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                  <text>Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Along the River

Friday, Mly 1, 1118

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Inside

By TOll AAIJII
Aia aclltl d PrMa Writer

the group's leader, Senate Appropriat ions Committee Chairman Ted
WASHINGTON- A Senate vote Stevens, R-Aiaska, said in an interapprovina the first post.Cold War view.
expansionofNA'f()eases the way for
"We just voted this NATO
the lddition of Poland, Hunaary and enlaracment We W!lJit to stop by and
the Czech Republic while opening sec the NATO ambassadors and make
the door for other former Soviet sateI- sure they understand the costs of
lites to join.
expansion.;,
In a voCe that ~howed strong
Estimated costs of expanding
· bipartisan support for a key Clinton NATO have ranged from the admin- ·
fon::ign policy priority, the Seaate istration's cumnt appraisal of $1.5
save its 80-19 raliflcation"'ate Thurs- billion over 10 years - with u.s.
day to the enlargement of the North taxpayers chipping in $440 million
Atlantic Trcaly Organization.
-to critics' estimates of up to $125
Meanwhile, a delegation of sena- billion over the same period.
tors was headed to the Petsian Gulf .
A ba:ker of NATO expansion,
region today aitd then to Bo5nia and Stevens also has been a leading Sento NATO headquarteri in Brussels to ate critic of the low level of li nancial
try to perslllldc cumnt NATO allies support from NATO allies. particu10 do mon:: to support military mis- larly in confronting Iraq's Saddam
sions in the region.
·
Hussein.
"We're going to tiy to find out
"We just cannot afford to go it
their altitude" toward paying more, alone any longer," he said.

Opponents complained about
potential hidden costs, and said a bigger NATO would further isolate Russia and could lead to dangerous and
unwanted military entanglemeots,
perhaps with nuclear consequences.
"I think it's going to pose a mighty
challenge to make it work," said Sen.
John Warner. R-Va.
Clinton said he was delighted ~y
the ."overwhelming margin" of the
Senate's ratification vote, which was
12 more than the t\l!o-thirds required
for treaties.
"This vole is a major milestone on
the ·road to an undivitled, democratic and peaceful Europe," the president said in a statement.
Over Russian ·objections, NATO
last July invited Poland, Hungary and
the Czech Republic to joit. the
alliance in the first round of eKpansipns.
·
All 16 present NATO members

' .lddi~onal

members beyond the three, small and ne1t 1.0 Russian territory.
NATO's centerpiece agreement is
nearly a dozen other nalions have
applied for membership.
a mutual defense pact- never put to
Warner, the leading opponent. the test - commilling all members.,
called hts proposed three-year pau.'IC to respond with military forte to an
"a reasonable period of time" tha1 attack on any other member·nation.
would leave the decision on future · · Sen. Joseph Biden. D-Del.; senior
expansion to the next U.S. president Democrat pn the Senate Forcisn
Relations Commiuee, called Poland,
and the Congress elected in 2000.
·But critics of Warner's amend- Hungary and the Czech Republic,
ment said it would work against·lhe "three highly qualified democracies.
spirit of opening N~TO to.the new who have. chafed under the Soviet
·
democracies-of cenuat and eastern yoke for four decades."
"We'll be righting a historical ,
Europe. ••This is what we fought the
·.
Cold War for," said Sen. John injustice," he declared. ·
McCain, R-Ariz.
NATOwascrcatedin 1949tocon·..
The leading candidal£5 in"the next front the Soviet Union in Europe. Its·
round are Romania and Slovenia. cumnt members are Belgium. Den-:
Nine other countries have also muk, France, Germany. Greece,;
applied~ including Estonia.. Latvia ltaly,luKembourg. Neiherlands, Porand Lithuania. Critics cllim Uiese tugal, Spain. United Kingdom, Icethree Baltic republics would be-dif- land. Norway, Turkey, Canada and:
ficult to defend because they arc the United States.

• Featured on

,.....
By LARRY MARGASAK
AIIOCIIted Prne Writer
' WASHINGTON - Presidential
friend Webster tlubbell is facirig
new charges that he evaded income
taXes. while his recorded conversations from an earlier prison term arc
likely to cause new concern at the
White House.
Whitewater prosecutors. who won
By SANG-HUN CHOE
a pl~a agreement from the former
AIIOCIIted PniU Writer
SEOUL, South Korea- Millions of workers across economically ail- . associate auomey general in late
ing Asia rallied today to mark May Day, representing every group from
1994 that landed Hubbell in prison,
striking dock workers in Australia to prostitutes .in India.
struck again Thursday.
Most of the rallies were peaceful, but the hard times that have hit the
They charged Hubbell, his wife
region erupted into violence in Seoul, where riot police fired tear gas to
and two associaleS with conspiring to
disperse thousands of workerS protesting layoffs.
. avoid taxes on hundreds of thousands
"No to layoffs!" the workers chanted amid the yellow haze of tear gas
of dollars paid to Hubbell from Pres·that filled a seciion of central Seoul, lite capital.
ident Clinton's supporters. Pro~Ceu­
' The roughly J7.(XXl workers and student supporters dispersed but quick-·
tors want to know if thi'S was "hush
ly regrouped, hurling rocks and garbage at police. The district reverbermoney" to keep Hubbell from proated with exploding tear gas and with the workers' staccato slogans and
viding them with information harmlabor songs ~Jaring from loudspeakers.
·
ful to the president and his wife,
About a dozen police and protesters were injured; one student was
Hillary.
rushed to a hospital with blood covering ·his face.
"My wife and I arc innocent," a
.The clash was the first violent protest since President Kim Dae-]ung
solemn Hubbell said outside his
took ofi"ICC in February. Kim is the fust opposition leader ever to take powWashington home with his wife.•
er in South Korea, one of many East Asian nations struggling with an ecoSuzy. at his side. "The office of indenomic crisis tha1 set in last year.
pendent counsel could . indict my
Rallies elsewhere marking May Day, the international labor day,.ran
dog. They can indict my cat. But I'm
the gamut of worker complaints:
not going to lie about the president.
• A small demonstration supporting thousands of striking dock workI'm not going to lie about the first
ers in Australia. The workers ended up disowning it, saying the live prolady or anyone else." 1
testers shouldn't have illegally entered a dock ~
Within hours of his indictment,
• A rally by prostitul£5 in Calcuua who want their profession legalized
The ASsociated Press obtained tranin India.
scripts of recorded prison con versa• Moce than 2 million people in Japan taking part in 1.000 or so raJ~
lies. some carrying banners with slogan.' such as ''Stop Murdcrou.,ly Long
Working Hount"
• A vigil in Taiwan in favor of -"original tribes who believe they are
losing jobs to foreign workers.
By KENNETH COLE
• A rally by more than 1,000 people in Malaysia, demanding more pro- . The
Debolt Newl
tection against layilffs they fear.
'
WASHINGTONFederal regu• A speech by Thai Prime Mi_!!ister Chuan Lcckpai in Bangkok, urg- ·
lators
arc
preparing
to
crack
down on
ing 10,000 union members to be patient while .Thailand uses painful
· "dirty" gasoline - a move that
reforms·to rejuvenate its struggling economy.
.
woo ld pressure oil companies to
· Since last summer. South Korea, Thailand and Indonesia have been
help reduce auto emissions.
p-applina with a currency and stock market crisis that has fon:cd the JntcrAs early as next week, the Envillllional Monetary Fund to put together a S100 billion bailoui plan for the
ronmental Protection Agency is
titRe of them.
expected to release a report on sulfur
levels in gasoline. The document

Regulator~

Meigs recorder posts land·transfers
Robinette J. Gillispie and Jeremy D.
King. Salisbury;
Deed. Evercu and Lena Roffee to
William Alan and Marta H. Blackwood, Scipio/Rutland parcels:
Deed, Randall R. and Peggy A.
Carpenter to Anne R. Carpenter,_
MicMiqiort;
. .
Deed. Robert L. and Rita A.
Stcalcy to Stealey Family Trust,
~ge;
.
Deed. Rutland American Legion
to Dennis E. McKinney. Rutland;
Deed, Stacy R. and Royce A. Bis11ellto Arnold P. and Cheri L. Johnson, Middleport;
Deed, Timothy Nelson and

well. Chester;
Deed, John W. and Mildred A.
1ecorded rccen~ly in the office of
.Krider !O Johruiy and Janet Krider,
Meigs County Ra:otdea Emmogene
Lebanon parcels;
Hamilton:
Deed. HaF.tlcy Hartl~y Hartley to
Deed. Harold and Eloise ao.tOII'to
Snowville
Inc ..: Pomeroy lots;
Randall M. Boston. Olive pan:cl;
Deed. Martin Marietta Material.lo
Deed. Steven H. and Wanda Eblin
to Albert and Teresa VanCooncy. Rut- '
Rc!bert 0. Spencer, Letart. .IJ.6S4
acres;
land:
Deed, Russell J. and Cynthia K.
Deed. Home National Bank to
Seymour, Karen E. Gunter Seymour ·
Kalhlccn Cleland. Syracuse;
to Russell J. and Cynthia K. SeyDeed. Leanna Sue Beegle, et al. to.
mour, Meigs parcels;
Gonion Proffin. Lebanon. 148-112
·
Deed, Roy Edward Proffiu,
aaa:
deceased, to Thomas A. and Carol A.
Deed. Paul R. and Rita F. Walker
Amott, Racine/Sutton parcels;
to Olarles Russell. Salem;
Deed,· Charlc:s and Martha K.
Easement, Forrest Dorsey and
S~icLynnDeemtoGwenncD.
Pansy
Jordan io GTE North Inc .•
Wheeler to o.Jc E. Taylor, Middle..,
lch
n
Columb1
"a·. '
·
..e • romeroy;
port Jllll%1•;
Deed. John Jr. and Sarah Sue FishDeed, Rae Lynn Basham to
Rilht of way, Harley Allen and
Joy Spm~n to lpding C!a!k Conser-. er to Frank M. and Pamela S. Col- Ronald R. Clampiu II, Orange.
vancy Oiwict. Columbia;
Riafll of way, Family Homes Inc..
to LCCD, Salisbury;
Riaht of way. Jack Jones to
LCCD. Columbia;
Rip of way, ThoniiS Cooper to

tions in which Hubbell and his wife
worried that l)is actions might expose
Mrs. Clinton to further investigation
~ and cost them White House
pon.
.
H~ also told his chief White House
contact. presidential aide Marsha
Scott, that "there arc issues that I
have to stay away from to proCecl others, and I will. Have I ever been disloyal?"
"Oh, God, n9," Ms. Scott "
responded.
The I 0-count grand jury indict·
ment charged Hubbell with evading
taxes on income he received from
Clinton friends and political ' supporters who sought to a.'l!list him after ·
he resigned as associate aUomey
general. "By late 1997. the taxes,
in~trest and penalties for 1989-19921
1994 and 199S exceeded $894,000,"
the indi~tment said.
·
·
Hubbell, who then was first coming under criminal investigation,
.. performed litt}c or no work" for the
consulting fees he received in 1994, ·
prosecutors for Independent Counsel
Kenneth Starr alleged in the indictment.
Among the fees Hubbell rcccived
was S100.000 from the Riady family of Indonesia. Former White Hou.'iC
chief of staff Mack McLarty, current ·
chief of staff Erskine Bowles and ell- ·
Commerce Secretary Mickey Kantor

su""

target

have all acknowledged trying to help
Hubbell lind the work.
Prosecutors' suspicion about those
fees, along with their frustration over
Hulibcll's mernbry lapses after he
agreed to cooperate, reportedly led to
the new investigation. :
Thursday's indictment was
returned 14 months after Hubbell, a
golfing partner of the president and
former law partner of Mrs. Clinton,
was released from his incarceration
on chaiJes he defiaudcd the Rose
Law Firm in Little Rock. Ark.. where
he and the finn lady u.o;cd to work ..
The White House said in a statement late Thursday tha1 "the Pr-esident and first lady are very saddened
by the developments in this matter
and feel had for Webb and Suzy
Hubbell" and the othcn named in ihe
indictment
Hubbell) anomey. John Nields,
decried the indictment as e~cessive
and Raid average Aincricans qever ·
would have been charged in such a
case.
..He has now paid his debUo soci·
ety. He has confessed. He has been
punished and .his .family ha.' been
brought to financial ruin and. a.' he
tries to pick him.'ICif up off his knees.
the office of independent counsel
comes .arou... and tric:A to prosecute
him again," Niclds said.
The indictment accu!IC() the

~dirty' gas

could signal how the EPA will rule on
a petition aulomakers tiled last
month, asking the agency-.to impose .
cleaner-fuel standards on petroleum
companies.
The topic has been a point of friction between the petroleum and auto
industries.
Oil companies say removing mon::
sulfur from gasoline is costly and will
result in steep i~ in pump
prices. Automakcrs, however, insist
that the current sulfur levels in gasoline will negate the benefits of developing advanced pollution-control

0

.

.

.

~

Three.
Environmentalists -

typically'
among automakcrs' harshest criticS
- side with the industry on the push
for cleaner fuel.
'
"Sulfur is like din, in effect.
going through a car's engine," said
Frank O'Doonell, executive director
of the Clean Air Trust in WashinBIOIJ.
"Drive down the sulfur content ill'
· gasoline, and all can immedillely JCl

(AP)- El Nijlo may have pro-

Rain conUnu"

Details on
pageA2

•

ttditu

Gallipolis· Middleport • Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· May 3, 1998

•
•

•
•

Vol. 33, No. 12

Tuesday vote will determine fate of
additional millage, party candidates

·

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmll Sentinel 8lafl .

PREPARING_ ~ begli!ID plall up their auppllel
lit·
,.,_ In
ltlol for Tl _,. : : ; ; ....._
pi'IPII~
Ull q l ·
' _,.
'
din ~•at: 111c1 Rill 11111111 cllreclor or 1111
COUIIty
ol
·
buay f'ltclly Prll*lng tllelltMJI t · · •
..kif . -.-- -f,:..; _ ... ·'"" ·~ .- -.-.._.;....,
In · lion ·to delel'u)lnlna the
Republicans wiD choose frOm
file of the two county-wide; levies; incum. . Fred Hol'lmlb; alid dillvoteri will nominate a Clndidale f~Jf lengers Patty Goqlein Pickens and
county commissioner in their E. Jim Sheets. Mick Davenpon,
respective party primaries.
Contlnllld on pega M

.

.

tla!llm

•

IAREtt•s.CiREENHOOSE &amp; COUNTRY MARKET.
• Over 100 Varieties of
Herbs and Perennials
• Over l,fHM) two gallon
roses .
• Full line of sbnbs and

T~.'ilt.!

s

llld:
·Deed. Charles H. Buaaworth to

GALUPOUS- Two requests for additional millage will be decided by
voters in au Gallia County precincts in Tuesday's primary.
A one-half of one mill levy supponing operation .of the Gallia County
Children's Home, and for operation of the county's Children Services office,
has again been submitted to the polls following defeat in the·
·
November 1997 general election.
The levy has been put to the voters to keep the
home open and to maintain the Children Services
office. Both provide for the care, protection and
placement of abused, neglected and dependent
children.
The levy, if approved, is to last five yead.
Additionally, Gallia voters will again decide a three-tenths of a mill additionallevy for the operation of the Dr. Samuel L Bossard Memorial Ubrary.
The issue also failed at the polls last fall.
The levy will bf for the library's current expenses, and if approved, will
be continuina, according to ballotlanguaae approved by the local Board of
Elections and t~e O&amp;io secretary, of state's Office.
·
·
' .
. A tax issue appearing on the local level is the renewal of Sprlnafield
ToWnship's one-mill fire protection levy.
.
·
. .
On the candidate Jeve~ Republicans will choose in a three-way race fo~
nomination 1Q run for lhe county commissioner's seat now held by two-tcrnl
incumbent Harold G. Montgomery.
•
. Montgomery is seeldfll re-election and fill:es opJIOiition on Tuesday's
ballot from David W. McKenzie -- who opposed Montgomery in the 1994
prinuu:y ...: and Robcn Rippey Jr.
·· ·, ;:
•,
Gallipolis businessman Casby "Skip" Meadows Dl is a wrlte-tn candld_ate
for the Democratic nomination for commissioner. Meadows needs 50 writein ballots -the same amount of signatures required for a candidate petition
-on Tuesday to qualify for a spot on the Nov. 3 general electii!R ballot.
Incumbent county Treasurer Larry•M. Betz is the sole Republican candidate for county auditor, the post that will be vacated by Democratic incum·
bent Ronald K. Canaday, ~~eho will be stepping down after boldin&amp; the job
·for 16 yean. Donald R. Holcomb is the only Democrat who filed to oppose
Betz •"n the fall.
,.
Joseph L. Cain, who is completing liis first term a the county's common
plcajndp,-ia.lliiOpPOSed.both In tho priDIIQ.apd ill .~~~
Also without primary or general election oppolilion is Dr. Daniel H. Miteley, a"l{epublican appointed county coroner lut·yw!OliOWinj llle' !elijnalion of Dr. EdwUd F. Berkich.
·
,
On a re.gional level, incumbent 94th District State Rep. John A ~y.ltConllnllicl on .pega M .
.. .

District expects .t o take ownership
of new school building In August

.

trees

·

.New Eastern Eleme~tary · nearing·compl.etion

zs.

aJ

:C N::

u._,

vided Ohio with a mild winter
while soaking the West Coast. But
durina the month of April, it
By ..... FltEEM•N
~ed the state.
Tlluaa B•tllllll 8lafl ,
1bc weather phenomenon that
REEDSVIllE - While other kids are
warmed the Pacific Ocean and
looking forwUd to summer vacation, young· splil the jet stream into two
sters .in the Eastern Local School District are
· tiranches - one througb southern · looking forward to '!lis fall- and attending a
.c;::anada and the other through the
brand new elementary school.
:southern United States - hu
With 17 days of school left, Eastern Local
· illowed moist air from the Gulf of Superintendent Dcryl Well llid the district
:Mexico to creep into Ohio ill the
hopes lo Ia¥ owoasbip of the new bui,kliJII .
· past couple of months, said Ri"k
on Aug. 14, giving teachers and administritOit
: hillbrand, a National Weather
10 days to get ready before the doors open for
•Service meteorologist
· students on Aug.
• : "We've just had a persistent pal·
Construction .on the $7.8 million builcliDg
tern with more rain." Hiltbrand Mid
project bepn in May, 191J7, lugely funded by
:Friday, adding that drier weather is
the state's building assistance fund progrui...
.ppc&lt;:tcd for May and June.
The new e.lementary school p a large, - .
. - A leas: rainy May would benefit
story, L-sbapcd buildin&amp; allowing for 6duic
larmcrs, said Joe Corncly, a
'
expansion if needed, Well .explained.
:spokeslilan for the Ohio Farm
· A building tour .
·
:Bureau. 1be prime plantina - ·
Vlsi1011 enter .!be new buildina throop a
:son for com and 10yflcans, the
peaked archway near the outside comer of the
·Slate's twO bigeat crops, is usual- · 'L'. 1be enlrance leads into a lobby dominated
ly this month.
•
by a display C8liC opposite the front doors.
On the left side of .the lobby is the new
Good Morning
Meigs County Public Library which featureu
.
conference rooln and wort room, along willi a
separate entmnce for ·people using the library
I
aftcr school boun. A corridor also on that side
leads to a portico COIIIIOc:ting the elementaiy
Calea1wa
CU!4
school to ~ hlah school.
·
.
Q•='Mp
Q3.7
. To the nghl ll the office complex which
c..g
•wn
includes a nune'a alation with diaic, ~k
F41Mri"'
M
room, oftl~a, conference -;oom and a
Alrjs !he Rim Cl ·
lpcCCblbeariogfrueotcd .and Gifted program
9h!!prln
At
.,_, ·
.
.
M1l
81;:8
The bottom of the 'L', .flclna ltatc Route 1
Cll"' Qloio WlcyN&gt;lilllilll CD.
IUid \be puki111 Jot. is compriled of the h'brary,

Ri&amp;ht of way, David ~kins and
Cheryl Hy!ICIIto LCCD. Scipio/Rut-

Deed. RoneY R. Ellep to Rodney
A. ... Marilyn ~. C.jJCilla

tmes

,..

~

April was unusually
soggy acroee Ohio

.

Saturday, May 2nd &amp; Sunday May :ird

•

Newa.Wifeh

LCCD. s.Jisbwy;

Cblrlcy M. and Candie Evans.
Col!lfllbia;
RiJhl of way, Steven B. lllld DcboniiAIIIhony to ColurnllusSouthern
Jl'oMi', Olive;
Deed. Llwrence D. Cur.
•Jei
~. toc.IT. anti Aleta Polley,
Colllmbia;
Dccd. Tracy Older lllld David A.
Jo111i1o11 to Richlnl ad Dooudly
Hwt It)'. S11em. 7.13 ams;
Deed. M8ry 1!. Copr to WiiiWn
It Copr, Minenville;
Dccd. L widll A. _. !lldldra P.
BoiiiO .... an.,e pmels;
Bled. 01111 R. _. u •.-.. K. .a •
111110 a...va c.....~ Chala;
Deed. Albat M.lllld hw WiJt.
IIIIIO.JacwieN.... ~s.
MrJrrie, Olive; .

.

By BRIAN J. REED
SeniJ&gt;r ~nter, has requested the'
TJmn.SenUnel Staff
renewal of a one-mill, five-year levy
~OMEROY- Two county-wi~ to provide services through the
levi~S aftd. two conteste~ party pn- agency.
. '
ma~·es· will be determmed when
The levy has generated some
Me1gs County vote~. go to the poi_Js $215,000 per year since first passed
on !u~sday. In addlllo.n, vote~ w1ll in 199;\. Of the 4,300 people in the
deade several township and VIllage county over the age of· 60, 2,280
levi~s and will elect t~eir respective · received seryices tbrough tbe
part•~·
ce~tral ':"mml!lee m~mbers. · agency last year, according to Susan
Stat •de 1ssues relahng to Oliver, executive director for the
school
ding and state-wide pri- MCCoA.
'
.maries will also appear on Tuesday's , The Meigs Co~nty Board of
·ballot.
Mental Retardation and DevelopCounty Levlw
mental Disabilities will again ~Ji
•
. The Meigs County Council on . approval of a 1.8· mill permanent
Aging, th"e board which governs pro- levy for services at tbe Carleton
grams offered through the MeigS School and Meigs Industries. The
MR/DD board has requested
approval of the . levy three limes
since last spring.
.
That levy would generate an
Flaah floods force
additional $382,000 per year for the
.road closings In "'elgs board, which provjdcs !lcrviccs to
. POMEROY - Flash floods children and adults with developdue to heavy rain early Saturday mental disabilities and mental retar• .forced the closing of several Meigs dation.
Last year, the agency received
County roads.
.
$695,8,21.96
through local taxes -·
Meigs County Emergency Serreal estate assessments, mobile
vices reported thai the following
home taxes and taxes on; personal
rl18ds were clos€d at prcsstime on
property,
according to the office of
Saturday: State Route 124 at ~ut­
Meigs
County
Auditor Nancy Parker .
land, Bradbury Road, Leading
·CreeIt Road, State Route 143 atthe. Campbcll.
. If passed, .the p~m will take
old county landfill, State Route
"124 at Portland Road, County m more than $1 mllhon throup
·
Road 10 at Jacks Road and Junior IocaI taxes, aIone.
1'k estimated proceeds from the ·
· Ward Road, New lima ROad at
local
levy requestsareiNI 1d OD.OIIt- - ~' Fori&gt;Mcigs. Kinpiilry and ICinp
rent
value,
rather thaq the aew value
Hill at Smith Road.
,
which
will
be set following the curLaurel Cliff Road and Happy
Hollow l~oad were reported to be ICnl reappraisal of propcny taxes
now undeiWay.
"p•ss~ble, • but an EMS spokesCommlulon " woman said that the water was still
on the rise Saltlrday morning.

facturers As.'KICiation, which lobbies

·

prsro
' ein-off'
•lfttertaiiiiMnt on,... C7 •

Voters will decide two county-wide
lttvles, two contested party primaries

Congrcs.~ on behalf of Detroit's Qii;

cleaner."

HI: 70e
Low: 50s

ISsues;·candidates focus of primaries in Gallia, Meigs ,

Hubbells. aecountant Michae1 1 c;
· Schaufele of little Rock and little; .
R6ck taX lawyer Charles C. Owen of:
conspiracy, tax evasion, impeding·
and impairing the Internal Revenue·
Service and mai I fraud.
lt said the four defendants
attempted to '"evade and defeat the,
payment of a large part of the income;
tait due" by the Hubbclls from 1989·
to 1992 and 1994-95, It accused:
· Hubbell with ·substantially under·:
stating gross business receipts. busi-:
ness income and adjusted gros~·
income, while overstating business·
e1penses.
· Schaufele also was accu.'iCd of aid-ing in the preparation of a false tax:
return.
·
In Lillie Rock. Schaufele said he
.was "ptelly shocked" by the indictment. "I know that I really didn't do
anything wrong." he said.
The indictment said Hubbell and·
his wife earned more than SI million.
between 1994 and 1997. but paid less:
than $30,000 in tax~. The Hubbells·
actually owed more than SSOO,OOO in·
state and fcdenil taxes, the indictmenl.
said.
"The Hubbell• spent during lhe
same period over $7SO,OOO on per:
sonal items, including clothing and ·
accessories, privDie tuition, tele ~
phones and domestic help pay•
ment&amp;," the indictment said.
·

•

• ,_Sf •

Pill' C1

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

for crackdown ·

devicc:A. ,
Currently, low-sulfur gasoline is
sold only in California. a move precipitaled by the stale's tougher emissions regulations. California gasoline
has a sulfur content of 30 parts per
million, vs. approximately 340 parts
per million for gB!pline sold in otlter stateS.
"The new technology · thai ~ ·
eme1ging will operate best with clean
fuel, but the fuel thal's out there now
in the United StaleS is prclly diny."
said Ellen Shapiro, rcgulatoly liaison
for the Anierican Automobile Manu-

'Run for
the Roses'

un H·

'

.

.

Kentucky
Derby

oo

•

.Ciinton's .friend HiJbbell .faces new charges

Asian workers
note May Day
with protests

The followifll land trlllsfcrs were

must ratify the agreement, as must the
three incoming members. Canada,
Denmark, Germany and Noi"Way
have already done so. The Senate ratification was expected to open door
to quick approval in the Dthcr nations.
The Czech Senate ratified the
country's participation eirlier Thursda~. two weeks after the lower chamber had done so. Legislatures of
Poland and Hungary have not yet ·
done so.
In the United States, the measure
- as a treaty protocol - requires
neither Clinton's signature nor
approval by the House.
Passage came after the Senate
rejected. 59-41, an amendmept by
Warner calling for a three-year moratorium before -any additional new
members arc added.
While neither NATO nor the Clinton administration has designated ·

'Seinfeld'

Saturday's

9fwal/s
could talk

Senate OKs inclusion of ex-Soviet
:blocs in·.NATO .·
.

$1

lobby, offic:e oomplex and
primary wing wbich IJoua..
es
"lassrooms
for
preschoolers, kiaderaanners and students aracJcs
one through three in addllion to 1pcci•l .educatl011

..-us. ·

The walls aJooa the pri·

mary winaare trimmed in

aimson while restrooms
are finished in either blue
or pinkish, mauve tile.
The c:Jasarooms in the
primlry willl are all wlrejl
for ~letS and students
will have lockers and llor·
aae spaces inside their
daurooms, instead of in
the corridor.
,
Conuected to the end of
the prim8ry wing, but in a
separate area, are two,
1,200-plus-square-fooe
ldndcrgartenroomsjoiocd
AIMOSTDONE-Rindrllult!IIIICICJwtlaBI 11ft totlleexiiLI(Ihlghachool. TlleiWO.. . grldul ..e ·OI
by a common restroom -"'-'~~a~.- u ldnilon• - .--=tJntiiiiMW El eem High 8ch0ollllcl ,.,.,. tar w..-. CclnMruc&gt;
area. A neigbboring, 9j)O- fl 11m Elamantlly 8cfiOo!. .,_ In ... lllciiQrouncl, lion Company, conbiCIOr 0111111 building piOjllct.
pliiHIJUIIfC·foot
.
traditiollal EUiem.coJ0111•
·
The JYnmasium is bordered by a pe•uge·prcac:hool tiiiSSIOOIII is located nell! door.
The gymD.ium wHich is the aam.e size as way that, stanina from the primary wing,
1boec rooms arc located·oft' a small .corri- the JYm a1 the adj~nt Eastern High School, houses the fourth-grade classrooms and comdor leading to a special entraDce for kinder- feahua six basketball. bac:kboards, boys and puter Jabs, a music room (with aound4eadcnprten and prachoollltudenla, al one end, and girls locker rooms with both common and stall ing walls and doors, and a soundproof lillento altpll'&amp;te prcsabool play IIRI behind the shoWers, and coaches' offices. A mezzanine, in&amp;,IOOm), an an.room .and another "'asa.room. '
bu1Min1- .
.
•: • •
.
ac:ceued by two IICIS of stairs, dominates the
The passagewsy ends at the junior bip
Tbeqentcr.ofthe.bulldlngll.doauoatedby ript si!le of the gymnasium. The building's wing which houses atudents padea five
a .... afetorium With I sta~·~ plalform at bcatina and ventilation system and other through eight. This area is trimmed in yellow
~ nabL ~Y~:the ~tortum IS the JYIIIRI· mechanical syllems are" hidden behind the and forms the upright arm 011 the L-shapcd
11um, wbidl 11 tnmmed 1n green and gold mezzanine, away from cluaroom areu.
Conlllllllll on pega M

.

No complaint .planned against:. Cremeans' recycled radio .commercial~ ·

A
1 -• TV -. ·•
,__., h' .
rJ
"'ffllrHNJnS
c· hargtiB· .H'•"'
Ulll8set.
.... 'auokflt puuwr r8IIICOI

...0... AP, T.a Rap 11;11
GAIJJPOUS -

A

•
IICriea

of recycled

"'l....lp

:~=~:g'!':~:~~=:-:a:-:r;rr!
I

.

ELECT

•

IRTIUR-•BUTCH~
KNIGHT.
.
.

.EllS COUIIY COMISSIOIER
•

•

Greenhouse located 3112 .... put
Sotlthen IIJab Scbool . .

Country Market

St. Rt. 124 RadDe, OR
740-949·l68l

St. Rt. 124 Portland, OH
740-843·5211

, _ ., lllnil , _ .

Hn: Moa·Fri. 9-5, Sat N, Sua 1-4

·a1 caadid11e Frank Crcmeau.
CrciiiCIIII, bowever,' "Jaslled ouf Sllunlly at lelcYiiloll
spoil he labeled as "negative ads and distonionaw of Ilia
performuoe in Congress.
Sixlh Coopesaional Dislrict candidate Nancy Holli.ter wiiiiiDI file a complaint with the 0~ ~
Commialion. her C.mpaigo manaaer, Chris Baldwin.
Mid Friday. ·
.
•
The commission :Mid a complaint filed immediatei_Y
could pt an expedited hcarin&amp; on Monday, but no ~aion -likely in time to inOucnc:e 1Uada:fs Rcpubhcan pii1111ry, he llid.
·

'Ibat would aa inlnplrly ditpute extendina put
·tbe primary and into tile Faeral elel:lioD seaoo when

::::::::

ia.IUPI ..t to llllify bclrind thei; aomi• .M'M'" juat aot i!UG I I in draghic this down into
!be illliiiiUIIIIIJIII," Baldwin llltL
.
.
A complalal- oa I'J~Ad beCI 1c the state's campai~ Jaw aia be .W._, If a candidate .gives
· fllle informallaa abowt aa .ap
ent
Crcmcm' QWIIDMn:ials pnMde
iofor·
matioll tbat aue Wbea die. ada wae ICiUHded in
1996. Bllt die c:adwwa- Gov. OiaiiJD \biiWWich anti
Hollister, Ida Ueuee•• aovww - dO 1101. want to be
·nmlotl_ccl.o l- tllal Halllaler IUid 0.111 ra are ccwetina die lillie job.
Cle- dcia lbcd die 1111 • ¥11M, Iince IIIey list .

....sor-ot

I•

••

. '

•

•

ICCOIIIplisbments from his two yean in
Conareas, and tboie feats have not
changed though the.endoi!Jements have
bcCn revoked.

At the same time, CrcmCB!" cbuged that a senea of
television ads sponsored by the Hollister campaipl
"sucker punched" him and his performance in Congma.
The ads, which sarcastically queatioa Creme-•

~FJ:::;.-:dc~;:-;;:fe:-!1ihc ~:'!'!u::~;~ :';:~~ ~~~~~!=.,:n:r':e

lepl advice he ~ned C?"vincing Hou~~e.
. .
.
•
bim he wa on IIOlid pound 1n placlna
~Nancy's relentless at~ leave me ~th Unl~
the commen:iala on radio stations in 16 choice but to lland up for my rcconl and )JOint out her
-theni Ohio awketa.
.hY.JlOCrisy in criticizin&amp; my term in Conpelfy"· Qe.
National Republican CoQgreuional means Mid.
.
·
.. ·
Committee Jcplcoe•ll'l'l Bruce Mehlman.uid fcdersl
"By .the .end of ~y IICmce in the 1~h · Conareu~
In ~-clllpll state llw, and even 10 the Oh1o law would Nancy HoJhster pra!scd. the work I had ~ for .~·
aot bC ~atcd bec:IUIC the , .. .~Is do ootlalsely em Ohio, the Gall•polll ~ubllcan contmuecl. Now
Identify die - . a of the ....-11 m tbe II!'·
she chuges t~t I did n_oth~na ... ~ could ahe have
"n. llatellll'llll - autharized when 111uecl," ~ changed her VICW so el!'lly.
•
noted - l'illll"hina tile \biiiOYkbiHolllllcr camp did
~- and Hollister ~ ~ by three 01!ter
aot lefule.
cand~tea for the GOP aommauon.

�...
l
· Sunday, May 3, 1998

•
PD~Mroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Chamber to

OHIO Weather
SuadiiY, May 3
AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

,,,,,

IMansfield 166" l•
• IColumbus !1o• l
~~

'''''

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Chamber of Commerce's
founh annual Business Appreciation
Breakfast has been set for Friday,
·May 8 aL7:30 a.m. at the Holiday Inn.
The breakfast honors 15 area businesses chosen by the ·chamber for
contributions to the county throughout the years.
This year's honorees include
Tawney's Jewelers, Caner's Plumbing, Remo's Hot Dog Stand, Fanners
Bank, fordan's Gas, Saaz Brewing
Equipment. Thomas Do-lt Center,
Norris Nonhaip Dodge, Taylor's
Berry Patch, Red's Rollen Garage,
Caner Tractor Sales, the Shelly Co.,
Gallia County Rural Water Association, the Colony Theiler and Bur·
nett's Roofing &amp; Heating.
The following is a brief overview
of five of this year's businesses
being honored.
Carter Tractor Sales

recognizt;~

1953, Caner Tiactor Sales, 2204
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, i~ currently
owned by Steve Caner, who stresses
that showing the customer respect
and treating them fairly will keep
them coming · back. With today's
modem technology impacting on
today 's fanner. Caner said his business will become more specialized to
serve the needs of tomorrow's farmer.
Red's Rollen Garage
Specializing in heavy truck road
service, light and heavy qutomobile
wrecker service. hazanlous material
cleanup. CJ'!Ifle service and shop service, Red's Rollen Garage. 14727
State Route 554. Bidwell, was estab·
tished in 1978 and currently has nine
employees.
.
Owner Red Brabham's motto is,
"to keep the nation goin', you' ve got
· to keep 'em rollin' ." Steady exp;msion of services and service area is
expected by Brabham in the future.

Established by Nolan Caner in

La~ers /see~ing
'
OKLAHOMA
CITY (AP)- The
man ·who failed to warn anyone
about the plot to bomb the Oklahoma
City federal building has served
enough time in jail · and should be
relea.~. his lawyers said.
Mirhael Fonier's lawyeti; said in
federal court Friday that their client
has served two years and eight
months, which is eight months 1110re
than the teJ111 ag~ to with prosecutors.
·
In a filing Friday, attorneys
Michael McGuire and Fred Bennett
asked a judge to release Fonieron his
own recognizance May 12, the date
of a pre-sentencing hearing to determine how the sentencing guidelines
should be followed.
Last month, federal prosecutors
recommended that Fortier serve II to

Forecast offers region
no ·break from rainfall
By The AIIOCIItld Preu
There will be a chance of rain across Ohio on Sunday. with the southern
half of the stale mQS~Iilcely to receive showers. Highs on Sunday will range
from 60 to 70.
·
.
The chance of rain will increase sUllewide Sunday night and continue into
Monday.
•
.
Sunrise Sunday will be at6:29 a.m .. while sunset will be at 8:27 p.m.
Wnther rorecast:
Sunday...Showers and thunderstorms likely by afternoon. Highs 65 to 70.
Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Sunday night ...Showers likely. A.thunderstorm is,possible. Lows in the
lower 50s. Chance of rain 70 percent.
· .
. Monday...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs 60 to 65. Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Monday night. ..Showers and thunderstorms tikely. Lows in the lower 50s.
Extended rorecast:
.
Tuesday... A chance of showers and thunderstorms during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. Highs near 70.
·
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms during the night. Lows in the lower 50s and highs in th~ lower 70s.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 50s. Highs in the mid 70s.

Debate surrounds Kaczynski's
control over his failed defense

_,

14 .years for his role in the worst act
of terror on U.S .'soil.
' Fonier, 2C,, will be formally sentenced May 27. He pleaded guilty in
August 1995 to four felony counts.
His sentencing was delayed until
after the trials of Timothy McVeigh
and Terry Nichols.
Fortier is charged with failing to
warn anyone of the planned bombing
a'nd for lying to FBI agents. He also
admiUecj te hiding evidence and traf·
ficking in fireaims the government
says were stolen to finance.the blast.
The April !9. 1995, bombing of
the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building killed 168 people and injured
more than 500 others.
·,
McVeigh'' was convicted of 'the
bombing and eight counts of murder
and senlenced to death.
' ·

RoJ!trt Rippey Jr., want
to 111ure .the people or
Gallla County that I· fully
1Upport the rlghll or the
vatara111, their famllltl,
1nd U. agriculture community. My 10n, Robert
.,.,,." Rippey, Ia 1 atudent
Gallla Academy .0 1
know the Importance of
lflrnllyand com'munlty.

SAN FRANCISCO ( AP) "If you.are competent to stand IIiTheodore Kaczynski did not want his ill, then ... it's your lawyer's job to
mental health to be an overriding empower you to make imponant
is.~ue in ·the Unabomber ca.~ - but decisiOns about. your case," Mello
· . it wa.~.
said. ·
,
He did not want to be examined
That includes allowing Kaczyns: , by a psychiatrist - but he wa.~.
lei to reF,! any claim ot.mental illness
•
He did not want to be represented and to demand a defense based on his
' by lawyers who put on a defense he belief the bombings were necessary
abhorred ..;;. but he wa.~. ·
- - to combat technological tyranny When all else failed. including a even if that defense doomed him.
suicide attempt. he a.~lced to represent
His defen.o;e attorneys should have
himself but was turned down on stepped a.~ide early in the case so
plUnds he"had waited too long, even Kaczynski could be represented by an
lhiJuJh he said he was ready to go to attorney willing to put on his chosen
' trial immedialely.
.
defenie .without delaying the trial,
:
The case will end M~y Wllh Mello ~~aid.
·
t Kaczyniki's sentenCe 10 life in prison
By the time the conflict was
' for the three murders to which he revealedontheeveoftriai,U.S.Dis; admitted. But it hall stirred deb&amp;teon . trict Judge Garlatid Burrell Jr. ruled
I alepl i~~~UC-that is far,from setlled: that brinBiDil in a new lawyer would
t tbl!.much conttol does a.defendant, delay the trial.
.1 apec~ly a capilal defendant, h1.11e . Mello ct;ticiz.ed that ruling. saying
1 over his.o'W1! ~ase?
., the,connict's timina wasn't Kaczyn~·
The. dec•••on• of Kaczynska ~ sk1 s fault and the judge should have
lawyers and the trial judge probably (l!lt the ca.o;e on hold. Burrell's "lawsaved his life. A death sentence · ~~"decision probably would have
seemed certain if his wishes were fol- led to the reversal of any death sen1 lowec!. But the question remains: aence, he said.
t Whose life is it. anyway?
Kaczynski, he said, ultimately
•
Accordmg to M1chael Mello, a wa.~ coerced into pleading guilty
• former capatal defense lawyer who "by a trial judge who wa5 way out of
teaches legal ethics at Vermont Law his depth."
School in South Royalton. Yt., the
Burrell has issued a court order
answer is, emphatically. the client's; forbidding the news media from con- .
"They have succeeded 10 savmg tacting him while the \/nabomber
: his body, but they'.ve taken his life case is before him.
• away, it see~• to me," said. Mello,
Several prominent legal ethicists
who bneny aaded Kaczynski defense said Katynsclci should have been
attorney Judy . Clarke early 10 the allowed to choose his defense.
'~· . He called her a briUiant and
"If you' re competent. you can dri. ded1~ated lawyer w~- Jtustakenly. •e your own car, even over the
. ~ sa1d- :·saw he~ JOb, and her &lt;&gt;?.'Y cliff." said ·Geoffrey Hazard. a law'
Job, as savmg has hfe at all.costs.
professor at the University of.Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. Kaczynski's .
lawyers apparently "got it into their
heads that they had a duty to protect
him that overrode his authority all a
client."
PYblished each Sunday, Kl5 Thhd 1\Yt.,
"The lawyer should make goodO.IMpoUs. Ohio. byrhr Oflio Valley Pllblishins
CoatpMy!Gannelt C..o•. Second clns (10SIIJ.t
faith effons to persuitde the client to
!Mid a1 Oallipolis, Ohio 4!1631 . Er~lertd u
leCOIId ClUJ lft!lilina: ntlller 11 Pomeroy, Ohio, · do what the lawyer considers to be
PaetOfrlct.
~
the wise thing to do. but in the final
analysis
.. . it's the defendant's life,"
~ 11w Auocialed Prns: and 1M Oh to
said Monroe Freedman, profes-.of _
Newt1p1FU Allocilltpa.
legal ethi~s at Hofstra University.
SUNDAY ONLY
Co-counsel Quin Oenvir, the fed·• SUII8CIIImON RATES
ly Clmer er MOIDr RHt~
eral public defender in Sacramento,
Ooe 11\et ...................................... :.: ......... ll .l,
said he interpreb:d lhe law to mean ·
OM Yeu .. 1.... H'"'''"··············· ................. Sh~ .llfl
that a defendant can decide whether
SINCLI COPY PRICE
to plead guilty or claim insanity,
Soiotdly ..................................................... $1 .110
wheiher to testify and whether to ~p­
No IUbvrtplions by mall jll!rmillcd in arets
resent himself or henelf. All other
wfleJC rrDiot ~nier ttrvice i1 awailable.
d«isions an: mattm d .lfi'IIC&amp;Y for
the lawyer.
·
'i1w S.lda)l Timu-Senriltcl wlllllOI bl riSpon·
llblt for ICIY,.. Jll)'meftts madt IG anim.
nle legal system wi1ns a broad
range of txtical decisio!ls to the
lawyer, he said.
·
"If the defendant can malce lhe
decision on menial heallll. does lhe
defendant decide whdher to pment
MAILIIIIICRinJONS
an al'bi defense, or whll willl w to
1-Colilo~
IJ - ...............................................127.30
call?" Denvir uked. ·~.,.the
•
:16 ..................................... .........UJJI2
reuons we haw couuel"
u-.............................................1105-'6
The defense *"*IY wu
--~C•IIIJ
13-.........,.......................................129.2$
ally
supported by Yeleran San Pnn. - ................................................ ~611
cisco defense lawyer 'Doion Wein· · '
u-.............................................su,.n

Gal(ia businesses ·

Dave Tawney cited personal serNorris Nor1hup Dodge Inc.
Serving Oallit. Mason, Meigs, vice, quality merchandise and g&lt;ltld
Vinton, Jackson and surrounding pricing keeps its cllentele corning
.
counties. Norris Northup Dodge, 2S2 back.
Burnett's Rooftns '
Upper River Road, Gallipolis, offers
Dodge. Chrysler.· J~ . and Eagle
" Beau..
Burnett's Roofing &amp; Heating
vehicles. Owner Mike Nonhup cites
fair and honest treatment of the cus- employs six. Founded by Clyde Burtomer during the sale, and first class nett and currently owned by John and
service afterwanl as the ~ey to his Tom Burnett, the finn 's . business
philosophy has been value for the
~pany ' sgrowth.ln business for40
·
c
years. the deale..Ship employs 30. ustomer through high quality prodNonhup .said he looks to increase Ucl• and dedicated service after the .
business by IS-20 p'ercent in the.next sale.
·~
Later lhis summer, 8\Jmett's will
five years.
be reloc;ating from 2212 Eastern
Tawney's Jewelen
One of Gallipolis' oldest busi- Ave., Gallipolis, to a new, larger fllbnesses, Tawney's Jewelers, 422 Sec· ricaiion-warehouse-office complex
ond Ave., Gallipolis, was founded by now under construction at I 0 II Mill
Max Tawney in June '1933. Max Creek Road, Gallipolis. The firm will
Tawney and son Dave, the current conlinue to . operate its 'roofing·
owner, have been documenting the HYAC·metal fabrication shop.
(Addhlonal bual,__ will. a
arca's history with photographs for
feltuled
lhla - k In the Gallipolis
over half a century.
Dally Tribuna.)
.

early release for Fortier

~

Free immunizations slated this week

GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Health Department will provide free
immqnizations this week at the following locations and times:
• , • Monday,,May 4 ~ Rite.· Aid Pharmacy, Silver Brid~ Plaza, from 6-8
.p.m.
.,
• Thursday, May 7 - Lobby of the Gallia County Courthouse from 4-6
•p.mchildren in need of immunizations'must b!: accompanied by a parent and
bring a current immunization record with them.

WOWill Tllk lbout slicker shocklll Just give the Tax
Acceuor'a office a ring and Inquire about the Increase In
property tax•• due to the rea11e11ment Just concluded . I
could hardly believe the reply when aaked about the percent
of lncreaH In the average tax burden. Would you believe 20
to 30% ??? More than you are currently paying and that
retroactive to theflret of the year??? If you are now paying
$1,000 1 y1ar, your tax bill will go to - are your ready??
$1200 to $1300 a y1ar. According to a recent Dally Sentinel,
there will ~ 1n "lncrea1e", but It never mentloned1so great
an addld burden. We, the undersigned oppose, on this
bula, any "new" tax of any kind. We do aupport all renewal
requeat1 tor tax11 now In place•
Respectfully,
James A. Riffle, Rudy Riffle,
Robert 0. Spencer, Eldon S. Baker,
Randy Friend, Charl~a E. Yost.

S6'6C"ed
I
II
I

parade
m8 fS ha, .
.

I

~

·
·
alumn~
GALLIPOLis. Morris E. Hask, MERCERVILLE- The Mercerville-Hannan Trace Alumni will have an ins has been selected parade marshal
Morris E. Haskins
I
·
th be · ·
4
s turda M 23 D'
·11 of this year's Founh of July parade
.a umnt get-toge er g•nnLng at p.m. on . a
y, ay . mner wa
through downtown Gallt'pol'ls, ·~t .
.,...
1ns Ariel Theater has benefited from
be
6 30 p.m. ·
. served at:
• S rda Jl 4
:: For more information or reservations, contact Katie Mullins, 8446 State oor at~ y, u Y ·
his kindness and interest in the com... Route 7, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631, 446-7379.
· Haskins. 87, who joined the Ohio munity, Graham said.
h
D'
h ·e
· r
Valley Bank boiml .o f directors in
In 1939. he almost single-handC
1939. and remains involved with the edly raised $10,000 for Gallipolis'
CHESHIRE -An open house will be held Saturday, May 9 from 1-4 p.m. bank, is an active Rotarian and serve~ municipal swimming pool. At 27, he
'"for the Disabled American Veterans Chapter S3, Tri-County, at the DAY, on the boanl of trustees of the First was the youngest Rotary Club presi•"1805 I SR 7. Cheshire.
Baptist Church of Gallipolis.
dent in Ohio. He is also a pa.~t direcThe guest speaker will be Lt. Col. Christine Cooke, director ofthe Ohio
During his lengthy business tor of the chamber of commerce.
Veterans Home in Sandusky. A slide preseniation will he given on the home. career, he was a founding member'of
"Morris Ha~kins has al,ways been
will
Bob Evans Farms Inc., and has made a leader with vision." said Graham.
CHESHIRE- Cheshire Viii•- Council's regular monthly meeting will significant conlributions 10 lhe com- "For these reasons. and many more,
..... hall, Village Clerk Jennifer Harrison munity over the years, said R.V. the Gall'aa·coun ty Ch am be r of Combe Tuesday at 7:30p.m. in the village
•.announced.
.
"Buddy" Graham, senior vice presi- merce is honored to ha.ve Morris
deni and chief operating officer of the . Ha~ k'ms as the Parade mars ha1•oor the
:.' , Council normally meets the first Monday of the month.
f 61
Gallia County Chamber of Com- 1998 Founh of July parade." .
6
~
0 ..
merce.
The parade is a highlight of the
CENTERPOINT- Residents with relatives buried in the Centerpoint
Known for his philanthropic annual Gallipolis River Recreation
F Cemelery are asked to remove Dowers from the graves as soon as possible. effons, the Morris and Dorothy Hask- Festival, slated for July 2-4.
·
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Residents are advised to not plant Dowers on the graves.
·
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Donations to the cemetery's maintenance shljlllld lie mailed to_Janet Jones.
i- secretary-treasurer, at 1167 Buckeye Hills Road, Thurman, Ohio 45685, or
TUPPERS PLAINS - Some
Bewallow Ridge will be affect• to Ed wan! Cooper, 3738 Centerpoint Road, Oak Hill, Ohio 45656.
.
~sc
Tuppe.SPiains-ChesterWaterDistrict edbytheshutdownandcustomerson
C
If I.
~;;,
m,
customers will be without service the pumping system are asked to not
iRIOGRANDE-TheGovemingBoanloftheGallia-VintonEducational Monday due to waterline work on use water between 9 a.m.-5 p.m. to
~ Service Center will meet in regular session on Thursday, May 7 at7 p.m. at Success Road in Olive Township.
prevent air from entering the hydro- .
• Buckeye Hills Career Center, Trea.~urer Debbie Ratliff announced.
. Service will be off from 9 a.m.- 5 pneumatic system.
p.m. in Onlnge Township from KayAll of the areas listed above will
~
lor Road to Alfred, Alfred Road. be under a boil advisory.
t RIO GRANDE - Registralion for fall quaner classes at the Umvers1ty Woods Road, Mudsock) Mercer. Owl
The bulk water salesman, used for
~ of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College is scheduled for the next two Hollow, Tucker Road arid Carr Road. hauling water from the main office,
r' weeks, May 4-8 and 11-15.
· ·
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In Olive Township, service will be will be out of service during the
f
"Early Bird" registration for summer. classes is planned for May 11-15. . off for pans of Success Road and above time period. Fire hydrants in
· ~ Open registration for summer colirses wall be Monday, June 22. ·
JOppa Road for those being served tuppers Plains and surrounding mas
i For mo~ informal ion, contac( Norma Edwanls in the Office of Records. from Success Road. Pans of Athens will also be out of service during the
~. at 245-7209, or toll-free, 1-800-282-7201, extension 7209.
County will also be without service. outage.'
~
Forashontimeperiod.theoulage
Areas affected may experience
;
JACKSON- The Southeastern Ohio Branch of the NAACP's monthly will affect the following areas in discolored water after service is
; meeting will be 'fllunday. May 7 in the council chambers.of the new Jack- Meigs County: Orange Township restored. The district will attempt io
• son Police Building, 199 Ponsmouth St.
· ••
from State Route 7 to the district's back up some of the planned areas of
the Youth Council will meet at 6:30p.m., and the adult chapter meeting main office one mile nonh of Eastern the shutdliwn with tanks in outlying
':
begins at 7.
.
High School to 'the Athens-Meigs areas. Both Tuppers Plains ElemenThe youth will be di.cussing fund-raising activities with the.adults. For County line. Customers on the east tary and Eastern High School will not
f more infQrmation, contact the following officers: John Howanl, president, side of SR 1 in Tuppers Plains will be be affected.
: 245-5441 : Jim Crump. first vice president, 740-682-6009; Jessie Payne, sec- serviced by the Reedsville Tank, so
In the event of inclement weath~ qnd vice president. 24S-5216; and Darlene Ford, secretary and youth advi; service should be l)laintained as long er, the work will be rescheduled for
; !lOT. 740-286-8929 (home) or toll-free, 1-888-221-4583.
as customers practice consea;vation. . Tuesday. .

Mercervllle-HT

schedule event

. 0 'Pen OUSe Set 1'0r
• "'AV

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:Removal

ap,,

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Pd . for by the above signed .

VOTE FOR

meet Tuesday

CASIY "Skip"

ht
owers .rom graves soug

Recycle.onlyTypes
1
&amp;· ~ ·
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Plastic, iridicated by
numbers inside the arrows:

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TUESDAY, lAY 5TH

TP-C plans water outage Monday

F Gallt'a-'"nton

' 1 C-..Jkdbu!• Page A3

11 aa lUll ..aPEBtt anus
II Mlill CDUiff

:-Tri-County Briefs:- Haskins

Cheshire Council

•

WRITE·IN BALLOT

meetr·ng ••ay 7

: Registration begins for fall classes . .

. NAACP branch will meet in Jackson

NOJ;mally, these arrews with numbers will appear on o~
near the bottom of plastic containers. There are several
types of plastiC. but only types 1 &amp; 2 are recycled in area .
programs.

. CASI YOUR YOIE FOR ME AS
GALLIA COUNTY COlUIISSIOIIER.
1-,.nk You,

THE

GALLI~ JACKSON, MlliGS,,V~N:OON

Souo WAs'I'E MANAGEMENT Df!ITRICT .
•

RO.ERT RIPPEY, JR.
OH 45631 .

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Patrol tickets driver after accident

· RACINE- A llacine man wa.~ cited for failure 'to control by the Gullla'Meigs Post of the Stale Highway Patrol following a one-car accid!!nt early
~ Saturday on Coianty Road 30 (Morningstar).
.
~ · Troopers said Richanl L. Thornton, 3S, 4S002 Forest Run Road. was east·
•. bound in Sutton Township at 12:45 a.m. when he failed to navillate a curve
··and went off the right side of the road.
•'
The car struck a stump, ovenumed onto its top and struck a mailbox,.
according to the report. The car was sev~rely damaged.

f!i/ffJpf

• 800·S44·18SJ

Funded by
Division

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Ohio Dept. of Natural Resources,
and"Liller Prevention.

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High water-related accident reported

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CHESHIRE- A high water-related accident on SR 554 early Saturday
is under investigation by the Gallia County Sheriff's Depanment.
Deputies said Wendy Long, Oxyer Road, Cheshire, wa.~ traveling on .554,
east of Story's Run Road. around midnight when the 1986 Jeep she drove
entered high water and was disabled.
Long wa.~ not injured and left the scene, but the Jeep was carried downstream after she her depanure, according to initial information.
The i1cident is still undet investigation, deputies said.
.

Suspected srson under Investigation
GALLIA- A suspected arson late Friday is under investigation by the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
.
Deputies were called to SR 233,4.5 miles west of SR 141, around II :30
p.m. after the Greenfield Township Volunteer Fire Depanment found an
apparently abandoned 1978 Ford Bronco on fire. The vehicle had been left
off the road and not near any residen~s. according to the repon.
After the YFD extinguished the fire, the vehicle, registered to Harold Far·
lev of Columbus. wa.~ towed from the scene.
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hid lor by Cally Meaclowa, tttl9, Duty

In response to· Joan Gruosor's ·•lsloadln1
.advortlsl•l co•••nts rogardln1 a ltalancttl
county ltut11ot, horo are tho figures:

1/J!.e

ll~ .

Bldweit, Ohio 45614

(JM//r!

VOTE YES FOR QALLIA COUNTY
CHILDREN'S HOllE AND .
CHILDREN'S SERVICES LEVY ,.

General Fund Balance, Dec. 31, 1993 .... ~.................. $239,149
General Fund Balance, Dec. 31, 1994....................... $242,057
General Fund Balance, Dec. 31, 1995 ....................... $283,654
General Fund Balance, Dee. 31, 1996 ....................... $240,002
Genaral Fund Balance, Dec•.31, 1997 .................. ;.... $215,898
General Fund Balance, March 31, 1998.................... $302,174
THESE FIGURES ARE FACJ~I
Even though costs have risen everywhere,
somehow, during my term In office, Meigs
County has progressed despite no !ncrp11 lg

taxes.
Vote for a commiuioner who believes in
facts, not fiction.
BALLOT WORDING
An additional tax for the benefit of GALLIA COUNTY for
the purpose
of
supporting CHILDRE,.'S
SERVICES and the care, protection and placerrMtnt
of abused, neglected, and dependent children •
Including the operation of the GALLIA COUNTY
CHILDREN'S HOME at a rate of (0.5) mill for each
one dollar of valuation, which amounts to five cents for
each one hundred dollars of valuation, for a period of
(5) years. commencing 1998 tax year.

EMS units answer six calls

.

COST
$30,000 Tax evaluated home will cost $5.25 per year
$50,000 Til)( evaluated home wlll .cost $8.75 per year
$80,000 TIIX evaluated home will cost $14.00 pet year
•

SACRIFICE
YESI A can of pop every two to three weekslls the
SAFETY of the children of Gallla,County worth It?
.
Paid for by All Kids Cot.r1t. Jeff &amp; Marsha Smith, Treas.

22 Edgem0111 Dr. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

•

__,

Uve it up with this great rate on Star Bank's EquiLine With LockRAte. For home
improvemeots.a new car or that dream vacation, it's the best way to borrow.
. For mare i~don. calll;.SQ0.274-41J 1 or oisit our tee&amp;site at UQU).starbank.com.
'

aener·

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.Regional·

May3,11118

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•

Introductory APR fixed
• for 6montlis.
'

Standard APR for lines
• of $50,000 or more.

STARBANK
Bank Without Boundaries

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:commentary
iunbav ~imes· ieadinel
'£stablisfid i/11966

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825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
614 446-2342 • Fax: 446-3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

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A Gannett Co..Newspaper

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Robert L. Wingett
Publisher
Diane tllll
Controller

Hobart Wilson Jr.

Executive Edllor

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__~_____________j

~' ;: Letters to the editor
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''
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j:Shame on cemetery .thieves
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• : Dear Editor,
: · I am writing this letter in reference to flowers that! planted on my father
: : (Dwight Wallace's) grave at Middlepon's Riverview Cemetery.
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•
These were live pansies that were planted on Sarurday afternoon, April
i ' 25th. We then returned to the cemetery less than 24 hours later only lo find
l that they had been stolen. The holes were sri II there in rhe soil. where they
• had .been yanked out. I realize rhal this is no faull of the cemercry workers,
• and ir didn't even bother me about the money thai I had spent ro purchase
, rhese, bur rarher the facrthat someone could even do such a thing.
~
We all have loved ones buried in many of the cemeteries around lhe coun. ' ry, and I just cannot imagine thar someone who was obviously at the cemc' •rery possibly visiling the grave of a loved one, friend, etc ... would have rhe
· audacity to steal live planted flowers from anorher's grave. I jusr hope that
whomever srole our flowers will enjoy them ~s much as we would have. I
am sure you know whB you are, and I hope rhat you feel very much ashamed
of yourself for what you've done. Imagine if rhe shoe were on rhe orhcr foot
How would you feel ?
Nan Swartz
Middleport

By Jack Andllrson
tnl Jan Molter
WASHINGTON - For millions of
~ lhe Supplemental Security
Income program is a l¥t·reson safety net
·!hal helps srave off complete impoverishment
. a.. for lhe unscrupulous fell !he lax
manner in which lhe Social Security
Adminislralion issues SSI paymenlS provides lhe perfect qJpOrtUnily for a rip-off
In New Yod&lt; Gty, a con man was
recently senrenced 10 21 monlhs in prison
af1er il was discovered !hat he had applied
for and received SSI payrnenlS under 16
differenr identities. over the cou~ of
seven years. he' tlefrauded raxpay&gt;rS of
more than $1 million in benefirs trom SSI
imd other govemmenr welfare programs.
This was not an isolared incident The
SSA's inspector geneml has documenled
cases in which "fugitives lium justice ...
have funded their flight~ lium the law
with SSI paymcnlS. " And there,have been
numerous reports of prisoners receiving
moolhly SSI checks !hal could have and should have - gone 10 needier recipicnts.

· sOme 6.5 million _AmCricans,depend

~--

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(NKJ)

the NIV version says. bring them our so we can have sex with them. I
ain no world renown scholar, bur I can hgurc !hal out That is why homosexualiry is known as sodomy. This.has been rhe teachings of the Church for
over I,900 years as well as the rcachings of the Jews for rhousands of years,
and jusr because some will nor live up lo the holy standards of being a Chris!ian, they wanllo change lhe leachings and lower lhe srandards. Even if the
Church docs lower the slandards OILC~rth, and I know some have, rhat does
, nor mean rharrhc God of Heaven will lower them . God does nor change'
l Lcviricus I 8:22, You shall nor lie with a male as with a woman. It is an
1 ahominalion. Again, the inlerprerarion is dear. God made man and women
I
1 ro be logclhcr.
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There arc some who claim !hal rhc Old Tcstamcnl laws concerning conduel are nor passed on inlo rhc Church. Lcr me quore whar Jesus has 10 say
aboutlhat .Mau. 5:18. For assuredly. J say HI you. till heaven and earth pass
1 away. one jot or one rinlc will hy no means pass from the law till all is ful .
1 filled . In rhc ncxr verse Jesus tells u·s rhalthosc who hrc~k rhcsc 'laws and
I
1 teaches others 10 so rhc same will he
I excluded from· rhc Kingdom of Heaven. The passage referred lo in the
lirsl chapter of Romans is roo long lo quolc in lhis lcller. hul it dearly srarcs
that pcnpk turn ro homosexuality nul of vile passions. He says lhcn men
I hum in !heir lust for olher men ~nd women the same. God gave !hem over
I ro a dcoascd mind ro do rhosc things which 'arc nor lining. hcing filled with
: all unrighteousness.
:
I do nol undcrsrand how someone who daims ro he called lo bring the
1 good news of Jesus Christ can lead people into a lifestyle rhal will send !hem
I ro the lake of fire forever. I now know whal Paul mean! when he said in 2
: Timolhy 4:3. For the rime will come when men will nor pur up wirh sound
doclrinc. Instead. 10 suilrheir own desires. they will galhcr around rhcm a
grcal numher of teachers lo say what their ilching cars wharro hear.
If homosexuality is natural. then why can rhcy nor reproduce·&gt; Could il be ·
rhatlhcy were never meanllo he sex partners? Man is g, iv~n rhc divine command lo leave his faihcr and molher and he joined 10 his wife.
ll is none Of my husiness if a man w·anls 10 have anorhcr man (or his sex
panner. hul iris my husincss when someone lrics 10 justify il l&gt;y usi ng my
Heavenl y Father's Holy Word. The only thing I agree wilh in lhis whole anide is rhc tillc. everyone should read rhc Billie for lhemselvcs. ask God 10 aid ·
rhc.m in their sludy. then make rheir own mind up on whalthe Bible really
says. nor whalthey wanl illo say.
·
Come judgmenl day, we will ~ol be judged by what society thinks. what
man's laws declare, nor even what some self appointed Church leader who
claims lo know ir all rclls us, bur we will be Judged according IO God's
word. Revelalions 21 :7-8, He who overcomes shall inherit all things. and I
will he his
By Janp.'1 ~
God an'l he shall be My son.- Burthe cowardly. unbelieving. abominat.lc,
I had been impressed with the Amcr·
· murderer-.. sexually immoral, sorcerers. idolalcrs. and all liars hall hav~ &lt;heir
part .in rl·c lake which bums with fire :md brimsrone. which is rhe ser.ond · ican Association of Retired 'Persons
sillL'C the day lrumcd 50 and an AARP
dcarh. Tb is wharrhc Bible really says.
memheh&lt;hip application package
showed up in my mailbo•.
Whoa. said I. There's a 101 about this
OIJlanilillion that I find imlating. II is too
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big and too liberal. But if the AARP is
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sen110 folks

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Bonding crucial in
ByROBERT WEEDY
Have you noriced how often we
tell the kids no110 do somerhing, bur ·
never seem 10 gel around to saying
why? On !he orher hand, how often
.are they modeled behavior that ar
the besl is adull behavior, and never
shown lhc consequences? If we are
aware of rhe nalural curiosity possessed by children, should adults nor
be more careful in whal we say and
do, as well as in what we don't say
and don'r do?
"Because I said so" could be all
righr for a rime. Bur as rhc child
develops perhaps a simple cKplanation as lo why is needed. Beller ro
hear il from a very responsible adull
who has rhc besl inlcrcsl of rhc child
al hearlthan from a playmarc.
When we apply rhis thinking ro
relationships wilh each other. we
have many choices lo discuss. Lei us
take on rhc subject of sexuality right
up front Ahcr all. il has 10 he rhc
mosr tmportanl suhjccl on rhe minds
of young people roday.
We do not intcnd to rurn the
pages of your family newspaper into
rabloid quallry. bur we ·cerrainly
need to be frank with one anolhcr.
Telling you rhar girls as young as 12
and 13 arc havin'g intercourse with
muhiplc partners in just a few
monrh's rime, arc becoming prcgnanr, arc gelling abortions. are being
infccled wirh sexually lransmiucd
diseases should obtain your permission to ri:ad and hear what is ncxr..
BefOre going any fanhcr. let us
admil 'that there arc those in our

CINCINNATI (AP) - The government sail! Friday police did not
violate any federal criminal lbws
when they shot and killed n brickwielding mental patient in February
1997. .
U.S. Allomey Sharon Zealey said
an investigarion by the FBI and the
Justice Department found no evidence of criminal wrongdoing in the
death of Lorenzo Collins. He had
escaped from a University Hospital

applications. In other cases money was which can be falsified fairly easily and are
who hadn'rtold the govern· subject 10 change.
menl lhai their silUalions had changed,
•'The very nature of the SSI program
which
explains
the
checks
sent
out
10
lends
irself 10 fraud and abuse," one focbasic necessi·~
.
incarcernled airr.inals oc people who've mer claims represenlalive told Congress
ries, like food
.
moved
a1:Jro00.
n:cen~y. "II is a welfare program and, foc
and
sheller.
CongressiJnal
auditors
recently
lhe most part. we must rely on recipien:_,
Most beneficiaplaced
SSI
o~
its
list
of
programs
a1
·
ro repro infonnatioo and changes Ill us. I~
ries are poe.- and
"high-risk" fo- wasrc. fraud and misman- doesn'l rake them long ro realize thai the
elderly, or sufagcmenl
amount of !heir monthly check ... can be
fering from disExplained
lhe
GAO's
Cynlhia
Fagoni
.
affected bY the infomration they furnish
abilities like
rccenrly: "Annual SSI ovelp3yments us.
.
blindness. Nearly
Moller &amp;
have increased steadily (and) program . WINGANDA~YER- Thrrorists
880,00) severely
Anderson
abuses continue 10 occur. SSA still lacks a who want 10 spy on lhe nmer wod&lt;ings of
disabled children
and !heir families depend on !he program comprehensive long-rcrm srrnlegy for !he Fedeml Aviation AdminiSlrnlioo may
have an easier job than !hey lhink.
.
10 keep !heir finance$ afloor lium mooth · improving ... program perf~."
The GAO believes the SSA suffers
By the looks of 1~ mosl of the seemto month.
Unfonuruuely, not all the hard-luck from "an agency cult= !hal rends to ry guards hired 10 provide secwity at 35
cases are as bad as they seem. L.asr year view !he SSI program in much lhe same major FAAfaciliries may not be ~ualilied
alone, lhe SSA dished oul $2.6 billioo in way as''.other benefilS.programs, such as 10 guard a convenience srorc: Yerthese
~·uards. in lhe FAA's own words. arc supSSI overpaymenrs lo people who either Social Security.
In other words, it's rough for anyone posed 10 provide securily against "ar.:ls of
weren't qualified oc who got more th:m
their fair share. Only $437 million of that ro cheat on Social Sccurily payment~. espionage. sabotage. rcnorism and theft."
money was recovered by lhe Social Socu- sincctheonlyrcquircmcnL&lt;arclobeover But in most cases. !hey don't even gel
!he age of 65 and lobe drawing txcinh - hOCkgmund check.~ belarc they're hin:d.
rity Adminislrnlion.
FAA inspccloo; checked a sample of
Invcsrigatoo say mosr of the ovelp3y- . bolh of which arc easily verifiable.
. Bur eligibility for SSI depends on scv- 92 ,.:cwily ~'Uards (including 52 ruined
menrs were the result of fraudulcnl
claims, in which people exaggerated their cml facroo, including income. physic'UI guards) covering six dillcrcnt lt~ilities.
cin:umstances or Oat-our lied on their disabilities and living cin:umslru1CCs -- Here arc lhe dislurbing rc.&lt;uiL&lt;:
.. Eighty of lhe 92 ~·uards never
undcJWCnl a "pre-employmcnl suirabilily" S&lt;.'ll:ening beiOO: !hey were hired. The
S&lt;.'I\.'Cnings include lhings like a scan:h or
local police Iiies and crcdil reports.
-- Only 3 of the 52 anncd guards
could prove !hal !hey' d undergone
firearm&lt; training and knew how In U.'iC
'!heir WClJ!XInS.
-- Only 4 of the 92 guards had undergone the required physical examiruuioo.
When FAA im;peclcxs audilod the
security guards in 1991.they liJUnd many
of the same pmblcms. Of LlJUr.iC, FAA
hurcnucml&lt; pn&gt;miscd to c11!Ck down on
their L'tllllrnL1ors and fox the problem.
Thai was seven ycar.;.ago - ~ the
.same pmhlems still exist l&lt; il any wonder
Why so nmny Americans arc ali:lid to fly?
Jack Anderson and Jan ~are
·wrilers for Unital Fealllft Syndicate,
Inc.

on SSI paymeniS 10 provide
themselves wilh

~orming

sexual r'cvolulion · arc !~it ill vocal

roday.
Parrly because uf rhis many
young people arc totally unallccred
by rhousands of years o( mor~l
cx~rience and moral progress. The
norion of objective moral !ruth is in
disrepute. Sex withourlove. wirhoul
intimacy. wirhour live bahics is the
rrcnd. And, at what cosl'1 ·
The breakdown of !he American
family is ccnainly cenlralln our spimling problems. We hear a lol aboul
lhis, so lei us take a closer look. We
rerum 10 the' suhjccr of. sexuality.
Why should this God given anributc'
be !he source of prohlcms within the
God given family'!
Was not the family provided
because of the need for intimacy and
a structure for funhcring the human
race? Intimacy. is helonging ro or
characlerit.ing one's deepest nature.
hut our curt'Cnt sociery has lessened
it and cheapened it to familiarity. We

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VANDALIA (AP)- As mony as
250 jobs at Geneml Motors Corp.'s
·airbag plant will be eliminared in the
summer ol' 1999, the automaker said
· Friday.
· About660 hourly workers are cur. rently employed at the GM Delphi
· lighring and interior plant, which
·makes airllags and instrument panels.
Delphi spokeswoman Kari Gaffe

,,,

By The AIIOCIIIted Preu
. The l'ollqwing numbers were
. selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lolleries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 5-9-9
Pick 4: 3-0-8-4
Buckeye 5: 4-13-20-22·29
There was one ticket sold listing
all five numbers drown in Friday
night's Buckeye 5 dmwing. and it's
worth $,100.000. the Ohio Lotte!)'
said.
The winning ticket was purcha.o;ed
at R&amp;D Westside Market in Urbana.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$391,815. Players will share
$229.022.
There were 147 Buckeye 5rickets

**
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with four.of the numbers, and each is
worth $2SO. The 4.731tickets showing three of the numbers are each
w'orth $10. and the 44,962 tickets ·
showing two of the numbers are each
worth $1.
The Ohio Lonery will pay our
$426,781.50 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily gaine. Sales
totaled $1,566,328.50. ·
In Pick ·4 Number5 players
wagered $465,762.50 and will share
S156.600.
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Lotto dmwing wa&lt; $12 mi Ilion.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 9-1-0
Daily 4: 5-9-4-8
Cash 25: 1-13-29-20-21-22

Betty Wills

New York Ute lneurance Comp6ny
At: 2, Box 639 A
Point Pl_easant, WV 25550
Bus. 304 675-2323/304 340-4350

The above was submitted as aleHer to the edHor,
but after the publication deadline.

f!ae••··....
.
*
AnEIITIOI MEIIS COUm VOIEU
*
Far Yaar,..

It's clear. It's cordless.
It's·on sale· now.

* On May 5 voters will decide the future of Milga *
County. Does Fred hold meetings behind closed *
doora? He works full time at The Dally Sentinel. *
Does thla create a conflict of Interest? Remember *
-* the hospital laaue? Was Fied ho.neat with Melga * ·
· * County taxpayers? What hila happened with ·our *
* EMS? Are there more tranafera taken out of Melga *
County? Have you stopped to consider the lou H *
.* our hospital Ia totally turned Into an extended *
* health · care facility? Where will we go In ca-. of *
emergency but out of our county? What H ttMtre
·* .Isn't enough time to mbllqe_a person who hila had *•
a stroke or heart attack? ThoH first minutes are
* critical In ..vlng llvea. Ia our hospital better now or *
. * worse? Please atop and give careful consideration *
* for Melga County's future when you cast your vote *
* on May 5. I will not lie or deceive thll public In any *
* way. Vote for Patty Goaglaln Pickens. I truly care *
* about what will happen to all cltlzana of all agee In *
* Melga County. ·
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·-- son. FBI memos, inrclligCR!.'C reports, i&gt;f its most ardent anragonists, fllflf!f
_
otrtcials al the
memorial filled
C!Adocumenrs - you !)3IIIC i~ he could . Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo.,to cJemajks
it our. idcntiflC(I
gtt it. And still con. ·
·
of AARP ofTtcials: ·:Do any of you ~
· his binhdatc as
Vmually every page of his book circs a cr.rp about y&lt;U' grandchildren'/" ,
confidential studies, surveys, memos,
'111c AARP' was able to ama.o;,&lt; l'
183~.' ruid added
the words; "You
reports and AARP "Sir•logrnms" -- riches, in large pan. because ir i&lt; a ~­
may know me
extn:tncly scnsilivc tkx.'IJmcnl&lt; !hal out· exempt oepni7iltion - one of I.7 milbellcr bY my pen
line lhe SRJUp's srrarcgics. "II is easier to lion soch instilulions in the Uni*'
nanic,
Mark
infillr.llc the CIA than the AARP," he SlalCS. And that brings up a favOt!le
Twain." · The
_.._.,me
~-: . lllookaycar-tudcvclophisftr.;t gripe: Why should !he raxpayc11&lt; sub$i·
I:
efficient
enough
10
my
dou!'Slep
return
mail
·
.
on the first day of m~ cligibili~. then I
-·--..,... gel his hands on lhar fillil dilfltheAARP,theNationaiRiOeAS30:
want 11 gwrdmg my Interests 1n Wash- brought a medpie&lt;.'c privilc~tod paper. He ended up ciation, the Christian Coalirion, tfie
ical idenlilica- U......l
1
ington.
with IS,!XXJ pages.
· N~ Football League, Iaber unio4s,
lion cnnl, along
Spur
I By The A11ocl11ted Prell
'
So I joined.
In summary funn, rhc story is thi~: chambers of commcn:c, counlly cl~
Today is Sunday, May 3, Ihe 123rd day of 1998. There arc 242 days left
Now comes Dale Van A!IJIIO rcll me with a rcqUCSI for
The AARP wa' the prodlll1 of a symbi, operas and 7.oo&amp;'l I say it is time to WI
_
in rhe year.
!hal the AARP was 1101 so compelelll as Twain's membership fcc.
otic relarionshir between Ethel Percy them all olht the knees.
:
"Inside the AARP" truly delivers on Andrus. a rcti/):'.1 ICacher whu wanrcd to
Today 's Highli~ht in History:
.
il was cMauslive.ln a new book. "TJ11S!
One 'last thing:' "Trust ·Bclrny&lt;iJ:
Fifry" y.ears ·ago, on Mqy 3, 1948. the U..S. Supreme Coun ruled that Beuuyed: Inside the AARP;' Van Ana whar il promiscs. ll is a,, "inside" a look do good, and Leonard D•vis, an insur- · Inside the AAkP" is published bY Regcovenants prohibiting rhe sale of real estate to blacks or members, of ,Oiher says the orptizalicln spends Ill least $8 at the sccond-larsest oegani~ion in the ana! man who wanrcd lo ma!&lt;c money. nay, the right-wing house that customracial groups were legally unenforceable. .
.
million a 'JG1I on "membership acquisi- United States (33 million members) as AARP got a chunk of every policy sold arily afflicJs society with sud! rullhish as
On rhis dat~:
tion'" solicillllions, and much of this is you will ever get.
10 its mcmbe11&lt;; both il and Davis even- Gary Aldrich's "Unlimircd Aca:ss," ltl
In 1802, Washington. D.C.. was incorporared ~sa 'cily.
...
waslfd becmse of mailing mistakes.
Indeed. getting ''inside" is VanAtta's lually got VCI)' rich.
don 'r let this tum you off. Van Atllj's
I In 1916. Irish nationalist-Padraic Pearse and two orhers were executed by Every ~• .ays Van Ana. the AARP specialiry. I know rhis because we
ll»productline cKpandcd. and soon book is 1101 an ideolocicailllll.'t. It i&gt;' a •
I the Brirish for their roles in the Easter Rising.
.
solicili nemiy lilllf a million people who worked together for a decade as associ- the AARP was peddling cvcryll'ilng solid invcsligalivc rcpon that should 6c
I In 1921 , West Vi!Jinia imposed rhe firsr stale sales lax. ·
arc 100 young to join, and ilnother five ates of investigalive reponer Jilek from mutual fund~ 10 prescription &lt;Wgs. read bY all whO are or hope 10 be scni{lr
In 1944, U.S. wanime rationing of moslgralles of meats ended.
miWon who an: dead.
Anderson. In 30 years of muckraking, I Along the way it developed imo one of citi7.ens.
.
In 1945. Indian forces captured Rangoon, Bunna, from the J~.
One oftheAARP's most embanass- have never ell&lt;XlUlllered anyone who !he most formidable loiJbying giOOI!i in
I'm kreping my AARP m ; but: I
In 1948, Pulitzer Prizes were awarded to playwright Tennessee Wilh1111s ing 1apaes occurred when it dispatched could vacuum up confidential docu- Walhington, feared on both ends of can't say I wasn't w...OO.
:
for "A Streetcar Named Desire" and ro novelist James Mict."Tales .an lplilication to Mr. and Mrs. S. ments with the acumen of Dale Van Pennsylvania Avenue, It has staunchly • Jllleph · Speer il • syndlalt$1
of the South hcific."
Clemens, care of the Hartford, Conn., Ana. I used to think the dim things coa- promoted budgrt-busting Medicare and writer for New ; ;..-..-- Ellie~
home where Marlt"Twain once lived . lesced out of lhe air and c!l.tg 10 his per- Social Security bencfirs, prompling one Aw• Whu
:;

be~

1

l

Just push abutton 10 select the dearest of
25 cbannels-N!Il during call~ CCT circuilly
redt!ces sraric. 10-number speetklial memory.

to the Editor:

1 am writing to lei the citizens of Gallia County know thai I
have no inlenlion of engaging in a leuer writing contest with
my detractors or involving myself in dirty politics. I feel this
would only be a detriment to Gallia County and the positive
progress and improveme.nts which have been accomplished
over the past four years.
The accusations being made have been addressed and
answered by this office many times in the past, however some
have chosen not to accept our responses.
1 have strived to make Gallia County com1'4!titive now and
in the '21st Century through positive action in economic
development such as the industrial park and Borg Warner
expansion, protecting the environment with construction of
state-of-the-art sewer systems, upgrading law enforcement and
emergency service systems and equipment, establishment of an
enhanced 9-1-1 · system, computerization of county
departments, support for strengthening our 'agricultural base,
emergency sheJ~r_ p_rograms, an__ aggressive grant program
providing funds for resurface and repair of county and township
roads, city and village slreets and sidewalks, storm sewers
systems, housing rehabilitation, fir_e protection equipment and
facilities, support for public service agencies (Outreach Center,
Senior Cilizens Center, Veterans Services), and proper
budgetary management.
.Qallia County stands to lose mill,ons of dollars in revenue
through_public utility deregulation in the future , however I have
and will continue to lobby legislators statewide to insure that
Gallia County receives its fair share in the proposed
deregulation bill.
'
·
My primary goal is and will continue to be to provide first
rate services which are necessary to nut(ure the quality of life'
• '-·fnr the residents ofGallia Coun!y in a competent and efftcient
manner. I strive to achieve this goal on a day to day basis and I
look forward to tbe opportunity to serve you in the future.

·New book on AA·RP hits hard .,

loday I n hI story

Attention Meigs Countiansf

naana
*
·: PII If IIIGLIII PICDII :

diseases we hav.c bred in rhc livcs•nf
many'! As !he hippies linally soul!hl
help allhe free dinic. will we return
ro basic principles. In comnion
sense. and in some cases to sanjly
irsclf."-./
•
The qucsrion of what Is rruc and
righr is in deep douhrroday. We hailc
fuilcd our children horh ar home ~d
in nur schools. Many can not •'IIY
why America was on the right side
in rhe Second World War, some ev~n
douhl lhar we were in the right TJte
assault on objective trulh has failed
us misembly and we arc rhe victinis.
With many of our young pco~le
morally confused and ill · informed
will we be conrenr wirh the sra.Us
quo?
•
Robert Weedy Is a cornspcttdent for the Sllnday tlmes-Sep·
tlnel.
· •

.

a criminal civil rights case involving the shooting.
versity of Cincinnati cleared the offi- sity police have re-examined training
a confrontation with police officers.''
Hinton said Friday he hod not cers of ariy wrongdoing in the shoot· . progmms and the way in which offiThe Justice Depanment's civil been made aware of the Justice ing: Since then, the city and univer· cers deal with menrally ill patients..
rights division has closed the inves- Department's 'conclusion and would
tigatilJil. she said.
not·comment until he n:views it
Millon Hinton, Cincinnati chapter
Collins' family has civil lawsuits
presidenr of the National Association 'P"nding against Univen;ity Hospital,
for lhe Advonce111en1 of Colored Cincinnati and the police officers
Apr. 28, 1998
People, had complained 10 the Justice involved. The family's lawyer, KenTo
Whom
it
May
concern
,
Deparlm~nl. In May 1997, the' neth Lawson. declined comment FriCincinnati Cily Council asked the day on the government's conclusion.
I am the blind lady that everyone is talking about, and
FBI and Justice Department to review
Reviews by the city and the Uniknows nothing about. I was a resident at the county home, it's
my home, and yes, I miss being there, but no one forced me to
leave. I kept praying about it, and made my own·decision.
I recently moved to the Maples, and am adjusting real well
to the change, In fact, I'm doing great. People say 1 have no
Gaffe. "But we're confident that reptesenrs employees at the plant,
working together we will be able to wa~ not returned.
assistance, which is definitely a lie; belween the Sr. Citizens'
reven;e this alarming trend."' ·
More than I00 workers at the
Center and Pass Port, I get plenty of help. Unless I cancel out,
However, she said if the trend is plant were laid off last year when progirls come to my apt. seven days a week, and they're
not reversed. there ciluld be addi- duction of one part produced at the
wonderful to me.
tional layoii~ after the summer of plant was awarded 10 another comAs a child,· I attended the 'State School for Blind in
1999. She would not say how many. pany and a design change in another
Columbus, Ohio, and was taught to do many things. 1type, run
A message left for United Steel part required less labor.
a microwav'!l, use a loaster, just to menlion a lew. By the way, I
Workers of America Local 87, which
Vandalia is about I0 miles north of
also Jake my own bath, and get clean . . 1 signed a paper,
Dayton.
thinking it was lo help save the home, and it came out in the
paper that I was incompetent. In the near future , a teacher
from the Agency lor the Blind is coming to teach me how to be
Amanda B. Marshall
·more independent When we leave it to God, He always takes
care of us, and' supplies our needs. I can't take any more
Agent
harassment, and I'm sick and tired of people using me to make
someone else look bad, and If this garbage doesn't stop, I will
take legal action. Thank you.
· The Company You Keep•

.·*

grunge. lhc itch and lhc rnt Will :.c

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said the cuts are necessary because of
the redesign of some future cars and
trucks and because of the loss of .
some business the compaity had been
bidding for.
"The company's business continues 10 be highly competitive, and we
are concerned about our ability to win ·
new and replacement business," said·

:·o hio, W.Va. lottery selections

lead ro such thinking? Are we nor
learning that is easier to tear apan
social fabric tb;tn it i~ lo pul it bpck
rogelher again?
.
We gleefully. even ca.~ually lhrnw
out customs and pracriccs not knowing lhe implicalions tir cosls. Os.;ar
Wilde once said, "I can resist evcrylhing except tcmplalion. " We
describe ltx&gt;lcrs a.&lt; "nnn,rradllinhal
shoppers" and killers as "morally
challenged".
The hippies of rhe sixties dcci&lt;ll:d
Ul sweep·aside the tudes of the past
nnd return tn i'.Crn und stun nvcr.
They lm&gt;k no harhs and rhus hl},'d
~.:umc In our senses and rcali1.c

psychiatric unit, confronted city and
University of Cintinnati police officers with a brick and was shot three
times, dying five days later.
'"The investigation into all allegations and potential leads failed to
establish evidence !hal fedeml laws
had been broken," Ms. Zealey said.
"I have met with&lt;COmmunity leaders
in advance of this public sratemenl
aod have explained the decision and
the high burden of.proof required in .

.

isn't dry rrom the previous piece the · diseases such as the mange , the

bond may he hrnkcn and we st.,rl
over in the process uf honding. In
real life we call it. divorce.
In a society where we want tu ge.i
to slcp 12, and skip over several
along the way. Is it any wonder rhat
rhc bonds won'! hold'! . They were
never givcri a fair chance lo develop
and sci up. Yes. rherc arc objective
reasons In follow the steps. They ·
resuh in lastint relationships. strung,
families and cxcc.llcnl havens fnr
· raising well-developed children.
America is nnw inln the sccnnd
generation !hal ha.~ hecn led mural
garbage and we sec kids who arc
incompetent of makinl! one single ·
• cunlidcnl moral judgment They
have said that given a choice
berwccn saving a pel ur a human
· being, they would save the pel. Is it
any wonder that the u,nique dignity
·and wonh of every human life, ·
being dis&lt;Jained as it is today, could

t

.GM .schedules
job eUminations at airbag
.
. plant

·relationships

::----, eommuniry
. wont to bypass all those events of
rhal rhink this life thai conrribute lo real. intimacy,
is just fine gelling io acrually know ~omeone,
and normal and proceed lo physical inrimacy for
for kids. Per- pleasure's sake. ·
haps you have
Those skilled in how solid relamcl some of lionships arc bui It tell us !hal 12
lhcm. I know steps arc involved when it comes to
some of our girl/boy relationships. There is first
kids
have. eye conlacl. you notice on~ anolhcr.
They relegate Thai may later lead to voice conlacl .
morals ro the Larer on there could be face ro face
Weedy
stone age and contaci. This is a process known as
view them as bonding. h rakes time. much like
repressive to a lif~sryle . Yes. in spire wailing for the glue In dry when
of rhc resuhs. rhcse ·'thcorists' of the pulling models rogcrher: If lhc glue

~

FedS'find no wrongdoing in shooting of mental patient

Cracking down on SSI abuses

Responds to wire story

Dear Editor,
I am responding 10 a wire anicle thai was published in !he Sunday limesSentinel on April 26: This anicle was in the C-4 section, and tilled "Read
your Bible, make your own int
rarion." So I did, and I would like 10 scr
the record srraight.
Genesi~] 9:4-5, Now b&lt;-·ore lh
lay
n, rhe men of the city, the men
of SO&lt;:(om, both old and ) 1ung, an
ople from every quaner, sur'
rounded the house. And lhry called lo Lor' and said 10 him, "Where are lhe
\ men who came 10 you tonight? Bring !hem OUilo us that we may know lhem
I carnally."

Ohio/W.Va.

Sunday, May 3, 1H8

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··Sunday, May 3, 1998

Patrol probes ir:-j_ury-related
~ccidents in .Gallia County

Nina R. Adkins
GALLIPOLIS- Nina R. Adkins, SI, S~uth Charleston, W.Va., died Fri·
day. May I. 1998 in the Holzer Senior Can: Center, following a lengthy ill·
ness.
Born in Ridgely, W.Va., daughter of the late James Roscoe and Myrtle
_Brotemarkle Robinette, she was a relined licensed practical nurse with the
Charleston (W.Va.) Area Medical Center, and McMillion and Thomas hospitak
She was a member of the South Charleston Senior Citizens, the RSVP,
the Union Carbide Retirees Golf and Bowling Club, and the First Baptist
Church JOY Group of South Charleston. .
Surviving are two sons, Charles (Marge) Adkins Jr. of Gallipolis, and Har·
ry D. (Carmen) Adkins of Jacksonville, Fla.: three grandchildren and three
great-granddaughters; a brother, Kenneth Robinette of Lavale, Md.; and two
sisters, Carrie Weimer of Cumberland, Md., and Arbutus Shaw of Seattle,
Wash.
GALLIPOLIS- Dennis P. John·
Services will be II a.in. Monday in the First Baptist Church. D Street. son of the Gallia County Juvenile
Soulh Charl~ston. with Or. Richard Sargent officiating. Burial will be in the Court has been certified as a chemiMadison Memory Gardens, Madison, W.Va. Friends may call at !he Snod· cal dependency counselor Ill CCC DC
grass Funeral Home, 4122 MacCorkle Ave., South Charleston. from 2-4 p.m. Ill) ~y the Ohio Credentialing Board
Sunday.
·
·
for Chemical Dependency ProfesThe family suggests that donations be made to the Holzer HoSpice, 100 sionals.
. Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, or the Eirst Baptist Church of South .
The certification is awarded·only
Charleston, D Street and Sixlh Avenue, South Charleston, W.Va., 25303.
after extensive experience and a
board testing proceS&amp; that "takes five
years to complete.
Johnson has been employed by the
LONG B~lTOM -'- Stanley L. Boyce, 75, Long Bottom, died Friday, court for the past three years. PreviMay I, 1998 m Veterans Memorial HospitaL ' ·
ously, he was employed at the Jack. Born Jan. I, 1923 in Clay, W.Va., he retined, after working for 36 years son Treatment Center of Jackson
m Butte, Mont., as a miner and· pipe fitter.
General Hospital, Ripley. W.Va., as a
Surviving a~ his wife, Frances Merchant Boy~e. Long Bottom; three rreatmenl assistant, and later at the
~ughlers,_ Berntce !Roy) McKinney of Rio Rico, Ari.z., Carol (Truly) Cock·
Gallia County Family Addiction
~n~ of Whitehall, Mont,~ Annette Boyceof Yakima. Wash.; three grand·
Clinical Treatment Services as a subchildren and three great grandchildren; and a brother, Russell Boyce of Point stance abuse counselor.
Pleasant, W.Va.
Gallia County is one of the few
: There will be no calling hours and no services. Arrangements are by the non-urban juvenile courts in Ohio to
Middleport Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home.
have a eeoc Ill on its staff, said
Memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs County Humane Soci· Court Administrator Gregory A.
ety, P.O. Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Shrader.
"A majority of the youth the court
deals with have some form or-sub·
stance buse problem, whether it be
RACINE- Arden Carl Davidson, 48, 27231 Apple Grove·Do('Cas Road, personally or within the family,"
Rac~i
e, formerly of Tallmansville, W.Va., died Friday, May I, 1998 at his said Shrader. "Mr. Johnson's views
rest nee.
on substance abuse have changed the
ices and burial will be in Upshur County, W.Va.
·
way the juvenile court .treats subLocal arrangements are by the Cremeens Funeral Horne. Jtacine.
stance abuse offenders in the rehabilitation pmcess."
"Education and and perseverance
are key components to treating juveMASON, ,W.Va. - Frederick W. Gibbs Jr., 6S, Mason, died Wednesday, nile offenders," added Judge Thomas
April 29, 1998 in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
S. Moulton.
Born May 16. 1932 in Mason. son of Frederick W. Gibbs Sr., who died
in 1963, and'Gertrude E. Edwards Gibbs Preston, who died in 1993, he was
Minor !jury reported
' a truck driver for Smith Transfer, Belle, W.Va.
A U.S. Air Force veteran. he was a n\emberoflheAmerican Legion Smith·
GALLIPOLIS - Minor injury
Capehart Post -140. New Haven, W.Va.
was reported in a two-car accident
Surviving are two daughters, Venida K. (C.J.-) Sanders 'ofLanca~ter, S.C., Friday on the 100 block of Third
and Trina L. (Tony) Stocart of Spring, Texas~ four grandchildren; two broth· 0 Avenue in Gallipolis, investigated by
ers, Robert B. (Judy) Gibbs ofCiihon, W.Va., and Richard L. CPauline)Gibbs · the Gallia,Meigs Post of the State
: of Decatur. Texas; a sister, Doris S. Carder of Middleport; and several nicc:es Highway Patrol.
: · and nephews.
·
·
Robin F. Brannan, 32. 162 Wright
There will be no services. Arrangements are by !he Foglesong''Funeral . Road. Patriot, refused treatment :it !he
scene of the 12:05 p.m. crash, troopHome, Mason.
ers said.
Brannan was southbound when
the car she drove collided with a car
SOUTHSIDE. W.Va. - Johll Franklin Lewis, 85, Southside, died Satur- driven by Robert L. Marchi, 67,620
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, that had
day, May 2, 1998 in the Arbors of Gallipolis.
,
Born Feb. II, 191.3 in Beech Hm, W.Va., son of tile late M.C. and Nao- pulled onto Third from a private dri·
mi Brannon Lewis, he was a retired employee of the Mason County Board veway, accordipg 10 lhe report.
The collision caused Brannan's
of Education, and the Lewis Texaco Station in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
He was a member of the Beech Hill United Methodist Chureh in South· car 10 continue on and strike a brick
wall ill !he home of Robert Cornwell,
side.
Surviving are his wife, Beulah Barnett Lewis; two daughters, Mary Jane 129 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Damage 10 Brannan's car was
(Jerry) Sayre and Virginia Ann (Nick) Berent. both of Gallipolis; a son, John
. Robert (Pam) Lewis of Southside; 13 grandchildren and nine great-grand· severe, and moderate to Marchi's car,
children; two sisiers, Mildred A. Roush and Bernice (Preston) Andefson. both !he report said.
' of Point Pleasant; a sister-in-law. Ethel Lewis of Point Pleasant; and severCIUtlo• ltsued
GALLIPOLIS -Cited by Gallipoal nicc:es and nephews.
lis City Police Friday were Charles
He was also preceded in death by two brothers and two sisters.
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in tile Beech Hill United Melhodist W. Bush, 45-ln Court St., Gallipo' ·Church, with tile Rev. Louis A. Hus'sell and !he Rev. Bobby L. Woods offi- lis, for disorderly by intoxication, and
' ciilling. Burial will be in tile Beech Hill Cemetery, Soutbside. Friends may lr:a P. Barcus Ill, 20~ 55 Garfield Ave.,
• callill tile Crow-Hussell Funenl Home, Point Pleasant, from f&gt;-9 p.m. Sun- Gallipolis, for leaving !he scene of an
accident, according to police record.~.
: day, and ill tile church .on Monday one hour prior 10 the service.
In other matters, Michael L.
Ziaceek, 25, Newark, was .lodged in
the Gallia County Jail early Sillurday
• GALLIPOliS- Nancy Eileen Studer, S J; Ga)lipolis, died Thursday, April by the Gallia-Meias Post of the Siate
Highway' Patrol on a charge of pro: 30, 1998 at her residence.
.
, Born July 26, 1946 in MaritmOIII, Ohio. she wa~ die daughter _of the late · bation violation, according to jail
records.
• Clifford and Mary Emery Studer.
. Surviving is a cousin, Anna Davis of Lockland, Ohio.
Watch meetiq Ml
Services will be I p.m., Monday in tile Cremeens Funeral Chapel. with
VINTON - The Huntington
the Rev. Chuck Stansberry officiating. Burial will be in the Centenary Ceme- Township/Vinton Village Neighllor·
tery. Friends may call at the chapel on Monday one hour prior 10 the service.
hood Watch has slated its monthly
meeting for Saturday, May,9 at I p.m.
in the Vinton Village Hall.
The public is invited 10 attend; and
Munitiplll
Divorce filed- Paul~- ~upe Jr., . for more informatiobn, call 446The following ca'ICS were recent· 2161 Loncoln Poke, Galhpohs, from 1221.
ly filed in GallipOlis Municipal Court: ' Ao:n~ M._ RuP':• 762-112 ~ond Ave.,
\
Bench warrants have been issued Galhpoh~; Ehzabeth K. G•~lenwater, I
for the (ollpwing people who failed Cro~n Cny. from James Glllenw~
10
for recent sliOw-cal.se hear· II, Bodwell; JoellaCooper-, 5~ Quail
Veterans Memorial ,
inp:
·
Creek Road, from B_rent A. Cooper,
Friday admissions_ Collis JewGlenn P. Dubois, Larry E. Duke, same address; Benota F. Marcum ell, Pomeroy. ,
Carl H. Duncan Jr., John Duncan, from DonaldS. Marcum, both of VinFriday discharges - none.
Nelson E. Dunlap. Robert C. Dunn, IOun . ~----....;;;;===;;:;;:===========i!
Steven R. Durham. M,ry A~_Durst,
r
WilliamE.Eakins, O:ividC.J'beflll.
Charle5 D. Edwards, Eric M.
.
•
.I 1
• •
Edwards. Kevin R. l!ldridJG. 1irnothy L. Elkins, Kensey Ellioct. Nanette
• M. EllioU. Kelly EII&amp;Jish. W.tlace G.
Ellglish, Barron S. Epling; Brent E.
: Epling, Lonnie Eplin, W11yne I!;
ZPan:e llld Tony ·A. Robinson.

Gallia court
staffer wins
certification

I'

Stanley ·L. Boyce

Arden C. Davidson

I

I

Frederick W. Gibbs Jr.

-Area Briefs:__;;

John F. Lewis

I

II

.

;Nancy E. Studer

Gallia County

co~Jrt

POMEROY - The following plus costs; Rev a J. Mullen, Pomeroy, CJon; no OL, $100 plus costs. 10 days
cases were settled recently in the failure to control, $25 plus cosL•; jail concurrent with DUI,. one year
Meigs County Court of Judge Patrick Charles E. Tnider, Albany, stop sign, probatit;&gt;n; left of center, cosl~ only.
H. O'Brien.
.
$10 plus costs; seat belt; $25 ·plus
Fined were: Steve B. Donaldson, costs; Dwayne A. Barley. Rutland.
Long Bottom. speed, $-30 plus costs; take wild turkey during closed seaDanny L Walker, Pomeroy, unSc.cure son, $150pluscosl,, 30daysjail sus·
load, $20 plus costs; John A. Coop· pended. one year hunting license suser, Athens, speed, $30 plus cos'ts; pension, one year probation, $225
Joseph S. Tillis, New Haven, W.Va., forfeiture to law enforcement trust
speed. $30 plus costs; James T. Far- fund; possession of illegal turkey
ris, Plain City, seat belt, $15 plus parts, two counts, $25 plus costs on
costs; Jason H. Nottingham, .Long each, one year probation, 30 days jail
Bottom, expired operator's license, suspended on each; William J. Reit·
$200 plus costs, 15 days jail and $100 mire, 'Pomeroy, fictitious tags. $10
suspended if valid OL presented plus costs; Stanley Watson, Rutland,
within 45 days; William Lehew, speed, $27 plus costs; seat belt, $25
Pomeroy, domestic violence, costs, plus ·costs;
WE NEVER
30 days jail suspended to two days,
Walter D. Arnold, Pomeroy, dri·
two years probation, restraining order ving under FRA suspension, $200
' CoMPROMISE ON
issued; disorderly conduct, costs plus costs. five .days jail and $100
only;
suspended if valid OL ~resented
QUAL11Y
Donald J. Steinmetz, Middleport, within 90 days, vehicle immobiliza.
BUT OCCASIONALLY
driving under the influence, $1,000 • lion; Charles R. Craig, Jackson, driplus costs, siJI. months jail, two year · ving under FRA suspension, SJOO '
.WE Do ON PRICE.
OL suspension, two years probation; plus cosl~. $75 suspended ifvalid OL
SPRING SALE
driving under suspension, $200 plus presented within 60 days; Todd
costs, six months jail concurrent . Wildell, Stewart.• driving under s~s­
NOW IN PROGRESS
with DUI,two years probation, vehi· ·pension, $100 plus costs•. three days
'•
cle forfeiture; expined ·tags, cosl' · jail and $50 suspended if valid OL
only; failure to dim headlights, costs presented within 66 days; seat belt,
only; resisting arrest, 90 days jail con· $25 J?lus cosL~; Christi Waugh, Mid·
current with DUI; costs, .two years dlepon, theft, costs, restitution, 10
probation;
days jail suspended. one year proba·
Matlhe~ K. Burke, Pomeroy, fail·
tion; ·
ure 10 di~play valid license plates,
Shannon _E. Petrie, Middleport,
$10 plus costs; Kimberly Turner.- DUI, $300 plus costs, IO days jail
Coolville, seat belt, $25 plus costs; suspended to three days, 90-day OL
Cyn!hia M. Smith. Syracuse, driving suspeosion, one year probation; stop
under financial responsibility action sign violation, $20 plus costs;
suspension, $150 plus cosl~. three - William E. Cochran, Vinton, seat
days jail and $75 suspended if valid belt, $25 plus cosl'; Angela J. Riggs,
520 W. Main SL- Pom1f117, 0
OL presented within 60 days; failure Leon, W.Va., DUI, $850 plus costs,
Phone 9111-11188
to display valid license plates, costs 30 days jail suspended to 10 days, · .L-....:~Vi~•~nlo~n;·.::~~t~t!:~:a~s~II~-J
only; Gregory A. Sellers, Portland, one year probation, one year OL sus·
seal belt, $25 plus costs;.Gary Black, pension, 90-day vehicle immobilizaSyracuse, theft. costs, 30 days jail f:~~--------"'!"
suspended; Earl A. Goode, Middle·
~
Serving the area over 1 a years
port. speed, $75 plus cost~;
24 HoUt' Ser·Vtce
George T. Ba•im, Long Bottom,
_'
Oxygen Servic.e
speed, s21 plus co•ts: seat belt. s2s
THE MEDICAL SHOPPE INC.

Gallipolis (614 J 446-2206
Toll Fr-ee 1-800445·2206
1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

~

Com-PleM
The following cases were recept·

~ lv fi~!d in the GaJ)ia CqpntyC...IUOijMi

HOME OXYGEN JME~'l:
~
., ....... Bleil• OfWfBIPN'
•WI I ':Jiillia•

..W.•WIS•
F,_ 01......,. •

itelolltf

•

~~~

. Police, student$
:. clash at protest

Mark Dillon
Sales Manager

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

May. is Better Hearing Month!

appear

PAll COIITIOL CLIIII(WEIGHT CONTROL

OJcvg:;a~:~s~~~~~~~ Equipment

Local Hearing Professional
.Donates "Gift of Hearing"
To ·A Senior In Need!

Hosp.ltal new"s

fiiiiLY PU_
__CJICE

By ROB WELLS
AP Tax Writer
WASHINGTON- Internal Revenue Commissioner Charles 0.
Rossoui said Friday the latest nile·
•' gations of cover-ups and misconduct
by criminal investigators support his
own pursuit offundarnental change ill
the IRS.
·
"I think every American who
heard the testimony would be just as
disturbed as I was, and we simply
must change the conditions that lead
to the kind of situations described by
your witnes.'&gt;Cs,'' Rossoui told the
_Senate F:inance Committee on the
fourth and final day of oversight hear·
ings into the IRS.
But he reminded the panel that
overhauling a far-flung Internal Rev·
enue Service and its work fo,.Ce of
102,000 people won't happen easily,
or overnight.
..
"Chan1e of this magnitude will
take time, and there is no magic for·
mula or easy solution t)lat will quickly solve the IRS' problems and trans·
form it into a quality-service organi·
zation," Rossoui said. "We will
make progress, Mr. Chairman, but it
will be step by step, over a period pf
years... ·
The Sei.ate will take a step next·
week toward strengthening oversight
when it debates IRS restructuring legislation. The bill. which pa~sed the
House in · November, also would
• grant taxpuyers a range of new rights.
;
Rossoui received a warm wei·
come from the committee chairman,
' • Sen. William V. Roth Jr., R-Del., after
Roth and his staff orchest111ted three
· · days of damaging testimony about
: the tax agency.
:
. The committee heard tales of
• armed IRS criminal inspectors raid·
ing businesses whose owners didn't .
pose a violent threat, and !hen failing
• to bring ·criminal charges. Several
• IRS agents testified they faced retnl• iation from managen alier attempting
to blow the whistle on misconduct.

MEDICAL muiPMENr _
s suPPuEs

wheels will be churning the waters of
thf Ohio River in October a1the Tall
Slacks festival-returns to the Port of
Cincinnati.

news

ROBERT·· HOLLE" M D

· reform
. pursui~of
.

. .___; ; . .;._____•

CINCINNATI (APJ - Paddle .

·;

.

.

-· In observance of Better Hearing Month, Mel Mock, owner of
. Advance~ Hearing Centers, Inc. of GaiJipolls and Proctorville
will provide a deser'VIng hearing Impaired senior with a pair of
hearing Instruments absolutely FR~E of cott If you, a friend or
loved one areln need of a hearing ald(s), but.have not sought
help due to the cost of hearing aida, contact us today!
With many yea... of service to our area, Advanced Hearing
Centers would like to give "The Gift Of Hearing" to a
daHrvlng Hnlor. The recipient will be chosen ~y random
drawing from the qualified patients who apply. Caii,Y1~1971
or 800-434-4194 today for. details and a confidential
consultation. Applicants will not be taken after May 22nd.

1

•

''

• PegeiU
j
I

•

Bank, 10 be ba.o;ed in the heart ofGermany's financial capital of Frankfurt.
The bank will control interest
rates and rponetary policy and is foreseen as a strong, independent body to
rival the U.S. Federal Reserve for
global influence.
A battle between France and Ger·
many over who should head the bank
'had threatened to spoil Saturday's
festivities . French President Jacques
Chirac, German Chancellor Helmut
Kobl and Qutch Prime Minister Wim
Kok haggled for a last-minute deal.
Ahearn provided no detai Is on
Duisenberg's appointment Chime.
who was backing his own candidate.
Jean-Claude Triche!, 55. had pushed
for a compromise under which
Duisenberg would step down four
years early to allow the Frenchman 10
take over.
.
The EU's single currency treaty
mandates eight-year, terms for .the
bank presidents, and Saturday's
wrangling wa• over how to phrase an
agreement on how split the job with·
out violating the.treaty.
·
The euro's supporter.; say it will
boost business by cutting bank

charges, lowering the ri sk bf
exchange rate fluctuations and giving
European companies the stability pf
a huge domestic market - like their
U.S. competito~ ..
'
"Monetary union can be the pl~t ·
form on which to build hjgh levels of
growth and employment," said
Brit;oin's Chancellor of the Exchequer
Gordon Brown.
..
Not everybody is convinced .
Opinion polls published la.~t weekend
show more than half of Germans .
would rather keep the mark. Recent
EU polls show just 51 percent of Git ·
izens across the Union want i)le
euro.
'
Critics fear the euro will end in an
ex~ensive and dangerous fai lu[e.
Others object to the loss of natioilal
intlependence.
i
" We're meeting to celebrate the
death of II currencies ... It's the ef'd
of our nation-states." fren.ch
exrreme-right politician Jean-Matie
Le Pen complained in a speech to ~e
European Parliament.
'
The EU a'sembly voted 467-65 on
Saturday to formally endorse the
euro 's launch.

that statement ,'' Springer said.
"That's absurd .... I don 't want to
tone it down."
Springer sa.id he plans to meet
with the company.
"I' m not going to leave, but I'm
going to make it clear about the show

that the' public seeins to want and that
I've agreed to do,': Springer tcild
Stem. who has had his own fights
with station managers over ~is
show's content.
·

Abuse allegation~ .
.
support IRS chief's Tone it down? Forget it, Springer declares :'

Cases ended in County Court

Home

~~. .
, liU t•:t.•J~JOJIIMbJol'

By PAUL AMES
a fiflh of world economic output,
Auoclated PreM Writer
abQut the same proportion as the
BRUSSELS, Belgium- Leaders l}nited States.
. of II European nations. proclaiming
" It is an historic day because the
a new era of unity and prosperity, pre· euro is going to have a huge impact
pmd Saturday to form. an un prece· on ... !he future of the people of
dented economic union with the euro Europe," said British Prime Minister
as their shared currency.
Tony Blair, chairman of this week-.
But !he landmark agreement was end's euro summit.
.
o;lelayed as the leaders sought to
"It's going to have an impact on
resolve a bruising dispute over who countries in the euro, those outside it
should head Euro~ ·, powerful new and the rest of the world," he told
central bank. They ultimately chose BBC radio.
Dutchman Wim Duisenberg to hold . hal ian . Prime Minister Romano
the top job for four years, sa(d Irish Pnxli said: "A page has turned, and
Prime Ministe,r. Bertie Ahearn.
a new chapter opens in our history."
The launch ·of the euro on Jan. I
Germany, France and Italy,
will create a vast economic bloc Europe's biggest economic powers,
stre"tching from· Finland's Russian will be at the heart of the currency
border to th~ Atlantic shores of Ire· union. Wilh them will be Spuin. the
land to' the tip of the Italian boot. Netherlands, Austria. Belgium, Por·
TELLING HIS SIDE -Internal Revenue Service CommluiOn·
Almost 300 million people will have tugal, Ireland, Finland and Luxem' er Charlee. Q. RoaaoHI geaturwd while teatlfylng on Capltpl Hill
euros in their pockets and purses ahe.r bourg.
·
.
Friday before the Senate Finance Committee hearing on the IRS. · the new banknotes and coins arrive in
Of the other four European Union
2002.
.
'
· RosaoHI reaffirmed that !Ia would change the agency's top mannations, Britain, Sweden and Denagentenf and would reform heavy-handed abu- of power by the
Euroland, as people here are mark have de.cided to stay out, for
IRS. (AP)
'
.
· ·
already calling the new bloc, will be now, to retain national control. of
the world's biggest trading power, monetary po!icy. :
accounting for 18.6 percent of $lOb·
Crucial 10 the functioning of the
al commerce. It will represent almost new currency is the European, Cen1ral

GALLIPOLIS- A one-car acct· Blue Lake Drive, Ciallipolis, refused p.m., troopers said.
Garten was westbound in Green
dent Friday on County Road 7 rreatment at the scene, troopers said.
Janet Jones was eastbound, one Township when he was unable to
(Georges Creek) left the driver
injured, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the mile west of State Route 7, at 9:43 slow in time and struck the rear of a
a.m. when the car she drove went off . pickup truck driven by Adam C.
State Highway Patrol reported.
Jeremiah Donnett, 17, 3631 the right side of the road, struck an Bush, 18, 1805 Ingalls Road, Gal·
Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis. was embankment, overturned and came to lipolis, according to the report. Bush
taken to flolzer Medical Center fol- rest on its top,according to the report. was slowing for stopping traffic
The car was severely dama&amp;ed. ·ahead at the time of the crash, troop·
lowing the 3 p.m. accident, the patrol
said. He was later treiued and and Janet Jones was cited for failure ers said.
Damage to Garten's car was mod·
released, a hospital spokesperson to control.
In
other
accidents
investigated
erate,
and slight 10 Bush's pickup,
said.
Troopers said Donnell was west- Friday by the patrol, Charles K. But· troopers said.
'Ronald E. Bonecutter, 52, Gal·
bound when the car he drove struck ler, 18, 19548 SR 7 South, Crown
high water lying on the road, causing City. was cited for failure to control lipolis Ferry, W.Va., was cited for
the car to hydroplane. The car came following a one-car mishap on SR assured clear distance in another
two-vehitle crash on 141 at 3 p.m..
off the right side of the road and 141.
struck a rree, iiCCOrding to the report
Troopers said Butler was east· troopers said. {
The car was severely damaged, bound in Green Township at 8:38
Bonecuuer waSo westbound in
and Donnett was cited for failure to a.m. when he lost control in a curve, Green Township when he was unable ·
control.
· went 11ff the left side of the road, and· to slow in time, striking the rear of a
Minor injuries were also reponed struck an embankment and a mailbox car driven by _Karla L. Sexton. 28 •
in a one-car acCident Friday on Clay before _coming to a stop. The car was 358 Green Terrace Drive, Gallipolis.
according to the report. Sexton ~ad
Township Road 640 (Bear Run), moderately damaged.
according to the patrol.
Michael B. Garten. 18. 296 also slowed for traflic when the
Driver Janet A. Jones, 56, and pas· LeGrande Blvd.. Gallipolis. was tick- accident occurred, troopers added.
senger Robin L. Jones, 6, both of 63 eted for assured clear distance folDamage to both vehicles was
lowing a two-car cra~h on 141 at 3 slight.

Cincinnati will
host Taii .Stacks

·Nation/World ·
L~ndmar·k accord tied to currency

lley8,11188

r

EAST LANSING. Mich. (AP) -,
Michigan Stale students clashed with
police earJy Saturday during a protest
over a ban on alcohol at a po'pular site
for tailgate punies before the school's
football games.
Police fired tear ga.• into. a crowd
of students who converged on downtown 'shortly af!Cr midnight and lit a
bonfire. Students later set more bon. fires.
Dozens of police officers tn riot
gear. were. on the.· scene. Six people
were treated on the scene for tear gas,
related injuries. and three others
were rreated for unspecified injuries
at Sparrow Hospital, officials said.
. Four or five students W\!I'C arrest·
ed as police had bottles' and rocks
Jhrown at them, police Chief Lawton
·Connely said. ·
·
J&gt;.tve Rudolph, a Mi~liigan Slate
, senipr who participated in !he protest,
said the first round ci( tear gas was
fined by pcilice without warning.
"Ha\1 \Ve gotten a warning before
ther shot the tear gas, the crowd
would have dispersed,'' Rudolph
said.
The Associated Students· Michi·
gan State Univenity-Student Assem·
bly said in a statement ihey are angry
they wercn 'I consulted before the
adminislnllion imposed the alcdlol
ban.
The ban was implemented for
Munn Field, where f~s hold tailgate
partie.• before Spartan football games.
School officials said last month tl\at
..tcohol 1111e had gotten out of control
in recent yell'S 11 the field.
The ban .takes effect this fall,
"though tailaate parties still will be
allowed.

' By MARTHA IRVINE
Aaaoclated Press Writer
CHICAGO- Jerry Springer said
Friday that he's not about to tone
Charges of racial discrimination down his raucous daytime talk show.
and sexual harassment were aired, as ' and said he doesn't know why his ·
were allegations that corporations producer-distributor announced an
received multimillion-dollar breaks in agreement to eliminate physicaJ.vio·
tax ilisputes. And, most surprising, lence.
.
three witne~ses described an aborted
"I'm not going to buckle,"
plot by a renegade agent in Tennessee Springer told Howard Stem during
10 !Jring phony money-laundering' and the shock jock's show. Springer
bribery charges ag11inst fonner. Sen. spoke from WRQC-FM in MinHoward 'Baker. R:Tenn .. in order to neapolis. which carries Stern's show.
enhance the agent's career. .
Springer said he did not attend a
Rossotti accepted Roth's propo~­ meeting between his producer-dis·
al to have,llle General Accounting triliutor and a religious group and
Office in'Vestigate the allegations. .said'he did not sign off on the agree·
"And I promise you that when we get ment announced Th~rsday.
··
!he results of those investigations. we
The agreement came exactly a
will act accordingly and take disci- week after Fox Broadcasting Co.'s
pi inary action where the allegations Chicago station picked up the show
are subs1antiated."
.
when the local NBC affiliate dropped
Rossoni's.efforts to overhaul and · it because of its increasingly tawdry
modernize the IRS include:
content.
• Independent review of the cljjn.
But along with Springer, Fox's
inal investigations division by former WFLD i~herited a boycott led by the
FBI and CIA Director William Web- Rev. Michael Ptleger, an activist
ster and a review or' the inspection Roman Catholic priest who decried
· service, which researches employee the "nudity. the degrad:Uion of
misconduct, by former Comptroller women. the obscenity'" depicted on
General Charles Bowsher.
,
• Several custol!¥'r · service
·improvements, 5uch a~ closely .mon·
itoring taJtpayer cornplainL~. increasing IRS' problem resolution staff and
-elarifyil)g letters lhe IRS s.ends to
taxpuyers.
.
· • An ·investigatio'l of managers INSURANCE
and agents who · may have been
Full Lint of
respOnsible .for abuses described ' in
lntu111nce Producta
+ Ananclel
last September's IRS hearings.
Strvlctl ,
• A proposed major reorganization
of the IRS into four new divisions in
AGENCIES, Inc.
order to improve customer service
and streamline management toward a
Bill Quicktl992·6677
customer's point of view.

Davis·Quickel
Agency Inc.

HOLZER
HEALTH HOTLINE
Hush little baby•..

the show.
After meeting with Pfleger. Stu·
dios 'USA Network, the show's pro· ·
.ducer and distributor, released a
'statement saying it would "eliminate
all physical violence from the series."
"I don't· know why they issued

FIC,S, Pl'l I1Y!

S'I'ICK '0

'

JU

'f;

Following are her lnelnuatlons and my reaponsee:
. ·
·
1. Patty'e Queitlon: Were the cltlzene ol Tuppere Plaine originally milled abol!l the co111 of ••wage
hOOk-upe by our commlnlonert?
Mr Rtaqoaat; Those Involved In the _Tuppera Plains sewer project ahould know that
this Is not a project of the commlaa/pnera but Is toCIUv uadtr rh• CQntrql qt the
TuaiJICI Plllnl Stwtc Dlafrlct. However, the comm/aa/oaera provided $500,000 In
• construction aaalatance through a CDBG water and sewer CQmptllflvt grant. We ara
a!ao, at this tlma, arranging tor aaalat1nce to homeownere to hook up to the sewer
system If they desire to hire this aaalataace. If you wtc• so Informed. pauv. I would
tblnlr fbal you wquld lmqw fhls.
•.
2. Petty'• Queltlon:·Did the commll!llonert prom111 rno111y to the Cheater COurthouM Committee, ·
the Chamber ol Commerce, Economic Development, and Tourlam and then take It aw.,Y? ·

Mv Rgqong: The answer to this Is ittftattitv aq. Nothing was erer promised end
then flken away. We hare provided $60,000 per JIIBT to , . Chaml»r .i o assist with
·economic development actlrltiBa and feel If Is money well spent. We are, at this time,
attempting to obtain an addltlonal ·$100,000 thla yMr for tiJeaa purposes. We hare,
provided much financial assistance for projects of till CIJeatar CourtiJouae
Committee and will continue' to do so.

LET'S STICK TO THE FACTS, PATTY!
3. Patty'• aue1tlon: Is the county budget bllanced or are WI like. Middleport Wll whtn Fred Hottmll:"':
wumayor?
·
·
~·
·Mv RIIDOQfl: As for 1 county ·balenced budgst, please notl the foNowlag actual facts, ·
· Patty/

·

General Fund Balance, Dec. 31, 1993 ......................................................... $239,149
General Fund Balance, Dec. 31, 1994 ......................................................... $242,057

Ger:-eral ~und Bplance, Dec. 31, 1995 ................ ~ .......................................... $2:63,654
General Fund Balance, Dec. 31, 1998 .......................................... ~ ........ ~ ..... $240,002
General Fund Balance, D~. 31, 1997 ..................................,...................... $2,5,898
General Fund Bilance, March 31, 1988 ...................................................... $302,174

.

THESE FIGUR&amp;S ARE FACTS!
.
Even tiJough coats /Java risen ewrywhflfl, somehow Mtlga County h1s, dur(ng
my term Ia office, progreued daqU« ap lncrg11 In tgq,
As for my 19 ytara as mayor of Middleport, I am proud of my •ccompllshmentl
during that time. Millions of dollars In grant funds were obtained, meny new services
were provided tor the people, and more Improvement pro~cts · .were begun and
completed than ewr before ar np extc• bualfo to the tup«vm.
4. Patty'l Queatlon; Will we losa our emergency•room/hoapllal becauae of paet/presetrt
dsclstona?
Mv BespqQI«; If the merger had not takta place betwetn Hoizer and Vetertnl
Memorial, WI would no longer hare tiJeae healtiJ cere facilities In Meigs County.
Vltlrsns Memorial was broke. The new Holzer Clinic It a super eddUioa to this area.
. LET'S STICK TO THE FACTS; PATTY/

s. ·Pltty'a

Queatlon: Are property taxn going up coneldertbly becau,e Melga County
Commlaalooera In the peat have not proven to be good admlnlatratort?
My Buqqnu; As you s/Jould know, qrqq«rty twa act not r«llfd wUftout • rote qf
'the apqlt ta'it the property appraisal required by th, eflte. You 11hould know tiJ/s
aln~ vqu hid ban wqrklnq In lire autfUoc'a offlct· on lh«; ,.,w,al of CQuntv

qcqptttv.

LET'S STICK TO THE fACTS.

PATTY/

11. Patty's Qunllon: Are the voter'l aware Fred Hoffmln'• .lull time job Is with The Dally Sentl111l?
Mr RUQORu; This 11 the only
wftlch yqu hlvt nw1t thlt Is trut. ·1 IJare
worked at The Dally Sentlntl for the PIBt forty yeara. This Ia cerfllaly no secret. 1
hare·alweya worked two or three }oba In order to support my wlfa «nd four children. 1
'!•re alwtya spetit wiJtterer time It talfea to do wllat.Vtc Job I haw and will continue
ro do ao. Utlfortun«tely, I had to work In order to aurrlvt and did not h«ve things.
IJandld to mt u you, per/taps, did: My day st«rfl at 51H1Ch mom/QQ. .
Since I htre to work for a llviOQ, I was not able to spend all my flme cam,.lgnlng

'''ttment

- ·Children imitate their parents.
Make sure to set·a good example for
a healthy, safe and happy childhood •.
Speak to a register~ nurs~. about your
healthcare concerns by.calling

1·800·462·5255·
7 dlrs a WHk • 6 a.m. uadl 2 a.m•.

Ask Yo'" phyJician about medication concerns

..

'

I am not a believer In t!tlllng untruths ·about any of my opponents .In the '
upcoming election, I am also not a believer In negative politics as Patty
Pickens apparently Is. I do feel compelled to . truthfully answer
Insinuations lri Patty Pickens' advertisement of May1. . .

·. aayoudo.

LETS TELL IT.LIKE IT IS, PATTY!

-11-ILIW

FRED HO·FF

A C:om•wlonar WhoPdStfelts
To TIN flldsf
!of' Fred Ho!lmln, 2H So. Fourth /We., llld
by

..

ilo!"l!t,

�•

pomeroy • Middleport •

Fr-age A8 • Jliiidlag c-.-~

G~lllpolla, OH •Point Pleasant, WV

St,~nday, May 3, 1998

junbq 1rim5· jerdinel ·

District
expects
to
take
ownership
Camp Read·A·Lot winds down with special 'E~ploration Day'
of n.ew school building in August .

.·

RE·E

$aund~rs

HAROLD
lX] MONTGOMERY .

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER

cia! situation and consider whether Slater concurred, calling them "far
Ohto ty!lu:ally gets $625. mll~ton
we have to postpone some construe- in excess of anything we can to $650 mtlhon each year m htghtion projects...
·
.
afford."
.
.
way money fr~m the federal governThe original highway bill exptred
_Budget Dt_rect~r ~rankhn D. ment, ":h,_ch ts added to ~tween
P!lid for by the candidate. 2624 St. Rt. 141
last fall but was extended to May l Rames sa1d Fnday m a letter to key $600 mdhon and $700. trulhon of
when Congress was unable to agree !egislato':' that the excess spending stat.~ money, Ms. M~y satd.
.
on a replacement. The leaders of a • m the btlls would etther squander
So f~r our enbre cons~ct~n
conference committee trying to the anticipated' budget surplus or prol!!am ts on schedule and tl wtll
work out a new bill deliberately lead to unacceptable cuts m other con!m~e on sch~.ule lhr?ugh the
soughi no further extensions on the programs. .
begtnnmg of June, she said.
grounds that the . lost sense of
•
WHERE TO TURN
' urgency would make their .work
more difficult.
The Senate passed a $214 billion
Road crews ho~ to reopen the
highwa~ b_ill and the House passed a
CINCINNATI (AP) - Firefight$217 btl bon vers10n. Conference ers tried using sand, shovels and · ramps sometime today.
Police ticketed the truck driver, .
commillee leaders have said they water before finally turning to dishCharles
Sealock, 51, of Momence,
hope to work out differences before . washing detergent to clean thou.
Congress· departs for i.ts Memorial sands of pounds of animal fat from a Ul., on a misdemeanor charge of
Serving Gallla,
failure to control his vehicle.
Day recess.
highway.
Jackson, &amp; Meigs
He was listed in fair condition at
The 6, 700 gallons of tallow
. However, both bills exceed - by
Good
Samaritan
Hospital
on
Frimore than $30 billion - spending spilled during Thursday morning's
Communities for over
.·
caps set in laSt year's balanced-bud- rush hour when a tanker truck over- day.
20 years;
Tallow is solid animal fat used in
turned on Interstate 74. The driver
get agreement. ·
soaps, candles and htbricants. ~ot
The Cl\nton administration _has suffered minor injuries. ·
1 :-&amp;Oo-252·5554
· The mess will keep I-74's ramps water generally·is the only way to
blasted both bills as too expenstve.
Transportation Secretary Rodney to·Interstate 75 closed into the week- get it off pavement, said Jim Raygo,
If ·you. have a problem
end, a city official sajd Friday. 1-74 plant manager at Kenosha Beef of
and need someone to
from Indianapolis joins the north- Kenosha, Wis., the company that
call,
we· are here for you.
made the tallow.
south 1-75 in Cincinnati.
"I suppose the rain helped cool it
One worker called it "the animal
down,"
Raygo said.. "If it gets cold
fat thai ate 1-74."
The spill spread a 46,()()()-pound you can shovel the hard stuff off but
Continued from page A1
of 1.9 mills, commonly referred to
layer
of fat several inches thick over then you've got the slick base underArthur Knight and -Charles Williams as a street-light levy;
·
seek the Democratic nomination.
• Pomeroy Village, renewal of. a an estimated half-mile of highway. neath." •
Liquid Tide laundry detergent
The winners of each primary ll(ill , ·one-mill, five-year-levy for fire pro- Rain complicated the ,cleanup by
also
was tried ' in the cleanup
cooling and solidifying the fat.
flee for the seat now occupied by tection.
"It~ been a tedious job," John process. It helped, but not enough.
OuF diverse highly
Hoffman on the Democratic-ruled
In addition to the Democratic and
Cincinnati-based Procter&amp;: GamNeal
Jr.,
•
a
n
assistant
Cincinnati
fire
trained staff are·
bbard
Republican primaries, voters on
ble Co. makes both Tide and Dawn.
chief,
said
after
workers
gave
up
on
dedicated
to helping you.
Other . . _ .
Thesday will have the option of vot"Tide was formulated to work in
\lo!&amp;ter
shoveling,
high-pressure
Voters in the Southern Local ing a Reform ballot, which includes
washing machines, not po the road,"
_
School District will be faced with a the party's governor and lieutenant spraying and scrubbing.
The fat went into the pavement's said Damon Jones, a company
4.89 miU, 23-year bond issue and governor candidates - John E.
pores
rises every time the _su~­ spokesman. "It's a lillie bit of a misiax levy for the construction of a Mitchel and Lawrence Anderson, face isand
cleaned,
said•Dave Yacchan, match there'"
()ew consolidated elementary build- respectively- as well as local levies
transportation manager of the Ohio
ing and improvements to the exist- and issues. Those voters will then be
lng Southern High School building. recoB!'ized as Reform Party mem- Department of Transportation.
By Friday . night, firefighters
: ·If passed, the proposal would be':5, JUSt as .th~ who vote De!"oc- seemed to be having success with a
generate $4,042,000 for the con- r~uc or Repubhcan ~allots: are recog- special solution of Dawn dish-wash· When you caat your vote for county commlaaloner
struction project, which would be • mzed as such on th~tr votmg .record.
on May 5th conalder the fact that a vote Ia a liberty.
ing detergent mixed with a foam
a4ded to $3.6 million in funding
Polls will open at 6:30 a.m., and suppressant to stop bubbles.
When .you vote you become an employer. You hire the
from the state building program.
will remain open until 7;30 p.m.
· Other levy issues to be decided . ._ ....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ,
peraori wh~ you feel Is most qualified to do the job and
Tuesday arc: ·
·
compenaate thla peraon with your tax dollara. Thlt
• Rutland Township, additional
person now worka for you!
one-mill five-year levy for fire proWhen you vote for a county commlaaloner you
tection;
should .be hiring your future. xour vote .ahould not be
••• Scipio Township, two-mill fiveyear replacement for fire protection;
daclded becauee ''thll II the way thing• have always been" or you feel
· : • Chester Township, one-mill,
Boss~rd
you •iowa" your vote and never ever thould a vote In thlt county.be Clllt
five-year replacement levy for fire
protection;
When you vote NI..Y 5th, vote for a candidate that can do the.Job and
· ·• Middleport Village, one-mill,
five-year replacement levy for fire
Ia this a new . tax? The levy was In place 1993-.
who Ia -willing to work .hard and get the Job done. Grant• are not
proteciion;
guaranteed from one year to the next. They are a nice addition to a plan .of
1997. H expired In 1997 and Is not on the tax
• JPomeroy Village, renewal of a
actlon, .but they ahould not be a aubltltute for a plan of action. Conalder
books In 1998. Vote.rs have the opportunity to
citrrent expenses levy in the amount

By KATHERINE RIZZO
AIIOCiated-Prlls Writer
. WASHINGTON (AP) _ The
federal government cannot legally
return to Ohio any- of the taxes paid
at the .state's gas pumps, at least not
until a new highway bill is signed
into law.
· . Congress on Friday allowed the
expiration of a law that allocates
,!!asoline-tax revenues among states.
But .ru; stale ls only half-reliant 00
federal funds, so it can weather a
short-term loss, said Michelle May,
a · spokeswoman for t~c Ohio
Department of Transportalton.
, "We can cover the shortfall in
federal funds temporarily by shifting
11 portion of our state funds·around,"
she explained.
. · Ohio will not feel any pinch for at
least a month.
• However, "At some point it will
lie 5omething we have to address,"
she said. "By June,' if Congress
doesn't pass a reauthorization bill,
we would have to reassess our finan-

Then, at the three-eighths pole,
By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
LOUISVILLE, Ky . . (AP)
the colt began to move, passing
There was a lot of noise about pace-setting Old Trieste at the lop·of
Indian Charlie, butbytheendoflhc the lane . Mid~ay through the
Kentucky Derby on Saturday, it was stretch run. il was obvious no one
Real Quiet. ·
was going to catch Real Quiet, who
Real Quiet, Indian Charlie's sta- in previous races had to rally in the
blemate, took the lead at the top of stretch.
the stretch and soared home over
Real. Quiet carried scale weight
Victory Gallop, with Indian Charlie of 126 pounds home in 2:02 .2 on a
third.
fast track.
The victory was the second
The colt is owned by Mike
straight for trainer Bob Baffert, who Pegram, who grew up in Evansville,
won the 1997 Derby at Churchill Ind.
· Downs withSil•erCharm.
"I may not win the Derby but
Before the race, Baffert said I'm going to have more fun that
Indian Charlie . whoo had won his anybody else," the 46-year-old
first four career starts. was more tal- Pegram had said.
ented. But he called Real Quiet his
While it was Indian Charlie's
insurance.
first loss, it was the second straight
Real Quiet, who lost his first defeat for Favorite Trick, the 1997
three starts this year, paid big premi- Ho~se of the Year and 2-year-old
urns on .a partly cloudy afternoon champion who finished out ofthe
before' l43,215 roaring fans. the money.
third-largest crowd in Perby history. ·
Real Quiet's victory extended
Kent Desormeaux, winning his . three longtime Derby jinxes. Indian
first
Derby in his·sevenlh try, had Charlie was the 18th consecutive
. WINNE.R - Jockey 0eiOI'II'IIliUX lhOWI his ple81Ufl after taking
Real
Quiet
back in the pack until the beaten favorite, dating lo 1979 when
Raal Quiet acro11 the flnl1h lint first In the 124th Kentucky Derby
final
turn.
Spectacular Bid won. Spectacular
~aturdiy at Churchill Downa. (AP)
,
·
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lobby.
.
ildin h f
d ~
In addition, improvements arc being made the bu
gs ca mg an v ntilation system.
·•
id 'll
.'
From the outside, the building willl~k like nev:. The outs e wt compliment the exterior of the new elementary, ~el_l satd.
..
It's been 30 yprs since a new school butldmg has been constructed m
Meigs County, he said.
_
. . .
.
Parenis in other districts m noticing the improvements t~. W~ll ~d he has received numerous calls from parents wanting to enroll thetr child at
Eastern under the state's ppen enrollment program. · ·
Well said the district is happy to accept students, as long as classrooms
don't becolDC overcrowded.
·
"We .want to fill it up, that's for sure," he said.

~xpir.atioli of law won't stop highway ~ep~i~s . y~t

VOTE FOR PROGRESS

If

"II

Crews work to clean .up an"lma •at Spl_

May i_s Mental Health Month
In time of need...

Meigs primary

-·

Gallia primary

this: A grant Ia a band-aid aolutlonl ou·r county naeda more than grantl. If
our citizens don't have jobs how can they make a life tor themaelvea and
a future tor their chlldran:?
. .
.
Is the candidate your voting for tomeone who can ' talk with. our
leglalators about our lack of hlghwaya, Jobs, and opportur,ltlea? Doe• thla
perton have poiHical conJactt? Can thlt peraon go to Columbua on .a
regular baala and make otar county be seen and haard? Can thlt perton
do more than hire aomeone elte' to fill out grant forma? And, moat
: Importantly, Ia thla peraon phytlclilly capable of and wllll" to put on the
hours the Job demands? A commlaalo~er·a job Ia not a part time poaltlon
nor can one take care of the needs thl.• county has bY being part time. Do
yo1,1 raallze the hourly talary qne makes It approximately $30,000 a year
· by being a part time com.mleeloner? '
·
:
I'd like to ahara my with lilt tor Melgt County wHh you.
.
* Health care &amp; more programs for Seniors. ·
* Opportunltl~s and recrtatlon to~ our youth.
..
:
* To aatabllah a home and health care facility_tor our Veterans.
* -=lectrlc and water for Forked Run _State Park.

RESTORE and CONTINUE the levy beginning In
1999.

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Continued frilm J1-vti A1
1et2 1183 1114 1 - 1 - 1887
1lt1
\'{ellston, is seeking a third term and
.3mll .3mll .3mll
.31111 .3ml
.3mll
0
Ita$ no OpPosition in the primary. ·He
will face Galli a County's Bill Oiler,
illa 8ole Democrat to file for. the
itoinination, in the fall.
' The 94th District includes Gallia,
Meigs and Jackson counties, and
eastern Lawrence County.
, 'n the 17th State Senate District,
incumbent Sen. Michael Shoemaker
Value Taxed
or' Bourneville faces no primary
Mk. Value of Home
bpposition, as does his GOP ~
A...eHCh•35%
pent in the fall, Portsmouth busi$8,750
$25,000
nessman Lee Thatcher.
$17,500
$50,000
, . ,Gallipolis attorney David .--I
$28,250
$715,000
JWana is involved in a three-way
$31,000
$100,00
gbe for the GOP nomination !o run
t43,750
' $1215,000
for a seat on the Fourth District
..... 500 .
Court of Appeals. His primary oppo$180;000
sition includes Marietta Municipal
$81,2150
$175,000
Judge ·Mill Nuzum and Jackson
$70,000 .
$200,000
Municipal Judge Marshall B. Dou-

11111
o

1188HPUMCI
.3mll

Bossard Memorial library
Funding Facts

'F
·

tliett.

· , ·.oemocrats seeking the nominalion for the appellate judgeship are
Athens County Common Pleas
JUdge L. Alan Goldsberry, and
Sdoto County Prosecutin,!! Attorney
t¥nn Alan Grimsbaw.
•' •

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$5.25
$7.88

~10.150

$13.13

$15:75

$18.38

$21.00

-Vote for Patty llolglel• Plclieas
for your 1,11 tl•~ .40+ co•mlssl~ner.

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Saun rs, slill an active and proficient player, boasts that he never
u•cd a l!91f carl 'white playing in a
sanctioned .tournament. At 76, he
even ltelps coach the Gallia
Acaderi!i High School team in his
nativc·dallipolis.
·
· 'Cilliey Martin. should be 'given
the right to play," Saunders said.
"Bul I 9on'tthink the judge should
give everyone who says they are disablcd
right to u5e a cart."
·
Sau ders believes only those
with di abilitic's that could prevent
them from playing should be permitted help on the course.
.
' "What I would object to is if I
came out and said my shoulder is
hurting me, even though there is
nothing wrong with my shoulder.
they have to give me a cart,"
Saunden said. "Fred Couple$ hu a
. bad back. Should he have a e*l?''
In addition·to coming in' second
in the Ohio Amateur, Saunders was
a star on Ohio State's golf team. He
was ti!Q medalist at the NCAA golf
c~ampjpnship after matching the
. 19~ soore at !he Big Ten tournament. '

'1:

Paid for by Bossard Memorial Ubrary

•

Peld lor by: I'OP lllcttOn CemmltiN, 31211 Tex.. Roeci,Pomenly, OH

Saunders said money .:.... not hi$
disability ·- was the reason he
didn't become a prOfessional golfer.
"At the time when I could have
turried pro, if you won the tournament 'you got $1.500 and if you
placed. 1Oth you got $100."
Saunders said. ''Even if I won every
tournament. I couldn't make it without sponsorship."
Saunders thinks it was Palmer's
charisma and public appedl that has
made golf what_it is today.
Palmer won the Ohio Amateur in
1953 and .1954, then won the u:s.
Amateur .later i'n 1954- befor~~ turning
pro.
Saunders never used his disability as an excuse.
·
"I have never felt that I should
have special ·trcalmcnt because I am
crippled," Saunders said', "If some·
one felt sorry fOI' me that was their
fault."

I

The non-profit Fore Hope pri&gt;vides lc'ssons for people wi1h sight or
hcvring problems. physical impairmcnts and other di~ahilitics ..
It offers clinics. golf leagues and
tournaments. and is a statewide
resource for information ahout golfing with disabilities.
.
In ijilliard. Fore Hope conducts
individual and ·groop golf lc!i.'ons at
·a 9-bole golf ~oursc. Usually. golfers
who ilrive a cart within 10 feet of a
green arc chased from the cuursc .
But this course even has u
wheelchair-accessible putting grcQn.
Mindy Dcrr, executive direcl&lt;lf,
said the hardest part of getting pcopic with disabilities to try golf is
convincing them that !hey can."Golf seems impossible to those
adjusting with a disability," she
said. "We let them know it is' not
impossible.''
· Howard' Baker Saunders of
Gallipolis has worked with his handleap for more than 60 years. He was
13 when a bone infection required
, hip surgery that l~ft one leg three
inches shorter than the other. His hip
remains locked in place.
Yet; he became one of the most
respected amateur golfers in the
nation. In 19S3. lie finished second
in the Ohio Amateur champiOnship,

losing by one stroke to Arnold
Palmer.
Rubert Olson. who had a stmkc in
1995 that paralyzed his left side. gels
around With a cane. His endurance
isn't what il used In be. hut he still
enjoys golf.
" I have lhc ·same fun as I used
to." said Olson. "The challenge is
still there. Get a good drive. hit a
good shot and try 10 get a good
scorct•·
.
Lori Schulte, dircctor 'of g&lt;ilf at
Fore Hope. said the pmgram had J50
participants last year and hopes to
have 500 this year.
" We welcome cvcryhndy . There
arc no parameters as far as what pen- ·
pic can do or can't do." Schulie
said. ·'If they just make the clfort to
.be out there we can have :successful
results.
" Once you suffer a disability it
nol the end. it is a new beginning
and new way 11f perceiving life. Our
program builds conlidcncc and .inner
s\fCngth."
Emina Frnboll, a double amputee
since 1992, said learning to play golf
has always been a dream. She
l~arned about Fore Hope at The
Ohio ' state University Mc~ical
Center's outpatient therapy department.

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. Advlllllld to.••
NBA Flnlll; loll io Cttlcioo
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1

extra-base hit and first -RBis by Rangers got two homers from Kevin
Milwaukee pitchers in the Brewers' Elster ·and one from Ivan Rodriguez
inaugural Nl season.
to beat the Boston Red Sox 7-6.
Weathers quickly got his revenge
Helling (6-0) allowed four runs
by hilling one of three solo homers on eight bits and two walks in sixoff Juden the next inning.
plus innings. striking oul six to
• Weathers' second career home become the first pitcher in Rangers
run followed Nunnally 's leadoff history to win his first six starts. Jim
shot. One out later. Willie Greene Kern. Jeff Russell and .Bobby Wiu
sent a fastball410 feet to center for each won their first seven decisions
the Reds' fourth home run in II at- for Texas.
·
bats and a 4-3 lead. Dmitri Young
Boston starter Brian Rose ( 1-2)
hit a 406-foot homer ofT Judcn in the gave up-five runs on seven hits and a
first
walk, strikin,g out three in six
J•Jden tied it at 4 with a broken- innings.
bat fielder's choice grounder in the
Helling allowed Mo Vaughn's
fou, ~h. scoring Geoff fcnkins from two-run 'homer in the firs1 and then
thirJ.
· ran into trouble again in the fifth.
The Reds went huck_rin 'top S-4 Darren Lewis singled and Mark
· Ic tn
· the Lem k c dou bl ed before -Jo h n
on Brct Bonne ' s RBI sm~
fifth, hul Jenkins' solo homer in the Valentin walked to load the bases.
sixth off Weathers !icd it back up at
But Helling struck out Vaughn
5.
and, after walking Reggie Jefferson
Nunnally made a spectacular play to make i1·4-3. he struck out Troy
in cen1er In rob Jeff Cirillo nf a two- · O'Leary on three pitches to end the
run cxtra-husc hit .in the sixth. His inning.
over-the-shoulder diving grail for
Rodriguez hila snln homer in the
the third nut drew an ovation from sixth and Elster hit his second homer
the crowd and comparisons 10 Jim in the seventh In make it6-J.
Edmonds' great gmh 1:nr Anaheim
Rockies 7, Mets 3
last sea."'"·
At New York, slumping El!is
Judcn gave up five runs nn seven Burks hil a gmnd slam with two ows
h.us 1n
· "'
· mnmgs:
· ·
wca the rs .,ave
"
· tlIC nm
· th ·mmng
· satu rd ay and 1he
up · m
fi¥c runs no nine hits in 5 1/J Cnlnrudn Rockies sen! the New
.t~mngs
. .
Ynr k Mcts In l.he 1r
. SIX!
. h strmg
. h1 I'!"
Rangen 7, Red So• 6
7-3.AI Bnstnn. Rick H~llint! l&gt;ccamc
Vinny Caslilla. Larty Walker and
the majnr lcat!ucs' first six-game Ncifi Perc' also hnmcrcd for the
winner Saturday. as the Texas
(See BASEBALLon B-8)

Muscle tear sidelirles Barkley for rest of playoff$ ·

:

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... -·

c:::::..;,=::....:=""
_HOWARD BAKER SAUNDERS

' five.
struck out
Harris bounced an 0-2 pitch past ~ve .
.
Miguel Cairo led off the seventh Fox (0; I) up the middle for !I 6-5
Right-hander Jeff Juden drove in
with aQ infield single , and Paul Cincinnati lead. .
four runs for the Brewers, but he
Sprrento broke up the shutout with a
Chris Styncs added another RBI also surrendered four solo homers.
leadoff homer in the ci@hlh that single off Fox. Eddie Taube~ see three ofthem in the third inning.
made itl,-1. Ogea, making his third added an RBI double of.f Paul
In the second, David Weathers
start since coming off the disabled Wagner in the ninth.
hung a breaking pitch to Juden, who
Ogca allowed three hits in 1/3 list, came; out after walliing John
Gabc White (1-3) pitched I 213 stroked it into the right-field comer
innings, and Sandy Alomar broke Flaherty two bnttors later.
innings of scoreless relief. Jeff Shaw for a three-run double to give the
out of a slump with three hits as lhe
Jose Mesa @&lt;ll the last two outs of
the final three
for his
BrewerS a 3-1 lead. It was the first
Cleveland Indians defeated the the cightll and Mike Jackson pitl:~d
T~mpa Bay Devil Rays 5-I on . the ninth as a heavy fog descended
Saturday·
on Jacobs·Field.
Ogea (1-1). who heat Kevin
Saunders (1-3), rou@hed up for
Brown and lhe Florida Marlins twice . six runs i~1 two-plus innings in Game
in the World Series, outducled fO! · 4 of the World Series against
mer Marlins slarler Tony Saunde~:· Clevclan&amp;', allowed three runsas the Indians won their sccon•l one. earned' - and eight hits in ~ix o
straight after losing I 0 of 14 games. innings, w•lking
three and striking
Jim Thome hit a two-rim homer, out eight. 7
his fifth, off Esteban Van in the scv·Rids 8, Brewen 5
cnlh.
· At Milw.0 ukee, Lenny Harr.is'
. Helped by defensive gems by pinch-hit RBI ~inglc off Chad Fox in
Omar Vizqucl. Kenny Lofton, the eighth inning broke a tic and liftTravis Fryman and Thome. Ogca cd the Cincinnati Reds to an H·S vicface!~ the minimum through 5 213: lory over the Milwaukee Brewers on
Aaron Lcdcsmit gotlhc firS! hit with Saturday. ·
li sharp grounder past shortstop
Barry Larkin staned the winninl,l
Vizq~l into Ccnl~r with IWO outs in, rally with a one -out single to left
·the: sixth.
1hat snapped a career-worst 0-for-30
. To that point. the only bauer to slump.
_·
'reach was Fred McGrin·. who led niT ·
Larkin. who lcl't the game in 1he
lhe second with a walk hut was hollom o f 1he ·inmng
· ·wilh a ermnr in
:ror~cd out on a dnuhle play started his left shoulilcr. umk third on Jon'
_
..
_
,
wh_
o
wa
_
lked
lwo
and
I
IN
RUNDOWN
MI...._
,__,
M
I
Grl
('
....
.-~y Qg,._
·~
·
Nunnally-' s· s~,~ c and -scored when
CAUGHT
. ,...u ..... 1 1rqu 1
110m ,..,)I1
; - - - - - - - - - - - - -·; ....·; ...""";..._ _ _ _._ · c•ught In • rundown bit-en Cincinnati third ba1amen Willie
GI'HM, tlllrd beN and the plate In the HCQnd Inning ol S.turde;'l
National League game In Milwaukee, wl)erl the Aadl won 11·5.
Grlaaom made It beck to tllltd base, but tet111111111te "eromy Bumltz
wu calted out when both men got to· third at ihname lime. (AP)

Can you afford anoth•r plrt·tlme commlaaloner? Vot~ May 5. Make your
vote count. It's time for a cha~ge.
.

I

•

**

*

Tax for Library
Per Year
$2.83

.over challenge

'

*

*
*.
.,.....,
!
*
The avtrall tbpayer pays less th,an the cost
*
.
Of one book per year for library services.
··** .
Remember to VOTE May 5
'

.

Rock and Roil, Chilito, Favorite
Trick and Indian Charlie.
.
They ran'in that order to the halfmile pole , when Indian Charlie
moved in behind Old Trieste. Real
Quiet was sixth at this point.
Then, on the turn, Desormeaux
asked Baffeit's insurance poHcy to
move, and Real Quiet cashed in,
taking the lead with a quarter mile
to go, opening some daylight, the~
holding on to hold off fast-closing
Victory Gallop.
Completing the order of finis~
were Cape Town, Parade Ground.
Hanuman Highway. Favorite Trick.
'Nationalore, Old Trioste. Chi lito.
Robinwould, Artax. Rock and Roll
aitd Basic Trainc~.
It was sweet revenge for Real.
Quiet over his more publicized stablemate. He had linished second to
Indian Charlie in the Santa Anita
Derby on April4.
'
Real Quiet earned $700,000 to
. boost his career earnings to
$1,284, 123 on three victories. two
seconds and five thirds in 13 lifetime starts.
·

By CHARLEY GILLESPIE
. HILLIARD . Ohio &lt;AP)
Leaning against a friend for llalance.
Norm Meizlish gripped his· 7-iron
with one hand, took another lobk
down the fairway. and then let-lhc
ball rip.
.
The ball sailed aboul 30 yards.
"Amazing isn' t ir?" he said sarcastically ..
.
Meizlish 'ii one of about 3SQ pcopie, enrolled in Fore Hope -. a program that helps disabled golfers in
Ohio enjoy the sport that many once
thought was inaccessible to people
with impairments.
Long before Casey Martin - the
pro golfer who sued to use a golf cart
on the Nikc Tour because of a leg
withcred since birth - brought a
spotlight to disabled golfers,
Meizlish and others were hilling the
fairways in' search of sunshine and
sport.
Meizlish, .a stroke viCtim who no
longer can move the left side of his
body, practices every week and competes in tournaments in the spring
and fall.
·
"It gels us back into circulation,"
said Meizlish. "I feel sorry for my
wife. it was no fu~ having me as a
crippled man stuck in bed. Now ·we
have something we both can share."

.

Major league
baseball

***********************************
.
*

·~~~ *
·**
**
**
** :
**

Der~y

Disabled-golfers found gl~ry.
in ·oh-course feats before Martin·

'

Woodland Centers, Inc.

..

.

Indians beat Devil Rays; Reds, Rangers, Rockies also
win
.

off

**
**·

Bid was also the last 2-year-old
champion to win the Derby.
Favorite Trick's defeat also
meant that no Breeders' Cup
Juvenile winner has won the Derby.
Real Quiet finished a half-length
in fr9n1 of Victory Gallop with
Indian Charlie another 2 114 lengths
· back and a head ahead of Halory
Hunter.
The winner paid $18.80, $8.80
and $5.80. Victory. Gallop, ridden
by Alex Solis, returned $13 and
$7.60, while Indian Charlie, ridden
by· Gary Stevens, was $4 .]0 to
show.
"This is one high cloud!" the
jubilant Desormeaux said. "ljats off
10 Kentucky!"
The 28-year-old jockey. then
doffedllis .riding helmet in triumph .
. ·"My first feeling was a feeling of
shock," Desorm)!aux said. "I wanted to laugh for a while and cry for a
while,"
Old Trieste, ridden by Robby
Al11arado, took the lead entering the
backstretch with three-quarters of a
mile remaining and was followed by

.

s.hows ·.
:lifelong _tr.iurilph
By CHARLEY GILLESPIE
Aesoclated Press Writer ·
· Long before Casey Martin drove
a golf curt to prominence, Howard
Baker Saunders was championing
the caus.c of di~obled golfers and
~arni~g the respect of opponents
such as Arnold P~lmcr.
·
"He was a great player, a very
·.goc:d puller ... . And a very nice
~uy , " said Palmer, whit beat
, Sounders by a stroke in the 1953
_ Qhio Amateur championship. "He
really was one of the best players I
:: ever played against at that time.
" He had a lifi in one of his shoes
. that must have been 12-18 inches
but he always walked.".
· Martin, afflicted with a withered
leg since birth, won a lawsuit earlier
~ this year qgainst the Professional
' ,Ool( As,talliUiOI! {Of' the right to use
1 golf can during Nike Tour events.
Saunders has worked with his
disability for over 60 years. He was
13 when he contacted a bone infcclion that required hip surgery. The
surgery left one leg thr~e inches
shorter than the other; his hip
beeamc immob~c .
'

C-R ISISL.I NE

WHAT: .3 111ill Property Tax
WHEN: May 5, 1998 Election
WHY: To·Support the
Dr. Sa111uel L.
Library
The Gallla County District Library ·

..,

·Real _
Quiet.wins Kentucky

Continued from page A1
building, the side nearest the high school . .Fifth- and sixth-grade classroorm
are located at the far end to avoid being disturbed by class changes by oldet
seventh and eightli graders.
·
f th
The school playground is at the far end of the wing, at the rear o . e
building, ncar the fiftb - and sixth-grade !=(assrooms.
.
On the right side, coming back toward the middle of the 'L' •. arc ~o SCIence/math cfassrooms joined by a preparatiO\) room, and a spact?us kitchen,
serving and storage &amp;rca. A door leads from the kitc,be~ to. a loadmg doc~ for
food deliveries. The corridor, which forms the left stde of the cafetonum,
returns the visitor to the main lobby.
·
·
.
High achool ~
. .
High schoolers will return to the same_butldmg, ~~t ·tt will be ~atly
improved with new doors, windows, floor ule, drop ceth~gs and n:furbtshed
lockers, Well explained. Workers arc busy now doublmg the stze of the

PRODUCT 'LOOK AUKES' - Jackie Greham, a It Is for people to read labela before auumlng It Is
.
representative from Gallla county Farm Bureau, the product they want and lhould use. ·
talks about look ankl products and how Important
Jane Ellen and Skip McGovern necessary when bringing horses to horse.
Many of the classrooms also
brought two of their horses to the participate in camping and hiking
opted
to set-up camp in their classand what else should be included in
school's ba.llfield.
.
The chtldren from Washmgt~n the packing process. The children rooms. AI these camp sites, stories
ere read and lessons were taught.
were taught how to camp, what IS then had the opportunity to pet each

Sunday, May

.

By JENNIF£R RICHTER

nm11 S1nUnll Stafl
GALLIPOLIS - Washir:tgton
Elementary students spent last
week learning about camping,
l)ature, and other outdoor activities,
wJiile reading books about these
topics during the school's participation in reading week.
The theme, "Camp Read-ALot," was designed to help children
expand their horizons by leamingwhat-ty.pes of nature activities are
·available in and around Gallia
'County.
Although the weather did not
·oooperate with several scheduled outdoor activities, the students at Washington did what they set out to do learn more through ~terary works.
The week's events wound up Friday with an "Exploration Day." Participants included representatives
speaking about specific topics:
Smokey the Bear, Rio Grande Fire ·
·Department, Soil and Water Conser, vation, Boy Scouts, Bug Collecting,
Horse back riding and camping, sto- ·
rytelling, Rio Sports Camp, back
packing, Girl Scouts, Bob Evans
Horse Camp, hiking and camping.
Many of the guests brought
equipment used in their field, such
: as tents, firewood, camping supplies, displays and books that children were encouraged to read. ·

B
3, 1998

Section

•

· ··

- · - M-

~::~·

...

By.MICHAEL A. LUTZ ,
entangled with 1!.:39 to play in the
HOUSTON (AP) - Charles first h~lf of Priday nighl's. 93-71
Barkley. who playe,d with a hernia .l!tah vact_ory thai evened the bc5•:ofthis season. will miss the rest on~ ftve s~ncs at 2c2 . .Tho decuf.mg
playoffs aft~r an MRI revealed . game 1~ scheduled for tod~y 1n S~lt
Saturday that he tore his right tricep Lake &lt;;uy.
. ,
· ,•
muscle during Friday night's play~ff
Trainers app~1cd tc.e to Barkley s
1
elbow and be tn~ tWtce to return to
'loss to the Utah JIZZ.
"H • d
• th 1· (f .. the game, but dtd•not have a full
. e s one .or e P ayo s, -range of mocion in h!s,arm.
~.a1d; team spokesman Tim Frank.
Barkley said after Friday's game
He II be re-evaluated (today), but that team doctors were telling him
he coul~, see sur1ery as early as "it would take a 10iracle" for him to
Monday. ,
. , ,• .
play in today's series finale, even
Barkley s parttctpauon 1n the ltc:fore the muscle tear was diagplayoffs was in doub.t from the niiSed.
, beBinning of the first-round series , · The hernia had scratched Barkley
~cause of the he~ia that·.slowed from tlie. last three regular season
htm all season..Butll was hts colh- games and he publicly ·worried
slon with Utah's Greg Foster that whether he could contribute in the
ended ~is season. '
Jazz series. Despite admitted soreBar~ ley and Foster became 1!19u •. he had 12 poinu and six

''7"' ____ - ·- -

- ---- - · ~ ·

-

..

.

rchounds ·in Houston's 103-90Gamc
I upset.
He played in 611 ol' 82 games during the regular season.
Barkley. who ha.~ played off the
bench in the ~nd half of the rcguIa!' season. gave the Rockets a spark
when he entered Friday's game late
in the first quaner.
His loss will mean more playing
lime for Othella Harrington in Game
S today and a heavier work load for
Hakeem Olajuwon and Kevin
Willis. .
The Rockets started strong in
Game 4 bul after Barkley left the.
game, .Houston relief on Olajuwon
and the starters tired down the
stretch. Olljuwon played 39 minutes
and Willis played 4~ minutes on
Friday:
·
·"A huge loss," Mario Elie said. ;
t\

"You · could sec the energy he
brought into the game off the
bench."
Clyde Drexler pni nted to
-Barkley's injury as a key to their
loss.
"We seemed to be in command
of the game hut with Charles out, we'
had no punch on our bench. HU:ccm·
and ·Kevin had to play extended
minutes and we also seemed to lose'
a lot of our energy. we were up by
five and the next thing we knew, we·
mcd I
t f
" '
see
o run ou o gas.
Harrington hopes to pick up some
of the slack.
.
•
'Til go out and try to do what I'
always do on Sunday, play defense.
and get as many rebounds as I can," .
Harrington said. "It's goin1 10 be up
10 all of us 10 just do.a little more." ·
-~

�•

Sunday, f4ay 3, 1998

Karl's ·pitching, Cirillo's glove help Brewers down Reds 5·2

'

offense, the Brewers beat Cincinnati position all these years." Gamer
ly ARNIE STAPLETON
.
5-2
Friday night in the Reds' first vis- cracked.
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Two ailina Milwllllkee Brewers turned iri it to County Sladium since 1965.
Cirillo's nice plays included a
With John Jaha on the DL with a scoop of a low throw, a sweep tag ofT
valiant efforts IS they won the opener of a series for the nint~ time·in 10 sprained ankle and Cirillo struggling an errant toss and a double play when
with the stiff neck, espeCially when he raced back for a blooper by
tries.
Left-hander Scon Karl (sore hand) he throws across the diamond; Brew- Eduardo . Perez, then doubled the
pitched three-hit ball for six innings ers manager Phil Gamer put Cirillo runner off first base in the sixth.
"Well, he's just a solid defensive
and first baseman Jeff Cirillo had a at first and Mark Lorena at third.
Cirillo
borrowed
one
of
Lorena's
player.
there's no two ways about it,"
spectacular night despite a nagging
stiff neck that prevented him from first-base mitts and looked right at Karl said. " Wherever you put him.
playinl! his usual position, third base. home in his first major league stan at he's going to play some solid
defense."
Behind Karl's pitching and Ciril- first base.
"We've been playing hi.m out of
lo's spaJtliiiJI defense and steady
Karl's own health continues to

beat Giants 6-2;
. Expos,
..
Marlins, Pirates, Cubs also w1·n
By The Aa*oclaled Preu
• So much for Greg Maddux's
slump. ·
·
Maddux rebounded from two consecutive poor starts. pitching seven
Solid innings . to lead the Atlanta
Braves to' a 6-2 victory over the San
Francisco Giants on Friday night.
Miuldux (3-2), who ~llowed 10
earned runs in 13 innings in his prethird Inning of Friday night's NaUonal League . vious )wo stans, held the Giants to
game In Milwaukee, where the Brewen won 5-2. . two runs and six hits.
"II takes .more than one poor
(AP)
game to put my brain in a funk," the

REACHING OUT - Cincinnati eec:oad beleBrei Boone (left) dives back to second base.
to r.g out the Milwaukee Brewers' Jeff Cirillo
during an lttSmpted ...., of second beu In the
1111111

four-time Cy Young Award winner beat the Giants for the lllh lime 'in
1
his last I 2 de~isions agaiMt them.
Barry Bonds hit a two-run homer
Maddux was coming ofT !lis worst
in
the first before Maddux SeltU:d
outing in two seasons, a 7-6 loss to
Colorado last Sunday in which he down. Bonds has eight homer§ and a
allowed six runs and I0 hils in fiv.e JOS career avera~e ajl~inst Maddux.
but the Giants slugger wasn't happy
innings.
after
the game.
.
"I didn't notice a lot of differ•
"If'! face Maddux three limes and ·
ence," Maddux said. "I hall a little
better heater. and I didn'tleave many hit three home runs, and we lose, it
up high. Tonight wasn't a desperation didn't mean a thing," he said. "I
don't care what my slats are against
situation."
Maddux improved to 22-5 in Maddux.! care about winning. Midstans following a'losing·~cision, and
(See NL on B-3)

MARSHALL BROWN·

Ba seball

.W L l&lt;L

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............ IK
~lon .................................. 19

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Baldfn(ft .............................. l ~ ''1:\
Tan!(la8ay ........................ l2 I~
Torunto ................................. IO 17

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Basketball
NBA playoff slate

7

...... 16 It

..'193

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~

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1

Charlone 91, Atlanta
3~ 1

(!lp().IJ.I :~r. m.
Balli~ (_Eridt~m

N. Y.

YankcL"~

CPcuiu..- -1-2) al Kansaa City

D.."'fnit CThnmpwn 1-:\)

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Chica,:o While Soa CSirocka -1- II a1 Ana.tk.-im
c_f·ink.-y ol-0). 10:0~ p.m.\.:.

rk:ll J-2

2 &lt;OT): Ruff:dl• wins
Wl\llhin~:l''" 11.--...a~~

2; Mtwt~h.'lll te:.b

JC-

k'ri..-~

.\·2

Thty played Saturday
New Jmcy :JII Ouawa. 1:;\0 p.m.
lhiLu .:11. S.-ua JOil'. IJ p.m.
Color:~~Jn 111 EOO.~nloo. IOJO p.m.

l :lt"p.m.

Tampa BOJy Unhn•on · 1·1&gt; 111 CI.EVELANl&gt;
1 : 0~ p.m.
·
Minn,:~ola IMfiiiMl 2·21 ;II R;ahi n~~un: (Muuina 221. I : J~ p.m.
N.Y. Y a nlr.~c• (Mcnd•IJ:&gt;t 0· 1I al K u n'"~ l'11y
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•
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~sl,.nouinn •~~' Mary lkth KcnllCdy . athla:th:~ 1lin.'I.'UJI'
anJ wom..-0~ ktskclbnll &amp;;1\ ilo: h. In t'll..'t.:nn\C alhldl&amp;.:
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(IJicb• 1·.11. K:O~ p.m

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'
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20,950

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RICHMOND ROOSTERS: Si~ncd RHP )~d
INF Jnhn 'Puss. RHP Tt.'f1'Y Slt.'f'Pb'. OF
Jim KPI.-mcr. LHP Jdf Mot11fon. RHP [)Qek Han.
RHP Run Nelson. OF Jncl Williams. OF Ryan
~a..-cyllnd RHP Cllri1 H:!.wns.

alTo

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Nenh_L&lt;_
RRAINERU MIGHTY GULLS: Sir.ncd OF
Mike Arh . SS Rick B'rDucau . P h snn Mn'J:mV11)'t.'t. 18 Olin Cnl1o1• a"'! OF Nol:an AriL111."

and OF Dwain lloMit.:.

A_......

Monday'Sitlllltll

Noo.............
NBo\: S••pcndcd Miami Heal C Alom:n
MouminJ fur 1w11 pnn Md fined him S20.000 ark.l
New YuR Knicb F l...any Johnson rur ~~~ JOIIIlC•
-.1 fi•:d .in1 SIO.OOO fur JiJhlinJ ;wllll .usp:mlc..J
knid.1 r: Chris Mills Dllt 1amt :tnd fina.·d him

~ll . Arizona~

Alla.ta 6o; San Fnmdk-o:!

-~~~~. Lot AIIJ&lt;b 4
· Milw-'«~ . CINCINNATI 2

2150 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
740 446-9/// or740 446-2484

I!I!IICilny l:mlln'
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•AMRI~•WIIfq 'n

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14 'l'o
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NEW IDEA BALERS

M71:n l'l'll• Slfl1

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4144-1DCIOI

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T.-,.'1 . . -

(s-Jin ().

1-21 ot Allooto

(-MIII-(IIa

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.............
•

12-

1 ir KEN RAPPOPORT
Hocllly Wrltilr
·

.

:

.

,AitfiWAY IIANURE·BPREADER I
GROUNDORPTODRIV!II-130 .......

lGftto .. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

·

game, ~ tonight," P\liladel· through the second period for Monphia coach Jloger Neilson said. "You treal, the NHL's most storied franDomlt!ik- Huek ·Won 11is first d11111'we showed in this series.':
can't allow six power-play goals in chise, but one that hasn't won a play- ··
:.=91ympic sold medal this year with .
Michal Grosek's power-play goal two games and expect to win."
off series in five years.
#' lhe Czech Republic team. Now he S:40 into overtime lifted the visiting
In two other Eastern Conference
Tile Pensuins can only hope that
...; ::.fw another fltlil - a playoff Series Sabres over the Fly~.
series Friday night, Montreal beat history is on their side again. Tile last
..Vil:[ory with the Buffalo Sabres.
Butl'alo, which hail·won only two Piltsburgll S-2 and Boston defeated time they lost a Game S 11 home to
;!- : "It's a great feeling," Hasek said of its previous 14 playoff series, elim- Washi*BtOI! 4-0. The Canadie111 8nd fal! behind 3-2 - against New Jer;: )fter ll!aking JS saves to lead the inaled the Flyers in live pmes. II was Capitals both lead those best-of·sev- sey in 1991-they rallied to win no1
(' Sabres over the Pliiladelphia Flyers. the same number of pmes Philadel- en series 3-2.
.
·
·only the series but the Stanley Cup.
: 3·2 in overtime Friday nishl. "I'm jlhia .-led to beat Buffalo in last
On ,Saturday, it was New Jersey at
Goalie Andy Moog came back
very hOiflPY· ,I've played well the la.'il year's playoffs.
•
Ottawa in the East, and Dalla.~ at San from a 6-31oss in Game41n which ·
, three games, but my teammates have
Before this year, Hasek had a 6-11 Jose and Colorado a1 Edmonton in he allowed five goals on nine shots. ·.
: done a great job in front o( me. My record while appearins in live play- the West. Ottawa. Dalla.~ and Col· This lime, be 'allowed only third-peri• defense did a 1rea1 job.''
off series.
orado all lead their series 3-2 and can
(See PLAYOfFS on 8-4)
:
The 4-1 series victory sent the
All three Sabres aoals came on ..,_, advance with victories.
: Sabres into the second round of the power play, which produced nine
. Cllllldlells 5, Peaplns 2
• Eastern Confere~ playoffs and sent goals in ~2 chances during the series.
Mark Recchi scored twice in the
: the Flyers home. The Sabres became Eight of the Sabres' la.'il 13 goals in third period as Montreal won at
• the second team to alvaac:e, follow- the seriea came on the' power pley.
Piltsbursh and put the Penguins on
• ing the SL Loui&gt; Blues.
Sean Burke made 26 saves in the the brink of elimination.
! . "We J~Cver expected thi~." said . Flyer's' net.
Patrice Brisebois and Shayne Cor• Flyers captain Eric. !-indros. whose
"Three (power-play goals) in the son scored I :2? apart midway
•
(Continued from B-2)
team was·a Stanley Cup finalist last

las~

season. "We're a much berter team

• dux does seem to find a way to win." against Jay Powell (3-2).
: · Tony Graffanino, Andruw Jones
Brown. facina his former team for
· ! and Michael Tucker homered for the lirsttime, departed with two 'out
: Atlanta. whicli has won four straight in the sixth trailing 5-3. He allowed
• and 13 of 16.
a season-high five runs, four ·eamed.
:
In other NL games. il was ChicaCubs'· C1rdluh 5·
: go6, St. Louis5; Montreai7.Arizona
Mark McGwire hit his major
~ 4;PirtsburghS,L.osAngeles4;HOII§- leasue-leuding 12th horner for St.
I ton 12, Philadelphia 5: and Florida 6, Louis. but Chicago used a solo homer
~ San Diego S in II inninas.
·
by Henry Rodrisuez and a two-run
1 Colorado at New York was post- double by Mark ·Grace to beat the
( poned by rain.
Cardi!lllls at Wrigley Fierd.
~
MartiDS 6, Padrea 5
Jeremi Gonzalez, (2-~) improved
Florida scored live runs off former to 3-0 in his career against the Car,
~ Marlins ace Kevin Brown. and Edgar dinals. allowin1 three runs and live
t Renteria singled in the winning ·run hits in five innings. Rod Beclc got
~ in the lith ofT Dan Miceli to win at nine outs for his ninth save.
f Miami.
·
Todd Stottlemyre (3-2) gave up
San Diegp. which tied the game in six ru~s, ~ix hils and five walks in
i the ninth on consecutive homers by seven mmngs.
j Wally Joyner and Greg Vaughn {Iff -·
. Expos 7, D~mondbKb 4
Antonio Alfonseca. l.efl the bases · Vladimir Guerrero hit a two-run
~ loaded in the IOth and the II th horner and rookie Javier Vazqo•z got

i'

his first major~ win as Monueal
snapped a five-aame losing streak.
Guerrero's shot off Arizona Starter
Brian Anderson (l-3)cllpped a threerun third inning tluu hel~ Vazquez
get l'tis first victol)' in six starts.
·
F.P. Santangelo 1111il Shane
Andrews also llomeled for the host
Expos, while Brem Brede and Dc:VOA .
White homered for Arizona. Vazquez
( 1-2) pve 11ft three run~ Iiiii five hits
in 6
inninas.
l'llilta 5, Dudpn 4
At Pittsbursh. turner Ward broke
a 1-for-20 slump with a ujple that
started 1 four-run sixth innins and
carried the Pil'llleS lo victory QVCl' Los
Anseles.
1be Pirates ended a th~-pme
losing Slrellk and bell the Dodgers for
just the ICCOIId time in their Jut II
meetinJIS.

!'

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lSabres beat Flyers in OT; Pen.guins lose

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l NHL playoffs move toward close of first-round play

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•

ARRIVES AT TltiRD -The Tampa Devil Rays' Quinton McCracken
(right) slides Into third bau for the run-scoring triple as Clevesince 1958.
got four outs for his lOth save.
land
third baseman Travis Fryman welts for the throw In the fourth
lrabu gave up both hits and.struck
. Orioles 6, Twins 3
Inning
of Friday night's American League game In Cleveland, where
out eight in 1 113 innings, lowering
Rafael Palmeiro gave BaltimOre a
his E\{A to 1'.47, and Riyera got his 4-3 lead with a two-run homer off the Indians won 7·5. (AP)
foorth save.
Brad Radke (3-2) in th~ sixth 11 Cam- heim.
longellt winning streak since Sept ,15Williams had an RBI single oft' Pat den Yards. The Orioles won consecAthletks 5, Blue Jays 2
20,1995-andis 114 si ncea2-IO
Rapp ( 1-3) in the sixth at Kauffman utive games for the finttime in two
Tom Candiotti (3-3) allowed two start.
Stadium and a sacrifrce lly off Jose- weeks and sent Minnesota to its runs and six hits in six innings. and
Erik Hanson (0-1 ). winless since
Rosado in the eighth.
fourtllloss in five games.
A.l. Hinch and Scott Spieziohil con- Sept. 23. 1996, allowed four runs and
Red Sox 5, Rarigers 3
Doug Drabek (2-4) allowed three secutive homers in the fourth. Oak- eight hits in 4 1/3 innings at Oakland.
Aaron Sele (5-1) lost to his former runs in six innings to stop his four-. land won 'its sixth straight - ·it• Billy Taylor pitched the ninth for his
team as Troy O'Leary hit a two-run game losing streak. Arthur Rhodes
seventh save. ·
horner that. broke a 3-3 tie in the sixth pitched two scor:eless innings, and
at Fenway Park. Darren Bragg hail a Armando Benitez finished for his
three-run shot in the first for Boston, sixth save.
which won for the 16th time in 19
Angels 7, White Sox I
games.
· Darin Erstad hit his first major
Sele, who spent his entire career league grand slam, and Paco Manin
in the Red Sox O!ganization before a snapped an 0-for-17 slide wi!h an
trade 10 Texas last November, RBI single thai broke a 1-all tie in the
allowed five runs and six hits in sev- sixth . .
en innings. struck out eight and
hen you ·buy your life insurance from us through AutoShigetoshi Hasegawa (1-0)
walked one.
pitched four perfec! innings.in relief
John .Wasdin (3-Q) pitched two of OmarOiivares. James'Baldwin (2• Owners Insurance, you11 receive special discounts on
scoreless innings, and Tom Gordon J) allowed five runs, five hits and five
your home, mobile home or car insurance. We '11
walk.~ in five-plus innings at Ana·

'
,.,'

~.1407, 1401,1401

.

By The AIIOCI.t.d PI'HI
.
Seattle isn'tjustlosing these days,
. it's g~tting pounded.
Bobby Higginson homered twice
. ;md had four hits Friday ~ight as the
, Detroit ligen routed the Mariners
, H-3. Detroit. which hadn't scored
that many runs since a 17-l ·wiq over
. jl.1inne.wta on April 24, 1993, sent
· Seattle's ERA soaring to S.93, the
_ worst in the American League. .
"You fall behind so big. so.early,
· so far. then whatever you've got is
. taken away," Seattle manager Lou
. Piniella said afler the Mariners J12.16) lost for the fifth time in six
games.
Dc:troil, coming · off a major
league-worst 6-18 Rl::ord in April,
·had 20 hits. iis most since last Aug.
; 22 against Milwaukee, and the most
~off the Seaule since an 18-3 loss to
: Anaheim last May 21.
• "Tonight we were making up for
: the first month," Higginson said.
: "Even when we were up b:~;, 10, you

still wanted to beat the ball up."
At the Kingdome, lim Worrell (23) allowed three runs and seven hits
in six innings.
Bill Swift (2-1) was pounded for
10 · iuns .and 10 hils .in four-plus
innings, the most runs he allowed
since giving up eight for Colorado
· against l,os Angeles on April 7,
1995.
"They came out swinging," he
. said. "Tiley hit some good pitches,
they hit some bad pitches."
In other AL games, New York
edged Kansas City 2-1, Boston beat
Texa~ S-3. Baltimore beat Minnesota 6-3, Anaheim routed Chicago 7-1
and Oakland beat Toronto S-2.
.Yankees 2, Royals I
Hideki lrabu ( 1-0).combined with
Mike Stanton and Mari'ano Rivera on
a two-hitter, and Bernie Williams
drove in .both runs as the New York
won for the 17ih time in 19 games
and im~ved to 111-6, its hest slirl

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415SouUJ Olutdl Stnu· ~ wv 1-lm82'l0417. 372·2844

n ,,eu .., ....... ,....s .,,,....,,...

A day after Rolando Arrojo
pitched the De:• :J Rays' ftnt-ever
shutout, Springer lasted only 3 V3
innings. He gave up live runs, six hits
and five walks.
·
·
Notes: Devil Rays first baseman
Fred McGriff was a late scratch with
an upset stomach. He was tested for
an ulcer, but the results were negative. Devil Rays manager Larry Rothschild said medicine he was given
made him sick .... Jackson reached
double figures in saves for only the
second time in his 11-plus seasons....
Cleveland's Dwight Gooden begins
his rehab assignment at Buffalo on
Sunday. He will pitch three innings
against Rochester.... Tarhpa Bay's
Miguel Cairo went 0-for-3 and is Ofor·l7 since hitting his first major
league homer April27 .... Hernandez
walked three in the ninth and ha~ 16
walks in II V3 innings. ... Fryman is
().for·9 with three homers in his
career against Springer.

Tigers maul-Mariners 17-3; White
Sox fall
.

•

Buketltall

Ott:awn :tt N..•w J~.."Pey . 7:J0p.m.. ir nca:CIIs;ary
S;an .kJM: a1 DaiW, 1JO p.m.. if k'C\..,S.'W)'
t:dnwmlnn a1 ('ulur.dl. IJ p.m.. if nt.'C&amp;."isoary

three earned- and eight hits, walking four and strilcing out six.
Colon got out of trouble in the second and third. bot couldn't escape in
the fourth. Quinton McCracken hit an
RBI triple and scored on Mike Kelly's single to right. Dave Martinez,
who was intentionally walked, came
home when Manny Ramirez overran
Kelly's single.
Former Indian Paul Sorrento ·
capped the rally with an RBI double
to make it 4-0'.
"We scored four qui!:lc runs, and
boom, they came back with five,"
McCracken said.
FryrTlQII's homer cut it to 4-3. Pat
Border5 was hit by a pitch, David
Bell doubled and Omar Vizquel
drove both in with a double that save
Cleveland a S-4 lead.
Brian Giles scored on Bell's shal·
low popup in foul territory to risht in
the sixth, and his RBI single in the
seve~th off Jim Mecir made it 7-4.

:• ...
AIL, 9'am·
es. ··~---------=-----u

MISSION VIEJO VIGILANTES: SiJno.'ll kHP
Parisi. OF Phil Kcm:in. INF M:~rw~y Ga,liano

, lldrnil a1 Phnmia . J p.m,
PiudlurJh m Mnnuc:cl. 7JO r.nJ.

season,

•

i

4110 w/DOIIy .-so.oo
4180 w/Dolly ...100.00
4170 w/Dolly .,.100.00

C'hic;~JnCuN fl. Sl. l.nui1 ~

S.DicJV (~ .... , .. -

.....

Mi~

2 p.m.

By KEN BERGER
· CJ.!:VELAND (API- The "J:ampa Bay Devil Rays aot a glimpse of
Cleveland baseball's past ind presenl.
· After a 62-minute rain delay, the
225th straight sellout crowd dwindled
to a few thousand as the Indians beat
·Tam.pa Bay 7-S Friday niaht in .the
Oev1l Rays' first game at Jacobs
Field.
•
The AL's newest team also saw
another rare feat - a home run by
·Travis Fryman.
Fryman, Mr. Consistency for seven years with the Deuoil Tigers, hit
his first homer in nearly a month and
raised his average to .200 by going 2for-4.
The Indians, who had lost 10 of
14, hope that signaled the end of Fryman's slump and t1uu of the defend. lng AL champions.
•
· "Was ita huae pickup? You bet,"
IJ!(Iians manager Mike.HaJirove said
"We needed something tUf bad right

there.,,
Fryman's three-run horner, a 419·
foot shot off Dennis Sprinaer ( 1-4) in
the fourth. was his third of the
first at home and first since April 4
atAnaheim.
·
"You want 10 do well any time
you go to a new place." Fryman said.
"You want to get off to a good start
for the guys yoo'te playing with, for
the fans who haven'.! seen you on a.
.day-to-day basis. Them's a tendency
to try maybe too hard."
The Devil Rays got a run in the
eighth on Kevin Stocker's homer off
Eric Plunk into a steady rain. After
the rain delay, the Indians loaded the
bases against Rober!D'Hemandez but
failed to score. Mike Jackson got
three outs for his IOth save.
Bartolo Colon (2-1) was inconsistent again •. but recovered from . a
four-run fourth to tetite 10 of his last
II batters. He allowed fou: runs -

Lf

)

A!'I

•
.
Wttttn DMIMI
S,.OicpL ... . ........... ... 19
M 71 ..
· l..t•AnJ~elft.......................... l-1
1.\ .5111
Salt Fr.w-U..:4J ................... .I-I I-I
Cnhw:ldct ............................... l2 lt. ..l19
Ari~ ........ ...........................7 21 ,!,.,

Jackson County
MunlcljMtl Judge

~" • 1 ca.-Jtmfuul • Page 83

. Indians notc·h 7-5 win ·over Devil Rays ·

~ ;AP

Drtrnil ({.'AJ~illu 0-1., Ill ~aUk-IJiiiiRS(IR I-H.
4, )~

DOUTHETT

36 years as an attorney
' • Twice elected Municipal Judge
• Endorsed by Jackson Co. Bar Associ.
11

W~Lnpe

.l-1 ).

.o-

Su~pcnlkd ~n · , ha~~lball
G R11fl'f Al~lnn it~tk:tinu~· ly ftw- ~tularm~ l"ft*'ai!LHI
NEBRASKA WESI.I~ Y 1\N : 1\nnnun~:\'..J the

Court of Appeals·

REND 8.-\NOITS: SiJn.:d LHP Will fl)'nt .
RHP Collin Kcrtcy and RHP Ridlilrd Wa:~lt,Vt.T.

Today'sp.-

. T(:laJ (Oliver 1·.1) a1 ""''"" CManincz 2-0),

Marahall Brown

ColleK•

FRESNO STATE:

M~Adou.

.

.

Today'•Rll(Ni~J,.

0;

Otovin Smit h m:magc:r uf

K~LAMAZOO

otfio VALLEY REDCOATS: SiJn~d R
. kff Cordle.

5&amp;..Tk:li.f..l
Boslalfl

T•lrl'lllkl CCicnrllll 2·:\ ) :at Oatbftd (lkfttiJI 0-111.

Phil~k!lrhia

Na~d

Mklw~ Ltq:ut
ROCKFORD CUIJOIE..Ii: lk~.:alk..J RHP Runnic:
Sorz::mo from CAicndcd IJ'I'inj. Uainin~ .

NHL playoff slate
Burf:1h1 .\ ,

ASSOCIATION:
n'led ia rrlation~ .

Rurida St ..t u- 1 ~
OA YTONA CUBS: Rec.dl.:d RHP Chrt!&gt; Gi5stll from Rar.:kftVd of lhc Millw1."51U:.glk.

•

Friday's Knreli

N.11lonal HMkt7 Lta,:ut
NATIONAL HOCK EY LEAGUE PLAYERS .

FLORIDA MARUNS': Senr LHP Gabc Gmu:aktlo Cbarloi'ta: oflhl! lntelllillonal Ua_gue.

rcn Fld .

p.m.
.
.
Tampa Bay (Sanden I -2 ) at CLF.VEI.AND

For 4th District

on the l~·day disabled li11. Rtca lla:d "OF Mau
Mft•lr.c from Iowa tlf lhc PCL.

Hockey

Trau tHcllin,: ~.01 t11 BtHuoft IRM!! 1· 11. l :t~

DOUTHE

:t

CHlCA.OO CUBS: Placed OF Lanct Johnson

Flnt--llnotn
Ne-w York 11 MiMni, I2:10p.m.• (NBC)
Hovslon Ill Urah, J p.m. CNBC)
Canl'trenu_.,....
'Os:trloU\! at Olica&amp;o. ~:JO P.m.

Thty pbytd Saturday

tn

N....... . , . _

Today'• slate

hh

CLEVELAND 7. Tamp:a Bay~
BalliiOOR' 6, MinnCwta J
Anaheim 7. Chica,:u Whit.: Soa I
Detroit 17. St;tUI.! J
Oakland!'. Tnron1o 2

1"-1 2·1~ K:05 r .m.

win~ ~ic•

Minnesota .01 ~lie. J:JO p,m.. CNBC)

2

Bos&amp;on 5. TcUt J
N.Y. Yankm2. KIIUI4Cily I

-4:05p.m.

l:t Chilrlouc

Ut:lh 9.\. Houston 71 : ames tied 2·2

Fridoy'sscores

Minntsata tNurpn 0. U at
).2). 1:.15 p.m.

DETROIT TIGERS: Rttal.ecJ OF Kimcr.a Bar·
lte from Toltdoofrhe lnlltmlllonal League,

They ...,yed Saturday

Oatland ................................ IJ 14
16

traciS ,

Friday'sscorn

4~

9 .667

Stattk ................................... l2

IT"flani

'

WtSin11 Ohri:tian

.............. 1!1

Base hall

~

CLEVELAND ...................... !~
kwaa~Cily ... ,...................... l2
MiniiCSOia ............................. l I
OiOfO ... . . . .
. 10

Tc~a~ ....................

Cult~

(Poliue 2· 1) al C'llk••gn
4--1), 2:20p.m.
St

th\' bl!nci• during il fiJ!hl
Hockey

.-\•tric-.n Ltacut
1\NAHEIM ANGEL'\: PJoc~d OF Tim S:1lntvn
1111 1~ l}i-day rJisabled lis1 rtunaclivt 1n Arril ~ -l
Calkll up LHP Gret: Cadare1frnm Vancoovcr of IIJC
PCI..
BALTIMOKE ORIOLES: R~allcd C COOl-he
Gnxne from Rodw:Jttr of che lmcnwui onaJ le;1~uc .
RekaJed INF Ouie Guillen. Signed RHP S1ev~ OntiYCrOS .and AHP Jim Converse 10 minor-league cno-

dro.l 0-0). 2:0~ p.m.

E.slrm DiwWon

t-

Transactions

21. I:J:'ip.m.
. Colorado fAs!:t~:lo 2-J) tu N.Y. Mtts tReed I·
21. 1:40 p.n1 .
·
CINCINNATI (Tomkn J-1) at: Milw~ut;.ee CEI·

AL standings

$2 .~00 for ltavin_g
1'1"" Arril :10.

..

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

:sunday, May 3,1998

.

.

said.

Scoreboard
2·2). I : J~ p.m.
Los Angclc:l (Park 2-01 II Pillsburfh (Silva 1-

.'

'

'

Cleveland kills slump

improve. He had an .MRI on 'Thurs- cessful elTon to relieve the pain that
Doug Jon9, who blew hi.s !ut two
day that revealed no bone fracture or bas plagued him for more than a save opportunities, aot the last three
tom ligaments in his left.hand. which week.
outs for his pinth save.
was struck by a comebacker off the
"My neck is killing Jlle. It's stiff.
Remlinger (2-3) gave up three
bat of Montreal's Shane Andrews on it's sore," Cirillo said. " I went to a runs on seven hit~. four walks and
April 14.
.
chiropractor in L.A. I got a massage two hit batters in S W innings. The
"That really gave me peace of in San Francisco. It's just there. the Reds didn't help him by hining,into·
mind." Karl said. "It's a deep bo~e ·pain is really frustrating. It's like .a · double plays to end every inning
bruise where there was no padding. gnat that won't go away."
between' I~ founh and the seventh.
They told me right away. even when
Cirillo sent a tw!)-out. full-count
"We're not getting any RBI PI!&gt;- .
the hand became functional. it was curveball from Mike Remlinger 'up · duclion, we're a bunch of guys hitstill going to hurt for some time. Now the middle for a twp-lun single that •ting .300. but what the hell good dots
thall know it's just a real deep bruise put Milwaukee ahead for good. 2-1, thai do?'' Reds manager Jack McKand it will go away over time. I'm in the firth.
eon fumed. "We just gotto gel some
OK with it. There's still pain, but I
Bret Boone put the Reds on top 1- guys that can score.lf we have to lind
know there's not going to be any fur· · 0 with a 409-foot horner in the sec- new guys, we' ll find . ~orne new
ther damage."
ond off Karl, who became the first guys."
Same with Cirillo.
Milwaukee lefl-hander to stan the
Noles: Tile Brewers wete coming
"We had X-rays on my neck and season 4-0 since Ted Higuera in off rare consecutive days off. The
the proble(ll's not skeletal," he said. 11987.'
Brewers•.tied with Houston atop the
But Cirillo couldn't hide his disKarl. 0-4 at this time last year, .NL Central, have now been in first
eomfon.
gave up one run on \hree hils and place for is games, their longest
" I feel like I could cut niy head off · three walks in six innings. He left in stretch since 1987; when they were at
right n,ow." Cirillo said as he the sixth for pinch-hiner Eric Owens,. the t6p of .the.AL East for 31 straight
swiveled his neck back aad forth. to who blooped a two-out RBI single. games from April 6-May 13 .... The
the left and the right in an un~uc- off Todd'Williams to make it 3-1.
Brewers are 6-0 in games Karl has
started this season.

Brav~s

•

'

•

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

•

COME HELP .CEUBRATB.Oil ZM ANNIJIEIWRY
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�•

•
Sunday, May 3,1998

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

· : Sunday, May 3, 1998

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

~

NBA to conclude first-round playoff action today

Jazz beat Rockets 93-71; Hornets beat Hawks to win series

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ

Utah trailed 42-36 at the half. and
it loo.ked like the Rockets might put
them in the m:ord book alongside the
1994 Seattle SuperSonics befon: the
Jazz outscored the Rockets 57-29 in
the seconll half.
"You have to give a 101 of credit
to Bryon Russell. He carne in and
played so hard that the n:st of us just
caught on." John Stockton said.

"This gives us an opportunity to stay
HOUSTON (AP) - Bryon Rusalive."
sell g01IO stitches on his face and the
The victor)' evened the best-of
praise of his t~ammates.
five series at 2-2, with the deciding
Russell provided the third-quarter
Game S set for today in Salt Lake
, spark. and Karl Malone scored 29
City. The winner will play the San
points as the Utah Jazz beat the Hous·
Antonio Spurs in the second round.
· ton Rockets 93· 71 Friday night and
In the only other playoff game Fri·
avoided beeoming the second top
day night, Charlotte advanced to a
seed in NBA history to lose a series
second-round showdown with Chica·to a No.8.
go by winning 91 -82 at Atlanta The
Hornets won .the series 3·1.
•'••
In today's only action, Minnesota
travels to Seanle for the deciding fifth
·lI
game of that series, the winner of
~..
which plays the Los Angeles lakers.
;
Today, New York travels to Miarni for Game 5 of that series, and
Chicago plays host !O Charlotte. .
·Russell scored 15 points and led a
~
third-qu~r charge that tumed the
game round for the Jnzz.
"Bryon Russell has been terrific
all series," Rockets forward Charles
Barkley said. "He gave them a big
lift
when they needed il."
''
The Rockets have a 'string of 17
•
consecutive playoff series victories
'
when they've won the first game.
•
Houston won Game I 103-90 at
Utah.
,.
The No. 8 Den.ver Nuggets beat
'
top-seeded Seaule in 1994, but the
'1'
Jazz avoided that fate as Malone
..
scored· 10 points in the third quarter,
I
and Utah outscored Houston 28-10 in
'
the fourth.
,.'
Hakeem Qlajuwon led Houston
I
with 27 points and 15 rebounds, but
•!
.
to lhe basket Is the Atlanta Hawks' Steve Smith (8} a a Clyde Dn:xler was the only other
' Charlotte'• Glen Rice moves In to defend durlrig the first quarter of Rocket in double figures with II
' Friday nlght'a NBA ftrat-round aerlll·flnaleln Atlante, where the Hor·. points.
neta' 91-82 victory pushed them Into the conferencesemlftnals opposite the Chicago Bulls today. (AP)

••

••

•

'
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'

"We didn't stan off well," Malone "'r points, matching the lowest quar·
· the
said. "But we stayed with it. Bryon "'r t01a1 by a Rockets opponenlm
did a great job and was a big lift for playoffs.
us off the bench. We had a game plan
The Jazz rallied around Shandon
and we stuck with it.
Anderson; who had seven second"Our defense gave us a big lift quarter points, and Utah pulled to a
down the stretch."
.siK·point deficit at intennission. ·
The Roc~ets played most of the
"We had an outstanding defensive
pine without Barkley. who bruised first half," Rockets coaeh Rudy Tornthe triceps muscle in his right arm in janovich said. "We didn't shoot the.
the second quarter and left the game , ball real well so it was a close game.
· after at..,rnpting to play in the third. Then in the second half we just
Russell and tearnrna"' Jeff Hor- couldn't make a basket"
nacek butted heads with 42 seconds
Hornets 91, Hawks 8l
left in the third period. Both received
Anthony Mason scon:d 21 of his
stitches and returned to action.
29 poinl!; in the fourth quarter for
·The Jazz, who trailed 2l·IO after Charlotte. .
·
one period and 42-36 a1 the half,
"Masewasawesome."saidChar·
started corning back in the third 1011e coach Dave Cowens. whose
period. They finally got their first team advanced to the second round
lead since the opening minutes on a · for the second time in team history.
pair of fn:e throws by Malone for a
Atlanta beca.rnC .only the third
57-56 edge wi'th 3:07 left in the peri- team to lose a playoff series to an
od.
opponent it swept.dunng the n:gular
The Jazz never trailed again, and season, and the Hawks wen: knocked
poured it on in the fourth quarter out in the opening round for the first
when they used a 10-0 run to !ake an time since 1995.
83-65 lead with 3:42 to play.
The Hornets, who shot only 34.
Utah rnanageaonly 10 first-quar- percent and· tied an NBA playoff

'

10

Alabama's new drivers find racing tougher than elders did .

! Legacy of .'Gang' in danger
. ~ of not having torch~-carriers
•
,'

:
•
~

Gang on its home turf. Then, the surBy JENNA HALVATGIS ·
TALLADEGA, Ala. (APl
vivifig members of the group looked
First. they honored the Alabama . around Talladega Superspeedway
and saw nobody to carry the . Iorch.
As Bobby and DOnnie Allison,
Red Farmer and Neil Bonnell's widow, Susan, stood proudly as grand
(Continued from B-3)
marshals before the DieHard 500, it
od ·goals by Marl iii Straka and was clear thai the cen:mony was
Jarornir Jagr and stopped 32 shots. · about history..
" I'm afraid we've outlived that," ·
"He's· been terrific the entire
series." Recchi said of Moog. "We said Bobby Allison, who had 84 of
kind of left him hanging out there the the Gang's 131 Winston Cilp victo.'
la~t game. There's no doubt he's been
ries.
the biggest addition for this .club this

,

year.''

1

Bnilns 4, Capitals 0
Jason Allison and Sergei Samsonov set each other up for goals a.~
Boston won at Washington ana stayed alive.
·
Seeking to overcome a 3·1 series
deficit for the first time in franchise /
history. the Bruins got three goals in
the second period and forced a Game
6 in Boston today.
Allison and Samsonov fed each
other with similar passes for the goals
that gave Boston a 2·0 lead, revers·
ing the 2-0 advantage that Washiog·
ton erijoy&amp;l in each of the four previous games. Rob DiMaio and Ray
·'
Bourque also scored, and Byron
Dafoe stopped 26 shots for his first
career playoff shutout.
"Our main objective was to keep
them oil the hoard in the tirst peri·
od." said Dafoe. who n:corded his
first career playoff shutout. "And we
did that"

.~

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can do it, I can do it,' but we just
couldn't go. I don't know if it's the
heat in the track or the heat affecting
the way the rn01or runs or what."
The top 25 qualifiers locked up
staning spots in today's 43-car field,
with the rest of the lineup set in Sat·
urday's time trials.
Here an: the qualifiers for the Cal·
ifomia SOO NASCAR stock car race
at California Speedway, with car
number in parentheses, driver, home·
·town. make of car and speed in mph
(remainder of 43-car lineup was
determined Saturday in further time
trials):

r;

• .•
:·: :

50fooploWI,.
Credit Pro.le•s
Y011 Ma1hn:llueA Nell' Or
Voed Vellkle Vndtr A Speeilll
._k 'ltll Market l'rop'llm:
We ..ve $130,080to lend,
limited to doe 111'11 50 people
who ire 1pprove6: Phoae Ia

1our cndk ..........lclllto 011r
·. l4hour~oerYke.

•

17\I.H!i.

ll. (91) Kevin
Chcvml&lt;l. 178.'191.

LcPaat.

Shelboutfte, Vo ..

14. (-40) Sttrlins Martin, Columbia. Ttmt.

Chcvml&lt;l. 178.873.
I~ . (Jl) ~n Schl'llder. Fen1on. Mo., Chc'frolel, t78.709.
16. (9) Lob Speed. la&lt;Uon, MiSI .. Font.
178.700. •

. .

~

'•

.' •

t' '

1996 CHEV TAHOE 4 DR 4X4 .

•

.

CAUFORNIA 500
TRACK L!HQTH: 2 mllea
RACE LENGTH: 250 llptl, 1500 mllell
DEFENDING CtWIP: Jell Gordon
Me! RICORDlJell Gordon, 155.012
mph, . . June 8, 1997
QUAUFYINQ R!COIID: Greg Sadta.
t83.753 ni!Jit, .. June 5, 1887

owned and loaded with Iellher natlng, pwr Mil,
V8, auto trans, end much more.
Locally

1989 MITSUBISHI GALANT

Nice starter car with pwr steering, p~r brakes, AM!FM
stereo, and air conditioning•

Sunday, Grissom was lucky enough
to make it through a 20-car crash with
only minor damage. That kept him in
the race, and attrition helped him
come home 16t~.
.
Stricklin failed to qualify for the
third time in nine tries and has fin·
ished just·once.
MThe little things are just killing
us right now," Stricklin said.
· The Gang rarely had the need to
say such things.
Bmdberry failed to make the field
for the seventh time this year. His
only finish was a 24th.
_, "This year has just been terrible,•·
he ~'i8id.'
·
The Gang hardly ever said that.
As NASCAR celebrates its 50th
anniversary, it has been hald for the
driver's tel avoid talk of the Gang.
"Without a doubt the Alabama
Gang has influenced kids from ibis
state getting into racing." Grissom
said. "And obviously the current
Alabama drivers would like to be as
successful ~~they were. . .
"But right now, it's like we're on
the outside looking in."
Fn:eman believes there ~'Ould be
another Alabama Gang someday:
"I like to think of this as a lransi·
tional period because I'm not ready
to call it the end." Freeman said.
"But I think there are some 15· and
16- and 17-year-olds thai in 10 years
or so can return Alabama racing to
the top.:·

I•IDD-

10. 1461 Moraan Sh&lt;phenl. Conover. N.C.,
Cl)cv101&lt;1. 17\1.381 .
II . fl) 0.,..11 Walcrip. OweNbooo, Ky..
ChcviOI&lt;I. 1711.:!96.
12. &lt;941 am Ellice~ o.,....,.,m•. &lt;lL. Font.

California lllllll/1~i.n ':I
Speedway .

::'Alabama Gang'..• &lt;Continued from B-4&gt;

•&gt;

3. (6) Mart Martin. Battnillc. Art., Ford.
180.148.
4. 111 Ruoty Walla«, St. l.ooi1. FOfd,
180.130.
5.1161 lollnny Ben,..., Goond llapicb. Mi&lt;h ..
Font. 179.8:!5.
6. (..:2) Joe Ntmechd.. Laltland. Aa..
Chcvml&lt;l. 179.686.
7. (II) Bobby t.abocnc. CotJ&gt;u• ~hri~i.
Te•u. Pontiac. 179.,71.
8.1121 Want Bunon, Soulh lln&lt;IM, Va.. l'oft.
ticoc; 179.4)5.
9. tS) Teny t..boote. Cccp"' Chri&gt;ti. Te'"'·
ChcvmlcL 179.411.

I. (141 leiT Clonloco, Pi..booo. Ind .. Chcvro1&lt;1. t81.772.
.
l . till Jeremv Moyr~elc!- Owensbooo. Ky..

•

: ' just ·outside Binningharn that pro·.
: ~ : duced several drivers capable of run·
: • ning 1·2-3 in any given race. ·
•• : "When the Alabama Gang would
~ ; beat the Waltrips or the Penys. it
;: -; would give fans the same kind of
: chest~purnping.pride as when Alaba' , ma or Auburn would 11eat a rival in
~ football;' said Jim Freeman.
;. J spQkesman for the International
;.;· Motorsports Hall of Fame. "Steve
, ., and Hut and Gary Bradberry just
; haven'.l had that sallle kind of suc-.
~ • cess."
''; When GrissOIR became the only
~~ Alabaman to qualify for the DieHard
' .: 500, it became clear that. once again
;. · ; there would be no native son staod:: : ing in the winner's circle at Tallade- .
•; · ga Superspeedway.
·
·
!,; : It's a trend thai besan in 1993, the
~- : year Davey Alli!on was killed in a
,: : helicopter crash at Talladega. Since
his death, no Alabama driver has won
;: :a Winston Cup race.
~ •: The curn:nl group is without a
career ~ictory - a far cry from the
~: • Gang, whicb c010bined for II ~ins at
: ; : Talladega alone.
~ ·· ; Being competitive is hard enough
:,:: for the drivers, but continuing the leg·
' ~ • end of the Alabama Gang is nearly
:::impossible.
:. ; "Racing has changed since they
· .- wen: around," Grissom saicj. "I'm
;~ ·; not saying those guys wouldn't be
: ; any good now. but it's not a• simple
; · : as waking up on Sunday mornings
;· • and saying, 'I'm going to win this
v, ~ ruce today.' If it was. there would be
~ • a lot more people in this sport."
,.
Freeman, who worked at Tallade·
~ .' ga during the Alabama Gang's glory
r.·:' days, is the first to admit that wipning .
~ - isn't as easy, or a.&lt; much fun ils they
f : made' it seem.
"Not to take anything away from
~ : them.·but when those guys were rae·
~-. • ing they only had six other really
~: competitive teams to beat," Freeman
f• : said. "The guys now have 20 other
~ - : teams that an: just as li~ely to win a.&lt;
~: : anybody else."
~ : • . Grissom is perhaps the rnostl!Oill·
•.: : petitive of the new group. and he.
: · : could do no better than 21 stlast year
•:
' •. in the series standings. His best
.
• •, result this season has been lOth, and
(·: he ·has · not qualified higher than
'•:: ,. ,23rd .
.
~: •
Afier starting in the 42nd spot last

Font. 180.639.

' 1,8
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f ·:

$13,995

1,318

. 2. ........, lllyfleld
3. TMy L.tlonte

· 1.113

4. ~ . . . . ~.. ...•• ~.,.

•

POints

10 drivers

Point&amp;

1. Mllll&lt;tnelth

Second-row starting pos111ons
went to the Fords of Mark Martin at
180.248 and series points leaderand Mayfield's teammate - Rusty
Wallace at 180.230.
The pole was the 17th of his career
but first since last May at CharlO!"'
Gordon is. the ninth different pQie
winner in 10 events this season, with
only Bobby Labon"' taking two.
Johnny Benson took the fifth spot
on Friday, with a lap of 179.825, fol·
'lowed by last year's California pole·
· winner Joe Nernechek at 179.686.
Labonte was seventh at 1.79.578.
Nernechek, whose pole speed last
year was 183.015, said, "It's strange
what happened to the race track.
When Gordon went out. I said, 'If he

'

j .

;. I Top 10di'Mn

(6141 992·6614 • (lOOt 137·1'094

Mon.·Frl. 9

By MIKE HARRIS
not to drive in too deep. There's no
FONTANA, Calif. (AP)- Cali- bumps or cracks or anything that sets
fomia Speedway is all right with Jeff the cars sideways. It's just you can't
Gordon.
feel the car getting away from you
The Kid won the inaugural Cali· until it's too late."
fornia 500 on the two-mile oval last
Jarrett and bolh Bodine brothers
June, and now he will start from the were set to get into backup cars and
pole in today's Winston Cup race. try to qualify again tO&lt;Iay in the final
But it's n01 just hij accompli5hments round of .time trials, while Trickle
· .ben: that have Gordon enthused wa~ 31st in his backup car in Friday's
. · about the place.
. qualifying.
"'I love the speed• we're running
Gordon wa.• the fourth of 46 dri·
· . hen:," he said Friday after leading veis tom~ qualifying attempts Fri·
qualifying with a lap ~f 181.772 mph . . day.
''Nobody wants to run as fast as
He was initially disappointed with
we're running at Atlanta.
his effort.
•:A track like this, wide with rei·
''II was just a good lap," the
· atively easy transitions into and out defending ·Winston Cup champion
· 'of the comers, makes it mon: Qf a · said. "The car just stuck good. But,
· . IJ;ick to get the cars set up just right w~en I saw the time, I was n:ally sur·
Bull think it's much safer; and you pnsed. It wa.• the same speed we
. ' put on a better race."
went .in praCtice.
'
'
The biggest problem at the. new
"I went into the comers a little
track on Friday was in turns three and ·harder on that (qualifying) lap and I
four, when: Todd and Brett Bodine, lhought it would be about three
Dick Trickle and Dale Jarn:u were tenths (of a second) quicker than that.
involved in one-car c.rashes.
"But, it turns out that just about
"I saw some skid marks that everybody slowed down from prac·
looked like they hit real hard," Gor· tice. I gue5s it must have been the
don said. "Other than it's justlcind of track heating up."
a flat transition that goes in there, that . The closest anybolly could come
: tum is a l.ittle bit tighter as you're to knoclcing Gordon offlhe top qual·
::·..coming in than the rest of the turns. ifying spot was Jen:rny Mayfield,
•..
"The banlcing that thjs track has, who put his Ford neKt 10 Gordon's
;, especially right then:, you're going . Chevrolet on the front row with a lap
: : n:al fast and you've gotto be can:ful of 180.659.
•

i:!}//1/1/~~ilf;t;l
GISnd W.tkJnill

INCLUDES MOUNTING I BALANCING
Main St. Pholw 112-4414 POmeroy, OH 4116789
v. mile Down River from Pomeroy Bridge

........ c ·······-

••

•••
•

Jl'~e:::=

5.811/a APR Up To 7'2. Manthst··

(

a·
....•

Well. there was Steve Grissom,
who began the DieHard 500 42nd in
a field of 43. He wasn't fast enough
10 make the race, and got in only
because of his car-owner's points.
And the other candidates?
Hut Stricklin was in the driver's
lounge after failing to qualify. And
there w~ Gary Bradberry, who also
. had the day off after finishing last in
a pool of 51 potential qualifiers.
This wasn't the' way they grew
them in Hueytown, the racing hotbed
(See GANG on B-5)

OVER
InVOICE

..

I

~

n:cord by scoring 64 points in a 32·
point loss in Game 3, surpassed that
miserable effort by the end of the
third quarter.
Mason, who had sparked a minor
controversy late in the regular season
when he said Hawks had "no bean,"
pumped his fist on the way back
down the court and went on lie his
.seao;on high for points, in addition to
grabbing 14 rebounds . .It was rerni·
niscenl of his effort in Game 2. when
he scored 25 points in a 92-85 victory.
Charlotte came to the Georgia
J?ome early to gel in some extra
shooting practice on Thursday. The
move apparently worked- the Hornets went 39-of·74 (53 percent) from
the field .
"What Mason did in the fourth
quarter was take over the game," said
Glen Rice, who added 26 points for
the Hor:nets despite a son: thumb on
his shooting hand. ''If anybody can
do that, Mason can."
·Steve Smith had 27 points to lead
the Hawks, bu.l only six carne in-the
final period.

Gordon captures pole position for today's California 500

6Jt

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1997 CHEVROLET MALIBU ,
Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

It's Election n•e
To whom It may concern. Tho blind peroon who
left the County Home and now Jives at the Maples
Ia very happy at thla time. We are all relieved and
happy for her.
The fact remains that she was told she had to
move, that tho home was closing on March tho
31st. .
· The Sentinel a~ted on· several occasions tho
home would cloae on the 31st. If ·that's not
pressure~ don't know what Is.
This blind person decided that she wasn't
preuured to '!'OVI after Janet Howard paid her a
visit on April 30th. Ia thla Political? Our .county
commlaslonora are.trying to uu this situation ao
that Fred won't look quite so bad .r ight before .
election.
··
Fred Hoffman·, did you know Janet Howard waa
helping you 1r1 thla way? If so, It's time for you to
retire! F~od, did you and Janet discuss thla
atrategy before ehe wont to the MapleJ?
We need commissioners that are Interested ·In
our county growing not playing mind .games.
Would the voters of Meigs Coun(y .approve of you
usltlg the ox~rosldents of the CdUnty Homo to be
reelected? Fred, are you trying to deceive and
mltload th~ public again? Tho blind person
receives $549 a.month on SSI and do you pay for
rent, . phone bill and groceries and still have
money to -pay for an ad In the paper.
.
Thla ad coot me $145.80, who paid for It? It's all
political, Fred Hoffman. You are using the blind
person to be reelected. ·
It will coot taxpayers ~ver $150,000 to tllko care
of tho original 10 county home residents. Our
committee dldri't aay •hat It would co•t tho
General Fund that amount, like Fred stated. We
uld It would c;oat tllxpayera, meaning ttate and
t.dfral.
·
.
The County Homo CornmlttH has nothing to
gain,. but Fred Hoffman Doesl Fred, we will not
roepond to any ~ of yow untruthful campaign .
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�Sunday, May 3, 1998

~

Sunday, .May 3,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point ~leasant, WV ·

yean. In 1994 Grogan was selected
by the local media members as a
member of the Patriots 35th anniver·
sary·team. Grogan (1975-90) completed 1.879 of 3,593 for 26,886
yards and ~ touchdowns. Grogan
has thrown for, more than 12,000
yards, more than any one else in
Patriot history.
• Irwin, is a b-toot·3, 273 pound
guard in hjs third year out of Col·
orado. Irwin is the nephew· of Pro·
fessional GoIf Association great Hale
Irwin. Heath was a third round draft
choice, he was an Associated Press
first team all-American for the Buffalo's
• Vineteri, is a 6-foot, 200 pound
place kicker out of South Dakota
State. Jte is fast becoming one of the
lop kickers in the NFL. La~t season ..

Vineteri led the team in scoring with held at Riverside Golf Course in
115 points including a perfect40 for Mason W.Va., with the camp staff as
40 on extra points.
well as other athletes and notables on
Last's year's camp was extremely hand to participate.
·
successful, with more thari 250 atbThe tournament format will be a
letes participating in the one day four-player best ball scramble. Bring
event. TWo sessions are scheduled. your own three-player teams, ·and the
The morning session will be held fourth player may be _purchased
from 9 a.m. until noon and is open to through a celebrity silen! auction or
athletes in grades 5-8. Registration will be assigned on tfie morning of
for the morning session will begin at the tournament. The celebrity silent
8:30a.m.
auction will be held from 8:00-8:30
The afternoon session, which will · a.m. A shotgun start will take place
be held 'from 2 p.m. until 5 P·111·; is . at 9 a.m..
open 10 athletes in grades 9-12. RegEntry fee is $50 and includes
istration for this session will begin at green fee for the tournament, riding
I :30 p.m. It is expected that this cart, food and refreshment during
year's camp could easily draw over
300 athletes.
Tht~ year's golf tournament will be

By SAM WILSON
Tim• Sentinel Conwpondlllt
A ~ea~ deal of anention baa been given to the
Lakers young star, Kobe Bryant. Instead, people
sbould be singing the praises of San Antonio's Tun
Duncan. Not only did he win tile Rookie of the
Year Award, but he's also a legitimate candidate for
the Most Valuable Player Award.
.
Of course, Jordan will win that prize, but Duncan is the real deal, and light years ab'lad of Bryant.
Kobe ~as fabulo~s in laat year's rookie game wlien he scored 31 points.
Duncan dtdn't play m the rookie game this year. He was too busy playing in
the All-star game as a rookie.
·
·
· Duncan led the entire league in double-doubles. He's a bonafide star.
Bryant is capable of spectacular moves; howeve! so waa former Hawks star
Dom\niquc Wilkins. One of the greatest score~ in NBA history, Wilkins
wasn t voted to the top 50 players list at last year's All-Star team .
If I was allowed to draft any young players; ! would take Duncan ·and
. New Jersey's Keith Van Hom before ·ever considering Bf)IBnt. Kobe's good,
' but there's morc.to playing the game than spectacular ·moves. Remember, he
doesn't ~ven start for the Lakers.
Fans were upset when Portland's Isaiah Rider stated that he was a bener
: player than the Lakers' all-star fOIWard Eddie Jones . .Rider was right, he is
· bener than Jones.
·
·
' Rider'saimplaint is not that Jones is an all-star, but that he, Dennis Rod·
man and J;&gt;errick Coleman are not placed on the squad because of the excess
baggage they carry. He's right there, too!
Rider plays in a small market, and he has Jhe reputation of a troublemakSCORING LEADERS "ONORED -The Little John's store In VIII·
ton
honored the top ecorere In the Vinton junlo~ high 1nd Rlnky·Dink
~r. _If he w~nts to join Jon~s at next year's All-Star game, he should try an
program1.
From left to right are VInton elghth1JI'IIdar Jarrod Huh,
attitude adJU$)menL
Jones bas a great advantage over Rider, because he has uie mOst dOmi- Lftlfa John'• managar Mirilla Hlckl and the VInton Sonlce' Juatln
. nating player in the game playing center for the Lakers: Shaquille O'Neal. Davia. Also getting trophies but not making the photo Mallon were
.
Be advised that the torcb has been pasSed to Shaq. He, not Jordan, is the the VInton Lady Tlgera' Jualca Colllna, Tiger HVII'IIh1Jreder Bran·
Chrlltln1 Nl'~or.
;,. single most dominating player in the game today. There is no one on the do.n Bums 1nd the VInton
planet who can guard him or match his power. If Shaq had been healthy this
: .: year,.he would have lecj the league in scoring and been its MVP.
,
: ·. · Nick Van Exel, Jones and Bryant all benefit beca~ tljty a~ not botli- .
. • ered by the types of coverage that they would face if Shaq was still in Orlan- ·
: ; do. Shaq gives them the freedom to be spectacular. ·
; : Consider how entertaining Kobe would be if the Lakers had Bill Perdue ·
. · in the middle instead of O'Neal? Imagine how good Rider would be if Shaq
: · played for Portland. Rider wouldn't face double teams because teama would
: .:have to double Shaq instead.
:' Don't kid yourself- the Lakers are a championship team ~use of
; : O'Neal. He's that good. In fact, he's great!
.

play and prizes. Persons wishing to
play in the golf tourn~ment should
contact Ri.verside Golf Course at
(304)773-5354 or (800)261-3031 for
more information. A sports memorabilia silent auction will also be held
at the golf course the day of the tournament
Proceeds for this year' s camp
once again will go to scholarships•
. Through proceeds of last's year's
·camp three scholarships will be
awarded this year, one each at Meigs,
Southern and Eastern High Schools,
with plans of· adding more schools
this year. More names of celebrities
taking part will be announced soon.

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::Holzer Clinl~ hosts annual sports medicine conference
• •• GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic in the top one percent of the 1997 weekend of sports medicine educa- helped organize the event
Roush also thanked Washington
:recently hosted its annual sports Boston Marathon and is currently tion. was complimentary of the proElementary
Teacher, Susan Brandegram
sponsors.
the
University
of
Rio
• ;medicine conference at the Universi- preparing for the 2000. summer
.
berry
and
principal
Jim Pope for their
Grande,
Eastman
Foodlands,
; •ty of Rio Grande on April 18.
Olympic Games.
cooperation
in
assisting
with the pioOthers appearing on the program McDavid Braces, and the City Perk,
; , .; The sports medicine conference
• · .:presents a unique perspective to area included Carson Crow, an attomey as welt as all Holzer Clinic staff who gram at WashingtOn Elemenwy.
.
-,.
!:coaches, athletes, and athletic train- from Pomeroy who spoke aboutliti: 'Crs on sports medicine and injuries galion and athletics; Dr· Kelly Roush,
:related 10 athletic activities.
.
Holzer Clinic Chiropritctic and sports
'; ~ 1998 program took the edu- . injury specialis~ who discussed the ;
· ~cational experience ·one step further year in review for 1997-98 athletic ·
: •by including not only Holzer Clinic injuries in our region; Steve Davies, .
' :personnel. but athletes and sports MS, .a Holzer Clinic Exercise Pbysi- ·.
UP Oil Fill 1111
~~-1'
; :medicine physicians with semi-pro- olog1~1. ~ho educated the group on ,
, ;fessional and Olympic athletic ex~ _ excrc1se 1nduced asthm~; and Lori
·rience.
Ward. LATC, head athletic lratncr at 1
· , The program also included a bas- Holzer Clinic, who addre~ the ·
;ketball handling exhibition by Ca.~y group about life threa!ening injuries
; Love, the son of Brent and Chris including beat stroke and allergic
•: Love of Addison. Casey is a seven- reactions.
; ' year old who attends Addaville EleIn addition to the one day seminar, .
· mcntary and has developed an abili- Roush and ocher speakers spent some
· •ty to handle a }lasketball better than quality time .with youth in Gallia
•: many college athletes.
County. On Friday aftemoon Roush
'
Saturday's educational session and the sports conference team spoke
JIUIDENTIAL • COJIDIDCUL
:· included several preseinations nnd to approximately 100 elementary
UMESTONE
TOP SOIL ·MUSHROOM
~ •Uhibitions. The presentel'll and their students at Washington Elementary in
RIVER GRIU
A"EL
COMPOST
• ,topics included: Dr. Craig Pearson, Gallipolis. On Saturday morning,
: 1South Africian former national rugby
the group met with children at the
; ·player and current professional rug- Gallia County Children's Home,
Open M~diY tlnru Friday 7:30 •m 1114:30 pm.
'· by coach in Boulder. Colo.. who sharing their message o( positive
s.turdly 7:30·...,.12 noon
:, spoke on the consequences of bead intluencesofgettinginvolvedinathy 011 Pick Up or We DeUver
: trauma; Dr. Chad Thoma~. who com- letics.

-

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CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.

l

RODNEY, OHIO

hlltolr ...

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:' ~ocal sports
happenings ....
.

•Dozer.
Work

in the 1996
Olympicholds
trialsthe
in
· .· peted
pole vaulting
and currently
, record for being national champion
:· six times; Dr. Craig Thoma.~. and elite
·. golfer from Memphis, Tenn.. who

.~R:ou:sh:,~tbe:.:coordi::·nator::.:o:f~the:!::::;;:;;;;4;4:6:-::2:11:4:o:r:2:4l:5:53:1:6:~~;;::::

won:s primarily
with
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:•. and·Dr.
John Hood,
a marathon
run: · ner from Clinton, Iowa, who finished

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JEW YORK (AI')-.,. N~w YOii

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. seCtional tournament softball game

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GALLIPOLIS ~ The Gallipoli~
Skatcsville USA roller hockey team
will hold its annual awards banquet
Saturday at 5 p.m. .
The Huntington Blizzard's Ray
Edwards, the .1991 awards banguet
speaker, is scheduled lo return a• this
year's guest speaker.
In addition to awards for the players, the team's sponsors will be hon- ·
OIM at the banquet.

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94 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 11200, Leatbtr power Hila,
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biL of fac1. Wlrr~ A/f, fl.JC, tilt, erviN, P.llflnclowl........$17,1111
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wan., A/f, AC, tilt, crullt, P. wtndowl..........,............- •••12,135
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Toclay - 6-9 p.m. ,
MOIIday - 6:9 p.m.
'l'tlnday-6:9p.m.
WedMiday - 6-9 p.m.
n•rsday- 6-9 p.m.
friday -:- 6-9 p.m.
Satu~y - 1-3 p.111.
•
S.llllay, May I I - 6:9 p.D)•

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RIO GRANDi; - Here is tbis
week's schedule for events at the
. Univenity of Rio Grande's Lync
. :Center.
0 . . eealer, &amp;JIIII'IIIium
and nicqllftballcwrls
Today - 5·9 p.m.
•
Mollday - 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
Tae day - 6 a.m.·IO p.m.
WedMiday - 6 a.m.-10 p.m•.
nu~y ~ 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
~ • Ft;ida)' - 6 a.m.·9. p.m.
· Slllw(day - I :6 p.m.
Snday, May 10- 5·9 p.m.

1997 FORD F250 414 SUPERCAI

''TENT SALE';

. tiM II

Lyne Center slate

I'INAN~ING.

Ill COIDITIOIIEIS IIISTILIED •21.00 IMOIITH
HEAT· PUMPS IIISTIUED •38.00 IMOIITH

Tuesday at Meigs High School. The
winner of the game will · ~~ the
winner of the Belpre/Sheridan that
will be played the same !laY at Belpre. Thetitlc game will be Friday at
S p.m.
The ·price of admission is' $2 for
everyone for the tournament game,

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS

PW, PL, P. .... aport wil1111 .............................-

Like a good neighbot, .State Farm is there.•

· .,

; !tfts decided ..Y decision op a nA

; llprne for the lam. whotc ,Jeare II

tilt, cruise, PW, PL, AM/FM llerco cast., luggage

rack, cast alum. wheels, running
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AI.H £ONDITIONERSIIII
. . •T PIJMPS

:· Athens Athletics
:· to hold tryouts .
.· In mld·May
.
,
THE PLAINS - The Atbens
• Athletics baseball learn, which willl
j: formed in 1997 for player_s 19 yean .
and older. w11l be conducting a play-·
er tryout on Saturday. May 16 at 9
~ a.m. at Athens 1ligh School's Rannow
F'.eld.
;
The Alh(etics compete in the Cen·
: • tral Ohio League. which is made up
· of teams from Columbus. Wester·
: ville, Delaware, N~ark, ZaDCJville
' : • and ·Cambridge areas.
•
The 26-game. seawn will be
' played in June and July with home
•, pme5 a1 Rannow P'teld. IQtefejlted
• individuals may contact Philip St.
, ¥gelo at (740)(i62·28 19 or Chuct
• Dousta&amp; at (140t797-4049.

1997 FORD EXPLORER 414 4 DR. ILT

COLUMBUS .:_ The Ohio High
School Basketball Coaches Associa; : lion named River V,allcy senior Sarah
- : Ward as one of the seven Division II
: : aii·Ohio girls' ~Kademic tea':" rnem.. be~.
, ' Ward, who averaged 23.3 points
: : per game in her farewell !W:8!14JR with
· : the Raiders, carried a 3.947 lfllde. : · puirit average during that time,
:: The only other soutbea.~t Ohio
· : players to get similar bono"' were
:: Marietta's Joe Vuckovic (3.4 gpa &amp;.
: · I6.7 ppg) on the Division I boys·
: :team and Chesapeake's Sammy Oue
· (3.84 gpa &amp; I 6 ppg) on the Divi~ion
~ . Ill boys' ~uad. Both are senion.

Crllft

tpOrl ........ Cllllllt ..............................,......................

• . Utah Is facing a Houston team that is nOt your typical eighth seed. Usu~ : ally, an eigllth seed is a young team that is beginning to make its move to
; : respectability. The former two-time NBA champion· Rockets are making
• : their last h!Jrrab. There arc still three dream teamers on their roster, aQd two
: : former MVPs. You don '1 fiad that formula on.many eighth seeds. · ·
: · This is also a lime for those t~ who.do not make the playoffs to clean
3-0N-3 CHAMPS - Nick:• AII-Stara of Bidwell won Hrat .,._ In
:·~ bouse. 'Q1c Blackbawb, who missed the big dance for the first time in 29
8-9 ynr-old bracket In tiMI Bldwellilq!latere' 3:on-3 basketball tour·
• · years, fired their entire coaching staff. The Oippers and Nugcts, who c:QIII- nament on Aprll3, On Aprll18. the qu.wt won the.Burllle Oil/little
. bincd for 28 wins, ftred their coacbcs. But that makes sense. None of us arc John'• Tournament. From left to right are Kayla Smith, Jnalca
t1Urprised when losing teams fire their coaches.· ·
Dlngen, Lacla P....-on and Alhlay Neville,
·
.
.
What I find incredible is that Seattlo's George Karl, Chicago's Phil Jack- ·
•· lion il1d Utalt's Jerry Sloan miJht be Jet JO by -their respective teams after •
. each has won over 60 games and qualified for top seeds in the playolfs. I stlll
: don't, and never wiD, understand that logic.
·· a.m Wlleon, Ph.D. . . . 11ua·n• ......., of
un~vwt~ty of
· fllo Onncle. An IVId fin of 1111110111- IIIII a ,_ 'I Ill totlllllflr of lleebl- .
. .... - 11t • a naaw of art. Ind.. 11111 a .,.e s of lndtllla um .. • - w111c11
· Mou?d ... rw1 ~,,. eDIIIil2?lin; ._.
11211 lll!lld (and IS aa1l~r s-t) ja,

;;Olympians, marathon runners add views

Wltlt..,ovl4

95 HONDA CMC DX 17188, 28,000 mlla1 1 bal. of lllcl.
w.r~nty, AIT, cruise, PW, PL ...........................................~$10,1185
98'NISSAN ALTIMA 17173, Glttn, bal, of fac1. wtrr., A/T, AIC,
tift, crul•, PW, PL..~ .........................................................$10,995

..: es.

Lewa.·1.9%

U•tll lq11tlttl

86
CAVAUER
17197·~=~jm:l~ltl:,~~ba~l.::ol~tacl~WI~:n·~·
A/T,CHEV.
AJC, AMJFM
CD, IJIOI'
t
86 EAGLE TALON 17282, 17,000 miiH, bal. Of fact.

Parity seems to be lhe wood in this year's NHL and NBA playoffs. As of
.
; : Wednesday, the eighth-seeded Ottawa Senators are a game away from elim: : inating the top-seedeil New Jersey Devils. The champion Red Wings are
· . having a difficult time with Phoenix, and the Flyers are trailing the Sabers. ·
: : It's not a good time to be the favorite· in the hockey playoffs.
: · Wilh the elCC)llion of the Bulls, who are playing a true eighth seed in the
: : Nets, llrcre baan't been 1 sweep in any of the other NBA first-round match-

•'
•
•'•

ADDRESSES STUDENTS- Dr. Craig P..r.on, a former South AtrtCOURTSIDE
- Seven yur old Cuey Love, who
1 :clan rugby player and current professional rugby COICh, Ia shown
hat bacome well known for hla ability to perfonn ba•kltball handling
· ;addrnslng studenta at Wallhlngton E'-tlaiy School at part of the exhlbltlona, 11 shown entertaining the partlclpanta of lila Holzer
::Holzer Clinic's annual sporte medicine conference.
Sports Medicine Conference at the University of Rio Grencle.

......
,
....
,
.. ,.,.....

The real deal

Bartrum slates football camp, celebrity ·un~est for mid-June
' DAVE HARRIS
IIY
all time leading punter for the BuckT-S Correspondent
eyes and averaged 44.7 yards a punt
' POMERQY - Plans are starting in his career. He also has the top two
to be announced for the 1998 Mike season punting averages in Ohio
Jlartrum Football Camp and Celebri- State history. Tom also played quarty GolfTournament that will be held terback his senior year, for his career
on June 19 and 20.
.
he completed 171 of 304 for 2,252
: Bartrum, the fonner Meigs High yards. This past season for the Palri~tandout and Marshall University' ots, Tupa punted 78 times for 3569
. standout, ha~ more than 20 current yards an average of 45.8 yards a kick.
and former National Foot6all League
• Johnson, a 6-foot-3, 240 pound
players pledging to take part in this , middle linebacker from Colorado,
year's event.
· was a first team all-American selec• Some of the players are scheduled lion f&lt;;~r the' Buffalo Bills in 1994.
· io appear are Tom Thpa. Ted Johnson. Johnson will be entering his third sea·
• ~vc Grogan. Heath Irwin and Adam son with New England, this.pasi'Sca.Vineteri. .
.
·
son Johnson led the Patriots in tack·' • Tupa, a former Ohio State. star ·Jes with 129. Johnson was also a
~as a all-American punter for .the. rookie selection in 1995.
·
• Grogan is one of the top qlljlr, puckeyes in 1987, where he was a
. four year starter at punter. He is the 'terbacks in the NFL in the.
20

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

J

·

1Jr&gt;
w.::M.Imo.~~-..~:::::iiiiiiiiiiiiMI~=
~~~
«1
~
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�I

Page
. •• ~ 3

•

ODNR issues weekly fish'ing report

In the Open
By Jim Freeman
nme•Sentlnel Staff

•The anti-hunters were busy in
:Meigs County last weekend.
· Members of Save the Doves, a
:group wanting to ban. mourning
"llove hunting in the state of Ohio,
~ere at Racine's annual Flower
l'estival on April 25 gathering signa·
l ures to put their anti-hunting issue
" " the Nov. 3 ballot .
.
• For about 18 months now, I have
.been warning arc., hunters and other
·sportsmen that tl. . anti-hunters are
:&amp;erious about puu 'ng mourning dove
)lunting on the ballot. Those hunters
11ttending the flower festival had an
. n pportunity to see, first hand , the
:-anti-hunters at work.
: · During an earlier visit to Meigs_
:'County, Ohioans for . Wildlife
conservation chairman Rob Sexton
said, '"It's hard to believe you're at
war until you see ohe airplanes flyj n~
overhead." Sexton was
. metaphorically referring to a tenden.cy people have .to pot recognize a
: threat... until it is too late .
· But as far as the two people representing Save the Doves were con-

Along the River

Mly~ 1 -

Outdoors

a.......J~--·--

:

COLUMBUS, Ohio'(AP) Southwest
crawlers and chicken livers fished
Here is the weekly fishing report
C.J. BROWN RESERVOIR- along lhe bottom.·
submitted by the Ohio Department Crappie fishing is best around the
. Nortlnrtlt
of Natural Resources.
artificial structures in May and June
CLEAR FORK LAKE - This is
Southeast
with fish measuring up to 14 inches. one of Ohio's lop muskie lakes .
TURKEY CREEK LAKE - Cast spinners or troll small crank Troll around submerged humps and
Rainbow trout should provide very baits in the main channel or in Buck emerging weedbeds at depths of five
good fishing action.during the next Creek near New Moorefield when to eight feet with large crank baits or
month . Use kernel corn or small seeking white bass. Most walleyes cast spoons to the shallow areas.
worms when seeking these fish. The measure 13 to 20 inches with some Crappies and bass can .be cau,ht.
outlook is said to be excellent this up to 25 inches. The walleye fishing around the shorelines during spnng
year for anglers seeking channel cat- outlook is rated excellent.
and provide good fishing opportunifish, bluegills and redcar sunfish.
EAST FORK LAKE- Fish in ties. The outlook is fair for anglers
Some of the redcars measure up to the wooded coves with minnows to seeking bluegills, white bass ,and
II ·,tches. The lake also has lar~c- catch crappies. Night fisl.":ng in the channel catfish.
mouth bass where a 15-inch mini- stream channel and upper half of the ·
NEW LONDON RESERVOIR
r•.um length limit remains in cflcct.
lake works best when &gt;.~king chan- - This 220-acre lake is in Huron
RLUE ROCK LAKE- This 16- ncl catl"ish. Lnrgcmout• . Kentucky County. Rock bass measuring up to
acre bkc in Muskongum County spotted and hybrid striped bass nrc 10 inches can be taken when fishing
offers excellent fishin~ for Huge- also present and provide good fish- with small night crawlers. Walleyes
mouth bass . Usc \top water plugs , ing action.
up to 24 inches 'may be taken on
spinners. live or artificial bait
Central
floating jigs or weight-forward spinaround shoreline areas during early
DELAWARE LAKE - Anglers ners. Fair to good populations of
morning and evening · for best can take white. and black crappies largemouth and smallmoulh bass are
results. Blucgills and sunfish can he measuring eight to 12 inches when present. The lake also has yellow
taken along the shoreline on small fishing with minnows beneath a perl:h, bluegills and channel catfish.
worms and larval baits used with or bobber. The best fishing is around
Northeast
FINDLEY LAKE -· Boalers
without a bobber when fi shed in shoreline cover, and the outlook is
shallow water.
rated excellent. Look for spawning may usc electric motors only on this
Ohio River
white bass as they move up the 93-acrc lake in Lorain County.
The Ohio River and its backwater Olcntangy and Whetstone arms. of Bluegill fishing should be e~cellent
areas in Co'lumhiann and Jefferson the· lake . Largcmout~ bass up to 20 with most fish exceeding seven
counties offer peak fishing action for inches can be caught along shoreline inches. Usc larval baits and' small
hass through June.
areas with submerged structure.
wor!lfs fished beneath a "bobber at
Fishing for white bass and hybrid
GRIGGS RESER. VOIR- The depths of three tq ·six feet in areas
strip~d bass can be exceptional at upper end of the reservoir north of with submerged structure for best
times with hybrid stripers weighing tHe island is the best place to lish for
three to 10 pounds. The tailwatcrs largemouth bass. Usc six-inch ·plas- ·
below lock and dam structures arc · tic worms. small spinners or crank
good place s to fish for stripers. baits, and live bait for best results.
Check with area bait shops for Night fishing along the cast shorcupdaocd ' fishing information and line is productive when seeking
conditions.
channel catfish. Usc cut baits, night

:,fc rncd, gathering ' signatures was
· their business ... and business was
: good. Too good.
• I went home and returned with all
· the pro-hunting hando•ts I could
)ind. These I freely distributed in the
park. encouraging other hunters to
6pread the word, "Don't sign the
jlctition."
• Po.r many it was too late . One
:Woman who had signed the petition
. .earlier explained she did not realize
· it was anti-hunting, something the
Petition gathc(Crs did not publicize.
One of the petition gatherers tried
her best to convince people that
tiJ.c.irs is not an anti-hunting issue.
:·:Another woman, wtlo does not
~ ign petitions, was asked to sign and
· r~fused. The response from the
· oo(i~? "So you're a mourning dove
. killer?"
::::Was my one-man crusade suc· ~e~sful? Probably not, but at least ·!
; ~~eeded in making it a two-sided
: o$Ue for a little while. Undoubtedly,
•Saye the Doves will gel signatures it
: ~i~ds.
·
~ •: Mourning dove hunting is rela-.
t ~cly new to Ohio, with only a limiied number of participants, so why
should other hunters care if it is
banned or not? The problem here. is
biologistS, federal and state wildlife changes in water .level and quality
the national organizations behind agencies, ahd the hunter from the also can lead to the spread of this
· Save the Doves; they want to ban all equation. It's bad for wildlife.
bacterium and its toxin.

results. Crappies may be taken in
these same areas when fishing with
minnows. The bass fishi'ng outlook
is rated good this year. ,
GUILFORD LAKE - Use traditi.onal baits fished during lhe
evening when seeking channel catfish . Most fish caught during the
daytime measure about I0 inches
less than catfish taken at night.
Black crappies will measure up to
13 inches and can be taken on min·
nows along with white crappies
which will be slightly smaller.
Lake Erie
Walleye action has dropped off in
the Maumee and Sandusky rivers.
and will continue to improve on
Lake Enc in. the coming months.
When condi.tioni permit, walleye
anglers should continue to work
over the reef complex and around
the western basin islands, in addition
to the Toledo shipping channel.
Previo11s surveys indi~ate anglers
who are trolling these waters expcri-.
encc a higher catch rat~ compared to
~nglers who arc drift fishing for
walleyes. Many walleyes arc suspended at various depths and will
respond to different lure colors as
conditions vary from day to day .
Most of these fish will range in size
from 13 to 16 in.chcs, wi.th some
larger lish measuring 20 to 30 inches.

'•

The Division of Wildlife advises
people not to feed. waterfowl. In
some communities, ordinances prohibit the feeding of ducks and other
birds and wildlife in certain art:as.
In 1997, about 1.5 million ducks
in Canada and the United States died
from avian botl!lism, the worst such
recorded outbreak in nearly 50 years:·
according to Ducks Unlimited; a
nonprofit wetlands conservation
group.
,
In Ohio, the largest single Ollt·
break killed nearly 1.000 waterfowl

Representing
the ~•
People.
'

Historic.Roush home unqergoing restoration

.

Elect Iilii. Sheets·
Meigs £ou~ty (!ommlssloner

,O,BEFU!UBI
"l'-------------------------------1111!1

AI Sl ... OHo

1r~;::,

..

to give .the ·Minnesota Twins their
first extra-inning victory in five tries ·
this season, 8-7 over the Baltimore
Orioles.
Coomer hit the first pitch from
Doug Johns (0-1} over the centerfield wall, just over the outstretched
glove of Jeffrey Hammonds. It was 1---------~---­
the .fifth homer Of the season for
Coomer, who entered in the seventh
inning as a'pinch hitter.

'

BONUS

,EII;glblleModel
.
97/9LNton ·-···-·~................iN-.......................-

Nat'l Rebate
~
.

Owner's Bonus
'Allowance

$1500 or' 1.911Kt-............- -....·-· $500
97/91 Aveig.,, Sebring C.UP'-··-····.,.....---------~1000-- ....--5500
97/91 stbrlng Convtl'llllt ..........- ••·-··--$500
97/91 Cirrus, Stratus,lretlt ....................;.._ ..,,.•..a....- ....-$1000-·-..····-·····--$500
97/91 Talon .................._, __,...........- ...- ....... _
t$2.000 ..- ....... --~-ssoo
97 /9e CotKortle,lntrtpltl......--·--··-··
-·---·-50---·..----5500
97/91 Caravan, Grand C.avan.-....- ......- ...- ..-·····-57S0.$1000 ......,.....- ...--.-Sl,fl09
97/91 Vorager, Gr.!
_,.$7SG-$1,000-----·--Sl,OOO
97/91/99 &lt;hrrsltr Town &amp; C...,try.--....:-....,_._..: ..._;,$1000--·-·-·-·-·51,000
97/91'Dakota...................- ....._,_ .................................. _,_..,. ..,$0 ................._,..,,__ $500
97/91 Ram 1500 R.... Cab.......- ..- ·
....._,..,....50 ..- -....- ...,...-SSOQ
91 RantlSOO Quad Cab.....- ......._.-......~-·-··-.8;..
$500
97/91 rem lSOO ct.lt Caii ..................................- ......- ...·~··-··•-S0-----!
$1000
Q7 ,,.. ChtfokH-.....,.---...·-----·-·--·~··--·--$0 .._ ,..___,.:...$$00
97/91 GrJftd Chlt'HH ..-·----· ·
;, . -SO.,..--.
- ..-5500
97/91 wrGngltr...."':"....---··
._........~.--......
~ ssoo
.......

f••

---50---·--·--

AY .SPECIAL
.
.
I .I I

.

v.,.,. . . _._,_._. . .-.. .

50-..,. . . . ..._-·-...

,...;..--$0-·-···"···..-......... .....
Note #I : The following models arc ineligible for t&gt;cnefils under lhis program· all model years: Dadge Durango,

Viper. Prowler, Ram Van (Cargo &amp; Conversion). Ram Wagon, Ram 2500/3500 Pickup (Including cah &amp; Chassis),
Chrysler LHS and 300M.
Note 112: Only one Chrylscr ow ness bonus allowance can he applied .to t~e retail purchasc·orleasc of each cligihlc
vehicle.

.·

.Chrysler Corp. is·the only one
of th·e Big 3 ~o do this
Curre~t owners or lessMs of a Clrysltr, GtHral Motors, Or ford vehicle who purdrased or
leased the vehicle new tnrd wlro Cllltlnw to
~ .ltast11:t velrldt •• ••a'le· This lo!IIIS
..
t

'

Includes: 200 Gallon Pr~pane ~
·. 25 Ft. of Copper Tubing. No Tank Rent
•

.

l.oeall~

Owned an4 Op..-ated!!
"Dol.., n.. • .,., Tlalne n.. BfiJat .wa,"
All Orders Must Be P•ld On Dtllvtry.

However, workers
dismantling lhe bouSe
~neiStafl
.:: · SYRACUSE -A longtime Syiaeuse lan~m~rk is
discovered an old
·the subject of an extensive renovati'!n and rel""tion
hearth beneath the
floor in the area lhat
project.
·
Several week&amp; ago, workers began dismantling the later became the
· HISTORIC HOUSE - Th• hlltorlc Rou1h hom• In Syr• who 11 flnanclng and OWf'IHing thl proJ•ct. Original con·
historic 1831 Roush House in Syracuse, in preparakitchen, causing
cuu, •hown ,.,. 1 t tha blfllnnlng of •n ongoing rotof'ltkm 1tructlon on th• houH begin In 1831, ..ld Duflt who I• a
tion for reconstructing the building at ~ new sile atop
Durst to belief the
proJICt, will bl dllmlntled 1nd tWCOnltrllcted on a nNiby dlse8ndlnt of til. orlglnll homsownsr, Ad1m Roush. Nota
nearby Snowball Hill. The goal is to have the house
family lived in a..
1 ne. Pl•n• Cllll to hiVI th• building on ·ns new tound1tlon tfre dlltlnctlw IUnbuflt amboa•ed and painted on front of
up the hill on its .foundation and under roof by fall,
dwelling behind the 1nd und8r roof by fill, according to owner Bob Dul'lt of.Kent, the houH. (Photo by JIM FREEMAN)
according to owner Bob Dursl, Kent, an auorney and
house in an area that
real estate developer who is personally financing and
later became the
overseeing the project.
·
kitchen.
The house is a distinctive two-story, wood-frame
The house's foun·
dation consists of field stone, quarried sandstone and
home with two full-length covered porches, one per
brick, each placed in dislinct sec1ions, showing how .
floor, running along lhe fronl a11ct south sides. The .
most distinctive feature is an embossed and painted •.
the house evolved during its c:Onstruction
The home is now in an advanced stage of deteriosunb11rst design on the front of the house. ·
ration, particularly the fouiulation which b115 slowly ·
The house was built in the Greek Revival s'yle
been sliding downhill '
with a definite
toward piesent day
Southern influen~,
State RQuJe 124, Durst
. Dunt$81d. .
explained. Along with
"History and
th¢ foundation, the
. bouae restoration Is a
,chimney has sli~d •
, hobby of
• lildill......_:....,...!...~-~
i'Orward, ·he tllldl. •~~
IJowevor, 0101t of tlie
The p~dy oil
lumber ·and ihe structure
which the boule ·
reliurin in good'shape.
atands h..- been In
"Irs very well built and
Durst's family 'for a'
in good shape with the
long lime. It was 200
exception of lhe founda·
y011n ago this apring
lion,' he said.
that his descendants,
. Hank Setzer, Kent,
the R~ settled·
owner of 20!11 Repairs,
oilto the property ·
whlctl is renovating the
after moving from
Virginia in 1798,
.
_ "'*--· f , . ourbuHd- old bou.se. said his
.,.,,,. O
company has per·
along wilti the Neas· .•
lngl
...oclllf«&lt; with "'' Roulh houH ,,. h11torlc In ~
ed bout 50 s1·mi·
ea and Wolfes, he
their own rlllht TltM .,., bul/dlnf wu • former orm . a
said.
·
IICIIoolhciwe built In 1-. poHibly tfrl ,,., M:hOol- lar proJCCU. •
.
Durst's greatho,.. u.-ctln Sllftolt TowUhlp, 1(1(1 Wllllter Ulltlu Seizer said he special• woiklhop by tiN. orlglnll homeort~n~r who Wll I izes in repairing old
great-grandfather,
o.blnet and coflfn mak-.:
.
buildings and said a
Adam Roush, snd
ftlll resiQration takes aboul a year 10 complele.
Adam Roush's
. The boarda in :the holne are numbered with paper
!tither, Jonas Roush, a Revolutionary War 5oldier,
tags; ~arked. with a pe~nent marker and videotaped
were the first to occupy the site .
,
DAMAGED ·CHIMNEY .... Plllri• Cllll to reco111truct lfre original chimney, u"alng a1 much of tha
The house served as the family horne for three
to ensure accurate reconstruction, he explained.
ortglnll
brick'., poalbla, ICCOfdlng to homaownar, Bob Dum who 11 1hown hsra axamlnlng •
While it may have been more affoidable to simply
generations·.wlth the last r~sident being Eber Roush
Cfllclc
In
, . chlmnly t:11ua«&lt; by • 1hlftlng foundltlon.
build a replica, Setzer said the cost of dismantling and
who died in 1970•
Durst said he has found no evidence to either
.
ho addition, some of the outbuildings have as much
"My mother, Marjorie Durst, lnheriled lhe property reconstructing the building is partly offset by the .
prove or disprove the story, but said .most stations on
history as the ~ouse .its~lf. .
.
value of the lumber contained iq the old house. ·
from my father, whose mother was a Roush, • he
the
Underground
Railroad
had
some
kind
of
distine·
A
small
whtte
butldong
dor~ctly
behond
the h~us~
•'1111, idea is to preserve and restore tbe house,•
explained. Durst purchased the houae and property
tive marking or design, making it easier for escaping
was a former schoolhouse buolt on 1825 ..The buoldong
about two years ago from his mother whom, he
Durst said.
·
·
was possibly. the lirst
to spot•
saves
I
. schoolhouse. used on Sutton
H!ltOry
.
added, is veri anxious to see it realored.
That could be something to explain the unusual '
Township and was later used as a workshop by Adam
If walls could lallc, the Roush home would bave a
Durst said there is sol)'le question aboul the actual
·
th
h~·Roush who was a callonet and
bu 1
age of the hpuse. According to family traditio~, It
story to tell.•
·
.
~rsone·
. · Local legend has it the building se..Ved as a "sta·
took over 10·years to build the house .rter construc•
bad considtion" on the "Underground Railroad" a system of.
tion was swted in 1101.
' ,•·
·ered "_10V.ing the ~OUSe tO its
homes and safe havens used by Blac!f; slaves escaping embosscd ani! paintciJ by
•wliere they were living wlten the.house was
a
"Mr.
Willis"
of
,o\ntiqU
1
new sole on one poece, but
under cotist~ction remains a mystery," he said.
.from the South prior to the Civil
. 'Yar.
.
decided it-would be more
uity in 1855, according
to an article in The
I..
11
efficient to ilismantle the ·
Athens Messenger, ~c
· '
home and reconstruct it while
said.
II . repairing the damage inflict·
"We have found noth·
.
'
.
.
Rol»rf Duf'lt ed by the years. - · ·
·
ing outstanding about the
.
He plans to salv.age the
construction of the house wilh the exception of the
original fire box and reconstruct the four fireplaces
embossed 'sunbursl' on the front, • said Setzer. "We
(two per floor) with brick from the original fireplace .
found no tunnels or secret rooms.•
Modem heating and·air condilioning ducts, and
. Another teaend concerns a 12·year-old deaf and
electrical outlets will be con,caled as much as possible
. dumb farm hand, who llv~ there iii 1862, ~ho was
and a more modem living area will be built onto the
reportedly shot all!l killed by Confe(lerate soldiers
rear of the house, reminiscent of lhe latter-day kitchen
durih&amp; a raid on Racine by Confederate Cavalry Gen.
area.
Alben G. Jenkins on Sept. 3, 1862, aboul nine months
The house, whi~h appears quite large on the out·
before the more famous raid by Confederate General .side, actually only measures about 1,500 square feet.
John Hunt Morgan.
"This house deceives you with its six-foot foundaYet another leaend concerns Morgan's funotis raid, tion, wide porches and high roof; Dursl said .
Durst liid.
·
While Selzer worked on the house below, Bill
Tho day before Milrp!l was defeated at the Bailie
Pullins was working higher up on the hill, usi~g a
bulldozer to constru~new site for lhe home:
of Bulfiitgton lllllld 11 Ponland on July 1'1, "t863, a
Union gunboal,llelnliitg upriver IOWard Portlanil ·
While Durst co
es.a purist would want the
spotted some Confederale 10ldiers geuina water at the • building to reconstructe · · site, he explained that the
house. Tho boat reportedly shelled them wilh one
construction of state Route 124 and the Mountaineer
shot, strikina the house neu the sunburst design,
Electric Generating Plant acrosS the river have drasti'd
cally
changed the landscape and view from the house
Dunt S8t •
•
Aathe dismandi111 continue&amp;, Durst said he plans
since its construction in 1831.
to cl\)SCiy examine that ponlon of the houk to look
"I want a more pastoral selling," he said, explainfor damaae ·that may have been caused by a cannon·
ing that the new site was designed out to allow a view
ball or ahrapAel.
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of the Ohio River while omitting the power plant.
By JIM FREEMAN

'

Rockies, who won for the fifth time
in six games. The Mets' losing
streak is their longest since dropping
~il!,hl straight in August 1996.
: • Burks, stuck in a 1-for-19 skid,
' hii his .ninth career slam and first
: slqce June 26, 1993, with the
: C)licago White Sox.
· -:Todd Helton opened the ninth
: wi!h a double off Dennis Cook (2-1)
: a~d. pinch-hitter Kirt Manwaring

Sunday, May 3, 1e98

•

Ltaders~lp

Feeding bread &amp; kernel ~orn
could kill ducks, other birds

(Continued from B-1 &gt;
walked. Reliever Greg McMichael
walked pinch-hitter John Vander
Wal with one out to load the bases,
and Mike Lansing struck out.
Burks followed by slicing a drive
over the fence in right-center field. ·
Curtis Lcskanic (2-3) pitched two
scoreless innings.
Twins 8, OriCIIes 7 ~ 11)
At Baltimore, Ron Coomer
homered in the lith inning Saturda~

C

Turkey Creek Lake touts rainbow trout

other types of hunting as well .
On the hunter's side is Ohioans
for Wildlife Conservation, a group
backed by the Columbus-based
Wildlife Legislative Fund of
America, and comprised of national
and state hunting organizations dedicated to defeat the ballot issue this
fall. The group's goal is to raise $2.5
million to defeat the anti-hunting
issue this .fall.
Save the Doves claims many of
its members are other hunters who
are just opposed to hunting mourning doves. This is a standard tactic
by the anti-hunters who seek to create the impression that hunters arc
~ivided on the issue. They have
done this very successfully in other
states, resulting in major wins at the
ballot bo•.
lf you arc a hunter and support
Save the Doves, don't be surprised if
they come after your favorite sport'
next. And it's not just hunting thcjire
after. they're against trapping, fishing. even rodeos and circuses.
This is why the Ohio Grange has
.withdra'lln its support of Save the
Doves, according to some loca l
Grange members.
Apparently the Grange looked
beyond Save 10 Doves to the groups
that arc really pushing the anti-hunt·
ing agenda here in Ohio: ohc
Humane Society of the United
States. Fund j'or Animals, People for
the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
the American Society for the
·Prevention of Cruelly to Animals .
The Grange, which has long represented the American farmer, could
ill afford to be associated with
groups opposed to cattle, pork, poultry and dairy farming.
By JOHN 'WI SSE
Wildlife management is a tricky Division of Wildlife
business at best. Federal and state · COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
agencies, supported by hunting and Meals of bread and kernel corn
fishing license sales and excise taxes could be fatal to ducks.
on sporting goods, thoroughly study
A'bacterium known as clostridiwildlife populations and can chang~. urn botulinum Type C·was identified
expand or even close certain seasons· in the 1930s as lreing responsible for
to protect wildlife.
causing botulism poisoning in birds,
No animal species has ever been particularly waterfowl and shor~­
threatened by modern, regulated birds. While the original sources are
hunting. ln fact, the most-hunted varied, wildlife biologists have ideospecies have thrived under scientific tified bread .and spoiled foods that
.wildlife management.
. are fed to ducks as a significant
.
Wildlife management by ballot cause of avian botulism death.
initiative removes the scientists,
Decaying vegetation from

;. Major league baseball...-

Section

OWJP

rebate aliO Is tr•sf...._ to all!lll!lllate fl!li!ly ......, It: the 111111 ho.stlroltl.

Come See: Mike· Northup,
Stevers, Pete SpmerviUe,
AI Durst, Neal
Tim Conwell,
.
Jamie Adamsoq, Jim Haniilton; Joe T'dlis, Ted Brock

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~~~u~.:!;!~'!'!:n~ly,
"The goal is to . __ave . co~~~s~!i~·he
th e ho se up the hill ·
On v"undat·'on and
tinder roof by fall.

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

'

Sunday, May 3, 1998,.;

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gllllpollt, OH • Point Ple111nt, WV

Sunday, May 3, 1998

Washing·hands vital
for restaurant staffers

ss·office
•

recogn1z~s

25-year .
employee

.Varian-Wood
MIDDLEPORT-'- Steve Wood andl.orrie Varian are announcing their
engagement and upcoming wedding on Saturday, June20, '1998.
The open church wedding will be held at the Faitti Baptist Church iri
Mason, W.Va., at I p.m. A reception will follow at the church.
Wood is the son of Brian and Peggy Hartman. He .is attending the University of Rio Grande. His fiancee is the daughter of the late Eddie·and Gail
Varian.
The couple will reside in Clifton, W.Va., following t~eir wedding.

t'
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SYRACUSE- Sulton Township
.Trustees, Monday.m 7:30 p.m. at
Syracuse Municipal Building.

CALL IIOWI740·441·1982

• RACINE- Racine Village Council, Monday, 7 p.m. at the municipal
SUNDAY ·
.
·building.
POMEROY- Ret,iremenl receplion for Ed Bartels. Salisbury EleRACINE - Free bloo4 pressure
mentary School. 2 to 4 p.m. Salisbury
screening
will' be done by ·yeterans
·staff and ,PTO invites frien;.~. col- ·
Memorial
Hospital nurses aJ the
leagues, and former sludents to
Racille
Home
National bank., Monattend.
..,.. i .
7
day, 9 a.m. to noqn
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·count~

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LETART - Letart ',Township
POMEROY - R~lay for Life.
Trustees.
Monday, 7 p.m. al the·
team captain's meeting. S p.m .. conoflice
building.
ference room at Ve1erans Memorial
Hospital.
TUESDAY .
.
ALFRED - Orange Township ·
RUTI.AND - -Free skin lesting Trustees. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
clinic, Connie Karschnik. R.N .. hoe of the clerk, Osie.Follrod.
Meigs Counly Tuberculosis nurse at
Rutland Fire Station Monday, 4:3f) to
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
6:30p.m. .
Masonic Loge·J63, F &amp; AM, regular
meting. Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at temple.

..

MARIE ELAINE STEMKOWSKI, KEVIN LEE GIBBS

Stemkowski-Gibbs :.
RUTLAND - Mr. "!'d Mrs ..Walter Stemkowski of Shadyside ann()llnce
the engagement of their daughter. Marie Elaine, to Kevin Lee Gibbs. son of
Mrs. Polly Gibbs Martin or Rutland. and the late Samuel Gibbs Sr.
·
The bride-elect is a graduate of Shadyside High School, Wheeling Jesuit
University, and Ohio State University. She is employed by Top 0' the Table,
Dublin.
Her fiance is a graduate of Meigs High School and Ohio University. He
· is employed by Home Care Network/PediaNet, Westerville.
A May 9, 1998 wedding i~ l?eing planned.

· .~rafts &amp; Ant1ques

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

SUMMER IS COMING

Refrlpraton ·

~ionAprill7-19inbonoroftheir

n:~.::c::~~~dattheir

IRer~etm;lHI22:12_
And, beyond, I come qulddy and my nwanlls with me, to
liii!IV"elle.IDID
II biaworkshallbe. .
·

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a.uahrer'Ahome in Foil Myers, with
411 of their five child~n altendinJ.
• The Neals arc; the purenl\ of
[)tlores Wooldridge of Fort Myers.
L(innie (Wanda) Neal of Henderson,
v.{va., Danny (Oienna) Neal of Jacltscit. anc1 Rober! A. Neal and Roser
(Qieryl) !'feal of Fort Myen. They
~e seven panckhildren and fiVe

IT

pat-grandchildren.
: 'Jbe couple was manied April22,
It'S in CallellsbuiJI. Ky. They were
dail)' farmers in lhe Bidwell area fO(
.yean, and then .moved 1o Fol1
M)'en in 1976. .

Wuheri

:za

Prices shown are for 8 mil thlcllnen.
12 mil alsO available. Call for prtclng.

Reale sold sepa~ately.
Call for pricing.

'

: Now, V'ltlor Hugo -

artisL

...

NOW FOR AM APPOINTMENT

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4212Ut.lt. 7 ............... t\w

IFI...

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544 W. Main St At the foot of the Pomeroy·MIIOII Bridge

H,s.t.M

VIsit our retail showrOom or call

Debllll At Stcnl •'

7401992-5724 or 1/800/552-1990

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~ 11(/N l~fil~~ H6-IJ5IJ6

Moalli. Nllioilwide. 500,000 mincn
cunenlly live in out-of-home cate almott twice IS many IS in I"'·

UST

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PLEASANT VALLEY
HOME MEDICAL
1011 VIAND STREI;:T
POINT PLEASANT, WV
675~6100
-$ffomplete trust. It's a quality that needs to be
learn~, and earned. Each and every day.

1-800-675-7846

.

May 14, 1998

Complete trust is the cornerstone of skilled nursing care. Just
imagine being cared for by someone you did not trust. It would not
haf?pen. You would not allow it. Ever.

9amto4pm

prolif~~:

; "Shadows of a Hand: 11te Drawinls of Y~t~or Hugo.'.' • the Drawina
COlter through June 13; is a rR
opponunily 1o · see a .el«tion of
aboul 100 workS on loan from
Fltltce's lllilional library llld other
soprces.

CUSTOMERS SEEN BY:
KELLY VEROSKI, RN. BSN, c;E1'N
CERTIFIED OSTOMY NURSE
'
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CALL TO SCHEDULE APPOINTMENTS
•

· Hugo ( 1802-IIW) made !hac
e FREE STOMA CHECKS
..U bel•au· the 1&amp;101 and the
1~. Moll• F• Mtl-inlt wasllet.
e EDUCATIONAL LITERATURE
in: brown Md blll:t ilakJ whole
.moody ~ cc 1111 ce iMo ponrful
• FREE OSTOMY PRODUCT SAMPLES
inia,es.lllll of emodotlilld mylfCI)'.
• APPLICATION VIDEOS&amp;: RE~SmreNTS
. .They .... hD flaid. impra•ic81illk llin ;
~r
fRJ Jand.
JIC i 0 • llhldowy rui• and lfOfmy
CUNIC SI'ONIOIIED 8Y:
- · to ........, experiiiiCIIII widl
c-aTtc A•lmtllyon IJfillll Co.
s~Gncilina. bloltiq. foldiaa 'IIIII
~· tealutjques.
·- ..__ _ _ _ _......_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,

The Arbors at Gallipoljs is built on trust. Each day
we .must earn the trust of our patients. And their famil.ies.
Of the community we serve- your neighbors, friends
and family. It's what makes us different
...and makes you special.

.

You can see that trust in the faces of
the Arbors at Gallipolis. Take a closer
look. Then decide. We invite you
to come see us. Face to face.

1

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'fult5P~!('I8~

osr:ro·M.Y CLINI·C

: NEW YORK .(AI') - Vic1or
Hllgo- m111 ofleuerl. poet. noveiU{. dnmuisl. polilical activiSl, popullrly t.wn 1o Ameril:ans for "La
Miserables...
•

AVAILABLE

..·FUI,.L SERVICe
POOl OPENINGS

f1e * /u,.~ fl MJA.«pU- "Ju,.~"lUN/~:..

q

Exhibit offers new
look at VICtor Hugo

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~~"' !f, 16til 11.'30 QJI(

- golden anr;
. u.versary
.... eaIs note

..
MANY OTHER SIZES

Mayiar.........

·. aJ~-t ofllfll(lBeatiJirf. ·

r-.1

CALL FOR

PRICING

TRIVIA

.' T~lJ~lfotJG~
(lf~ltu/'fl. to eo#r~ (lJ(dltAI"If t~

*

Announces ·MAnAG

ABOVE
GROUND POOL

"Parents uooerestimate the maturity of these fifth- 10 eighth-graders,
" says Harvard child psychologisl
Lawrence Kutner.
Given findings, it's not outprising
the two generalions are often not on ·
the same wave lenglh: About half the
kids (46 percent) and one-quarter of
lhe parents (27 percenl) say they
sp.nd less than a half-hour a day talking to each other. Only one in five
kids finds it very easy to talk to parents about lliings thai matter.

DEAR DR. BLONZ: While on vao:ation recently, I dined at a restaurant
where I observed an employee who did not wash his hand~ after using the
balhroom facililies. I was upsel enough to tell the manager. After I deseribed
the employee, the manager said i1 wa.' the dishwa.&lt;her. She said she would.
talk to him. When I returned 1o the table, I told my wife what happened. She
thoughlthat my reporting this incident pul the employee's job in jeopardy.
She said that since his hands are prob;lbly in hot soapy water. any germs
would be rendered harmless~ lhus not transm!ned.
First, I do not care ifthis employee'sjob is in jeopardy. And ·l do not agree
that all germs would be killed in the "process." Whal is your opinion, please?
P.s·.: Regardless of your answer. I would never return 1o lhat restaurant.
....:.. J.D., San Diego
,
.
DEAR J.D.: In my opinion, it is altogether appropriate for a restauranl
pa1t0n to be angered if he were 1o see a food-service employee f;~illo wash
his hands after using the balhroom fao:ilities. Tbe manager's pallialive commeniS fall short because dishwashers also handle 1he dishes afler they have
ban cleaned. According 10 the CenterS for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), handwashinli is the single most important means of prevenling lhe
spread of infecdon. Poor handwashing contributes lo millions of cases of food
poisoning every year. This, by the way, includes washing by cus1omers as
well as by food-servic:e employees.
To assure safely, a soap and hot-water.washing of no less than 20 seconds' duration should take place at the slatlofwork. After washing, the hands
should be dried wilh a single-use towel. There should then be rewashing after
using the bathroom; handling dirty plates or garbage; working with raw foods;
IOIIChing one's hair, skin or other body part; and handling dirty equipmenl,
utensils or olher unclean objects. These rules are established 10 encourage
frequent handwashing during all jlhases of food preparalion, but they also
serve to alert food-service personnello the various ways that germs end up
on the plate.
For J!lltnts. teachers or restaurant owners interested in encouraging belter hand hygiene, there is an interesting product named Gl(}o(]erm. Originally
developed M the University of California-Los Angele·s. this producl is applied
like a hand lotion and is then rubbed off. When the hands are viewed under
an ultraviolet light, the "genns" are visualized. (They are not germs, of course
- only safe, inen ingredients lhal becom~ visible when ~wed under ultraviolel light.) The individuals are then 1old 1o wash their hands. When !hey
check how well they have done, most are in for a surprise. as they see how
many of the "germs" remain. It is an eye-opening exercise that shows you
how 10 do a better job of washing. It also leaves you with a real respect for
1he body's immune system, our la.•lline of defense charged with lhe job of
neuualizinl! all those micro-organisms that make their way in. For information on Glo-Germ, check out the cllmpany's Web site (www.glogerm.com) or call 18001 842-6622.

GALLIPoLIS - Winter quarter
1998 graduates of Southeastern Business College include:
Samanlha K. Booth, associate of
applied business in executive secretari~. with a major in medical SCCRtary; Shanna Gullett, associate of
applied business in business adminislralion; Angela K. Jao:bon, associof applied business in microcompotcr/dala processing, diploma in
junior ao:coun1in1; Janet L. Newber·
ry. associate of applied business in
business administration;
Barlow Allen !'Canon, diploma in
junior accounting; Cora Rebecca
~
MR. AND MAS. ROBERT L ICIIL
Pearson, diploma in junior ao:counting; Marisa Dawn Trussell. diploma
~
insec:rewial:andHenheiW.White.
associate of applied business in
:: · FORT MYERS, Fla. - Mr, and J__[)uring the ~lebration, the Neals microcomputer/data processing,
Mrs. Robert L. (Clara WalteB) Neal rr-'ed their wedding vows.
diploma in junior accountinJ.
were surprised wilh a weekend celc:- ~
·- ;;;;;.;;;...~---------------..;;.--i

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There will be a time of tinging, praise and
woref'!lp each evening.
.
Plea.se 'pray wlttt us for each service.

UALITJ FU

STOCK UP ON YOUR
POOL SUPPLIES NOW!

SBC announces
winter quarter
graduati~n list

..::,:.-;:~~':::;.

Open 7 Days A Week
s,.e~~• Still Avslhlb/1

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10 to 6:00P.M. Mon.-Sat.; 12 to 5:00 Sundays

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Parents think kid.~ prioritize fun
above all else, but kids themselves
say their fuiures are their lop concern,
a poll says. .
•
The fulure wa.~ named a toncem
b)l87 percent. Nelli on the andety list
for tho5e ages 10 10 13: schoolwoik
(83 percent) and family matters (72
percenl).
. PareniS thought fun would come .
first (82 percent) for kids, followed
by friend.~ (72 percent) and their
appearance (60 percent).

~

Yoa'n lnvltttl •• Joll~ 1.- Worship •
. with Ptlstor Isaac Shupe
.,.11_•17 •• 7:00 -··
•
Sonic
- .. will lie holtlat
Gallla Acatlo•y High School IMIIorl••

SECOND AVE.
614 446-9020
DOWNTOWN GALUPOUS (Acrosa trom Jhe CltJ Pll'kJ
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FRENCH CITY.

USAToclly

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Poll: future concerns children

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Meetine
Revival

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GALLIPOLiS -Urban and Mary Ann Baldwin'of Gallipolis celebratlheir 50th wedding anniversary on April S with a gathering of family and
' friends at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
:: The couple was married April 4, 1948 at Elizabeth Chapel Church in
:lfhiviner, with lhe Rev. Charles Lusher performing the ceremony.
~: .They renewed their vows at the April 5 celebration, with the Rev. Todd
•powers offiCiating. ·
·
~· They have a daughter and son-in-law, Karen and Richard Pallen of Pick:eringlon, who celebrated with them: a daughter, Debra of Cape Coral, Fla.;
a grandson, Rich Jr.; and a great-granddaughter, Anna Marie, from SheriJian, Wyo.

LETART, W.Va. - Elmer an&lt;lCatherine Roush Newberry will ~lebrale
the 50th anniversary of their wedding with an open house on Saturday. May
9 from 2-4:30 p.m. al the Letart Community Center.
The couple was married May 9, 1948 by !he Rev. C.G. Billips in the farm
ho~where they slill reside.
·
· Their children and grnndchililren, Steve and Karen Newberry, Janet Lynn,
pavid and Chris of Vinton, Mike and Carol Newberry. Daniel and Joanna
of Letan, and Tim and Lee Newberry and Conner o~ Point Pleasanl, are inviling all friend~ and relalives 10 come and celebrate.
.
They will be renewing their wedding vows and Jenny Cadle will provide
a musical.program.
.
In lieu of gifts, they are requesting a card wilh a written message. an event
or fond memory of limes past.

c.....

RUTI.ANO- Rutland Township . RACINE- Friends of the Meigs
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the Rut- · County .Library, Monday, 7 p.m. at
land Fire Station.
the Racme L1brary.

' •.

FREE
SAMPLES
'
.

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Newberrys plan open house

•World's Largest Weight Lou
Company
.
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••
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•

RACINE- Racine Chapter i 34,
OES, practice Sunday, 4p'.m.; inspection, 7:30 p.m. Monday.

. I

. MR. AND MRS. ELMER NEWBERRY

SUJDfER·IS COMING!

M.ei.gs community_calendar

MONDAY

By ED BLONZ, Ph.D.

GALLIPOLIS - The Social
Security Administralion is celebrating Public Service Recogni1ion Week .
,from Monday, May 410 Sunday, ~y
I0.
:
~ . week gives Social Security
the opportunity to s'how apprecialion
10 its public employees al all levels,
and lo . ensure'thllj~ the cpmmunity
understands the employees' contri- review 1echnician. In February I
bulion 10 the community and to the Jones was promoted to herr ~::~
nation.
• •
.
posilion of Supplemental S·
Marian Jones is one of lhese income claims teprc:senlalive. Jonc~
employees who accepled the respon- has been serving 1he Gallipolis
sibilily that came with the opportu- munity for the las12S
oily 10 serve the country as a career oul her career, she ha.~ won
federal worker at a young age.
awards. She has also been
Upon graduating from high scl!ool ed to receive lhe
in weslem.Pennsylvania, she weniiO Citation Award, which is the
Washington, D.C.. 10 wortc as a sec- honor award presented ~:~~~~~J:~
retary at the Federal Aviation Admin. · who have made superior
istratiori.
.
lions 1o the agency.
Later on, she worked as a civil ser'Marian is an assel to !he a!~~
vice employee in the U.S. Army and and 10 our office. We are very i
.t.ir Force. In 1967, Jones moved 10 · 10 have such a committed and
GallipOlis. and in 1973; she joined tl1e .caled employee al our office,· ·
.Social Security Administralion as a. Martha Rader, Gallipolis flel•~ ott~
claims clerk. In November 197S, she' manager.
pro1rno~ed 10 the position of dat;a-~J~o:ne:s;~;;;.;~:ilj

•
STEVE ~OOD, LORRIE VARIAN

SCOTI'OWN - Ms. Bobby Bowen of Scottown is announcing lhe
engagement and upcoming marriage of her daughter, Rebekah Leigh Bowen.
to Travis Michael Shaver, son of Michael Shaver and Robin Shaver of Gallipolis.
.
The couple will be married Saturday, July II, 1998 at 2:30p.m. in the
Crown City Wesleyan Church.
The bride-to-be will graduate from South Galli a High School this month.
and plans lo further her education at the University of Rio.Grande in the ans
field.
·
Her fiance is a 1995 graduate of River Valley High School, a'nd a 1996
The Community Calendar Ia
gradua1e of the Nas'hville Auto Diesel College. He is presently employed at publlahed • I free service to nonNorris
·
· profit groups wishing to announce
: meeting and apeelal eventa. The
clllendlr Ia not dealgned to promote 181ee or fund rallll'S of any
type. ltama are prtnt.d 11 space
permilland cannot·be guarantelcl
to run a apeelfic number of daya.

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·ARBOR

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled Nursing Center
· 170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(614) 446-7112

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

BY. Bob Hoeflich

Congratuhitions to the Rev. and
Mrs. O"Dell Manley who will be
observing th(ir 50th wedding
)lnnivets!U)' on May 14.
I'm sure the couple would appreciate hearing from you on this special
:OCcasion. Mail will reach them at
;160 Beech St., Middleport.
•

The "locals" from the Racine
t-ligh School . graduating class of
'1948 have had a ball this spring planning for the 50th reunion of the
group.
· Besides attending the RacineSouthern Alumni Banquet on Saturday. May 23. the class will be holding a special reunion on Sunday, May
24, at the present Southern Junior
High School, which in bygone days
served as the high school.
The Sunday reunion will begin at
.I p.m .• and everyone who began high
school with the class is invited to that
event in the school auditorium. The
class was pretty good-sized when the
school year began in 1944.
However. through the years some
moved away, others quit school to go
to work, others left school to go to the
. armed forces. At any rnte, everyone
who staned high school with the class
is invited to attend the Sunday affair.
' whether or not they ended up gradu·
; ating with the cla.~s in 1948.
. The reunion on Sunday will he
: very informal with no speake!'li, and
~ will be just a real visiting session.
: Music of the 1940s will be a feature
' and the local members of the class
: will be providing refreshments.
: · The Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital has set its
• \lnnual white elephant sale for Friday.
: June 5.
·
'

Members are hoping that you are
encountering a lot of white elephants
that you'd like to get rid of as you do
your · spring cleaning. Also, it is
hoped that people having unsold
items from the weekend's l'ellow flag
yard sale in Pomeruy and Middleport
will flow those articles to the auxil·
iary. The sale does not include items
of clothing. however.
Anyone wishing to contribute to
the sale, whjch will be held outdoors
near the hospital if weather permits,
is asked to leave items at the auxiliary counter in the hospital lobby.
By the way, the auxiliary is in its
final stages of selecting the winners
of two $1,000 scholarships it is
~arding this spring. Interviews of
some of the applicants is scheduled
for Wednesday. Acitizens committee
comes in to help with the 'final selec·
tion of the winners.

listie missile submarine to complete
Navy Public Affal,. Centar
50 deployments.
Naval Sllllon, San Diego
For ShiHet, the 33-year-old son of
ABOARD -THE USS OHIO Jack and Elizabeth Shiflet of Rutland,
The ballistic missile submarine USS the event was significant. .
Ohio completed its first patrol in an
•• think it's pretty cool that I grew
uncertain world. The year was 1982, up in West Virginia and Ohio. I com·
and the United States and Soviet missioned the submarine West VirUnion were IQCked in an ideological ginia and now I've done the 50th
war.
patrol of the Ohio. Those are a couAn arms race had produced pie of big events.for each of them and
weapons more destructive than any in me," said Shiflet, a 1982 graduate of
history, makirtg the threat of a cata- Meigs High'School.
strophic war very real.
Shiflet is an electronics technician
While on its 50th patrol in 1998, ~¥ho operntes and repairs the Ohio's
·
the Ohio faced a world much more electronic .e$ipment.
sure of i1$Cif. Gone were the Soviet
Shifle(and the crew of the Ohio
. Union and the Cold War and in their deploy for up to four months at a
place were a democratic Russia and time. The whereabouts of a Trident
overall world peace. The· threat o( submanne, so called because of the
global nuclear war seemed very Trident missiles it carries, is top
remote, if not impossible. .
.
secret during its deployments.
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Jef- · . Because of the clandestine nature
frey C. Shiflet waS part of that early of the Ohio's mission, it stays sub1998 patrol, which put the Ohio in merged for weeks at a time. When the
history. books as the only U.S. bal· lack of sunlight is combined with reiBy JASON EMERSON

Dark douds are gonna break up so
put on a happy face and keep smiling.

:Gallia community calendar
The Community calendar Ia pub-

Thursday, May 7

: lt groupe

wlahlng to announce
meetings and apeclll went~. The

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. '
Narcotics Anonymous Tri - County
' nltnd8r Ia not dlllgried to ·pro- . Group, 611 Viand Street • use &amp;ide
} mole aaln ar fund-1'111. . . of any enuance, 7:30p.m.
"
' JYPII· tt.nll arw prlnl8cl • l]piCII
.
• ••
permlls and cannot bt g111ranteed
; JO run a apaelllc number of daya.
BIDWELL - Garden Of My Heart
•:l ·. Sunday, May3
· Holy Tabernacle, 7 p.m., weekly
prnyer service.
).,
***

.,

remedies, wrote Catherine Houck iit your doctor about use and dosages for
an 'article in 'the May issue of Red· these common natu·rat remedies. ·
Chamomile, for example, contains
book. and the estimated 425 million
a
compound
called apigenin ·that is
visits a year made to unconventional
effective
as
a
mild tranquilizer for
practitioners such as acupuncturists
anxiety,
or
for
digestive
problem~. It's
and chiropractors now exceed those
primarily
as
a tea.
available
made to mainstream primary care
doctors.
.
"People are disillusioned with I Don't Waltstandard medicine's high cost and
.two Years 01111
inability to cure everything," says
Varro Tyler. Ph.D.. professor emeriDo JOU have the
tus of pharmacognosy at Purdue
shots JOU aee4? ,
University and a leading expert on
Babies need to vlalt a doctor
herbs. In other words, people have
or clinic tor ehota tlve tlmea
learned that while Western-oriented
byage2.
medicine works well for. an abul)dance of ills. some .conditions . Without all ot their ahota,
.such as chronic pain, autoimmune
.babies can get one or more
disease, and stress-related backaChes,
dangeroue dleeaaea, like
headaches, and gastrointestinal dis·
meaelee and diphtheria. .
turbances- don't always respond . .
Make sure your llltblee get
While some natural remedies~
· the ahota they need
quite effective, others don't do much
by lga2.
of anything. Despite hype to the contrary, there's no proof that garlic helps
It you have a heahh
sinus troubles, for example, or that
provider, ask about
wearing a copper bracelet cures
lmmunlzatiOflt.
arthritis. And a few naturnl treatmcnl!l
It you do not, call the Gallla
can cause serious trouble ornen kill
County Health Department .
you. Still, a growing body of eviet 448 4812, ext. 2113, to
dence is revealing that for muny com·
mon ills, alternative remedies can obtain Information reg•dlng
provide effective relief. Check with
lite-protecting ehota. ·

Former Gallia residents gear .
for run to aid leukemia victims

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. · NarCHESHIRE ***
C
. N .
, fOlies Anonymous Tri -County_
• om!l'unny au~n• Group, 611 Vi&amp;nd St., 7:30p.m.
-al D~y of Prnyer Servoce at Cheshore
·•
***
Baptost Church, 7 p.m.
~1
•••
CJ!,OWN CITY - Two Gallia
, • ADDISON • Preaching service at
GALLIPOLIS
•
National
Day
ol
County
natives are planning to go the
· Addison Freewill Baptist Church
Prayer
Breakfa.~t.
Holzer
Medicai
·
extra
mile
to help victims of
with Rick Barcus, 7:30p.m.
C~nter cafeteria, 7:30a.m.; Nationa 1 · leukemia, and are calling upon GalGALLIPOLIS • Don ,Karr to Day of'Prnyer of Service at the Gal· lia County for help.
Iia County C~rthouse, noon.
Carrie Waugh and Cynthia Waugh ·
., preach at Bell Chapel, 7 p.m.
Middleton
have joined the Leukemia
;.
***'
•••
Society's Team in-Training to partie·
' KANAUGA- Worship service at
ipate in this year's San Diego
1, Silver Memorial Freewill Baptist
Revival
Marathon on June 21. The marathon
;. Church, Rand Avenue. 7 p.m., with ·
***
represenls a 26.2-mile run for the
; the Rev. Charles Neece preaching.
Revival
at
Okey.
Chapel
Church
pair.
II
,
*** '
in Lecta, April 27 - May 4. Rev.
Carrie
Waugh
is
the
'
CHESHIRE - Emmaus gathering
Jack
Rankin
preaching
nightly
at
7
director/teacher
at
a
preschool
in
' at Cheshire United Methodist
.
p.m.
West
Union,
while
Mrs.
Middleton
is
1 Church, 7:30 p.m.
***
a legal advocate for battered women
***
Crown City Methodist Church and children in Shelby County. They
CHESHIRE • PopliiJ" Ridge Baptist Church service, 6 p.m. with John will hold a revival, May 4 • 8,'7:3!1 . are the daughlers of Roonie and Donp.m. nightly. Speakers to include: na Waugh of Crown.Cil)', and they
Elswick preaching.
Monday - Garland Montgomery, need ~ raise $5,200.
"Nor all of us have the desire to
GALLIPOLIS • Joe Woodall to Tuesday - Ron Nichols, Wednesday
·
'
Burton
Spencer,
Friday
•
Marvin
run
a mamlhon, but most of us have
~ speak a1 Bailey Chapel Church, II
Turner.
Special
singing
nightly.
a
desire
to help," said Donna Waugh.
; a.m. Chester Bia.• lo speak at 7 p.m.
•••
"Ninety-seven thousand people will
I
Revival with Biblical dramatist, be diagnosed with cancer this year,
Monday, May 4
I
I
Norm
Arrington will be held at Eliz- with 55,000 people dying each year,
I
***
abdh
Chapel
Church. May 3 - 6. Sun- ISO people a day.
GALLIPOLIS , •
Narcotics
. • I'
day
services
I0:45 and 6 p.m.; 114on·
"But ,{. can all make a differ' Anonymous Miracle~ in Recovery,
1
ence," . he added. "A tax-deductible
St. Peter's Episcopal Church, 7:30 day-Wednesday. 7 p.m. nightly.
•••
con · tion will go toward research,
p.m.
TIJe
Rev. Ralph Workman will ~.Cat~
· nand patient aid. Help in this
***
I
·
hold
revival
at
Gibson
Chapel
in
fight
to
ond a cure. It is better to give
1
CHESHIRE • TOPS mectins at
May 3-10,7:30 p.m. night- a little t n nothing at all."
! Chcsllire,Unitcd Methcidi!lt Church. Scottown,
ly.
Special
music by church choirs.
The
' mother nOied that her
[ 8:30 • 9:45 weish • in, 10 • II a.m.
daughte
·
jn
rigorous 'training on
' meeting. Call Janet Thomas at 367 daily basts in preparation for the
0274 for infonnalion.
·
i
•
• ••
marathon. The
rnce
have .
GALLIPOLIS • Grieving P~~Rnts .
I SuppOrt Group. 7 p.m. al New ure I
I lu!Jieran Chun:h.

•••

completed so far was nine miles in
Cincinnati for the Heart Fund. Prior
to this year, their only rnces or walks
were for the March of Dimes.
Anyone wishing to contribute can
mail checks to the Leukemia Society
of America Inc .. in care of Donna J.
Waugh, 344 Rockllck Road, Crown
City, Ohio 45623-9230, phone 614·
256-1548.
.

•••

...

'

I
l

~~ ichae1 \ V.

•••

...

Tanday, May 5 .

-!.

.-

•j
· GALLIPOLIS· Chooftc To Loose
•, Diet Group, 9 a.m .. Gfaj;c United
' Methodist Church.
•'~ GALLIPOLIS•••• Community can:
: cer Support Group, 2 p.m. at New ,
: Life Lutheran Church. Call 446 • 1
&lt; 0713 or 446 - 3538. ' .
·'
j

I

r

)'

. Wedllftday, May 6

p
'! •

***

HENDERSON -' Western Squa.te ' ' ·
• pancilll at Hendcnon Recreation
· I Building. 7:30. io p.m.
, :~

• ••

POMEROY • fi!IICOiics Anony-

, ,I_!IOU LiYiiiJIR The Solulion Group,
: ~ 6amd Hcln Catholic Church, 7

I

I\

0

tp.m.

•••

I, I

r

'

.

***

Cm· hi n~

~I. D.

-Board cea~ Obetetrtdan a Gyne(olojlst-

n

.

Butler Opera House that usually
gave persons six or seven different
kinds of entertainment in a year's
time. Usually, only one Qf the seven
was an actual lecture as there was a
barbershop quartet (or harmonic
quartet as it was then called), a magi·
cian, a dog and pony show,.and plays.
Persons from Ewington, Bidwell
and Vinton would produce plays that
would come to Opera House. In
1909, the Ewington Methodist
Church put on the play "Under the
Laurels," and raised several hundred
dollars over several performances to
pay for a new parsonage.
The Ladies Home Circle of the
Vinton Baptist Church produced a
play called, 'The New Minister," and
the Vinton Leader newspaper called·
the play, "different than anything ever
before seen in Vinlon."
Food events were also held in the
Opera House. There was always a big
dinner on Halloween for the young
people. The ladies of the Baptist
Church and the Methodist Church
sponsored box suppers. The boxes
which contained supper for two sold
for 25 cents. Little girls' boxes sold
for I0 cents.
.
The deal wilh many of the box
suppers was that you not only bought
the box and its contents but you had
to share it' with the girl or lady who
made it. Of course, · most women

SITE OF ENTERTAINMENT - In thlt 1901
photo, one can -on the lett the Vlhton Baptist Church and beyond It, the Butler Opara

would decorate their boxes so that
they could be easily identified by the
appropriate male, especially after he
was tipped off on what to look for. In
later years the boxes would be auc·
tioned off to the highest bidder.

Houea. Both ot theali buildings burned In 1.928.
The Butler Opera HoUle
an important part
ot Vlnton'a history from the 1890a to the 1920a.

w••

There were several big Christmas
dinners held at the Butler Opera
House.
Of course in due course movies
wen: shown in the Opera House
along with live entertainment such a.~

the "Hawaiian Singers" and Harmount's "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
(Jamea Sands Ia a correaporr
dent lor the ·Sunday Tlmea-San·
tlnal. Hla addrau Ia 65 Willow Drive, Springboro, Ohio 45066.)

.Prayer vigils highlight National Day of Prayer observation
POMEROY - Meigs County's United Methodist Church - will'
: observance of the National Day of take place from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
: Prayer begins Sunday with a week- through Wednesday, and untiliO a.m.
: long Bible reading marnthon and on Thursday:
The Meigs County Day of Prayer
· prayer vigil.
Committee,
headed by Pastor Les
· The Meigs County Day of Prayer
Hayman
of
Middleport,
will host a
: wa.~ proclaimed by the Meigs Coun·
breakfast
on
May
7
for public.
prayer
: ty Commissioners and area mayors
. for May 7, in conjunction with officials at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, and the annual
. National Day of Prnyer.
.
. ,The daily Bible reading marathon Day ofPrayerobservance at the cour·
: - .Jn the Pomeroy Pavilion - and thouse steps. ·
AConcen of Pra.v~r
-at

local Day of Prayer at the Ash Street
Freewi!l Baptist Church in Middleport at 7 p.m. All events are open to
the public.
Members of the Meigs County
Day of Prayer Committee, in addition
to Hayman. are Steve Beha. Gladys
Cumings, Bill Frazier, Faitll Hayman, .
Curtis King, Bob Robinson, Martie
Short and Norma Torres.
The National Day of Prayer was
first initiated by the Continental Con·
revived
President
. in I

Truman in 1952 and declared by
President Reagan in 1988.
The theme for this year's observance is "America. Return to God,"
based on a passage of scripture from
Joel.

~

eare·

***

li8hMIM a f1w MrYice 10 non-prof-

, JEFFREY C. SHIFLET
more than two dozen counti-ies·have
nuclear stockpiles, ballistic missile
submarines serve as deterrents to any
nation that would tum to the use of
nuclear weapons.
"Trident submarines deploy
throughout the year to maintain overall world peace," Shiflet said.
The Ohio and its many crews over
the years saw the United States and
its allies through the Cold War. With
submariners like Shiflet patrolling the
oceans in powerful ballistic missile
submarines, the Navy will continue to
protect freedom througtl the.next cen. tury.

Vaccine

.

1

atively tight quarters, life for the crew
of a submarine can seem·oppressive.
The few who are chose'n to serve
aboard submarines are put through
extensive testing and training to
make sure they can cope.
Ballistic missile submarines like
the Ohio, known in the fleet as
"boomers," form one-third of the U.S..
· strategic nuclear
·
. ~e philosophy behind . ballistic
mosstle submannes ts stnught for·
ward:~ country gains.no ad~antage
launchmg a nuclear stnke agrunst the
United ~llltes when a Jl?&lt;&gt;mer. lurki~g
nearby os able to retahate woth mos·
siles of its own.
"Trident submarines act as a deterrent against any country IIJ"OUnd the
world by providing a silent. m~bil~
platform for the launch of mosstles.said Shinet, a 12-year Navy veternn.
Although the threat of global, war
has diminished sioce the 1980.s,
regional confl1cts threaten peac~ tn
different parts of the world. Stnce

By JAMES SANDS
There were no saloons in Gallia
VINTON - From the 1890s 10 County from 1909 to 1915.
the 1920s, Vinton had its own opera
Following the parade of 1908, a
house, which hosted events ranging big rally was held in the Butler Opera
from political rallies to graduations to House. Dr. J.M. Davis of Rio Grande
plays to movies.
College addressed a packed . house
Known as the Butler Opera that stirred pe.ople to frequent out·
House, because it was built by Col. bursts of applause. The crowd .also
Butler, it wbuld last until 1928, when sang a number of local option songs.
a fire destroyed i.t and most of the In later months, tempernnce meetings
buildings on that side of Mai~ Street. were held at the Butler Opera House.
The picture accompanying today's
Of the entertainment at the Opera
article dates to 1908 and it shows a House in the 191 Os, one 'would
· local option parade that had started at include concerts by both the Vinton
the Vinton depot and was winding its Orchestrn and the Bidwell Orchestra.
way through the streets of Vinton. . The latter orchestra had but five
·The parade was headed by. the Yin- members: J.D. Hanger, Ed Kent,
ton band, followed by schoolchildren John Kent, Clem Glassburn and Sam
· bearing banners of different mottoes .• Harmon.
·
·
such as "Vote Dry and Save the
Prior to the opening of the Vinton
Boys," "VoteDryandReduceTa~es" High School in the 1910s one of the
· and "The Saloon. or The Home, big events held at the Butler Opera
Which?"
House was the Boxwell grnduation.
Loclil option was being voted on
Vinton area students who com·
by the whole county in 1908. Prior to pleted the eighth grade could go on
1908, villages and townships could and do self· study or directed study
control their own option. Vinton had under an individual. That student
voted itself dry in 1904. However, the could then take the Boxwell Exam
vote in 1908 could have brought (sometimes referred to as the Pattersaloons back to Vinion had the entire son test) and even in some cases be
county voted to allow the sale of certified to teach in the one-room
alcohol. By I908.onlyGallipolis had schools. In the 1912 Boxwell tOll)·
saloons. All the other villages and mencement, we find piano recitals,
townships in Gallia County were dry, solos, duets, essays and · speeches.
In the 1908 election, the "voters of There were nine graduates'in 1912.
Gallia County voted themselves dry.
There was a lecture series at the

Natural c~res you can ·really ·trust
dies have migrated from health-food
stpres to pharmacies and supermarkets. In fact. over a third of Ameri·
cans have experimented with naturnl

111t.. Jlr tblal • Page C5

variety for Vinton ~rea residents

'

Normally by this time of year, you
would have heard from one of the
members of the board of the Meigs By REDBOOK
Division of the American Heart Asso- · A Hearst Magazine
ciation in.regard to the annual carna- For AP Special Featurea
tion sale held each spring for severHerbs and other bOtanical remeal years as a money-raising project. ·
However, the local group has
dropped the activity this spring due
to rising costs. and the fact that a
number of other organizations are
selling various items. Genial Nora
and Denver Rice of Middleport have
traditionally chaired the carnation
sale on behalf of the, associalion's
board.

•

Butler's Opera House .offered

Rutland ·native part of 50th
patrol logged by miss_
ile sub

Beat of the Bend

J11,

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

Sunday, May 3, 1998

Sunday, May 3, 1998

• OfBce-

•"

Newport News, Ya.
Will Be Singing
At t•e Followi1g
Churches

"David
Evans·Has
the Best
Experience
forJudge
to Protect

•Hobson Fellowship Ch~rch,
Sun., May 3, 1oa•
•Rutland Church of God,
Sun., May 3, 7 p•
•Father's House, Hartford, wv,·
Su11., May 10
·•Church of God of Prophecy, White Rd.,
Galllpoli,, Sun., May 17, 7 p•
•Btnil Area Gospel Jubilee, Maso11, WV
Sun., May 17

Us in

Southern
Ohio"

David

Eighth Annual

•

.•.

Bend Area Gospel Jubilee ·
'·

·'

•

.

•
•

Mason County Fairgrounds
(I Mllea North ot Point Pleasant, WV Jult Ott Sl Rt. 62)

•
•
•
•

.

Thursday, May 14 through Sunday, May 17, 1~
Thurtday, Mav 14
Frkllly, M8y 11
Salut'day, May 11

7:00 till ?? *Various Groupe • Sololata
1:30 tiH ?? *Anchormen &amp; More
1:30 till ?? *Conrad Cook &amp; The Calvary
·
Echoee Plus Many Othert
1 :30 till 4:30 *Kevin Spencer Family

Sunday, May 17

Ill Vallq ..... !IP'

$ I

ns

Chris

McdJra! ()lllw IS1111d!oli
SUite 214

2&amp;20 v.ce, Drift .
~!'Is
1t. WV 25580

'

. -lppu:. ..11!. . . . -

•

e ·Former ChiefAssistant Prosecutor in Gallia Courity.

... ~ a.m. liD 5 p.m.

v.t ·

liJft PI£ ISitt
ILII HosJMal ·

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

,.

ACCEPTEDI

9'£aftsf

OAII

Z1 c:::Ma~ 194!1

Slllft.r

~-PIIdlll

IL.

&amp;m:n_" .
. - ~lt fW~ ~Ju/1

FREE AOMISSIONSI

- omce Hours •

"dl~ «fluu caw
tWd ~ ~

'

DRAWING$1 .Hakl Elch Day fOr
CONCE8810HSI
. Crafta and Var'- llama Donated
RAIN OR IHINEI
Av8ilalll8
by SUpporlara.
CAMPING! At at tillable Retea &amp;
SINGERS COM!a SY INVITATION I
R....,.._ Ala Not Requlracl•
SHOWERS AND RESTROOM
FACIUTIES AVAILABLE I
BRING LAWN CHAIRII!Some
BleKhara Available.
IRING JAC~ET8 FOR COOL
l!VEHINGSI
LOVE OFFERINGS TAKENI

mil Pleasant Valley

I.

A FRIEND

M!&amp;l Wellness &amp; Rehab Center
(304) 675-7222

ir

for Appeals. Court Judge

Vote Republican May 5 Primary

GENERAL

(304)87~

•

•

..•

Knight Family
·
Marvin i. Deanna Clerk Family
DIVIne Purpoat &amp;
Builders Quartet

·'

• 22 Years Courtroom Trial Expemnce, including work
in 10 of the 14 counties within this 4th Court District.
• Dedkaud family man mu1 Cf!m"!unity ltad!r.
e Business knowledge mul edUcatiOnal.expenence.
Pllllforlo7- ""AftiiiOiel..... - - - n. .•,._,.,... Cl!Rit •• 011 •5631

�. .,...
,

.'

,

sunday, May a.•1998

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

Lawmake.rs wrestle with privacy
issue as database access grows·

WINS ACCREDITATION- Displaying !he Holzer Medical C.n·
ter's Rehab Unit CARF accreclltellon.certlllclte are, from left, Pam
Short, R.N:, CRRN; Daniel Black, D.O., unit medical director; Ellen
Gibson, MSW, LSW; Karen Leigh, speech lhereplst; Jodi Sickles,
physical therapist; Mica Rees; RehabCara Community Relations
c~rdlnator; an'd Sandy Rayburn, occupatlonaltherapllt.

HMC's Rehabilitation
·Unit once more .wins
. ·
national accreditation
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Medical Center 's Rehabiliiation Unit, foll'owing a recent on-site survey. was awarded its second consecutive threeyear accreditation by the Rehabilitation Accreditation Commi·ssion.
The only hospital-based, CARP-accredited rehab unit in a 50-mile
radius of Gallipolis, the unit. located on the hospital's fifth noor, has
offered comprehensive inpatient rehabilitation services to residents .of
southeastern Ohio and western West Virginia since June 1991.
· "Our team of dedicated ~ealth care professionals provide medical, nursing, thempeutic and psychosocial services," said Daniel Black, D.O., medical director.
"Our team works with patients and their families to maximize each individual's functional abilities following an illness or injury, so they can have
a healthy reintegration into the community," he added. ·
· HMC's rehab unit is managed .by RehabCare droup Inc., a management company based in St. Louis, Mo., which provides services to hospital-based, acute and subacute rehab ·units and outpatient programs.
'The Holzer Medical Center Rehabilitation Unit demonstrates quality rehabilitation programs, measured by rigorous standards," said Donald E. Galvin, Ph.D., CARF president and chief executive office~
CARFis a privately-funded, not-for-profit organi~ation, which devel, ops standards to help organizations measure ano;l improve the quality of
their rehabilitation progrr 'liS.
For more information on the HMC Rehab Unit, contact JaneII Call, program director, at 446-5905.

By ROBERT DAVIS
USA"Today
As the most private details of our
lives become pan of huge computer
databases, Congress is trying to
ensure privacy without slowing
advancements in health care and
research.
Keeping a l!'llitnt's secrets private
is a: basic element of the physician's
HippOcratic oath. But horror stories
of abuse of medical records keep sur.facing . They include the Colomdo
medical student who sold patient
records to lawyers looking for easy
malpmctice cases, and the Maryland
banker who tmcked his customers
suffering with cancer to call in their
mortgages.
·o n the other end of the spectrum,
Boston-based Harvard Pilgrim N~w
England identities patients with diabetes and includes them in a disease
management plan. The plan increased
annual retinal exams by 26 percent
and eliminated diabetes-related major
malformations of newborns.
· The issue is whether the records
are used for sound or questionable
motives .
Congress is in the middle ·of
debates over legislation that would
give patienl~ the right to make corrections in their medical records
while also setting limits on'.their use
by insumnce firms, marketers and
others.
Records will travel
For now, one fact is clear: Your medical records are only briefly in the
doctor's office alone. From the examining room, facts go to insurance
companies, pharmacies and other
places - where databases are born.
"The days when your m~ical
record was in a doge~ folder in the
left dmwer of your doctor's desk are
over," says Sen. Bob Bennett, R- .
Utah. who is among those proposing
laws to protect the records. '.'This
information is now swished around
the world through third-party play·
ers."

Medical ·databases are hot commodities. And access to these records
is growing as medical operations and
managed care organizations become

more -computerized. Growing numbers of employees at these organizations have access to medical and psychotherapy records.
Nonmedical personnel . who may
see patient records include system
managers looking for ways to cut
costs and drug marketers looking for
patients who might buy their products. "This year alone, $6 billion will
be spent on claims-based information," says Ernie Rutherford, a Monroe, La., doctor and CEO of Physician Information Exchange, a company that helps doctors manage com-.
puter information.
While 34 states have laws that
require confidentiality, feder;ll lawmakers say those laws often·are conflicting.
"Your record at a video store is
given greater protection than the
most intimate · personal details of
your health," says Sen. Edward
Kennedy. D-Mass.. co-sponsor of
one of the bills and a member of the
Senate Labor and Human Resources
Commillee, which is considering
sweeping legislation aimed at protecting medical records privacy.
Proposed legislation would give
each,patient:
·
• The right to review his or her
own medical record and ask for
changes.
• More control over who sees the
record. Access would still be available to employees of medical centers,
group medical plans and insurance
providers. Access to law enforcement
is still tieing debated. but police
would likely retain the right to view
the records.
• Legal options if records are
abused or misused.
In recent years. privacy advocates
have gathered hundreds of examples
of abuse.
When customers of CVS Corp., a
pharmacy chain. learned in February
that personal information from their
medical record.~ had been given to a
marketing firm, lhey were outraged.
The Massachusells firm, Elensys
Inc., had sent out notices to CVS
pharmacy customers reminding the
patients to refill prescriptions.

CVS told the marketing fiim to
stop after 200 complaints.
Pros, cons of sharing
' "This is where the line is fuzzy,"
Bennett says. " If a pharmacist calls
you because you haven't refilled
your prescription, when you come in.
that sale is going to make him a littie bit of money."
But at the same time, the computerization of medical records is ·helping patients. The CVS computer
detects ·dangerous drug combinalions. Similar systems help. doctors
.spot waste in their practices.·
AnQ researchers say that with
more records being fed into growing
databases. today's powerful computers may be able to crack some stubborn mysteries . Researchers routinely study old medical cases looking for
beller treatments and common causes of illness.
The connections between smoking
·and cancer became clear, for instance,
by looking at decades of medical
records.
.
"This is how we develop medicine's greatest ideas," says Gillian
Woollell of Pharmaceutical Research
and Manufacturers .of America, the
drugmako:r.; ' trade group.
But it's not just medical records
that are used behind 11 patient's back.
·It's common practice in medicine for
abandoned tissue samples and old Xmys to be shared for medical studies.
.. As long as the researcher c.an 't
get the patient's (name and othef)
information, they should be able to
use that information," Woollen says.
" If your name isn't auached to it, do
you careT'
.
· Somebody with a gertetic predisposition for serious illness, like a

woman with a history of breast cancer in her family, ha.~ much to lose
and much to gain by sharing her
records.
Having her records on a database
outside her doctor's office could
spoil her chances of getting ajob.
Some big e}llployers have admitted in r~cent surveys that they use
medical information to screen candidates.
·
"They are scared to death to
apply for an insurance policy because
they are afr~id the infonnation will
.get out," Bennett says.
But if researchers could solve the
· mystery of brea.~t cancer by studying
past cases. she might be protected
from the disease that hit her family.
"We know that if misused, our
medical records could be used to huri
us," says Christine Brunswick of the
National Breast C3ncer Coalition.
' But she says eyen though some ben~fit can come from research using
·these record•, "we don't want to
wake up as·we did recently to find out.
our information is being sold to
direct-marketing companies."
Senate deadline ahead
Even those with legitimate reasons
for having the data ·are not always
caref~l to protect the identities of
patients.
"Researchers are not always very
careful with the confidentiality of the
data," says Chai Feldblum of Georgetown Universiiy Law Center, who has
helped draft the proposed laws. "It's
not like they are all people in· whitt
hats and we have no reason to be
afraid."
This month. Bennett and senators
with competing proposals have
worked on' compromises ·

I

By IIIKE .HUGHES
Gannett N1wa Strvlce'

Lots of islanders can get chomped just fear our predators. We are transand shredded.
.
. fixed by them, prone to weave sto' There are two ways to look at
At least, that's lhe final theme. ries and fables and cha11er endlessly
Peter Benchley's "Creature," which This miniseries (9-11 p.m., Eastern, about them, because fascination ere. reaches ABC on Sunday, May 17.
Sunday and 'Monday), has strayed ates preparedness."
One is the broad, philosophical far from Benchley's "White Shark"
For "Jaws," Beochley chattered
view. "I wanted to u8e it to sbow · novel.
on aboill a killer shark. At the time,
~ how we're destroying the natural
"Except for the story, the charac- Hollywood almost didn 'I have the
·creatures," Benchley says. .
ters and the location," Benchley technical ability to pull it off.
: That •much . is fine. · From laugbs. "everylhing is th~ same." ·
"They almost shut it down,"
Bendlley_is a genial: 1101t wbo llcnchlcy says. '"Jaws' is a classic
:"Frankenstein" to "Juraasic' Puk,"
·mad scientistS have been ·recon- migllt have been a humorist like his'· now, but there was a time when pco' structing nature, with shaky results. . grandfather, Robert Benchley. "I did · pie thougllt it wouldn't work."
: The other approach is far more write two comedy novels," he says. : Nowadays, Hollywood is filled
;specific.
"But nobody. read them."
with technicians. The. ·~creature"
Let's say you have a si:ience proHe also is steeply educated. He producers went to the top• .
•ject. You think it would be cool to wa a preppie and a Harvard man; he
"Their greit stroke of luck,"
:mix a shark and a dolphin.
now lives in Princeton, N.J., sur- Benchley says, "was getting Stan
. lbat way, you'd have a creature rounded by bminpliwer. "
Winston to work on it."
·that ,wants to rip us to shreds, and is
What people keep remembering
Winston is the "Juraasic Park"
' a lot smarter about doing it. You · him for, however, is ''Jaws." He's guy, now adapting to a TV budget.
. might throw in .me human DNA, been trying to explain that succesS He had to create a 7-f09t'5, 400100, so the tbing can stomp from
for ye!lrs.
pound terror of sea and land.
.
house to house.
The best exphmation Be0chley
· "Obviously," Winston says,
· Before yoti get · any further, can find is from socio-biologist 1.0. "we're not going .to be ... using the
"Creature" suggests lhis: DON'T.
\\(iiSon: "In a deeply tribal sense, . most expensive technolo~y in the
Even a well-meaning ~xperiment we love our monsters."
/ world, and spending $20 million on
like this can (surprise) go wrong.
Wilson also wrote: "~ d~ol effects." .
·
.
Grand
Funk Railroad back on the main-nne ly. Everylhmg
had to be done ughtTrilogy Entertainment - once a
•
·
: By CHUCK DARROW
·
an ill-fated attempt at resurrecting movie company, now .focusing more
·Camden (N.J.) Courier-Post
the group. "It was too early for' us to on TV - needed ·to be large and
: It's easy to · assume early-'70s come back," insists Brewer.
cheap.
• powerhouse Grand Funk Railroad
In the meantime, all three found
"Trying to do it on a TV schedule
: called·it quits ·for the usual rock 'n' other things 1~ occupy themselves. ·is prelly terrifying," says producer
: roll reasons: runaway egos and-or Farner became a born-again Christ-' Richard Lewis. "When · we did
: runaway habits. Why else would a ian, Schacher devoted his time to 'Back.draft' and 'Robin Hood,' they
; band that, in its day, sold millions of. . restoring cars and houses, illld'Brew- were 100-day schedules. This was
·: LPs IJid constantly set concert- . er kept the beqt for Bob Seger's Sil- 50 days."
•
Benchley had made Several tries
, auendancc records, cease to exist, as ver Bullet Band.
; Grand Funk did in 1976?
"As the 1990s began to play out, at writing a movie scrip,t for "White
i According to drummer-vocalist says Brewer, radio created the clas- Shark.'! When ABC .wanted a four' Don Brewer, it all came down to sic rock format, and, as he and his
•
; common sense and knowing when partners noticed, many groups from
: to say when.
.
their era were re-started, even
l "By the time 1976 came around, thougil many of the acts weren't
t disco was very big, and Grand Funk pure in terms of original personnel.
[just couldn't go there," explains
"We would think, they don't
, Brewer.
,
have the original meJDbers. Whr are
t The band's high-decibel R-and-8- they doing that?," offers Brewer:
; based ~k, "wasn't contemporary
COLONY THEATRE
; for rad1o. So, rather thari watch
• FJUDAY THRU 'niURBDAY
r everythi~g go down, We decided IO .
BRUCE WIUJI, ALEX IALDWIN
•go on hiatus," Brewer explains. Mark
~Farner (guitar) and Mel Schacher
MERCURY RISING A
:(bass), also .make up the band.
ON! MNIIQ 8HOW 7:30
"We had recorded two albums a
,year between 1969 and '76. And
;when we weren't .in the studio, we.
were Oil the road. We said, 'Let's go
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
:on to other things and give Grand
FRI., SAT., IUN.
.Funk a.rest. Lets take a break."'
ADAM SANDLER,
Through the years, the thr~ .
DREWBAR~EII
Michigan-based. musicians, whose ·
THE WEDDING SINGER
PIJ13
signatures' included "Some JGnd of
AND
Wonderful,'' "The Locomotion" and
WILUAM HURT, GARY OLDMAN
the 1973 anthem, :·we·r~ An AmeriIN
can Band," kept1n touch. In 1981,
LOST IN SPACE PG-13 .
Farner and Brewer were involved in

THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL

2&amp;41/8

Gender

r~mains . an .issue

By DAVID WECKER
Army's male recruits, 25 percent of
Jlle Cincinnati Poat
the Navy's male recruits at1d 40 per'; CINCINNATI - Sue Villanueva . cent of the Air Force's male recruits
wa.~ apprehensive about going into routinely enter basic training with
U.S. Army basic training. but not women. Currently. the Marines sep- .
!JC:cause she'd be crawling in mud amte the sexes during basic training.
alongside male recruits.
- lo any case, basic training is a se,..
'· Her concern was whether she sitive time in .one's nlililary career~oold stand up to the rigors. hideed. a time when a soldier, sailor or air~he had no hesitation about going ' man lean)s to take orders; to subju-..
through boot camp 'with men.
gate his or her own will to the wish• · "I found myself competing with es of a drill sergeant or drill instruc·
lhe guys - •exuar hara.'l.~ment was tor. When green teen-age female
never an issue." says Pfc. Villanue- . recruits are mixed with green teenvii, who completed basic training at age male recruits, the potential for
Ff. Jackson, S.C., a year ago and has someone cros.•ing one line or anoth·
$ince been assigned through the er becomes that much greater.
National Guard as the volunteer
That ·wa• the point of a report
· ~rdinator at the Coalition for a issued late last year by the Federal
Drug-Free Cincinnati.
Advisory Committee.on Gender lnte.• "I wanted to be as strong, as good grated Training, led by former Sen.
1$ they were. Turned out, I did better
Nancy Kassebaum Bakicr, R-Kan.
tl)an a 101 of them. I worked up to · · The report. while supporting the
doing'57 guy pushups and 70 sit-ups concept of a gender-integrated miliin two minutes. Having guys to com- tary force, argued that mi •ing the
oete against made me a better sol-

sexes in early training undercul•
efforts to make men and women
work together effectively after basic
training ha.~ been completed.
"Our major conclusion wa.~ that
our volunteers deserve the best training we can give them," says Lori
Mumy, the committee's executive
direcJor.
,
"And our recommendation for
doiog that is to say that these operational training units all ought to be
same-gender. not mixed."
Just Ia." month. however, a second
Pentagon advisory panel called for
more integration of the sexes in
ba.~ic training. The second panel
based its recommendation on
responses from mililary personnel.
ll~ basic conclusion wos that training programs aimed at men result in
"more negative and prejudicial altitudes toward women."
Cohen wants the Army, Navy and
Air Force to toughen training ·while

&amp;!er." ·

. Then there's Leigh Chemi, who.
was in an all-woman uni.t when she
eptered the Army's basic training in
'1993, She's glad she was.
.
"There were no distractions,"
says Sgt. Cherni. now assigned to the
· 1\";entucky National Guard and majoring in sociology at Northern Kentucky University.
: "The only men were our two drill
~rgeants, and there was never a hint
Pf se•ual discrimination."
, So what's the best appro~~Ch for
bia.~ic training? Recently, Defense
~retary William Cohen cnme down
pn the side of sexuqlly integratedand tousher -training but with men
illd women housed separately. The
~bate, undoubtedly. will continue to

tage.
' Today's Army is going thrqugh
lig changes. along with the other •
tbree branches of the armed forces.
' .\ylth 1he end of the Cold War. the
h!ilitary has been downsized in I0
years from 2.2 million active-duty
nicmbers to 1.4 million.
, ; Demogmphics have changed. too.
Jil 1972, women made up 2 percent
of the military forces. Today. women
mnprise a full 13.5 percent - and
recent changes have opened more
th.. 260.000 new posjtions for
-""n in the military.
Altitudes have been slower to
ehlnge. Beginning with t~ Tailhook
. ~in 1991, in whidl83 women
~ molested or aWJiled at ·ai:onWIIIion oi Mwine llld Navy aviators,
jlarics llboQt hanissment and even
dt!e 11e11111 ai!IIOtt coinmonpiiiCC.
~l The cleblre over pndtr-integril·!k!f! jn the milir.wy IIIII focused 'f
~all ~ rer,r JQ J5 "initiill
l!*ry tt'linlnJ" plllll'lllll·· Or basic

...n,. Or boor camp.
A• ir

Sfl!ldl• about

half of the

lZNO

·in basic training

JUNE
s:i3

•

housing male and female recruits in
separate areas to· cut down on.
improper sexual behavior. He said he
would not require that they undergo
basic trainin~. ·

19-28
22-27
27·28
30.7/1

=

AmNTJON

liWKY WIMftt

KMART SHOPPERS
In the Kmart May 3
advertisement sent to home
owners, the Kathy Smith Alrtech
Glider on page 23 sale priced lor
$49.99 is incorrectly pictured .
The exercise item pictured Is the
Weslo Alrstrlder sale priced for

81Glfll ', .•

PIM.U8 ...............""'

(!4/t ~ Sup 4 ~ a. ';w ~I
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Saturday, May 2n,d &amp; Sunday May 3rd
·

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Entertainment

·

Wednesday, May 6th 6:00pm-8:00pm
. Thursday, May 7ch 8:30am-4:00pm
'•

·

mostly done with computers.
" It's kind of a two-dimensional
orchestra, instead of three-dimension," Van Tongeren says. "The siie
is the same, but the colors are different."

)'he sound.is big and little, generic and ethni~;: . " I call it •island iri
peril' music.n·

•
" Creature" reminds us that bad
things can happen in pretty places. li
also reminds us to choose our sci'
ence projects well.
·
Mike Hughes covera television
tor the Lansing (Mich.) State Journal and Gannett News SeNice.

•

•

Travel ·

.

APPRfCIATION Wffk!! .
'

SAVI: ON ALL Rrf'1AININ6
_1998 M~!ORCOACn TOUR~

.GrtenhOuM
9pentothe

. May 11 -16, 1998 Only!
"Show Your Card &amp; Save".

. Pubilc·

~-St,reral Open House

.

hour miniseries, Lew'is gave lhe project to "SeaQuest" writer Rqclute
O'Bannon.
.
The first to go were the Nazis
who were Beni:hley~s villains&lt;They
were upgraded to Vietnam-era
Americans.
Qlher lhings changed, nudging
the story into the Caribbean.
'there, a scientist (Craig Nel&amp;!ln)
and his ex-wife (Kim Callrall) try to
find out what other Americans have
wroughi.
Gorgeous • island,ers
(Michael Michele, Elizabeth Gib. son, Cress Williams) worry; a madman (Giancarlo Esposito) babbles. .
Much of this was filmed in St. .
Lucia, a sun-soaked island with a
steep unemployment rate.
"It's a very poor country, but the
people were fantastic," Lewis sa'ys.
. "A lot of them we used in the show;
the voodoo dancers were all real."
Tying all of this toget~er was
~ohn Van .Tongeren, a composer wbo
knows how to create large emotions·
on a budget. One key element, for
instance, flo~ts throup the s6und
tmck . . .
"It's like an ethnic flute," Van
Tongeren · say.s. "That kind of ties
things down to the island. ~:
Alongside that sweet tone is the
dark boom of danger.
"The people .I work for have a
style they like,'' Van Tongeren says.
"It tends to be .somewhatlarge.
"I said, 'What if we put in this
little flute here?"' The sweet ~und
mixes with the thunder of melodra- .
rna. This seems like a powerhouse
John Williams score - ·except it's

Gallipolis

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4- $2S .Door Prizes

Join us in ""'·"' . .. .,. .
of our new!Y r~odeled office
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�Entertainment

Section

•

Series answers question: What's so great about Alexander?
Edltor'e: ~rdetaa for "In tht FCIOtala!M of Alexander
tht car-t" -May 4-5 on PBS.
By ANNE BENDHEIII
Home Newl Tribune
If Hollywood's Indiana Jones has a real-life model,
that person just might be Michael Wood.
.
The Oxford-educated British historian and journalist
i~ tall. handsome and well-spoken with an unruly mop of
curly, blond hair and Paul Newman-blue eyes. He has a
typical Englishman's dry sense of humor, but unlike Mr.
Chips and other dusty ~ry British classicists, his jokes
are of the funny variety - and never Greek or Latin epigrams.
But more to the point, Wood has a habit of ducking .
out of modern, Western society to trek off to parts
unknqwn. He exchanges his rweed suits for camp shirts,
khaki pants and hiking boots to explore the wilds of"
Asia, Africa, India and the Mediterranean. His quest: To
unlock the secrets of history.
For the past rwo decades, he has shared his quests
with millions of avid fans worldwide on Public Broadcasting System series such as " ln .Search of the Trojan

Shawn Colvin discovers

War," "Leg~~cy, " "Saddam 's Latest War" and "G.reat
Railway Journeys of the World. " His newest, four- hour,
rwo-part epic, "In tbe Footsteps of Alexander the
Great," airs at 9 p.m. Monday and Tuesday on PBS and
likely will bring new Wood-followers into the fold.
One of the primary reasons for Wood's success is his
enthusiasm for his subject. The qu intessential moment in
any Wood epic is a scene of him charging up a rocky
mount in some forgotten corner of the globe, finishjng
with a quick crosscut to his triumphant conquest df the
crest, bursting forth in ebull ient terms with some new,
captivating insight. He makes the obscure clear, the past
immediate and impbrtan t,
The enthusiasm comes easy fo r Wood.
" I love being places like that, and I love history," he
says. " History is complicated and ancient, and there's
not much for the television audience to go on. Unless the
host is enthusiastic, they're not going to watch.
" But I make films because I want tu tell a story. After
' Legacy' aired, we got letters from people all around the
world. There was one lady from Lubbock, Texas, who
wrote, 'You'veshown us things we never dreamed exist-

r~al

meaning of success

By IAN CAHIR

it's just the greatest. " group of strong women who now
Her hard work has rule the pop airwaves.
After about 30 seconds talking
paid off not only with
• For Colvin, it's nice to see Sarah
with Shawn Colvin, it's obvious
popularity but with the McLachlan, Fiona Apple, Paula
she's not yOur ordinary music star.
Cole and others make it big. But it
respect of her peers.
She's t~oughtful. She's eloquent.
Colvin says she's doesn't surprise her.
And she understands that music isn't
" You k'now, it just seems like a
flattered wen she
j ust her love, it's her job. And right
reads about another natural progression," she says.
now, things at work are pretty good. ~~~_.... musician praising her " Women were undersold fo r a while,
"I've got nothing to complain
so th ere'• some catching up to dq.
work.
about," she says with a laugh.
" You never know how your life's
"N; for the whole women thing,
Colvin wasn 't always. laughing. gonna tum out, " she says. " It's fun . I think it's great. It' II be even better
about her success. Jbe folk-rock- · I've come to value.certain things in when we don't think of it as a
pop-country singer-songwriter spent my life, and if I'm put up as a model, woman thing. It WQilld be neat if that
more than a decade playing bars, then that's flattering.
were the way it was.
.
i:offee houses and " mt holes" trying
" I think the best .example is when
"(Music) has much less to do
to make it in the music business.
with being young and new and hot. I play. People don 't walk up to me
· During that time, she had dreams That was on my mind for a long and say, 'Oh, you ' re good for a
of becoming successful, but nothing time, but it has passed."
'
girl. "'
like she's gotten in the past year. .
Colvin will tour more this year,
Part of her new life a~ a role
. "You dream (about su~). but model for other artists is as the unof- but don't expect to see her on Lilith
once you get into the work of makelder stateswoman of the Fair 1998.
ing records, it just becomes too
teal," she says.
.
Nancy
· "1 . found out that there 's much
Hollister
more to (success) than I thought,"
Undecided
she says. "But I'd say I met my
dreams, and then some." ·
: Colvin has reason to be happy
· Abortion on Demand
ibcse days." Her latest album, "A
. J'eY/ Small Repairs" is platinum, she
Partial Birth Abortion•
won a Grammy in 1997 and she's
Undecided
sained new fans around the country.
Federal
at Planned Parenthood
: Colvin quickly points out that the
Oppoeea
Homoaexual
Children
;success she has now isn 'I just a flash·
1n the pan. She's worked hard, but
Freedom
Undec:lded
&amp;he feels like she's finally gotten
:past her weak points.
"It's gotten easier," she says.
"Everybody h~ their weak points.
Singing was never tough for me. I
never felt like the greatest singer, but
I felt comfortable:
"Writing was a terrible struggle.
Paid lor by: Cathy Bennett, Looter &amp; Molly Plymale, Connie Hemphill,
Now that I've gotten the hang of it,
. 1841 St. Rt.
OH 45631
San Bernardino County Sun

•

1

Wood says. "The survival of the legend was one of the
ed."'
" In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great" is actually things that most am~d me - wherever we went, peo·
a bit of a departure from Wood's current interest, which ple had stories to tell."
Alexander the Great was only 19 when his father 's
is best seen in " Legacy." That series, which aired six
years ago, is more of a "history of ideas," Wood says. murder hastened his succession to the throne of the
"Footsteps" is more in the tradition of the much earlier Greek kingdom of Macedonia. Shortly after that, in 334
B.C., be' embarked with more than 35,000 soldiers on a
" In Search of the Trojan War."
He spent two years on ." footsteps," six months, on holy war of vengeance against the Persians. Today he is
and off, fi lming Alexander the Great's 20,000:milc, 16- known to people as hero and monster, explorer and concountry journey of conquest fro~ Greece to India. He queror, devil and even god.
"The number one misconception about Alexander is
had come up with the concept in the late 1970s and had
that
he was history's golden boy," Wood says. " Every·
written a film treatment for the British Broadcasting
Company in 1987. But the Afghan war and then the Gulf •body agrees he was incredibly chivalrous, generous,
War intervened, making it impossible for him to even devoted to philosophy, history and litemture. He had a
travel in the areas, mu!;h leSs trace Alexander's journey. great curiosity about the world. He took scientists and
In fac t, although filming dictated a trip into southern botanists and naturalists with him.
"But he killed thousands and thousands of people. In
Iraq, Wood is not welcome in that country because of his
our time, we rightly reject such people. It's tepible. But
" Saddam's Latest War" documentary.
.
For Wood, tracing that journey was critical to discover- you can't judge him as a man of our time."
. You can, however, learn much about the forces that
ing the real Alexanaer, a man whose persona is obscured
drove him, the challenges that faced him, the obstacles
by myth and legend, even to this day.
"The legends are almost as interesting as the stoiy," he surmounted in his quest to rule half the world.

LOOSEN

I·

.

GALLIPOLIS • An open house
will be held Friday, May 8, from II
a.m: to 2 p.m., at the new Ohio
Department ofTransportation garage
on Jal:kson Pille in Gallia County.
Area office holders, community leadcrs and the general public are invited.
A program will be held. starting at
1:00 p.m.• to recognize individuals
who were involved in the successful
construction of the new $2.50 million
facility.·
The general contractor for ~w
OD9T building was Wes~oostruction of Chester in Meigs County. AJ. Stoclr.meistcr Inc., Jackson,
installed the heating, plumbing and
cooling. Draw Electric Inc., Huntington. W.Va., was the eleCtrical contractor.
.
The address of the new gamge is
2397 Jackson Pike, Bidwell, about ·
two miles west of OOOTs c~isting
building, which also housed the·state
highway .patrol until they built their
new offices.
Area residents may wonder why
ODOT has built a garage on a coun· ty road.
·
The 60-acre parcel of land was

purchased by the state in late 1988 at
a costofapproximately$1SO,OOO.At
the time of purchase. the road was .
still US 35. The road didn't become
a county
Ul)til after Cj&gt;ITipletion
of new US 3~ in June 1992.
Officials with ODOT District 10,
of which Gallia County is a part,
sought property on new· US 35 after
the road' was completed. but could
not find anything suitable that was for
sale. Since a salt dome had been built
on the Jackson Pike property in
1990, OQOT decided to keep the
new
property they already had and move
being
checked
out
before
employees
n111ke their permanent
forward with a new building.
move to the feeUity. From lett to right, Frank Rosenow, technl·
Construction of the new building
cal services eclvlepr for Engineered Air, Cincinnati, explains the
began in June 1997. Local ODOT·
working• of the air exchangera to County Manager Jeff Phillips,
employees had a say .in the developMechanic Terry O'Dell, .Diatrlct 10 Business Administrator
mem of plans for the building, espeGeorge Colllne and Mechanic Jay Haeklns.
cially County Manager Jeff Phillips
and Head Mechanic Terry 0 ' Dell .
The old Gallia ODOT garage was bay.
In iln effort to save money, employ- .completed in July 1955 at a cost of
Once ODOT moves out of its
ces went from a proposed brick, $105,384, quite a difference com- existing garage, it wi ll become the
masonry buildina to a ~re-enai· pared to loday's construction costs. property of the Gallia County Comncered, O)Ostly steel building with a Gallia ODOT employees have been missioners.
brick facade on the offi&lt;:e section. · served well by tile building during the
ODOT traded their property to the
During the past few weeks, state )ll!St 43 years, however, employees . county commission for property
inspector,&gt; have been working' with an: loolting forward to the move to needed for the recent widening at the
the contractors to finish up all details the new building with its updated fea- State Route 160/Jackson Pike interof the work.
tures, .especially in the mechanics' section.

road

Weed problems in the garden
By JENNIFER L BYRNES .
Mulching is helpful, however it
GALLIPOLIS- Weeds in the gar- · must. be applied after the warm sea-;,
den become a popular problem this sorl crops are well csta!llished, usutime of year, and unfortunately low illy during the month of Julie. Time
labor solutions are hard to find. Lack o.f application is important because
of a universal herbicide that could be · mulch hol&lt;ls soil temperature as well,
safely used on all garden vegetable therefore the .soil should be warm
crops is something that gardeners when it . the mulch is applied.
face every spring. A wide variety of Mulches are commonly used too
vegetables are usually grown the . early in the season and tend to keep
home garden; which would require soil temper•tures too cold. High
purchasing and storing several dif- organic mulches need nitrogen for
ferent chemicals. Furthermore, when decay and will therefore compete
herbici,:les are applied they tend to with the vegetables for nitrogen
drift onto plants in the aarcten that available in the soil. To mi·nimize this
cannot tolerate the chemicil. It "is for problem, U'IC mulches that are already
these reasons that herbicides are not partially decayed. .
normally recommended in the garWhen high organic mulches ~
den.
used, apply extra nitrogen to com. ~pile lac)( of chemical control pensate for the loss. Most commonthere.are cultural practice.s that gar- ly, the harmful effects gardeners see
deners can usc to control the weeds. •from sawdust- or shavings in vegMulching is a common prai::tice in · ctable gardens is due to the depletion
weed control,' Using mulchins mate· of soil nitrogen.
rial such as clean straw, sawdust, peat
Cultivating is also" a goOd method,
moss, gmss clippings. or plastic film but one that should be used with caucan conserve soil moisturo and tion. Roots of many vegetable plants
smotlier weeds.

grow very near the surface and spread matioil will be put out to the public.
out widely in every direction.
Producers are urged to ,apply
Therefore. always cultivate shal- Dithane or Carbamate (Ferbam) to ·
low. ~~p. cultivation will prune veg- their tobacco transplants immediate.etable crop roots, and teduce yield ly. We should assume that reproducand increase moisture •Joss. Also tive spores have already passed
keep in mind that elcessive cultiva- · through our area and each producer
lion also results in loss of soil mois- should consider their plaqts.vulnerature as well as wasted labor.
ble to the disease. Since last week,
So we wish there was a quick and Gallia County has been under a Blue
easy solution to the undesirable plants Mold Watch, please repon ;my susin the garden, but sometimes the best peeled cases of blue mold the ex tenrecommendation is the good old sion office ar740-446-7007. Please
fiiShioned hoe. For more infonnation check plant and float beds and greenabout gardening plea.~e call the OSU houses daily for signs of the disease.
. E~tension office at 740-446-7007.
The Blue Mold Forecast announced
AG NEWS .
at noon on 96. 7 has been changed
BLUE MOLD UPDATE: Blue from Monday thru Friday to just
mold is spreading mpidly throughout Tuesday's and Thursday's. Producers
Kentuc~y and Tennessee.
can also call 1-800:835-BLUE for
. ft is also llkll"cstablfshell in Gem.,. . fOrecast infonnation. Also, please
gia and Florida.· This stmin of blue check with your local ag supply dealmold.has been tested and found to be er for a current blue mold forecast, or
RIOOMIL RESISTANT. Currently, call the Extension office.
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
Ohio does not have a label for Aerobat MZ. however, soon a.~ an emer- County's extension agent io agrigency label is approved that infor- cultUre and natural resources.

By HAL KNEEN
carbohydrates and iugars for fruit and
· POMEROY · Are cloud.~ of white leaf deve,lopment, greatly reducing
snow-like flakes dropping . out of tomato yields. Commercial fungiyour pine trees? Several homeownen cides such as chlorothalonil, manhave called in complaining abQut cozeb and azo~ystrobin, if used on a
dyjng pine branches and clouds of timely basis, prevent and minimize
white flakes. If so, your pi~ trees losses due to early blight. The Tommay be infested with pine bark adel- Cast (Tomato Forecast) ·computer·
gids. The female · adelgids have system placed in local tomato fields,
matured on the pines this spring and monitors air tempemtlire and humid·
have transformed tlicm.~lves into ity to forecast when weather condismall, white "flakes." These aphid- · tions ani favorable for early blight
like insects cover themselves with a disease development. Fungicid~
waxy. cottony substance and deposit . spraying needs to be appli¢ as the
eggs within the filaments. The white aecumulation of proper weather confloeculent material not only protects ditions meet the critical slage. "Fhe
the eus from desiccatiop, but also ratiq scale is referred to units of Dis·
shields the females from the effects CllliC'aVerity Values (DSV).l:dcal
of a number of insecticides. .
fungicide spraying needs to occur
It l s too late to effectively kill wheri DSV's .reach 13-15 units,
mature females with insecticides at depending on tomato variety. The
this time. Donnan! or horticultural oil 8fOWC! ' can access the local DSV
spra~s in early March should· have
values by calling 1-800-228-2905
been applied. However. you can use . -and listening to the prereCorded mesplain water under hose nozzle pres- sage for the Racine !lfel. pSV's
·sure to wash off the mature females . updal&lt;d at one o'clock each-wort day
from the bark, twigs or branches on10 afternoon. ·
the ground. This will reduce the nell
Ohidl State University will be
generation of adelgids. Insecticides, · monito!/ng insect~ using helio-lure
.
' .
such as Dursban, horticultural oils traps in sweet com fields for EuroRIO GRANDE - While pizza ·
aod insecticidal soaps c:an be used in pean ~rn .borer and com earwonn;
• the RCKt few weeks on the' newly sticky trap lures for variegated cut- and pasta ha.~ been the specialty of
hatched crawler staSe of the adelgids. wonn on tomatoes; and helio-lure Speedo's Italian Cafe, its newest
• Make sure to completely cover ·old .traps for European com borer in pep- ·location in Rio Grande offers more
and newly expanded pine growth pers. Chemical spraying should be for diners seeking something differwith insecticides. This sucking insect withheld until instct thresholds lev- ent.
The new Speedo at the comer of
can c:ause substantial injury, espe- els are reached. Delayed chemical
cially to new growih. The generatiOns applications allows for native preda- State Route 325 and Ridge Avenue,
overlap on this inliCCt, so ellrly con- tor insects to survive and assist in the also goes in for American ancl
Mediterranean dishes, explained
trol of the firstscneration can great· reduction of harmful insects. .
ly reduce total adelgid populations. '
Vegetjble groi!Vers can receive owner Bahrain\ Heidari, who'~ been
additional recommendations for their involved in the restaumnt business
Commercial fresh market toma- crops by purchasing the 1998 Ohio both in the U.S. and the United Kingtoes have ·been planted in the field.• Vegetable Production Guide from the dom for nearly two decades.
• •
Heidari has operated a.Speedo's in
alons the Ohio River in Letan, Port- local e~tension office. Ask for bulthe Spring Valley Plaza for the past
land and Reedsville. The first Ohio letin 672. ,
' •
feW yellfli, but said opening a cafe to
River Valley-grown tomato should be
ready by early July. I can't wait! Once
Homeowaers, it is time to apply Rio Grande was prompted by the
. asain. Ohio State University E~ten­ your lawn weed and feed to control prospects offered by a college comsion _and local farm cooperators will those pesky broadleaf weeds. The munity.
Open for Ste&amp;rly a month, the Rio
truck diseases and insect numbers to · dandelions have bloomed ond tern-'
minimize the amount of chemicals peratures are coosistcntly in the six- Grande Speedo's has already attractapplied to locally grown produce. ties, thus the herbicides should work ed a regular customer following.
This not only reduces the chemicals more elfectively. Remember to fol- Heidari said. The cafe operates sevfouf¥1 oti crops but also minimizes low label directions on the bags or en days a week, I0:30 a.m. until II
. wort force chemical e~posure and · bottles, especially for the interval p.m., and offers free delivery.
Speedo's has deVeloped a follow· reduces chemical expense to .the ~tween application and the ne~t
ina
for its pizza, Heidari said, pri: farmer.
rainfall.
marily
becau.~ the ingredients have
:
Early blight is a funps di:;ease
· that causes the tomato leaves to tum
Hal Kneea II tile Melgi County been developed over years of ~xpo­
: :tan/brown ~ then die: The lack of Apil:obunl.f' Natlll'll Resources rience in the business.
:'The piZZII is our own recipe," he
. he~thy tomato leaves reduces the Extension Aae~t, ·Ohio Stale
,
said.
·we've been doing it roi over
: abihty of the tomato plant to produce . UnlvenJty. Ex · , .
I 5 years. so we feel that· we know
what we're doing."
. .
I
· Heidari said lhe pizza and other
offerings ..-e made" by the staff from
GALLIPOLIS - Keith · A. John· committee. 11
fresb products, and he noted that the
-son recently received a promotio)l to The fund, erecheese
Speedo's uses is 98 percent
. assistant cashier. collections manag.- ated • and
fal-ff"!!C'
•
.•
cr for Ohio Valley Bank. His office maintained ·
·
"We:re
very
health-oriented
in
will still be located at the Ohio Val- by employthai
respect."'
he
said.
~d~Dk Anne~ on Third Avenue in ees, donates
But the new Specdo's is goins in
Gallipolis. Johnson began at ova· in thousands . of
for
mOre: delu~e meals, among tl)em
dlri and Shlrrl McCoy. The reateurant, 1110
READY TO SERVE - 81111 with 1 ulectlon
to
December 1985 aft~r graduating dollars
steak,
catfish,
traditional
~afood
of
101M
ofthtdlllllll'l
offtted
br
Spndo'altal·
offwlng American and Medltarranean dlahel,
from Gallia Acad~my High School. charity each
dishes
and vegetarian lasagna, courlin
c.r.ln
Alo
Grande ... tram 111ft, ...., memIa open seven deya e· ~ 10:30 a.m. untlll1
Johnson has completed Supervi- year.
p.m.
tesy of the cafe's chef, AI Taylor.
bers At Taylor, Sllphlnle Ohlinger, AI1MII Hal·
sory Skills Training and. Principles
Ohio ValTaylor said tecipes for the entrees
of Banking courses from the Ameri- Icy
, Bane
he's dcvelopid have come from his aboUt how you'd like to have your
Speedo's i\ also available for can be 'contacted at 245..0088.
can Institute of Banking. lie has also Corp. is a one
meal prepared,"1iylor added
IJri9r
experience
as
a
chef·
with
the
caterin111,
Heidari said. The restaurant
been a st~nt at the Ohio School of bank holding
'
.
~Greenbrier resort and the ChesaConsumer 'Credit at Kent State Uni· company operating Ohio Y.alley
vcrsity and· Mapother Colleg~ uf Bank with offices in Franklin, Gal- peake Crab House in Charleslon, •
Collections at Louisville, Ky.
lia, Jackson and Pfko countic~ il\ W.VL, is well as his.own past own·
··-On other markets, precious metals 1 Arrieta, on a scheduled.trip to Me~·
By CUFF EDWARD$
Johnson is a past recipient of the Ohio and Point ~'~pant, w.va: The ership of~ dinin1 facility.
rell sharply. as did corn and wheat 1 ico, was expected to hold talks with
"These dishes, like the bourbon- AP Bualneu WIIIW
. bank's Joycelyn M. Barlow Aw1rd Bane Corp. also'·u
consumer
. that country's energy minister over
Crude
oil
fullna
~ soam1 · fulllres.
&amp;lazed
salmon,
I
picked
up
from
the
: of E~cellence and a mem.ber of the finance comp111y offices in GallipoCrude
oil
rose
sharply
as
market
Friday
on
tile
New
Yort
Mercantile
: the weekend. according to uncon: ban~· s overdraft cOI)lmittee. He !Is, Jackson and South Point, Ohio Oteenbrier, but I added a few lllOR:
puticipants
feared
a
weekend
deal
&amp;chan&amp;e, tugins petroleum prod,
1finned ~ports. Meanwhile, Saudi
• resides in Gallipolis with his wife, •. operating .under the name of Loan inlfOdients," he said. ·
uc:ts hisher, on unconfirmed reports · would be shuck .to funher slash lArabia's oil miniS!fr was scheduled
"'ne
thina
I'd
like
to
11ress
is
that
·: An1ie• .and daughtcr.KayiL In his Cenlpll. Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
. world oil output as producm work to !to meet with Clinton administration
: spare ttme, he "I'Oiunteers for the commoo stock is tnlded on NAS· becau!IC this is a quaint kind of place, world oil producers were pl111nina boost sharply lower prices.
don't be afraid to talk to the chef secret meetings JOreduce- daily ou.t·
Continued on D-8
: OV.B employee community fFund DAQ under the symbol OVBC.
Venez~la's
oil minister,
further.
•
.
.
'
.Erwio
'

are

as

Speedo's opens new cafe at Rio ·Grande

..

THE TAx

·s:

"'
l

Dr.
Samuel L.. Bossard
.
. Memorial Library
FACTS:

•

let us show you ways to: .
• Reduce your taxes
• Build Assets ·
• Keep peace Qf mind

l

1. Gallia County voters have been given the opportunity every five years to show their
support FOR their publi~ library: the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library,

GaUia County's District Library.
'

2. The .3 mil property tax levy is the same millage passed by Gallia County voters
since 1986.

·If you're like many iiM:stors, you're tired of the IRS taking up to .a thln:l of your financial security.

It's time to take controL
"

I

Marketing One Securities, Inc. located at Peoples Bank has tax-advantaged investments that

.

'

. 3. The .3 mil property tax levy on tlie ballot May 5, .1998 is an attempt to restore a
current operating expense levy which expired in Dec. 1997 due to voter failure to
renew the levy which has passed in 1992.

1113Y help you lower your taxes and are designed to giVe Y()U flexibility and peace of mind.

.

.

Let us help you put more of your Interest earrungs where they belo ng ... in your wallet.
Stop by the Mark.etjng One St;curities desk at any local branch, o~ call fOr. an app6intment.

NORTHWEST TERRITORY UFE
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
MARKliTING ONE SECUR111ES, INC.
' registered broker-dealer; member NASD arid SIPC.

.

..,. ,
.

' · Jii ,,
.

.,w

Dianna Lawso11
Kegtstered Represefllatlve
.Marketitlg 0 11e Securities, /t1c.

..
Nortbwnt 111frlt0f"j' Ufr /nsurrmce ~Inc. Is a subsidiary ofTbe First National Bank of So utbet~flern
Oblo, a hopln Baru:otp, Inc. ajJfliate.lltSUfance products are offered ~ Nort/Jwest Territory Life Imrmmce
Jf&amp;m91/nc. St!curllles are oJfrred ~ Marlll!ttng One Securities, Inc., all wra./JIIIa/ed reglsterr!d broker·&lt;leale~
nNrrWer·NASD and SJPC. TIJESE ·PRODUCI'S ARE NOf FDIC INSURED, ARE NOT DEPOSITS. OBLIGATIONS OF,
OR GUARANTI!ED BY TilE PEOPLES BANKING &amp;TRUST COMPANY ORANY OTHER BANK: AND INVOI.VE
INVESTMENT RISKS INCLUDING TIJE POSSIBLE WSS OF PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED.

4. Ga:llia County residents pay the lowest property taxes in the state of Ohio.
5. Library ser.vices which have EXPANDED or BEEN ADDED since 1992;

Circulation services, Library Automation, Reference Services, Computer and
Internet Services, Children's Programming, Geneaiogy services, Literacy/early
reading services, Adult programming, Books on Tape, Music CD's...
•

6. Library operating and service budgets were CUT in 1998 due lo lack of additional
tax money generated by the .3 mil property tax .levy.
•

7. Bossard Library closed one full day and one partial day per week' as a result of
fun~ing cuts.
8. A vote FOR the Library on May 5 is needed to restore hours and continue to grow .
and expand to meet the library needs of G~llia County. .

It's Your Library~ your VOT~ counts.
Vote
FOR the Library .3 mil Levy on May 5, 1998.
.
.

'

.

.

•

"!

Area homeowners are
complaning abo~t 'flakes' .
falling from pine trees

Vote ·.
·May 5, 1998
FOR the (.3 mil) LeVY

WANT .To

:J52 SecoDcl s~
Gallipo~, Ohio 45631 .
740·446-0902
800-374-6160

·

BIGGER AND BE'n'ER- An equipment shed Ia part of ODOT'e
new facllltln on Jaelulon Pike.

IO,E ·CR

located at PEOPLFS BANK

Open House · set for new·ODOT
garage in Gallia.County .·Friday .

.

..........

GRIP?

SUnday, May 3, 11198

It's YOUR Library ·
Your VOTE counts!
•'

D

•

•

.

.

y·ova

: Johnson prorr-oted

.

Crude sos_r_t!_on _
rumors of further production cuts

...

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.,

r
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�Page 02 • Jlllllbv G!imn-.$mtine1

Pomeroy e Middleport • Gallipolis, OH e Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunday, May 3, 1998

· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TheHo~seoftheweekExtraordinary estate living. Homes:
'
•

.Question and Answer..

,.

into the blocks to drain the water .
By POPULAR MECHANICS
from the cavities into the molding
For AP Specl1l Futunts
Q: 1 have two cherry trees in my which carries it to a sump. Does this
front yard that I have to use nets each l'eally work?
season so the birds won't eat the cherA: There is such_a product ~ it
ri~. Js there a way to protecllhe trees does work. But.the 1deal WliY to co~­
withoyt using nets, perhaps using a . recta hydrostatic leaka_ge p~l~m m
high technology device? I've won- ·a co~cretc block wall ts to tntercept
dered how big-time grower11 protect or dtven th~ water before 11 reaches
their trees.
•the foundation.
,
. .
A: There is no high technology . However, 1f you can t lay dratnage
solution 10 the probleni. l spoke to the ptpe~ beca~se the area around t,he
local horticultural agent for the Coop- founda~ton ts paved or c~vered w!th
erative Extension Se..Vice who said ~xpens1~e shrub~ry,. or ts otherwtsc
that many commercial grower11 pick macces.~1ble, . thelf you must control
be' re -1 · · .,.__ b'rds the seepage mto the ba.o;ement. You
the 11'ru't
I
oO
I IS npe. """ I
.
,
de 'be b
'
don't find the unripe fruit very ca~ do thts as you sen , y puncappealjng and leave it tllone. The tunng !ieeP holes at the_ b~ of the
cherries ripen during shipment or at concrete blocks an~ dtrcctmg the
the stores.
effluent to a sump ptl.
1lte best approach is to cover the
Q: I would like to install a strip
trees with netting. This discotlrages
oak
tonguc-nnd-gioove floor on top
birds and will not harm the tree or
of
an
above-grade concrete slab.
fruit. Some people use plastic owls
However.
I' ve heard horror stories of
and sound devices to scare off bird.~ .
This is nOI as effective as nets, how- costly wood floors buckling from
ever, and some communities have a moisture. How can I avoid' problems
noise ordinance that prohibits sound caused by moisture that might accumulate in the area ~nder the slab~
devices.
A: A hardwood floor can be
Q: 1 have a problem with water installed on a concrete slab at 'or
seeping into my bao;ement after a above grnde. llte.Oak Flooring !nstiheavy rainfall. Perf'orated drain pipes lute recommends again~t IJ&lt;,Iowunder the basement floor do a good grade ·in~tallations.
·
job of rei ieving hydrostatic pressure
~oisture is the chief culprit ·in
below the slab. However,lhe cavities hardwood floor buckling, so test the
in the concrele block walls fill with .slab for dryness. Tape 1-square-foot
water. which leaks into the basement. or clear polyethylene sheet to the
Co)llractors recommended break· slab. sealing its edges with plastic
ing up the floor at the ,perimeter jind tape. If after 24 hours. no clouding·or
installing drain tiles 'and a sump moisture droplets have formed under
pump. However. 1 recently heard it, the slab is dry enough to install a
about a pla.~tic molding. similar to a wond floor.
baseboard radiator cover. that is
To prevent moisture from reaching
sealed to the inside of the foundation the underside oft~ hardwood floor,
wall along the floor. Holes are drilled · place a vapor bamer

MULTIPLE ROOFLINES, unusual window arrangements and a combination of stucco and brick
accents make this an unforgettable orle-story design.
·
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
AP Ncwst'cat ures

and a peninsula snack counter
which it shares with a breakfast
Estate li ving Is at its best in plan
room and family room. A built-in
G-95, by Hom eS tyl es Oesigner·s ·desk is a convenient spot to jot
Ne twork. This palatial hom e prodown messages and grocery lists.
vides 2,597 square feet of living
Th ese three informal living
space.
spaces also share a corner fire The double -do01·ed en try opens
place ce ntered between television
to an e legan t foyer, which is
and media niches . The family
topp ed by a 16 -foot ceili ng .
room is topped by a 10-foot .c eilStraight ahead , the large central
.ing and has sliding glass doors to
living room has angled half-walls,
the rear patio.
and ove rl o.oks a covered .patio.
Isolated at the opposite end of
Soaring 14-foot ceilings are feathe home is the spacious master
tured in th e Jivin g room, in the
s uite with private patio access.
formal dinin g room and in the ' Dual walk-in closets distinguish
den/study, which could serve as a
the entrance to the adjoining
fourth be droom .
master bath, which features a
The go urmet chef will e njoy the
garden Jacuzzi tub , a seated
spacious• kit c he n , which has an
shower and separate dressing
island cooktop, a walk-in pantry
areas.

Across the home, two identically
s.ized secondary bedrooms have
10-foot ceilings and private
access to a shared , dual-sink
bath. ·
The h11ll bath opens to the patio
and can be used as a pool bath.

G-95 STATISTICS
Design G-95 has a liVing room,
formal dining room, family room,
kitchen, breakfast area, den/
study, three bedrooms, three full
baths and a utility room. This
plan includes a slab foundation
and 2x4 exte'rior wall framing.
The attached three-car garage
adds 785 square feet to the plan.

,----------------- ·· --------------------~

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--.. .
_,....,.
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0

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~=...
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ou

Low-odor ext~rior .paints . .
should debut ·in near future

way
89 "Raven· poet

keyboard
162 Spud

90 Cardgame

91 "The Thinke,.
sculptor
92 Cower
94 List of names
96 Animal friei1d
97 Monster
100 Lubricala'
1.01 Tennessee- Ford
104 That man's
105 Bartok or Lugosi
I06 ApparatUs
I07 Bac!: prefix
108 Peace prize name
110 Moral
112 Yearn
113 Boot-shaped
country
116 Less
118 Approving won!
119 Elk
120 Kind of paper or
copy
122 Dried out

123
124
125
127
129
130

133
135
136
137
141

Portent
Worked the land
Bel~ ·•
Originates
Mountain lake
Fleur-de· Throw In a curve
Legal matter
Illuminated
Madame Bovary
Part o1 Canada:
abbr.

142 Zinc is one
144 - capita

145 Retail happening
t 46 Com spike
147 Texas landmark
I49 Stage whisper
151 Take as one's own
153 Sensational
155 or warships ·
156 Evans or Lavin
157 Bring about

DOWN
t Ear parts
2 Occurrence

3 Unclear
4 Cry at bullfights
5 Original
8 lciCatlono for
barbecues

7 Unaccompanied
8 Viclory goddess

9
tO
11
12
13
14
15
· t6
17
·18
19

Frost
cOndemn
Chesaman
-Baba

Ol!ter layer
Girder. hyph. wd.
Mother superior
unfriendly

ALISiralian bird
Compact

Playing marble

20 Scarer
30 Old pronoun

32 Letters

34 Minced oath
37 Medical Piclures:
'

hyph. wd.

39 Code name
43 Raises. as the ante
44 Building eklenslons
45 Short flight
48 Maladies
47 Baby's enclosure
49 Peasoup
50 Overly
51 Brilliance
52 Incline

53 Butterfly-lo-be
54 Tennof
endearment

•56 Land measure
· ·511 Parlor: 2 wds.
sg See eytl-to-eye
60 Acts
62 Jewish law

158- acid

64 Acont.

159 Sugary
t 60 Derisive look
t6t Worked at a

67 Interest
68 Once more

69 Pasture

71 · Cruc:ialiy important :~:
76 Ccimpllation
•
78 Boy
81 Alter Sun.
83 Ghostly yen
84 Man of rank
86 - de Janeiro
88 Mature
89 Dressed oneself up
91 Kind o1 race
92 Amusing

~

~~Sunday, May 3, 1998

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

.

'

,

f

' By POPULAR MECHANICS
knotholes ·to a I 112-itich diameter back laminated to a center core of
· .For AP ,Special FutureS
plus synthetic rc:pair11 and defects that hardwood strips. It's used for desk
· Since 1905 when plywood was do not impair strength. D-grade 'per- and table tops and comes in 4-by-1().
.·fir1it developed in St. John, Ore., it mits knots and knotholes to a 2 112- foot panels, one-half, three-quaner
:has changed litl,le. But its use in home inch diameter, synthetic repairs and ;~nd l-inch thicknesses.
,building ha.~ changed the design and stitching repaif1!.
• Medium-density overlay (MOO)
. sjructure of homes r;~dically.
Some plywood iilctreconstituted is exterior plywood veneered with an
· , Here's a review to help you un~r- panels are performancdrated by the opaque resin-treated fiber overlay
stand the types and applications of American Plywood Association suitable for painting. It's used for
· _pl ywoods that are available.
(APA). These are stamped with a exterior signs and soffits a.~ well as'
, Softwood-veneer plywood is mQ~;t · number such as 24/16 which means kitchen and bathroom cabinets. MOO
,:·~idely used in C!lnstruction and they can be used in walls over studs e"'terior plywood siding is also avail··industrial applications. It's made by on ·24-inch centers and floors over able.
., c'ross-laminating an odd num!J&lt;,r of 16-inch centers.
High-density overlay (HOO) is
. wOod veneers such as pine, spruce,
Hardwood-veneer ,plywood is a similar to MOO but tougher and
· fir. and hemlock. Running the wood quality interior panel for furniture and more abrasion.'resistant. It's used to
,grains at right angles to each other · c;~binet cQnstruction. The face and build concrete forms and for counter
·· gives plywood its strength. It comes back plys are hardwood like birch, tops and workbenches. Both MOO
· in 4-by-8 foot panels with one-half, oak, walnut ~d ash with softwood and HOO come in three-eighths,
three"eighths, and three-quaner-inch .interior plies.
.
one-half, five-eighths and three-quarcommon thicknesses.
Lumbercore plywood Is the high- ter-inch thicknesses. ·
.' ,' During manufacture, wood est quality with hardwood face and
. ~eneers are bon.ded together with an
:,adhesive .under a hOI press. Qepe~dKIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
. ing on the adhesive used, the ply·
·wood is graded for interior or cxteri,or use. Interior-grade plywood is
made with moisture-resistant glue.
I;:"'terlor-grade uses I 00 percent
.waterproof glue.
. Plywood is graded by the quality
of the veneer used on the face and
back surf'aces. as well as by the type
•
,.of adhesive. The highest quality
/ .
. veneer grades a.,-e N and A. These
. have smooth, defect-free surfaces.
'Grades C and D are the lowest. ,N. ~rade natural finish is all sapwood or
. heartwood free of open defects and
' 'with no more than six well-matched
wood repairs per panel. A-grade is
' similar with no more than 18 neatly
. made repairs parallel to the grain. Bgrade ha.~ a solid surl'ace with circu'lar repair plugs and tight knots permilled to l-inch diameter arid minor ' ·
•spl\ts allowed. C-grade (plugged)
·permits synthetic repairs. splits up to
.one-eigHth-inch wide and knotholes
up to a one-half-inch diameter. C·grade (regular) allows tight knot~ and

-

-----

.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Auction
and Flea Matket
HJCII. Pearoon Auction Compan,,
full time auctioneer, complete

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

Personals

005

auclion service. Licenaed
166.0hio 1 Well Viroinl~ . 304·
773-5785 0. 304-773-5«7.

MElT~

COMMNIONI

1·100-215-tal?

90

12.811 ""lotin.

Comptere Household Or Estates!
An.- Type Of Furniture, Appllanc·
11, Antique's, E1c:. AIIO Appraliel

EXT. -

-l!eiiYro.

--.....

Setv-11 (1111) 14W434

'&lt;

30 Aoooune»menta

entertainer
93 Lariat
95 Even score
96 A nut

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

OI,.BETIC PATIENT&amp;: You Mil
Be Entitled TOi Rec;eiw Your Dia·

~,

...............-su.aw

belie Supplitl At No Cott Ta
~ . FOf More tnlormadon l-e88·

-98 Wash l~tly
99 - on: encouraged
102-deplume '
103 Long-legged bird
105 Vehicles with

Qlr:2:00~m.

877-8581.

No Hunii"O Or Trupaaling On
The Property 01 John Loveday,

,.......aw2:00 """
0

· -

·ID:OOa.aSalllntl.,.

Wilhout Wrin.n Pelml11iDn. Vlo-

letoriW•a. PIOI8allld.

Garage Sata: May 4111, Thru lm,
1.2 lolitn Out RouiO 211, - .

pedalS

109 Enticement
111 Residences
112 Actor Greene
114 Weight units: abbr.
115 "Mad About - ·
117 Sunday talk: abbr.
119 Impair
121 Cairo's river
123 Ham it up
'124 Destiny
126 FirldS the sum of
128 Anger
129 Leaned

Yr. Old Mole Dog,

c-.
3
740-311 8117.
1

Spitz, &amp;

Month 01c1 COIIt - .

·Huge Yard Sale: Mar Ht, 2nd,
4th, 5th, 1:00 To ? Furniture.

Tools. Clothing, Lots 01 Misc.

5 Adorabte Puppies &amp; Mother
Dog To Gao~ Home. 740· 446-

Vacant land: Nice Home Sitts,

Acoou From Ketr Post Olfic&lt;&gt;.

-

. ~IJliiOY,

'Blue tick/Black lab mi dd, 10
mo. old, good wlkida, haa all
llholil. 30+885-3071.
aJI &amp; 10toe. 31M-882.jl024.

Freel&lt;inen&amp;, 740-002·7215.

132 Stanza
134 Sink pan

Hide-a-bed couch.

740·742·21H

Of 740-992·5615.

136 Slight error
136 Be worthy ol
139 The Pine Tree
State
140 Zeal
142 Lose feathers

Labt Shepherd mix pups. .1ho11

and-. 740-!IQ2-42117.

60

Lost and Found

LOST: AEP T-ahirl ID&amp;I during
Walk America. Plea• retvrn lhe
pllttic clip that was atlllched to,
the shirt &amp; keep lhe T·thirl. It
lowld ....n 10 Roailwr O!b.

14:3 Occupation
144 Pome frUit

145 From- to nuts
.,
148 Actress W881
150 JFK's predecessor
1.52 24 hour$
153 Map abbr.
154 Actress Thurmah

Twp. 7&gt;10M8·288S.

0

frH dead IfNI lor firewood-you

4

Mlddltp9M
&amp; VlclnHy
family garage salo· Mar "h·

tram Tuppera Plains, Ohio take
18t E - - . 111t11 r1tt11 on Lirnboftll' Rei,. fitol hoUM on lell. XL
lizo clolhlng, tumltura. 117 -

-door.

!'onday I Tueldaf. Nelson Ave..
Rulllnd, . .,.,, lir c:andillon"'· Cll

parts. ole&lt;1ric sc•-lveo.

--.g.

....

1-==:!!i~~==

I·

Lost: Black lab, Wearing Brown

Collar. lait Seen Near Vanco
Road, Rawanlt 740-3n-11044.

70

BIG Vord

Soii•E..'Yihi"O cheap,
Gues1, hOme lnt•iOf, etc. 2825 JelfoifOi\ .... Frl &amp;
Avon~ lawi'l,

sa Rain canciiL
80

Auction
and Flea Market

Wedtme~er'•

Yard Sale

Wanted to Buy '

--1740-3711-2720. ' .
AbooluiO Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil-

pt. PleiiSIIIt
&amp; VICinity

Auc:tlon Service.

Wetdlltert, Books, Houahold GaHipolis,.Qnio 740·3111-2720.
lloml, Oiho&lt; Thngl.

2'1'· old ~It Beaglt. runt rabbit&amp;. 127 o-111 S l - -·

11818.

130 Cash aclvanc:es
131 Relative by
marriage: hyph. wd.

ver And Gold Coin1. Proof1111,
Oiamoncfl, Anlique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre· tt30 U.S. Cu,ency,
Sletlillo, Etc. At.:qullilions Jawelf'1
. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Saconcl
- - Gallipollll, 740-448-21142.
Ant1que1 1 cl•n uled Klrnltur•;
will bu~ one piece or complete
household, Osby Martin, 1•0·
992-65711.
1

===--._________
Buyin~

Suuwli"O Timber &amp; lond

Wilh Jilrllor, 740-682-7318,

AsWant Fitt~~tdal Allain Atlmililft uiOr
. 20 Haun per wMklaltemuon houn)
Ohio llttlvriy
of Osteepdtic MedidM
SAIAiY:' '1 5,000.'17,000 plus excellentltnlm
AVAIIABLf: •••ttedlalely lobitg 5eiRh
QUAUFl(ijiOIIS: llachtler's degrtt !n uccuu1tlttt, business
manogemenl, Dr relared field required. Mini11um lhr11 years'
txperilnctln D«GUtt11ttg und ~plus krtG!illtlge 1!1 armpulw
up~icullons requlr.ed. Strong auotnfing skills, ellectiu
tommunitalion skills, cvsiDmlr serwict orltntalhttt required;
krtGIIhtlge Di O.U.bodgllttt r &amp;JMdtosinu praoUes pnllned.
IESPOIISIIIUTIES: Wil adminislw Ullgelttcontl and 1xptdur11,
indulling operatiltg. •tinls and laundttion DCtounls; administw
linutKial re~ords/reports of the College; tvoluatl Dctountlng
inlorltlallon syslellls, itqplemenling' operatiatts !lid conversions as
itledtd; condutt tas1 '-fits iludils; - as liakon with Univtnity
busirteSI offices; lllpll1ise ouounlng stall; lie.
·
APPU&lt;AliOII DEADUIE: Cr.t.ntials and tine prtltssionalrtflllltCts
must be rtaMd by May 26, 1998. Send at Anita M. ~. Director
COM HUtlln l110urlts, Ohio University Cohge of OstNpalltk
Mldidn., Gr~,w.st. Adtn, Olio 45101.1740) 593-2546.
01110 UMMISIIY IS All EQUAL OPPOilUNIJY niPI.OYEI.
HIF priDrily il placed on'the Clltllltin Df 111 ettwi 01..r suppOt lht
· D1 WOI!I'ft, rniltllilill. iilltllll, and J111111t11 with Ities.
POSIIION:

ua.

+

POSIIION:

.

~

.

~

Plywood has changed design
and structure of modern homes

Electrical tips for the do-it-yourselfer

By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS plastic covering otT with pliers,
-- Make a tool for changing .light
For AP Special Features
•• Crea.te a mini trouble light to bulbs in high, hard-to-reach locations
Here are tip~ to make it easier to provide light for small jobs in by ra~tening a light shllde Clip to a !handle some minor do-it-yoorself cramped spaces. Plug a small hood- inch-diimeter dowell 'of the right
electrical projects around the house: ed incandescent night light into a length. Wrap the clip with electrical
•• Low-voltage telephone or doortape so that it gers a .good grip on the
• bell wiring can be quickly and ea.&lt;i- household extension cord.
-- To e!JSIIre that you shut off the bulb.
ly secured to walls arid cei lings with right circuit when you need to do
-- Protect the cord of your electric
a hot ~It glue gun. Run a bead of electrical w~k in your home, mark hedge clipper from being cut by the
glue an inch long and one-eighth to the number of the fuse or circuit - blades. Put a length .of garden hose.
three-sixteenths-inch wide. While the breaker on the back of each switch . split l~ngthwise and wrapped snugly
glue is ~till soft. press the wire into plate or outlet cover.
with electrical tape, over the segment
the bead and hold .it in place a few
• -- To fi gure out which fuse or cir· . neatest to the blades. 1lte blade teeth
seconds until the glue sets up. Repeat cuit breaker controls an electrical out- don't separate far enough to damage
this process every few feet. Using . let. plug a radio into the outlet and the hose.
glue eliminates the need for staples .tum ..its volume on high. When the
-- Keep small extension cords
on wood surf'aces and makes it easy music stops, you'll know that you organized and untangled by tucking
to run wiring on concrete or mason· have switched off the right breaker or them inside the paper tu~ t~at
ry walls.
taken out the righ~ fuse.
once held toilet tissue or paper tow-When installing an outlet. use an
·- To avoid overcharging your bat- cis·.
ordinary 25-fOOI metal tape measure tery-operated tools, plug the charger
- Protect your electronic devices
to fish a wire or cable inside a walL into an ordinary light ti~r,and set it by .plqgging them into a surge proIt remains rigid for a long distance to shut off after the recharging time. lector rather than an outlet strip.
and you .can attach the wire in the
-- Removing ~ burned-out light Although many such stripS have
hole in the end hook. The tape also bulb.from a recessed fixture can be built-in fuses that prolect against
tells you at a glance exactly how far difficult because there isn't room for strong currents, a true surge protec·
the wire retehes inside !he waiL
your fingers. ¥ake a light bulb "han· tor also stops voi!Jige .sjlik~, Check
--To n:move insulation from the die" with a 15-inch strip of duct tape. the response time on the packasing;
end of a wire without nicking or cut- Center the tape·on the bulb. Fold the the quicker the bener. .
ting il, heat the insulati.on with a two ends back to the middle, then
·- Wires hangins down behind
llllldt about where you want i1 to fold each end over again on itself to your TV, VCR. or stereo can look like
break away. Then pull the softened form the handle.
a jungle.
t

.

'..;....--~~-'j":::==:::==:::==:::==:::==:::=T!===:~;::==='j 80

•

"'!'P

ACROSS

0'

\l

SUNDAY PUZZLER

1 Juice-filled lr'Uit
6 Fear
11 City on the Seine
16 Fragrant wood
21 Rudimentary seed
22 Wonde~and girl
23 Excuse
G-95
24 Last Greek letter
25 Mois1~ .
26 Coin of a kind
•
27 Sherry, port, etc.
28 01 the moon
DOUBLE DOORS open into the foyer, which flows easily to sever!ll
29 Cease
of the living areas. The de£~/study and the dining room · flank the
30 ,Fork part
31 Upperclassman:
foyer; the living room is straight ahead. The kitchen, the breakfast
abbr.
area and the family room are grouped together at the back of the
33
Old-fashioned
home. Two bedroom's, a full bath and the utility room, which offers
35 Canonized woman:
""-•
access to the three-car garage, are nearby. The master suite occuabbr.
pies the len wing of the home, completing the floor plan.
36 River in Hades.
36 Garden implement
39 Silent
40 Actress - Ryan
41 Always, to poets
42 Feels remorse
r
44 Practice one's
health
48 Balsa
51 Flee
54 Charter
55 Stew pot
• By POPULAR MECHANICS
they meet fe!leral specifications for has completely evaporated, the globs
57 Thingamajig
For AP Special Features
solvent content and new varieties of of binder are coalesced an.t-dllc 61 Materials for potters
U~til recently, .a strong odor in
paint that are formulated (o have remaining solvent evaporate"51· 62 Heavy weights
latex paint wa.• like a lot of things in al most no solvent.
vent-free latex has sort bioder11. They 63 Put
life - it was unpleasant. but you plll
A can of high quality laiex paint coalesce without solvent.
65.0eep ravine
up with it to get 'the job done.
contains 20 percent binder by volBoth types of paint form a high 66 Pieces of land
67 Solidify
1lte primary odor-causing agent in ume. In traditional latex paint, there quality.long-la.,ti'ng film, but the sot70 Pai)Cake topping
latex paint is solvent. but things are is 1 percent to 7 percent solvent dis- . vent-free variety is good to know
72 "Chances-·
changing. Today. you can buy low- solved into the binder. New low-odor about if you're chemically sensitive.
Mimic
odor interior latex paint that is essen- varieties of latex paigt are essentialPaint manufacturer11 make a point 73
74 Minerals
tially solvent free. and industry ly solvent free, though they contain of stressing that their' product meets 75 Gave a meal to
expens say that low -odor exterior about the same amount of bind~r.
or exceeds federal slandards for 77 Danger
paints 5hould debut in the near future.
In traditional latex paint. globs of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). . 79 Married ·
Certainly. this is a boon tq: painters binder and panic.les of pigment are Most high-quality latex paints meet eo School parioo ·
everywhere who are sensi tive to suspended in water. As the paint this requirement. Hence, they are
82 Negafive vole
83 Cook beef a certain
chemical odors. The problem is dries: the water evaporates and the "low odor" or "low VOC" by
way
telling the difference between paints solve nt-softened binder g!ob~ nature. But this does not mean they
85
Ditfers
that arc: nominally low-odor IJ&lt;,cause become oval shaped. When 1~ water are solvent free or as close to it as
87
Cook
eggs a certain.
possible.
•

.

•

•

•

l'llmotml
Olio University CGIIge Df Osltttpalhic Wcite

,'.

~IY:

AYAilABlE:

S14,SOO-SI600 plus bnlils
lttttnetlialely folowitg -dt

QUAUfiCAliOIIS: Badtelor's .... r..... ln Hutt.t lllour111 or
. . . field. Mininllt Df 2-3yettd tx,erleltet llljtlil'ltl in penoanel
futtdlons · sudt as ittwniuit. ••ettet ~ proltln
nllfliation ' redmon, IC1IIttln!l applkiiiOtts. olfltnorlilt odioa
1ssti11, 111;
~ipititrrlo In on HI olfD slnnfy prefwred.
. . writing ~ . . . . .... hM txaletrl' lrllllpntllll,
IIIIDttlzailr.. Inti praltletn !Ghi, sl!ils. (lt!lflllw ,.,.... II
prDIIIIirtg requhtl; tlalallost IIIIIIIJIIIttltl ,.Jtrnd.
PreptVspedtll """ coorA•t tiU.W.. Oaasitlltttl lrMI

'0

get••

wn

'=lllfill5: , _ ptiSIItlllll s.mcts in IICNihttll,

*'*' ' ......., ........... ....-- ~

.1lappy 'Birtfiday
..Ccts o{cfiarm
&amp; tyts of blues
Sfit~ sweet sixteen

W.U1he be
• I•

I

Crossword Puzzle tAnswer on Page B-5
0

'

1
'f - I

•rnilinB

eomorrow 111hen

lhe turrla the

BIG 40?? .

Can you 9uess wfio?
.

i.DJJtya,

'Dtstintt, ,Mgm, 'Dad.
)(annit, 'Pow, !Aja, 5fml~rl
6o 5fu•lin

IU ••• wtints, l'lftiiiS, paldes, joii4MalfillortS, Ill; 1011AIIIIs
tht Colege's ..maloti slvtlent
,.tal; 1111111111S wt,lorw wk ' 11 ; 11 a the Hl Juul••; tiSIIsls lllih ~

....,n••

Mltlsut01llllk~,.farlltlatl.,.....

ftiCADOIIII(AU(; ly May M, 1,., pleate -... 0

will _,....... Mtben Df ... prul tal · · - Ia
w. M. lldtls, Olndttr, toM lltiiMI 111nu tiS, Ilia Uri 11n1tr
~ ul o~ ~ Muln, 015
w.sr, AIIMis. dio
45701. (7401 5'3-2546.
OHIO UMMISIJY IS All EQUAL orroiiUIIITY EMI'lOYEI
HlF )llltdy i ... Ill the Cltlillrt rJi111 ltliLW:IIIIII AII NNM
• - . It L lllils, . . . . IIIII ,._with + "llol.

Gt-.-

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS
North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully furnished,
near restaurant row.
Openings from May thru Sept.
446-22P6 MQn thru Frl
446-2734 Evenings &amp; ·
weekends

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work
Licensed &amp;
Bonded
20 yrs exp.
740-388-9515

Have you or
someone you know
experienced the loss
of a child? If so and
you are interested in
meeting with a group
of wom!3n that can
feel your pain,
Please contact
Lisa CoughenourTackett or Tammy
Stevens at 446·4467
UFTCHAIRS
Mother's Day Gift as low. as
$499
· Bowman's Homecare
. 446·7283
70 Pine St.
Gallipolis

Andrews Lawn Mowing .
Service For All Your Lawn
Maintenance Needs
740-245-5797

Past &amp; Present
21 aThird Avenue
wm be open May 1. 2. 4 &amp; Sth
from ·9-5 Need something?
Probably no doubt we have ~-­
Come&amp;See

HUGE YARD SALE

FOR SALE
One of the area's finest homes.
Beautlful brlek On 1he Ohio River.
70 River Street, Kanauga.
Appointment only
448-2515

French City Twirlers
Baton &amp; Flag Corps
Yard !;iale·Saturday and
Sunday, May 2nd &amp; 3rd
7:00 to 5:00 at Jacks
Transmission on 2nd Ave.
Approx. 30(lO sq. fl. commercial
•
·building for lease
beside Kentucky Fried Chicken
'Across from Burger King.
Available Sept 1, 98
245·5040 Days
OFWC/GFWC Gallipolis Junior
Worrien's ·club
Spring Dance
Everyone Welcome
Saturday M~y 9th, 9 pm-1 am
Gallpolis Elks Lodge
$10 couple $8 single
Need tickelll?
Call Cindy at 74Q-256-9159
All proceeds go IQ local charities

800 sq. fl plus building lor lease
Village of Rio Grande
··
approx. 4 yra old. .
Close to Qlov,lnnis, Mini Mart,
Hardware stOre Call lor details
245-5040 Days

Sweetwater Pay Litke
opening May 8
W~ly' Jack Pot plus Big Tag
Fish Blocking weekly with
channel and shovelhead.
Tum onto Woods Mill Rd. off
Rt 325 between VInton and
Rio Grande. Watch for signs
to 475 Deckard Ad ..
-No fishing license needed
740-388·8447

Gallipolis Area Jaycees 1st
Annual Go~ Tournament
· May 9th, 1998
4-Man Scramble Cliffisde
Goij Club
Cost: Member- $45.00
Non-Member· $55.00
Shotgun Start @ 8:30a.m.
Deadline to agister is Wednesday
May 6 @ 5:00 pm
Register at Cliffside Golf Club
: 446-GOLF Limited to first 80
people.
GoH, Cart,
I

TINA'S
GREENHOUSE
• Bedding Plants
• Hanging Baskets
•. Garden Plan~
· • Yard Accessories
Rt. 35 - 3 1/2 miles West of
Rio Grande to St. At. 279
in Thurman (Centerville)

Retirement
Sale
-SAVE -SAVE-SAVE

-15% off
storewide
"PETS PLUS"
Silver Bridge Plaza

441-0770
All Sales Final

GRAND OPENING!

Monday, May 4th

D&amp;S Autocare
New &amp; Used Tires, Oil
Chage, Detailing Fast &amp;
Friendly Service
Guaranteed!
Oil Change: $17.95
13965 St. At 554 Bidwell

740-388-8211

TLE Supply
980 Swisher Hill Road
Cheshire, OH 45620 .

(749) 367-0334
· For your landscaping needs!

Retaining Wall Stone,
Cottage Stone, Steppi(lg
Stones, Patio Brick, Mulch
Lawn &amp; Garden Tilling
MONUMENT CLEANING
SERVICES
Need a monumenl cleaned in
time for Memorial Day? Call
256-1579 Priees range from
$5- fO per monumenl
depending on cemetery
location. · ·
NOTICE
.
Frenclt' City Pet Grooming
Now Open Professional Grooming
by ilppt (evt!Rings available)
650 SeCond Ave Gallipolis, Oh
; 740-446-1528

INVESTORS
WANTED
Developing 87 acres south o1
Portland, Ohio (aCross from
Buffington Island). Lots for
house building, lots for sate.
· acres available, nice creek,
trees. Any
you want it.
Investors needed· contractora,
reaHors, bankers, anyone.
Everyone
ContaCt
Mike Warner, P.O. Box 13,
Racine, Ohio 45nt,
(740) 949-2874. Mon-Fri 9-5
Michael E@eurekanet.com

way

welcome.

UPHOLSTERY
Why buy new furniture
when we can make your
furniture as good as new.
We offer a large selection
of sample fabrics, new
foam and quality
craftmanship. Call 446·
3438 tor a free estimate.
2205 Graham School Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh 4563.1
Now accepting Visa &amp;
Mastercard.
1997 Pontiac Firebird Black
3.8 Uter V6, factory polished
aluminum wheels, CD player
$t 8,500 serious inquires only

441-1308

Hours:
Mon-Sat9-5
American Legion
Auxiliary Post 161
Hot Dogs, Bean Soup,
cornbread, baked goods
and drinks ... At the Citgo
Service Station in
Vinton, Ohio
Tuesday, May 5th
Bam- 5 pm
Mercerville-Hannan Trace
Alumni, May 23, 1998 Doors
open 4:00 pm Dinnsr 6:30 pm
Reservations- Contact Katie
Mullins, Secy-Treas 8446
State Route 7, South
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446-7379

OHIO VALLEY
WAREHOUSE
Jacltaon Pike across from.
Gallia co. Fairgrounds

Mother's Day Aowers
and hanging baskets.
Many assorted varieties
to choose from:
Vegetable plants full Flat

$6.99
Coca Cola Products
24pack $5.50

For More Information
446-2342 or 992-2156

�.

.
-,

•

Pomeroy • ~lddleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
90

Wanted

to Buy

AnllquM, top ptiGel patd, Rivet·
ina Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Ru11 Moore owner, 7t0-9Q2

25211

BUYING TIMBERLANDS
wo oro P'Y"'9 lop priCM 1of dm-

berJand that 11 ready to cut now
or read)' to cu1 tn 10 10 15 years
or ttmberland whtch has jull
been cut recently Wt 1110 buy

tWnber on 1he

11U~

For more in-

founa1ion call toll rree, wnhout

obligatiOn 1·800·32S·8325 e&gt;l

Bill 8nghtland

2$&amp; or wrtte
Corp Box

~eo

Usa
Summtrt11Hie,

110

HelpWantad

11 0

Ovetbrook Cen1er hal lull time &amp; Pick up trash or lunk. $35 load
part tlmt STNA positions 111'111· 30&gt;1·575-2807"' OO.·f!tl5.3067
Trealmentt, Furnhure, RHume lbtt tor all liiha, lll"fYCCI'W tnterelt·
To Tope Furniture, 151 Second ed piMH lOP~ &amp; fill out an ap- Prole11i0f'lal Tree Stf\llct, Stump
- · CloMII&gt;olio, OH 45831 .
plicallon. 7•D-DD2·5•72. Ovtr· Removal, Free Esumatea ! In·
brook Ctnltf. 333 Plgo S1ree1, auranee, Bidwell, OhiO et•-388·
E•perltncad T l - Culler Neod· ~~~on •S780 EOE
~. 814"'7·7010
td, 700&lt;1112-7318.
Ouahl}'
SprlfiiJ Claanona At Alford·
OvitbiOOk Cenlef' II c:urrendy IC.•
HAIRSTYliST niALON
copbna oppl lca1iono for Oifoclor able Pnces, No Job Too Big Or
IIANAGER
ol Sadol Sonllcot. The ldeol can- Small Free Eat1matea, 7ol0-446
Smln Slyle Will Soon Be Opening didola will 1 BSW ond bo II· 2376.
In The New WaHAan Super cenatd. We otler a compe liti&gt;Je
Cenltt 1An4 lo Owned By Aejj11 IIIII)' and banoftt peckogo 5aoc1
Corpaflllon) And W1ll Be H1nng
Several Ha~r StyliSts, ~!I Well As
A Wo rkmg Salon Manager, No

Clean Late Model Can Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Ot Newer,
Smith BuiCk Ponhac, 1900 East·

Shall Supply The Reot Benefi!l

your resume 10 Adml nltlrator,
Ovtrbroolt Center, 333 Page
StrHt, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

No p/11no calls pletlsa EOE

Shee11 &amp; License AI Hand &amp; We 1 ·-~=-_:...~.:_:.::.:.

Buying

wrecked or salvaged vth tcles
304-7?3-5033

Old hand operated water well
pulr!&gt;. 7&lt;0·992-e031 anynmo

Wanted To Buy . Junk Auto's Arry

ConditiOn, 7&gt;10~9653
Wanted Old Red Bncka For
Landacapmg, Phone: 740-Ue 0547, Alter 6:00 P.M

As FollOwed

Inc Benef1t1.

G
Ho 1 Wa
• uoran
ur Y ge
v..sosCom•mionPtogram
• Top RolaN Conrnllolon
Wilh P!1c:oo
• Hoallh iniUflllCO Avalable
• Paid V.caions
Stock Pun:laoed Plw1
•Ma-lo Eligible Fot

No Experience For

APfl And 6•om Into, Call 1 800·
813·3585. E•t 8474, 8 A II 9
PM, 7Daystdo.II1C.
Thornton Greenhouses looking
tor labor workers lor greenhouse
wor~ . Expen8nce not ntceasary.
$~ 15 tour, 7&gt;10-24 7·&gt;1334

o

WANTED . Mechamc 10 pull &amp; '"
stall motors. general mecnantc
work-brakes-exhaust-tune wPI
Must nave awn tools Ripley call
304-372·8833 llon-Fr1 8am·5pm
Sat 8am-12 Noon

llontli)'
And - Fumill\od
-• SIJfll)lloo

•llttehat1dlea Olocount
• Advoncad T111ining
• Opporllnll}' For Adv.,_,..,t
Rooker. 1-888-888-7778
1S73

__

POSTAL JOIISTOI1S.35MR.

WILDliFE JOBS TO $21 60 MR.

For More tnrormatlon Call Bill

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

310

Inc: Benellta Game Wardens ,
Secumy, r.ta1ntenace, Park Rangera. No E~;p Needed For App
And Exam info Call 1-800·81 3·
3585, E&gt;t e-75. 8 A II · 9 Rll, 7
Oayoldo. '""

e...

We Oo Vinyl Siding. Raplacement
Wtndows, Roofs, Room Additions.
ReiTICido;lflll, Cttamlc Tile l Hardwood Floon, New Construction
No Job Too B1g Or Too Smolll
Contact Joe Saunders At 1•0·
446·2450, Re-1 Avoiable
Will Caro For Elderly Or Handl·
capped, Parson 1n My Homt, Rtl·
740-« H 531.
W1U hiiUI Jun~ or tralh nay. S351
pidwp toad 30oi-117S.!i035.
·
Wtll Mow &amp; Tnm lawns, Reasonable Rates, Contact Joe saun· ·I
ders At 740-448·2450
FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportunity

elrlql'

*·

Digital Imaging &amp; Videography

State of the art videotaping and digital
editing of weddings, speeches,
reunions, training documentaries,
sporting events - as well as still
image capture, editing and archiving

"Saloly Bonuo

••

Now h1r.ng safe duvera, good
pay, fleXIble hours Apply In person at Oomano·s 1n PL PleuanL

.,
~,

Earn 11.000 Waokly Sllllii\G an·
' ~·· no pnat' expenence, fret
dota1ls. ltf1CI SASE to N B Oopt
• 174-301 Easr Srh Ave Sune 112
Cottlcar~~, Texat 751 10
Eat . VENDING rio. -lluot Soli
' sw 5t15 20 locar1ons tate
' t2.300 +IMo. Income. 100%
~ Finance Wt Good Credtt" 800• 380·2831 E&gt;1

'I
•

~,~

Respiratory Thetapllt To Do
Home Viatll Far OME Paltenls
On A Contract Per VIlli 8as11

~··1·1179

IIIDNtlllmlloef Cllllit- Ft.
Ph. 740-317.a&amp;W
Ed Clonch

descendants
Frederick David Ecker
and Mary Slrlngftllow
Ecklf, are lnvtted to a

Reunion

tile

eummer of 1998. For

~

lnformtllion

• - -· Judv

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.

Announctllllllts ·

Family

F~~~~Pu~b~llc~s~·~~e~ajnci~~Au~ctto~n~~~fl

1

Gunw-OM . .

30

Our goal is to bring the latest in
graphics technology to the individual
and small business at reasonable cost

Open1ng For Elpef'lenud Manne
Techn1ctan, Apply Ar B1g Boys
Walet Toya, Cheshlte, Ohio, 740·
367-7802.

or •·800·4S1 · _
Rooter, must be expe11enced 1
know carpentry, call after 8pm,
7&lt;0-37a-83.4D

lllftll

•

740-446-0098

Now Tak1na APflhcaoons ArOomJ
•no·s Pizza. Galllpohs. &amp; Pomeroy
Looaoono

Ecklf

1~1110y, 101 •· w. 8 sa..

FL

Phone or Fax:

6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST

SJOSO.OO
$60.00 0. MOll
PIRGAMI

lEECH GROVE

AUCIIQN
Tuesday, Mey5, 1998
8:30p.m.
BOB EVANS FARMS SHELTER HOUSE
10854 State Rte. 568 South of the
Village of Rip Grande, Ohio
Dofla· Barbie, B1onlc Woman, GabbiQBI, G. I. Joe, Die
Cast Toy Tractors, ~. JD Waterloo Boy, Model A.
John Deer, Reg &amp; Min. Glaas: Ptlgnm, George and
1\Aanha, Ruby eJtcber, Old Ruby fi.@Sh, Blenko,
Fenton, Uncle Sam statue, Edison Decanter, Oil
Lamps Case Knhe, Atwood Hall collector plate w1th
box. Very Rare Rio Grande College P08t Card,
Original first two buildings, that later bumed. Colna:
1982, 63, 84, and other PROOF SETS, Liberty
Walking Halves, Sllvet Dollars, Mere Dimes, Rare
and Key d81es
Norman Rockwell Lhhograph Framed, Mugs and
other NR collectibles. Granite ware, old tools, 11n1,
etc. Pop boHies from general store that closed 1982
shea! mueic, comic books, stamps etc Much more
coming In day of sale Too much to list.
SALE CONDUCTED BY

#J'ITU JNJ)UN CREEK AUCTION CO., INC.

710

All real estate ad'Jer'llslng In
this nempapet' is suDf8d to
tho Federal Fair Housing Act
ol t968 which makas ft Illegal
1o adYer1"" "any praferance,
limitatloi'l or dilcrimfnatlon
based on race. ooiof. religion,
sex ranutlal status or national
orlg1n or any 1menc1on to
make any such pratorence,
limitation or dbcrimtnallon •

II"Jo'li.ArC

IMPOUNDS:

running Honctas,

ITfNiatu. Chtvya, Jeept and Sporty Utility.
IOCJo772·7470 txt. 7320

lng. 1-lllle.t26-:W28

· ;~x80

Syracuae- OhiQ Blym YIIW from
this 41 bedroom spill le\181, l'luge
lam1ly rooM w•lh WB. 101id as a
rock. no loading, $73,000
Phone John 81 ERA Manin &amp; As·
social•. 740·SG3-3333

ThrH bedroom mobile I'IOrne- With
7 acres, 'onven1en1 lacallon on
us 33, $49.900, 7&lt;0-·1333
320

1¥03·90-3780 &amp; 1¥57-89-4388
740-245-N01
L .C. and Bonded by Stale of Ohio
Not responlibll for accident, lost or stolen rnerchandlae
Consignmenls needed for 5/19 and 6/2 sale
advertising deadline 5113 and 5/27

Mobile Homel
for Sale

410 Houses for Rent
Houae Far ltue Or Land Contract To Oualllled Buyer 2 Bed·
rooms. 1 112 Balhs, Nice Yard. Rio
G111nde, 1350/llo , Deposit, 1•0·
«8-2801

Make 2 Payments Move In No
Pa,.m•nls After 4 Veara, 1·100·

38U882.

New 3 Bedroom Homo
Only 1189.00 Par Month
1·800-251·5070
NN 1998 14x70 lhr" bedroom.

Hcuae In Chester, many updltH,
deposn, leaae, references ate requlred, 411 4·.US.W21 af1tr epm.

lncludes e months FREE tot rent.
Includes lktrrlng, deluxe steps
and 11tup. Only $187 08 .per New two t)tdroom house, Hammonth with 11075 down. Call , . sorrvme area. Iota\ eleclnc. S325
1D7D Ek:ona 14x70 Mobile ~orne · 800·837-3238.
per month ptuo uatltlet. depo11to
,3 Bedtooms, 2 Bathe, Fireplace. :::=-:=-:-:-:::-=----- required, no smoklng. no pets.
• $9 500 740-24
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 Ioiii 7&lt;0·7•2-:1133.
Shll under warranty, owner f1· 1:---------USe Commodore 14x8S, twa nanclng
ava1leble
304-755· N1ce 2 bedroom, f&amp;ferencet, debodraom, ona balh, ""'a lnd ,. 7191 .
po11~ no peto. 304-875-51&amp;2. •
~1gt111lor 1nc:ludod, gao hea~ can. tral air, twa porches, very goad 350 LOtS &amp; AcrAAtla.
2 Apartments In Rio Or1nde
~ondltlon, 110,000 negotiable
·-••
Area Acrooo From College, 1
7-2-7822.
•
!ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
Room, 1 Bat(~. Utilltittl Included,
SMALL BUIINES$,
$ZOOrllo Depooll Requ~red , 2
111 Tlnw Buytta, E·Z Financing
COUNTIIY
ESTATE)
Bedroom
Apartment, $350/llo •
2 or 3 llodooom, Arourd $200 por
month. Call credit line 1·800· 83.95 Acres, Apprax 8 Acre Utilities Included, 1·888·840·
Laka, Mobile Home Wtth Largo I·0:-:52~1:::-:::-~-----­
Ml-5671
Add On Den. Galha County,
Mobile Homes
County Water And Eleclnc 420
lloublo\'Mt
3 Bod oomo, 2 Bolhl
$2.800 Pal Ac:re. 740-388-8878.
for Rent
$1,885 Down 1289 Par14xl0 Trailer 2 Bedrooms W/0
1nc1uc1e1 Dohvary And Sot Up
1 Acre Camplile Own Your Own Refrigelator, Stove, CA. Porch, Rt
Coii1-800-25Hi010
Boat Dock, GOOd Ftlhtng, Hunt- 218 Deposit ReferencH, 740·
Savo My Credit, Aouume Pay- lng, SSOO Down $148/Mo., 740- 258·1CW...
258·1218.
1:-:-:--------man!l,304-738-7295.
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hornet
ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay· 2 To 3 Acrea Mob1l1 Home Wei· S280-S300, sewer, water and
menta, auume loan. owner fl. came, OWn Your Own Boat Dock, lraSh Included, 740·992·2187.
$500 Down I21D!Mo., 740·251J· I : - : : - - - - - - - - nanc:ong avaHablo. 304-755-7191.
1218.
2 Bedroarn Beaut1lul River View
AnenbOn llobila Home OWntta
Aelerencea Depo!llt, NO pETS!
BRUNER LANO
Footer's Mob1le Home Park, 740·
Areas Larg•t lrwtniOry Of Inter·
t~erm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumpa,
140-441-1412
441-11181.
Air Cond1tlonen, Furnaces &amp;
Parll, Hugo Buying Maano Melge Co.: Danville, N1ce 17 2 bedroom mobile home 1n Mtd·
Tho l-11 Installed Price, E11y Acres 118,000 -$2,000 Down + d"pof!. 740.992-5039
OYt1 Tho Phone Bank Flnonc:lng $212/Mo: Or g Acroo $18.000.
Coli Bonnetro Mobile Home HTG Water. Oyesville, NICe 11 + Acr· 2 Bedroom Mab1li Home, large
os $10.500Very Pnvate.
Lot. Gao, Water l Trash Pi&lt;k·Up
&amp; CLG 1-800-872 5987
Furnished. Alt Equipment For
BUY IN APRIL
Oollil Co.: Gath~til, Hunterol 22 Keeprng Up lawn, 7 M1lea On•St
nr.IJs. •'37•••o'.
740·
No~UndiJu~ 1998
Acroo With Pondpr-NOW $2•,ooo. Rl 218, GaJIJ~
~~
E-Z Flf\MCing
Ot 8.5 Acres $7,500 Ne111 To 6 5 388-9918
C.ll Finonc:e line
Acres $8.DOO. Bolh 115·000
3 Bedroom Mobile Home, You
1·800-1148-5878
Pay Udi1Ueo, &amp; Depaoli, Relerenc:C F
F'" Sokip &amp; Oellvory
all or Free Maps + Ownet Ft·
Required, Porter Area 014 _
nanctna Into Take 10'11 on lilted 11
New ClayiOn llobllo Home (lor- Pricoo On Caoh Pun:la101l
388-9!8.2
don Tub, Skylight, CA. On Ran!od
2 Bedroi&gt;mo. State Routt 7 Soulh
lo~ Boll OllarI ?40-448-8028.
3 Acre• Recently Landscaped Bladen, S2751Uo, Referen,es &amp;
Dlacoun1 Mobile Home Parts &amp; Wllh Watar Tap $8.000, 7&gt;10·256· Depoal~ No Pats, 740-258-1568
ACCIISOrlts Water Htatera, Vi ~ 1189 SerlouolnquirlotOnly.
2~ Foot Pontoon Boot For Sate. 2
~yl Skirting Klto '$299 g5, An·
4 Acres Oh10 River Frontage, 13 Bedrqom Tr11ler 740·441 t53EI .
chofo, Wood &amp; Flberglaoo Slope, Milel Soulh Gall1poils, On AI 7.
Root Coodngo. Oooro, Windows, J25,000, 7&gt;10·258 6888
Mitchell Road. $315/llo , In
PlumbinQ &amp; Electrical Suppllto,
eludes Water /Sewer $250 De·
Blocking Wood &amp; Wadgeo An4 4 Building Sitt1·2 Acres each. po~L 7.&lt;0-1143-2918 After' P.M
Morel Call Bennett'• Mobile convenient yet pnvate. 8 m1les
from Point Pleaaant 1 tf4 mile on SaleiRant-2 Bedroom tratler on
Homo Supply At 1-7ol0-4&lt;6-ll4111.
Bethel Rd oil Sendh1ll. no 11ngte rented lot, 112 m11e out Sandhill
Otvarce Forces Sales-Take over wides S14-10,000ea 30.t-875· Rd. 304-875-•637 leave mea·
daymonll, 2br, 2 both, llnanc:lna 11"8 bolore 9prn.
oogo
available 30&lt;-755- 551!6
Holly Pork 3br. 2 lull
· batha, man~ exuu 30•·875·
2359

MeiQI Co North all bnck ranch
on 17 4 acret Wllh barns, full
basement, two ~ar garage, huge
·survoom &amp; family room, $130.000

r.---111!1----1.

•

Mobile Homes
for Sale

REAL ESTATE

1----------

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, May 9, 1998
10:00 a.m.
Location: From Gallipolis follow state Route 7
South approximately 10 . miles, Turn Right on
Bladen Road, go 2 1/2 miles, then turn left on
Swan Creek Road and go

2 miles.

Tile fol/ow1ng will be.sold:
1973 New Moon Mobile Home 12 x 65 2 Bedroom
wllh stove and refngerator. 1977 Chevy P1ckup Truck
(350 Automatic) full size 2 wheal drive; 500 gallon
fuel tank on skids; Satellite dish; Champion 12 gauge
shot gun; New England 20 gauge shOt gun; Sears 22
nfle; (16 shot) Marlin Boll Action slug gun; 10 unit
gun cablnat; 2 not faedets;HD Oliver Mowing
Machine; HD Thrlble Shovel Plow; HD Cultivators;
Murray Riding mower: S1ngle Cultipacker; 3 bonom
14 mch John Deer Plows; New Idea Hay Crimper;
Parmak Fence Charger: Metal Gale, Poulan "310"
Cham Saw (20 Inch bar); Water Heater; Locust and
Metal lance post: We1ght machine; Shower and Tub:
One Lot hand tools and Miscellaneous Items. The
mobile home will sell subject to Owner Conflrrna1ion;

Large selecliOn of glassware, vases, teapots, pttcher
collectton, ftgurines, head vase, Limoges chtna, . Hull,
McCoy, Ntppon, two red crocks. Dazey churn No 60,
Libra paper weight &amp; others, satin pin cushton, Child'~
metal dishes, child's toy gun gabnel, marble collaction,
dolls, jewelry, 1eweler's workbench, plush 1ewelry bole
wneweler watch maker tools, watches, men's pocket
watches- Elgin-Hop-A-Long Cassidy w/orlglnalleather
band· neads stem &amp; others, Seth Thomas clock &amp;
otllers, coins- 1970-71-72 proof sels,
1972
Eisenhower uncirculated Stiver Dollar, 1987 U S.
Special mint set, 5 rolls 1983 D Penntes &amp; other, coin
bag from Citizen Nat1onal Bank, lg. selection of
bBskats, old washboards, Ford logo, newspaper
chppings, Nalional Geographies, books, magazlne4,
comic books, records, black beaded purse bag
wtvelvel trim &amp; fringed bottom, old clothing· Heavily
beaded beige dress 1930's, black IBd1es dress ecru
lace trim black slip from roanng twant1es, 1930's
antique ladies nigh! gowns, antique lieaded bolero,
old picture frames, Ltonel train set, souvenirs,
Halloween masks, old box of Invisible hair p1ns,
crocheted doilies, copper coffee pot, copper candle
sttcks, old keHie, jars, plus household ttems- parti'l
hstlng -much more not hsted.

For aale 1170 12x50 mobtlt
· home, 2 bedrooms, new lurnace,
. like new water healer. 81r c:ondJ, nonor 12000. call 740-11112-5111111.
Huge 2S&gt;80 3BR, ·.1 112 bath.
, Siartlng at ONLY $39,91111. Many
, opnono available 1·888'·928·
3028.
~ ~-------~ large uleclion of uHd homaa. 2

' or 3 -..mo. Starlina al $211115.
I Oulck dollvary Call 7•0-385·
r 9821

'~ ~-~==~==~-UIIIITID OFFER

, 1.QII8 Ooubiewide 3br, 2 bllhl
\ $.t,8g91down S2591mo. Only at
f Oa~wood Homes Nitro, WV 304·
: 755-5885

Auction Conducted tiy

Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Executrix Terry Casto

: Slngll PINOI Program. Special
~ tl nan"ng on 2, 3 a 4 bedroom
: homes. Pawmenta ae low a•
: 1110.
304-755-5885.

Rn. 773·5785 or Auction Center 773-5447
Terms: Calli' or chec:k w/ID.
Not responalble for accident• or lou

ANTIQUE- COLLECTIBLES AUCTION

Friday, May 8, 1998
6:30pm

LEMLEY'S
AUCTION BARN
85BO St. Rt 588, Gallipolis, Ohio, 2 miles south of
Rio Grande, Ohio
Small drop front desk with pigeon holes (oak),
oak drop leaf table, primitive hand-made ice box,
dove-tailed dome trunk, several tables, (one with
tole painting), primilive oak cupboard, kitchen
cabinat w/stencil, painted step-back cupboard,
mahogany , server, 5' church pew, old rockers,
deacons bench, oak dresser, depression
sideboard, cherry bed, reverse paintings (one is
Trtanic), other furniture, ideal child's rille (1917),
Daisy metal water pistol, blue &amp; white stoneware
pitcher, Sheraton blan~et chest, Hull poltery,
Griswold 1114 skillet, other ceat Iron items by
Wapak, Erie, several old pictures, 3 small display
ce~s: silver plate ftatware, Davey Allison
Commemorative Plaque, late 1800's kitchen
Items, Aladdin lamp, George &amp; Martha Lamp,
Duncen Phyfe Drum table, small oak file,
depression glass, Fostoria,
Fenton, other
glassware, Ufe Magazines (40's). old bottles,
1930 Holzer Hospital School of Nursing
Graduation Picture by Moore's Books/Stationery
of Gallipolis, Ohio, Coca-Cola International
Harvester Adv. Item, Graniteware, cow &amp; goat
bells, baskets, old tools, advertising items, feed
cert, Wattware bowl (!pple w/some damage),
moch,much more not listed. This is a very brief
listing I
Auctlonear: Lulie A. Llmley

740-245-110118 or 740-2411 8888
Cash/Approved Check

FOOd

. "Not responsible for accldenls or lost property!"

** Thanl&lt;s again for the great attendance at our
we have saleS tWery Friday
Night at 8:30 prn. We're also available for estate
sales. Remember,

sales, yc)ur place or ours!

r

See ya on Friday

"HOUSEHOLD"

•
tNEEOLAHD
II You Have Land, 1 Need To
Hear From Vou NOW! We Pay
Top SSS For Farms And Vacan1
land, 20 To 300 Acres. Road
Frontage And Woods A Plus
CatiM1ke Anthony land Co . ltd
HIOD-21 3-11385.

4-46--2583
•
2bdrm ~PII , 101al electric, ap ·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PFIICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 W
dD
rive
lrom $27D ' to $358estwoo
Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 7410·U8·2568
Equal HouSina ()pportuml}'.
F
urnlshed Elllc ..ncy All Otllltlll
Pa1d. Shere Bath, $185/Mo, Q11
Second Avenue, Galhpolto, 740- •
l-4;&lt;4=.,1h19,:;:;:.;4:::5~-.,-...,...,..,-...,...-• :
Gradoua IMng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and '
RiverSide Apartrnan!lln Middle- I
port From $249·1373. Call 700· I
D92·50e4 Equal Houai""" o-r· ,
tunnies
... ,..r-

2 Badroom House Burkhart Lana,
Gallipolis. $300/Ma., WID Hook·
Up, Oepo111 Required, 513-57•-

m1

PHONE 448-9539
WIWS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 448-91131

lEADiNGHAM REAL ESTATE

t1250 : wedding gown 101th voll
olzo 7. paid 1700 Will talie, 1300.
740-3117-11218 .. 740-11411-2..1

1V' Wood Planar, 5 HP Planer
Uotor, 2 HP, Feed Motor, 10•
Table Saw Sura Savlfal Other
Wood Rtllttd Tools, 740·•46·

Antiques

Buy or sell 'R1vtrtn1 ~nuques ,
1 124 E Ma1n Strett, on Rt 124,
Pomerow- Hours M T W 1o 00
am to 6~0 pm , Sun4ay 100 to
8·oo p m 7•0·992·2526 , Rull
Moore owner.
540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

-·

"k Engagemom A1f1115 112 $175
Uk Wedding Band 5 D1amonds:
e. 1400, 1Dk Cluoter, e. $75,
llothefo R1na, 8 10k Soo. Tennis
Bracelet Hk t75 , Annette 7410-

«8-73311

175,000 BTU lP Gas HeatAOr, For
Swfrming Pool, Ulld. 740245-!&gt;IIM
18,000 BTU room air condirlaner
$200 Uoed rolrlgarator $100
304.a7S..118Leevo nwsoago.

4 P1oco Cherry OuHn AM: Sola
Table, 2 End Toble't, Collet
Table. Pa1d $8DD: Will Toko $300
F1rm. 7&lt;0-38S 8080

2 Room blue plush carpet, Yery
goodcond 304-875-4127

Shp Troy Butlt trller, uc:ellent
conduton 1500 large molded
plast•c dog house S30 Tlrtt. 2
P·205r7DR 15·130. • P-2151
75R1 ..$25 304-1175-7223

25• Zenith stereo-colar-conaoltt

TV $7S 304-875-3804

'9 N Ford tractor needs 1 rear

whoet 11,400 1078 Che¥)' Malibu Cia111c loaded. 58.000/mllao
$3,200 11• Tan electric: hoist 110
volt~ 1135. 300·518·211117

;,~;;;;;;;~;;~~;;~~~~;;;;~I
f

WOOD .RE..UTJ', INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GAWPOUS, OHIO 45631

Allen C. Wood, Broker · 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker· ~71
llm Watson 256-6102

-

~

Jeanette Moore, • 256-1745
Patncia Ross
74Hif.1081 or 1G 1111 1081 •

1!!1

SYRACUSE- Beautifully remodeled ranch home Newly
reftntshed hardwood floors New kllchen cabtneiS 3 to 5
BR or could be den, off1ce or hbrary 3 Baths (1 In Bsmt)
loving
w/stone fireplace. Family rm, Dining rm, Ioyer
Full bsmt partially flniehed wtl&lt;it. area, uUhly area, slorage
Large backyard w/above ground pool and deck 2 car
anached garage. Many e&gt;rtrasl Lovely home w1th lots ol
posslbiiii18S. Call us to see this spec1al homel Th1s home
carries a 1-year warranlyl

room

TUPPERS PLAINS· Good location· 2 E&gt;rtra large lots. N1ce
home r~ently remodeled. New carpel, ceihngs. drywall,
wiring•• Plus! 3BR, bath, LA, DR. eat-1n kH, utlhly Area.
Heat Pump Located on a qUiet slre8t JUSt off SA 7. Pnced
in mid-60's.

2

POMEROY· Great buy I story home, offers 3 BR wl!h
approx. 1400 sq. II of living space on more than a fourth
acre lol Loca1ed on Laurel St. 1n low 20's.

-Price--

Roclu-to q3,000.0011 on 1111110 Acre
Tract of Land, with approx. 9 acrea wooded, Util available,
mineral rights

SYRACUSE- 1 1/2 Story home Corn91 lol ol 175x1 00 3
BR, bath, LR, OR, kH w/appl HP &amp; elec furnace AC New
aiding, windows, roof, wiring, plumbi'lg. Mid 40's

•

NOD:Z· Two bedroom Mabile Home 111tuated on .150 acres m/1.
loca1ad on $.R 1 Soulh.

- . PRICED REDUCED· greatlnvnlmont opponunity· 3 ona
bedroom apta- a 2 bedroom mobile home- eaay to rent Cheek on
lhls properly
,..... Cornmtrclal PI opertlr· In Town Location, Comm- Bldg,
Apt- ~dg, 2 house's Get al four tor one price! Call for more

TUPPERS PLAINS • Lots of pnvacy just off SR 7 2 BR
house located on 6 acres m/1 With a stocked pond. LR, FR,
ltlt, bath, an garage FREE GAS. Mid 80's
RUTLAND· 92 acres m/1 on Lasher Rd. 1illable and
fW!1ods . On good road. Bam In lhe 70's.

1201• Ras&lt;tentlallotls) In Ganlpotta
1146- Horne locatad 1n city ochoots, 3 bedrooms, 2 balh, ranch

tome.

KANAUGA· COMMERCIAL "I&amp;J". 2 Nice butld1ngs, land,
large Inventory conslattng of pumps, machine tools, relays,
plumbing supplies, hydraulic supplies, industrial suppltes,
hand todls, seale, gasketa, bolts, nuts &amp; you.name-il, we
have 111 can tor an appointment.
We Need Li sltngs'

12012· Approx ono acre lot loaled on loland Ave., Gallipolis

Property is selltng. Call u s todayt

3br House '" New Haven, WV
t3351mo + depoaJI 304· 7735881
Ava1lable Fa, Lease 2,000 Sq Ft
Executive Home, Near Golf
COurae, Immediate Occupancy
S7501Mo. 7&lt;0 ..6 2957

BUTCHER SHOP- Slaughter Houaa

Old

Establishment

Bualness.

. Centrally located 1 the ~!)dwell.
Portlf Area. Excellent Chai1Qt To
Own Your Own Bualneaa.

Four bedroom hoine 1n Mldoleport. $375 monlh plua depOSit.
740-11112·319&gt;1

I)EAL SITE FOR APARTMENTS-

Qyal!ty. LoCation, and Livability
This brick colonial features attention to
and quality lhroughout. The floor plan includes
sunken formal living room &amp; dining room, eat-tnl
kitchen, 16 x 30 family room with massive stotnel

Thla thrse atory, ~urn of the century home
:Ja,ffllre 4 bedrooma, 2 full baths, 2 flreplacse,

Real Estate General

, formal living room, dining · room, first floor
laundry, family room and hardwood floora.
Llrgeblck yerd tenures screened In porch,
pool, chlld'a playhouse and

•

2·

i

530

113 Cllrat. rvYnd diMiond IOitlalre,
OIZO 0, paid $100, will talie 1550,
Marqu11 wedding set 112 carar •
"'" 1. pold $1~00 , will take

In Pomeroy, 3 br., garage, $250
per month plua depos1t &amp; re1e•·
ancao, 300-882'3842

448-01126

I

W1ld Turkey ..aaon. buy Army
wood1end lree·bark camouflage
at Sam Somorvlllo·o by Sandy·
ville Post Offlce, Fn Stl I Sun
12pm 5pm other days 30~ · 273 ·
5855

Miscellaneous
Merchandlsa

70D-25&amp;-1885

I ba'akatballl cc1urt. Shown I!Y app't only.

..

540

Rttnlngton 1100 12 Go Now In
Bo•l Von! Rib Wtth Turloay Cllolut,
$350, 740-"*-'1111.

Information

fireplace, laundry room, 3 bedrooms. 2 1/2 bathsl
~creened in back porch, 2 car garage &amp;
storage building. Close to town &amp; f:9AC. Green
School District. Call 446·02991or appointment.

5.667 Acres by survey.
Priced· $20's·
·

01111.

Household
Goods

Sporting

Goods

Modern 1 Bdrm, all ut111ties paid
except electric In Gallipolis FerWV •2so
ry,
~
tmo. plus depaait.
304-8 75- 1371 or 304-1175-3230
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
740-«&amp;-03110
•
'

Broker owned

........&amp;. .,.....__-..!

.
rf!A

510

1:3~7~1·~·HUD~~ac~c·~illa'~~j~---

456 112 Second Avenutt, Galhpohs, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Apphances, ·
$425/Mo . $225 DepoSit, UtililiOI
Pa1d 740-&lt;46 2129

Ono
101'x171', Clly water, city
sewer, natural gaa, electric, all
are available at this rot Prepare
NOW lo buld your dream home
In this pleasant, quiet and nice
IUbdiYiston luo1a shorl dlolanc:e
out ol Galltpolls. Lot 117.

1893 Chann! Downtown Gallipolis, Z%7 _Jrd Ave.

IYILQINA
xcellant location.

l.lERCHANDISE

Reconditioned
One bedroom aparlmenr In Mld- Appliances .
phancll furnished, laundry room dleporl, Ill utii111H pt.ld, 1270 per Wuhers, Dryers, Rangel, Rein·
fac11ih••. cion to school In town. month, t100 depoalt, celt 7.&amp;0- grators, ;o Oa~ Guarantee •
French Cn~ Maytag, 740 ·446 Apphcauons ava11able at Village GD2-780ei
Green Apts 149 "' call 700·992· 1·::-~:::--=------ 7195
37 11 EOH.
Twin Rl'lltrs Tower, now acceptmg appllc:a11ans for 1br. HUD GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Application• Now B11ng Accept- 1ubsld1zed apt. for elderly and Washers , dr~efl, felngeralora,
ed For Beaut1lul Aparlment In handicapped EOI-l · 30•·875· ranges S~aggs Appltances, 76
Vine Straat, Call 740-448· 7398,
Country Setting One Bedroom: 1 ;«~::;:.:7D~-::------­ 1·800-11111·3499
Smail K1tchan, LA. Washer. Dryer, ,. ~
Stove, Frlg Pr&lt;Mdad Vert Cloan. 450
Furnished
Aeirernent Sale Room S1ze CarNo Pets, No Smokers 17,.3 CenRooms
pet 112 Pr~ce Kitchen Prmt 15.00
tenary Road. Galllpoho 1300 De· 1:::-.--:-:--.----::-.._..,... Sq Yd 740·..8·7"~· Mollohan
posu S3501Mo . 740·448·9585,' Clrclt Motet lowtlt Rar11 In Corpol
740·448·2205A6kForV1rgina
Town, Newt.- Remodeled, HBO,
C1nemax, ShowiJmt a Oisnew-. W. Moved! Used Furnnure Store
Appllcat•onl Now Being Accept Weekfr Raitt. Or Momhty Rlraa, Below The Hohday Inn In Kana.u·
ed For Beautilul Aparrment In Construction Wor~tra Welcome ga, Ohio. Beds, Oressere, CouchCountry Setting Two Bedrooms, 74D-441·58G8. 7~ 1 ·5!87
es, Matuessta, Eel Hrs M· T·W
LR , large Kttchen, Wuher, Dry. 1::-_;;.....;.;.;.;;....;;....;_;~.;_10·4, 17&lt;01«6-4182
er, Stove, Frtg , 01sHwasher Pro- Sleap1ng raoma w!th cooltlng
Vlded Very Cl&amp;an, No PelS. No Also trailer tpaet on rivtr. All
Smokers 1743 Centenary Aotid, hook-ups Callallar 2 00 p m,
Gallipolis s•oo Dtpasn, $4501. 304·773-5851,MasonWV
Mo , 740 •46-9585 Or 740-448·
2205 Asll For Vir~~·
Real ~le General

SUBDIVISION
large
lo1
appro•.

Estate

fUR

--

11 accopong appllcaiOna lor rent.
Wll 1CC0P1 HUO. 304-773-59&gt;4-4.

520

2 or 3 bedroom. full s•ze base
man~ no pe10, 700·992·5858.

DW Ropo 4 Badroomo, 2 Baths,
Eai}'Tonno. 1.aoo.3fl3.8882.

saW

Moblit name aile available bet·
WHn Athena and Pomeroy, call
7&lt;10-38S..3117

v... . - . . - -

LOT·BPFIINCl VAlLEY

410 Hous~ for Rant

Oio~i&lt;l.

TAX SPECIAL
' New 3br IQgg/down $18glmo
: Free Set-up &amp; Oelivory Onl~ 3
• lehl Only 11 Oakwood Homos HI·
'"'wv 304-755-5885

Sola $leeper, recliner, chest of drawers, desks, color
3 five sheW corner shelves, lamps, couch and
chair, Har&lt;J:Niek maple single bed, chairs, rocker,
doulile metal wardrobes, New rollaway bed, K1rby
sweeper, Metlll D~de fumijure, Mise dishes, PO!lt, •
Pans, Unens, 5 folding chairs plus many, many
•
•
1 things.
"MISC"
'
1001 anvil, approx. 15 tongs, Black Smith 1ools, Drill
Press, Vice, Chisel for anvil, hand auger, large
blade, Lathe, Single cylinder gas one luggu engine,
steal wagon wheels, single and double shovel ploWi:
platform scales, copper wire, Maylag wringer washer. ~
74()-676·3576 Gall Lea McClain· Executor C8q.
N30181
Pollltlve 10
Cnh
Den Smith- Auctl-r
Ohio 11344
W. Ve.l515 .
Auction will be Mid lnsldt building. Bring lawn
chllra. Motet CIDII byl ·
• !
All day singing Ifill lunch on tile ground1l1
•
Lulich MI'VtCI by V.F.W.· Auxllllry
II

TV,

460 Space for Rent

tor

2 Bedroom House, In Crown C11y,
South Galha 6 fa~rfand School

NII."V, wv. 304-155-11185

wood:

ApMI11i11'1IS
Rent

Small two bedroom mobile t'lome Now Taking Applications- 35
for rant 1n Raeina, 740-11&amp;2-503Q
W111 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmen11 $295/llo, 7~0-•&gt;~e440 Apartmenls
0011&amp;.
for Rent
OlD ASH VILLADE
1 and 2 bedroom apimments, fur- Now IICC:ttPtinG ~IlOna,
nt~hed and untutnlah&amp;d. tecurny cerniR,Iaundty llcllirt on
deposit requued, no pets, 7•0 · lilt,...,, Wll..,.,lt'Uhrncluded
992·2218
., ~=--::-:--:--::---::- Ide apply. £quai Houoing Olltrao·
1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove, Re- l.rnity. Contoct Ardra \/OniiOw.
Jngerator Included No PolS. 740· 1Qam.2pm.Uon. tvu Fri :J04.182..

C4&amp;-CXISO. •

SPRING SPECIALS
141111 Down
UFbtocl11-. Paymenlo
S11,1150113BA.
F- Oollve!y I Sol-up
Only AI oa.M Homao

Ropoo
Ooulrle- And Singlo Wldeo
WDn1l10t Lonat
Call: ......738-3332

440

Mobile Homes
fOr Rent

Real Estate
wanted

2 padroom House, S300rMo .
$150 Oepoolt, locatad 1801 Gra·
hem Sclloo1 Road, Gaiipeio, 700-

' Special 18x80 3BR, 2 bath
• $.1,325 Down. $205 11o Free ak
llree olo1nlng. 11100-601-11777.

Estate Auction
Saturday, May 9, 1998
10:00a.m.
This is lhe personal property of the late Letlle
McCain. It has been rnovad to Meigs Co Fairground
due to space at Farm home.' Located on the comer of
St Rt 33 and St. At 7 just outside of Pomeroy, Ohio.
Watch for fairground signs then auction signs .
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Oak 6 legged Table w/5 leaves, cylindet record
players and horn, pie crust sland, highback mlrrcli
dresser w1th leaves and flowers, oak chest whh g l •
knobs, high back double bed, wash stand · with towel
rack, oak dresser, square stand claw and ball f~t
wnh sarpent, oak storage chest, oak h1gh dressar,
wood chest, camel back and flat trunks, picture
frames, seWing rocker, wood chairs, wood high bacfi
bed, Hardrock maple dining table and 4 chairs, gl~
door cabinet, washstand, Minnesota treddle sewing
machine, Etc Spade Spanish Amencan Bayonet and
metal sheath US 1897, army shell belt, bell system
1st a1d kh in canvas pouch, 20 pal stone J&amp;r, blacK
hawk haod com sheller, lard press, telephone boxes;
Parts lor coflea grinder, Towal rack, A.P Donahue
Stone Jar and others,. Wicker Picnic basket, oil lamps,
old newspaper back to Ctvil War, Paper clipptngs and
Funeral Home cards, Lois of gramte cookware.
(Stone Chtna, bone plates wtth gold trim, royal
1ronstone, cemlval, depression aod more) , Wheat
cradle, Tables, 2 Flu sand stones, Pile of
furniture Par1s, Keg egg basket, dinner bell, lroh:
Ketlle and stand, corn JObber, bean scales, tool chest, ·
draw knives, old post carde, Long Bottom ME church:
plate, old knives, StrBight ~azors, pocket watch with:
Westclock Works in Brass, Jewelry, old photo albums, :
school books McGuflay and Etc , hal boxes, hats, old•
clothn and fur, Quilts (Wedding ring, Star, Tulip, and·
Etc.), looks like brass bed, Seth Thomas clock 1906,
and lois, lots more.
•

360

420

~~~~~~~~=~~$~~~=~~~~~~·

253D.

ca• ,_

Terms: Cash
Jerry Northup, Ow1Ulr

Public Sale and Auction

.

~

Some Raotrlc!lono, Near S R 850,
Ju11
New Loll
lnduo~lal
Largelllnuteo
WoodedFrom
Building
W11h
Par~. Some Reatrictlons, J40'"..0541, Afta&lt; 5 P.M.

RENTALS

' New Ooublewide 38R, 2 bath.
' $1.325 Down I $205 permo 1·
: 888-828-3428.

, .. , uc-.Jhatbtal• Pag, os

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

320

,.170 1979 Windsor 2 Badrooms. large liv1ng Room &amp;
Kilchon, 1 Balh, U~ifl Room. Aolo·
.Ifill $7,000, 740-25&amp;-82&amp;1

Mason, W.VI · 2 Bedtooms, C.ntrtl Heat, Air, Anderion T1l1 In
W•ndawa, Full Buement, Front
And Back Porches, 74Q . gQ2 - ~
:II~' · 740-99? 3557.

ThiS .-paper Wilt not
knowingly """"pi
adYertlsaments for realastala
wtkh Is tn violation ol the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
tuM~~ In this newspapar
are ava11abie on an equal'
opportuo1ty bas1s

Mobile Homes
for Sale

14 x10 31R, $111111 Down &amp; ONLY
$1 7D ptt rno F'" air &amp; kao lkrt·

7&gt;10-4~91111

~OGER L. FETTERLY. AUCTIONEER

·VAliS

320

Houae, 2 Story Ouple1, 1 Bed·
room Cottage, 13 Pine Street,
Golllpollo. largo lot Shown By
Appo•ntment, Price $1 o~.ooo

'Pixe[Cam Systems

:::C!"rc!t

310 Homes for Sale

Houoo lor lilt oo 2 - - • 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, il kitchens,
...., ...... 7-2-ll)lg.

no

r

o Homes for Sale

S$S

-day•

'SIItetlileCorTII'TI,JmcaliOn
Minmum 1 Expertenee
Ciall A CO . HazMat.
"i
H &amp; WTrudtlng Co Inc
~
1-821-3!110
Randy s-• or Larry Taylor

31

COKE /NABISCO /PEPSI
Lt&gt;cal Routes Available, $1,500
Weekly Praf1ts, 1·800-337·1375,
Call 24 Hours -7 Oa~a

HVAC lnstal!ell Needed for Ex·
pandlng Compan~ For tnstalla·
110
Help Wanted
lono Of Haobng l Cooling Equl!&gt;ment In Manulac:turad &amp; Re11·
$1$ DANCERS WANTED S$S
160
Radio, TV &amp;
danbat Housing
!NOTICE I
Excel lent opponunlly tor the nght
• 3 YrL Exporlance Naadad
CB Repair
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
g1rl SSOOi.,.)p&amp;f weett earmng po·
recommends tha t ,-ou do bull·
• RSES Cerlified
tent•al No ltiiP necessary, must
House work got you down? G•ve neu With people you know, and
be at least 18 Call '6,4-992 8387
• Paid lledicallnouranco
us a call, we can help Have ref
NOT to send money through the
or 304·67S..595S alter
• Pilei lllcatono
erenc:es. Call Pany 30• •sa 1755 mat\ unUI you ~ave 1nvesugated
5al
or Kr1sta Xl•..tS&amp; 1902
rhe offenng
• Paid Holicll¥1
•E-ti'Mgoo
"POSTAL JOBS180 wanted To Do
COKE /PEPSI II
Start S1~ 08 /Hr Plu 1 Benef1t1 lntiMow Appo1ntmo•11o Onlyl Call
1
Besl Prgoram In U SA Excellent
For Exam And Application Info Bennatll Healing &amp; Coaling At
Andy"a lawn Mowing S.n~k:e
Locations $1 200 .,. Wklv Poten, can 800·280-9189 ~'' OH20o. 9 7~0-•46· 9418 Or 1·6DO·S72·
F- Eollmatoo
tia l M1n1mum Investment 4K, 1.
5987. Gallipolis, OH 45631
All.-11 P.M.
304-1175-4435
800-617·6030 Ext t 732
7 Da~&amp;.
After 5pm.
IMMEDIATE OPENINQ
'
OaiUa County
AVON I All Arou I Shirley
ANYODOJOBS
FREE
ChllmborOICo.......,
Spoaro, 300-875-1-1211
Shrubs &amp; weeds 1r1mmed, mulch·
CASH
Secretary /Admlnistrallve Assis- mg flower bed1, landscapmg,
GRANTS I
Admlnlolrotlvo -ory
tant Th•s Is A Very V1stble And stdewalk edging. t~lOWtng ,
College Scho~rshiPI
Challenging Poslt1on, People etc Free Esttmates. Call 811!
Busmess. Medical Bills.
The Meigs local SchOol Oislricl Skills Vtry lmportanl, Computer 304-675-7112
NOYefR11 m need .of a dependable, cap. Exper111e And Wriun$» Ability A
CaltToll Frao
able person to 1erve 11 an adSome Bookkeeptng Experi- Onveways paltOS, Stdewalks
1-i!oo-218·9000 E&gt;l G· 28"
ministrative seetetar~ In the Su·
Helplul. Pay Is Compentlve. buemenls &amp; garages, also lay
1 perlntendenrs Olltee The person
Baud On Sk1f11 And Expenence block &amp; small JobS, 740·742·2261
HOSIERY ROUTE
mull be c:ompurar prone;.nt, haw. Send Resume· By May 7, 1998
Earn Up To S05K Per Year Part
ExpM18f'ICed carpenter will do re supenor orgamzanonal and aec- To
modeling, decks, vmyl 11dmg, T1me Restock1ng Local Stares
1 retanal alulls, be ab'e ID deal ef
Gall11 County Choplumbing Free esumates Call W1th Name Brand ladies Hos•ery.
fec:IJvelw- and elfic1en~ wtlh parot Comrnen:e
J1m
ShulL 304-675·1272 Reier· No Seihng, Accounts Prov1ded
ents. IIUden!l, and the publiC and
Anonoon R V. Gnthom
Your SICK Investment Is St·
encet
upon request
have the ability to perform nu·
PO Boxol85.
cured 8~ tnw1 Call 1-800-758
meroua tllkl at rhe same rime
Galipolll, Ohio 45631
Furmture repair, reftntsh and res- 4661 Anyttrne
Fast-paced olf1ce, good worktng
All Rapltes Conlidtt1tlal
loratlon, Blso custom orders OhiO
, conditions, excellent benellts
MEDICAL BII.LINQ
K1tchen &amp;Ids, cooks, experienced Valley Rel.ntahlng Shop larry Work On Your Compuler, Full Or
pec:kage aval~ble.
Philips.
700
992-8518
In nuuioonal serviCes prelanad H
Pare T1me Processrng Insurance
Send rOIUml ond lelllir of Interest rnterested contact Human Re· Georges Pottable Sawmill , don·r Claims For Doctors And Dentists.
sources at Veterans Memonal haul your logs 10 the m1ll JUSt call Complete Tra1n1ng
'"confidence ID:
William L. Buclday, Superlnten4· Hospital, 115 Easr Memorial 304-875-1957
~LIENTS PROVIDED
ant, Metgs local School 01s1nct. Dnvo. -oy. 740-11112·2100.
800-D3H530 ExL 05.
320 East Mam Street, Pomeroy.
111expens1ve
made-to-order
MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
Oh •5769 Deadline lor apphca·
greeung cards. part~ trwnaltons, 230 Professional
.ll.lnSII TRAJNNQ CENTER
tion 11 Ma~ 11, 1998 With a probuslneJa cards, resumes, etc ·
EDUCATIONAl. SPECIALIST
Services
JeC:ttd starlmg dare of June 1,
call Gnc:le'e Gr..tlnga. 740
OR
EDUCATIONAL
11196
742·1007
Joo'o TV-VCR Sorvlco
SPECIALIST, 811.
Free £s11me1es
Certified Nuf18 A\de Needed For
Mother ol 9 &amp; 12 year old ..,,u
AI! Work Guaranleed
In Home Care Weekends &amp; Educational Speclalllt - Pay watch children ume age d11~ ng
AYSJiablo, Catl Angi AI Grado 18, 5alary 121,301 IYaar aurnrner, 7.0.62·8926
304-875-1724
t-8CXJ-41-83.3o6
Oltallllcatlona: Bachelor's De·
gree In Special EducoiOn Or Ro- Mowlng, 111mmng or odd fObt, ba· Llvlngltan·s basement weter ·
• COMPUTER /FREELANCE •
laled Field And Over Two Years bysnung, any 1h1tt Call J1rr: or proofi'ng, ali basement repa1rs
Data Entry, Word Proceattng, 01 Expetl.,ca Wilh Autistic lnd1· Paula In Minersville, 7410·992 · dane, free eltlmates, uter1me
guaranlee 10yrs on JOb expen·
Graphtn And Web Many Levels v1dua11 And tOr Other Develop· •286
ence ~4-675-2145.
And Poaillon'at Flexible Hral Mo- mental 01tabiiU1eB (Or Equlvdom Roq Start Nowl Call 800· alence)
Saturday May 16th,
~-·-2220
-:-:-::-::--::==-=~==::-1 Educational Speciallat S.nlor .
Overbrook Center wiD be haying its annual
CPR I FIRST AID COURSES Pay G111da 17. Solary 122.800 I
For Those lndlvtduals Working Year Ouallflcattane: Master's
Sprtfi!HJ
SHOw
With The Public And/Or Children. Degree And Experrence As
Two Ctatses To Choose Framl Abcwe Beapanllblllt... For Ellh·
In conjunction with . •
Saturday, May 2, 1H8 Ot Satur- ., L.wel tncludes-Delignlng And
day, May 16, 1888 Both cta 1111 1mp1emen1lng lnsuuctlonal And
National Nursing Home Week .
Are From 9 oo A.M ·5 00 PM. Beh1v1or Maneoement AnenThe
hours
of our Craft Show will be from 10:00
Conla't Buc:~eye H1lls CarHr men1 And Traimng Programs
Cenler, Adult SerYaees To Reg· Uay Supentlll A Praclcum
a.m.-4:00a.m. There is
enlly tee but table
, 111er. 740·245-5334 Eat. 209 Tuispace IS limited. Along with our Crall Show, there
' 1 liOn· $'0
level And Salar~ Dependent
',
Upon QuallftCIIions Travel
will be a Spring Camlval. For mare information or
: • Simple Work, 0111y' Pay, Procell· Would Be Required.
lfllll.tall At Homo Call toll Free 1·
· to reserve a table for lhe Crall Show; please
: ; 188...a77·9057 Code P3
To Apply, Send Letter Of Interest
contact Mike Crites at 740·992·6472.
•
And Oetatled Reaume To Or
~: DrMtf . 810 1M INCREASE! 0.8 Barbara Becker .Conrill, 01rector
~ ~ Mo. Exp • .2k lUi· • Mo • 27c. Ot Autism Tr8ln1ng Center,
1r
1 Yr •
2 Yrs • 29t. 3 Yra • Marshall UmverJlly, Huntu'JgiOn,
.:Jle, 4.Yrs • .31C. 5 Yrs • 32c, 8 wv 25755 Rovlow Of RoouOMO
, ~ Yrs ·~ 33f:. 1 "Irs • :S.e Harold Will Start Immediately And Po·
, lveo .ru&lt;k1ng. 1100-142-11153 Co olllon Wll Bo 0pon Until Flllod. .
, Pel Driver Tra1ntng Prog (Trant. I
: :, Meals Incl.)
Mar•hall University 11 The A•·
Of Tttt U S. Ubor Ot·
• DriveN OTA (Also, nlw 0/0
EVE Award For ha
·~
~'1:-'::letbed/VanAction And Equal
'" •Mileage or Reweooe Pay
Opporlunlty Pro·
'·• ·Excellenl Benefil Package
grama.
•• •Alief VlclllOn
Need 4 Lad1es Who Would Uke
'&lt;OIK Retlrt1n10t
To 5at1 Avon. 7&lt;0-448-3358.

•

Homtl for Sale

Exper1enced Saltapenson----...ome

Cl1 en1ale Neaded, Jus t Have

J &amp; • 0 Auto Parts

Wanted To Do

Furnlthingl, Carpet, Window

wv 26651

ern AileRJa. Galllpoll~

180

Help Wanted

. Sunday, May 3, 1998

Sunday, May 3, 1998

LQD that have smal acreage.

WINDS· 2 lots remain. Fairfield qentenery

DALE E. TAYLOR REALTY
272 East second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992·5333
Weekly Feature

I

~§~BOTIOM!REEDSVILLE· Baautlfut building lOla,
cabin area In 1 acre lOla and more, ne.tled on
Run Stale Parte and Shade National Forest,
111$10,000 and owner will finance.

DEXTER FARM: 61 Acres MIL with 2 ponds lor fishing or
your Nveslock, plus 2 houses currently rented, large bam.
various outbuildings, Secluded area, very prlvale Terrific at
$50,000
. -:
MIDOLEPOirn 2·story Colonial with wrap around porCh,
newly remodeled, nice location, price reduced to $75,900.
POMEROY· Fixer-upper, 4 BR, Ialge yard, owner anxious to
tlell, make an otter. Priced at only $12,500.
.
MtDOLEPOirn 3 BR 1 flOor plan, owner will finance, newty
remodeled. clOse to town but still private $25,000
GALLIA COUNTY SR 554· 3 M/L in a nice subdivision.
Great building Bite Owner will finance. Unle down. $12,000
HEW UMA AREA· Bulcher shop, Immediate Ponoaalon
with 5 acres mit 2 equipped mobile home iltea, Move In at
$45,000
POMEROY: 3 BR plus loft, large prtvale yard, porch, move
In condition. cozy, starter or Investment property at $17,900
RUTLAND- 2·3 BR ranch, 11/2 garage, 2 lots, hardwood
f!ooll, new carpet. Covered porches. Level yard $57,500 00

IWIY Wll CONTRACTS TO CHOOSE FROII
W1 US FOR AMARKET ANAlYSIS
IWI L ran• (llql[lll
WALT TAYLOIIWIS ASSOOAn 1740)446-1529
fiAIICH TAYLOIIWIS ASSOQATI)74H4HIOS
DA¥1 I'ARSOIIS ISAlES ASSOOATI)740-992·1064
TOl1 flEE 1•111 912-S:IU

150 x 207 lot Ia located at the
comer of Spruce &amp; 5111. All utilijiea
avalla\l'e. $19,900

RACCOON
PRIVACY· thla
almost brand new ranch atyte home
rests In over 7 acres of woods with
approx. 800 ft. of creak frontage.
Some of the many feature&amp; are 4
BAs, 2 baths, 16 x 21 LR W/French
doors, 2 larg&amp; treated decks, vinyl
skiing &amp; an unattaChed car garage.
II you don1 want to look at your
neighbors. You must -this one.

EXTRA NICE BUILDING· Or
MOBILE . HOME LOT. Mature Pine
Treas on lhe three skies. Acc8ss to
Raccoon Creek. Located In Hobar1
Dllon Subd. $11,900

,._

\ \

~ \,1~ 11 :\ /,'1 I

1:\"\\)

1:1.

\~ hl:t

t:I:OI\1
RACCOON
CREEK
FARM·
Located on State Route 180 Jn
norlhem Gallla County. Approx. 1
miles creek frontage. 30 flat lots
aurvvyed.
Water and electric

avallable. $88,00o
OHIO TOWNSHIP· 82 Acral more
or less, localed In section 28 on
Green Rd. Some tillable land but
mostly pasture and woods. Old
house and pond on propeny.

II;

GUN STORE: One of southern
OhiO's largest dealers.
Established In 1966. Large
volume. Owner retiring.
Contact Ranny Bllckbum.
RIVER LOT IN THE CITY· 2 3 acrt1a
234 II. frontage on the Ohio
River, all utUhle8 available. Otd

1710 STATE ROUTE 7 NORTHCommen:lal sne. Not many left in
this arf8. Approx. 5 acres flat land.
lclaiiiOr almost any type biz.

home on property.

~.900

IDEAL. COMMERCIAL LOCATION
. lllha corner of SR 160 &amp; VInton St.
Formtr locltkln of lhe llvellock
Nlet. Approx. 3 acrt1 with an o1c1er
2 IIOry bilck home. Put your future
. buelneaa·hera.

LAKI

DRIVI BUIDMIION- RIO

GRANDI- CIDN to Unlwralty· lDt
121 hal wettrr aewer &amp; tlec:.

I\'IIIIIM. $12.000

1:\
1:

• 1111 1'1:•11'1 , ,

m/1

attechecl ' UBf11118. Broker owned.

I

,,.I II ,.ooo:: ,,,,

$47,000

RODNEY
VILLAGE
II-LAND
CONTRACT· 3 BR ranch with LA,
kMchen, bath, laundry and an

I I

SPACIOUS LIVING ABOUNDS
THIS COUNTRY CLASSIC. Historic
two story house offers 3 bedrooms,
1/2 beth, LR, DR, FL, full basement
and detached wortcahop. Bring In
11111 outdootlln lhe window covered
kHchen with anacha walk·ln panlry.
Priced to steal at $74,900
SPACIOUS FAMILY HOME· Thll 3
BR 2 1/2 bath charmlf Is IOCI!tcl
ne&gt;rt to Holzer OtT Lariat Drive. 14
you walk 1hrough, you'A · view the
large formal dining rm, LR with
stone flrapl-. ax1ra large family rrn
with built In ahelves, completely
equlppeel kllchen with sun light, 15 x
17 sun rm finished In ceder &amp; g11u
&amp; • 2 car gar~ge. When you atep
out on lhe patiO, you'll not1c11 the
gazebo, shop &amp; another garage.
lata of fun living here. Cell for

STURDY SPACIOUS 2 story
colonial home. Located In the
village of Vinton, this property offers
country living at a convenient pnce.
3-4 Br, 1 1/2 baths, bright open
kitchen with 112 baths,
with
detached garage. All located high
above Raccoon Creek Call today.
VINTON VILLAGE· 4 acres of level
land MIL with frontage on SR 325.
Water &amp; electriC available. Home
builders or tnvestors all about this
one. $14,000
FISHERMEN'S DREAM· Two mtles

below the dam you'll ftnd this older
completely furnished 2 BR mobile
home. Th8fe's an 8 x 24 deck
overiOclklng the Ohto River wtth a
storage bulkllng, steps going down
to the beach &amp; a large dock.
$17,900
HOMESITE IN THE CITY· Thts
large level lot Is located at the dead
end of Nell Ave. Utillt1es available.
Home builders. or tnvestors call
about this one. $19,900
COMMERCIAL liSTING· Rio
Grande area. 1.8 acres rn/1, located
on lhe NE corner of U.S. 4 lane 35
and SA 325. Lotf of potential.
$49,900
CROWN CITY AREA· Double
Creek Road 300 acres rn/1. Lever
land, hMIIidel Woods, pond, approx.
9500 lb lobacco base, 3 good
barns. Not many tracts this large

available.

c.a -·

GREEN
VALLEY
ROADEvergreen Area Near Bob Evans
aauaage plant. 3.3 acres m/1
r•lncled building lot. Pond on
property. $28,500

'

�Pomeroy • Middleport e Galllpolls1 OH e Point Pleasant, WV

•

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

7 pltcea of matehino Am.,ican
touri1ter luggage &amp; 4 waiteri'WIIi·

-jlc:MII. 304-1!75-!052.
Amazing

Mttaboli1m

Break

Through. Lo., 10 10 200 lbo, Cllll
For fret conaultation and Free
~

(740)«1-1a82

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

7moa. old, tuH grown. S300 090.

A.KC Golden Retrivers 7 Weeks
Old, Shots, I Wormed , t225,

263-2640.

Mu11

740·441-G4a7.

1torage unit. Black and cherry.
Never out 91 box. $125. Holds up
to 940 disci, also holds 1apea.
Call 740· 892·8836 alter 8 pm.
CD1 &amp; lipea not included.
Carport far sale no reas onable
offal' refused, 740·992·2358.
Concrele &amp; Plutic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons. Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

1-80().537-952&amp;

Couch, lo'lle seat &amp; antique col-

fe• table . 304 -675-6963 or

304 -

675-6132.
Electric Hospital Bed, Like ·New

$500 ; Collapaable E)(tra Wide

Wheel Chair $150; Bedside Commode $15. 740..48-1609.
Emlt'alda &amp; Diamonds Necklac;e
&amp; Eartings, lrrediscenl Pearls,
Necklace· &amp; Earrings, Am&amp;niltlis &amp;
-Diamond Ring, Gamet Earrings &amp;
Riflg, Gold Nugget Pendant With
Diamonds, Elecrrolysis Machine

740·3118-8448.

Maton.~

&amp;y, Sol, Tr11da
Used &amp; Antiques

11·8. Fish Tank &amp; P11 Shop,
2413 Jackson Ava . Point Pleat·

Furniture.

30ol· 773-5:r41 .

RefrigeratOr S125; Ele&lt;: tr ic Stove
$, 25: Oak Express Brown Table

La ~ l · Boy

recline (, Florence
Green, 1200. non smoking residence, 740·992·.3301 .
ladies tart hilnd Conlidenc'e Visa
gq~• clubs with bag, 4 woods, one
!Mill 7 wood , 9 irons, cosr

s532.35, sell tor $200, 740·992·
21161.
Uh CMir, Good Working Condi ·

tior), $150, 740-3'19-2720, AFTER
6PJI.
LOng 5equin ·Formal Size 7, Teal

Blue Sit Upside, Worn Once, Call

7.0.256-6239, Leave Measage.
Love seat , coltee table, booth,
Wurlilzer plano with extras,
dresser. chest drawer1, twin bed,

740-992·3860.
No'fil That Spring Is Here 11 Is
Time To Stocll·UP On Your 4von
Skin-Sa -Soh Moisture Suncare
P1us, To Order Call Pam At 740·

•nt. 304-1175-2Qe3.

304-1175-4182.

Cockatiels ·Pearl &amp; Lutinoa. 304·

You r Area John Deere Deater
For Residential And Commercial
Lawn Equipment Compact Utility
Tractors From 20 To 3D HP. All

~ow

NOTICE

Poodle puppies- teacup and t iny
toys , AKC Regis tered , 740·687 3404.

29Hl098.

STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon
J¥kson, Ohio, 1·800·537·9528.

388-9971 .

WOLFF TAN NINO BEDS

Regi'stered F&amp;male Siberian Hus·
ky $25 : Tin y Dwarf Rabtllls SB;
1990 Chevy Lumina Low Milea
$3,500, 740·446-8627

TanArHome
Buy Direct and SAVE!
Commercialr'Home Units

From$199.00
Low Monthly Payments
FREE Color Catal~
CdiiToday 1·800·711-0158.

Aonweiler puppiet, purebred (no
papers) , born Mar&lt;:h 24th, 1100
or trade, can afler 6pm, 74Q-992·
4581 .

Ty Beanie Babres Reasonably
Pricedl740-4o46·8051.

fair Pigs Excellent 9oodline, Call

740·245-5872, Or 740-38Hl!i83.
Riding Horses For SaiEJ

44-4110

640

t 740)

Hay &amp; Grain

Tobacco Pl1n11 For Sale, R•·
serve ~or May Planrlng. Danny
OewhUIII. 304-895 -37ag Leave
l.llessage.

650 Seed &amp; Fenlllzer
Oekalb Seed Corn. Kay Farmt.

Coli 304-675·1508 It No Answer
Leave Menage

Rate Finaocing On New And

Used Equipment. Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lown Galllpoli&amp;, OH 740·

30 Angu1 And Chi-Angus Bulls
For Sale, Reasonably Pt~ced , Ex·
cellent Breedin g, Slate Run
Fatma, Jackson 740-288·5395.

li80 ·1110 HONDA CARS FOR
1100 Seized &amp;Sold Locally Thia
Month. Call 1·800·522·2730 E•t.
.. 20.
1980 - 1990Trucks For $100!11

Seized And Sold

locally This Month.

Trucks, 4x4'a, Etc.
HI00-522·2730, X3901 .
1984 Chevy Celebrity 2.8 V-6,

160.000 Miles, 2 Dooro. S1,000
OBO 740·245·0117.
'

.

1984 Old Cudaas 305 V-8 pa, pb.
$1.500 Firm. Can be seen ar
2405 Monroe Ave . Pt. Pleasanr ,
WV. 304 -675 -5019 after Spm or

4-48·4053.
Registered Morgan horse mare,

t985 Trans Am 305 auro tran1 ,
black/gray inrerior. Hops, loaded.

1050.

•

Good ~a tor, Sell CMeapt 740·

..e-&lt;42811.
198e Ford Escort Srauon Wagon
$1 ,200. 1988 Mercury Topaz
S700. Front clip 1984 Ford Tempo
$100. 1988 Dodge Ants auto
tranamluion $75. 1084 2.5

12.500 OBO CJ04.67S..220.

Real Estate Ganeral

1150. 1979 Auto uanaler case
Jeep $100. 304·578·2387.

We have buyars looking for homes priced
from $30,000 to $110,000. List your home
now and let ua do the work! In Melga call

1986 Olds Della 81 auto, like

,_ 304-675-2359.

1.988 CheYy Corsica, 2.8 V-e. air,
t1l1, cruise. new tires, runs good,

sharp. S1495, 740~2-8824.

Shaula Laudermllt 992·5054.

1988 Dodge Shadow, white lour
door, air, till, e!C., lOW mileS, l)(cei-

2

1992 Bu ick R•¥•1 Gran Sport,
110,582 milea, white with burgendy
leather interior, automatic:, aun·
roof. Alloy wheals, two door,

maxed outl $5300 OBO. 740·949·
2311 days or 740-949-2844

1992 Toyota Corolla, 92.000
mllaa, maroon with ,.a~ lnlerlor,
rour doors, amlfm casaette, air, 5

$2900 , 740·949 -2311
day1 or 74().1149·2844 OYOftings.

Log Home with

~ bedrooms, 1 bath and

ceo. 1.00.

Veh icle•. No Turn Downs, Call

Jackinc.com).

Opportunltyl
Potential!
Restaurant/bar Ifor sale
... lock,
otock and barrel. Ohio 0·5 llquore

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

$1500; 74().992·5232.

Jackson. Ohio, 1·800·537·9528

5'70

Wedding Gow_n· Beautiful ivory
sequined, re-embroidered lace
size 10 with Veil. Only t226. 304:

Musical
Instruments

FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO,
responsible parry wanted 10. make

I:~:~~~~1=;J~

OPEN HOUSESunday, May 3,

1998

.
1 :30 to 3:30 p.m.
537 Plymale
Gallipolis, Ohio

kitchen, all furniture , seGurity
system , ventilation s~stem,
extensive satellite TV system .

e,u

720

Forest land. C8bln IncludeS beda,
futniture, cooking equipment, ett.
$59,900 1220

Niwer roof. Bargain priced $299,000. Call Dave tor mora

intoomallon. 00nl'heslletell227

H0ata11: Cara CIIHY

IIIO!Ip. Merctuioer inboard motor,
with lrailitr. life prese.rver' &amp;
bu....... $2,750. 814...S.361ol.

"!tucks for Sale

Lovely living room w~h
bay window, wood floor and
French doors leading out to the

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

patio. beautnul

k~chen w~h

1978 Taylor Crah Hh. open -

1971 Galaxy 19 Fr. Fitlergtass.
DHP Vie, Open Bow 170 HP.
Mercrul~er, Garage Kept , One

Sale

all your e)(pectationl. Priced

GrMt~174Cl-448-9487.

~

862;·323~5~-~~d~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~

and

on an overalzed lot. Sure

or ••tras, SSSOO. will consider
johnboetonrado, 740-9112-7ol10.

1978 FD&lt;d F· ISO ••• $800. 300·

game room plus a 2

758-4135.

1185 Four Winns, 140 horse in·

board/ outboard. with trailer, 1011

1992 11 Ft. Nitro Base Boar.

FO.d;;&lt;,,; 1 BRa, 2 baths, a full baHment
offering large family

eo.-. t:I.OOO Cd 74().388.87•4.

$2000 ceo. 740-702·21112.

oak

·

- . ......ge.

engine, autoJNtic. new 33• lirn.
, _ otetl tlalbld, ...., , _ par-.

cabinets, LRIDA combination , 3

Slee4 Building Oeai&amp;flhips In aelect open markatt. Huoe profit
potential. Call Mr. Moonie. 304 -

at

S103.000-

A Groom Shop -Per Gtooming ,
Hydro Batt! . "Don
Sheers. 373 Georges Creek Rd .

Fea turing

Pomeroy Thrlf1 Shop now buying
taro• outside toyl and baby
itlfflS, walkeri, toddler c;ar sealS,

740·448·0231.

.

AKC Boxe;, Eatl Cropped. Tail

eiC. TuKday through Friday, 740· Cropped. All Snoll. Ready To Gol
992·3725.
$175, 740·44&amp;-1617.

G)

--

• 205 North Second Ave.
OH
MIIOLEPORT· {I 2 etory home IOith 3 bedrooms and 1 3/4
baths. Has a living room with a bMullll!l ftfep~Ke, a dining
room, and a k"chen w11tr· CDmis wllh llllned
·
enclosed rear pori:h and sHs on a small lot

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191
Office ........................... 99:Z..2259

25 LOCUST ST.· GALUPOUS
very
pump, 2
bedrooms, one bath, large altaj:hed llorage building and
garage. Perfect lor that business at home. 111111 a large fol
and iS.IIef)' near bOal ramp. $20,000.00

. Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383

446-3636

$56,000 WILL BUY THIS LARGE TWO STORY
1-jOME FEATURING FOYER WITH OPEN
JTAIRCASE .. .4 LARGE BEOROOMS... LARGE ·EAT·
1N . KITCHEN . VINYL SIOING ... CONVENIENT
IDCATION IN THE. CITY.

.

•

PRICE BREAK NEW LOW PRICE IS $54,ooQ... YOU
~AN MOVE IN AND ENJOY THIS BEAUTIFUL
HOME. .. LARGE LI\(ING ROOM ... FAMILY ROOM IN
BASEMENT AREA HAS FIREPLACE wrfH WOOD
BURNING INSERT. HEAT PUMP. AIR COND. NICE
GARDEN AREA ... CALL SOON ... OON'T BE THE
ONE SAYING "I 'WISH . I HAD BOUGHT THAT
HOME ."
V,ILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE WE JUST LISTED
'A-liS PROPERTY LARGE 2 STORY HOME PLUS 1
STORY HOME PLUS 2 BEDROOM MOBIL HOME.
All PRESENTLY RENTED. NEAR UNIVERSITY OF
FIIO GRANDE CAMPUS. ALL FOR $72,009.
•

••

, . .•• Nothing
~ lhlfl W8tcft.
lng lh'e Ohio River Flow. You can enjoy 111a1
view from your kitchen table or on a warm
summer evening on the back porch. This
home features approx. 200 ft . of River
Frontage, with a gently· sloping yard. The
home Is brick ranch wHh 1 1/2 baths, 3 bedrooms, utility robrn, allached 2 1 ~r garage,
paved driveway, lull basement, new1)' carpeted
With H.P./C.A. Approx. 1 1/2 Acree. Beautiful
Home·Beaut~ul SHe. River Frontage Is Hard
To Find. COME LOOK AT THISII ASKING
$134,900

I'Oss!BLI COIIIIERCIAL SITE.f'OIIEROY· A 3 bedroom
home wilh 1 1/2 balhl. living room, dining room, larp
kllchen, and full balern8rtt. Has a lanced back yard and a
one car aa.:hed garage. Aganl Owned S48.SOO
LJNCOUtl HTll.· A 1 1/2 -v home with a lalge ,_deck. a
fuR basem8rit. a nice back yard. Has 2 to 3 bedrOOmS.
acppped klldten. and a China
lornced Irani yard. ~
eystem I roof ,_fall
$31,.0110
• .

a

**

'f'!N·

RAINBOW RIDGE· Approx. 16 acres IOith at leaal 2 nica

ATTENTION HUNTERS OR FOLKS
SEEKING A BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITEII
Located On Apple Grove Road, just oul o1
Racine. Approx. 37.B75 Acres ·with some
clearing already done. Room for several
homesltes with approx. 1.000 feet of roed
kontage or e•cellent HUNTING SITE wHh
abundence ol turkey, deer and squirrels.
ElectriC and TPC wal8f. available. REDUCED

building sites. One curratlly hill a mobile home on It AIIO

lnC:Iuded is a 12x 12 shed..NOW 11I.ICIO.GO

.

.

•

POIIEAOV· A 2 1/2 slory bricl' laM with a lull finllhed
bMemenl and attic. Home has 11 1001111. 4 1/2 blllht, and
IIIII cin many Iotti. Nice horne with'a large finilhed IWC n!dm. 2
older fil"8fii11C81, &amp; a cedar c1o1e1. 3 floors are hlllldicllp
IICC8Siible with lift·chairs. AIIO hill another home thai ccUd
be 2 aparlnterD or an olllce. Has a carport and a large

J::.:~::Ja=;c:' 21

'1/2 story home w/large
counlly kHchen, living room,
family room , oversized
detached garage: Nice level
lawn. l873

•

PRICE REDUCED • Hera il an older
Story Fr"""' Home, with original woo!lworlt.l
vinyl aiding, patiO, appli1111C81. Cloie
h hill 2 bllhl. c:arpellnlertor. 2 car
beclrooma, , _ lhlngle roof. In ~~:~r,;
OWNER WANTS TO SELL N
8M•11 ,,_ PLACEII $71,900

LOOKING FOR A COZV HOME IN A CONVENIENT
LOCATION? WE HAVE ONE! 3 BEDROOM RANCH
HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM. EAT-IN kiTCHEN,
UTILITY ROOM. CARPORT, FENCED eACK YARD,
GAS FURNACE. CENTRAL AIR COND ... FENCEO
SI!WNG S1!A80N '11· Hlfli WE IIAYE ·IUYERII WAITING FOR THE anilrl
L;BAc;;;.;,;;,;,;,K.;,;YA.;;.R;;,D;..
. ~
· _ _;,__ _ _ _ __.IPROPER1rY.II' Vol'l WANT TO SI!LL CALL CLeLAND

CITY LOCATION! $49,000
Vinyl added 1 etory lhal has
living room, kitchen, 2
bedrobmo, bath &amp; laundry.
Nice front porch. House has
had updating . Handy

,......

~

.. - .,....,.

REDUCED! II,IDO.OO
Come &amp; Ch~k out whal
yoU:re mlsalngl Private
selling 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, large aal·in k~chen
w/extra cabinet space,
fonnat ·dinlng area, covered
lront porch, carport &amp;
garage. Around 2 •acre lot.
1M3

One. Hurry on over. Call VLS 388·

88261446-6.806.
.
1211\l CLAY ST. Vinton. Ohio nice

101 do a llnkt work for $3 ,500. Suild
. .
.
or mObile home. Water tap &amp; elec .
d1mng room with a Vfe~. Glas s available. VLS

onclosed back porch. Forst floor IIOIKI COMMERCIAL BlDG· 62

4 bed rooms , 3 . baths. Oli"w"e St., Corner lOCation . 1990Sq.
In the finished • ft. good roof. Owner will seH
c::ar g_a~age inventory or bUilding separate or
. Anfsttcally together. $60.000 Make orter,

treeo 112202 NEW BRICK RANCH some

diSCriminating family will take pride
owning a beautiful BRICK home.
Central foyer entry w/extra large
rooms throughout. 2800 sq . ft. 2
car attached garage . Elec. H.P'
loads of Wlllk ·fn closets, laundry
rm , kit w/ialand bar, oak cabinets,
all appliances, cement driveway

pad &amp; walks. Huge
8826 or 448-6606.

·

&amp; Home with a family future . Large
home wffam . rm. fireplace, jormal
dining rm, breakfast i'm, fenced.
pond &amp; 2 wells alsO mineral rights.

VlS 388-8826.
12M Baautltul Stocked Ulko piUS
63 N; , mil was used tor a camping
grounds &amp; pay lake. Greatlocadon
ror sub-dividing or build a home.

VLS.

·----

. . . ·'

. - ..:.r

mobi le hOmes with room fot

-·

~

.... '

.- -··

-·"'

01 features In IIIia 4 bedroom
3 bath honie including large
master bedroom, living room,
tarp country kilchen lillly
equiPPed with french doorS
lhll. lead to wrap around
decking . Full walk-out
basemen! with huge family
rae. room area with · 2nd
k"c:hen area cornplate with
appliances. Lots .of exira
slorage epace. Come and
enjoy
this
. well
c:oriltructedlrnainlaine!l rustic
8lyle home. See " and fall in
lOVe. 1111118
•

badroom """"' nome. large barnS,
and other outbuikfings call Wilma
you'll have with this 3 bedroom

bam. some fence. Cal Wilma.

QUAUTY
QUALITY
QUAUTYI Brand , _ I10me
ready to occupy! 2 Story
colonial home b~il . with the
family .in mind. 4 bedrooms
with walk·in d0881a, 2 112
balh8 (tnaDr bath complete
with whirlpool tub), foyer.
living room, kitChen', dining
room. Heat pump, allached 2
car page. basement. Low
maintenance. Flat over 2
acoe 101. city echools. Lat us
tell yoiJ about the rest. City
sdtoolsl , . , .

LOOKI Own.'e Reduced ·
Price $5,000.001 Now aslcing
$54,900.00 IIPIICious raised
ranch wilh' lots of living
space. "3·4 bedrooms, 2
baths, rae. room &amp; living
room. Al1aclted garage plus
adciHionill detached double
car garage. OVer 3.9 acres.
Immediate possessiortl , _

,OWNER REDUCED PRICE
OF THIS 51 Aae rrlllbad ol
land to $55,000.00 . 2
County water taps. Quiet
country selling: Lots or rosa
lrunlage.
11000
DON'T HAVE A LOT OF
CAIH? Let this Seller help
you wilh some financing . 3 ACREAQE...Lots of road
bedroom ranch etyle home frontage .., approx. 100
SitUated on small fol. Asking acres. Rio Grande · area.
price is $25,000.00. Quiclt Quiel-.cl end toad. Owner
wanting lo sell in on tract.
posaessiorll 11112
11172
LDOKINO TO BUY SOME
'
RENTAIJINVESTIIENT
110,1100.00 VACANT.I.AND
PROPERTY!
Then
consicler
ALL THAT GUTnRII n.,
approx 7.4 acres IOith pond .
in !liS 3 one of lh-1 4 Diflllrn Country water available.
bedroom, 2 112 bath home properties conslaling of Nice homeSite, fencing . City
wtlh personality to spare! ·aeveral cliflerent unital In ldtooiS. 1918
Decoralor
!ouches town localionl. Call for mora
1Jtr0141hoU!. Split .... _ , information. Starting at RIVER LOT· Utile lass than
apacloua ..... room. Almotll
$35.000one acre. · Includes well
5 acres with fencing &amp; bam
water, 3 electric hooltups &amp;
REDUCEO
PRICE!
SmaJ
fol
ideal lor a couple horses.
·stoclted ·pond. Clasa to Rio silualed along the Ohio block basement. Lol has
Grande, city school. Loads Rw. 'Approx..803 acres. been St.WV8J8d......
warer &amp; electric available.
morallll3
IIOBILE HOME
3
11110
bedrooms. 2 balhs, living
LOTS of land '!einq approx.
1011111, dining room, kilch8n &amp;
430 - • • m/1 wilh road . LO!tROOfoiEV
ARII:A...Oviu 2 acres more. Land not included in
siluallld a1 SR 588. Wooded. · the sale. Asking $18,000
nice place to build thai , _ 1171
to mention 4 gas well8.
Cheshire Toop. C8lf today for home . County water
cornpfe181isting. , . ,
available ... oily schools! REDUCED PRICE! Smallol
$19,900.001114
situaled along . the Ohio
RW.. Approx. .803 acre.
wate&lt; I electric available.
fi50
.,

121U JACKION PIKE AREA.
brick' rand1 wl1l1 ,.;,. and Iota of updates, large lc!t,

Wilma or O.C.

12142· WITH ROOM TO MOVE
AROUND, e•cellent huming.wrth

severar home sites, road frontage
on 2 roads. 98 acres mJI_. Wilma or

o.c.

112143- COUNTRY SECLUSION
12111 HISTORICAL SPEAKING AT ITS BEST, 31lr, 2 B. Jenny Lind
charm irlg •. Victorian home 4-5 l1yle 1 1/2 story home with wrap
betfrms. 3 baths, ki1, formal DR &amp; around porch on 58 acres. Call
LA.
Crystal
c handeliers o.c .
throughoUt, lull bsmt with ,_RIO ORANOE AREA.
3
complete kit, stone WBFP. BA BA ranch with 5 acres m/1 only
w/gas flrepJace garage , 55 000. Wolma or O.C.

Yrill1-

..,_..,.., lot El«:lusiYe Yiowit~~~
L Smith o041H1806.

MEIGS

~P'I'!!i.~Otd hOme and

WAITING FOR A
BARGAIN? HERE IT IStl 3

12835

bedroom . 1 bath. living: rm
wJI,replace. nice eat-in kitChen,

OGYOred pot;o, oil1ing on 1 acoe ~.
~al ... this one

=111"&amp;

OUNTY

12117

2 balh , living rm w/FP. eat·in
ltitcllen. utifily on. CIA. farge 2 deck. 28 ft. rd. pool , slorage

~ ·~1

Caroly• Wudl· 44t-1007

.

Ranch..,..

MINIATURE FAAitlt
llama 3 - . . . .. 1.5
-.eh, living rm wtFP. skytights fi;7411fiEAlHTAKtNO
WOADII Ttwo 8&lt;-level 3/4
2.5
~ - Ulitity
· eo11·tn
buemenl.
rm, kfld\en,
de&lt;:k, beth. eat·"' kit. LR ,.!fioop~aoe, FR
So)llll'a - . 241124 cuporl wlfireplaee. C/A, 2 car oarage
24 • 31 tt.m. ~ bergain. ..,"'11 on 2 5 ocoe ""· Tl1ere's ony

G1mes "'-1707

SOLDI

Brictrr

PRICE

fll"d ..... caa

ee...

~

a

ranch

•liP"""'-

nl7t . . , . _ II CITY.
---.r
s .. .,_

•:1• -·--"m
mr
JERRY IPRAD'..NI----- Ml-21:11
TURNER.

lNI2 ltlfYhama ..... ,1111_
1 1/2 Ia pnc.J to ... ..
135.000. COl ... Hoys

1• tt:n

---··••
. ...1...

tttl3181 .

llfiENOAJUf'iHI:-·-···--

'

f

_,to
•

Hlya ... 3183

I'IIHER'8 IUifDM8ION- lltlat:UIIg to bullet thai dr.-n
laM? wa , _
I' u o - wllh- and
lllclrtcau X He. I1',M'ID

ICII f .IC) CO' I " ' · -

ono

:

•

~

j

- 1 Roncft hOme wf3 BR's &amp; 2.5
buemenl. Nice - - fnlnt · Appro.J. 2343 oq. ft. buift in
""""" Coll'llricll M• .._,. Cl1ina cabinot &amp; in Li
311114.
Beautiful ki1c:htn W/JJIIW
counter
topo. · OW, relr&gt;g. 2 car garg.
wlworbhop •••· lhed . ~· • 24
IOOOtal1op .,_ _ &amp; · Much
moral $148,1J!l0. cab Paulcla 11.

~~=~210111 and a wal r..pc 12 X52 mobile
:112.110000
.
•

f.

~. Get

-

acres with a 2 11ory IJiaze!llile

CHARIIELE SI'RADUNG-·

A

742-3171

with 2 bedrooms and an GOIIIIIMng. Al .fllr the prtce olen.

DAVID WISEMAN, BRQK.ER,GRI - 446-9555

DON 'T DREAII

DIIEAII,.BUY ONEtt 3 - ·

Cheryl Lemley ·

I

DOlliE

.
..

~~·~oo:.==

ki1ctwin with breakfast nook, 2

wieemafl@zoomnet.net

- ..

H73 fiAfME DEVELOPMENT
LAND 117 Ac. MIL. Close to

- ..... the.,_

... - ··· 10 beautifully 'Grand
El~e livlflll '"'
for your - - . ,... at
town. thlo home oftero charm ond
liYobility. . liYiniL roo.!.. nice aiZe

WISEMAN .REAL ESTATE,INC.e
(740) 446-3644
........,_,..

121125-lt tannlt~~~la what yoo are In

the markp!: for thiB is it. 280 acres
m/llhal will suit your fancy with 2
homes and a mobite hOme pad,
barns, free gat and a privale

landiflll stnp. Wilma or o .c .
l2tiZI Greal pasture land, wl1l1 a 3

W/linOIIIod on SR 51111. city
&amp;d10oll. •BWS, 2 U bolito. F..

lot.-

12187· Aaeage For Hunting Or To
Build A New Home On Rio Grande
Area. Call Wilma 446-2851 .
12901 Great building site with
seclusion 3 acres m/1. Call Wilma.
12S1112 Investment prope rty, 2

dOublewide on 13 ecoes with la'llf

'"-·-··"·.,.
,..,.,.,,.·u

lui-. 1

•

12958 U Acroa Cowboyo Ranch

AEOUCIDt

plus a carport. You'w
wailed long enough
tilct
lhil, cal today. Priced II $54.1100.

deck VLS 388·

or 0 . C. for infol••l&amp;tiol1.
•
121130 FANTASTIC VIEyt, is wha1

This

Loretta Mco.dt. 446-7719

www.vle.mHil.com

121124 Ll Grande Blvd is
I
you. No repairs GY9f'V1:hing new
like new, bath, roof, stdlng, gutters,
sink, cabinets, wlndow1, h8atetl
garage, fenced yard, patio &amp; On &amp;

HOllE

E-Mail Address:

i

.

. . . COII'I8y/Cora ri!1" ·
-~~ WANTS THIS

ttl

CARA CASEY ..................................... 2 - ..
wtUIA WILUAIISQH ........................- 1••
i Ohio O.C. FEREBEE .................................. m nn
US! I.

18'x80' outstanding mobile home
with a deck. special· cabinets ,
window&amp; , and built-In music
center. 3 ~A, 2 belhs. beaulii\Jl 11

RACINE· ot11t FlOor F,_ Home with kilcllefl,
IMflg 100m. 2·3 bedi'IIDin., 1 bath. f;loora are

bedrooms, 1 beth.

S

Loc

another, a11 on 3. acres mil Call
.
12018 NEW 11M Sunshine Wilma or O.C. 446-2851 .

lhal
room, .-.da

ca" -

1111 '

Hnll1: vlamtth.com

:az::~s~~~~ 1

2 bedroom mobile -

baaement, 2 car
piUI 24 K 38 building

A

Main 0ff1ca . 388·88 26
958 Clarlt· '::ll8pi~_Rd .
Bidwell,'.'
.

lit

B!)I~'Jt'll . RIIN AREA- Superb loCation and a vieW ollhe
mobile home 01' build • nice , _ home

carpel/vinyl, W!llll are drywaiVpanel. Heat is
provjded by FA B.G. AIICINO 127,1100

·

8828 $54.000.

·

padting area. l121.000.00

PRivATE, QUIET, REMOTE I PEACEFUUI
Thie delcribee IIIia epprox. 80 Acres.Of Vacanl
ground, loca1ed on Roea Road. Eleclric &amp; TPC
waler Is cloie to aile. Th8fe are aomtt
good bUilding silee. Plus an abundance
!Utkey and deer.'lf you like quiet country!!
IS FQR YOUII A8KING S45.000 .

..

CREW flO. A large 1.5 ai:re lot wlltr a Barrington doullleWide,
aitting on a full - 1. Home has 4 bedrooms, dining
room,IIJmily room. all in 1l'ound pool; and a lalge back dedt.
S51,100.00
..

me...

BEAUTIFUL PROPERTY LOCATED ON STATE
ROUTE 588. COUNTRY SETTING JUST . A FEW
MINUTES FROM THE .CITY. 8 RENTAL
UNITS ... PRESENTLY FULLY OCCUPIED. PLEASE
CALL SOON FOR MORE INFORMATION AND AN
APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS PROPERTY.

P~OFESSIONAL

SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE' .

~
CfP. ~ &amp;J. VIAGINIA &amp;IIITH. IIROIIER................
I
446•6806 ~
(!)JaG EUNICE NIEHM ..............................:.......
Branch Offlcp PATRICIA HAYS,................................UI -4

patio. Over 3.6 acres. plus
bath,
laundry. Cd.lered rear
more11171

WOODED SE111NG... Scads

RealtY
OPPORTUNITY

AFFORDABLE C
. 'OMIFOA~I
You'll love this
horne as ·you errter
door In the living room
: . : . . a loads ·of
IU"oundlng, just
off this room ' Is 1111 oversized
family room IOith formal dining
room. Large eat·ln kHchen
w/lols of cabinets master
bedroom w/doubte cloMI &amp;
bath, aclditlonal2 bedrOOmS &amp;

NEW UITINOI NATURAL

Henry E. Cleland Jr..992-2259
Sherri L. Hart ............ 74~2357

.
Y

.*

.

ac mt1 Close to !Ojlrn. VLS 388·

IN PRICE
taS,OOO.OOII New price of
$105,000.00 CommerCial 2B"
x 52' building with approx. 2
acres. C.reat spot for produce
marke1, craft shop, . ere.
Purehale with extra 100' x
oiOO' lot. State Roule 160
iocalion. 11001

75Mhz Penttum

1048.

lenence· Pa fntl ng , vinyl aiding,
Clfperur~. doors, WindOWS, balha,
mobile home tepair and more. For
free estimate call Chat, 740·992-

&lt;?!.· t!J

l""l~

...,...P"a,

REDUCTION

830Mb hard drive, 4X CD·AOII,
3.5 floppy, 14.4 internal modem.
33.El external, two years old. internet· ready, $600 firm. 740-992·

Uain ·

90hp. Chrysler motor Wltrailer
$800. 30•·875-5019 after Spm or

730 Vana &amp; 4-WDa
.76 Ford F-250 ••• High 8or. 300

town
much more lhao meeta

MISSINOI Warmlh of a
lamily to fill the many rooms
in thrs Southern styl' home.
There Is 4-5 bedrooms,
formal dining room, family
room, rec room. 2 tul baths,
plus 2 half baths, roomy eat·
In kllchen, basemen!.
'allaclied double car garage,
over 5.8 acres and so much
Immediate

1t2ft. deep-V,
beiQe W/11nd interior, • Oc;;yl,

1ol18

'

Home

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Manha Smith ................................... 441 -1919
.
. 446-4618
Judy ~Wiu .............................. 44J.IJ262 Cheryl Limly ................................... 742-3171
J. Merrill Caner......................... 379·2184 DanaAtlta..................... .................... 379-9209
Tammie QeWiu............:...........:245-0022 Kenneth Amsbary ......... ........... :........ 245-5855

19119 Saa Imp 19

Factooy S· IO Wheela (740) 44i-

low monthly payments on plano,

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind ·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winrera,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740· 245 ·
5'21'.

General

1-800-585:.7101 or 446-7101

anchor. like naw. seoo. 300-1175·
3581.

1178 Chev~. pic;;k-up truck, runt
good. 304-675-3199.

.

7795.

=Eitate===G:•:n:e:ra~l
~::====----.
·-----

t21t aluminum Jon boat. trailer. 2
folding 1ea11. aluminum oara &amp;

1913 Ford Dump Truck F-800
Real Good Bed; 1973 Oodgo 314
300 Engine740-446-39811.

Checll Out The•e Deal.!

saelocally. Call HIOQ.288.a21 &amp;

CIC

Stove. Sink, 12,800 , 740·250·

750 Boats &amp; Motors ·
lor'Sale

- ·· 3C)4.4511.101111.

thousand acreo of wayne National

5,100 sq. ft remodeled building.

e860l~ Message.

..... 74().742·11103.

Upton Used Car~ Rt. 82·3 Ullll
South of leon, WV. Financing

the end ot a townshi~ road. Boou:
the ac-reage is adjacent to OYef a

I

French City llaytog, 740·oi4G·

18 Harley Davidson lOft tail. CUI•
10m, exceUem condldon, very low

9000 Ext. A-2814 For Current
Usting~
•

up you've been dreaming of all
yoor lite. Rustic 3 BA cebin on 69
acre• In the mlddte of nowhere!
Very aecluded in Walnut Twp. at

license. Equipped commercial

·

Vellow head Amazon parrot with
cage, 1 1000; Umbrella Co"'atoo
with large cage and accesSories,

EX1rtlll 7~3945.

Corvettes. Also Jeeps, • W0'1.
Your Area . Toll Free 1-BOQ -218-

Atlontlon Hunton... Here'olhe oet

t

1998 Honda 300 EX E•Cellenr
Condition, Hardly Aidden, Many

For Sale By Original OWner: 1991
NIS&amp;an Mulma OXE Leamer tn·

Real Estate General .

245·5443.
Packard

Vk:ltie, 740-441-21107.

eo, Cadlllaco , Chevy&amp;, BMW'1,

poisoning . R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUP·
PLY, 740-992·2184 (www. ha~py -

Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI
S2t.95 Per 100: 1· 200 PSI
$37 .00 Per 100; All Bran C:;:mptession Fittings In Stock

$ot,000. 304-e75--7591 .

Seized Cars ffom $1 75. Porach·

LAR? IT WORKSI Against Jl.uJ,

992·3301 .

1998 • Arctic Cat 454cc:: . 4xo4

Euy Bank Financing For Uted

terior, Sunrool, Loaded, Well

~system ic

Excellent

mil••·

Credit Problems? We Can Help.

Visit our Web site at www.alhens·realty.com.

n•••

wo. Short Bed

.(!I

77

acres to c.a ll your own. Please call for more
information . Priced in the $120's . 594·J

1GG3 Chrysler Concord, 78.000

Po~- U~

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

o~eed,

1902 To~ota Tercel 5spd, super
red. 304·675-5325.

1994 Coleman

lmprove~w ,,~--------~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~

Appliance Patti And Setvlc:e: A11
Neme Brands Ova, 25 v..,. Ex·
perienct All Work Gu11an1eed.

Condtlion, Sleeps 5 ·I, Awning ,

r,

Lovely 3 BR· 2 bath home set on 2.8 acres at
28547 SA 143. Family room w/fireplace and
breakfast nook w/lots of nall!Jal light. $80's.
531-J
.

eveningL

Motor Homes

lent Condition, 740·441·2723, With Toppar, 1o,ooo Mll11 On
7MH48-8387. .
Rebuit Engine, Hal Uft I Shill Kit, 2045, will conolder tredo tor a 1:.;.:.,::;::=_______ 1&amp;:_3_23_._ ___:_ _ _ __
2111. Wilderness Camper, t1aepa
Clean
lnoide l Ou~ IUOO Firm, goodpoNoonboat
11es Chryolor Concord ee,ooo Cel Aflor
6, lull IWning , ,good shape.
TamrneraCon...,.e.tktn,lnc.
5
P.t,l.
740-245-5829.
llllea, loaded, $1,500 OBQ, 740·
Auto Pani &amp;
$2.!iob. 304-&amp;75-7133.
For al your buMdlng nleda ...
Clrpar&gt;try: Fralllng and
256-01011.·
1980 F-150 4 WD 90K $3,6 0C ,i
Acceaaorles
.
~nilh car~trv.
740.::..:·3e.::7:...·7:.. 7:::.27:.·_
1995 Plymouth Noon 4 Doora, _
. · _ _ _ __
Roofing. Paining, Orywoll,
1
Plumbing and Eloctri&lt;al;
Green With Spoiler Automatic, • 1988 Plymouth Voyager SE, V-6, Cor Doily Extra Tire l Whotl, Tit
7.00.3874170.
For dedi.. adchono, rehabs,
Air, s1.soo wn ...~·::z pao. t32,ooo Mlln. $t,soo oeo. 740· Down
740·2511 '1340, 74().
7. . 256-1233.
.
810 . Home
at&lt;:
Cloth Banch Saat For 1997 Ford
I
ementl
Forlrr.. aoilmatocall:
I--:-:-:-::-~~--111116 DodQe Neon, 27,000 MIIH,
F-150, Back Ia A 60140 Split, __...;;m;.;p~ro~v~-=-....;:__
740- 112.e317
1993 A&gt;ntiac Tranoport mlri·von.
1
2 Door Expreno, S7,0911 OBO, lwl'i•l AC. PW, POL.
BASEMENT
c
·Senior Cl;zen.OiocouJ11S.
call Grey, 1250, 740-3111141237. . ·
74().25&amp;-1539, 740-256-1371. .
740·992·7028ar eveningt SCM·
WATERPROOfiNG
o1.
Ntw oaa tanks , 1 ton !tuCk
882-3480.
UncondhlonaiiiJetlrno guarantH. u40 EleCtrical and
lOGe Monte Carlo, .Black. Llatbor,
whlell &amp; radia1ors. D &amp; R Auto.
Refrigeration
Loaded. 33.000 Miles. n0·378- 111li95 Chevy Baaztr LT •dr. 414, Ripley, WV. 3Q4·37~· 3933 or 1· Local rataranceo furn01hed. Eo·
tabli1hed
1975.
Call
(loiO)
ol46·
2e66.
10?-273-13211.
ltather, loaded, 45,QOO
0870 Or 1·800·287..0578. Rogers Residential or commercial wiring,
l18,Qg5.
199•
Ford
F·
Hi,.O
XLT
new ,lef'lice or repairs. Mastef U·
1998 Neon Grwer1 ~ Dooro, Auto, 4x4, loaded. os.oo mlloa. Nice fibefQtl.ll 11:1pper to lit small WdltwPfOOfing.
cenaed elac::trlcla n. Ridenour
AC, 31,000 Mlloa, $7,200 080 $1•,11!15. Call 304·875-1!281 ofhlt pickup. ocr- and ;nted ..,;~
Electrical, WV000308 , 304·675740·258-8340, 740-256.a417.
ows. bronze; in color, must see.
8pm.
.
. 1786.
740-742·2102.
1997 CM!Iy Cavalier RS, 2 Door 19118 Chevy 4wd, 350, Sa~. air,
f
Coupo, Red, Griflto Interior, 5
SpHd , AC, Factory CD Player, e75-53320&lt;014-992·611a.
cruiM, uu, am-tm calletll.. 304- I ___:___.;.===::==R:e:e:l
2S.ooo Mi'-1, 19.500 080, 740·
256-1011 .
740 Motorcycles •
e-ma.ll ua for Information on our listings:
1997 Pontiac flreblrd Black 3.8 197D H.D. Sportoter 1000, S&amp;S
blgbencl@eurakanat.com •
Liter, V·l, Factorr l!oll1hed Alu· Cllb .• QOOd COf'dition, 14000 ;
minum Wheals, CO Pla~er 1084 H.D. Sportster 1000. many·
$16,500, Seriou1 lnqulreo. 740· ettras, excellent condition ,
441·1308,
$5200;CIIIII'onny, 74().949-2317.
Bad Credit, No Credit, Bankru~t· 1981. CB 650cc 4Cyl. Honda road
cy7 We Can Help! Bonll Finenc· bike, g90&lt;1 cond. $900.·Call K&amp;K
ing On UHd Vohlcjol, 740·401- Mobile Homes. 8am -5pm 304 01107.
.
·'
G75-3000.

lovod, $0,000 080, 740-4483139.

What's so different aoout the
HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·

Victor Victrola VV · )CIV 204841
walrAJt, loor 'model, 4 doors, work~
very well, 150 with records. 740·

Pets for

...

Watch Spring Unfold from the large front
porch of this 3 BR. 1.5 bath home set among
the trees on 3 .3 acres . 922 SR 681 is prelty
as a picture for just $84,000. 577-J

1101 Dodge Spirit ES, 4 Dooro,
Loaded. 114,000 Mile&amp;, U,695,
Good COndlllon, 740-44&amp;-2300.

&amp;

sa.soo..

BEDROOM, 1 bath , fenced yard, play gym,
gazebo, located in Cheshire. Well cared for
home. 599· M $50's
•

while.
, ax.
-ID appreclate. 304-937·2881 .

Clmpera

s._

25tl-1311 .

$200 . 740·643-0030.

560

11193 Satum st2; Power Surrvol,
lMiher Interior, 5 Speed, Excel· 1088 Chevy 4

790

.w~rranty, thrH ltltlf, 83 horae· 1--~---=----..,power, bowohl new July o f '97, 1998 Sprinter 30' travellfliler,
three matching Kawaaakt sk 1 like new condition , uaed 4 Urnes.
ve1t1 and trailer au ·oo wi th il , all accanorlea $14,760 . 304 t5000. 7o60-1'11l1·2203 br 74()..049- 87~3823.

work ~n. new •t-ust. YlfY rea-

. . -. 30ol-e75-373ol.

MEIGS COUNTY

Buick •cyl. $200. 1979 4.3 V·G

Miloo, Loadedl $e.&amp;oo
2-169.

750 Boats &amp; Motol'l ·
for Sale

. 730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

&gt;448-2203.

1·800-536-11.46

TRANSPORTATION

leave message.

quaner horse gelding, 7 40 • 742 .

1986 Ford 2 Oooro. High Mileage,

COnditlon, 11495, 740 -992-

71 0 Autos tor Sale

8,81~0---~~mt;----~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;~~~~

1993 Ford T...,., • Dooro, PS, 1983 llodgo Carovan I.W mlleo,
PB. Air, Automatic, Tran Or runa good, In good condition. 6 1/2, HP Outboard Motor, John$3,4G5: 740-2•s.an.
304-1175-1!171. '
oon Uoed very Llnlo, $325, 140·
246-1411.
•
111113 ,Piymoull Accf&amp;lm 4 Dooro,
Auto; 4 Cylinder, L010 IIIIH, 7.00. 1983 Full·lizo Chevy nn, goOd K...aki ITS Jl$ 1k1, still under

Shih-tzu Puppies Male &amp; Female,
Shots &amp; Wormed, $100, 1•0.·

Ty Princess Oi Beanie Baby,

Building
.SUpplies

Arabian Mare 5 Veara Old, Well·
l!tolol, GeniiO 7.00.4-1.

A1 2.9.. On Lawn Tractor&amp; And

Ready mid ·May-5 female &amp; 5
male white Lab puppies ~regis tered as yellow) . Hloh quality AOHA 4 Yr. Old Filly Sired By
with local father. Have been held Poco Hydecker t2.200. 740-256·
and loved daily. Call 304·875 · I'::206=:A:::•:::.k.:.;Fo::;,r_:To::m::;,"'l~·---5909 for pricing and appointment
Holstein Heifer Apporx . 400 Pds.,
Ready To Go Aher May 15th : $250. 5 F1 Woods Fimshing
Male Collies Thoroughbred, 7.a · Mower, Excellent Cond . 740-

Year In The Heating &amp; Coo11ng
Business! 740·448·6306: ,1 -800-

550

llee&lt;e Skid .Steer loade&lt;s. Cttec:k
With U1 About Flnencing AI low

4·H pigs, call 740· 949·2017 after
5pm.

Call Us Today, 1998 Is Our 28th

710 Autos for Sale

Livestock

Tractors. Hay Equipmen!, John

pomlments. 850 Second Ave . 1:::~---:~~.;,.:.~"':".,..

Gallipolis. OH. 740·446·1528.

WARM UP: High Efficienc~ Natu·
ral And LP Gas Furnaces, lifelime Wananty 'On Heat Exchanger. •11 ~ u Don't Call Us We Bolh
lose!· Free Estimates! Add -On
Heat Pumps Only Slighty Higher.

875-8040.

~arm

French CltyPotGroomlllg
..S·24121·8QQ.$4·1111.
Now Oponl
Prolessi onat Grooming by Ap· 630
Livestock

Ma tchin g Dr esser With Mirror,
Chest 01 Drawers 1 Night Stand;

Grubb's Piano - tuning I repairs.
Prdbtems? Need Tuned? Call the

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans, 1 ·8Xl·537· ~ ·

eo.- Flnencing, Down Pay,_,L

441-1419

Sola That Radlnos On Each Side.
Matching Recliner, L~eseat, Col·
·fee Table &amp; End Tabla: King Size
Wa terbed With 8 Orawera,

4085.

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Cratl Creak Road , Mason Co.

Sizes Of 4 WD And 2 WD

Green swivel rocker. good shape
S30. Free' bedspread. 304· 675·

Model 1100 Power Ohair,
Pric e: $1 ,500 , Camcorder $700,
7.0-388-1322, 740-388-aS?O.

.- ........ 304-&lt;lse.,.n.

I am looking br IWO terrett: II you
are the person who bouoht lhem
from the ArM about one year ago
plea~e ca ll melt Ferrets namet
Brandy and Teekia Phone ~740)

condi;on; 740-949·2905.

Jazzy

-

Scooters., Electric Wheelch&amp;ltS,
Salea : Renta l. Trade , New &amp;
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 740·

448-n83.

630

Gtavely lrOctor no. 5240 ""lk be-

875-4220.

shaft; rwo twin size mattresses,

piar&lt;&gt; Dr. 740·448·4525

8 N Ford tractor wldisc, good
-·• 12 aoo 30+875-38~
~~ .
• .
.
N.; .t 'ffi!N no till com planltf with
monilor I plllft. 7&lt;40·848~ 2878
EvMngt &amp; IIIII Ida.

Tigtr Ltg&amp;, Like New. $100: 740446-3224.

Upright, Ron Evans Emerpti&amp;e!l,

Full set of 858 irons, fiberglas s

610 Farm Equlp~t

hind, wl 4 anachmenrs, recondl ·

AKC Siberian Ftmalt I Wttkl,

740·379-2720, AFTER I P.M.

Ret1il1 For $ 1, 600 Will Sell For

Appreciate I 740·

710 Auto, for Sale

Vet Chocked, Sholl I Wormed,
Vlcon Hay Balor lolodol 1211
$125, 740·379-2383 Kathy.'
Malin 5'•5' Rolli, Samo i\1Now Open SundaYs 1·4. Mon·Sat $8,81!0; LO! FO&lt; Sale: 3.55 Acreo,

R &amp; 9 Fumltu,.

Brand Naw! Gre~t Gift! CDI¥ideo

s.. To

256-1688.

Princtu 0 1 Bllntt Baby, t90;

liko To Soli Avon, Call Pam At
740-245-5443.

Sale

:!Ool-1!75-..88.

$41 ln111ll1llon, 880·

&amp;~eclal,

Pets for

AKC Chihuahua small male,

Prlmaallt· $D9 tnttallatlon with
S50 reball. Firtt month lru wuh
lrea molfte channels, StarOne

Are Your Looking For Avon Pro ·
ductl But Don 't Know Wh&amp;rt To
Find Them? Also, If You Would

~

560

~mdlq ~---~ndbltl e Page 07

Pomeroy • Middle-port e Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WI/

Sunday, May 3,1998

Sunday, May 3, 1998

•

..

�1!'111 Dt•.

Monday

' ;e

~

II

•

During 'Better "'-ring Month'

Weather
T.y:Sh~rs

:,· is B ette r Hearin g and Speech

local hearing aid service plans to
donate hearing aid to senior citizen
GALLIPOLI$ • Mel Mock,
owner of Advanced Hearing Cen·
l(rs, Inc. of Gallipolis and Proctqrville will provide a hearing
impaired senior citizen with a pair of
tlellring instruments fn::e of cost later
tllis month.
· This effort is in observance of
May as "Better Hearing Month."
: The recipicn.t will be chosen
tl!rough a lottery system from the
qualified patients who apply.
. Individuals should call (740)
4211 - 1971 or 800-434-4194 . for
d¢tails and a confidential consulta-

Sunday, May3, 1 -

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Polnt"Pieaunt, WV

I

Tomorrow: Sunny

/1nagine
the

I

f

that new PRISMA
hearing
aids
use
Siemens voice
activity detection system to
continuously
monitor
for
. speech-like
sounds . Digital
control
logic
Mock
automatically reduces the volume of
other sounds when no speech is
detected," said Mel Mock, who is
board certified in hearing instru-

High: S01; Low: 601
High: 701; Low: 401

'

••

Promoted

rro.;

Milt Nuzum

~~

Pa!CI for by Hutum kM Court ot o\ppeal!l Comm4t.. David M. ~. y _ . ,

'.
•

Ads blanket Ohio with Issue 2 ·messages

2067 fawn Center Moll
304-345-92.10 •

I

I06 K""""""' Moll
J04.1725-2778

t;

u . "'"'ted
Local Utes
Every Weekend!'

-~wv
.xx; G&lt;eot ~ Bill&lt;).
304-757· lb

lttptlf,WV ·
Rt.33
304-372-2926
-.Mart 304-372-7134

~ ,.

· -.g!on.WV

~Mol
73t

WOI-Moll Rt.OO East

J04.733-4Q!)6

1315 f&lt;ultl/We.
304-522-2355

-

3509 US Rt. OOEost
J04.73b-23l6
17 M&lt;*l Street
JOI.&lt;I2A.6Q12

...

• AZINGER SUPPORTS THE RIGHT
TO BEAR ARMS.

":•.

• AZING~R WILL EXAMINE THE
. CONSTITUTIONAUTY OF ALL BILLS THAT
COME BEFORE JoiiM, AND THEIR EFFECTS ON
AMERICAN FAMILIES AND BUSINESSES.

.

·'" -

•

Pcaibl Ci, 011

,

6t4-992-7070

USE
OFA

15UlE
_ __
G~--.OH
61-l-06ol7

-

'

ygu QECIDE,

=~=~~by20%.
to work programs.

I«DEielienlnS!reet
6 14-J63.3583

--

.

depanmnents.~a,a~

Wci-Marlb14-894-3801

WIMolr.OII

'

.•

19!1~11·
61~

~Fl.!~::!.

. .

-·

Dl!hlter-"A liberal's choice" ·
~IllS "Y~'' cendldate" · .'

pli~ne

6t._m~700

, . , . _ Sq.&amp;ar8

-.011

\

.

By The Attoel.ad PI'HI
Two polls'of likely Ohio voters
found that more th;m half of those
surveyed did not support a proJudicial campaigns are normally endorsed his c!!Jididacy.
JlOSlll to increase lhe state sales tax reserved political affairs. The race for
"In an Evans campaign brochure
by a penny per dollar.
judge in the Fourth District Court of received by voters between April 24
The latest Buckeye S11te Poll
Appeals. however, has taken a decid· and April 27." Douthett and Nuzum
and the latest Ohio Poll, both of edly negativetum,auwoofthethree said. "Evans claimed endorsement by
which were released Sunday, said
Republicans seeking their party's 'Soulhem Ohio's Top · Prosecutors
most of the probable voters they
nomination iti Tuesday's primary and Sheriffs'."
questioned opposed state Issue 2.
have joined forces to attsck the cam·
"This appears directly beneath a ·
The ballot issue would raise the
paign practices of their opponent. map of southern Ohio with the coun- ,
state sales tax from S percem ·to 6 Gallipolis attorney David T. Evans. ty sealS highlighted,• lhe lwo candi·
pen:ent. generalinalbout $1.1 bil·
In a statement issued jointly Fri· dates conlinuod. "In our view, Evans
lion per yellr 10 be evenly split · day by candidates Marshall B. Dou· is anempting to imply !hat these
between schools and property-tax
ihen and Mill Nuzum. Evans is elected offiCials have endorsed bis
relief for homeowners.
accused of distributing campaigtl c&amp;ndidlcy. •
.
The Buckeye State Poll, based , materials thai are "deliberate allempts
Evans' opponents said a Friday
on telephone inlerVie.ws with 1.153
to 'mislead the public as lo his expe· lnvesligation they conduclechhowed
·randomly selected adults from
rience and endorsements.•
thai atleasl· seven Republican sher·
- April12·30. was..conc!Uc.ted.byJhe: ~· . Doi!wn...is .judae -of Jackson . ·iffs_.in the 1-4-cOIIItty--dislrK:t,indi~Oitio State University Colleae
County Municipal &lt;fou~. Nuzum ed they did not support ruin! ____
Soo;ial and Behavioral Sciences'
serves as municipl!l judge in Marie!·
"There was never any ,lalement .
.
'
• ,f I
f
,
,
Pomeroy Ieder carriers are plansurvey research unit. The poll w_u
ta.
. by me thai all prose~:,IMOn 'aiiiJ sher·
ning their fourth annual food drisponsored by The Columbus DtsEvans issued a statement Saturday iffs endorse David Evan~. • the. Gal·
w: on Saturday. May 9 in conjunc·
paldt, Columbus television station . dismissi!)g the pai(s allegations and · lipolis Repui11icsn responded. "Melly
WBNS and the college.
~barging the two are "trying to stir up
are Democrats and would not be
lion wilh the annual National Let·
ter Carriers' Food.Drive.
The margin of error for the poll
a non.issuc.•
•
backing me ... the home county iller·
was plus or minus 2.9 pen:enrage
. "late in many campaigns we iffs for my two opponents were 1101
The Pomerpy branch of the
NalionaiAssociltlionoflelterCar·
poiniS.
enter the 'silly season'," Evans said, asked for support out of respect for
rieB, AFL-CIO; will collect DOlt·
The poll projected that 61 per"i!nd apparently my 1wo opponenls their local judges.•
·
perishable food items on their
cent of lhe n=spondenls who are
s,ee things that that do not exist on
"Bul a large number are pictured
routes Saturday, and will donate
likely to vote on Tuesday opposed
P!IJ!Cr and/or miss photoarsphic evi- (in the campaign literature) wilh me
lhe items to the Meias United
the measure, while 39 percent lienee thai was i:learly printed for any and have been very supportive."
Methodist Cooperative Parilh. for
favored it.
eye 10 see." .
·.
Evans added.
disirihotion to needy families:
For the Ohio Poll, the Institute
, Amona the items challenged by
As for the map used in ~ camPostal customers served the
for !'olicy Resean:h at the Umver·
Douthett and Nuzum is the "claimed paign piece. candidate Evans a.~sert·
sity of Cincinnati questioned 809 e'14orsement.by (Highland County) ed: "The map of the district showing
to
randomly selected aduiiS who ideo·
SlteriffTom Horst" that appears in an the 14 counly seats within the Fourth
lified themselves as likely voters.
Evans' campaign brochure dislribuled District is ju.\1 lhal."
Thai phone poll folind thaljS.9
to voters in late April.
"It does not state or imply lhat all
percent opposed Issue 2, 32.6 per·
The document contains a picture of the prosecutors and sherifrs
centsupportedilandli.Spercent ofSherilfHorst,includinganattrib- endorseme,"hecounterod."lnfact.
A ...
WC,C undecided. Pollsten ftiCIOI'ed uted quote thai praises Evans' back· the headline sa~s: ;~vans Knows All
1'\ I
in the undecided votm and issued ground ll!ld e~penence. ·
of Southern ~to!
· ly JOHN OMICINSKI ·
011
10
a final projection of 67 percent • Dout!tett _and Nuzum charxe '!'&amp;~ . ~ candtdale wenl
assert · GanMII Newltervlce
opposing the issue and 33 percent
UPI!IJ mqutry, Horst has denJed that stnce he has !raveled throughout
WASHINGTON - The Senile
supporlina il
endorsement of Evans or even mak· the district- and has practiced in 10 voted 80-19 last week to add three
. The poll, sponsored by The
ing the slalemenL"
'
of its 14 counties during his 22 years former communisiStates 10 NATOCincinnati Enquirer and the UniEvan.s .countered that "... Horst as an altomey - lhat, "It's a 1011~ 1Y Poland. Hunasry and the Czech
versily of Cincinnali was convery wtlhngly was photographed IJ'UC statement that I do know the diS· Republic - bullhe nexl expansion
ducted between April l2 and May
with n:-e --: directly in -front of his lrict very, v~ _well."
may be a very tough sell.
I. The margin of error wa.~ plus or
off~ •n Htllsboro.
.
~~~ dillm~ ou.t-of-hand an
The debate revealed a streak of
1 P.ersonally read to htm a pl'o- addtllonal complatnl raised by Dou- concern for Russian feelings among
minus 3.4 percentage poinls.
·
Both polls found more support
~sed qt101e for. use by me in. the lhett ~ Nuzum: Thai_a statement ·some senators. as well as fears of trig·
forlssue2amOngwomen,Democpnnt~_brochure, Evans~ and made 10 a 5~ pubh~ 10 the . gering a nuclear war with a Russia
mts and younger voters and more
he wdh~al~ ~sented I!&gt; th1s usage ~orts~~lh Ttmes mcorreclly whose army is faRing aport.
opposition among men Republiand atlnbuno.n.
tmplted an endorsement for Evans
N . he
.
cans and older uote~. •
"The p\clut-es. an: not cricks or by Fourth Distn_'ct Jud_lle Earl enou~- t~ntheumPolesent .wHasun!!:!'.~
cr
••
ardbolld fak
~-added '1b
s phe
..--6 ,. ~ u:q&gt;
Brian R-nberg. a spokesman
c •
es~ ·~
·' any·
le. nso~.
·
•
and Czechs out of NATO, largely
for the Vote No On Issue .2 cam- ·. one 5• e~, 1J.!c ptctures are clar and
Regarding J~ S~n~, the because they have heavy historical
paign, · said Sunday the polls
convcncma.
·
Portsmouth Times 10 thetr April 28 IOUs But thesecOI-ICems about Rus
-fleeted the beiJC
' f thai Issue 2 '
Evans'opponentsalsoquestioned editiott.ono..-A-7ranacorrection
·
"
••
· r
the lai fal ·
he' ' ...th had · orrecd
sia could slop funlter expansion,
1
11
does 1101 solve the slale's scfioof.
campalllft lleralure Yc m se- to
tr story
me
Y especially when the Baltic states
fundi
lema.
,
ly implies thai elected officials have
(Continued 011 Pagl3)
demand enby.
Pr-esident Clinton said the
approval":
sliowcd that "American
Good Afternoon
support for NATO is firm," and
called expanding NATO to 19nalions
"a major milestone oil the !'Old lei an
undivided,
democratic and peaceful
Today's
Europe."
1 Sedlons • 11 Pa1es
. The new .trio- all former SoviCI
Vol. 49, No. 10
satellites- was welcomed into the
North Atlantic alliance by a comCalcMar
6
forllbly
wide miUJin, I~ more lhln ·
8-10
necessary.
11
Comlq
the vote came after 40 hours of
Editorials
2
debate over nine days in which .50
I mal
~e~~ator$ spoke. maklna the NATO ·
J
debate
u exhlllllive. trek ev-en by
8)1!1111
U5

Local letter carriers launch
·ann.u al-toed-drive on -May 9

g,,,,,..

CNia':'cOM

(103Cenbd ......

12 eor-- (ldwe
61..17$-721Xl

'"

Sentinel

614-374-2355
-.Mart 01~76-9277

.

..

CELLULARONE

IIOOEaoi-Sitaet
6J-6-691Cl0

238--

"Ill• ~aloe for Ohlo'l fUture"
If you lilt wll8l Mlkt Azlnger IIU to ay, Mlkt llka tor yourl
• ¥011 on lllllylth. For more lnformltlon ctill: ··
'

AII .. IIII.ICY

· AZ~GER'S

~·038

~2366

GMICfl•~• /We.
~

Lottenes

ARMV -

QRIO

W.VA,
Daily 3: 5-3-8;

- NATIONAL WAR HERO GENE WENTZ
OF. WATERFORD, OHIO

.,

.

Super Lotto: 4-7-16-22-27-34
l'lc:k 3: 1-0-9: Pkk 4: ~ -3-2-2
Klcbr: 6-7-9-S-7-0

AZINGER IS ENDORSED BY
FAMILY ARST AND NAVY SEAl AND .

Wci-MariO.lU-27119

Senate Slandanls.
·
Yet a 1=1ote look at the votes durina .the debate shows thai l'urtht!r
addiliolls -especially in the Bailie

J

Wgtbcr

1~00·980·3411

llllliiMoilll-

n.u, 4:5-7-2-2

0 19911 Ohio Valley Publillli., Co.

..._,OH .......II - (

lj

hit a similar theme: Issue 2 is an unneeded tax increase that wo~' t help Ohio's
school children.
·
The Vole No on Issue 2 campaign, bankrolled by the United Auto Workers. the Ohio Federation ofTeachers and other labor and education groups,
planned to spe_nd $200,000 on TV spots showing a fat cat supponer of Issue
2 sucking money out of a taxpayer's pockels with a shop vacuum.
Other opposition television and radio ads are being financed by the U.S.
Senate campaign of Democrat Mary Boyle. Republican state Treasurer J. Kennelh Blackwell and the National Taxpayers Union.
"We're going to be working through Monday," said Brian Rothenberg,
spokesman for the Vote No cwnpaign. But the campaign is running on a shoe-·
siring bud&amp;et. and "it's not go,ng to compare with the frequency of their ads,
that's for certain," he sai'd.
·
But when it comes to increa.~ing taxes. the no side may only need enough
ads to plant some doubts, observed Scott Brooks. associate director of the
University of Akron's Ray C. Bliss Institute for Applied Politics.
.· "When voters are confused, they vote no." Brooks said.

leave the items side lheir mailboxes for pickup by leuer carriers.
'f!le association asks thai only
non-peri~hable items, such as
canned goods. be leli, and asks that
no glass items be donated lo lhe
drive. ·
Last year. over 73 million
pound., of food were collected
lhrou&amp;IJ the drive nationwide. Over
1,700 pound., of food were collected locally.
Those working in Pomeroy area
stores and offices are also encour-

?;

•

1

aged 10 participate, by bringing
ite111s on either Friday·or Saturday
for pickup.
•
Items will also be collecled in
the Pomeroy Post Office lobby.
The nationwide drive is cosponsored by the U.S. Postal Servio;e. lhe United Way, and the;
United Auto Workers of Saturn, a
new sponsorfor 1998.
Co.tnpbell Soup Co. is also a
supporter, having donated I0 mil·
lion pounds of canned goods to the
effort.

Russ · ·an res pon.se ~0 expans •. 0 n
of N Q,·worrl·es s'·ome sena·tors

. HIS OPPONENT WHO CANNOT SEAT
··.· STRICKLAND:
NANCY HOLLISTER••• .
CpMMC)N SENSE CONSERVATIVE .Q8 TAX AND
SPEND LIBERAL? .

2114- Second Street

tie.
''We never said it would be easy," he said. "But we are working as hard
as we can to make sure this th,ing wins on Tuesday," ·
. The campaign eslimales it had saved 40 pen:~nt of ils money forthe days
before the election. The group, which expects to raise and spend $3.5 mil·
lion, has run a half-dozen ads since early April.
'TWo are still on the' air. One louts the numerous newspaper endorsemenls
collecled by Issue 2, underlining key poinls in red. The other is more emotional. Sepia-toned pictures of a deteriorating classroom with a leaking rndi·
ator are·contrasted with more ~peful images of children genin&amp; new teKI·
books and computer equipment.
·
An announcer asks, "If you wanted to treat every child in Ohio fairly, whal
would you do?''
Treyens says the message is simple: "It's all about the kids."
Opponenls of Issue 2.- who range from anti-tax zealots to labor unions
and the education eslablishment- are running their own ads.
Though the various groups have denied coordinating their efforts, all have

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rivals' objections

Polls don't
bode well
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· By tllmlnatl.tm tht IRS, 1 whopping 600 tax
forma would go to tht sh..-ctderll
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JIM.422-2355

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• AZINGER .IS 100% PRO-LIFE.

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• AZINGER IS FOR LOCAL CONTROL OF
EDUCATION; AND THE RIGHT OF EVERY
PARENT TO CHOOSE THE SCHOOL THAT
BEST SUITS THEIR FAM!LY NEEDS.

• Americans work .lfllil;~ ~rd every year to mML11
the demands of th~ government. We work more day!l
for the government than we work for ourselves.
• America1_1s SP.end 5.4 bill!on hours a year nnit,nlll
our taxes; ThiS;: is more hours than the enti
automotive lnd~ry spends every year building can!l
and trupks.
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• Americans spend over $190 billion a year
services to figurt.~out how to pay our taxes.

for service from Cellular One.

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32 Elllt&lt;lm SIYeet
J04..436.e6'7l

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• AZINGER IS FClR ELIMINATING THE TAX CODE
AS WE KNOW IT, AND REPLACING IT WITH
A SIMPLE, FAIR FLAT TAX.

· Why the tax ~pde needs to go...

Absolu~ly HmE when you sign up

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304-752·11&lt;14

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ICHAEL AZINGER

• AZINGER
WOFIK TO BRING FAMILY
VALUES,jACK TO OUR NATION • ~- ­
~D ITS _
CAPITAL

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THE REP~LitAN tANDIDATE
STlliCKLAND•••
TO BEAT 'TED
•

• AZINGER WILL WORK TO MINIMIZE .
BUREAUCRACtANDDEREGULATEPO~R
,.
OUT OF WASHINGTON D.C.

101 ~Street
304·-2355

-

By PAUL SOUHRADA
:Ataoc~ Prats Writer
COLUMBUS -Television viewers tired of the state Issue 2 ad in which
.a vacuum cleaner sucks ca.'ih out of the taxpayer's pocket have a choice: They
can watch the other side show crumbling schools where kids do without textbooks.
· Backers ofa piuposed penny increase in the slate sales tax planned to hom·
bard the airwaves through Tuesday in a last-ditch effort to salvage tht strug·
gling school funding campaign.
As the Every Child Counts campaign says in its ads: "It's a fact!"
"Our stralegy' has been to build and peak when it matters the most," said
.spokesman Cliff Treyens.
· l5sue 2 would raiseS 1.1 billion annually to be split evenly between schools
ud property tax relief for homeowner.~. The issue is part of lhe state's
4-esponse to a Supreme Court ruling last year that said Ohio's funding forIIIUia is unconslitulional.
· Based on statewide polls, Treyens conceded his group has an uphill bat·

·'

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Smgle Copy - 35 Cents

•

ELECT

I t

Bulls win in
2nd round of
NBA playoffs
Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Stock d'lv'ldend
is announced

a.

'

Meigs County's .

'

Crude soars...

No exoneration for Ray, Page 2
Southern wins powerlifting meet, Page 5
~arry Bird as role model for kids, Page 7

Possi

not . me~s scidencest.0 M I the
PRIS
BETTER- HEARING AND SPEECH MONTH • Margaret White, t.ft,
ccor mg
e • new
- and Kathleen Moore, seated, and Lisa Koch, M. S., of In-Hearing In
MA hearing aids change volume Gallipolis, are taking part in Better Hearing and Speech Month actlv·
be taken until May 22.
automatically
so wea~ers hear quiet l~les. Mrs. Koch said, "I am pleased to Join with all of Galllpolle In
Digital technology, the driving
sou~ds
whtle
protectmg
them from celebrating Better Hearing ·and Speech Month, and lealute the audf.
force behind computers, FAX
loud
sounds.
_
. •
. ologists and speech-language pathologlsta who work llrelteely to
machines, compact discs and satel·
He
eKplatned
that
some
models
bring better hearing and speech to the one In 10 families In Galllpolite communications, is revolutionoffer the exclusive TwinMic system lis affected by communication dlsordera. During thla annual obtlll'·
izing: hearing aids.
To offer the residents of this area that focuses either on soundS" com- vance, we should focus our attention on the needs of our cltlztna
ing from the front, or sounds coming who have some form of haarlrig, speech or language Impairment
this latest technology in hearing
from
all directions.
and ensure that everyone has accese to the treatment that helpa
health care, Mock now dispenses, a
"For example, this lets the wearer people with communication disorders lead acthta, fulfilling, and
computer-programmed hearing atd c_onccntrate either on the person productive lives.
that offers digital sound processing
that's hctter than -COs (compact they're talking to at a party. or hear
the sounds of traffic when crossing
CHESHIRE -Timothy D. Towne,
discs).
a
husy street," he added.
an employee of the Gavin Plant, was
"It's especially exciting to think
· JACKSON · Oak Hill Financial, promoted from equipment operator to
Inc. announced today that it has coal handler recenty.
Continued
D-l
declared a 25 percent stock dividend
offiCials on Monday. spwring talk he crippling sanctions imposed after payable on June I, 1998 to share- Named to positions
RAVENSWOOD· SieveS. Sed·
would meet with Venezuelan or Mex- that country's 1990 invasion · of hoi , of record as of May I, 1998.
·Kuwait.
·
berry,
G. A. (Sandy)· Linle and M.
ican offiCials·over the weekend.
stock dividend is the company's
Crude
for
June
delivery
rose
74
Todd
RitChie
have been named in
Saudi Arabia. Venezuela and Mex·
first since its common stock began
cenls,
or4.8
percent.
to
$16.13
a
bar·
new
positions
at
Century Aluminum
· ico in Much pul together a deal that
trading on the Nasdaq National Marof Wesl Virginia, Inc., the wholly
resulted in the Organization of Petro- ·rei; June heating oil rose 1.57 cents, kel on Oct. 12, 1995.
leum Exportina Countries and non- or 3.6 percent,' to 45.78 cents a galWith"'the · dividend, Oak Hill owned subsidiary of Century AluOPEC members such as Russia and lon; June unle3!1ed gasoline rose Financial shareholderS wi II receive minum Company that operates a
Norway cooperating to cut daily.out· 1.83 cenls, or 3.5 percent, to 54.29 25 additional shares of common large DJuminum reduction and rolling
put by I.72 million barrels a day, or cents a gallon; June natural gas . stock for each I 00 shares they current compte~ al Ravenswood.
retrealed I.9 cenls to $2.202 for each own.
2.3 percent of world supply.
: The culs briefly lifted prices, but 1,000 cubic feet.
Gold futun=s fell sharply on the
they quickly seulcd back into the S I 5
a-banel range amid skepticism all the · New York Men:antile &amp;change after
countries would hold to the deal long a trade magazine quoted Belgium's
e11011gh to see a supply glut ease. If finance minister. Philippe Maysladt.
~ilional culs are made, analysts as saying his counby planned lo sell ·
bCiieve prices may finally begin to more gold reserves to reduce its debt.
· Judge of the Court of ,Appeals
The report igniled concerns .that
rise.
"AI a)l!(lge of the Court ol4ppula,l.
· Prices further were supported by l;:uropean countries. as they form a .
promiH lhlt I will felllllully llld lllllllftlllllr
perform the dUIIH Of my cifftc.IIICI wtll .
aiatements from Iraq thai "serious monetary union, would sell much of
uphold
the lm.grlty of the court"
c:Onsequences" would occur unless lheir resaves lo reduce debt and rely .
die Uniled Nalions soon agrees to lift less on the gold standard.
11

Sports

\

••

ti~mC.andt.dates 'or lhl·s o"er wt.ll
''

Mey4, 1111

'

msy be diffieqiL
Sen. Jolin Warner, lt-VL, failed
.with 1 key .mendnwtl 10 freeze
NATO menNillip 1119 for It leul
. dtree ,.n. but ic lllrao."'ed e-ah
&lt;41 -to lelld a Wllllllll lia·
.1111*-lllbtleqttent l'l)tlllds. Trellies
te~~~~ire uwo-thinll vote ohpproval.
lilieS-

"*'-

"thoUght of Czech tanks rolling acros.~ join, and he might be right.
the Rus.~ian steppes is ludicrou.~." and .
Knocking on NATO's door are
ciled polls showina the average Rus.•- Slovenia, Austria, Slovakia, Romaian does 1101 care much about NATO. nia. Bulgaria. Albania and the Baltics:
"Our principal concetli with Rus- Lithuania. Latvia and Estonia.
sia must be Russian behavior- 1101
· A geostrattgic look al a map .of ·
the volatile mood-swings of Rus.~ian Europe would seem to favor Slovedomestic politics," said ·Lou:
nia, Austria. and Slovakia as the next
Several key political shift\ con: entrants, because lheir absence physlrilllited 10 Clinton's enthusia.~m for ically cuiS Hungary off from lhe oth&lt;a bigger NATO. Upon enterin@ er ne'Vt' Continental members.
office, Clinton initially backed an
OpponenlsofNATOeKpansionamorphous interim organization 10 Democrats and 9 Republicans called , P---~· , p
.. hal r. sed ob' .
bou
... u .....tlp .or eace t
ocu
l)flCitons on concerns a t
was neither an alliance nor a power- Russia's ·arsenal and its unpre-·
sharing group.
·
dictability.
Republicans look over the Senate
t"« f""•. addt'ng to rwo••u- 'or an
"We'~ talking ahout nucle~r
" ,......
r··~ ••••
,.
•
expanded NATO. In the House, vic· war." said · Sen. Daniel Patrick
torious Republicans had placed the Moynihan, 0-N.Y.. one of the oppoissue on their so-called "Conii:ICI nenL~. Another, Sen. Dale Bumpers,
With America." In the 1996 presi- D-Ark.• argued the sole purpose of
dential election campaian. Clinton's the expansion wa.&lt; "to hem Russia·
GOP opponent, Bob Dole, criticized in."
him for going too slowly on NATO,
Senate Majority Leader Trent
and the president's support for expan· Lon, R-Miss .. called it a "histoiic
sion quickened.
vote ... about what kihd of allies we
Meanwhile, NATO's success in want in 'a continent where we have
pacifying Bosnia-Herzegovina in fooghl three grea1 wars in a century."
1995, after years of U.N. failures and
Bul he _also noted, a&lt; the voting
250,000 deaths, cemented the bepn Thursday nighl, how much the
alliance's importance. In ils firsl-ever debate had been dominated by Rusmililary effort, NATO in Bosnia got sia'scotteerns,nuhcrthandiscussions
the i,naac of bein&amp; .lhe 'rare inlerna- of America's place in the world.
lional orpnizalion thai actually could
"We have heard," he concluded.
get SOiilelltina done quickly.
"1111ny eslimates of how our vote will
•.
influence the tangled web of Ru.&lt;sian
When Secretary of Stale politics and distutbillll coufl!C of forMadeleine Albri&amp;ht ciUill; aboard in · eip policy.:· But he uid. "The
early i997, NATO expansion picked was only lukewarm, as was Deputy
up speed She wu born in Czecho- 'Secretary of Stale Slrobe Talbott.
ilov.m, and her family fted the Red
Albriaht argues lgtiiiSI wonyinll
lyrlnlty of the 19.501.
aboOI RusiiL
AlbriJitl has been an uncornpro"If w-e Wlnt RIISSiiiO complete ils
mising booslcr of expantion, while lrariafonnalion into a modem Euroher predeuvqr, W81Tft Otrilltopba, iJI*I potJer," she wrote in an op-ed
widl J.4 Yotes suftlcient to ~- · article. Mille l111t thina we should do
Wimer predicled the epprovll is act a if·Centnll Europe is still 1
vote will triger a "Siampede'" lo RU88ian sp11en of influence."

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