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                  <text>Tfllllll'l trove ·
from the
171hCenbly

SatiWday's /tfl}or
£eague Baseball

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • June 15, 1997

c

Steubenville, the Grant Bridge in Ponsmouih and the
Tlrnt..sentlnel Stiff
.
Iront()n· Russell Bridge at Ironton.
POMEROY • The Ohio Department of Transporta.
The bridge was built in 1928, and has been closed
lion still plans to replace the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge, several times for major repairs. The state has earmarked
$25 million for replacement of the span, and has ~ired
.and expc~s to start ~nstruction in five ye~rs.
A pubhc. meeting a~ut the proposul wlil be held at . · Sverdrup and .~ociates of Columbus as a cons!llting
Wahama H1gh School 1n MaSon, W.Va. on Thursday firm on the proJect.
.
·
·
from 4 to 7 p.m. At that lime, ODOT and West Virginia
According to Nancy Pedigo of ODOT's Marietta
!Jivi~ion ofHi~hways officials will d~scuss how the pro· office, the firm has an 'international reputation for
JCCIIS progre~.mg, and answer questions and hear com·
excellence,' and was involved in consulting work on
ments from Citizens.
several large projects, including the I·77 project in West
. The P~meroy-Mason Bridge .is one of o~ly four Ohio Virginia. They arc currcndy doing the studies on the
RIVer bnd~es _ own~d by Oh1o. In adduion .to t~~ U.S. Route 33 expansion from Athens to Darwin.
Pomeroy br1dge, Oh10 owns the Fort Steuben Bndge m
The contract with Sverdrup places a maximum of

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~Chamber

of Commerce
schedules 'Lunch
WftW our legl.lators' ..,.

GALLIPOUS - The Gallia
County-Chamber of Commerce's
first "Lunch with Our Legislators"
has .)1een set for Monday, starting
atll :15 a.m. in the Gallipolis City
Park.
Co-sponsored by Ameritech,
chamber members and their guests
will have the opportu-nity-to meet
and interact with guests from the
I.Iegislati·ve branch of government.
Joining the event will be U,S.
Rep. Ted Strickland, State Sen.
Michael Shoemaker and State
Rep. John Carey. The luncheon is
to end at 1:30 p.m. with a ribbon·
cutting . ceremony dedicating the
renovated chamber offices at 16
State St.
Also in attendance will be rep·
resentatives from U.s: Sen. Mike
DeWine's office, the Governor's
Office of Appalachia, the _Economic Development Administra·
· lion, Community Development
• Block Grant ·program, · and the
· Ohio Department of Develop·
•. ·inent.
·; , · The legislators and representa·
tives are expected to be
. appr,~hed on such topics as
!lowntown development'and high·
. ways, industrial and economic
. (levelopment, health care, land use
planning, education and political
issues.

Good Morning
Paget

· 'Calendan
Clu•lf!cds
: , £onllgl

Slmy=
CINr

Detalll on
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Vol. 32 , No. 18
that ODOT is consider·
ing sites as far away as
Hobson · and Min·
crsyille. Pedigo said
that it is likely, howeV·
·cr, that the new bridge
will be -built In the
, vicinity of the existing
bridse, since the main
purpose of the span is
to connect the commu·
nities of Pomeroy and
Mason, W.Va .
Sverdrup and Asao·

ODOT schedules public hearing
on·proposed bridge replacement
By BRIAN J, REED.

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AppHislooin
sfter bombing
Jury decides
·McVeigh must
with his life

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F.dlhlrie!s

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Eoter1alnment

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C 1997 Ohio V.IIFY Publdhlna Ol.

$1.2 In consulting
expenditures.
The firm will
conduct the envi·
ronmental, histori·
. cal and ecological
REPLACE.-ENT
will bt
'studies required to In 1828,
finalize the current IICt Ia plannad for Thuraday
stage of the
process. The study will take in an area three. miles upriv·
er and three miles downriver from the location of the ·
exiSiing bridge.
.
.No decision has been made -as to where the new
bridge will be located, although Pedigo said in January

~=;~~r;~E:it~~=:buHI
in January,
pro- ·elates,
has 24hired
months
from

for _sunshine

Area farmers
Cold, wet weatherfprces delays in.
spring planting

their hiring date to
.
complete their studies.
After those studies arc completed, certain groups, like
the Ohio Historical Society, will be allowed to comment
on the findings. The answering of these comments, Pedi· ·
go said, is often the most lime-consuming aspect 'Of tile
Conttnulcl on page 142

Ohio hospitals .lose
Medicaid money
under budget plan

By PAMELA BROGAN'
By KEVIN KELLY ..
Gannett Newa Strvlct
nmes·Sentlnel Staff
WASHINGTON- Federal Medicaid payments used
CADMUS - The word for southern
by Ohio hospitals to pay for the uninsured patients
Ohio agricultural producers whose grow·
would be reduced ''1;;7;:;;;::;:;-;::;;;;
ing season has been affected by spring's
by 20 percent or II'
unusual weather is: piay for lots of sun·
$796 million by
. shine. ·
2002 under a budget
Above-average rainfall coupled with
bill
by
the coolest May seen in decades bas
Hpuse
and
· caused problems.. Jor .· aio":~~~::~:n:~
"~Yriliting"o'il_n~~~~th~r to '.
key
tee late Thursday.
'Producers w•ttr"peppcrr ~~~:~:
sun, while others have st
cold
The action was
shock," explained Jennifer Byrnes, the
opposed by Rep.
Ohio State University Extension Service
Ted Strickland, D·
agricultural agent for Gallia County, 'In
· Ohio, a .member of
general, plant growth has been slower
the House Com·
because of the cold.'
merce Committee,
Temperatures have been on the rise
which approved the 11 ::!:.!.J:.:.::t..:..!.:.:.:~~~D8t.::.J
since the beginning of June, but the need
bill on a 29·17 vote. "
..
for c'onsistcnt sunshine and moderately
· "This is harmful to ihe hospitals of Ohio," Strickland
· drier conditions has beeome apparent, she
said. ' 1Many rural hospitals that provide care for poor
added;
people need these payments to survive."
·
. Sunlight and dryness are also important
Rep. Paul Gillmor, R.()hio, who. holds the No. 2 slot
for hay . P!oduction, which has been
on the committee, defended the plan and said it would
delayed by dampness. If hay is allowed to
"slow ~own the rate of growth of Medicaid."
stand for long before cutting, "it will be
Other Republicans said the reductions would be off·
lower in nutritional value, • Byrnes said.
set by another p,l!lll approved by the committee Ol) a 39·
Producer Lowell Jeffers, who has
7 vote to give the states $16 billion to provide health
fahnC\1 near Cadmus for over 30. years,
insurance .to uninsured children.
·felt that cold and rain have to a degree
But Mary Yost, spokeswoman for the Ohio Hospital
slowed down his operation.
Association, said the reductions will be painful even
"With !he way the weather is now, we
with the additional funding -for children.
should h~ve had the hay in and cut, but we
- Qalllll County Agrlculturtl
Agent Jennifer Byrntl
"I think our hospitals in Ohio are going to feel the
haven't even started on it,'' he said. "For
1011 111111plta lht took frqm 1 tobtcco
friday on lltnltl Role! In
pain from-this cut," Yost said. "The reality is that our
the last two years we have had awful wet
Townllhlp with producer I.Qwell Jtfftnl, who plintH tht tobtcco. D1mp.
hospitals arc providing care to people showing up on our
springs, and this year,_the second day after nta
chlUy concllt!onl hlvt contributed 110 1 alow 11111 for agrlcljltllrt lil the
doorstep. I think children should be a first priority, :but
I set tobacco, it was 38 degrees out here." lrtll.
·
·
·
that program doesn 'I address o.lder people, like young
But farmers who started their crop early have been faring bet~ problems ·getting corn in because of soggy fields, but t~e situa·
parents, who have healt~ concerns too.''
··
ter than 1996, when many were unable to get into their fields tion is muth improved over last year,' she noted.
In 1996, Ohio's 202 huspitals received $340 million
because of' excessive rainfall, Bymes said.
·
.
A dry season is critical to fight infection from diseases and
in federal Medicaid payments under the disproportionate
"Depending on the soil type, some pruducers experienced
Contlnuld on PIP, 142
Contlnulcl on page 142
-"

Multi~state · chase leads ·t o arrest of_
We·s t Vi·r ginia man
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme•Sentlnel Stiff
POMEROY • A 30 year-old Harmony,
W.Va. man is in the Ross Coul)ly Jail follow·
ing a police chase Friday -evening that stai1ed
in Jackso11 County, W.Va. lind took in some 30
miles of Meigs County roads.
· '·
According to the Meigs ~unty Sherift's
Department, Daniel S. Fisher led an unnamed
officer from the Raven~ood Department,
several Meigs COunty deputies oDd an Ohio
State Highway Patrol trooper on a 43-minute
chaSe, after the Ravenswood officer ·noticed
that Fisher was driving with stolen license
plates on his vehicle.
The officer had tried to stop Fisher on the
William S. Ritchie Bridge~ but Fisher failed to
pull over. The Meigs County Sherift's Depart·

menl was then notified, and the chase sot tires on a vehicle. Fisher traveled another half·
underway. Fisher turned left at the foot of the mile before his vehicle was completely disabled.
Moderate damage was reported to David·
bridge, heading toward Racine, and traveled on
·
son's
cruiser, and light to -moderate damage to .
State Routes 338 and 124, as well as Tanner's
· Run Road, Sycamore Grove Road, Portland Trussell's.
David · Moore, Prosecuting ".Attorney in
Road, Elige Hill Road, Nease Hollow Road,
Bashan Road and Apple Grove/Dorcas Road. Jackson County, W.Va. said that Fisher will be
· Deputies Scott·Trussell, Robert Beegle and charged witli a third offense of d~iving under
Ben Davidson, as well as Trooper Brian Pack the influence, 'a sceond offense of- driving
from the Ohio State' Highway Patrol pursued under a DUI suspension, ilttcmpted murder,
Fisher to·Apple Grove Doras Road and Mile assault on a police officer, battery on a police
Hill Road, where Fisher struck Davidson's officer, obstructing josticc, failure to yield to
. crui~r. which was parked a! the intersection - an officer's signal, possessing stolen license
· .'
awaiting Fisher's a"ival at the SCC!IC. .
· plates 'ild destruction of property.
Sheriff James Soulsby ·said that he-under·
. When F'IShcr backed up, he struck another
cruiser, driven by Trassell. He was finally stands that Fisher fired shots ill the
stopped when Pack, used a 'stop Slick,• a tire Ravenswood officer's cruiser, resulting in the
deflation device that uses spikes to puncture charges of .attempted murder and relalcd

counts of violence to an officer.
In Meigs . County; Fisher will be charged
with three counts of felonious assault, one
felony count of stolen license plates, a felony
count of fleeing, driving under the il\fluence,
no operator's license and fictitious tags.
There arc also WJI!Tants on file for a parole
violation;'DUI and no insurance, according to
the sheriff's departmen.t report.
Sheriff Soulsby commended the officers
wbo took part in the chase, saying they did an
'excellent jpb of keeping Fisher boxed in'
during the chase. Soulsby also said that the
officers' -attempts were aided greatly by calls
that were received at the sheriff's office from
residents along the chase route, who listened
to the incident on their scanners and called to
advise the dispatcher of Fisher's location.

Bea.r .-company~s 'Emily and Emmet' make it to television
f!tf CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.QVC Augusl16.
·
.
sold primarily
Tlrnt.Stntlntl Stiff
·
· Emily and Emmet arc 14-inch handcraft·
in Ohio and
MIDDLEPORT- The Ohio River Bear - ed fuUy jointed bears made .with acrylic fabwestern· penn·
Co. ·of Middle)l!lrt is one of 20 Ohio small . ric and dressed in green plaid outfits. They
sylvania. Then
businesses and entrepreneurs select¢ tq are two of many lllyles of bears created by
six re~scnta·
ihowcasc their pi'O\Iucts and services on the the Oh~o · River Bear Co, Seven ~undred ·
lives began sell·
QVC cable television program at the Obio bears are being prepared for the show.
ing them at var·
State Fair.
.
.
Starting as a one-person bome businesa in
ious gift mans
. Susan llaker, owner of the C91111*!Y· 1988, The Ohio River Bear Co. has grown
and
shows
which produces a variety of jointed ~ by Icapa and bounds · over the past nine
around
the
will be scllina . "Emily" and 'l!nmlol"(,llll ·years.
.
country.
The bears were first sold at aaft fairs and
Today they arc .
throuah odnllanme~\ at ncliby ahops. Then _
sold not only
-" independent manut~urer's represent&amp;·
all over the
tive became intercatcd in selling the bears United States, .but in JaJllln, Hong Kong.
tor. the oompany. That niarked the comp1· Enaland, Germany and Canada. Baker's
nt• elllry into thc ~~~~ bUIIIICII. · company has over 600 wholesale cuatomell!
For the first ~ llf_fCIII the bears Were and i1 now hand making about 25 dilferc111
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CHEVROLET• OLDSMOBILE • ·LEKUS •
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bear models in various sizes and styles.
The business started in the century old
brick house. of the B_akers on Fourth Street·
with Susan doins all the designing, sewing, .
costuming and selling.
Ai. the business grew, more and more of
the Baker home was used for producing ·
bears to fill orders. It became evident that
.the time had oomc to find larger quarters.
A building in mid-downtown ~iddleport
was rented for the business unul last year
when Baker purchased the former Meadows
buildina as a permanent home for her bear
business. .
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Production of the bears takes place In the
rear pan of thc IUJC buildlna and a retail
lhop opc!llel in the front. To the retail bull·
cantlnUICI on page AI

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~.June11.1187

-Pomeroy • Mldc:lleport• Glllllpolla, OH • Point P....... WV

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Lobbyists come .run·ning as tax
cut proposal unveile.d in H.o u$e·

OHIO \Vt•,ltiH't
Sndtr, J.... l5
Aa:u~ f"olec:as&amp;

MICH.

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GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizatioos will be provided this week by
tho following dates and toea,
lions:
.
• Wednesday - Gallia County Courthouse lobby, 4-6 p.m. .
• i'riday, June 20- Guyan TOWJIIhip Volunteer Fire Department, Mer' cerville, 9:~0-11 a.m.
· · • Saturday, June 21- Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library, 1-3
p.m.
· children in need of immunizations must he accompanied by a parent
and bring a current immunization record with them.

. GALLIPOLIS- Two drivers were sliJhtly injured in a tw()-vchicle
accident'Friday at the intersection of County Road 3.(BulaviUe Pike) and
Gallipolis Township Road 25 I (Solar Drive), the Galli a· Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported.
·
·
Tracy A. Ferguson, 19, 3211 Kriner Road, Gallipolis, and Stanley Q.
Taylor Jr., 43, 3867 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, were both trBJ{sported
by the Gallia County EMS to Holzer Medical Center from the scene of
the 2:30 p.m. accident, the patrol reported.
Ferguson was tteated and released for contusions, but Taylor was later transferred to St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., an HMC
spokesperson said.
Troopers said Ferguson was no{lhbound on Bulaville Pike, five-tenths
of a mile north of State Route 160, when she .turroed left to enter Solar
Drive and collided with Taylor's southbOund minivan.
Damage to.both vehicles was severe, and Ferguson was Cited for failore·to 'yield and no seatbelt.
.

around through Monday

Krebs predicts slow going for farmland b.ilr

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I e1 'fbi Alloeilled Prall. and lbe Obio

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After the llllldy is completed and
. Conllnuecl from page A1
lppiOVed by fedenl officials, tbe n~ Baker has added bear clothing.
·pt«lll of deaiping • new bridge sweaters, furniture and other· bear
will ~· . .
related items, as well as a few bears
~lie Oh1o ,m rcspoiiSibl~ for produced by other companies.
replaciDg
owuenhip
of ·· Wh'
• ·
· · .the retat'I
the
bricJse,theto bridge,
tbe Ohio
blak, will
. 1le shoppmg
!n

reven to \Val VUJiaia once .it is
buill. in acCorduce with ill apeemeut ill pll&lt;lC between OOOT and
WV DOH iuvolvlng 0W11C11bip of
repllcmlent bridps,
1bll ap:emeut is ktnelly belleficial to Obloans, Pedigo aald,
tw • • of the hip COil of bridp
i!llfw.tioa and repm. ~ lllid
tbat Ollio illlfiOCII its bridpl once 1
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Bears.on televisi-on

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"This broadcast will provide
these 20 entrepreneurs with a
tremendous opportunity to market
their products to a natinilal audience, • said the Governor. "By partnering with QVC. viewers throughout lhe nation will see a diverse
store, custome111 are 111v1ted to. see _ cross-section of what Oh_io's entrewhere and bow the.llears are BC!Ual- preneurial spirit bas produced.•
ly made.
The winners were ch01en fiom
Tbe IDDOUDcement came Friday
more
than l.SO Ohio companies who
from the office of Gov: Oeorge
· \billovich tbat the Ohio River Bear competed for a c:bance to appear on
Comploy bad been selected to tate the live broadcut earlier this year at
two bear models on the live, three· tbe . Obio Exposition Cente(s
hour .broadcast, "The Quest for Rhodes Building.
Ame.nca's Best - QV&lt;; SO ill S0
The only other southelstaD Ollio
1bur """'"'m. .'
r,..,..._,
business selected for appearance
It will be aired from Collllllbwo at wu the Brub.1na WoodWork&amp; of
the Ohio State Pair 011 Saturday, Athens which will be doiDa wildAuJ, 1611 the Ohio Exposition Cen- flower pin window .v - witll IUCter's Celeste Buildlng.
Iioa cup.

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Patrol issues citation In accident
.VINTON- A Rutland man was slightly injt~red following a tw()-vehicle accident Friday on SR 325, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Stale Highway Patrol. ·
Timothy C. Gaus, 27, 36200 Nicholson Hill Road, sought his own treatment after the 3;30 p.m. accident, troopers said.
'
. Gaus was southbound in Morgan Township when his pickup truck went
· left and collided with a northbound minivan driven by Grace A. Forbes,
· 40, 8020 Bull Run Road, Vinton, according to the report. Forbes' vehi, cle then continued on and.stnlck a ditch. ·
·
Damage to the minivan was moderate and slight to Gaus' pickup, and
· Gaus was cited for left of center.

· Vinton area thefts under Investigation
VINTON -A pair of thefts were reported Friday to the Gallia 'Coun·
ty Sheriff's Department and are currendy under investigation.
Lisa Dixon of Vinton Video, IS179 SR 160, informed deputies that
.shelves and a set of steps to a mobile horne were removed from the exterior of the b~siness sometime between 2:30a.m. and 2 p.m.'
Charles Kuhn, 622 Perlcins Road, Gallipolis, reprn1ed Jhat a jewelry
box had been taken from a house he owns at 150 Ai~line koad, Vinton,
• sometime within the last two months. ·
· .

.Five handed citations by city pollee
GALLIPOLIS- City Police cited Charles P. Lewis III, 29, 3198 Kerr
. Road, Bidwell, for indec~nt exposure early Saturday, according to police
records.
·
· '· Ticketed by pollee·Friday were Beth M, Rocthi,.22, 93S Second Ate.,
Gallipolis, on a warrant for failure to comply with the court and warrants
· from the Point Plea5ant (W.Va.) Police Departlllent;' David T. Reynolds,
19, 153 Green Terrace Court, Gallipolis, underage consumption; Charles
· B. Hill, 21, 17 Cindy Lane, Gallipolis.. window tint violation; and Matthew
: B. Davidson, 18, 3737 Bulaville Pike: GaHipoli~. no headlights when
. required.
Booked into the Gallia County Jail early Saturday was Matthew V. Halley, 18, Africa'Road, Bidwell, by the Gallia~Meigs Post of the State High'. way Patrol on a charge of underage consumption.

· Board meeting time corrected
. EAST MEIGS - The Eastern Local Board o(Educ,tio~ will meet on ·
. Wednesday at 6:30p.m. at the Tuppers ·Plains Elementary School cafeteria. The meeting time was incorrectly reported last week.

. Man sought for indictment arrested .
· POMEROY- A man wanted on an indictment warrant from Meigs
· County Common Pleas Court was arrested in Vinton County on Friday.
According to the Meigs County Sherifrs Depattmelit, Ronald Collins
is being hr.ld in the Middleport Jail, pending a coiut appearance.

. Accident causes power outage
- ·· MIDDLEPOIIT - ·Oamage to a service polt at. Lincoln and Pearl
streets in Middleport on Friday .resulted in a power outage on the lower
end of Middleport.
,. According to the Middleport Police Department, a garbage truck oper, ated by Modem Sanitation clipped 'the pole, causing power to be inter- .
• rupted fr9m the Mill Street area to the lower end of town.
American Electric Power officials were not available for comment on
~ the o,utage, althou11h the police department official reported that the out" age was brief.
•·
._

· Beer bottle smashes windshield
PO'MEROY -

·

William Heeter Jr., Antiquity, reported Wednesday

~ morning that the windshield of his 1984 GMC pickup truck had been brD-

a

. ken b)' a beer bottle thrown from passing vehicle.:, Ac~ording ' to Meigs County·S~riff James Soulsby, the su~ct _vehi: cle was apparently traveling toward Racine at the ~e. of the incident.

: Driver cited following accident
RACINE - A Racine ,man was cited for failure tb control following
· a one·car accident on SR '338 near Richards'&amp; Son Gravel Co. on Friday.
: Carl Alley was eastbound on 338 in a 1987 Dodge Ram when•he lost
; control of the vehicle. It rolled on its side, causing heavy dlimage, accord·
_ : ing to, the Meigs County Sherill's Depar_tment. There were no serious
· injuries.
·
·I

:Deputies make three arrests

AI

Chamber, ~erchants stage first
'Picnic in th·e Park' in Galli.p olis·

Stop sticks halt reportedly stolen car
pursued by officers from city, county ·.

Heart ·Hea,th campaign
sets event for Thursday

.Tawney Jewelers

Isn't It nme
To Think ·
·About A

Meigs EMS runs

ter;

'.

WANTED!!

Diy

1\

SERVI£E

'

'• .....

COVINGTON. Ky. -The Clinton administration expects Republicans to keep promises they made in
reaching a compromise with Democrats to balance the budget by 2002, . EVENING ENTERTAINMENT - The Cherry
Chamber . of Commerce
V~ee President AI Gore said Saturday.
Ridge Band performed In the Gllllpolll City
Retail Merchents .&amp;11oclltlon. The
I•
Gore told Democratic contributors
Park Frldlly IS ptlrt of the uplcnlc In the perk"
under the dlrec:tlon of MlrHn "Sa ilotd" Jorden.
that their support for President Clin- .event co-spont~red by the G1U11 County
ton is helping guide policies that are
,allowing the economy to grow while
keeping inflation in check. ·
"We have growth and strength
without igniting inflation," he said. ·.
The $5,000 per plate Democratic
National Committee lunch· in this
northern Kentucky city raised an estiattend th~ . weekly · i:~~oelts ~houtd
By ODIE O'DONNELL
out the summer months.
mated $250,000.
bring lawn chairs and picnic-type
T·S
Corre1pondent
Composed
of
local
musicians
and
Gore said. the administration is
GAl-LIPOLIS - Despite low singers, the Cherry Ridge Band pre- food. •
·concerned that Republicans in ConFriday's progrlun ca~ghl 'many
. gress have already strayed from their clouds and threatening skies, the . sented a two-hour program of bluebalanced-budget agreement by first "Picnic In The Park" attracted a grass, country-western, hillbilly, and ·residents by surprise, as witnessed by
proposing a spending plan that falls sparse crowd Of speclators' who religious music under the leadership a number of passing motorists who
$13 billion short of what should be enjoyed musical entertainment by the of Marlin "Seaford" Jordan of Rio parked their vehicles an" became part
Grande.
of the audience.
designated for education tax cuts. . ·Cherry Ridge Band Friday night.
Picnic in the Park is a joint ven:
The weekly concerts in the GalSeveral of lhe downloWn merAs proof that Clinton will hold the
· GOP to its promises, Gore cited Clin- lure of the Gallia County Chamber of . lipolis City Park are free to the pub- chants have extended shopping h!lU~
ton's veto of the Republican'sdisas- Commerce and the Gallipolis Retail . lie, will run for two hours starting at on Friday nights at the present time,
ter aid bill, .which included funding Merchants Association to attract 7. p.m. Officials of the chamber and while other.; are making plans to
for Ohioans affeCted by this spring's more people to the downtown busi- ,merchants association issued a alford evening shopping hours in the
flooding. Clinton opposed it because ness distriot on Friday nights through- . reminder that anyone planning lo ncar future.
thought it contained extraneous provisions,
"The president will insist that they
do the right thing.just.as they did on
the disasterrelief bill;'' Gore told supporters. "I'll predict for yo~ that they
will end up doing th~ right thing on By JILl,. WILLIAMS
when the suspect swerved toward the and Heeing. Separate charges Will be
this 'balanced-budget resolution."
Times-sentinel Staff
cruiser, nearly striking it and cpntin- filed by the Mason County Sheriff's
Brett Buerck, press secretary of
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia uing on.
'
.
. · Department.
the Ohio Republican ·Party, said the County Sheriff's Department ·assistSh~riff's Deputy Kenny Feustel
Democra~ don't have to be con- ed Gallipolis 'City Police during a
set up stop sticks at Second and First
cerned.
· stolen car pursuit Friday morning . .. Avenue, yet the suspect drove around
"Since the budget agreement was
Gallipolis officer Brandon Chap- the sticks and continued north on
our idea in the first place ... I don't man wa~ approached by Anthony EasternAvenue.
think it's going to b&lt;\ a problem for . Pearce, who reported that his brothThe suspect .traveled at a reponed
us to hold up our end of it," he said. er, a 17-year-old Mason County, speed of 60 mph as he swerved back
After ihe speech, Gore went to W.Va .. resident, had taken his vehi- and' forth, keeping anyone from passneighboring Newpon to attend an cle from Point Pleasant and that he ing him. He , reportedly .reached
Italian festival_on his way to Colum- had followed him to this atea.
speet!s of90 mph as he continued out
bus, Ohio, where he was scheduled to
A second officer and Gallipolis of.city DQrth.on State, ~qute 7..
speak at a dinner himoring retiring police Sgt. Robbie Jacks c'ame into
. Galli a County deputies Jerry Darst
. Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio. ·
carat
contact with the victim, who gave and Pat Cochran deployed stop stick$
Diamond A,if!D ~oo.
Cincinnati lawyeri •&gt;Stanley M. them a description of stolen vehicle. at 7 near the Chesh(re Post Office.
Chesley, who has donated thousands
Jacks located the vehicle at the The suspect hit the sticks, causing
of dollars to De111ocratic campaign intersection of Vine Street and Chill- both front tires to deflate,,and turned
coffers and has attended White House icothe Road and attempted to stop the down a dead-end street, before dri·
events during the Clinton adminis-, vehicle. The driver of the vehicle ving over parking barriers into a park.
1/4 Carat
tration, said he was proud to serve as allegedly refused to stop and went The vehicle came to rest after driving
Anniversary Band
host for Gore's CQvington appear- north on First Avenue.
'
over an incline and-crashing.
ance.
.
Chapman tried to catch the vehiGallipolis Police have char~ed
"I'm committed. I'm pleased to cle at First Avenue and Locust Street, the juvenile with no license plates
host the vice president of the United
States," Chesley said Friday. "Vice
President Gore has been a good
friend of mine since the mid-1980s.
L4844
That's a big part of this."
· 1/4 Carat
He · dismissed criticism from
Diamond Ring
Republicans in Washington, who
· GALLIPOLIS - The first in a Health Department received a state
questioned the Democrats' fund-rais- series of initiatives to help reduce .the grant to work o~ public awareness of
1 Carat
ing procedures and are pressing for rate of bean disease in Gallia Coun- cardiovascular disease. CVD was
of
an investigation.
Diamonds
ty has been scheduled for Thursday, identified in 1995 as the county's
"I think that's absurd. The media June 19, when Heart ·Health of Gal- leading cause of death, exceeding the
Reg.
likes it. Both parties need to raise lia County has its "Fun Walk After state average as a' whole.
$689
money to elect suitable candidates," Work."
· Organizers of ihe "Fun Walk After
he said.
Ll188
The walk is to he held from 6-8 Work" said plenty of parking will be
Chesley said none of the revela- p.m., rain or shine, starting on the available at the Rails-to-Trails site.
tions will affect his support for the Rails-lo-Tr.ails site on McCormick Each participant will receive inforDemocratic Party. According to Fed- .Road.
mation on preventing CVD. Anyone.
eral Election Commission records,
interested
in participating should-call
The trail will be lllarked off in
Chesley contributed a total of half-mile increments, and partici- ..the health dcpanment at 446-4612,
422 2nd Avenue
$78,745 to candidates and the DemO- pants will l)e able to walk whatever extension 292.
OH
cratic Party during the 1995-96 elec- distance they desire. Participants can
tion campaign.
•
also walk the entire length of the trail
Chesley also helped raise thou- section to Pine Street and back again
sands of dollars for Clinton's 1992 to McCormick .
presidential campaign.
AS an incentive to participation,
Ohio Valley Bank, Fartl)ers Bank &amp;
Savings Co., Peoples Bank of Gallipolis and Unity Savings Bank will
POMEROY ~ Five calls for donate one day of interest on $1 milassistance were reponed by Meigs · lion ($ 120) that will be awarded to a
Emergency Services on Friday.
participant.
·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Heart Health of Gallia County Vias
12:23-a.m., Leading Creek Road, initiated last month after the county
James Pratt to Holzer Medical Cen-

6:22 a.n\., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, George Cundiff to Vet'cirans Memorial Hospital;
...
People to lose weight
12:02 p.m., Hiland Road, Steve
* 100% Natural*
Hartenbach to HMC; . _
7:04p.m.; Yellowbush Road, Vel·*Doctor
ma Winland: treated but not transReeommended*
ported.
*3D
Money Back*
RUTLAND ..
I :48 p.m., Cremeans Road, Halley
Guarantee
Wilson to HMC, assisted by Central
: POMEROY- A Rutland m&amp;!l is · lion of RC&amp;D An:u, represented by Dispatch,
()!le of thtee representatives f'?"' the local delegation, represents sevWuhington, Monroe an_d MetJS . en authorized and· two applicant
counties who will represent the area areas, coverin1 8$ of the state's 88
at the''Nation~ R¢squn:e Conllei'Va- counties.
'
lion iDd DeYelopment~l in St.
~ RCA:D ~ncils direct pr()PIIII, Mlrui., next week.
l!'~Dlllnvolved w1th l~d conservaJoe Bolin 111d fellow Buckeye lion, w•r coniiCI'VIII1on and manHills Rc&amp;D coullclil memben MIIY ·. qement, C';lffimwii!Y develop.me~t,
~llofWuhinponCountyand and_protec
_ non of fish and_wlldhfe
MirkPotni ofMonroeCounty,llioft8 babibll. .
with BllCkeye Hills coordinitor Bob · , One pro.Je!:t that ~ local RC~D . ·
Pint, will be present to hilbliJitt COUIICII . hu ~~~ lhVOIV~ woth
1~ psojects and projects' ~ NC1IIIIIIy 11 ':111"'nlina 1 rec-tion and
Ba~ alae IDfiJ it
. IICrOii the .we. The Ohio Auoc.. tourism IJIIi!l'·

'

n

By JOHN NOLAN

: POMEROY~ Deputies of the.Meiss Coupty She"fl's Department
: reported three arrests on Thursday: Williani Kail.ff Jr., 20. contributing to
: the delinquency of a minor; Davi~ Park, 19, Pomeroy. bench warrant for
• failure to complyl John Van Reeth, 43, Pomeroy, domestic vio_lencc.
· All three were held in tile Meigs County Jail, pending County Court
: hearings:

;

,

Aaaoclllted Pres• Writer

(6i4) 441·1912

SAUl

•0

\

F.tutland ·resident will attend meeting

REO.t2M.OO
Enjoy the lull Junction from this B-ene
1ectlonal with two fully reclining lfttS,
comer table, tllld right ftldng sl..per.

3

r

~ Galha County Health Depanment on

Crash leaves two drivers Injured

Dry conditions will stay

~

Tri-County Briefs:---... Gore· visit
Gall/a firms file tor Incorporation
to region
were .t
helps net
as
donations
Immunizations slated this week
for DNC

GAUJPOLIS- Articlea of iDcorponlioa have beeo filed by two GalIii County finnl with Secrewy of State Robert A. 'lift's office.
Filina
0 M Hupp Inc., Oallipolis, with M.n:e Hupp, Ollie
Hupp and Dirbm Cllarlca lilfed incolporlton, and Maurice Hupp, 1704
Eastern Ave., Gllllipolis, as llpllt; aild Oallia BOll Reatalllnc., Oallipo- ·
lis, with R,obert E. Je~ns and Michelle L. Jenkinlliated as incorporatol'$, and Mark E. Sheets, 19 Locust St., Oallipoli1, as lj!Cnl.

•
r

"
By ROB WELLS
A Jood day's worlr;, for them · would- in offect- be helping to based on the fair market pri\:e for
APTU Writer
involves adding a few paragraphs to subsidize the oil-well tax break with furnished one-bedroom • apartmerlt
WASHINGTON· It isn't often or deleting a couple of hundred new taxes on prepaid phone cards fo,r including utilities. The value of such
_that the world of the Washington lob- unwanted words from the mon: than long distance service.
housing-would.have been added to;.
byist has a chance to feast off a tax 400 'pages of the tax bill. ·
As the tW()-day marathon debate lawmaker's gross income and wouta _
bill as big and meaty as the one · For some, the long, sleep-&lt;leprivcd on the bill wort. on, the committee have been taxed accordingly., . :
·The
committee lcilled it on a voice
unveiled in the House last week. vigil in the committee room, and the moved to a secti\1~ of miscellaneous
.
.
What a feast it was!
vote.
prospect of eating dinner out of a provisions and ollened the door to a
Horse breeders, bakery delivery vending machine or scarfing down wide rang~ of unusual provisions,
Rep. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., tried til
e Columbus
.persuade
colleagues to adoprhis ~
drivers and oilmen we~ among those pizza while standing in a noisy hallRep. Jerry Kleczka, D-Wis., put
riveted on the deliberiuions of the way, was well worth it.
forward an amendment to ensure that posalto make investing in race horsHouse Ways and Means Committee
:
The nation's small oil producers members of Congress be treated like es much less risky.
"What this amendment woold ell&gt;
as it worked from Wednesday hit pay dirt with an amendment average workers when it comes to
through early Friday to approve an sponsored by Reps. Wes Watkins, R- taxing items consirued as employer is revitalize the breeding industry all
over this -country," Bunning said. He
$8S billion tax reduction package.
Okla., and William D. Jefferson, D- benefits: ·
House Ways and Means Chairman La.
.
Given that woftcers increasingly read a letter from th~ 'American
W.VA.
Bill Archer, R-Texas, heralded the bill
Their proposal greatly enhances are being taxed for the value of ben- Quarterhorse Association in A!llarilas the biggest tax cut in 16 years, and the tax shelter status of thousands of efits provided by .elJ!ployers, such as lo, Texas, informing members tha,t
. committee veterans said the l~bying so-called "stripper" oil wells parlcing spaces in downtown garages, $25 billion in goods and services ~
spectaCle rivaled that ofthe 1986 tax throughout Okla\loma, Texas and Kleczka proposed a similar tax'treat- associated with the. quarterhor$
reform act.
,
:
Louisiana. Those are wells that Pf()- ment for members of Congress who . industry.
Beginning Wednesday morning, duce fewer than IS barrels a day. .
"There
are
a
lot
of
people
who
sleep. in their offices.
young people were being paid almost
Mickey Thompson, executive vice
"More and more members of want to get involved and buy a horse
double the wage of an average fast- president of the Oklahoma Indepen- Congress are using their office as but don't want to step in the manuQ:
food worker to stand in an enormous dent Petroleum Association, said the theit lodging," Kleczka said as red- every day," Bunning said.
;
line ·outside room II 00 of the Long- provision provides "a huge potential eyed committee .and reporters staff
Bleary-eyed lobbyists and comworth office building, holding places tax benefit."
walked zombie-like through the mittee staff blinked to com~rehend
for lobbyists angling to get seats
"We're talking easily millions of room. "Members who sleep in their Bunning's presentation late Thursd•y
inside.
dollars, if nottens 9f millions pf dol- offices, those members should treat evening. Rep. Charles Rangel, 0·As the hearing began, the stand- Iars, in ... Oklahoma, Lou.isiana and that as an employer-sponsored bene- N.Y., spoke up.
.• · .
:
ins gave way to a small army of Texas," Thompson said.
"I.want to congratulate Mr. Bunfit." ·
sharply aressed . men and women
Passed on·a voice vote, the three·
His proposal was to in,crease the ning for bringing this thing up during
By The AIIOCintd Prell
.
.
from
downtown
Washington
law.
page · amendment angered . the tax bite on congressmen by declaring the day," Rangel said, befo~;C the panThe weekepd's predominlindy dry weather in Ohio will last ~~til Monand
lobbying
firms,
the
accounting
telecommunications
industry, since it their congressiqmil offices as lodging, el voted it down.' "Deals like this are
day, the National Weather Service says.
·
legendary
"Gucci
gulch"
crowd.
normally done in the back rQOlll."
A high-pressure system will move east through the state on Sunday, shifting the windS to the south and raising high temperatures from the middle 70s
to the lower 80s.
It will he mostly clear SUnday night with lows ranging from the upper
'
.
SOs northeast to the lower 60s south.
Thunderstorms will be possible on Monday as temperatures continue to By PAUL SOUHRADA
force - said it likely will take
·"If you aild two or three years to tried to do that last month by insert~
climb, reaching the middle 80s.
· months to draft a comprehensive bill.- the process, there will not be enough ing an amendment into the Senate's
Ataoclllted Press Writer
Showers and thunderstonns will remain likely on Tuesday with highs of
COLUMBUS -A key Republi- And while he figures he can get the .uninterrupted farmland left to make budget proposal. 1-:ier plan essentialc
7S to 80.
can lawmaker says efforts to protect · plan through the House yet this ses- the p,rogram worthwhile," said Sara . ly would have allowed local govern1
The record high temperature for Saturday's date was 94, set in 1994. The Ohio farmland from development sion. convincing the Senate .to go Pavlovicz. She said her county, nes- me'nts to encourage farmers not 10
record low of 44 was set in 19S9.
may not bear fruit this legislative ses- along might be 'difficult.
tled between Cleveland and Akron, is sell out to real estate developers by
Sunrise on Sunday will be at 6:02 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:02 p.m.
If the bill does not clear both losing an average of 38 acres of farm- paying them the difference between
sion.
Weather loneast:
what their property is worth as farmRep. Gene Krebs, R-Camden, said chambers by the end of the legislative land each day. .
Sunday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. Light and variable winds. Friday that he plans to begin drafting . session qext year, lawmakers will
Medina County officials . had land and what they could get from
Sunday night ..,Clear. Lows near 60.
legislation . next week that would have to start the ptocess ail over in planned to ask voters in November to commercial buyelii. _
Monday... Mostly sunny, some afternoon clouds.·Hij~hs in the mid 80s.
implement the recommendations o.f the session beginning January 1999. approve an anti-sprawl ·plan, but
Gov. George Voinovich . created
Monday nighL ..Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstO!'IIIS. the Ohio Farmland Preservation Task . That will be too late, warned a needed a change in state law to pro- the farmland group amidst growing
Lows in the mid 60s
commissioner from fast-growing ceed, Ms: Pavlovicz said.
Force.
concern about the loss of land devol-,
Extended lorecut:
Krebs - a member of the task Medina County.
Sen. Grace Drake, R-Solon, had ed to agriculture.
Tuesday.:.Partly cloudy with a . c~ance of showers and thunderstoims.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Wednesday...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the .mid 60s and highs in the lower 80s.
Thursday... Polrtly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
J.·
1
Lows near 60 and hiahs in the lower 80s.
· bufied at Gettysburg will have tlie
state flag flying over their graves in
"We've never gone out of
Conllnutld from p8ge A1
At Selby General in. Marietta;
·~•e
·
n
__
t·~
m
~!!'aroryb
o
tflethe.
men
lci.
.
l
led
in
th~
CivFranklin
,
C
ounty,let
alone
the·state,"
share
hospital
program.
free
health care accounts for about 8
_
1
11 n;
lrtl ~II
.,., i II
I '
. I" g
Testa said. "But the.committee liked
·The paynienll! are used·b{h6spi: · percent of, the hospital's totai · CQSIS~
6
Members of Franklin County's the idea."o,,h &gt;
·tats to pay for medical procedures "We're going to feel these cuts,"
m~
Operation Flag presented 131 state
MottS:l.said, Geotge Ni~on •. the not covered by state Medicaid
said John Reddick, the chief finan;
.
.
flags to officials at Gettysburg great-grandfatherofformer Presodent · grams and for patients .who don't cial 'officer for Selby General thai
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) _ . Convicted who waited outside, supposedly saw · National Military Park in southern Rochard Noxon, os the most famous have health insuranCe
· rece!ved about $850,000 in dispro:
lciller Glen Rogers' attorneys told a _a wom~n and a Mexican man in Pennsy)vaniaduring a ceremony Sat- . Ohioan buried at Gettysburg.
Under the Comm~rce•· Commit· porlionate share payments last year,
jUdge Friday about a surprise witness l{ogers' room. They went on to urday.
Nixon, a 40,year-old farme_r from · lee-approved plan, states with dis- "There's a train coming down the
-a day laborer who can give Rogers Ambr)&gt;se's motel and drank. some
The flags will. be flown at the Waverly•. enhsted 10 1861 With the proportionate share budgets ihat are tracks and I don't know how to stop
an . alibi in the slashing death of a wine and, a couple hours later, graves July I through July 4 when all 73rd Ohl~ Volunteer Infantry Rego- Iess than 12 percent of their Medic- it," he said.
''
· woman whose body. was found in a Rogers said he had to get back.
of the park's graves will be d~corat- "!ent, whoch _assogned to fight the aid program, which is ~he ·case in
The committee also approved a~
motel bathtub.
Edenfield said that after the inter- ed with American flags.
Confe~erates '" a -rheat field on the Ohio, would have .thOle budgets amendment sponsored by Strickland
They asked for a new trial, saying view, Ambrose dropped out ohight.
Of the 4,440 Ohioans who fought ~outh 51 ~ of Geuysburg. He was shot reduced 20 percent. Stai~s with dis- not to force children with ·severe
_the laborer, Thomas Al!lbrose. COR' Sinardi said he has been loolcing for in the three-day battle in July 1863, In the_hop and doed on July 14, l863. proportionate share budgets totaling medical problems- into managed~
tacted ~m eithei' ~ng Roae~· tri- him ever since, checking homeless 1,271 were killed, wounded or taken
By the end ?f the battle, 41 per- more than 12 percent oftheir Medic- care programs that would make i(
al or JUSt after JUrors convocted missions, day labor paols and jails.
prisoner, said Wayne Motts, a battle- cent ofthe73rd s 330 men were dead aid budget would receive a 40 per- harder for them to see specialists. :
Roaers of first-degree murder last
Circuit Judge Diana Allen post- field guide and historian.
.
or wound.ed.
cent cut.
, f'
This was the firSt amendment that·
month.
.
.
poned next Friday's sentencing for
Motts asked County Auditor Joe
· Republican Ohio Gov. George Strickland has sponsored in _the
Ambrose s11d that he was w1th Rogers formerly qfHamilton Ohio
Voinovich, in a June ,9 letter to IOSth Congress that was approved:
I.·_
Strickland, said "cuts ~uld come by a committee. The fi,nal vote was·
Rogers when nna Marie Cribbs was so the defense could have a ~eek ~~
killed in November 199S and that . try to locate Ambrose and bring him
from high-DSH states .before being 27-20.
·
Rogers found her bloody body when to court. She said she would hear
applied to states with f'!"' disci"I feel very good about it and 1:
he.went back l_o his roo.m, said James ·. argu
· inents for a new trial then.
·
· · Oh'
phned and frugal spendmg, like spent .a lot of time begging my:
.,
.._ fioeld, an. mves
Contlnu""'
m 10, West Virginia or Kentucky, :Oh'10. ,,
Rcpu bl'1can friends," · Strickland·
.
.,...,n
. llg.ator •aor de'
. aense
Rogers is facing a_ life term in
... from .,_
..-.- A1
·:·
' kJand's congress10na
· 1dis- sao'd.
·
attorney NICk S.1 nardo.
prison or death in the electric chair molds that thrive in damp condi- Byrnes said.
, 1n sInc
Ambrose. saod tbat before he left for killing _Ms. Cribbs.
tiQns, Byrnes explained.
TobaC:co producers hit by blue :trict, one of the poorest in Ohio, Pike
The committee's work on .Medic-:
come
to
her
for
informold
in
1996
are
planting
additional
'C
·
H
·
ds
'd
Producers
1
the parlcing Iot ofthe ...,aampa 8 Mole1•
18
The claim of new eviden~ came
h'
. ommumty osp11a spen
per- a1 and ch'l
.' dren's health care is part,·
Rogers rusbed ouI of hos room a nd during a presentencing hearing Fri- matl·on and treatm'ent suggesto'ons poundage I os year. Jeffers said last '-cen1of I·rs budget on f ~ hea lth care, o_f a -mu 1lopane1 House effort·led by·,
said, "Ob, my God ... she's dead. day.
when disease takes hold, which year he set 1-1/4 acres of tobacco, the highest percentage in the district. the Budget Committee 10 draft the .
.
. "Do lthink somebody else killed Byrnes tackles via on-site visits as but has now planted nearly 2-112. By ~parison, .the &lt;:Jreenfield Area details of the balanced budgetagree-:
Whatshould I do?"
Ambrose told Rogers to ~et m the Tina Marie Cribbs? No," said Pros- well as through public awareness in this season 10 make up for the '96 Medocal Center on Hoghland County ment between the White House and•
car and leave, Edenfield saod. .
ecutor Lyann Goudie. She said she seminars, and print and broadcast loss.
spent 2 percent of its budget on free . Congress. That deaf includes a plan:
. Edenfield told the Judge he onter- was certain the claim was bogus, but information.
On the whole, Byrnes felt that care, the lowest in the ,8istrict.
· to trim $15 billion from . Me&lt;!icaid ;
viewed Ainbrose and was told the fol- added, "We've got to find this person
Additionally, the extension ser- once conditions are ripe for grow.
spending over the next five years. :
lowm11:
_ .
and present him to the court, what- vice mpnitors the incidence of dis- ing, the season will ilol be adversely
Ambrose and Rogers met whole ever that means. You don't hide evi- eases. Byrnes said her office is affected by the delay. ·
wallcing from a convenience sto~. dence...
,
presently tracking any advances in
·"I think everything's going to be
Ambrose invited Rogers to his room
. Rogers, 34, acknowledges that he blue mold, a fungal growth that okay, we just need to get plants up
at the Tropicana, a motel across met Ms. Cribbs, also 34 , in a bar and · resulted in just 53 percent of Gallia and growing, • she said. "In the
from the street from the Tampa 8. took ·her back 10 his motel roorn. He County's tobacco yield being sold in meantime, we don't want producers'
· THIRD I OLIMI:
Rogers wanted his cigarettes. They was IU'I'ested days later following a 1996.
crop to be overtaken by disease
GAWPOUS, Ott
· Kentuco.y.
L
He told a
The answe,rto reducm'g the e..
ect
while
in
such
a
young.
fragile
state.•
Slopped by Rogers , room · Ambrose • poI"oce cbase on
"'
(114) 441 3041
state trooper there that he left Ms. of blue mold again lies in steady,
· Jeffers; wllose tobacco crop has
Cribbs in the room, took her car to get sunny conditions with a reasonable shown some cold' shock·because of
cigarettes and never came back.
amount of rain, Byrnes noted.
'the weather, agrees with Byrnes'
He said he learned about her
Because of blue mold's effect last an•l)ISiS. ,
death over the car radio.
year, producers have been more
"The weather, if it's decent, will
aware of its existe.nce, although an pretty well remedy that," he said..
hbllthe!l eac:b Sunday, 825 Thint Ave.,
(lolllpoHt. Ohio, by !he Ohio Volley Plablllldoa
outbreak has not yet been identified "Financially, it won't be bad and it
c...,..,.o
..
Co.. Second .bitt will recover."
'
plli4 11 OIIHpoHt, Ohio •563 L "-'d 11

Regional

'Junl11, 1117
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lf)fU

bel! .

meant

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New Career?

•Opportunity
•Independence ·
•Success
Thinkabout th~
excitement, the new
challenge, and the
rewards - think about
.
· Call for special classes

·

SoutheosternBusiness
Col.
Spring
Plua • llpolls
Valey

446·4367

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,Commentary

Sundly,June15,1817

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.,. . . . .~Riverbank · cleanu

Indian' knife comes from China
Junhq ~imt•· jentiaw ·- 'American
raan
By .hloll An 1
anciJMIIolar

"authentic" Indian producll that
Campbell deliped n ai:...ly bein1
W~~GTON •• As capllin of manufactured in China •• even
825 Third Avenue, Oalllpolla, Ohio
the 1964 U.S. Olympic judo team, thouah the ..ts for the prodiiCII fca1114 4411 2342 • Fax: 4411 3008
Ben Nighthorse Campbell bumped
111 Court Sbeet, Pomeroy, Ohio
up against SOII!C lOUBh characters.
1114-1112-21511• Fax: 892-2157
Now a Republican U.S. Senator fro!n
Colorado, Campbell is bumping up
against a quite different opponent: his
own law.
A member of the Northern
. . Cheyenne tribe, Campbell was one of
A
Co. Newspaper
the prime architects of a 1990 law ture·campbell's picture.
The item in question is a kn ife,
that requires all arts and crafts items
and
it was advertised in a recent
that are advertised as Indian or Native
ROBERT. L WINGETT
Publlaher
American to actually be made by nationwide Sunday supplement as the
"Spirit of the Thunder Collector
American Indians.
Hoblilt WI'-' Jr. ·
Execullve Edllor .
Knife
by Ben Nighthorsc."
More than most legislation .that
In
keeping with congressional
moves through -Congress, this was an
· n. .._......._ we 'ca Nil ,.,.,. ao .,.. .,., INm ,.....,_ on • bloefl,.,.
issue close to Campbell's heart -~ and ethics practices. the ad does not
his wallet. Long before he enle!ed ·mention that Campbell is a senator
"'..,.,_ " " " ' - 1»1- "'-) ... - - "'_,,... _ll'l*f _ _ ,.. ........ .,.,.. ...., ..
----·s,.ct~y•politics, Campbell owned his own and does not contain lhc name Camp••~M•""••.,.. « ,.,.,.,,.. m: ....,..,....,
ot,.. 1dd so
Indian jewelry business, Nighthorsc . bell. Ben Nighthorsc is the name he
01 MX ~ 11*11-... n. e1111or..., .. rcarnn ,.,.., ,.. trom our
Inc ., which is now con!rolled by his uses ~ist. In fact, one would
wife and son. Yet even ihough. he . hll'dly gue that the man depicted in
·ng a Cheyenne war bongave up the business when he became the ad, s
, a politician, Campbell still designs net and traditional drcss, spends bis
- jewelry for ·the firm, for which he weekdays debating budget policy on
receives a salary.
Capitol Hill.
The knife, like other CampbellBut as our associate George Clifford Ill has learned, some of the designed items, is being sold through

'EstUlislid in ~

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.,..editor,., ...

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How about a bill to
crack.d.own on
repeat pretenders?

:

Campbell was a Democrat scrvina in
the House, and It was desipcd to
stop a rather widespread problem.
Millions of !lollars in profits were
being made by·companies marketing
jewelry and trinkets that were "Indian" in name only. Many American
Indians rightly felt their heritage was
being e~ploited by people who were
out to make a quick buck. It also
made it harder for real Indians to sell
the genuine articles.
Yet when it came time to implement the law, Interior Department
officials were vague about defining
what constitutes an authentic Indian ·
product. Interior Department regulations define an Indian produCt as
"any art or craft prnduct made by an
Indian." It makes no reference to cases where a product is designed by an
Indian and manufactured by other$.
Neitf!er Campbell nor his staff
responded to our repeated reques(s
for comment. But Campbell's son,
Colin Campbell , · who runs
Nighthorse · Inc .. said his father
designed the knives, and Nighthorse
Inc. then sold the designs to the
Franklin Mint. 1lle Mintlhen became
responsible for manufacturing, marketing and distributing the prnducts.
He added that nei!her the company
nor his father received any royalties
from the knife sales.
"They are pretty conscientious,"
the yo~nger . Campbell said of the
mint. "It seems to me they. would
have done the marketing and the promotion in a way which was intact
with the law ... for obvious reasons,
not even withstanding the fact that it
was Dad's bilL"
When we first asked Colin Campbell about the situation, he said' It
appeared "especially ironic given the
circumstances." Yet he insists that
nothing was amiss.
Campbell, who jumped to the
Republican Party after Congress
changed hands in 1995, wasn ' t
always so cavalier about moving jobs
overseas. In recent years, he has V(/l·
ed against the NAFTA and ·GATI
trade pacts, noting his concern that
.1.:!1==::::!~( American fanners could be hurt by
competition from abroad. All of
which raises the obvious question:
Are other ·U.S. industries, like
metalworking, beneath his concern?
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for Uaited · Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

the Franklin Mint, a Penniytvaniabased company 'that sells comnlOITI·
orative coins and other memorabilia.
To add an extra measure of authenticity, die knife is authorized by the
Virginia-based Al!lerican Indian H~r­
itage Foundation. which is headed by
controversial performer-activi st
Princess Pale Moon.
Wjt Rose, a .spokesman for the
foundation , told us tl\at "Campbell
being co-author of the bill ... certainly gave us the credibility or confi·
dence ... to proceed ·on the basis that
we had been operating under. "
The Franklin Mint, meanwhile,
acknowledged that another Campbell-designed knife they sold, the
"Cheyenne Buffalo Knife, " was
manufactured outside the United
States. AFranklin Mint official added
that advertising for that knife notes
that it is imported, thereby avoiding
"any suggestion it was manufactured
by Native American Indians," But in
. the Spirit of the Thunder advertisement, there is no mention that the
product is manufactured overseas.
The law banning the misrepresentation of products as being Indian-made passed in 1990, while

By Jack Anderson ·
tmd ·
Jan ,..oller

Gannett .

then followed by a later act of even
worse judgment. If these allegations
are true. I am very disappointed."
COLUMBUS - Gov. George
Voinovich'a fOI'IIlW chief of staff,
Voinovich · said, declining funher
knowing 'ho was under'inveatigl!lii&gt;n, .
comment.
.
The grand jury also indicted the
llterecl a buildillg j)Crmjt issued to a
contractor, Thomas G. Banks, w1th
contractor worlci111 On 'his fiancee's
one misdeme11nor count of violating
~o'!"', !ICCordinl! to a . grand.. jury
md1c~ont.
·
.the ethics hiw for allegedly influeJIC·
ing a public officii!. '
The Union. County graqd jury
· Banks' company, T.G. Banks and
indicted Paul Mifsud Friday on
Associates, performed the work ~n .
. chtttgcs that he forged a document
Ms. Bartunek's house•.Bankl also 1s ·
and tampered with evidence.
involved with Banks Carbone ConThe indictment charged Mifsud
struction; a company \hat has
with .five fel6nie,s: three counts of
Pllul
Mifsud
received millions of dol\ars in unbid
tampering with records, and one
,
state contracts.
count eli!:h of tampering with evistory addition to the Marysville home
Banks, reached at !lis offiCC Friday
dence and forgery.
afternoon, denied any wrongdoing
~ indictment said Mifsud of Kathleen Bartunek, then Mifsud's
. and said he plans to fight -the charge.
altered the document "knowing that fiancee and now his wife.
There were allegations that Mif"We were just doing the work for
an official proceeding or investiga~
titin was in progress or about or like· sud, who resigned from Voinovich's Dr. Bartunek," he said.
staff last year, may have gotten a deal
The Ohio Ethics Commission. and ,
ly to be instituted."
The grand jury also charged Mif- for his fiancee in' exchange for secur- the Ohio inspector general also IJl'C
investigating various matters rclated
sud · with three misdemeanors: ing state work for a contractor.
The pennit, which. appears to . to Mifsud.
obstructing official business, petty
Inspector General Richard Ward
theft and violating Ohio etl;tics law. have been altered, said the work .
.
.
.
If convicted on all counts, Mifsud would cost $110,000. But a carbon- said Frid~y his investigation ofMif·
Joe Thompeon, left, llld Greg Senior tMd to ksep their bltlltnc:e luvlng the rlverbttnk with
could be sentenced to II years in less copy of the permit estimated the ·sud was "95 percent complete."
a canoe full of dabrla Friday ae thly joined do~~~~a of voluntHrl to collect garbAge tram the
prison.
·
LltUe Miami River near Milford. Voluntl!«&lt; were out clllnlng up along 1 30-mlte etretch of rivcost at $210:000.
. "What I'll do now is gettoacther
er. Ohio River
clunup
1111
been
tentatively
achedulecl
tor
liter
thla
month.
(AP)
Voinavich
Mifsud's
lawyer,
Charles
R.
Saxbe
said
in
a
statement
Fri·
with
the special prosecutor as soon as
.
of Columbus, did not return a tele- day that the allegations did not possible to discuss whe.ther I should
phone lhessage. There is no telephone involve Mifsud's duties as chief of release anything.'' Ward said. ·
.'
listing for Mifsud .
suiff. He previously said he was disOhio Democratic Party Chairman
Tile indictments followed a week appointed that Mifsud had allowed a David Leland said · Voinovich, a·
contractor who had worked for the Republican, cannot distance himself'
of hearings by the grand jury.
. The investigation, which began state to do work on Ms. Bartunek's from Mifsud.
·
."Every governor has to be responeight months ago, centered around a home.
..
According
to
the
grand
jury,
that
sible
for the people to whom be gives
building permit issued in . 1993 for
' ..
'
construction o( a garage and a two- first instance of bad judgment was power and authority," Leland said in
•·
a news release.
' WILMINGTON (AP) - A man m~rder, aggravated murder and kid- alleged that Doan hit her in the head
with a heater. That case was dis' i,.waiting trial on a charge he killed his napping.
.
•. former girlfriend was seen "covered
Prosecutors allege Doan kille(l missed in October after Ms. Culber·
with blood" hours after the woman Ms. Culberson while kidnapping her, soq ~ who had been missing for
',!lisappeared. prosecutors.said in court ·a charge for which he could get the more than a month ~ did not appear
for the proceedif1gs,
-documents.
death penalty if convicted.
Between 12:30 and I a.m. Aug.
'.., A witness said .the accused man, · He is jailed without bond while
29, a witness saw Ms. Culberson and
Vincent Doan, was "covered with awaiting trial July 14.
nl&gt;lood" hours after Doan allegedly
Poan's lawyer, John Rion, said his . Doan arguing in the street near his
. Phillis said the group's books
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ The coati- . director of the coalition.
, ~bducted and killed Clarissa . Ann client is innocent because allegations · Blanchester home, according 10 court
After
receiving
an
inquiry
last
have
been audited since 1992 as part
tion of schools that won a lawsuit
"Carrie" Culberson on Aug. 29, in tl)e court documents do not point documents.
mo~th,
Petro's
staff
detennined
that
of
the
Tri-Valley Local School .Dis"Clarissa Ann . Culberson was against the state calling for an over,
' .according to doc~ments that prose- to him.
state law allowed local sc()ool dis- .. trict in Muskingum.County. The disCouniy Prosecutor Willilim Peelle siruggling to free herself as Vincent haul of Ohio's system of funding .tricts to allocate money to any lrict serves as 'fiscal agent or trustee
";;utors filed Thursday in Clinton
public
education
will
have
its
own
··county Conimo11 Pleas Court. ·
declined to comment. Judge William Doan grabbed her, threatened her life
spending .reviewed in a routine state regional council' of governments set ·for the coalition.
,.,~ Prosecutors also alleged that Doan McCracken has ordered lawyers to · and struck her in the face with his.fist
up for cooperative efforts, Prender. According to the latest Tri-Valley
as he held her with his other hand," audit.
'talked of how he planned to kill Ms. · avoid discussing the case in public.
gast
said.
audit,
the coalition began tbe fiscal
. The review by state Auditor Jim
~ulberson who was 22 when she di,s: . The documents allude to a possi- . the document said.
The coalition; which filed suit in year July I, 1995, with $261,502;
A.shon time later, a car was tteard Petro will examine the income and
~(ipeared.
ble motive, citing that Ms. Culberson
1991
against the state to demand a received $655,597; spent $4fi0,562;
expenditures
of
the
Ohio
Coalition
. "Vincent Doan later made state· had filed an assault charge against leaving the area, tires squealing, the
new
system
of funding schools, qulll- and ended the year June 3p with
ments of his prior planning of how to Doan a month before her disappear- witness said. Doan, Ms. Culberson for Equity and Adequacy of School ifies as a council of governments. $456,537.
fkill Clarissa Ann Culberson before he ance. 1bc document also said Ms. and her red Honda CRX, which 'had Funding from Jan. ·30, 1991 , through Such entities initially can be overState audits of the Tri-Valley dis:actually killed her," prosecutors said Culberson gave an affidavit July 28 been parked in the area, · were June 30, 19.96. The report is expect- looked by state auditors ·because trict'provide no breakdown of coali· .
ed
Aug.
30.
.
nowhere ill sight, ~cc.ording to the
, in the docul)l~nts.
.
. in suppon of those allegations .
"In general, we're looking for they are numerous and not rcquired tion income or spending.
documents.
.. . Doan, 24, has pleaded innocentto ·
In that affidavit, Ms. Culberson
three main things; making sure gov- by law to report their existence.
ernments are following the law and
rules; to verify the fairness and accu"
racy of their finanCi!ll statements; and
to evaluate their internal controls,"
auditor spokesm·an Tom Prendergast ·
told The ·Columbus Dispatch for a ·
story Saturday.
,.,,,
APPT~
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.
He stressed that the audit is. rou, ·!' BATAVIA(AP) ~Authorities are him the body so he can detennine widow, Tina Cannon of San Antonio, tine and there have been no allega·
Gift Certificates purchased through Ms. Lopez
•.•trying to figure out whether the bod· whether the remains are those of Can· guessed they had buried the wrong tions of misspending.
.
man after reading the autopsy reports
that have not e%pired may be honored at
ies of two prisonerS killed in a traf. non.
The coalition is subject to state
"I
don't
know
how
else
we
can.do
each.
received
from
Tennessee.
a~lhor·
.::tic wreck and fire in Tennessee were
a~iting because it is supported by
Elite Look Beauty Salon 446-2891._
. .
.:inistakenly switched prior to burial in this," Capurro said. "We'll identify ities.
public money tbrough fees from its
it, then it's the .choice of the family
Catal,no w~ 5-feet-11 and misS- school district members. Membership
different states.
,
what
to
do
with
it."
.
ing
10 teeth. yet the autopsy repon varies and has involved as many as
•· Clermont County Coroner Nico
He
said
he
had
never
seen
anysaid
he was shorter and had perfect 553 · of Ohio's 611 school districts.
~Capurro said Friday he hoped to get
thing like this during his 28 y~ars as teeth. ·
~elp from authorities in,Washington
Fees amount to .50 cents per student,
·
Cannon was 5-feet-4 and had a said William L. Phillis, executive
touilty, Pa., to resolve the issue. The a coroner.
· The pathologist who performed full set of teeth.
victims were among six prisoners lhc
autopsies, Dr. Charles Harlan, ini- ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,~
who died April 3 near Dickson,
II I
IJ/JJJ
(1 ~ c:"1
(?
.
''Tenn., when a van transporting them tially denied that the bodies could
....Holz11r. fffal.rniltj CJT
..Jt1rllict16
; caught fire and burned along Inter- have been switched. Harlan's lawyer.
Daniel Warlick, said he had not
; •state 40.
.
A body thought to have been that ~ived any infonnation proving
..of prisoner John Cannon. 36, was liattan made a mistake.
"So, we really don't know," War,: 'buried in Clennont County, but was
exhumed from Mount Moriah Ceme- lick said. "We're still 'not able to
" ICry and found not to l!e Cannon's comment and more than happy to
work wjth · anybody that has the
wremains, Capurro said.
,_, The family of the other prisoner, infonnation to compare. I'm not in a
,,James Vincent' Catalano, 33, had position to.disagree with them, but at ·
.•. whatthey ·thought were his remains the time the bodies were identified it
burie'd in Canonsburg, Pa., in St. was done based on all the information
2.Patrick Cemetery. Catalano's family available."
by
'!)ow believes the body is not his. ·
Clennont County Prosecutor Don·
Catalano's survivors plan to have .aid Whit~ said his office had no plans
the body exhumed. A Washington to get involved.
"No crime was committe~,"
. County judge has approved and the
' exhumaJion couldlake place as soon White said. "When the accident hapSunday,Ju~e
as Monday, .said Richard. D~Salle, a pened, lhc bodies were burned almost
lawyer for the Catalano famtly.
• beyond recognition, or beyond rec6g..
Capulib said F.riday he will w!lit niti0n."
Catal~no's family and· Cannon's
for Pennsylvania authorities to send

AIIODiallid PIMa Wlllat'

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1MfCUUOI~
~ INI 1ffl,,.,

. .Prosecutors make case to back
:.claim woman was murder victim

School funding equity coalition
spending slated for examination

Manhood more:than being an ·adult male

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_: Coroner seeks help in co.rrecting
!;~ccidental prisoner~ body switch

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We hllvtJ ju.t religion enough to make us hate, ·
but not enough to make us love one another.· Jonath~n Swift (1711)

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By .foeeph Speer . ~- . general officers and the
world's lint female B-52 pilot· bit the
dust before the Pentagon reacted to
the sex crisis, but they finally•mOIIIIt·
ed a classic counterattack.
They appointed a commission.
Three commissions, in fact. A
panel of senior legal officers will
attempt to clarify the military's posi·
tion on adultery in the ranks; a p-oup
of civilians and military officials will
inv,estigate whether the befense
Department. selectively applies its
rules of conduct; and a civilian·Jl&amp;rl·
el will evlluate the military's mixedsex trainilll efforts.
.
It'll cost a bundle for Ill ~
·meeting• and rqKirls, and ·it:sa terri·
ble waste because I have .the •swer
llready.
·
Here it is: Except for situations
that occur in the wne chain of com·

' and th!:
·Anned Services Committee
idea of a besottcn ·solon acting as
guardian of' the. natimi"s military
secrets was frightening. We wrote
.about Rep. Wayne Hays of Ohio
because he hired a bu~om btonde,
,
who admitted she couldn't type a
missions have to do is declare that the ·lick, for his personal pleasure.
military ~s mission of defending the
But now every wart on a public
n!llion is best served by soldiers, nQt person's hide S4CI1)S to be fair game,
. saints. Our forces •are best COli)· and I think we are much the worse for
1man&lt;lcd by Oen.loscPit Ralston, Dl!l ' it. .As in orthodox Islamic nations, our
Parson Pat Robertson. Our bombers streeis and alleyways are patrolled by
..., best flown by Kelly Flinn, not Jcr- mutawa in search ·of the unvirtuous.
ry Fllwell.
The difference is that in America, we
· When I lint began workina in don't cut off their heads. We just
Wuhin1100. we had a rule about pee· cas~ them. · · · .
CB!Iillound predilections: If they did . What happened ln this . latest
not affect the performance of public paroxysm of PUritan penccution is
duties, we didn't report them.
. lnlly traP:. We lost the scrvic:eS oflt.
We nailed Rep. L. Mendol Rivers Flinn, an intellilient, skilled and ded·
from Sl&gt;tlth Clrotina for drunkenness · ic!lled Rier. The cornmandlna qfficer
because he was chainnan of lhc of Abcrdeen .Proving Ground in .

Joseph SPfllr

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(ja{{ia County
Cfiamber of Commerce

Infant Chlld CPR

.

W.Va. lottery picks
.

• By n,. Alaoclltld Preu
.
.
· ·
··.. The1 (olloWing numbers wen: selected.in Friday's Ohio and West Virginia
. lotteries:
·
OHIO
.,
" Pick 3: S·7-6
•
: Pick4: O-~-S-6
.
: Buckeye ,5: 2-7-~6-29·31
·
. . ·
: The owner of one Buckeye S ticket with the correct five-nwnber comb•·
Jlation may claim an Ohio Lottety prize of $100,000, the lottery announced
Sattil\iJy. ', · ' ·
·:
:. il1tc w.lnnini .ticket was sold at Discount Dnlg Mart 37 in :Norwllk.
• Sllea in BuckeYe 5 totaled $~82,594.
' : The 130 BuCkeye S game tickeU with four of.the numbers are each wonh
$25(); The 4,294 witb three of lhe numbers are ~.h worth $10. The 44.~93
lr.oith two of the ntmlbors ... each worth $1.
·
·
: The Ohio lotlery will pay out $4,311,658 to winners in Friday's Pick 3
l'lumbcra daily pme. Sales totaled $1,524,23S.
• . In Pk:t 4 Numbcra. players wapred $432,629 and will ~hare $104,700.
. : The j.i:kpot Slltllday'a Super Lotto mawina wu $8 million. · ·
-:
· .
WIST VIRGINIA
.
: Diily 3; 0-6-8·
:, Dail~ 4: 2-6,7-3
·C.,. ;15: 3-Hl: I9-;:Z0.21

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(Both held'io the Third Floor Prenatal Classroom) .

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13eautiju{

~novation

The CPR class is open to all family memben
The brothen 8t sisters class will include
a fdm, tour of. OB unit, and instruc:tions
about riewbonu by OB peuonnel

Project
WE ARE PROUD TO HAVE BEEN SELECTED
TO PROVIDE THE ......

.Carpet, Drapery &amp; Wallcovering

To rqister
call 446-5085

'Walk-ins wel~me

FURNITURE .
GALLERIES

for

••

,;

Brothers &amp;. Sisters Class

followed

I

Maryland, Maj. Gen. John Long·
houser, resigned in disgust ralher-than
submit to an investigation started
when a tipster called an Orwellian
sex "hot line" and told of an affair
the general had been involved in during a separation from his wife. Anny
. Brig,' Gen. Step~n :!(enakis, a top
med1cal officer, wa5 relieved of his
command after an alleged ·~improp­
er relationship'' with a civilian nurse .
· And then the~ 's Gen. RaiSt'!fl; a ·
man wbo w'!S commonly believed to ,
be the best Cal!didatc ih the entift mil·
itary to chair the Joint Chler. of Staff.
A decorated colllbat pjlot and Vi~,
nam .veteran with 32 yoan of superior service, Ralston wu lllendiJII the
National War Cclteae when be lllilck
up an intimate rclationllhip wich a fel.
low student, a mlrried woman who
worbd f!l' the CIA. Rallllln WUJ.P.
at!lled from IU• wife at the 111111.

fJ'O P.JlP.

1:30 to 2:30PM

military ~excapades··

mand and directly affect the uni!fs
mission, the military should keep its
nose out of the bedroom.
How hard is that? All the com-

presents

Sunday, June 22

World

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

-'

NOW AT HOLZER CliiiC MOH.·FRI.
IY PHYSIC Ill REFERUL 446·540

Jami.UJ

··-.

•••

Grand jury hits Voinovich's
former aide with indictment

..

By JOHN llcC~Y

By CALVIN WOODWARD
Associated Press Wr:Her
1
WASHINGTON ~ If tenn limits are such a hot idea, why limit them to
elected politicians? Why not stop the also-rans from running again?
. Even in this impatient culture, som.e who get their day in the sun just won't
go gently into the night.
Steve Forbes turned the "hope, growth and opportunity" theme of his
last Republican nomination campai~n into the name of his new·~rganiza­
tion, where he is believed to be plotung a second run 1f he sees a btl of per·
sonal hope, growth and opportunity.
. .
..
· Pat Buchanan slides back and forth between pract1cmg polmcs and com~
menting professionally on them. He hasn't ruled out a third try at the pres· .. ·
·
idential barricades.
· Two-time candidate Ross Perot, ,too, h!Jvers, trying to keep his Reform
Party together.
·
·
· There's a Quayle,' a Gore and a Gephardt in the future~ all three ofthem
past losers of some sort, but unbQwed.
·
.
Term limits for the unelected might solve all that. And why stop at pres·
idential politics?
·
·
.
Health gurus, Bees Gees ~:omebacks, Madonna and those drearily rcpet·
itive parking tickets could be other candidates for the term-limit impulse.
Anyone capturing 15 minutes of fame could be held to a half hour, rna&lt;.
By comparison with the British parliamentary system. where a defeated
party leader may lick wounds in the comfort of Her MaJesty's Loyal Opposition, U.S. presidential politics are brutally effic1ent at the top. You lose.
. you' re outta here.
·
. .
.
The thought of Jimmy Carter or George Bush retummg to the fray 1s
. inconceivable. Only Grover Cleveland pulled off a victory after such a defeat,
Presidents who lose re-election bids are expected to write b&lt;loks, play golf
,. , '
or .both.
· Carter has expanded that scope by building houses and mediating inter.national disputes; Bush, by jumping out of an airplane. .
.
Not since Adlai Stevenson has a beaten Democratic presidential candidate been give~ a second chance. Dw.!J!ht Eisenhower defeated him in 1956 By ROBERT WEEDY .
protected, feels secure and loved. become promiscuous can never There .arc compliant children, and
. even more soundly than in 1952.
•
Just what does it mean to be a That is the role of the father in spite remember being hugged by their there are strong-willed ones. Now
Among Republicans, Richard Nixon came back from 'his naiJOW 1960 man? When does a boy re~ll man- of all current efforts to confuse it.
. father: A hug says "I love you, you there are many excellent books
:· defeat to John Kennedy to win twice.
hood? What characteristics mark a
This father has a discipline of are important to me." How ine~peri- available on child rearing, I wish
:'
It's mostly the smaller fry who just won't quit. They take it on the chin
person who is character, he is a role model to his sive, yet priceless is that hug.
they had been available when we
• and get up. •
· truly a man'/
children. He has the courage to stay
Kids don't make up 100 percent were raising ours..Make good use of
:;.
AI Gore's 1988 campaign for the Democratic nomination was a flop. He
. ;, :
Orily in at a task until it is finished. He is not of the population, but they do make them, 'but start early. Severe rebel·
:' declared his utter lack of interest in being anyone's vice president. Now, Bill
recent times.-with afr.,aid to show affection, to rclease up 100 percent of the future. Having lion, in the strong-willed child,
: Clinton's vice president is a prime candidate for 201!0.
· the coming of the his feelings; to cry when he is sad. a positive outlook, even though we increases in the 6 to 13 ·year age
·. Missouri Rep. Richard Gephardt, the Democratic House leader, was
; unise~ culture, When he is wrong, he admits it. Vul· primarily are in a negative world bracket, but skyrockets in the 13 to
: defeated in his 1988 nomination bid and is a top potential rival of Gore's.
· have these ques- · nerability wears well on .manhood.
today, wilt go a long way in getting · 20 year category. Scientists have
: Dan Quayle, another name from t~e past, has quietly but painstakingly tend·
' tions taken on 1 Can fathers ·measure up to such good results. Fathers must team up found that rules are important, but
' ed to his influence in the GOP since his defeat on the Bush ticket in 1992.
m·uch
greater· standards? Certainly, because we witb mothers if we want the best example is the great stimulus. A
:
Buchanan actually won something the second time around ~ the New importance.
increased absence learn from both our successes and results. There will be times when child needs to team by concrete
:: Hampshire primary ~en route to bei.ng cru_shed in the nomination fight by of fathers from the home has also our failures, and so do our children! mothers will be most effective in an e~ample, especially until the age of
Bob Dole, who in tum was defeated by Chnton and reltred to make com- increased the difficulty of raising ltl!elps to be transparent, rather than area, other times it will be fathers. II. "Do as I say, not as 1 do"· Isn't a
. · mercials and a loan to House Speaker Newt Gingrich. ·
.
· boys into manhood. .
trying to hide our mistakes. Then I · Positive parents can raise positive very apfl~priate message from a
~
Perot faded to 8.5 percent of the popular vote last year from 19 percent
.Manhood is more than being an become real. A d!lse of humility also kids. A survey has ·shown that in the . father to his son or daughter.
:• in 1992, when he was a fresh phenomenon.
adult male. It is favoring relation- belps a lot.
· .
home negative comments tend to · Fathers Day is meant to be a eel·
~
Forbes dropped out after spending.$30 million of his own mW~ey and win- ships over .materialistic desires. It is
. It is a good e~perience for fathers exceed the positive by I0 to one.
ebration of parenthood, as well it
1
choosing commitment over conve- to walk in their wives shoes. Finding
One of the best ways to solve should be. No parent is perfuet, but
•
;; ning the Delaware and Arizona pril!'aries.
.
..: From his platform now at Amencans for Hope, Growth and Opportum- nience. It is accepting responsibility . out first hand what mothers cope problems in' the family is simply to they arc still our Jl&amp;rent and should
:: ty, he's been championing a variety of issues a_nd pitching the~ specifical· instead of rationalizing the situation. . with hour to hour gives a new appre- talk. We have so many things that be so honored. For~iveness for hurts
~ ly to all-important poht1cal states ~ a speech m New Hampshire, a call to
It is placing substance·over style or ciation of their contribution to the take us away from ordinary conver- in the past can bring about a whole
: reporters in Iowa.
.
: .
.
. .
.
. . image. It is building family bridges family. Whether it is fixing breakfast sations. Surveys have · ~hown that , new attitude where love can prevail.
~
1be millionaire pubhsher beheves m term hmns but only m the usual rather than placing all the energy in for .the kids, getting . them off to · fathers fail at this point the most.
Especially good resources arc the
climbing corporate ladders. It is school, or tucking them into bed and What with working, sleeping, eat- following: ·
,
., sense.
•
EDITOR'S NOTE ~ Calvin Woodward covers national affairs for knowing our roots, our heritage as a helping·them with their prayers. Dad ing, and television (about seven
•• Growing a Healthy .Home, by
~ Tbe Aisodatcd PreS$. ·
··
people rather than being rootless and grow~ deeper in family life.
hours a day in the ~vcragc home), Yorkey •• Wolgemuth &amp; Hyatt Pubfancy free .
.. . '
:roo often fathers watch daugh- there is little .time left, for talking. lishers Inc.;
. ·
~~----------------------------------------------------------------, · Fathers, likewise, are ll)Ore than ters grow up, be!!in to date, and stan Remember. talking, .even before . . : Parenting Adolescents. by
".!
spenn donors. They are to p,rovide thinking of marriage and stay aloof birth and certainly 'after, develop~ Huggins .. Navpress;
servant leadership, not the Archie from the process. She doesn't know the child's braiq. Orie imponat\'t key
-- Parenting iSII't for Cowards, by
Bunker-type
loudmouth
who how to ask for our input, so she to comqJUnicalion on any issue or Dobson •• Word Publishing;
slouches in his chair, b!lrks out waits for us to take the initiative. subject is to end every conversation
•• Raising Positive Kids in-a Neg- '
orders, and thinks the world gravi· Too often the counsel is left up to the with a comma. not a period.
ative World, by Ziglar •• Oliver Ncl·
tates around him, Since when does ~ife, yet she win- many · someone.
Yes, Dads, it is not easy to be a son Publishing.
.sclfisltness, dogmatism, and preju- hke us, · a p~an. The process of 'parent. There arc no ,imple rules to
Robert Weedy Is a -c:orrespori·
, . •••
dice mean you are a man?
involvement must begin early !n life, be applied because all children arc dent for the Sunday Times-Sen·
FatherS provide for their family. . for character traits are molded over different. If they start·out the same, · tine!.
• ••
\1 .
'
They see that the family is cared for, many years. Often young girls who they .will be different very soon.

· ~ . Ber~\·9
"'I'

Ohio/VtVa.

June11,1..,

44110332

Gdlpolla

'

.

, _

. .. ,..

.

,

I

•FINE JEWELRY
•CUSTOM DRAPERY
•CARPET
•INTERIOA DESIGN
Rllldlntlal
IIICI
commtretll

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�...

Sunday, June 15,

Ponwoy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point P._unt, WV

·~~~~----~--~~~~~~~~----~--~--~--~-

SurVivors' group pays ·
tribute to Vietnam -dads
Thomas DeLong

Deaths of note elsewhere
.
Jaek Hagerty
.
MANDAN, N.D. (AP) - Jack Hagerty, a fonner editor of the Grand
Forks Herald, died Friday. He was 78.
He had suffered a heart attack about six monlhs ago and several small
strokes since then.
Hagerty joined lhe Herald as news editor in 1957 after working at papers
in Aberdeen, S.D., and Grand Junction, Colo., and as a United Press correspondent and manager in Bismarck and Minneapolis.
Hagerty retired as the Her:ald's editor in 1983. He continued writing "That
Reminds Me," a retrospectiv~ column, until early this year.
The North Dakota Newspaper Association honored Hagerty in 1985 for
50 years in the newspaper business. The University of North Dakota established a lectureship in his honor.
.
Survivors include his.wife, Marilyn. a Herald columnist; thrde children;
a sister; and four grandchildren.
Howard Thomas Frazier
· BRANFORD, Conn. (AP) - Howard Thomas frazier, an organizer of
goodwill programs during the Cold War and past president of the Consumer
· Federation of America, died Tuesday of complications from heart surgery.
He was ·8S. .
·
·
from 1974 until his death, frazier was e&lt;ecutive director of the Woodmont-based Promoting Enduring Peace, which sponsors friendship tours for
Americans to other nations.
·
,
frazier, of Milford, spent 19 years in Labor Department upholding fair
wage standards in the 1950s and '60s. He was named to President Johnson's
Commission on Consumer Interests in 1965 and three years later joined the
White House staff as administrative assistant for consumer protection .
frazier headed the Consumer Federation from 1970 to 1972.
A native of Etowah, Tenn .. Frazier worked after college for the Tennessee
Valley Authority. He served in the Army Air Force during World War II.
.

.

HE'S FREE- Micah Papp, a.k.a. Manny the Hipple, hugged his
sister Feral at their home In Beavercreek after Papp was releatled
from prison last week after serving time for violating_his probation on a mariJuana charge. Papp ~me known as Manny the
Hippie by doing movie reviews on David Letterman's "Late Show."

(AP)

~'It's

just·that when you do it, you want to
do it right," Sellers said.
The 6th ·u.s. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Cincinnati, which handles
federal appeals from Ohio, Ken-

By PAUL QUEARV
While McVeigh's sentence wiD be
vAaaoclated Pre• Writer
appeal~)(~. there is yet another !rial to
'• DENVER-. His sister wept, his come. McVeigh's eo-defendant, 'fermother struggled to liold back tears ry Nichols, is expected to be tried lat•attd his father slumped in his seat. But er this year on the same charges.
,nmothy McVeigh sat expressionless, ·
The jury that convicted McVeigh
his eyes fixed on the judge who read on ·June 2 deliberated .for more than
'lbe jury's decision to sentence him to II hours over two days before deciddealh for the Oklahoma City bomb- ing that he should die by injection
•ing.
.rather than spend the rest of his life
·,, "It's OK," McVeigh mouthed I~ in prison.
·
•-his family as he was led out of the
U.S. District Judge Richard
: courtroom Friday afternoon. He hel4 Matsch said he will inlpose the actu. up two fingers in a small wave, and al sentence this summer, after a July
made the same gesture til the jurors · 7 deadline for motions and appell)s.
who had decided he should die.
In Oklahoma City, the sentence
•· They stared blankly back.
· · prompted cheers from people galhThe trial was finally over, ered along the fence that surrounds
although appeals are expected to the site where the federal building
•take three years or more. The $CD· was !educed to rubble the morning of
· 'tencing decision for murder and con- April 19, 199S.
.
"'spiracy came two years and SS d{tys
"When Tmiothy Mc\Tei&amp;h made
after 168 peQple were killed and hun: the decision to murder, maim and
' dreds more injured in the explosion destroy all these people, he gave up
' at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal the righttb be called a human being.
· ·Building. ·
.
.
Del!th is obviously what he should
,: The deadliest act of terrorism on have," said Kathleen Treanor, whose
· U.S. soil shook the nation's sense of 4-year-olddaughter and iri-laws were
. internal security and thrust anti-gov- killed in the blasL
·
· Other .victims were iomber.
"ernmeht . fervor squarely into the
" spotlight. That the 29-year-old
"It's not going to bring back my
·, M0Veigh, a decorated Gulf War vet- wife and lessen my loss," said Mike
:,eran with a boy-next-door look; was Lenz, whose pregnlint wife, Carrie,
:the suspect stunned many. ·
was killed.

AIDSI .
and still have money left to enjoy life! ·

;:r.

a

, Such a deal. But that reverse-sale
scenario is a little like what's happening in the stock market.
·
"People just want to get a piece of
the action,'' said Arnold Kaufman,
'editor of The Oudook newsletter at
Standl!rd &amp; Poor's Corp. "If you
explain to them·it's like buying a can
of Coke at $10. they'd ul!derstand it."
Demand for stocks is voracious, as
. investors read about fabulous returns
in the stock· market and put themselves on a frantic deadline to buy, as
if a Jift-giving holiday were imminent.
Supply is lower, as companies buy
Municipal
their shares out of the marketplace
GALLIPOLIS - The following
llld other companies don't replace cases were recently resolved in the
·them with as many new issues.
Gallipolis Municipal Court:
. Following the laws of Economics
Walter C. Boolh, ~7, Crown City, ·
I 0 I, hiaher demand and shrinking charged with driving under the influsupply have pfoduced hiaher prices, ence, was fined $450, five days jail
But how hiah is too high? At what (credit time served), two years propoint does the price of a stock com- bation and I 80 days license suspenpletely disconnect from its underly- sion.
·
inl value?
·
·
. Brett C. Agner, 19, Cincinnati,
The Dow Jones industrials are up chttrged with disorderly conduct, was
more !han 20 percent Ibis year, after fined SI 00, one day jail
,. (credit time
..

·* two proiriiDI * co•pater Cllltolllized

•

'i

(other sizes ;mel moclels also on sale)
.

Investors are paying more than
four times book value, compared
with just over 2 times in August 1987.
The dividend yield,. which is the
company's indicated annual dividend divided by the price, goos down ·
when the price of stocks goes up. It
is at an all-time low of I.73 pef!:ent, ·
Kaufman points out. At the August
market peak in 1987, it was 2.54 percent.
\
_ "! _think there's no question that
we're overvalued here;-' Kaufman
said.
•
·
Smith Barney stock strategist
Marshall A-cuff Jr. agrees that, by all.
those measures. stocks are selling at
dizzying prices.
I

served), one )'ear probation.
Warren E. Dotson, 43, Bidwell,
charged with disorderly conduct, was
fined $100.

.

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It

lltG· C

,,

CommonPieu

GALLU'OLIS .,.. The following
cases were recently filed in the Gallia County Common Plea,s Coun:
Divorce filed - Jacpe Lee Shepherd, 11624 State Route 7 Soulh, Gallipolis, from JoAnn Shepherd, same
address.
·

414 2nd Ave ·Suite 204
Downtown Gallipolis

ago.'~

Most jurors refused to discuss the
deliberations.
"I'm glad it's complete," said
juror David Gilger. "I think there's a
sense of closure for everyone."
President Clinton said the trial
.confinned the country's faith in its
justice system.
Despite McVeigh's stoic facade,·
Jones said it is a mistake .to assume
the defendant was not emotional
during the trial.
''Tim McVeigh, despite all outward appearances, is a man of deep
.emotions, empathizes with people, .

. •·.

~·1·1&gt; .

:1

an.

1t the
of the t.dltll buldlng exploib'lln
OklahOrllll City lltt.r the dedi MJ~t.nce for
Timothy McV11gh wa1 •nnoun.,..S. (AP)
'

OKLAHOMA CITY REACTS ...... Oklllh0r1111
City pollee c:h!lplltln Jack Pol, c•111r, consoltd
.Prlaclll,8 Salyera1 !eft, 1nd Karen EV.n• Frldax

shares their grief," Jones said in an an
interview that will appear Sunday on
CBS's "60 Minutes." "Tim McVeigh

-that it was, in McVeigh's mind at
least, an act of patriotism plotted to
avenge the deadly 1993 government
siege at Waco and stave off tyranny.
In his closing, Jones told the j1,1ry:
"It' is a political crime. It is an ideological crime. He is riot a demon,
though surely his act was demonic."
Andrew Cohen, a Denver trial
. attorney, said McVeigh, believing his
cause lost, may have ordered a
"political statement instead of a legal
maneuver."
McVeigh's lawyers "wouldn't sell
out their client That really makes me
, think McVeigh, the boss, was behind
that strategy." Cohen said.before the
verdict came in. "From alegalposition, it's sort of a disaster."
Added Levenson: "I think they're
trying to play to the one juror who
might understand how somebody
equid be that angry at the government."

is a far more complicated person than trial, jurors were brought to tears by
what has been projected."
· . · the stories of survivon and victims'
During the penalty phase of the relatives.

Whatever strategy lay behind was merely "suggesting that we
Jones' curious line of -reasoning, it · needed a more measured response to
failed utterly.
· acts of domestic disturbance, that we
In the detailed list of pluses and needed to lower ourvoices, we needminuses lhe jurors weighed in decid- ~d to heal o~r divisions, .and _that the
ing whether McVeigh should live or JUry, a federal JUry, by grvmg Mr.'
die, they unanimously rejected the McVe1gh hfe w1tho_ut parol~ would
assenion lhat "believed deeply in take a step m that d1rect10n.
the ideals upon which the United
In h1s closmg, Jones also urged
States was founded."
. jurors to spare McVeigh's life to preIn·his closing argl.ment, Jones also serve the pos.sibility ·t~at he might
hinted that McVeigh's execution reveal others mvolved m the bombcould cause more bloodshed. "You ing plot.
have to make the first step·to restore
lrven Box, an Oklahoma attorney
domestic 11'8nquility." he said. "You ~ho has defended_death-pc;naltt. casknow now that Oklahoma City start- es, found that tactic offensive. Sayed something."
ing that his client knows is totally
Prosecutors called that statement admitting guilt," Box said. "It
tantamount to a threat, and Denver absolutely to me is unprofessional,
defense · auorney Scott · Robinson and there may be some ethics proDagreed. "It was blatant intimida- !ems with the bar."
· tion," he said. •
After friday's verdict, Jones
In an interview with CBS after the backed away from any implication
· death-penalty verdict, Jones said he that McVeigh committed the crime.

'

'

feS#• ""'ent'S

ited Saturday, ended affirn\ative ebrating our diffe~nces, but embracUI
action in·admissions.
ing more strongly what we have in
"l know that many people in Cal- common?"
. recf_/'1 COmeS
ifornia voted to repeal affinnative
"Our hearts long to answer yes,
action, and did so without ill motive. ' but our history reminds us thai it will
But the results are dramatic and dev- be hard,'' he said.
·
By RON·FOURNIER
astating," Clinton said. "Enrollments
Clinton has promised to devote at
Asaoclated Preu Writer
iri law school and other graduate pro- least one major presidential event a
SAN DffiGO- Urging black and grams are plummeting for . the fi..St . monlh to the topic.
white A!nerica to "breach racial time in decades."
Ointon 's civil rights record is
divides," President Clinton opened a
Even as Clinton put finishing mixed. ·His appointments mirror
yearlong campaign against intoler- touches on the speech, critics fanned racial and'ethnic percentages of the
ance Saturday by denouncing Cali- on the right and left over his recotd national population, and he has been
Cornia's anti-affinnative action drive and his creation.ofan advisory com- a strong voice for racial tolerance.
as "dramatic and devaswing. ,;
mission on race relations. .
But critics say he has not don~
In stem rebuke to ending racial
House Majority Leader Dick enough to help minorities. The weipreferences, Clinton declared, "Call Anney or'Texas said blaming drop- fare bill he signed in 1996 and his
it what you will, but I call it resegre- ping minority enrollments on the end effort to curb federal affinnative
galion."
of affirmative action is a "misdiag• action programs have drawn criticism
In a commencement address, nosis."
· from the left.
"It's actually evidence of the . Ointon, a son of the segregated
which was billed as a landmark of
Clinton's presidency, Clinton sought urgent n~ for school choice.'' South, staunchly defends his record.
to trace the' history of race relations Anney said .in a siatement. "Calling "If there is any issue I qught to have
in America and offer a frank assess- for quotas in coll~ge admission is · credibility on, it is this one," he told
simply passing the buck. We can't reporters Friday after meeting with
ment of where mat~ers now stand.
"The ideals that bind us together expect anyone to survive 12 years in his newly fonned seven-member
are as old as our nation, but so are the substandand schoOls and Uteri excel in · advisory board.
foi:l:es that would pull us apart," Clin- college. "
Proposition 209, approved by Calton said in the pddress prepared for .
With the help of . the advisory ifornia voters in November, bans condelivery to graduates at lhe Univcr- board and its . 15- to 20-member sideration of race and gender in suite
sity of California, San Diego.
staff, Clinton promised to spark a hiring, contracting and-education. It
Recalling struggles for civil rights national discussion about racial, reli- has not taken effect because of legal
in his native So.uth, the president.said, gious and ethnic tensions in Ameri- challenges, which the Justice Depart"We have torn down the barriers in ca. He plans to report to the Ameri- . ment has supported i~ briefs to the
our laws. Now we must break down can public in a year with concrete federal courts.
Republican lawmakers have
the barriers in our lives, our minds solutions.
"Can we become the world's first accused the administration of trying
and our hearts."
Bucking prevailing political truly multiracial, multielhnic democ- to "defend the_indefensible"· in its
winds, Clinton chose California as ,racy? Will we be one America in the attack on Proposition 209.
'the site of his speech to underscore . 21st century?" lhe president asked
In a cautious recognition of voter
his opposition to Proposition 209, a rhetorically.
distruSt of affinnative action, Clinton
.- J996 ban on racial preferences. In
"We lcnow what w~ will look like has proposed ~o "mend - not end" .
l99S, The· Univenity of California -but what will we be like? Can we .the f~ral programs.
system, including the campus be vis- , !»e one America, respecting, even eelClinton has criticized university.

But 'p·

'd
under scrutiny

·

~urvey

Call lofty for a 1111 cost, 110 obl/gtllltHI . , . . , n.IIMIIID1t
t11td pro,..,..,bk li•lll'illg tdd u-~Utn~t~tRt -yo• will N w/Ml yo• 411 . ,

"If Mr. McVeigh has kn.owle&lt;lge,
a death sentence would not encourage him to talk,'' Jones told
"You shouldn assume by tJiat.,t!jat
Mr. McVeigh is guilty."
·~
Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowiti was unforgiving in his eviiluation of the defense, especially
Jones • closing.
"He was at his absolute worst,
asking the jury in effect to say everybody was responsible for this and that
solllChow patriotism and political
motivation should be a mitigating
factor," · Dershowitz said. "That's
the kind of argument that forces people who . are on the fence to. vote
against you."
.
Rob Nigh. another one Qf
Me Veigh's lawyers, said: •" No doubt
that we've made mistakes along the
way, but that's human nature• and
lawyers are human."

systems in California and Texas for
ending affinnative action for admission. The number of blacks admitted
to the University of California's
Boalt Hall law school tumbled 81
percent in the fint year without affirmative action. and Hispanic admissions fell 50 percent.

earns NAACP boycott

said. They will be the target of a boy- ,planning the hbtel boycott and infor- results of its hotel survey last Febru- '
!jflaloCiiatllld p,... Writer
leoti this summer, he said.
.
mational picketing by mid-sUffilllCr in .ary. At·that tinle, eight hotel chains
NEW YORK - The NAACP . "We will not support hotels' who the nation's 25 largest marlcets.
had failed to participate and received
it will lead a boycott 11ainat
not support ua," Mfume said at a
The three ~bains that received an "F" grades, prompting the NAACP
hotel chains that failed to news conference Friday. "And we · "F" noted that their hotels are inde- . to threaten a boycott.
toasurveyonthehirinaand ,·call on Americans of soodwill :pendently owned and they don't i ~ince then, all but three of the
of blacks.
·!hrougholit the natioll to support 111 in· have ICCell to m1111 of the iaforma- '1 "failing" hotels have chosen to parTho ·
Associllion for the this llrllgle."
lion requeatod.
ticipate, Mfume · said, and have
· of Colored P"'Ple , 'f!te ,NAACP hU made the hotel
Westin spokeswoman Sue B~h reCeived improved scores.
IS hotel cbai111 to help swde ·liitdutlry the tint tarpt of its "~ also said her company cbai1111111 ·: · The WuhiiiJIOII, D.C.-based Marorganialiona and COIIIIIIDIIIS nomic Reciprocity Campaip," reapondecl to the NAACP survey in rioU International received the high;;:;..,--where·- to 1p011c1 their lodJing dol- which ..0 to 1110 black economic a leaer. "We didn't respond ia the : :ett ranking - a "C plus" grade · !!!lin.
·.
' clout to improve c:onditiODiln black way !bey ubd 11110 telptllld. 10 !bey .buod on the NAACP's survey, which 1
three hotel chaiu thai! cemmullltlel.&amp;tt!-filbn,it~to lpaltdit," ltiellid.,
, ubd_queltio• about theinchlli!"' ··
·ved falllq _..... - Holiday · ,look II the retil'l and •tomoli
. ve . , A boycoa, Bruab added, il "not 1 · of blllcks in employme~t, franchise
Wallin IIIII Belt W k a - .indutlriel.
I Cll a bliCtiw way 10 achieve billllnl OWMnhip. veadot relations, adverto IWfllMI 10 lhe euney,: : Me- llid lhe NAACP will '*r-llliw·"
·. 'tiliq and philmttbropy.
NAACP Ptaidrat ICwelal Mlinne' .wort wilh 35 blaek.Ot!JII"••ioM in
'l1le NAACP fint aniiCJiincell tile

:do

441-19'71 or 800.-434-4194

j

McVeigh's lawyen had portrayed
him as a misguided patriot bent on
avenging the deadly government
siege of the Branch Davidian compound near W~~:o, Texas.
Outside the courthouse, defense
attorney Stephen Jones said be
accepted the jury's.decision.
"Their verdict is entitled tci
respect and all Americans should
accord it that respect until such time
if ever it is overturned by a court of
competent jurisdiction," be said.
Prosecutor Joseph Hartzler said
the sentencing decision brought no
joy to his team: "The verdict doesn't
diminish the great sadness that
occllll'ed in Oklahoma City two years

CATHERINE CROCKER

Dacr to the flooding In March•
we haw moved to oar new

location at: .
1124 JACKSOn PIKE

GfiLLIPOUS. OH. 45631
This Is In the Spring Valley
Plaza across
.
from Foodland.
'

We would also like to express our ·
appreciation to thoH who ltelped
·durlnttiN floM:
*The Gallla County Sheriff's Dept.
* Jordan's Gas Service
* JolannJ (Able) Math•~• ·
·
.*All our custo••r• and thoHinvolved
b In helping and llelng patient during
~·- thlstl••·

~

~

jl

Thank You!!

FERRELLGAS
GALLIPO~IS,

OH•.
1

446·2264

ifTh.

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-clinton. launches race relations initiative

' failure to answer

. "Wiat!re tile Futurl of Bltter Hearing is Hen Today!"

Call Mel Mock ·&amp;C-HIS
today for a free hearing evaluation

~

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save $200!
'

Gallia County court news

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PRICE! $695

Your choice
. • run concha
. or smaU behind·fhe-eu

:'Increasing demand drives up stock prices
gaining 26 percent in. 1996 and
romping 33 percent in 1995. And
since the end of 1995, stock analysts
have .been debating whether the market is overvalued.
On paper; it certainly is. Most Wall
Street experts have favorite measures
of market value, and nearly all of
them show a market clearly out of ·
whack.
Stocks in the S&amp;P 500 are selling
at about 22 times average earning~.
That price-to-earnings ratio is the
highest it's been since World War II,
with the exception of the fateful year
of 1987, when it took a 35 percent
correction to bring things back into
line, Kaufman said .

j

·ADVANCED

'

NEW YORK (AP) - Imagine
1Sab Fifth Avenue raising prices on
:men's ties, cutting supplies just
before Fathers. Day. then trying to
,convince consumers the reason they
·should buy is that prices are ... high-

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By PAUL QUEARY
Aaaoclated Preu
DENVER- After two years of
pf(l!:laiming Timothy McVeigh's.
innoceno;e in the Oklahoma City
bombing, his lawyers all but admitled during the penalty phase thai he
did it. Why?
Was it shrewd strategy? A blunder
born of, desperation? Or possibly a
. · political statement orchestrated by
MeVeigh himself?
"II was a gamble and it didn't pay
off," said LaUrie l,evenson, a deali at
LOyola Law School in Los Angeles,
after the jary came back wilh its deci~ion that McVeigh must pay with his
life.
·
Instead of begging for mercy or
ti'ying io raille'more doulils about the
crime, defense attorney Stephen
Jones made a tacit admission of
McVeigh's guilt and all but adopted
the prosecution's·theory of the crime

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)
- Media lawyers have argued that
disputed evidence should not be
heand behind closed doon in the
Unabomher case.
,
They contended friday that disClosure would noi hun Theodore
Kaczynski's chances for a fair tri'al.
A hearing was scheduled for
.MPOday, ·in ..u.s,, District, Judge
Garland Burrell's chambers to consider the government's request to
introduce potential evidence that
includes material related to crimes
not listed in the indictment.
The evidence includes alleged
admissions Kaczynski millie in his
journal, a chal't detailing the prosJ,e,cut:'ion's allegations of other.
crimes and 'documents seized from
Kaczynski's Montana cabin fol-rl•lo•~,e~hi~sarrest in April 1996.
!!
lawyen have opposed
the request to 'allow the evidence,
But both sides agreed that the
release of some material "would
irreparably damage" Kaczynski's
trial rights.
·
A IIICdia coalition told Burrell
there was no proofto support that
·
contention.
The agreement between the
prosecution and defense is "as a
matter ·of law, insufficient to
exclude .ihe press and public from
presumptively open pretrial proc~~~~~s(~an~~d~:documents," wrote
,a
Kenyon . . ·
representi~g Sacramento
~~~~~~i~ stations KCRA and
'"
· The Associated Press and
:ti~;~ newspapers - the Los Ange:
nmes, San Francisco Cbroni:~: San Francisco Examiner and
iii
Sacramento Bee.
Kaczynski, SS, bas pleaded
to a tO-count federal
accusing him of using
tO kill two people in Sacraa decade apart and injuring
o;~ ;•l"uothers. He also is accused in a
Jersey indictme'lt of
:i;~:~~r.::~anNew
advenising executive.
If convicted. he could face the
:;!;death penalty.
· The disputed material includes
;~:~~:::nstrelated to Unabomber .
:;
that occurred between
and 199S. Iri all, three people
killed and 23 injured in Hi
linked to the

CROWN CITY- Greg·A. Gooderham, 44, of 653 Galli a Street, Crown
City, died Saturday, June 14, 1997 at his residence.
· :
He was born June 30,,1952 in Gallipolis, the son ()f William T. Goodetiham and Naomi Swain Gooderham of Crown City.
·'
' He graduated from -Hannan Trace High School in 1970.
,
In addition to his parents, he is survived by .a daughter, Melissa tBarr.y)
· Call of Gallipolis; two sisters, Kim Miller of Crown City, and Beth (MartY.)
Matthews of Proctorville;.t"+"o grandchildren, Courtney Swain of Crown Cit~,
and Cody &lt;;:all of Gallipolis; two , nephews, B.eau Miller and Nicholas
Matthews; and a niece, Morgan Matthews.
!
Services will be _l p.m. Monday, June 16, 1997 in the Willis Funeral Homd,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Gary Warner and the Rev. George Holley officialing. Burial will be in the.Crown City Cemetery. Friends may call at the fune~. al home frotn 6-9 p.m. Suhday, June 15, 1997.
'
Pallbearers will he Barry Call, Marty Matthews, Beau Miller,' Keith Smith,
Jimmy Halley and Ronald Burnett. . ·
:
The honorary pallbearer is Dr. Sigismund Harder.
'

0 .....

ttorneys Admission of McVeigh's 'demonic' action puzzles experts
seek•open.·
Writer
cas.
h earlngs
'I
:. on suspect
: 8''1.~'~enc
· e
be
Ul

Greg A. Gooderham..

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:

OK,' McVeigh says

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tucky,TennesseelindMichigan,tOok
in
4,800 new cases last year. Court
Clerk Leonard Green said he would
welcome a reduced paper flow, but ·
does not expect his court to adopt
electr()nic filing soon.
"lt's still .off in the middle distance. 'It's not something we're
actively pursuing at this · point," ·
Green said. "The technology~s here.
It's just a inattefof pressure the courts
might feel on themselves. Not.everyone in the bar is on computer."

r

: as· jurors dictate·death

Electronic legal filing gains slow acceptance
By J_OHN NOLAN.
court in eastern Pennsylvania set up Institute, which studies how copy·
· Aaaoclated Press Writer.
a bulletin board system and allowed right law and other leg-al codes are
CINCINNATI -The paper chase attorneys to send in documents elec- adjusting to legal issues. " I suppose
could be reduced to bits and bytes as tronically, but they also were req~ired I could' write up a fake brief, print it
more courts begin to accept docu- to submit paper documents as a . out, get it bound .. . and send 40
ments by computer.
backup. .
copies into the Supreme Court, if I
Advocates say the procedure now
• Northern Ohio's federal district wanted to."
in use in some federal and state courts courts began accepting · electronic
No one has tried it yet, Post said,
around the country saves space in filings in maritime asbestos exposure · "but it's an issue I think they have to
· crowded court offices, cuts the time cases via the Internet in January deal with."
·
it takes.lawyers and clerks to file the 1996, The system now manages
Participants.in the New York fedpapers. reduces client bills, and more .than 7,000 cases. Almost 50 eral bankruptcy court's electronic
expands access to court files.
lawyers nationwide submitted those filing program have passwords.
But even the most andent sup- documents electronically, and creal- Lawyers must "sign" the documents
porters say prqblems inherent in ed the court's official docket entries. they file electronically, with a code
electronic filing could delay wide• The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for based on their Social Security nomspread acceptance for years.
the Southern District of New York, . bers.
Some court administrators and based in New York City, has been
With a modem and passWord, the
watchdog groups worry that elimi- - accepting electronic filings for more parties can retrieve the filings from
nating paper files could effectively than a year. The pilot program began any computer and print out copies if
deny access to people who don't have by allowing lawyers to file docu- needed . The system serves docua computer and modem. Others wor- ments in the bankruptcy case .of ments on all parties in a case by
ry abOut security- including bow to . retailer Bradlees Inc.
infonning them by electronic mail or
restrict access to sealed documents• And lawyers filing complaints fax if a filing has been made.
and detennining the ·legitimacy . of for women alleging health problems
The Administrative Office of the
lawyers' ''electrqnic signatures" to from breast implants are using elec- U.S. Courts, the Washington-based
· ensure -the filings are. legitimate.
tronic filing in state court in Beau- support agency for fhe nation's fedThe problems will have to be · mont, Texas.
· era! courts, issued a memo in March
solved. All sides agree electronic fil- .
,Electronic filing also has gained a urging discussi&lt;;m and comments as
ing will one day replace paper in the foothold in Denver; Dallas; Topeka, the office makes plans for widespread
courts.
Kan.; England ; Singapore ; and handling of electronic case files.
"I call this my retirement pro- Ontario, Canada, McMillan said .
"There are many issues .and unanject," said Jim McMillan, 43, direc· .. Hybrid systems have sprung up. In swercd questions," Director Leonidas
.tor of the Court Technology Labora· some locations, including Santa Clara Mecham wrote. "But there is also a
;tory for the National Center for State County ·in northern California's Sili- · widely held belief that ... resoluiions
•Courts in Williamsburg, Va. "We're con Valley, · lawyers deliver docu- and answers can be found and elcc: going to have a long transition peri" ments to courts and their opponents Ironic case files capabilities can he
tod where we're going to be allowmg electromcally. ln others, lawyers htre made commonly available in the
' people to file.things in by paper.
commercial service providers to near future."
: "We've been working on this for deliv'er documents electronically.
Federal appeals courts are not yet
:years and setting u~ the rul_es to all~w
. While the system makes life a bit using electronic filing . They are
:a structure for th1s. I thmk you re . easter m the court clerk's office, com- .· soliciting comments from lawyers,
. ' going to have different approaches.... puler gurus are still working on ways but the federal judiciary remains
lhink everybody's going to have to to make it foolproof.
cautious, said David Sellers,
:decide how to support the lawyers."
"That's so~ of a thorny problem spokesman for the Administrative
l Slowly, courts have begun testing whert you think about it," said David Office of the U.S. Courts.
Post of Georgetown University and
"I don't think anyone 's opposed to
:the system.
, • In the early 1990s, a federal co-dtrector of the· Cyberspace Law · it. It's the wave of the future .... It's

• : ,= ,

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WASHINGTON (AP)- Just tall he survived.
enouah to be at eye level with the feet
"It was scary there," said Kintie
of a memQrial statue at the Vietnam Rheinheimcr, 9, of what it was like ·
. Wall, a little boy asked why Ameri- for her grandfather to fi~t in the'.w~.
can soldiers in .Vietnam ·wore ~g
"It w_as so hot they os~ly dtdn I
tags on their boots:
' .) wear sh1rts, JUSt vests With .hOOtonVietnam vet Robert M,aras didn'~ g~s pockets," added her twm s1ster,
.
~,flinch: "If they ~..:'got a leg blown otr; Bnana,
.
The two g~rJs cam~ all ~ way
you could identify them."
Of the S8,000 Ainericans _911ed in from Bakersfield, Cal1f., w1th the~r
Vietnam an eStimated one4liird were parents to learn more about theu
fathers. They left young children who grandpa, Cpl. Richard L. Sanders, a ·
have become patents lhemselve.s.
m~dic wilh the Anny's 9th Infantry
Saturday, members of the nation- DtvtSIO~ . ,
. .. .
al survivors suppon group Sons and
Kirstie wd ~ d1~ trymg to help
Daughten in Touch bnJught to Wash- a wounded sold1er.
.
ington dozens of grlinachildren of
Sons and Daughters m .!ouch
men who died in Vietnam for a spe- works to bnng t~g~ther fam1hes of
cial Father's Day rell)embrance at the the dead and surv1 vmg veterans who
Vietnam Veterans Mep10rial.
may be able to share news of the last
Maras, presid"JJt of the New Jer- days of lost fathers and ~andfathers
sey state council of the Vietnam Vet- or JUSt .lend a.sympathetic ear.
· erans of America.· :~elped parents
Kelly R1hn, 31: of Glensh~w, Pa.,
answer their childreQ's questions.
was able to get m touch with her
A misty rain d~ipped from lush father's sergeant through the group.
summer foliage overhead as he spoke She learned that her, dad , .Joel D.
offlakjackets,jungleboots,machine C?le~an of.the Army s 1st Caval~
guns and the untimely, violent deaths DIVIsiOn, was shot by a smper m
of young men who should have lived 1966- when he was 21 and she was
to be these children's grandfathers.
8 months old.
•
"You try to explain the best you
Although. she c~n t remember
can that he was doing what his coun- --:hat he was hke, Rhm has m~~e sure
try wanted him to do and fighting for h1s granddaughter Megan, 4, knows
our freedom and that he•was a really her grandpop's n~me is on the wall.
special man for that.'.' said Gary Size- If she even sees 11 on TV, she calls
more, 42, of Largo, Aa. Sizemore me."
'
came to The Wall with his two broth·
"We're literally carrying the torch,
ers to teach their six kids, ages 4 to and it's our ·cbildren who will !ali:e
10, about grandpa.
over,'' said Jeanette Chevrony, 30, of
William D. Sizemore was an. Costa Mesa, Calif. whose 3-year-old .
American adviser to the South Viet- · son Eddie is named after his grandnamese army and had been in coun- father. ·
try just 18 days when he was killed
In addition to bringing their chilin an ambush in June of 1967. Each ·dren to visit, 250 Sons and DaughteK;S
of his grandchildren made a pencil ·members from about 40 states gathrubbing of his name etched in The 1ered at dawn Saturday to help NationWall and got a red-. yellow-, and :al Park Service rangers wash thl:
green-striped sticker like the cam- memorial. They planned to place ro$paign ribbon he would have worn had . es there Sunday.
!

PEDRO -Thomas DeLong, 89, Pedro, died friday, June 13, 1997 ill the
J~Linn Health Center.
Born Sept. 24, 1907 in Kius Hill, son of the late Theodore and Minnie
Mae Huddels DeLons. he was a retired fanner.
.
Survivi111 are three sisters, Clara Conrad and lnis DeLong, bolh of Columbus, and Mildred Bush of Johnstown; and a brother, Raymond Del-onll of
'
Gallipolis.
,
·
.
He was also preceded in death by two brotliers, Ralph Delong and (llba
DeLong; and a sister, Carrie Demint.
.
Graveside services will be I :30 p.m. Monday in the Johns Creek c,rnetery, Waterloo. ArrangelllCnts are by the Cremeens funeral Chapel, Gallipolis:

Na.tion/World

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orts

SUnda~June15,1997

Cohen touring gulf
to strengthen ties

Suspected
informant
beaten by
students·

During the 1991 Gulf War, protection,
BRUSSELS. Belsium (AP) of
Saudi Arabia and the Gulf sheikAfter delivering a divisive message to
· the European allies on limiting doms was part of the reason more
SEOUL, South Korea {AP) NATO's eastward expansion, than 500,000 U.S. troops were sent to
Leade~ of an outlawed srudent group
Defense Secretary William Cohen the area.
admitted Friday to beating a·man lhcy
Cohen's stop in Saudi Arabia was
headed to the Persian Gulf to ,shore
suspected was a police infonnant.
to include a visit to U.S. troops•based,
up military lies in lhc region.
The man later died.
at Prince Sultan Air Base. Then he
Cohen
flew
.
S
atunda,Y
from
the
Police said they were looking for
Belgian capital til Jiddah on Saudi was to travel to Kuwait, Bahrain. the
student leaders of Chonnam UniverArabia's Red Sea coast to se~ King United Arab Emirates and Oman,
sity in the southern city of Kwangju
Fahd and top Saudi government offi- where U.S, military equipment is
in the death of Lee Jong-l!:won, ~.on
ciJiis on the first leg of a five-day, stored in case of a crisis.
May 28. Leaders of the 1011thern
In Brussels on Friday, Cabell' and
five-nation Gulf tour - his first to
.chapter of Hanchongryun, the radical
other NATO defense ministers met ·
the
area
as
defense
secretary.
nationwide student group, were also .
"It will be a fairly far-ranging dis- 'with their counterparts from 27 non,
being sought, they said.
cussion of ways in which we can con- member countries - mostly Central
. Lee was questioned by students
tinue the .very strong bond we have and Eastern European countries,
fo r more than four hours the night of
in
security relations," Cohen told a including three expected to be invitMay 27 but was released alive, the
news
conference Friday·in Brussels at ed next month 10 join NATO.
Chonnalll University student council
Poland, Hungary and the Czech
the
close
of two days of NATO .
·~aid, adding that he was found two
·
Republic are seen as shoo-ins to win
defense meetings.
hours later but died before an ambuU.S.
relations
with
the
Saudis
membership invitations at a July 8-9
lance arrived.
have been slightly strained by differ, NATO summit in Madrid,Spain. Yet
" It is true that violence was used
enccs over the handling of an inves- to he decided is whether Slovenia or
when Lee was being questioned to
tigation into the terrorist bombing a Romania - or both - might be
determine whether he was a police
year ago at the Khobar Towers mili- asked to join then , too.
North Korsa Saturday. Tile grain lathe Second·
FOOD CHECK - A North Korean officer.
informant or not," the group said.
tary
housing complex near Dhahran
Cohen insisted that President ClinIn
a
aeries
of
food
shipment•
from.
the
South
sampled corn flour from one of the sacka
Police said Lee was bruised all
tHat
killed
19
U.S.
ainnen.
ton
would not be budged from his ·
Korsan
Red
Crou
aimed
at
relieving
the
aboard a Chlnesa freight train at the Namyang
over his body and had two broken
'There
also
are
signs
of
growing
view
that only Poland, Hungary and
famine
In
North
Korae.
(AP)
railway alation .near the Chlneae border In
ribs.
impatience among some U.S. allies in the Czech Republic should be invitthe Gulf over the Clinton adminis- ed at Madrid, and that the door to
tration 's refusal to seek aci:ommoda- another round of eastward NATO ·
iion with Iraq. Some Gulf countries · expansion be left open.
also have defied Washington by deal"He js firm in that commitment,"
ing
directly
with
Iraq's
government.
Cohen told reporters.
By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
.
' .
342 are still being looked at, Army harassment. McKinney faces an · other times, a taped message will tell
Anny Article 32 hearing on June 23, callers when operators will be availAP Military Writer
officials said.
·
the
equivalent of a civilian grand jury · able.
WASHINGTON -The Anny is
The remainder of the calls were to
proceeding
on sexual misconduct
In a separate statement, the Anny
shutting down the sex abuse hot line register opinions, ask questions or
it set up after the Aberdeen, Md., were judged to be crank calls, offi- charges. The officer in charge will announced it has appointed two men
decide whether there is enough evi- to perfonn McKinney's duties until
scandal, declaring the line has done cials said.
its job and criminal investigators are
"The hot line, which was estab- dence to have McKinney face a ·his case is re5olved. He was susNEW DELHI, India (AP) . - · fire was the second major fire jn a:
probing more than 300 misconduct lished to provide an additional way. court martial. McKinney has said he pended · in February as the Anny's
is
innocent
and
that
he
wants
to
retire
most
senior-ranking
enlisted
man.
Police arrested four theater managers week and the fourth in 18 months;
co mplaints. .
for victims to seek assistance, has
Holders of the position advise the Saturday for suspected criminal neg- each of them with dozens of deaths.
Army leaders took the step Friday, done its job .... There are indications with an honorable discharge.
Col. Vickie Longenecker, the . Anny on matters involving enlisted ligence in a fire that swept the crowdci ting a declining number of calls. that the hot line may have lieen used
Survivors said they had smashed
director'.
of human resources for the • personnel, who make up the bulk of ed premiere of a blockbuster movie. · through windows, ·shinnied dow~ ·
Also, they were known to be unhap- by some calle~ for purposes not conPY the line had become the source .of sistent with its original mission," said Army, said in an interview that the . the service. The two will rotate ihe Sixty people were killed, most of drainpipes or jumped to the roof of an
anonymous complaints, including the an Anny statemept announcing the, number of calls in recent weeks had · duties in 30-day periods, officials them asphyxiated or trampled to adjoining building to escape the
"really begun dropping off." Her said.
·
death.
tip that led to the resignation of the decision.
smoke and heat.
office
will
he
in
charge
of
a
new
tele;
.
One
of
the
men
is
McKinney's
A magistrate ordered the mancommander of the Anny Ondnance
Ticket scalpers had charged preSusan Barnes, president ofWANCenter at Aberdeen, Maj. Gen. John DA's Fund, an advocacy group for phone line, known as an "assistance identical twin -llrother, Sgt. Maj. agers kept in prison for 14 days while mium prices for the Uphaar theater's
James McKinney, who is based at the investigators began an . inquiry into opening-day matinee of the HindiLonghouser.
women in the military, called the line."
The line will not take anonymous Army's Training and Doctrine Com- why so many people were trapped in language "Bonder," based on th~·
The married two-star general decision 'to shut the hot line down "a
admitted he'd committed adultery mistake at this juncture, a stupid, stu- complaints. However, it will give mand at Fort Monroe, Va. The other Friday's inferno at the theater in sub- 1971 India-Pakistan war.
those reluctant to identify themselves is Sgt. Maj. Jerry Alley, who is urban Green' Park.
while separaied from his wife live · pid decisia·n."
Many families attended, and 12
information
about what to do and assigned to the Forces Command in
years ago, details relayed to investiThe investigators spent four hours children were among the dead.
"It will discoutage women from
Atlanta, which is in charge of all today surveying the the movie theater · The fire· began during a scene of
gators through a hot line, tip. Tbe base .making calls. Hot lines are · well how to proceed, Longenecker said.
Chaplains and . advisers familiar fighting for~s based in the United and later met with some of the a fiery tank battle. For a moment,
is the site of some oftheAnny's most known by women as avenues for
·
serious allegations of sex abuse complaints that are taken seriously.... with dealing with harassment com- States.
injured at the hospital.
.. ,
some viewers thought the smoke fill- .
plaints
will
be
available
to
thos~
who
The
statement
said
the'
decision,
involving trainees and drill' instruc- It's clear the generals still just don't
Police said the frre started at a ing the hall was a special ·effect, ·surtors, incidents that touched off the get it," said Barnes, who is also an call in, but the line will not be used made by Anny Chief of Staff Gen. · transformer, and survivors said their vivor Balram Shanna said.
service's worldwide investigation attorney representing retired Sgt. in coun8eling callers psychological- Dennis Reimer, is not to he taken as escape from the theater was blocked
A short circuit in an electrical
ly, ·she said.
·
a reflection of McKinney's guilt or by belted doors. More than 200 pea- · .transformer in the underground parkinto sexual misconduct.
Maj. Brenda Hoster.
The new number, 1-800-267- innocence, but only to underscore the pie were injured.
,__.
Since the hot line's establishment
ing lot had ignited 130 gallons of oil,
Hoster has accused the now-sus9964,
will
have
operators
on
duty
importance
of
the
post
and
the
work
in Nove mber, 8.305 calls had po11red pended Sergeant Major of the Anny;
Safety regulations in public areas police said.
in. Some I ,354 of those were referred Gene C. McKinney, with sexual from 7:30. a.m. to 6 p.m. EDT on neede4 to be done.
are widely flouted in India. Friday's
Monday through Friday, she said. At
to criminal investigators for study and

Army hangs up on sexual abuse hotline

Theater managers held .
after fire kills 60 patrons

Black ·Lung Progr.am
and the
Ohio Department of Health
is .offering

•

and

•Occasional shortness of breath?
•Ti,ghtness iii the chest?
•Burning in the chest and throat areas?
Are you:
•A welder, insulator, iron or chemical worker, etc.?
·•An active or retired coal miner?
•A regular or occasional smoker?
Do you have:
•Emphysema?
•Asthma?
•Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease?
•Asbestosis?
•Occupational Lung Disease?.
Were you raised in, or are yoo.now in, a smoking household?

J~

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.B
' 's·tatus
:, Ulis stru
.· ggled
., . to
, earn
. · , 'dyna
. .· · sty
.
.

ROYALOAK , Mich . (AP) - peringwiththegame'/Afterall,the
The driver of a limousine that struck only thing truly traditional about
·
baseball is change - change,
a tree, critically injuring a Detroit change, change_ going all the way
By JIM LITKE
"This was' a sober one," Chicago greatest teams of all time.
the series•.including a miss at the end Red Wings hockey star and the back 10 1888, when baseball moved
· CHICAGO (AP) _ Weaknesses coach Phil Jackson said, ' 'because
This season, 69 wins in the regu- of Game 4 ihat might have cost team's masseur, had a driving history pitchers from SO feet awa" from
lar season and a fifth title in seven Chicago a chance to win that game.
\hat was so bad his license was
·
'
a,·re always more t'ntere.s t.t'ng than we had to struggle for it."
home
plate to 60 feet, six inches.
· year. , ·
. strengths, especially in a champion.
And a more memorable one than years would seem only to solidify the
In a roundabout way, that miss revoked until at least next
(Swines.)
So while this fifth title run might those that went before it- for tha! ,Giaim. At a minimum, anyw~y. Ute inight also have been behind Jordan's , Defense man
Vlaqimir
have beeit the Chicago Bulls least very same reason ...• .
' Bulls can call .themselv~s ~- seco~\1- otherworldly perfOI'iiJIIIIl:e in Qarne1'S1• Konstantino~ suffered a head injury
That also was the year wl)en
dominating, it was without doubt
Last season, 'when' lhc' Bulls won a grea~st team 10 NBA htstory, behtnd He w'as eertain.that the only' 1persOn 'In Friday night's crash' ~nd remained baseball reduced the number of balls
their most compelling. Every game record 72 regular-season games and only the Boston Celiics of the late whose commitment to winning un.conscious Saturday. The crash needed for a walk from five to four,
in the Finals but one was close. dispatched the Seattle SuperSonics in '50s and '60s, who won 10 champi- hadn't wavered was his own. So, came six days after the team's first and the number of.strikes flceded for·
Taken tol!ether, they revealed a a six-game j inals series; there was onships in I I years.
even though he was dizzy, dehydrat- Stanley Cup win since 195S.
a strikeout from four to three . ·
dynasty moving inexorably closer .to still lingering debate about whether
But nobody was talking about that ed attd disoriented at. moments, he
"The long-term prognosi~ for this (Heathens.)
its end than its beginning. · ·
-Chicago should be ranked among the after the Bulls beat Utah 90-86 in kept calling his own number - and is impossible to tell. The next few
Bad for baseball. All of it. ·
Game 6 of the l'inals. Their playoff delivering.
days are going to be very important
Joe DiMaggio, the former
run began with . a sweep of
But even Jor.dan recognized be to determine which way he is g9ing . Yankee great and current south
Washington and conSecutive five- couldn't shoulder the burden every to go," said Dr. James Robbins, a Florida resident, threw out the first
and-out dismissals of Ailanta and minute, game after game. trauma surgeon at William Beaumont pitch. Then two of the better pitchMiami. But they looked old and vul"He doesn't know this," Jondan Hospital.
~rs in all of baseball threw a bunch
nerable along the way. Too tired, in said of l&lt;ert, "but his wife told me
· "Can hC recover? Absolutely, he more. David Cone vs. AI Leiter.
.'fact, to deny that their offense was how frustrated he was. He kept his can recover," he said. " I have absoOver in Atlanta, it was Greg
faltering, that their jojnts wem~~~:hiilg head· in tlic pillow for hours because lutely no idea l"hether he'll play Maddux vs . Baltimore's Jimmy
.and that finding the resolve to finish he felt he let the team down, and again." ·
Key. The re sults were the same.
it out was going to he very, very dif- be~ause everyone knows he's one of
Konstantinov, ~0, had a pressure Fabulous pitching duels and close,
ficult.
·
the best shooters in the game ...
mom tor placed 10 hts head and tight, exciting games . Up in New
"This was a grind," Steve Kerr
''When Phil drew up the play at unden-:ent surg~ry on hts nght elb?w York, the Mets and Boston Red Sox
concurred, "bin that makes this one the end tonight, everybody in the to ~patr a tern~?n l!fld ~move debn~.• · were reacquainting themselves in a
much better.'' .
.
gy~:~~. everybody on TV knew it was · . Our org~mzatton ts devastated,.
game that mattered for the first time
That would be the same Kerr, of coming to. me. I looked at Steve and ~mgs captam Steve Yzerman satd. since the '86 World Series.
course, who hit what proved to be the said, ·'This is your chance, because I
I hope and I ask for everyone's
h
decisive shot. It was a straightaway know (John) Stockton i.s going to prayers. Do what ever you do in dif.1nter 1eague games meant 1 at
14-foot jumper made possible when come over and help and I'm going to ficult times that help make things Amencan League fans got 10 sec
the Jazz defense doubled on Michael come to y6u.'
work out better."
players such as Tony Gwynn and
Jondan. Up to ·that point, Kerr was a
"And he said," recalled Jordan,'
Team
masseur
Sergei Barry Bond~. Nattonal League .buffs
·brutal eight of 24 from the field in "'.Give me the.ball." '
Mnatsakanov was in critical condi- saw Ken Gnffey Jr. and Cal Rtpken
- -.....lllllllllllllll.....
Jordan passes up any shot reluc- lion after undergoing surgery to Jr.
.
.
· OUT OF THE, ROUGH _Jeff tantly, but almost. neve~ does he relieve pressure c~used by his head
Bad for baseball. Temble, JUst
Maggert of The Woodlands, entrust the biggest shots to someone injury aitd teammate Slava Fetisov temble.,
. .
Texae, hill hill way out of the else in the most important games. was in good condition with chest
Don I .they know that thts 1s
rough ln. the third round of the During the championship marches at injuries and a bruised lung Robbins gomg to dtlute the World Senes, the
the start of this dyn.Sty, he got com- said.
'
. only time other than the All-Star
U.S. · Open Saturday In
G
h
h A ·
L
Batheeda, Md. Maggert tied fortable letting John Paxson take
Limousine driver Richard Gnida,
arne w en t e mcncan eaguc
Torn Lehman for the lead after 1 those shots, including a trey at the 28, was in !load condition with no should lay eyes on the 11fational
rein delay euepanded pley late end . Of the 1993 Finals to beat . serious injur1es.
League, and vtcc versa?
In the dey. (AP) .
.
. Phoenix .
Onida's driver 's licen se was
Never mind that the Chicago
.
.
revoked for a year in January 1996 Bulls played the Utah Jazz twice
'.""'''
'e"'e'"'nd
s·t·""""t·um
·Construction bids come /n$15.5M h/nher
than ex~ted
.
for an unsatisfactory driving record during the regular season, and ·
"'' ,..
..u,
ll
r.-and medical review . He was then nobody remembers what happened
ti~kctedfordrivingwithoutalicensc inthosegames,orthatithadabsoand his license was revoked for lutcly no effect QR an exciting NBA
.
another year, making him incligihle Finals.
CLEVELAND (AP) .:_ Mayor only because it will spur more com- for the structure, to be built on the including expansions at the for reinstatement until January 1998
. lntcrlcaguc play? What baseball
Michael R. White said Saturday he petition , but it will give us 'more site of Cleveland Stadium, which Cleveland Clinic and Hopkins allhc earliest.
.
has accomplished is not!ling more
hoped to reduce the cost of building control over the project;" the mayor was razed.
.
·
lniemational Airport.
..
Smce !994. he had been ttckcted than sprinkling it pocketful of asterfootball stadium by requiring bids said.
. . .
.
The C&lt;1nstructt&lt;;'n manager, Huber, · He also m9ntt~ that the cost ol. for operaung whtlc tmpatrcd, opera!- isks onto the game.
o.n separate portions of the sup~r- . The ctty wtll be accepting new Hu~t and (lhch?ls Inc. of pourtng con~rete 10 the upper d~ks ·ing under the innucnce and unlawful
Bad for baseball. Bad, and very
structure work instead of the enttre btds through the summer.
lndtanapohs, had esumated that the of the stadtum, espcctally dunng bollily alcohol content and twtce for sad.
project. ,
·
· .
White reiterated that the project foundation and superstructure of the ,cold-weather months, may have ·speeding, a state .official said.
.
And so interleague play is here,
White announced tlie' plan at a muSl' stay within its $247 million stadium would cost about $40 mil- been underestimated.
.
John Gambtno, owner of the at least for this season and next
news conference after the city budget and that the stadium will lion. Howe,er; the hids ranged from
· The superstructure IJroject will ,he G~mbino's Limousine Service, s~id Experimental is what they call ii
rec~ived bids for the stadium's faun- open in time for the 1999 season, $55.5 million to S64 million.
split into four areas:. cast' in-place, Fnday he dt.~ not know that Gmda now. But (wink, wink) we know
dation ' and structural concrete that whom the NFL promised the city a · White said he believed a couple slab and pre-cast concrete, and struc- had a bad dnvmg record. He saod he what that means. The designated
were at least $15.5 million higher new .team to replace the Cleveland of factors drove up tiM. bids . One tural steel. White said' he hopes to has a secreta.ry wh.o checks records hitter was experimental in the
thai! expected:
Browns.
·
reason was the number of construe- save between $3 million and $4 mil- before dnvers arc htrcd..
American League back i.n !97 3, and
"We're doing this, hopefully, not · Ground was brokFn last month tion projects going on in the area, lion in each area.
Seve,nt.een Red Wtnl!s. players now it's still around like a housewent golfmg togelhcr Frtday ·after- guest who won't leave.

r::=============·=========::-t

slam·med.'his racket against the grass, kicked it on
the rebotbtd at\d prompt!~ was slapped with a seeond dela ,-of-game warnt.ng. ·
. "This was a nigh!llllii'C day. ~ lou.h~rta,"
sBJd Becl(er, a·three-ttme Wtmbledon champton.
Kafelaikov, \Yho lost last y~ar's final to
· Swedents Niklas Kulti, jumped to a S-0 lead .in
yeer.
.'
. just 1.4 minutes as Becker strusgled with his
,. Kafelnikov will face eighth-seeded Petr serve.
Becker, nmked 13th in the world, had breezed
Korda after the Gzech player defeated Paul
· Hm~ia of the Netherlands 7-(i (7-S), 6-4,
lhrough three easy matches into the semifinals
·
: Becker rallied apinat Kafelnikov in _the sec- wi~OUI hav~ng his big serve challenged.
and set even u he shouted at the umptres and
It surpnses you when you suddenly lose your
lcreamcd out loud. Trailing 4-S, the Oerman serve. Then suddenly y&lt;iu start thinkin1 llbout it
wii'Cied off a IIIIlCh point, then eamod a break 100 much.'.' Becker said.
·
~ apilll dto world'aliKIIHululd player.
Becker connocted on only 10 of 29 flnt serves
, But whim he netted hi• a.xt retum 1 Becker and double' faulted sev~ll lime&amp; in lhc fml 1181,
• HALLE, Germany (AP) - Top-seeded
Yevgeny Kafelnikov beat an agitated Boris
Becker 6-3 6-4 Saturday in the semifinals of t'he
. $87~.000 Gerry Webe~ Open. .
. .
· TIIC Russian needed four match pomts to oust
lite: foorth-secd~ Beck~r and reach the finals of
lhe Whnbledon tuneup {or the second straight

Z5 Soalh Slr111
Jackson, Ohio

(614) 446·5397

"'

L"Imousl•ne·
dr·l"ver
for InJure
•
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.R·ed W.l· ngs
had II"Cense·
sus pen de· d. .

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i&lt;afelniko.v -beats . ecker h1 eber o.pen semis. ~:~.ia~t~n~:~nJ~~ii~~cl~f~~r~~lh

OF JACKSOn coon

•

By PETER KERASOT1S . .
Florida Today
MIAMI ..... This is bad for basCball. .
.
Some 42,4SS people were drawn
to Pro Player Stadium Friday night,
drawn like moths to a bright light,
filling up the bleacher seats and the
upper decks, a sellout, the largest
crowd of the season, just to watch
two second-place teams play a midJune game.
Bad for baseball.
They came early, earlier than
Uiual, crowding around the dugouts
for glimpses and autographs and to
see if they could get absorbed into
.
the excitement of the moment.
They could. And they did.
. Beca11se of interleague play,
south Florida baseball fans got to
see the New York Yankees. They
got to see the reigning world cham·
ARRIVES AT THIRD- aal,tlmora:e Rollarto waite f.o r the throw In the elxth Inning of pions play the hometown. Florida
Alomer ,take• the bally elida Into third basa In Seturdey'e game In Atlll)ta. whe.r e the Oriole• Marlins, They got to see the preemifront of Atkitnta third "cker C~lppat; Jonas, who won 6-4 In 12 Innings. (AP)
nent franchise in all. of sports., And
being south Floridians, many of'
Clark lasted only one batter after Tim Wakefield (2-6) leading off the
them got to see the team they grew
Jefferson,
allowing No mar fifth. his first ~it sin~e last Aug. 6.
.
up watching and rooting for, .
Garciaparra's double on a one-hopRockies 7, Athletics 1
Bad for baseball. Very bad.
At Oakland, Calif., Roger
It felt like Opening Day. It felt
perto the right-field fence.
like October in June. It felt, well ...
Darren Bragg hit a sacr.i(ice fly Bailey's eight-hitter and home runs
off Greg McMichael as Boston by Ellis Burks, Andres Galarraga and
special. How dare they? HQw .dare
0
closed to 4-2, and Mo Vaughn sin- Larry Walker powered the Colorado
they trample On tradition like that?
gled, but Naehring grounded into a · Rockies to their first interleague win,
How dare they infuse fun and fervor
double play.
a 7-l decision over the Oakland
and - dare we SIIY it?- baseball
fever into the game?
· ·
Joe Hudson' s run-scoring wild Athletics on Satunday..
Bailey (7-S) struck .out five and
Bad for b3seball. Bad, bad, bad,
·pitch in the bottom half restored
New York's three-run lead, and John walked four en route to a team record
This is tantamounno \Yhen they
Franco finished the three-hitter with fifth complete game this season .
split into two divisions in 1969.
a perfect ninth for. his 17ih save in 19 Despite two errors, some key defen(What a hofrible idea.) Or when
they went to three divisions and a
chances.
sive plays also ~·~d lhc right:hanClark homered on an 0-2 pitch by der shut down the As.
. . ---.
wild card in 1994. (Sacrilege.)
.
---·
B~'BURT HERMAN
When are they going to quit tam-

a

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'

Columnist
challenges
cries of
baseball's ·
demise

Whl"te' s'ays.· he'.hop·es to trl"m· bu•··ld' ··n.g cos·ts

X-RAYS

Testing is being provided at no co~t to the patient. Costs not covered by patient's insuranc~ will be offse~ by the
Ohio Department of Health Black Lung Grant.
Do you experience:
~----------------------~

lundlly.Jun111,1-

Indians defeat
Cards; Rockies
and Mets also win .
gle and Jim Thorne tied it 3-3 with a
two-out, two-run double off the wall
in left-center 8s the Indians ·denied
Benes his IOOth cweer victory.
T.1 . Mathews (2-3) allowed two
runs in two-thirds ,o f an inning and
Tony Fossas didn't retire 'any of the
four batters he faced.
Albie Lopez (3.4) allowed a hit
· ST. LOUIS (AP) _ Emulating and s"'!ck out two in I 113 .innin~s.
the National League's move-theEarhe~, Benes gave. Indtans pttchrunner-over style of play helped the . e~s a Mtmg le:;son. Hts t--:o-o.ut RBI
Cleveland Indians win the openewnof·~gle m the seem~ was hts stxth ~~~
the first interleague doublehea r th!s se~on ~d thtnd RBI, tytRg htm
with an 8-3 victory Saturday ove St. Wtlh hts brother, Alan, fQr the staff
Louis.
lead. '.
, Davidlustice singled 10 open the
lndtans rookte starte~ Ba~tol.o
eighth inning, advanced to third on a Colon took three called stnkes 10 hts
sacrifice and a groundout to the right lone at-bal.
.
side .. and scored on Marquis
C.leveland manager Mtke
Grissom' s tie-breaking single a~ the Hargrove made .what appe~redto be
Indians scored five runs 10 break the II!' un~ec~ssary double-swttch ·~ the
.stxth tnn10g. He replaced rehever
game open.
· Grissom, one of three Indians Paul Assenmacher with one' out and
nobody on wfih Albie J:.opez and
starters who played in the NL I.St inserted
Brian Giles in right field .
season, also singled and scored in
But Giles, batting .in the pitcher's
the seventh as Cleveland, one of the spOt,
came through with an RBI sinAL's most powerful lineups, scored
gle to start lhc seventh-inning rally.
three runs to tie it 3-3.
Jolin Mabry; hit his fourth home
· Cleveland's five-run eighth was
run
to lead off the fourth . Gary Gaetti
highlighted by Julio Franco's two- followed
with a double and scored
•u.n do~ble.
on
Difelice's
single for a 3~ lead.
The Indians have won six of eight
Colon lasteil four innings and
after taking the opener of the series allowed three runs on five hils .
matching defending Central Difelice walked in a 15-pitch at-bat
Division champions. The day-night in the second, 10 of them foul balls.
doubleheader was forced by a rainMets S, Red Sox 2
out Friday night.
At
New
Yark, Mike Clark took a
Sandy Alomar went 3cfor-5 and no-hit bid inJO
the eighth inning as
extended his hitting streak for I 5 the New Yark Mets beat the Boston
games for Cleveland.
·
Cardinals starter Andy Benes Red Sox 5-2 .Saturday for their first
win.
struck out II ·in seven innings, but interleague
Clark (6-4) wasn 't outstanding.
threw 124 pitches and tired in his
fiital inning when he allowed three He walked five before giving up the
hit to Reggie Jefferson - including
runs on four hits.
Tim Nael)ring with the bases loaded
. Brian Giles had a run-scoring sin- in the sil!tb. .
'

B

llitt--•'

PULMO.NARY FUNCTION TESTING
~ST

Section

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Btrmtngham poltce Sgt. John
while battli~g Kafelnikov's pinpoint returns. ·
VanGondcr said in a release that the
'After another first serve by Becker was called limousine was moving from the secout in the second set, he explolled against the ond lane from the left to the far left
umpire; delayed the. match 10 minutes and was lane when it continued moving left
slapped with his first warning: ·
·
· onto the median and struck a tree.
·"It wu always the same identical mistake by
'"!'here were no other vehicles
the .line judge.'' Becker said. "He was calli.ng that were involved in this accident.
balls out that weren't."
. ·
Witnesses said the roadway was clear
Kafelnikov retained his composure. after the in front of the limousine and there
outbunt and pulled even in the next game at 2-2. was no car tllat caused the limousine
Becker then fought oft'l three match points to move into the median,'' he said.
while behind 3·5, but the Russian served an ace
Witnesses sald the limousine was
to close oullhc match in 78 minutes.
moving within the speed limit, he
Not even 12,500 che-.ring fans could save said.
Becker on 111 off-dly.
Robbins said there was no indica"It wu a feellftl out there like a single man tion that alcohol or druas were
apinatlhc rest of lhc Wcrld,'' Katdnikov said. . involved in the accident.

.

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~ --- -.....fd
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1iins fans c . t
~~d:~~yasc~~
.
•
.
arne ~

~e htstory. They ~arne to see trndtuon . They came 10 dro~es !o see
b~cb~ll on a hot and humtd ntght 10
Mtamt, What they saw was a ga~e
that went down to the ~nal ~t-b~ 10
the bottom of the ntnth tnntng,
before the Marlins' Moises Alou
laced a single to left-center to 'sc?"C
Kurt Abbott from second base, tymg
the game lit 1-1 and pushing the
, contest into extra innings.
What they saw was baseball at its
best, each and every inning of it.
They saw something that would
draw anybody back to the same.
Most imponantly, they had fun.
This·is bad for baseball?

�..... 82•1)
,.
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r

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point P1111unt, WY

I

Ke" hits clutch basket

SunciQ, Jul'll11, 1117

lnsugursiSBBson to stsrt·June 21

Bulls' 90-86 win
over Jazz gives
them fifth crown

Newest women's
league entering
crowded market

By USA M. COWNS
and three nationally televised 11ames
Steve kerr, w!lo was wide open
By MIKE NAOEL
NEW YORK (AP) - They're a week - starting with the first
CHICAGO (AP)- Michael Jor- between lhe foul line and top of the
strong,
fast, swe!ll)' and yes, some of game June 21 - the ·eislii~team
dan IIUghed. He made fuil of Den- key. Kerr released his jumper, and
them
can
dunk. 'Oiese are the women WNBA is off to a flying 5141:1,
·
nis Rodman's rainbow hair and of lhe ball swished through the net with
of
the
WNBA,
the
new
pro
basket"This
is
a
historic
m~t
The
lhe Cubs, the city's lovable losers. five seconds to play.
ball league that promises an aggres- start of the WNBA marks i ·new era
"At the last timeout, I was siuing
He smiled as he sipped champisive, finesse-filled game much bet- in the evolution of women'•· sports
onship champaane and puffed a cel- down by Mike, watching him," Keir
ter than anyone expects.
and professional sports in this coun·
said. "He sat there for about30 o;ecebratory CiJII'.
The
league
enters
a
crowded
try,"WNBApresidentVai·Ackennan
· Absent were the tears of joy he onds, then he tuined to me and said,
sports market where male athletes ' said.
r·
shed after winninJ NBA titles during · 'Be ready, Stockton's coming off me.
rule
and
anolher
new
women's
bas.
"Ourinterest.s
are
very
much
long
the "three-peat" seasons. Absent I said ·oK, I' II make it."'
ketball
venture,
the
American
Bastenn.
We
recognize
that
it
is
going
to
Kerr made it, shaking off what had
were the tell'S of remembrance that
ketball
League,
is
fighting
for
fans.
take
time
to
develop
a
stable
fan
base
flowed last year, as he hugged the been a horrible series for him and
So, while the WNBAclaims "We . and we're foc~sing on the future of
basketball and thought of his reminding everyone of John Paxson,
got
next!" how lon11 can .it hold the the league. We believe that you canwhose jumper clinched the Bulls'
deceased father,
court?
not underestimate the importance of
His Chicago Bulls had another 1993 championship victory over
·
"We have no idea what to·expect prime-lime TV covemge. ~expo·
·
title - five in seven years. He was Phoenix. ·
this
first year," says Olympic gold sure will set us apart:" · · ·
·
And it was just another example
named MVP of the NBA Finals for
.
medalist
Rebecca
LObo.
a
6-4
cenAlthough
it
is
too
early
to
tell
if
the fifth time. His Bulls .established ·of how MiChael Jordan can beat a
ler/forward with thc\·,New York Lib- the WNBA and ABL can make it,
themselves as one of lhe ~~ dYIIBSf· team.
erty.
"But the reason we joined this interest is exceptionally high, said
"This oJlPOI!unity would never
ties in sports history.
league
is because we believe we're . Richanl Lukar, executive director of
And as exhausted as he was after · have presented itself without
of
something
that's going to get 'the ESPN Chilton Sports Poll.
part
Friday night's 90-86 victory over the Michael's presence," Kerr said.
much
better.
"Right now, women's basketball
Utah Jazz, Jordan was enjoying this "He's so unbelievable ... and his
· "We're laying a foundation and . has drawn a 50-to-60 percent interexcellence 11ave me the chance to hit
moment to its fullest.
we
expect to be celebrating our 50th est rating. That's · mammoth, it's
"They just keep geltina bigger the game-winning shot in the NBA
anniversary
just like the NBA did huge, but it has not articulatecj.itself.
and bisger as we keep winnlns and Finals."
this
year."
I would count on 30 pereentofthose
Usually, Jordan hits the winners.
winning," he said after the Bulls won
Of course, that's also the hope of people (becoming real fans). Many
He did in Game I. He did in Game
the series in six games. "I'm very
t~e
NBA, which owns and operates of the others are drawn by cw'l&lt;lsity," ·
happy for the organization, happy for S, despite being sapped by a stomach
the
league. To try to make that hap- he said.
··
·the players. I'm tired. I'm weak:.The virus. He has done it so many times.
pen,
the
WNBA's
big'
brother
has
.
Of
the
poll's
12
major
·interest
Utah Jazz. save us a run for our mon- And he would like to do it in the
organized marketipg, corporate sports, the NBA garners 60 percenl
ey. But we persevered, and I'm hap- future under coach Phil Jackson and
.sponsorship and national TV cover- of lhe population rating and men's
PY ... just knowins .that we're the with Scottie Pippen by liis side.
LAUNCHES GAME-WINNER - Whh Utlh's Karl Malone (back- · age that is unprecedented for a new NCAA basketball has 55-60 percent.
champions for lhe fifth time."
"Look at the'joy of this night and ground) and John Stockton In front of him, Chicago's Stwe ·Kerr league and all carefully planned to Lukar said.
Jordan · scored· 39 points, his all the other nights when we won the .Jeunches the last-minute winning shot to help the Bulls get e go. raise awareness of women's basket"I think (the WNBA) is going to·
bis11est output of the series. His championship," said Jordan, whose · 86 win over Utah Friday night In Game 6 lhet secured their second ball.
work and work well," he said. "If I
33.6-point playoff averase is the straight N!'A title. (~P)
biggest play, however, was a pass.
With
like
(See WNBA on 8-3)
NBA's best ever. "This team is enti. sponsors
'
With the shot clock winding down
tled to an opportunity to continue to
in an 86-86 game, he ducked
be successful."
between a double-team of Bryon
(See BULI.:S on B·3l
Russell and John Stockton and fed .

•

EASTERN SOFTBALL SENIORS -

The

senlon honored r-1t1y tt the eut.rn Softblll
· banquet wwt (L-A) Mauidltli Crow, Patey Aelk·

·By J~ KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - First.
Albert Belle snubbed, Cincinnati 's
owner and mascot. Next, he made
.the R~s look foolish by hilling a
decisive homer.
·
Finally, he left them sounding like .
any American League team that has
had the misfortune of trying to contain him- or deal with him -in a
regular-season selling.
Belle's two-run homer in the
sixth inning gave the Chicago While
Sox a 3-l victory Friday night in the
er, Ml.rtle ttolter, All)ende Milhoan and Tracy.· firsi interleague game for both teams.
White. Absent waa Mindy SempiOil.
The first meetiqg between the
Reds and White Sox since the 1919
World Series - .which produced the
"Black Sox" gambling scandal V!BS dominated by the major leagues' ·
most volatile player.

"It's tough, when you spend so
much time talking about one guy,"
said manager Ray Knight, who had
proclaimed before the game that the
Reds would not let Belle beat them.
"It 's mind-boggling."
It was vintage Belle.
When he came out for balling
,practice, be smiled and waved· to
Reds shortstop Barry Larkin, who
has mel him at All-Star games.
"It was great to see Albert,"
Larkin said.
Owner Marge Schou tried to see
Albert, but was turned away. Schou
took her St. Bernard, Schouzie 02
over during balling practice to intro:
di!Ce herself and Jllaybe get a photograph of the historic moment.
Instead, Belle sneered before she
could get close, . shook his head,

WNSA •~ • _(c_._on_•_in..;u_ed_._fr_o..;m..;B_-2_)_ _ _..;.;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_...:.._ __
·was spending sports marketing
bucks it would be in women's professional basketball."
The year-old ABL, operating with
much less TV exposure and corpomte sponsorship but with many good
players, ·believes the market is big ·
enough for two women's leagues,
especially since it plays in the fall ,
while the WNBA plays in lhe summer.
''It's a competitive situation.

We're the underdog. But ultimately,
lhis is great for women's basketTVC ALL·ACADE;MIC HONOREES - TheH
From left to right ere Meredith Crow, Mertle
ba!l, '.' ABL's co-founder Gary Cave Itour young ladles were honorad 1t the Eastern
Holter, BIIIH Pooler and Stephanie Evens. Not
Ii said. "Two years ago. great college
aottbell banquet for eemlng recognition on the
plcturad wwt Valerie Kllrr and Kelll Belley.
players had two choices: doop their
AII-Tri-Velley Conference III4Cidemlc teem.
sport or play overseas. Now, exposure to women's basketball is at an
all-time high in this country." ·
The WNBA hopes it will contin•
ue to grow.
·
;·
Although the league estimates an
average allendance of just 4,000, the
TV audience will be much bigger.
The three WNBA games a week will
•
be broadcast on ESPN, NBC or Life- ·
time. (NBC will show the inaugural
game between · the Los Angeles
Sparks and lhe visiting Liberty),
l'
~~
The 28-game regular season runs
ihrough August, with the winners of
the Eastern and Western confer,-~~
ences and the two teams with the
next best records advancing to sin+'
.. :0.
gle-elimination playoff games.
·~
The league. features Olympians
•
anlf lop college players, like Lisa
Leslie of the Sparks and th~ HC?~·
ton Comets' Sheryl Swoopes, who 's
Jerence Hocking Dlvlalon race. Pictured are (LSPECIAL AWARD WINNERS- Theu ·~~na
expecting her first child this month
R} Meredith Crow, Petay Aelker, Mertle Holter,
; Wldlee were the apecllll 1W.rd wiiiMfl on the
and may not play this season.
Amende Milhoan, Tracy
White and Kim Mayle.
• _ Eaetern High School eotlbelllllm which plliced
.,
Foreign professional~ also 'have
: · second behind Southern In the Tri-Velley Consigned up, including Elena Baranova of Russia, a 6-5 center/forward
...
with the Utah Starzz, mid Catarina
Pollini, a 6-5 forward with the
Comets who also plays in the Italian
league.
.
Among
the
WNBA's
80 players,
•• PARKERSBURG, W.Va..- The
Aeiker also had the Mosi Hits State game and banquei the .weekend · 15 are from 14 countries outside the
Award and Most RBis; Mayle, the of June 27 at 6 p.m.
~~ Eastern softball team under the
United States, 22 are former
Also lettering for Eastern were Olympians and 12 have won
: : direction of veteran coach · Pam Most Sacrifices and Most Assists; ·
; ; Douthill recently celebrated its 18-S and Milhoan, Most Put.Outs.
Juli Hayman, Karr, Chasatie Hollon Olympic gold medals. The ABL, on
.Senior
honorees
honored·recent: · season with a banquet at Chuck-Eand Hilary Peal. Managers Therese the other hand, limits each learn to
ly at the ~tern softball banquet Bise and Lynn White also iellered.
•· · Cheese's in Parkersburg.
two foreign-born players.
All-Ohio scholars honored were
This year, Douthitt picked I!P her were Crow, Aeiker, Holter, Mil'
"The WNBA has the best players
hoan, Mindy Sampson and White.
; 200th career win.
Crow and Holter.
from around the world." Ackennan
Six young ladies were honored
These young ladies were the speHonored as aii-Tri-Valley Con- said. "These women have been
; · cial award winners on the team that for earning recosnition on the aii- ference selections were Aeiker, playing in obscurity overseas. Peo:. placed .~ond behind Southern In~ Tri-Valley Conference all-academic White and Holter. Mayle and Mil- ple's heads will turn when they see
: .• Tri-Valley Conference Hocking. team: Crow, Holter, Kelli Bailey, , hoan picked up honorable mention the skill of these women."
Billee · Pooler, Valerie Karr and honors.
•~ Division race.
·
Indeed. The WNBAgame will be
Stephanie
Evans.
Third in voting was Aeiker, who played at a level that will shock fans,
, c
Award winners were Meredith
Aeiker was selected to participate was selected as second team all-Ohio with an up-tempo, physical style like
_ Crow, Most Improved Outfielder;
· . Patsy Aeiker, 'Best Balling Average in the District All-Star Game on June and first team all-Southeast District the NBA, players and coaches say.
:-, (.418),; ., Martie Holler, Most 8 at the University of Rio Grande. In behind Player of the Year honorees
. "When I look at .the ABL, it's
; :'Improved Infielder; Amanda Mil- addition to all-district honors, Aeik- Andria Smalley of Lucasville Valley much more of a guanl-based game,
!. hoan, Best Defensive Player (.954); , er was c!Josen as an all-slate selec- and Angie Spencer of Symmes Val- with so many of the good young col·
tion and will participate in the All- ley.
• 1 and Tracy White, Coaches Award;
lege guards," said Mary Murphy,
:~ and Kim Mayle, Most Runs Scored.

coach of the WNBA's Sacramento
Pollini warns against comparing
Monarchs.
the women's game with the men's.
"The WNBA will be much more
"Basketball is baskelball. Physiof a post-game, and we have a great cally, the difference hetween men
inside-out game. Overseas leagues . and women is big. But technically,
look for post players, 6-fqot-2, 6-3
what we can do with the ball can he
and up. We have those players."
very good," Pollini said .

There's~.

strong intere~t in
first-rnte . . g
5Month Premimn a&gt;·

-

0\icaio .................. :Z..'I 40

_.,..1_

..

Los. A.,..~es ........... :\2

Iii

Hew York .............. 36 28 .563

8

19

.694

.m
n ..t68

T-o .................. 29 J2
Dctroit.. ... .............. 29

n ' . 42~

8ollon. ........,.......... 27

Central DhW.
.Cl.EVI'l.AND .. :... J2 28 .m
Milwaukee ............. JO 32 , ..-c
Klftlll City ........... 29 ~) .468
0Ucqo..................29 34 .460
Minnnoea .............. 29 :\5 .4!\l

m14
~

4
4~
~

29

. ~so

Tuu ,.................... :n 30

. ~2~

Anahtim ................ :\4 30· .:UI

Oalllond ................. 27 40 .403

I~

Frklar••......,

.AL ... NL
Milwaukee 4. ChicaJo Cubs 2
PillsburJh .5, KMIII Cily 3.
Olie410 White So~; 3, CINCINNAn I
M011trml 4. Derroit ~
Baltil'l'lllR 4. Atlant~ :\

Boltoa 8. N.Y. Mets 4
Philodelphia 4, Toroolo 3
MIIIDeiOia I, Housto. I
Teus 6, San FraaciiCO 5
Floridoo 2, N.Y. Y...... l tl2)
Sanle6.Colcnolal
Lor A. .lei 6, Ookland 4
. •
Sill Dieao I, An*im.7 (I')
a.EVB.AND • St. Louis. ppd., rain

They ,..,.,. Satunlay
A.Lvt.NL
1o11on (Watefteld 2-S) • N.Y. Mets
(Ciofll !-0). I: 15 p.m.
Baltimore (Muuina 8-1) at Atlaata
·(Smoloz 6-~).
p.m.
·
CLEVELAND CColon 1-2) at St.
t.c.is(Morris'-:\J,I :ISp.m.
MIIWIUUI: (Kart 2-7) 11 OicQSO Cubs
(Tiach:el J.~). 4:05p.m.
Colorado (Bailey 6-5) at Oakland
(W...,. 3-3), 4&lt;!5 p.m.
Loa AaJCin (R. M_.i~z ~~~ a1 Sealole (Wolconl-4). 4:05p.m. .
·
Toronto (Pcraoft I·') Dt Phillldtlphia ·
(NJOO.Il. 7:05p.m.
.
N.Y. Yanlcus (Wells 7-3) 11.1 Aorid.a
(feoow.... ~). 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Belcher 7-6) 111 PimtUebor J. 7:0!1 p.m.
thicaao White So• COarwin 2- ~) at
CINCINNATI tMetck&lt;r 3·~). 7:05p.m.
CLEVELAND(~ ~-S) ar s,. Loui1
(Andy-. ~-2). 7:~ p.m.
O.roit (Thomp1on 6-4) a1 Montreal
(P. ,.._.hiez 8-2), 7:35p.m.
Min!IIOIOII {Robertson ~3) M HOuston
(Kllel-2), 1:05 p.m.
S11 Die.Jo. ~Jatkton 1·2) al Teaa1
ts..- 3·2). US p.m.
SIUI franc:iac:o (CariUtn 0..0) II An.a ·
helm CWatsoa ~-~). 10; 0~ p.m.

1:1'

'

'

"-'-

n

5speed.

TEXAS RANGERS : Siane&lt;I'C Jason
Grabowski and C Jason Tt'll'fts.
TORONTO BLUE lAYS: AJ..cd lo
1etms wilh SS ~ichDel Youns llOd LHP
Ronald B9sr on a minor·kaaut ~onlracl.
•

SAVEl
MSRP $8,920
Don Tall Sale Prlcl •8,422

Nat-.IIAape

ATLANTA BRAVES: Si1ned SS
Troy Cameron and nuianed him to
. Danville olrhe Appala..:hinn Leaa~.

.lWll 997 CIEV. MALIBU

LOS ANGELES DODGERS : Optioned OF Todd Hollnndsworth ro Albu·

querque or the PCL. RQ:alled OF Kllrirri
Gartia from Albuquerque.

NEW YORK ~EfS: Plnoo.l SS Man·
Ale~;ander and ~HP Rick, Trlic;:ek on
1he I ~-da~ disabled Jut. Recnlled LHP Ri·

ny

canlo Jordan from Norfolk of the l•tema·
donal Leacuc. Purchased rhe conrnicr of
INF Kevin Morgan from Norfolk.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES : Recalled RHP Wayne Gomes and IF Kevin
'Sefcik from Sa:~~~~on - Wilkei - Barr-e of the
lnlemationt~l League. Placed 18-0F Re"
Hudler and RHP Ken Ry11n on lhe I~-duy
disabled lill . Signet.l RHP Mark Ruthtr-forH and C T{oy. Norrell and auianed
Rutherford to Bar.win of the Ntw York·
·Ptnn Leaglt( aid Norrell to Martinsville
of the AllPalachiiUI Leque.
Plli'SBURGH PIRATES: Signed OF
Jose Nicoln, LHP John Grabow , OF
M11urice Washi•gton und LHP Michoel
Pukerson to minor·lugue coruract5 und
aui1ned them to the Pii'a.es of the Gulf
Coa.t Wsur. Signed RHP David Combs,
LHP Andrew Bausher. OF. Kurwin De·
HIWI, LHP Paul Stabile, UtP Sam McConnell. LHP Kris Lamben, LHP J1110il
Hardebeck. LHP Christopber LuniJ. SS
. Kevin. Haverbusch, LHP Keith Muwell.
RHP Bradley Guy. OF Chri11- Clark,
OF Peter Aullin ud 38 Derrick Laftkford
to minor-leuaue c:ontractl ;mel auiancd
them to Erie of the New York-Penn
LellJUe. Traded RHP Scou Taylor of Cal·
pry of the PCL 10 the San Dieao Padres.

ALv~oNL

Baltimore (Erickson 9·2) at Allnnta
tGiavl• 6-4~ I:10 p.m.
Detroit (Moetller ..._~)II !IAOftlreal (lu·
. dn 6-2~ I :l5 p.m.
T-.. tlleMI'ft 6-3) ao Jltoiladelphia
(M. UloerU~ 1;:!5p.m.

"-- aoy (Appior 4-5) ao Piltobwah

,.

'~:·
f,

'•.

..

tCook~7), 1 : 35p.m.

Chi&lt;.., Whloo Sox (Baldwin l·l) 11
CINCINNA11 ( - 4-5), 2:15 ~. m.
a.t:VELAND IN'Il' 7-3) 11 So. l..oui\
(S lau;uc 4-4). 2:15f .m.

1 1 - (Dicb&gt;o 1-2~ 4:05 p.01 .
Colonodo (Rill ~5) .. Ooklood tl'ltclo
~4&lt;l.Sp.oo.

•

.'·

. Lot A•ae• (Valdis ':\. 7) 11 Seaule

( - $-2~ 4:35 p....
~.Y. Yoo..... (Goodn 1.0) • F1orido
(-4-3), 4:35?-"'

. . _ (P 'uw~ll 11 N.Y. Mets
(-11·2~ t&lt;l.S p.a
·Sao ..... (~Wob, Z.l) • t .... (Will

N:uned Bill McGiltisaeneralftllftlllcr.

FootiNoU
.Noi_.F_._..

.

ARIZONA CARDINALS: Siane&lt;l G
Anthony Redmon to 11 one-~ cunlracl.
BUFFALO BILLS; Sianed OL Mar-

•

.•
..

CAROLINA PANTHERS: Waived
LB Elrick Hmin, LB ltlogic Gamoo. DT
Tim Colsron 11ncf WR Cedric l.lk:htr).
DETROIT LIONS: Slaned WR Deoo
M-•. ltlolealcd QB loi!My loiiiiO&lt;lO.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Si&amp;ne&lt;l QB Dan
Marino to 11 one-yc.- coatrac.:t c~;tentloo
tt.roup 1999. Si&amp;ned WR Yatll Oru!n to
a five-)UI" cOQfnll;t.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES : R• tiped DT Hotli• Thomas to a four·,..:•
&lt;OftiiiCI.

SAN DIEIJO CHARGERS: SiJned S
·Orea JIJI..·bon.

_......,._
Hockey

.

BOSTON BRUINS: Sip&lt;d F Shown
Bws 10 I two-~ coalnlcl.

.

CALGARY FLAMES: Siane&lt;l o loloor
Hitmcn of the

of iNeM 10 buy the CaJaawy

w-.Hoc..,.._.

PIIILADE:LPHIA FLYERS: Flr•d
TenyM..,.y,C&lt;*b.

Honencl
HOLLYWOOD

M_, .....,,. .,

.

PAit~ Mile

..,w~c~oy

ond 0orren

7-lU:OSp.a.

R. . -

~et: PI_ I'

MIO.AMEit~CONFEIIENCE:
Natnl4 'fboww ao.no • I l l - COli-

..

rite r8tll••tioa of Rod~ey
. . , . , ,..., .......·s . . . CIOKh.
PLOIIIDA SfAlE:- SiloS....

.. ........... l2 .

~·r::::· :.......•

~n .......~

.

I

,

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

NORTH CAROLINA STATE!

_ _ .....__OOIIoltle

- - . . . r.. .,..111 """""''""

PI I .............
-

dMI

A8KANSAS·LITI1.E ROCK: All·

:

.. .
·····.~rr
~
~

I

Ha~·ced

............ lil • .
............ 35 ,
.
.
...........D 41, .~

;

- " ' " ' ....i&lt;IIJ.

......_for eM

~ ~lflltl
: : ::::::;:-'. ~ .

I

16~

VB, all power, CO player, Ktylnl
MSRP
DON TATE SALE PRICE

Don Tile Sale Price •1 0,29S'

"""

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MSRPc,•.
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•

..

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MSRP $21,11115

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.

DON TATE SALE PRICE--

Don Tile Sale Price 11

1996 OLDS
Auto.,

10 Month Premimn.ffi

.08%
.25%APY

~~ Eastern softballf.,team presents
~·~ honors ,to p/ayees a't awards banquet

--:.~=--1996

Minimum deposit to open an aCcount Is $2,000.00. Rales Indicate annual percentage

Vlel~ and are etf~ive tor accounts opened June 121hru June 18, 1997. tnteres!.IO be

cap.tallzed. DepositS of $100,000 or mo!e are subject to daily iate quotations. A penalty
for earty withdrawal may be Imposed. Above rates available al all Peoples Bank
locations. FDIC Insured.

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Gallipolis Mlddlepon Pomeroy R~llarul TOO Only Bank·Dy·Phonc
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.

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... ----~----------------------~-.:.~. Bulls reneat
~
(Continued from B-2)

Ame-llorkellloiiiA-

c.lll ("-7-4), 2:20 p...

·s. "'-1... tv......,..;.,- J.4l

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MSRP $11,582
·.

LONG BEACH STINGRAYS :

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Auto., buc;kets, PW, PL,
air, cassette.
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.Don Tile Sale
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·

5. %

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BuketbaU

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lll.l 1997 GEO METRO

..

•v

lll·~997 CHEV. CAVALIER
appearance pkg.
MSRP $13,492
Don Tete Sa~ Price •12,466

.
MINNESOTA
TWINS: Aareed to
term• with RHP Man Carnes, OF De·
Shawa Southward nnd LHP Aaron Miller
on mu'IOI"·Ieague eonrntcrs

2

10

7

BasebaU

17

Wntun Dlvillon
Sean~ .................... J6

I~
'

.492

San Dle10 ............. 29 36 .446

r.s.

&amp;.

n

,

1~

WatemDMIIen
San FranciiK!o ........ J6 29 .554
Colorado ............... J~ ~I .530

AL standings
:r..
l!
Ballimore .............:...:\

. 18~

waved her away and muttered, "Tile
hell with her.''
The Reds were .shaking their
heads when B.elle ultimately beat
them.
•
.
Pete Schourek (S,S) gave up a
game-opening homer to · Ray
Durham and sellled in, holding lhe
White Sox without another hit until
the sixth . Belle came up with
Michael Cameron on first and two
outs.
The Reds intended to pitch
around Belle. Instead. Schourek left
a full-count sinker close enough for
Belle to reach. He hit it over the
right· field wall for his 15th homer,
prompting Schourek to stare into the
Reds ' dugout in disbelief.
" When I looked in the dugout, I
· {See REDS on B-4)

1995 CHEVY LUMINA VAN V8, auto., air. PW, stereo, cruise.................................. ~ ..................-. ......................$14,796
199&amp; CHEVY S-10 EXT. CAB 5 speed, air, atere0 ............................. ~ .... ~........ ~ .....................~ ............................ $11,829 ·
1996 FORD RANGER XLT 5 sf)aec:l, air, stereo, more ...... ! ........................................ ~............................·••••••••••••••$8,929
1995 ·cHEVY SUBURBAN V8, auto., air, loaded, l..thar..................................................................................$26,969
1994 GMC SIERRA PICKUP VB, auto., air, stereo, cruise ........................,::.................................;...........:........ $14,9,s
1995 JEEP CHEROKEE V6, auto., air, stereo, cruise, 4X4 ...............................................................................$15,i59
1994 CHEVY S·10 BLAZER V6, PW, air. auto., crulse ................................:.................. ~ .................................. $18,995
1995 CHEVY 9-10 PICKUP LS PKG. Auto., air, tilt, cruise .......................,.......................................................$10,329
1198 CH~ TAHOE VB~ auto., air, PW, PL, crul~ •.CD player ......................
$23,9oo
1812 CHEVY LUMINA EURO V6, auto., air, tilt, crulee, atereo ............................................................,..............$5,99$
UNI9 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE V8, auto., air, leather, loaded .............. ~.......................................................$8,795
_1995 CHEVY -~ONTE CARLO V8, auto., air, stereo, tilt, cruise, grHn ................,.......................~ •.•••;............ $,13,929
1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME V6, auto., air, ttereo,tllt, crulae......................;...... ~....................................$11,995
1115 CHEVY MONTE CARLO G,_n/gray, V8, IOided..........": .......................:.........................................,.........$11,185
1918 PONTIAC SUN FIRE Air, ltereo, 5 speed, white ............................,':·~· ........................................:....... ~........ $9,989
1915 PONTIAC FIREBIRD Auto., air, stereO, PW, PL, tilt, cruJH .......,~:.......,...............,..............;................;•• $12,129
. 1115 FORD MUSTANG Auto., air, stereo, tilt, crulu ...............................~ ..........'...........:.................................. $14,1C)i)
.1918 PONTIAC GRAND AM VI, auto•..alr, atereo, tiH, cruiH ....,.........';:;........................................ ~................. $13,.
11111 BUICK PARK AVE. V8, auto., air, PW, PL, lttriO, tilt, cruiM, llllioon...................................................$22,18i
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1998 OLDS 88 LS VI, auto., •lr, PW, PL,·tllt, crua. .............................'!,'.................................................~......... $11,121
1112 CADILLAC SEDAN
Low mllel,l•ltler~ V8, loeded ..............~ .................................~ ................ $1···
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AN Uout our wide 111nge of extended Hrvlct plllnt•

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc. . ·
ITS WORTH YOUR DRIVE/

: • Jordan, Pippen and Jackson have
:: been the'catalysts for all five titles-: 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996 and now
: ·· 1997.
. Jordan and Jackson arc free
• : agents .and Pippen hus been lhe sub: : ject oftrade rumors. Rodman also is
• : a free agent. · ·
·
; · · "thCre has to be some 'sense of
: : loyalty to myself, Scollie, Phil, even
• : Dennis with all the different colots
:; he may wear," Jordan ,;,id. "We're
: entitled to keep whui we have until
._.' we Iose
• 11.
.
.
.
; • "Phil should be the 'head coach,
:; and I' shouldn't be put in the position
: · to play for another coach. It's as sim' : pie as that: I will not choose to play
: : for another coach."
,
• Owner Jerry Reinsdorf called )or: ; dan tJle game's greatest player ever
• _and Jackson the best coach in the
:: league, but he again refused to say
t·· whether he would keep the team
~: intact or begin rebuilding .
Li · "Rebuilding? Noliody is guaran~
~ •teeing rebuilding is 11olng to be two,
I: three, four, five years," Jordan said
· · "The Cubs have been t'ebuildin11 for

All~=

Pippen certainly demonstrated his
; .·value again .
: : He had 23 points, nine rebounds
. ~and ~ blocked shots. He also
: :clinched.the victory after Kerr had
;·liven the Bulla lhe lead. Bryon
·.1b.MII'a inbounda p i l l - deflect;,;eel alipd~ by Tbtli Kutac lid Pip:;,(IIIIIIWOJW ' in fdr lhu!AI. Pippen

.

.then fed Kukocfor a clunk th~t set off
'You guys .didn't come in here,
a celebration of streamers. confeui
where ·everyone thought the series
and rock music.
was over, and lie down and just show
' Then ... liugsilll around.
up and let them beat .U!.' We went out
Jordan hugged · Pippen. Jordan
there and played as hard as we
hugged Jackson . Bulls .players
could.':
hugged Karl Malone, Jeff Hornacek,
So did the Bulls. They usually do.
John Stockton and other members of
That''s wtiy ·they hud 69 victories
this season. · tied for second-best
.a Utah team that gave the Bulls their
toughest finals test.
ever behind the 72 wins of last year's .
Four games in the series were
Bulls. That's why they )Vent IS-4 in
decided in the final minute. The· the playoffs, despite struggling
Bulls won three of them.
offensively iii almost every game.
"That's what" eats everybody up
"This was n grind," Kerr said,,
inside ... but at least we gave the
"but thai· makes this .one much beteffort," Hornacek said. "The first
tcr.... ·
thing said by (coach) Jerry Sloan was- - ·
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•Reclinino Butttel Seals
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. ·

• 4300 V-6 Power
• Power Steeri&lt;l!l'
• Driver's Side Airbag • Cu~om Clollo lnleriof
• 4Wheel Anti-loci&lt;
• S~led Wheels

.

.

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TP£ Fresb Start Flnandn8.

Sometur.dl'altr.odf!o ilprlla) 011111M1Ufl ll&gt;'llll~lllJftJt Ill. IIIII) Ulew ...'II t:lr.!.l'IWIII'l'd!~·, 11U'" "" Stan ~lnaoM11lj( Is ~'I)Cid IMII".'f')
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.

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin K..ltellgh

Tom Peden

. Clark Reed

Country

Blue wlblue cloth interior, AC, 81er1110
CUI., . JIOW8I'
windows,
mirrors, tilt, cruise, r811' defroster.
.

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PomerOy • Middleport • GaiHpolle, 0H • Point Pill lint. 'ffY

.

Milwaukee's Mark Loretta, who
As Paul Molitor says, interleague attended Cubs aames as a student at
play still takes some getting used to. Northwestern. "lbere was a buzz in
lben again, sonic things stay the the clubhouse before the game. This
$ame: in their first real game against was not a run-of-the-mill game for
the AL in 52 years. the Chicago Cubs us. Everybody was excited to come
to this shrine of baseball."
still lost.
Minnesota. which swept its eight .
And once again, the Minnesota
Metrodome
games against St. Louis
Twins couldn't lose to an NL team in
and Atlanta to win the World Series
a dome.
in 1987 and 1991 , had a boost in
And, oh yeah, Mark McGwire
Houston from hometown hero
and Jose Canseco still can't hit the
Chuck
Knoblauch. The former BelDodgers.
.
laire High School Star, who will be
"You had to keep reminding
honored with a special day today,
yourself that this was a real game,"
had four hits and three RBis in·an 8Molitor said after hitting a two-run
1 victory.
homer in Minnesota's 8-1 win
'.'It was strange," he said. "You
against Houston at the Astrodome on
had to fight through telling you~lf
Friday night. "You have to say,
it was a real game."
'We're playing in Houston.' But as
Canseco and McGwire, a comhard as it was to realize, you have to
bined
2-for-36 against Los Angeles
understand it's going to show up in
in
the
1988 World Series, .were a
the standings."
AnAL team hadn't played a !)Oat· combined 1-for-12 in the two-game
game at Wrigley since the Detroit series against the _Dodgers. Mike
Tigers won 9-3 on Oct. 10, 1945 in Piazza doubled to break a ninthGame 7 of the World Series. This inning tie as Los Angeles rallied to
time, the Milwaukee Brewers beat win 6-4 and gain a split.
the Cubs 4-2.
·
Piazza was a designated hitter for
"This is a thrill for sure," said the first time in his career.
"It keeps your leg fresh: and to .
ByThe~PteA

Marlatn 6, Rocldell
Randy Johnson (10-1) held base·
ball's highest-IICOI'i ng team to just
two hits in eight innings and stluck
out 12 at the Kingdome as Seattle
completed the first interleague
sweep. Edgar M.runez, who drove
in three runs, and Russ Davis each
homered as the M~ners won before
a crow4 oBS,980,
.
Expos 4, tllen 3
At Montreal, Qmar Olivares (4-S)
got the firsl triple by an AL pitcher
in 24 years, .but Henry Rodriguez hit
a two-run homer. Olivares' fifthinning triple off the walt in nght-centcr was th~ first by an AL ,pitcher
since Milwaukee's Ed Rodriguez
against Cleveland on Sept. 3, 1973.
Padres 8, An&amp;els 7
Quilvio Veras doubled home the
tiebreaking run in the .14th at Anaheim, his fourth hit of the game,
which lasted S hours, 3 minutes. San
Diego rallied from a 7-2 deficit to
gain a series split.
Pirates S, Royals 3 .
Former Pirate Jeff King.hit a two-

trauma surgeon at the hospital said.
"Can he recover? Absolutely he can
recover. That.s what we continue to
hope and pray for.
"I have absolutely no idea
whether he'll play again."
Mnatsakanov remained in critical
injury after undergoing surgery to
relieve pressure caused by his closed
head lhjury.
Fetisov was in good condition
with chest injuries and a bruised .
lung, Robbins said.
' "He was admitted primarily for
monitoring to look for the possibility of deterioration in his respiratory
status. That has not happened. We
are very optimistic he will continue
to improve," he said.
Fetisov talked to his teammates
Friday night, Robbins said. He could
not remember the accident and it was
. not known if they were wearing seat
belts, Robbins said.
The driver of the limousine,
Richard Onida; 28, was listed in
good condition with no· serious
injuries.
Witnesses said the limousine
veered out of control in the Oakland
County suburb of Birmingham at ·
about 9:30p.m. and swerved into a
median, hitting a tree.
Birmingham police told the
Detroit Free Press that initial information indicated driver error was the
cause.
"It's nothing to do with the hockey players," a police official said.
"What happened had nothing to do
with them.:·
The driver, Onida, did not hold a
valid driver's license at the time of ·
the accident. Liz Boyd, spokeswoman for the Michigan Secretary.
of State, told the Free Press that"Gnida's driver's license was most recent·
ly revoked in January 1996.
In February 1996, Onida was
ticketed for speeding and driving
while his lipense was suspended. In
July 1996, Onida was given an addi,
tional revocation, arid be is not eligible for review until January 1998,
Boyd said. ·
Limo company owner John GamGETS THE OUT - Chicago White Sox first baileman Dave Marbino said he did. not know that Onitinez leaps to catch third baaeman Chris Snopek'sthrow and make da had a bad record. He said he has
the out on Cincinnati's Delon &amp;andere In the fifth Inning of Friday a secretary who checks records .
nlghl'l game In Cincinnati, where the While Sox won·3-1 In thel.r before drivers are hired.
tlrat visit to Clnergy Field. (AP)
.
Known as the "VIadinator" or
"Vlad the Impaler" by his teammates, Konstantinov honed his skills
&lt;
;;:c:::.:on;;;ti;;;:nu:.:::ed:..:fr:.:::om:::..::.B-..;;;3l:...__ _ _ __
on the ice playing for Russia's CeoRoberto Hernandez got the last . tral Red Army club, known as
· was just stunned that he hit the ball
four
outs- for Iris 13th save of the sea- CSKA.-,Born iil "Murmansk, Russia,
that hard," Schourek said. "I guess
that's why he gets $10 million..! was son and ·the !47th of his career, the ~0-year-old came to the United
trying to make him swing at a bad matching Willie Hernandez for most . States in 1991 to,play for Detroit.
His style of de~ense lias attracted
ball or walk him, but it just dido 't get ' by a Latin player.
The game felt more like a typical · the ire of other teams, and also
there."
National
League game than an inter- earned him a finalist spot this year
Thr&lt;;.ugh a club spokesman, Belle
league
contest.
It lasted only_2:40, . for the James Norris Memorial Trodeclined to be interviewed.
·
the
White
Sox
didn't
have to make . phy forbestdefenseman.lbeaward
Belle was booed loudly by the
Reds' second-largest crowd of the a double switch and the pitching winner is scheduled lobe announced
dominated.
Thursday, along with other National
season -they sold 31,682 tickets The
only
ugly
moment
was
when
Hockey League awards at the Hall of
every time he was introduced and
Alvarez made his first major-league
when he rounded the bases.
appearance
l\t the plate. He shipped
It was tbe second time this month
a
slow
grounder
to the hole at shortthat Belle has disappointed fans in
stop
but
was
thrown
out by Larkin,
Ohio. Last week, he returned to
Cleveiand, got treated a little wotse who went into the outfield to grab it
aDd make the ihrow.
and produced about the same. .
Alvarez. a slow runner anyway at
"That's just because it's Ohio,"
6-foot-1
and 235 pounds, fell for one
manager Terry Bevington said of the
of
the
oldest
tricks in the-game. First
boos. "It was about one-tenth of
baseman
Eduardo
Perez relaxed as if
what it was in Cleveland, the noise
the ball had gone through the infield,
level. It wasn 'i so bad.
and
the pitcher fell for it.
. '"It was.a similar (game) situation
"The
first baseman, he tricked
. in Cleveland. when he hit a three-run
me,"
Alvarez
said. "I saw ·him and
homer."
The White Sox got only those said, well, maybe the ball's gone
three hi.ts, but they were . epough. through. I slowed down."
Notel: The. White Sox had not
Wilson Alvarez (4-6) took a quick
played
a National League team since
liking to home plate umpire Tom '
losing
the
1959 World Series to the
Hallion's strike zone and gave up
Los Angeles Dodgers .... The White
seven hits over 7 213 inninga.
"I love the strike zone here." said Sox are 2-4 without Frank Thomas,
Alvarez, who held the Reds scoreless who is sidtlined by pulled muscles
until Barry Larkin bad an RBI dou.· in his side. lbey've scored only 13
ble with tWO OUts in the eight. runs in the six games.... Schourek
"Everything around the plate, they has given up a game-opening homer ·
can : I love it. That's why the sames in each of his last two starts and a
are shorter here than in the Ameri&lt;:an total of 12 .in his last five stariS.
Leap."
' .
remained on ventilators, wh(ch hospital officials said earlier was rouline
for such head injuries, and were listed in critical condition.
The two were injured along with
fellow Red Wings defenseman
Viacheslav Fetisov and a limousine
driver after an accident Friday night.
Konstantinov underwe~t surgery
on his right elbow to repair a tendon
and remove debris. He also had a
pressure monitor placed in his head.
"The long-term prognosis for
this is impossible to tell. The next
few days arc going to be very important to determine which way he is
going to go," Dr. James Robbins, a

Reds lose ...

•

'

Fame in Toronto.
Despite talk that the Russians did
not care about winning the Stahley
Cup-. after they had won numerous
.awards for their native country in
Olympic and World Championships
-the -players said that winning the
Cup was just as sweet.
"This Cup is for you, for Detroit,
for Michigan." Konstantinov sai!l at
a rally that drew more I million people to downtown Detroit on Thesday.
Fetisov also played for CSKA,
and is known as "Papa Bear" for
being the elder Russian at age 39.
He joined the Red Wings in 1995
after five 'seasons with the New Jersey Devils. He played on Olympic
championship teams in 1.984 and
1988, and also helped the Soviet
Union capture. seven world titles and
one Canada Cup.
Hospital spokeswoma~ Collette
Stimmel said Konstantinov remained
unconscious .early Saturday morning.
He is on a ventilator, which is routine for the type of injury sustained
in the crash, Ms. Stimmel said.
Red Wings spokesman Tony
Lasher said 17 of the team players
had been at a golf outing earlier this
aftel'ii'nOii.~ ., .• . ·
'·' ·

"•
~DOUG FIAOUSON

run homer on the lint pitch he saw
back 11 Three Riven Stadlwn. But
ex-Royals player Joe Randa
answered with a tyilll homer, triple
and three RB!s as the Pirates rallied.
Phlllletl4, Blae Jays 3
In a rematch of the 1993 World
Series, Gregg Jefferies drove in
three runs at Ve1C1'811s Stadium and
reliever Wayne Gomes (1-0), called
up from Triple-A earlier in the day,
was the winning pitcher in his majOr
league debut. Jefferies' bases-loaded
single drove in l)fickey Morandini
and Darren Daulton iri the seventh
inning, giving 1M loss to Paul Spoljaric (0-3).
i
.
Marlins l, Yaakees 1
Jim Mecir (0-4) walked Charles
Johnson on a 3-2 pitch with the bases
loaded and no outs in the 12th as
Aorida won the first extra-inning
interleague game.
.
Rangers 6, Gluts 5 .
Rusty Greer hit a two-run homer
in the fifth inning, then bit a ~e­
winning hOrner in the ninth at Ailington.
·
·

~

•.

•.

TREATED
LANDSCAPE

TIMBERS

·
O'DELL I.UHBER COHPAHV .
SemHranspar~nt,

pllon ancholld colo&lt; oil
slain or dect sUin
in INn'f colon ....

CONCIIETt

MIX

c;;--

IOPOUNO BAG · .

VIHE sr ~ THIRD AVE
GAWPOUS, OHIO

614 446 1Z16 .

RIO GRANDE - . Here is this
week's schedule for events Ill the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
Center.
·
\ Fitness center, II)'Dinaslum
and ncquetbaU courts
Tciday- 1-S p.m.
Monday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
· Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thu..,.y- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Fridtiy - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- l-S p.m.
Sunday, June ll-'- l~S p.m.

.

_

.

. fJom die Orand Slllllto wbelber he lion lJellind than thai, .. be said.

•· BE111ESDA, Md. (AP)- Con- would e'JCII make the cut.
irol ia everythinJll the U.S. Open,
On Priday, .he played the same
which means more than just bittiag pme. 1!11111 the same clubs and hepfairways and greens.
pelled 10 hit a lot moce fairways. 1be
' That's why Tom LetuDan has ~I was a 67, which left hjm II I ·
been the onjy player ~ shoot p.- ex: over 14lllld Well. Within Slriltina dis,~tter ov~ !',Yo rounds 11 Conps- tance heading il\to the. Weekend.
siolllil Country Club, and why 1iBet:
'lit's kind of Npfty ,because I fell
Woods managed to work himaelf . the same," Woods said.·"It's just that
back into contention after starting yesterday was o.J\e of those days
,nine strokes back. .
when you're not hitting the ball the
, It also explains why Scotland's · way you would like to, so you get a
·colin "Montgomerie, the first-round little frustrated."
l~er, now has some catching up to · . One.reason 111£k Fleck is the only
player in 96 preVIOUS U.S,. Opens tO
~o. .
While Lehman overcame a dismal· trail-by as many as nine strokes after
start to shoot even-par 70 and take the first round and still wiri the tour. t_!1e lead at 137, Montgomerje let a nament is that Open-type courSes
nearly three-hour storm delay, his don't allow scores in the low 60s to
wildness off .the tee and the gallery help make up ground.
·
get the best of him.
Woods took care of part ·of his
, "More than anything, I think deficit with awesome iron play in the
t_hings that get you out of this tour- early 'going, · getting four birdies
nament is just hilling bad. shots, ur from inside six feet on the front nine.
bad breaks get under your skin,"
The pained look on Moni·
Lehman said. "And pretty soon, gomerie's face from the first fairway
.')t.ma're so worked up you ·'can't made it clear that·Friday would not
' play....
·
·
resemble anything like the 5-under
, Lehman had a one-stroke lead 6S he posted.iri the first round, when
q.ver 1994 U.S. Open champion · he miS$ed only one fairway and had
Ernie Els and Stewart Cink.
birdie putts on 16 holes.
' · Mark McNulty was at 2 under
When Montgomerie reached the
through 14 holes when the second par-5 ninth green, he had hil only
round was suspended at 8:31 p.m. two fairways and slipped into a tie
. Friday because,of darkness. When he for the lead with Lehman. After
: ~turned this morning, he bogeyed
missing a four-fool birdie pull, be
·two of the third three holes and fin- heard a woman cackle and lit into
:ished at 73, putting him at even-par her.
.
: l-4il
"Save your cheers for the Ryder
: ' JeffMaggert had tlie best round of Cup," he growled.
:the day,~ 4-under 66, to getto 139. He later conceqed that the .inci"David Ogri n and Hal Suuon com- . dent·"put;me in the wrong frame of
:pleted their rounds with pars and mind."
·
There •s no room for that at the
:were also at I under for the touma:fliCnt, along with Scott Hoch, who U.S. Open.
Before long, Montgomerie had
·birdied the 18th for a second-round
:68.
begun to rap a putt and immediate: · Vijah Singh also made ~irdie at ly start walking after it. He would hit
·the par-3 18th. That gave h1m a 76 drives and flip his club to the ground
:tor a 147, but he needed the putt to as if he were through trying to figJitake his 38th consecutive cut, the ure out where his accuracy had
longest streak among PGA Tour gone.
.
·players.
· ·
.
After hitting all 3-woods on drii · .Among those missing the cut of ving holes in the first round, he even
\ .,
·t47 were Greg Norman. Corey gave his driver a try.
. "I. didn't hit that well, either,"
Pavin, Ian Woosnam and Mark
!{ Brooks. · ·
· · ·
MoQtgomerie said.
His round of 76 included no
b Woods missed three fairways and
birdies,
six bogeys and .three difficult
~ l'pok · double-bogeys on t)Wo holes
: !.when he missed the green during his par-saving putts. But at 141, he is
only four ·strokes off the lead. ·
~ ,~74 on Thursday, which 'urned talk
I.' '
,
"I. have won
from
a greater
c!
.
'
.
. P.OSi-

654 EHAIH sr
POHERO'I, OHIO

614 99Z-5500 .

•

·

Domt.-m

_......

But never 11 a major champi· llrMieyltupa
Leeionship, and certainly not on a coune Pool&lt;lo,M
1"1111. s
*i
as taxing as eonpssional.
"You know, the aame plln doesn't change," Lehman said. "Thi1
-Col1or1
course is too severe to ,change wbal Niekl'llee
you're doing. All you'can do is keep GnoiWu
plugging away. And as long 'as I Scnnllon
Sd!all
don't go outllld bell myself the next Kn
M.tO'Man
BrodF.,..
two days, I'm going to·bea factor on
Paul B.-...,
Sunday."
Dovid Duvol
Woods feels the same way. · Mwoo DlllfiO•
Nl"' Faldo
Including the players still on the W.MaaiiCe
course, 30 Were Within five StrOkeS Orea"'Y Kraft
Qris51111dt
ofLehman:
'
"Today I shot myself back into
it." WOods said, '"I'm back in the Tom W1111011
Mike Mullen.
toumainent."
S!ophon A!""
Jack Nicldaus,"playing in his 41st .
Randy Wytie
consecutive Open. made the cut for Joctl'tnu
.
the 34th time and is seven strokes lesporPomevit
behind at 144.
s..
.. Dimna.b
···It is'just wonderful to watch.him JimmyGrun
play, to walk up the fairways," said R-y Bu1&lt;htr
Ben .Crenshaw. "I learn things from BenCrenww
Foed Cooples ·
Corey Pavln
him every tlnie." ·
Black
And then he offered perhaps the Roanie
loeRlbest lesson of all from Nicklaus, who LIIIty Rinker
Poul Mc:Oinley
has won the U.S. Open four times.
Mark Clleavw:hia
''I have never seen emotion affect MorltBOJOb
Lon)' Silvara
.his game~"
Ken Green

-I

•

=:::1

Do--

· Ciary Nk:klaua
Kevin Altenhof
len Woosman

-

Elw.l:

Cunis StranJe
a- Terry NOll
Mark Weibe

Tom Lehman
Ernie Els
Stewllt Cink
Jell MIQOR. ·
Justin Leonard

Torruny Tolin
11aerWoodl
KtOy Giblon

Se"'1 Dunlop
Dave Scbn:ya
Colia Monlaomerit
Otln Browne
Dick Mast
Jose-Maria Olaubal
Steve Stricter ·

U.WeJIWood

David Whhe ·

Jim Fwyk
Billy Andrade
Ouis P1my

ManOoael

Anlhony Aauilu
Oary Robison

RoyHuDter
Jim McGo&gt;mn
Mib Brilky

Joy Doollloke
Bob Gilder

7S-Mo141 (1-1)
68-13•141 (+1)

Frut. Uckliter

M-76-141 (+1}

Peter Mitchell
Rici;Cnmor
Jason Se~tsbeq:er
Dave S1ockton

71-71•142 (+2)
73-69-142 (+2)
71-71•142(+2)

66-76-142 (+2)
71-11•142 (+2)
70-72ol42 (+2)
74-68ol42 (+2)
7~-67cl4l

OriaNonnan

Brett Wayment

Brim li:lnnyMin
Ted Tryba
Raymond RIISsell

(+2)

70-7.1-143 (+3)
75-68ol43 (+3)

Phil Mickelson
Hale lrwin
.

Andrew Mont
Rust Cochran

70..73zl43 (+3)

a-O.ristopher Wollmna.n

75-68•143 (+3)
12-71•143 (+.'h
72-72·144 (+4)
75-69•144 (+4)
70-7....1441+4)
71-73•144 (+4)
70-7&gt;!..144(+4)

Steve Elkll'lpon .
Clarence Rose
·Paul AziDJCf
Tom Kite

Cnia ""!Y

· Poyne SJOWan
l.onyMire

Scott Mc:Canon
Edwl!d Fryan
GrqTowne

73-71•144 (+4)

Jack Nictllu•

73-71•144 i+4)

'

Mike Sposa "

72-69-i141 {+I)

David Opin

'-lrila Hanina1on
Duffy Waldorf.
Foed Funk
Loren Robent
John Cook ·
111omu Biori&gt;
¥ic:hael Bradaty

72-72•1441+4)

Mike Reid
Jay Haas

71-73:~~144(+4)

71-74oi4S (+S)
72-74ol46 (+6)
74-72-146 (+6)
74-72-146 (+6)
7!-73•146 (+6)
72.7.. 146 (+6)
77·69-146 (+6)
74-72=146{+6)
7!-71• 146 (+6)
72-7&gt;!..1&lt;16 (+6)
71 -?S•146 {+6)
77-69-146 (+6)
. 77-69-146 (+6)
71-7io146(+6)
7S·71•146(+6)
'll-7&gt;!..146 (+6)
7l-7l•l46 (+6)
7!-7.1-146 (+6)
75-71•1461+6)
71-7&lt;1-147 (+7)
72-75-147 (+7)
72-?S•I47 (+71

"69-0NF
66-DNF
76-0NF
71-DNF
71-0NF

Hols.-

ScoaSIVijay Siop

Bobl'way

76-DNF
67-DNP
17-DNF
7S.DNF
77-DNF
79-DNF
71-DNF
70-DNF
78-DNF
73-DNF
79-DNF

Mort McNulty
DloitlSalt M"""'y
ltob Bradley
EdHu..Ut
Pfttr Teravaiaen
o-)Qd Kribel
DOYidToms
llcmbudl.on4"'
MosuhiOWi

.

IMI lllliCI

+
155/Rll 1•.
+PI8S/10R

~-99
.ft

P195/75R14
P205/701114
+P205/65RIS
P205/10R 15
P215/701115

5.99
.99
72.99
73.99
77.99

-

_

PIBS/~14

P19S/701114
P20S/65111S
P21S/.aR16
P225/.aR16
P20S/551116

$ 93.99
$ 97.99
~106.99
· 113.99
117.99
122..99

"""_........,._-s...o.d
'*&gt;01..~...........

Pool
Today- 1-3 p.m.
Monday --' 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday - 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday - 6-9 p.m.
Thursday - 6-9 p.m.
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Juue 22- 1-3 p.m.
Notes
• A Lyne Center membership is
required to use the facilities. Faculty, staff, students and administraiion ·
will be admitted with their ID cards.
• Racquetball collrt reservations
can be made one day in advance by
catting245-7495 or 1-800-282-7201.
• All guesiS l"ust be accompanied
by a Lylie Center membership holder ($2 fee).
• Gym ti~ will be available during the limes when sports camps are
not in sc::.ssion.
.

JG.DNF

Jim EMcs
Hioloki Kue
Mlc:boel Clorlt
spice McRoy
John Mau.a .
Eric Brito
KtntJonu

Micb.el Martin
Dennis lJI\kon
Bill Poner

John Pillar
John Daly

73-7&gt;!..147 (+7)
7S.72ol47 (+7)
73-7&gt;!..147 (+7)
73-7&gt;!..147 (o7)
~l-72-147 (+7)
. 74-7.. 141(+8)
76-72ol41(+8)
7l-7S•148 (+8)"
76-72• 148{+8)

75-73•148 (+8)
73-7&lt;1-149 (+9)
71-78-149 (+9)
77-72ol49 (+9)
75-74-149 (+9)

7!-76=151 (+11)
·. 71-IIOoiSI (+11)
S0.71siSI (+II)

77-74o1511+11)
77-7.. 1SI (+111
78-74o1S2(+12)
74-78•1121+12)
12·110oll2 (+12)

_,

70-82·1~2 {+12)

79-73•112 (+12)
80-73=153 (+IJ)

71 -82• 1S3 (+IJ)
7l-7S.IS3 HHl
12·81 • 1!53 (+I;\)

78-16=1541+14)
76-7llol54 (+14)
lS-79-1541+14)
7li-77•1SS 1+1 S)
79-8o-IS9"(+19)
80-7'1oll9 (+19)

IN CHARGE - Tom Lehman of Scottsdale, Ariz. ho.l ds the ball

•t the ninth hole during the aecond round of the U.S. Open Friday
In Bethesda, Md. Lehman, who ahot a per 70, lead&amp; the field by one
stroke; (AP)

-Could

19·81=160 (+20}

17-77•164 (+24)
· 73-DNF
7S-DNF
70-DNF
7!-DNF
73-DNF
71-DNF
72-DNF
72-DNF '
71-DNF
77-DNF
72-DNF
73-DNF

ea1th Insurance
The State Farm Way
.

was "in a choking situ~ion," a comAfter the Rangers series. Clarke
, • PHii.;ADELPHIA (AP) - Even ment that angered a number of his said Murray would return as coach
next season "if he WijniS to." Mur: F,IY!'fl! general man11ger Bob Clarke ,-Plllyers. including Lindros.
. 'llllmuted his firing of coach Terry
Team spokesman Mark Piazza . ray said at the time that he did want
·:Murray will be seen as another case said Lindfos was at his offseason to return.
But thC goal.ie gamble he tried
::of·players forcing the ouster of an relreat about .two hours north of
successfully
in the firs.t three rounds
:'1!11popul¥ cOach.
Toronto and was not available for
of
the
playoffalternating between
-: • ·:I probably would have the sam~ comment on Murray's firing.
_"perc~ption you have, but the playen
Murray, who did not return a Ron Hextall and Garth Snow : weren't involved in this decision," phone call to his suburban home, has failed against the Red Wings. lben
Clarke said after dismissing Murray been offered a job "that is very came his "choking" comment.
Clarke saqj the problems were
' tess '!'ail a week after Philddelphia imponantto us," but Clarke declined
ongoing over the last several. years.
vias swept in the Stanley Cup finals to say what it was.
·
by the Detroit Red Wings.
No successor was named, and Murray was hired at the S!art of lhe
- In a news release announcing the · Claike said he would wait until the 1994-95 season.
flfing, Clarke said "problems that June .21 NHL draft ·before making
"The problems didn't ~ust sur·existed between the coach and the the decision.
face," Clarke said. "They've been
players" were the main reason MurHe did acknowledge that current basically over the last couple of
ray was removed. But he refused to assistant coach Keith Acton was a years. We solved some and we
·provide details in a subsequenl news candidate. Other possibilities are haven't been able lo ·solve others."
fODfc;rence. ·
former Flyer Bill · Barber, · who
The relationship between Murray
and Lindros- the 24-year-old fran! . "We'll keep it where it should
coac~ed the Philadelphia Phantoms
hj:long and that's internally," he farm flub to a 49-18-10 record last chise center for whom the Flyers sursaid. . .
season. and San Jose assistant coach rendered six players, two draft choices ancl $I S mill ion - was never
1 · Murray wasn't particularly popuWayne Cashman.
jar with many of his players, espe- ·
Murray's job appeared safe after great.
Murray, 118-68-30 with the Ay·
:l:ially star Eric Lindros.
he led Philadelphia to five-game
ers,
chastised his captain at the end
···~ After the Ayers were humiUated playoff series win~ over · the Pen·
;6ll in Game 3, Murray said his team gilins, the Sabres ani! the Rangers. . of the seasori for taking retaliatory ·

U&amp;II'IICII

76-DNF
II·DNF
711-DNF
74-DNF
611-0NP
77-0NP
73-DNF
73-0NF
74-DNF
71-DNF
117-DNF ·
76-0NF
74-DNF
76-DNF
77-WD

72-75•1.1'7 (+7)

.

:By JOHN' F. BONFATTI

· liD

o-Bob ICeonoy
M.,y Sebieoe

•

~·

IAGUGA

72·0NF

o..,..,.s-

71-DNF

5coa Hodo
KcMyi'Ony

Fuuy Zoeller

Roaerr.-.

74-77:.151 (+II)

Denni• Tri :d tr

67-70.137 (-3)
7.1-&lt;17•138 (-2)
71-67•138(-2)
7:1-&lt;16•139 (- I)
69-72•141' {+ I)
74-67•141 (+I)
74-67•141 (+I)

74-11•1..~ (+~)

Jell-

74-7S•I49 (+9)
73-7&lt;1-149 (+9)
77-72ol49 (+9)
7S.7S•IS0(+10)
73-77•1501+10)
711-72-ISO (+10)
· 76-74•1SO(ol0)
7!j.71• 1SO 1+10)

LlnyN&lt;bon
PJ. Cowan
MiUSwanz
Robm Alleoby

Here are the scores and relation 10
par Friday·during the darkness-suspended second round of the $2.6 million.U.S. ,Open, played on the 7,213·
yard, par· 70 Congressional Country
Club course (a-amateur):

7S.70oiU (+l)
75-70o1451+SI
72-7Jo14S (+!)
73-72=14! (+l)
75-70o14S (+l)
71-74o14l (+l)
71-U.14S (+l)
71-74oi4S (+Sl

'

;Flyers,
fire.Murray as~ head coach
.

Lyne Center slate

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John K. $Chmlttl. Agent

342.SecOnd Avenue, P.o. BOx 908 .
GallipOlis, Ohio 45831
011.: 614-448-4290 or (888) 970-2345
Res.: (614) 441·1420

like a good neighbor, -~tate Rum is there.®
UAU t.II•M

....A
_. ....

. TERRY MURRAY

,~

SUI&lt; F:um Mucuai Automobile 1....-.ncr Company

penalties that eained Lindros a twogame suspension as the Flyers were
l!attling for Eastern Conference
supremacy.
Given inany chances to endOrse
his coach. Lindros has been silent.
Murray joined the Ayers after
being fired as coach of the Washington Capitals 47 games into the
1993-94 season. Overall, his . head
coaching record is 281-198-58.
Clarke, a former teammllle of
Murray on the Flyers, said the dismissal was the mo5t difficult thing
be's done as a gene~l manager.

11om&lt; Ollk:e: l!looml11(11on. UJiDui&gt;
Cllll frw tktalls mt crH~. C't'l.SU, mtrlctiolts artll mw&amp;miJillt)'.

$an Francisco police want to see Irvin about aUeged fight

·''

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) !Police want to talk to Dallas Cow- .
:lloys wide receiver Michael Irvin fol·lowing a complaint that he struck a
&gt;man and held him against his will at
:a .San· francisco nightclub, a news·
:J?8per reponed today.
::, Irvin, 31, on probation f'1!' cocain~
.possession in Texas, allegedly forced
· )he unidentified "!an. into the basement of the 1015 Folsom club, hit
~im on the chest and refused to
telease him until security guards
)lfrived,.the San Francisco Examiney spid.
:: The alleged victim, Aaron Waller,
36. who was ..:companied by two
~iRppers, told police he met Irvin and ·

ano.ther man at a supper club early rings, watch and chains~ and slllrted · very much like to inte!""iew him.
June.l, officer Daniel Murphy sajd. · to push Waller around. Irvin took off · Witnesses at the scene identified
Irvin later allowed Waller to use his jacket, unbUttoned his v~st and Irvin, Murphy said.
1be incident allegedly occurred
his limousine to take his 'ompanions got into Waller's face and started
.·
the day before Irvin was due at Cowto the I 0 15 Folsom club without the screaming at him.
"On one occasion, Irvin ·struck boys training camp,
receiver. When Irvin go! his car
Waller
in the chest with a closed fist.
Irvin never .showed up. and later
back. he discovered his cell phone
was missing, and came to the club to Waller stated that Irvin appeared to said he was considering quitting
be 'wacked-out' (sic) dn drugs and football, thereby forfeiting the $5.5
confront Waller.
million he was due this year.
lrvi!l was accompanied by a p~an alcohol.''
Waller
consulted
with
an
attorney
· Fifteen mo!lths ago, the All-Pro
described as 6-foot-5, 265 pounds,
before reporting the assault Thurs. receiver was found in a hotel rQOIII
the police report said.
·
. with two topless danc.ers aoll.drugs.
Waller denied taking the phone day. .
Murphy
said
officers
are
investi·
,
He later pleaded no contest to a
and an argument ensued "where
eating
possible
charges
of·
false
felony
cocaine possession charge
Irvin and the other subject dragged
· imprisonment,
-1111!1 kidnapand is serving 800 ttours of commuWaller to the basement!" ,
. • nity service as part of his probation.
The report · continues: "There, ping. He said Irvin
the unidentified subject took ofT his airelited. but that :::::li~::.;;:l~.;:~---~--~--

!Ohio prep basketball all-stars

1989 MERCURY
.LTS4DR.

'weep ,West VIrginia In twlnbl/1
1.-

t:: LOOI\I'f, W.Va. (AP)- Qhio's

lin-star teams beat West Virginia's

· EliDE
IAmRY

•39'5

rr:idaY niaht -

the boys by a 1321QS score, while the girls won 94-71 .
['Both teams, made up of each
~·5 all-star senion, will play each
~r again Saturday.
,; Ohio's boys were led by Chris
Stoden with 24 points, Andre Hutson
with 18 pointJ and Kalan Smith with
pOlnta. 'I1Mire were five other
p~yerr who II:OI'Od in double fig-

t,1

ures.

.

.

·'"Well Vl!Jinia'• only lead was 62, but thia Ohio took ova-. Ohio waa
. ••.'
I

•

·~

TREATED
LATTICE
PANElS

.

Lehman shoots par ·to.· take one-stroke lead over Els· &amp; Cink

Konstantinov gets.worst of injuries in wreck
By JUSTIN HYDE
ROYAL OAK, Mich. (AP)- A
week ago today Vladimir Konstantinov was preparing to bring his
tenacity and toughness to the ice and
help the Detroit Red Wings win their
first Stanley Cup in 42 years.
After a car accident Friday night,
the Russian-born star defenseman
lies in the intensive care unit of a
hospital here with potentially fatal
head injuries.
' 1be injuries to Konstantinov and
team masseur· Sergei Mnatsakanov
are life-threatening, said Dr. James
Cisek, an emergency doctor at
William Beaumont Hospital. Both

D uS

•

V.S. Open conclu•• NCOtJd round

Brewers defeat Cubs 4-2; Pennsylvania clubs notch wins
catch as much as I do in the Nation- in the fourth innina. stretching the
al Leque, it's got to help," he said. Twins' lead to 4-1.
" On the same note, I wouldn't want
Dodpn 6, Atllleda 4
to do it all the time. but it would be
At Oakland, Piazza doubled off
riice to d&lt;! it once or twice a week. Aaron Small (5·3Ho bruit 1 ninthThat would be awesome.· ~
innina tie. Darren Hall (1-2) pitched
In other games, Baltimore beilt a hitless eiahth and Thdc,i Worrell fin.Atlanta 4-3, Boston beat the New . ished for his I Sth save in 18 clwlces.
York Mers 8-4. Seattle beat Colorado
Orioles 4, Jn.w 3
6-1, Montreal beat Detroit 4-3, San
In a matchup of the teams with
Diego beat Anaheim 8-7 in 14 baseball 's best records, Jimmy Key
innings, Pittsburgh beat KansaS City (Il-l) outdueled Greg Maddux (7-3)
5-3, Philadelphia jleat Toronto 4-3. in a rematch of the starters from
Aorida beat the New York Yankees · Gime 6 of last ye&amp;f's World Series.
2-1 in 12 innings and Texas beat San Key allowed five hits in 6 213
Francisco 6-5. €1eveland's giune ~t . innings 11 Turner Field, and lialti·
St. Louis was postponed by rain and more scored four' runs in the sixth.
will be made up today as a day-night
Red Scix 8, Mets 4
doubleheader.
In a rematch of Jhe memorable
Brewen 4, Cubs l
1986 World Series, John Valentin .
Jose Valentin drove in three runs, anjl Troy O'Leary hit consecutive
JelfD' Amico (3-3) gave up five hits home runs in the fifth for Boston,
in eight innings and Doug Jones fin- playing its first real ·game at Shea
ished with a perfect ninth for his I Sth · Stadium since losing Games 6 and 7.
save, sending the Cubs to their sev- to the Mets in II years ago. Carl
enth loss in eight games. Terry ,_,ul- Everett homered t'!"ice an4 Todd
holland (5-6) lost for the third time Hundley and Alex Ochoa also homein four starts.
red for New York, which drew
Twins 8, Astros 1
44,443, its largest crowd since April
Knoblauch hit a two-run triple 29. 1995.
.
over right fielder Der~k Bell's head

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port • o.lllpoll8, OH • Point Pltntnt. WV

---

\

ahead 73-48 at the h,lf, and,, at one
point, led by 38 points.
·
Monty Wpght led West Virginia
. with 27 points. Mike Wortman had
19.
. .
Ohio's Jirls were led by Jen Lyn·
den with 18 poi111S and Jamie Krivak
with 17.
Susan Hatcher and Laura
Rollyson ~h scored 14 for West
Virsinia.
.
.
Ohio held West VifliniaiiCOI'Ciess
for almost ei,hl minutes. bbfore the
half to take a 48-271ead 11 the break.

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Sundly, June 15, 1117

Pom810J • Middleport • Qalllpolle, OH • Point PI' 111nt, WV

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•• ..! !l"'l o! ! dl! !ly! ,!!l!J!!!lune!!!!!!!!!!!!l15!!!!,=1=G!!r7!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~P~OI~IMI;;;;~o~y~·~MI~d-~dleport • O.Uipolle, OH • Point P11111nt,

Area
sports
notes
•.•
~·

·--

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - ·
The 1997 Donnie Jones Basketball
Camp is 'coming soon.
Jones, a native of Point Pleasant
who is assistant basketball coach
with University of Florida, will hold
two sessions.
Tbe morning session includes
ages 5 to 10 from 8:30a.m. to II :30
a.m. 1be second is the afternoon session includes ages 11 -17 from II
a.m. to 2:30p.m. from Monday, June
23 to June 26.
Ages 5-10 will register June 23
GALLIPOLIS - The 1997 Blue
from
7:15a.m. -8:15a.m.Ages 11Angel Basketball Camp will run
17
will
register from 9:30 a.m.- 10:45
from Monday to Thursday from I to
4 p.m. at Gallia Academy High a.m.
All registration will be in the
School.
Point
Pleasant Middle School gym .
1be cost of lhe camp, designed .
Fees
will
be $60 per camper and a
• for all girls entering grades 4-10 this
; . fall, is $60 for !hose registering ori or $25 deposit is required with the
:· before Wednesday. Those registering return of your application.
For more information, call 675: after Wednesday must pay $65.
4402.
'
..
The fee covers instruction of fun;. damentals, cometitions wilh awards,
RIO GRANDE - Here are the
~ contests for prizes, guest speakers,
~ camp T-shirts and camp basketballs . dates for the University of Rio
.Applications are available at Grande's girls' summer basketball
·
,
;; GAHS. For more information. call camp.
COURTSIDE IMPROVEMENT of their still-developing akllla waa
June 29-July '2: Individual camp
' varsity head coach Kim Adkins at
the shared objective of the 83 partlclpantaln the Galllpolla Aree Bas(grades 9-12)
ketball Camp, which waa held last week. Participants In thla boya446-7654.
July 5 &amp; 19: High school one-day
POMEROY - Former Meigs shoot-out
July 20-23: Individual camp
High School standout Mike Bartrum
' ·
will appear at two Tri-State area (grades 4-8)
July 24-26: High scho9l team
Zide's Sport Shop locations Tuesday.
Fifth grade: Jeff Payton
· GALLIPOLIS - The four-day
· The New England Patriot tight camp
Sixth
grade: Jamie. Merry
· Team camps and one-day Gallipolis Area Basketball Camp
end will be appearing at Zide's at the
Seventh grade: Clarke Saunders
concluded Thursday after drawing
Univ.ersily .Mall in Athens from II shootouts will be limited to the first 83 boys entering grades 4~9 this fall.
Eighth grade:.Jocl Elliott
a.m. until noon. And then be will 12 teams that apply.
Freshman: 'Jeff Mullins
The Gallia Academy Blue Devil
appear at the Zide's location in the Call 245-7491 or 1-800-282-7201 coaches from the varsity to the
ci-ab dribble
for applications or more information.
Huntington Mall from 6 to 8 p.m.
Fourth grade: Ken Dyer ·
junior high teams too~ pan in teachFans are encouraged. to bring
Fifth grade: Jeff Payton
.
ing
fundamentals
of
ballhandling,
. SYRACUSE - 'l'he Bill Hubitems to be autographed for free.
Sixth
grade: Casey Taylor
catching the ball, passing and shootBartrum will also sign color pho- bard Memorial Little League Tour- ing as well as offensive and defen Seventh grade: Cole Haggerty
tographs that will be available for $3. nament will be held in July in Syra- sive movements.
Eighth grade: Bob Jones
cuse.
Freshman: Allen Skinner
Here are the various contest winThere will be a 20-team limit with
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. .
Dribble
ners.
The schedule for the Point Pleasant the drawing to be held on Monday,
Fourth
grade:
Justin Saunders
Bump out
Sternwheel Regatta 3-on-3 Basket- June 30.
Fifth
grade:
Jeff
Payton
Fourth grade: Travis Stout
For more infonnation call Eber
ball Tournament has been finalized.
Youth anti adult teams (with age Pickens Jr. at 992-5564.
brackets) will make up the doubleMARIETTA - The Marietta
elimination tourney, meaning all
College
baseball staff wi II host the
teams will play at least twice.
rett, whose third-place at Pocono
1997 Camp of Champs, a baseball By KEN BERGER
A fourth roster member is
·
BROOKLYN,
Mich.
(AP)
broke a string of three successive 'finallowed if desired. 1be tourney wi II fundamentals camp, on the Marietta
Dale
Jarrett,
who
went
from
steady
i'shes out of the lop 25, "We knew
·
• · be limited to the first 100 teams reg- College campus.
to
suspect
in
recent
weeks,
proved
we didn't have a problem. We were
will
be
two
residenVcomThere
istered. Awards and prizes will be
things
were
back
to
normal
Friday
by
leading
races and running up front,
muter
camps
for
players
age
12-18
given and. a long shot contest will
winning
the
pole
for
the
Miller
400
but
things
W!lren 't g&lt;;&gt;ing our way."
also be held. There is a sign-up lee fr.om July 13 to July 17 and from
at
Michigan
Speedway.
Jarrett
had
various engine trilUfor eagh player regisiered: $S for July 27 to July 31.
·
A
week
after
a
third-place
finish
bles in finishing 35th at Talladega,
A day camp will also be held
players'l7 and under; $15 for play·at
Pocono
atoned
for
three
straight
27th
at Charlotte and 32nd at Dover
from
June
17
to
June
19
for
players
ers 18 and over.
•
poor
finishes,
Jarrett
secured
his
sec-a
rare
dry spell for Robert Yate~·
Registration forms are availahle age 8 to 14. A weekend battery
. '
ond
pole
of
the
season
and
fifth
of
his
steady
Ford
driver. For one lap on
' at the Sternwheel Regatta Office at (pitchers and · catchers) camp for
career
with
a
speed
of
183.669
mph.
this sunny afternoon, then: ~as noth305 Main Street in Point Pleasant. players age 13 to 18 will be held
He
joined
fellow
Ford
driver
Mark
ing
wrong wit_h Jarrett or hi~ car.
from
July
II
to
July
13.
·Cutoff for registration is Tuesday.
Martin
as
the
only
multiple
pole-sit·
In
a qualifying coincidence, JarThe cost of the annual Camp of
ters
this
season,
delighting
an
estirett's
speed
was identical to the one
MERCERVILLE - Open gym Champs residence/commuter camp
mated
crowd
of
40,000
that
filled
the
he
posted
at
this track last August.
·: for volleyball at South Gallia High is $265 for resident campers and
entire
front
grandstand
on
a
warm,
Back then, it was only good for 11th,
. School will be held on Wednesdays $195 for commuters. The cost of the
sunny
day.
bu!
Jarrett won the race.
;; from 10 a.m. until noon from now_ week long camp includes tuition,
Jarrett
was
even
happi~r ttian his
The
top five spots were dominat·: . until the end of July.
room(resident only) board. cainp T- .
fans.
·
ed
by
Chevys.
Joe Nernechek, fastest
·: For more information. caU Daphne shirt and iild!vidual evaluation.
"Everyhody's·
been
asking
the
·
in practice, qualified second at
_. Davis at 256-1364.
For more mfo, call :rom Weber at
que·stion, 'Whats wrong?' "said Jar- 183.379 mph. Ricky Craven, the last
..
. 614-376-4673 or 4517 .
driver to attempt to qualify, was
·'
RIO GRANDE - Here are the
third. Sterling Marlin was fourth, and
j remaining dates for "the University of . CHESHIRE-The Kyger Creek
Mason: Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Ted Musgrave rounded out' the top
. Rio Grande's boys' summer basket· j..itlle League Tournament has been
Home,
Fruth Pharmacy, Mel\d Body five in a Ford. ·
scheduled
to
nm
from
July
18
to
July
ball.camp.
After running IOtb-fastest in pracShop,
Mason
VFW I, Mason VFW
29 at the Kyger Creek Employees
June 15- 18: Grades 5-9
tice,
Jarrett and his crew decided not
June 9-21: Junior varsity and Club diamond on State Route 7 II, Nationwide Insurance, New
Haven Reds', Point Pleasant Hard- to tinker with the car. Jarrett, one of
between Addison·and Cheshire.
'• vartsity team camp
ware and Point Pleasant Home Care the last drivers to make a qualifying
Here
are
the
26
teams,
listed
by
June 22-25: Grades 5-9
; .
Medical
run, decided cooler temperatures
June 26-28: Junior varsity and county, that have entered in this
l
Mei1s:
Chester
Pirates.
Harlate
in the afternoon w0 ~1d work in
year's
tournament.
· ' vartsity -team camp
f
risonville
DK
Fackler,
Middleport
his
favor.
Gallia:
·
Bidwell
I,
Bidwell
II,
July 10-12: Grades 7-9
uwe seriously were never even
The cost is $225 per student or Gallipolis Reds, Gallipolis Yankees, IGA Indians. Pomeroy Yankees and
Racine
Tornadoes
contemplating
the pole," said Jarret~
$220 if seven or more students from Green I, Kyger Creek Ra_iders,
Others:
Coolville
Beha
Insurwho is fourth in the Winston Cup
the same school district register. The Kyger Creek II, Rio Grande Redance
and
Little
Hocking
point standings. ".We were trying to
men,
Rio
Grande
II
and
Vinton
cost for team week is $1 S5.
Make the check or money order
payable to Rio Grande Basketball
··' Camp, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
Call 245-5353 (e~tension 7294)
or 1-800-282-720 I for applications
or.more information.

an

only camp are ahown with ·members of the Gallla Academy Blue
Devil coaching ateff that ran .t he camp. (Timea-Selltlnel photo)

t.cA

Seventh grade: Clarke Saunders
Eighth grade: Bobby Jones
Freshman: Ryan White
Three-point shooting
rourtb grade: Kurt Fenderhosch
· F'lfth grade: Kyle Burn~tte :
Sixth 11rade: Cody Caldwell
Seventh grade: Anthony Dey
Eighth 11rade: Justin North ·
Freshman: Jonathan Payne .
Sponsoring the camp w'ere
Coaches Corner, Colony Theater,
Eagle's Nest, Movie Station, Put On
Shop, Shake Shoppe, Shoe Cafe and
Zide's.

Sixth grade: Cody Caldwell
.
Seventh grade: Clarke Saunders
Eighth grade: Bob Jones
·
Freshman: Jeff Mullins ·
Free-throw shooting
Fourth grade: Jared Burnett
Fifth grade: Jeff Payton
Sixth grade:l1amie Merry
Seventh grade: Anthony Dey
Eighth grade: Justin North
Freshman: Jonathan Payne
One-on-one
·
Fourth grade: Kurt .fenderbosch
Fifth grade: Mason Smith
Sixth grade: Tom Fr.azier

Jarrett captures ·pole pos_
i tion 'f or Miller 400
exactly why," said Earnhardt, ,the
seven-time Winston Cup champion.

get our car good enough for the top
10."
.
Dale Earnhardt, IQ&lt;Jking to end a
career-worst-tying 40-race winless .
streak, will start 22nd at the track
where he has -two of his 70 career
victories.
"We've been off a little bit the

··we ne'ed some· more motor."

Jeff Gordon, victori.ous last week
at Pocono and in si~ of. 1·3 races this
season, qualified 12th: His tum carne
up right after Jerry Nadeau had his
run ended by an accident in tum two.

entire practice, and I'm . not sure

HOLLEY BROS.
CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.

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PQI' IJiotJ infQI'Jilation, call 441 ~
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Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon
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· Accidents will.
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446-2114 or 245-5316

•

.,.y,

By Ttie Aaaoclatecl Preas
tins ville, Va.
·
The 1997 NASCAR Winston Cup
Oct. S.:.:. UAW-GM Quality 500,
l stock car racing schedule, with win· · Concord; N.C. .
1!1
ners in parentheses and driver point
Oct. 12 - Sears Diehard 500,
·~ standings:
Talladega, Ala.
Feb. 16 - · Daytona 500, Day·
Oct. 26-AC Delco400, Rock·
tona, Fla. (Je(T Gordon).
ingham, N,C.
•
Feb. 23 - Goodwrench Service
Nov. 2 - Dura Lube SOO,
·: 400, Rockingham •. N.C. (Jeff Gor- · Phoenix:
: don):
Nov. ttl'- NAPASOO, Hampton,
March 2 - Pontiac Excitement _ Ga.
' 400, Richmond, Va. (Rusty Wallace).
x-non-points race
March 9 - Primestar 500,
mpton, Ga. (Dale Jarrett). ·
Driver standings
.,
March 23- TranSouth Financial
1. Terry Labonte, 1,955.
400. Darlington, S:C. .(Dale Jarrett).
(tie) Jeff Gordon, 1,9SS. .
April 6 ·- Interstate Batteries
3. Mark Martin, I,894.
500, Fon Worth, Texas. (Jeff Bur- .
4. Dale Jarrett, I,826. ,
ton).
5. Jeff Burton, I ,772.
,
April I~ -Food City 500, Bris·
6. Dale Earnhardt, I,687;
7. Bobby Labonte, 1,602.
:. toi,Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
:· . April 20 - Goody's Headache
8. Ricky Rudd, I,586.
:: Powders 500, Martinsv.ille, Va.·(Jeff
9. Michael Waltrip, I,508.
'· Gordon).
·
10. Jeremy Mayfield, 1,467.
::
May 4 - Save Mart Supermar11. Bill Elliott, 1,437.
;: kets 300, Sonoma, 'Calif. (Mark
12. Rusty Wallace, 1,400.
,. Martin).
13. Ted Musgrave, 1,388.
::
May 10 - Winston 500, Tal·
14. Darrell Waltrip, I ,383.
:: ladega, Ala. (Mark Martin).
IS : Johnny .Benson, 1,367.
;;
May '11- x·The Winston, Con16. Bobby Hamilton, 1,360.
' · cord, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
17. Ken Schrader, 1;332.
::
May 25 -Coca-Cola600, Con18. Ernie lrv.n, 1,326.
:: cord, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
19. Sterling Marlin, 1,316.
:·
June I-Miller500;Dover,Del.
20. Kyle Petty, 1,289.
:: (Ricky Rudd).
21. Ward Burton, 1,273.
22. M011an Shepherd, I,261.
:: ': June 8 -. Pocono 500, Long
:: •Pond, Pa. (Jeff Gordon).
·
23. Brett Bodine, 1,260.
::
June 15- Miller 400, Brooklyn,
24. Jimmy Spencer, 1,240.
'· Mich.
25. Mike Skinner, 1,189.
'·'·
.
June 22 - California SOO,
26. John Andretii,
1,157.
i: Fontana, Calif.
27. Geoff Bodine. 1,139.
•
July S - Pepsi 400, -Daytona
28. Steve Griuom, 1,114.
:; Beach; Fla.
29. Derrike Cope, 1,110;
:
·July · 13 - Jiffy Lube 300,
30. Rick Mast, 1,094.
:. Loudon, N.H.
31. Ricky Craven, I,Q68.
July 20 - Pennsylvania 500,
32. Hut Stricklin, I,()44.
:·
t Long P9nd. Pa.
.. .
33. Kenny Wallace, 1,020 .
Aug. 2 - Brickyard 400, lndt·
34. Dick Trickle, 9311.
:
anapolis.
.
35. Lab Speed, 93'!;
Aug. 10 - Bud at lhe Glen,
36. Joe Nernechek, ,JO.
Watkins Olen, N.Y.
37. Dave Marcia, 80S.
:
Aug. 17 - ITW Devilbiss 400,
38. David Green, 698.
;, Brooklyn, Mich.
3!1. Robby Gordon; 660.
:.
Aug. 23 - Goody's HeadxM
40. Chad Little, 644.
:; Powders SOO, Bristol, 'ICon.
41. Robeft Pmlley, !14.5,
::
Aug. 31-Mounllin Dew South- ,
42. Mike Wai~Ke, !141.
:· em SOO, DarlinJIC)n, S.C. '
43. Bobby Hillin Jr, .511 .
,; Sept. 6 ·- Winston Cup 400,
44. Willy Dtllenbach, 492.
iRichlllOIICI Va.
• .
45. Olea Sal:b, 429.
:: · Sept. 14- New Htmpshire 300,
46. Olry Bt'ldberry, 419.
,. Loudon, N.H.
47. BiUy Strtln*iJI?, 222.
t Sept. 21 - MBNA S00. Dover,
G. Jeff Oneil, 21 :

t

JIUIDENTIAL • CO.IIOUJICLU.

_

·-

n -

llre/r -me-- ,

Ii= . w·houkf·•:nt-dens.t;._~
01~11

'

~· ·--··-···

I

~. .

UP 011 fill HilL

.

CHESHIRE ~ The R"ider Basltetball CanJps are a series of instructional sessipns fpr youths entering
grades 3-8 Jhis fall .
The foc:us of the CIJ11P is on
offensive apd defensive ITindamcntals. Special empflasis will be put on
shooting.
·
For each camp, the cost is $35 per
player. The cost is $60 if two playel'l are sent. ~ch camper will
~ive a T-ahirt.1
The final- cunp is .a five-day
llflir ICI for ),fonday, June 23 at Rive!: VII ley- H~ Sehool for grades 58, II will ru11 from 9 a.m. to noon.and
he lllftitcd ljJ 30 players. .
. Applications ~checks must be
Qlliled to C4J!IP director Carl Wolfe,
968 Oreea Valley Dr., Bidwell, Ohio

,.•

The future
....,_.. cbange BuebaU, wboec purists realat the
·
·
::.:'JOrt); IJf change IDd defend its history IIIOR IbiD
By DAVID JONES
really associated wilh each other. I
~ any other sport's fans, decided to flaally take DiU
Floflda Todlly
was. with the married guys, and he
~ Sr.'s suggestion and have intcriCiglle play.
MIAMI - The subject still was with single guys. (But) it was a
Of course, Veeclt made Ibis suggea:lon 70 ~
comes' up every now and then, espe· lot of run. One thing about Fidrych,
.,. .180 wlteu the Babe was hitting tumultuous l!olne
cially the last few YC8I'S when he was he is a great guy, really a great auy."
~~ and baseball was ~erica's premier sportiDa
managing in the minors.
..
·
He said he knew the pitcher was
-Iteration. Today, baseball bas finally been
But time and distance has sepa- ·aliitle different when he caught..him
;;'presSed into reality and change beca111e of its own
rated thai one wonderful selison that · in Triple-A.
'ineptitude, a shrinking fan base and 1:001pelition
Bruce; Kimm and Mark Fidrych
Arter the shllftStop made a good
...:rroni'Qtber sports.
'
sNnd while wilh the Detroit ngers play in lheif first game together,
: : · l'm'excitcd about tbc prospects of interleapc play. I even aueoded Sat- · in 1976, the year "The Bird" took Fidrych ran up to lhe infielder and
-,urday'(Reds-While Sox game so I i:ould cheer for the Sox. Since I used to · baseball by storm.
ishook his band.
5!ive jUII40 miautes from Comiskey Par~ and an boor from Wrigley F'~tld,
"He was the biggest thing in
Fans fell in love with Fidrych's
~} was fO~ate e~ugh to see both American ·and National League games. It baseball in 1976," recalled Kimm, antics or talking to the ball - and
.-gave m5_~ chance 10 cheer for a Chicago team tllat wasn't the Cubs. I've who was hired as the Florida Mar· himself. while on the mound.
::;..Jwayi ICJt Cub fans shoul!l be lllowed to park iD handicapped parldllfl. .
tins' bullpen coach this' season and
But tiKi magic soon died because
;,;•. Siace_JDOYing to .Gallia County, however, I haven't been able to inake it . will no doubt do some reflecting or arm problems.
' to the junior circuit 10 sec a game. Cleveland's games apinll Cbii:ago have when the club opens a three-game
"It wa~ always mysterious how
·'
.
been sold out, and 'Chicago is series Monday in Detroit.
he hurt it," Kimm said. "He had a
""' ",l;_l!'I':Aa ~. #tjU...~ now too far away. So getting to
"There~s no doubt that was one or . knee injury in '77 in spring training.
{~]!!i_,
mr:
··fl_J'-:._~ ~·,~·~'!";.Iry_,,.-..., .........: ~ see the Bia Hun ,and Albert lhe biggestthings ever in baseball.l . He came back after about 2-3 weeks
·:,,:, .&lt; .
.
·- ··~·· '!-:" Belle, in addition to seeing his- mean he captivated all of baseball. at the start of the season and was
,, ·. · , 8 MY,;lb ·,..'fb~J·, tory in the m~g, were too (Hedrew)970,000fans.in29starts: pitchingwellandaroundthe8eventh
lhln
good a deal !0 tgnore. I.packed It was a·great attraction and aood for or eighth start that year all or asud•., .
,•·l up the fuuly and beaded to baseball."
den he lost that 93 mph fastball that
l~ue
~~9ft~~ , Cinergy Field. ·
·
Kjmm, who had never played in · he had all the time."
. , ..: _' ;WJfh _t hj ll8.'fll1•dlill8/f#llll, As attendance figures sug- the big leagues, came up the same
He said after one of those early
• · ~ -I&lt; lilfmllt.·'lJI'8 gOQd. for'
gest, biseball has found a way year as the right-handed pitcher with '77 games, Fidrych told him his arm
•· ,;, ' ·~ .: ·' ' "1'1'•. -. _ .· ;
\ .,, ·~ 1 to bring fun back iniO their the curly hair and the funny antics.
was huning. A potential Hall of
, '; '''i't ·:., · · ·' ';, . ' IIIIIJ'It'~f~ game.'lnterleague play, along
Famecareersoonwasover.
~ ,.... ,;)'l',
.,,
.,_ .·
,.fJ. wt'th tb'e n-u d•'vJS'1•01181 fonnat
The two were thrown together in
·
""
• an early-season start, and Fidi'ych
·"He got hurt, and that's the thing
"··arc good for the game. ~ven the Reds have a legitimate chance to make the pitched well.
about this game - you never
playoffs.
.
.
·
Rather than mess with what was know," Kimm said. "If an injury
· For those purists who resented expansio!l and divisional play in 1969, not .working, they were kept together the crops up, particularly to a pitcher, -.
to mention tbe recent move to wild card teams and three divisions, I suggest rest of the season, as Fidrych went .this is a hard enough game 'to play
you adapt yourselves to the new reality. Look for both the owners and play- on to win 19 games and electrified when you're healthy, let alone when
ers to approve interlcague play as pan of the regular season after 1998. The the baieball world with his on• field . you're hun. Basically, that injury
_;,..future means chan~e and baseball has finally decided to join.
antics. -· ·
. took him right out of being possibly
,: . In all honesty, it .was difficult to concentrate on interleague play with the
"The year before, 1caught him in one of the greatest pitchers in basec' NBA having such a great week. Even with the great change in baseball, all Triple-A," Kimm said. "He got his ball."
,,., eyes were on the Chicago-Utah finals.
.
first major league start on 8 Saturday
Kimm's career also came to a
Even before Game 5 Wednesday, fans knew it would be a · special against Cleveland. I had just come to sudden end after some promising
evening, a watershed mark; a tiefining moment in the careers of two great the big leagues like a Week and a half moments.
athletes: Michael Jordan and Karl Malone. Aftc{ the game, I told my wife before that, so they were basically
He played in 14 games wilh
that when our son wiU ask me to tell him about great and memorable per· taking a look at me, too.
Detroit in '77, then w.ent back to the
formances, I will have to put Jordan's GameS heroics near the top of the list:
"So they said, 'We're going 1o minors for all of the following sea,,;,He was magnificent.
.
have you catch his finit start.' And be son and most.ofthe next. After play·"" I found · myself in the unfamiliar position of cheering for him and lhe hadaperfcctgameaaainstCieveland ing parts of four seasons with the
Bulls. Even though I really like and admire Karl Malone, John Stockton and for 7 J/3 innings ~d. 1 think, just Tigers and both Chicago teams, he
:!" the Jazz, I was in awe of Jordail.'s performance.
. • because it wa5 successful lbcy dccid- ' retired in 1980.
· .,,. Our lives are filled by great and memorable sporting events. Jordan has ed to stick with it. And then he was
"We send hellos to each other
.,_, •the potential to be added to these memories every time he takes the coun. doing so well that no one wanted to when we know somebody who says
' " .Last Wednesday was special. Sick, on the ve.ge of exhaustion, he carried his change anything.''
they're going to see (the other),"
.v -team to victory by.scoring 38 points and ending Utah's 23-game home win-·
There w.as something magical Kimm said. "We always say, 'Hi' to
ning streak.
·
ahout the combination. Kimrn hit each other. But I don't even have his
After the game, I was certain that the Bulls would Win another cbampi- .263 thai season in 6~ games. His. home phone number, and .I don 't ~nship, Jordan and Jackson will be back, 'but not Rodman. Game 5 defined average was .303 when Fidrych was
think he has.mine. lt'd be nice to see
~ all these events, that's why it was so special. I can hardly wait for next sea- pitching,
him again, and probably somewhere
i · son to begin. Change is good!
"It was sortofrefres!Une,".Killlm along the line I )ll'ill.
.
: • . i~li~. Ph.D. 1a an I'I'IICt• 111crnur oii!I*'Y It the~ or said. 'He was really into tlie game,
"It was definitely a different
Ill Rio GlwlcN. All IVkllln of Ill lporti-IIICII ._. ...... loltilww o1 blllrlt· playing the game like we. all like to
atmosphere, adifferent electricity in :
~ bill..:.. beta 1 Jllllva 01 Gary, Incl., anclt gredlllte Of tndllnl UnMnlly -which . play the garne,justlike we did wben
the air. You'd have reponers all over .

Gallipolis Area Basketball Camp draws 83

ATHENS - Ohio University is
holding the following summer baseball camps:.
Fundamental camp: June 22-June
25 (boys ages 9-15)
Hitting camp: June 25-June 27
(Boys ages 9 and up)
Pitching/Catching camp: June 2729 (Boys ages 9 and up). ·
The costs for the four-day funda·
mental' camp are $225 for overnight
campers and $180 for commuters.
The costs for the three-day hitting
camp and the · pitching/catching
camps arc $190 for overnight
· campers and $150 for commuters.
For irifo: 614-593-1180 or 614-5931776.

wv

_Baseball finally pushed· Kimm recalls year
~oward reality, change when Fidryich '
~.a1r:t~ ~aetook center stage

•"·

RIO GRANDE- Registration
for
the 1997 University of Rio
'
; . Gnnde Rcdmcn S&lt;K:cer Cunps is
• currently underway. So,ccer players
aaes 4 to 17 arc in vi red to participate
in Ibis year's camps. The five-day
second session will begin Monday
beld at tbe Stanley L. Evans Memorial Athletic Complex on the Rio
Grande campus. For info: Scott C.
Morrissey at 614-245-7126 .or 1800-282-7201, ext. 7126.

•

~~

Baa.

soo, Mlr-

49. 1bdtl Boiliae. 130.
,.,, Loy Allell. 119.

wfie.,IBd-:_~~~i~~~t its own way off the :u~:~~~:c:.~p:~~y
:e~s~~:i ~~ t people, too. We went into Oakland, "
"AI the time he was single and 1. which didn't draw good at that time.

c

was m~ed and had kids," Kimni · Charlie Finley owned the club, and \
said. "We only reall): associated at he drew 3S,OOO.- .which was a lot
the ballpark. We were great.friends of people for Oakland .at that time.
and everything at the ballpark but as He was definitely a draw. He was
far as away·from the park, we never special."
,
·
• - - -...- - - - - - - -. .

1987 CHEVROLET
SUBURBAN n.:::l

...

JerryBibbH
M.vln Ke!pbll119h
Cl1rk Reed

350 V-8, auto., 4X4, red wltan
vinyl interior,.. AC, AM/FM calis.,
67K miles.
·
SOUD SUBURBAN I

1992
; ; :NISSAN 4X4

O'DELL·LUMBER says••

"Don't.forget _DADI"

,,

A/C,

-

AMJFM Clll., mr .
bed IIIII,
tool box. dual mirrora...................- ....~......~ ....................$12,770
. 7 PML, A/T,
1995 DODGE CARAVAN H888, Gntn, V-teng,
A/C, AU/F.M, clalh lnttrlor.................................~..·--·"'11G,550
1186 DODGE CARAVAN 1e811, Blue, 4 Dr., V-1 eng, A/T, A/C,

f::Uoo':::i:~~~~·~;i·::surv~·:;·p;.-:,--•1 3,100

_.,o.-

AJCf A/T, AM/FM.............................. ,. .....................~.......
1989 PLYMOUTH VOVAGER VAN,..., Blue, AIC, A/T,

=~UiiA'APV'ii't?:·o;;n;·v:i·tng.-;NC:-:r:-

wl.._

liOCkl, ciOih 1~ ...,.....$11 ,405
18113 PLYMOUTH VOVAGER lti03, 7 pan., ._ ''
14/f, tilt, crulll ............................................,_............. !$7115
DODGE CARAVAN te5l8, v.t eng., A/C, A/T, cruiH, 7
'P. windows I lockl-.......................................114,113
CHEVY LUMINA AP'V 11117, V-1 eng., AIC, A/1, AIIMI
tilt, cli'IM, PW, PL................- ................................$1416

tllt, CIUIM, 7 pas., P.

1HEIN1s.

wl,._,

1.W CHEVY ASTRO VAN EXTENDED 18625, 8 11111., '".
mlltt, V-1 eng., A/C, A/f, CL trim, 1111, P.
INti,
1oc1t1, hli!IIG' riCk, tp0rt whtllt,,.., AJC,_.............. S11,110
1813 CHEVY LUIIINAAP'V 11171, Vol, AIC, A/T, Wll.llll, ·
01'11111, P.lacllll wlrldMII
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1995 DODGE CARAVAN llm,llue, A/f, AIC. tilt, CIUI..

LL
LUHBER
VIlli ST .t JHIIIO AW -1.14 f HNII ST
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~------------~~--------·
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Jun111, 11t7
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....... ,

2 ,.

•

7

Along tbe River

Outdoors

I

•

·Section

ODNR Issues weekly fl•hlng report

Blue~ Rock

Lake largemouths use sunken str~tures to hide ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - channel catfish. Use prepared baits,.
Here is the weekly fishing report or shrimp and chicken liven fished
provided by the Division of Wildlife alona the bottom. The outlook this
of the Ohio Department of Natural summer is excellent for those
Resources:
· anglers seeking largemouth bass.
Southeast
South-a
BLUE ROCK LAKE- Bluegill
STILLWATER RIVER . and sunfish can be caught on wax · Thfough access Is limited, the upper
worms, meal worms and larval baits reaches of this river in Darke
fished .beneath a bobber at depths of County off good small mouth bass
two to six feet. Look for aquatic fishing. Fish in the deeper pools and
V.egetation and submerged structure just below shallow riffles with soft
when seeking largemouth bass. Live craws, hellgrammites or small jiss
bait or plastic baits can be used sue- for best suc·cess. Also try smallcessfully when bass fishing.
mouth bass fishing in nearby
SENECA LAKE - Walleyes Greenville Cicek. .
measuring up to 30 inches arc preROCKY FORK LAKE -The
sent here. Troll small crank baits or lake is at full summer pool and
&lt;!rift weight-forward spinners tipped clcarina following last week's rain.
with night craw?ers and minnows. Channel catfish up to 32 inches can
Shoreline ·anglers will find fishing be caught on traditional baits fished
action is good at night when seeking along the bottom during the evening.
•

Muskie fishing improves during seckins crappies. Saugeye lishinJ is
early summer.
·
·
best in these two areas , plus at
Ollio River
· Dream Bridse and alons the west
The Meldahl tailwatcrs in and south banks. Largemouth bass
Clermont County is a good place to and bl~gills are also being caught
fish for saugeye, white bass, carp, here.
catfish. and freshwater drum. An · DEER CREEK LAKE- Fish in
occasional walleye, stripped bass the creek above the upper reservoir
and hybrid stripped bass may be with cut shad when seeking channel
caught in this location as well. The catfish. Areas with downed trees and
backwater tributaries just off the submerged points are good places to
main river channel offer good fish- fish for cr11ppies and largemouth
ing opportunities for black bass, bass. Aathead catfish can be taken
crappies and bluegills.
on small sunfish or large chubs
Central
. when fished along the bottom in the
INDIAN LAKE - Water tern· tail waters below the dam.
peratures are about 6S degrees and·
·
North-a
lake levels are high. Saugeycs, white . LEIPSIC RESERVOIR- Water
bass and channel catfish are provid- temperatures are near 70 degrees.
ing excellent fishing action Largemouth bass have been hitting
lakewide. Try the areas around Old on crank baits cast during the
Field Beach and at Blackhawk when evening hours. Small channel catfish

'Gallia County Conservation Club report meeting notes

have been active and hittinJ on usins minnows or jigs tipped with •
worms t1w 11e fished along the bot· chartreuse .twisters. Largemouth
tom.
bass 1-2 to IS inches in size are,
ATTICA ' RESERVOIR - bCing caught on night crawlers and AnJiers 11e Cllchioa small crappies plastic .worms near the shoreline and ;
and medium-sized, bluegills when in the weedbeds.
usina minnows suspended beneath a .
. l-ake Erie
bobber. Channel c:alfish up to 10
Smallmouth bass arc bei~g ::;
pounds arc being cught, mostly at caught around the western bastn :;
night, on chicken livers fished along island at depths of 12 to 20 feet by •·
the bottom.
anglers casung or trolling soft craws
NortWst
and lead-head jigs. The central basin FINDLEY LAKE- Largemouth breakwalls also are ideal locations to :
bass measuring IS to 18 inches~ fish for smallmouth bass. Walleye .
now moving off their spawning beds action is beginning to improve with •
and being caught ·on crank baits, a stable weather pattern in place
· night crawlers anlf minnows. now and expected to remain through ~
· Crappies measuring IO to 12 inches the weekend. Use stick baits, bottom •
are being taken aloq), the brushy ~uncers, weight-forward spinners, •
shoreline areas by anglers using jigs and niglit crawlers fished in areas •
tipped with minnows O{, twister tails. with less stained· water. Try the •
. MOGADORE RESERVOIR - western islands, the·areas around B- ·co
Water temperatures are in the mid- ' Can, C-Can, and D~Can and th.e area ·
60s. Anglers are catching crappies north of the .reef complex off Port •
mcasurin&amp; eight 'to 1.2 inches when Clinton.

25 years of
church service
at Gallipolis
.Christian Church

!fl.l(ielf l"lek4

·fo"' cf,ba~t~!f
1afle,olf.

By JAMES SAND
Special Conwepondent .

On Feb. 20, 1972 there were 12 adults IIIII five
children who met at the home of Mrs. John Elardo on Maple Drive to ettablish a
New Testament Chun:h in Gallipolis. In due time the church that
was begun that day was called the
Gallipolis Christian Oturch IIIII
June 20 through .22 of this· ye..there wiU .be a big celet&gt;ration to
mark the 25th anniversary. There
will be a catered meal Friday June
20, a picnic with a 23-foot sub on Saturday June
21, a sing on Saturday evening, and lots of activities on Suriday .June 22.
.
The first minister (he is also the present minister), Denny Coburn, was called on April 23, 1972
following a week's revival' meeting which had to
compete with the appearance of David Hartman
in Gallipolis and the Gallili Academy's successful
presentation of the musical, "Brigadoon." The
finit Sunday School was held on Masnolia Drive
with 33 in attendance. In four short years (June
· 26, 1976) the church would set their all time
·
attendance record at 506. ;1
In July, 1972 the chur;,;h made history wben
they intentionally sent pe0bpie home from church
early so they could watch TV. The reason ·was
that the Gallipalis Christian Church was featured
on WSAZ that morning. Earlier that summer the
church baptized its first member, Keith Carpenter; elected its lint officers: Milt Houdashelt, Pat
Elardo, Waldo Brown, Annabel Houdashelt and.
Sharon Bowman; held their first picnic; and ,.,on
first prize for their float in the Gallipolis 4th of
July parade. The theme of the Oost was "Pace
Through Prayer" with a young John Elardo
dressed up as the minister.
The weekly schedule of activities during thai
first year included: Sunday School at 9:30 .a.m.
and wo.Ship atl0:30 a,m. anll7 p.m. Adult Choir

'

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'

ODNR official explains Sunday hunti.ng bill
By ODIE O'DONNELL
T·S Correspondent ·
GALLIPOLIS - Members of
the Gallia County Conservation
Cl ub received updates on Sunday
hunting , a money war-chest to
oppose anti-hunting groups, a pro. posed lake at Cooper Hollow, and
the purchase of about 11 ;ooo acres
in Gallia and Lawrence counties for
use by outdoonmen.
During the monthly meeting at
the Gallia County Gun Club this
week, 38 members voted to sponsor
Ben Sheard, a student at Gallia
Academy high school, to attend an
Ohio Division of Forestry camp this
summer and to lend support to sev_eral projects proposed by the Ohio
Division of Natural Resurces.
.
Jim Marshall, district supervisor
from the ODNR office in Athens,
explained some of the stipulations
· that accompal)y Senate Bill 103
(SB 103) regarding the Ohio Sunday
hunting legislations.
If and when this becomes law, it
would carry stiff penahies for
hunters who are guilty of trespass-

ing, a landowner granting permission for Sunday hunting must own a
minimum of I00 acres of land, and
children under the age of 16 would
be permitted to hunt on their grandparents' land without a permit.
Marshall explained that both the
Ohio senate and .house of representatives still have the Su~day hunting
proposal in committee,. and he urged
all hunten who support this legislation to contact Senator Mike
Shoemaker or Representative John
Carey to voice their views on this.
Marshall also toid the club that
efforts to build a lake in the Cooper
Hollow area are on hold until a satisfactory arrangement is made. to
replace some 160 acres of wetlands
that would be lost, and would have
to be replaced, if a lake is constructed.
He also noted that a fund-t'aising
sweepstakes sponsored by the Ohio
Division of Wildlife has now
reached approximately $200,000. in
donations to the war-chest. This
money is placed in a special fund to
be used to combat efforts by anim.alrights groups whose goal is to out-

law all hunting and trapping in
Ohio.
Regarding a recent proposal to
purchase some II ,000 acres of land
in Gallia and Lawrence counties for
use as a hunting preserve, Marshall
stated that various officials are just
doing preliminary checking to gather all of the facts involved in acquiring this land. He said that about
7,000 acres is located on land that
had been strip-mined and reclaimed
by the Crown City Mining Co. years
ago, and about 4,000 acres is in the
area ·of Timbre Ridge Lake in
Lawrence county.
·
He stated that if the land is
acquired it would be strictly
reserved for hunting, fishing, trappin&amp;, and wildlife viewing.
Marshall then invited all of the
members to make plans to attend the
annual awards banquet sponsored by
the Ohioans For . . Wildlife
Conservation, slated for Nov. 21 a.t
the Ohio State Fairgrounds ·in
Columbus.
Mike McConnell, Gallia
County's wildlife officer, accepted a
challenge issued by (}allia County

Clerk of Courts Noreen Saunders at
the May meeting to contribute to the
DOW war-chest fund . He, Ernie
Null, Bob Donnct, Kenny
Tomlinson, Jack Mink and Sheriff
J.D. Taylor made their dlinations.
President Ed Clary ·read a letter .
from Cindy Jenkins, Gallia County's ·
conservation official, to sponsor Ben
Sheard to the Ohio Forestry Camp
the week of June 15-20. Sheard is a
·m ember of the Gallia Academy
High School Envirothon team, 4-H
and FFA and is active in Blue Devil
athletics.
The camp is scheduled to be
staged at Camp Musldngum in
Carroli .County, and members voted
unanimously to sponsor Sheard.
.
Food for the dinner was prepared
by Mr. and Mrs. Louie Miller and
family and Buell and Hope Burnett,
who requested that club members
thank the Gallia County 4-H clubs
for the foixl.
Clary announced that the next
meeting would be held on
Wednesday, July 9, at 6:30 p.m. and
would feature a cook-out and cov.ered-dish 'dinner for all members.

.·

po~t;uite·

rlir;ltlf at
lfalfttirjtol( ;~fall
1995 FORDjiiPLOIER 4 DR•.4141LT

VB, IIUIOmatlc, power ~ring, power brakes, air, 1111, .;ruise, power
windows &amp; locks, NNFM stereo caasette with B disc CO player,
luggage rack, cast tllu!lllnum wheels, rear defroster with wiper,
power min:ors. dual power seats, interior decor. group. X-tra clean.
LOWIIILESI

Outdoor datebook...
Fall turkey deadline
Hunter Education Instructor course E. Stat&lt;: S~t. Athen.s, Oliio 45701 - · 189S, or call 614-594-2211.
set for June 30
in April can iake advantage of the
Sportsmen have until June 30 to class as an opportunitv to complete
submit their application and fees to their hunter education certification .
receive a fall turkey hunting permit.
The class will include discussion,
These permits are necessary to hunr- dtimopstrations and videos on hunter
turkey during the Oct. 20-25 fall safety, ethics, marksmanship and
'
'
'
season which is open in Gallia, archery. Students will also receive
Meigs and neighboring counties.
an Ohio Hunter Education Manual.
This also includes those persons
The class is free, but enrollment
who are eligible to receive free hunt- is limited to those students who reg·
ing licenses and permits, and those ister in advance and students must
landowners, their ·spouses and chil- attend all four sessions. To.preregisdren who wish to· hunt on their own ter, call Jim Freeman at The Daily
land.
Senrinel at 992-215S.
Applicants must indicate their
· Women's Ouldoqr Day
first and second choice of county
planned for mld-Aupst
where they wish to hunt. A limited
The Division of Wildlife, in con.number of fall turkey permits will be junction with the Hocking Valley
iss ued in .each of the 22 counties . Sportsmen Association, will offer a
through a random selection process. one-day workshop for women near
MMLI0227
Any permits not issued through Athens on Saturday, Aug: 16. ·
2-c:ydi4.75HP Englne
this process will then become availCourse offerings include beginMend mount.d Zone Start
21" $tllggerecl Wheel. 14 G8uge
atile 'only at Division of Wildlife dis- ning and advanced fishing, introducSlllel Dick 754.617
trict offices on a first-come, first- tion to archery, handgun basics, rifle
se rved basis beginning· in late marksmanship, beginning and
MIIR IOIH
September.
advanced shotgun, backpacking, and
5
Applications are available locally turkey and deer hunting instruction.
at the district office in Athens or by
"'Many women are interested in
2-Cycle Mlfilt opelled 754.702
calling 1-800-WILDLIFE.
outdoor skills usually associated
with fishing or hunting, but may not
Hunter education dass
coming in July
have had the opportunity to try tti~se
· 2t" Cut Alum Self Plop 248.283
. A hunter education course will be activities. Some may have ·grown up
held July 15, 16, 17, Tuesday in families where . these activities ·
through Thursilay, from 6-9 p.m., were shared by the men, but the
and Saturday, July .J9, 9 a.m. io 3 women were not included. Some
VIHf 5T •t THIRD AVf 854 i HNH 5T
p.m. at the Meigs County lkes Club may have tried these skills earlier in
CIA' I IPOUS~ OHIO
I'OifflfOV, OHIO
on Scout Camp Road near Chester.
their lives and now have the time to
The class is mandatory for begin- pursue them . Some wome·n ·are
814 446 lZI&amp;
114 IN 5500
ning hunters wanting to purchase an intimidated by instruction from a
Ohio hunting license, in addition spouse or partner or simply don't
those Meigs and (}allia county resi- have someone to teach them," sai.d
dents who completed the Ohio Carol Wells, public information spe_ _ _ _ __,_ _ _ _ _ _ .cialist for District Four.
·
"At this workshop, women will
Sports shorts ·.
be able to experience the camaWhen the Giants hit eight home raderie .of like-minded individuals
runs in one game in 1961, Willie and ~rhaps develop skills they call
cnj,oy in the out-of-doors," she
Mays had four of them.

$$

·"'-""' 'ZS9'

..
:

.. .

1993 FOlD

'3S!J9

VB,
stereo
lane paint

5

7 PASS. WAGON

iliaerina. power brakes, air, till, cruise, AM/FM
washer, luggage rack, new tires, tu-

I 972 LINCOLN
CONtiNENTAL 4 DR.

O'DELL LUMBER

460 VB eng., auto., . PS, PB, air,
tilt, cruise, PW, PL. dual power
Nata, leather Interior, AMJFM
atereo. l.Ocid ·ONE owner. Only
43,648 actual miles.

•,...ea.

ve.

Deadline·for registration is Aug.
Bob Gibson of the Cardinals set a
I
.and
the workshop is limited to 60
'record with an earned run average of
participants.
For more information,
1.12 in 1968.
co.ntact the Division of Wildlife, 360

...

J.ry 11111111
IIW¥In Ka alleUgh ·

.,..... '4481

wibutl~~Jndy

clottt Int., AC,
steleo CUI., P. Mat, P. wlridowa, P..
locka, mlrrort, till, crulle, rear
delroller, 57K miles.
I

V8, auto., PS,'PB, air, lilt, cn)ise,
PW, PL. AM1FM atereo cassette,
power drlver.'e eeal, ...caal aluminum
raar defroster. Xtra dean. Loca1owner.

wh••·

.,..

1983 LINCOLN
TOWN C·AR 4 DR.' ,

va. automatic.

power steering,
power brakes, air, till, cruise,
power windows &amp; locks, leather
Interior, tu-tone paint. Local
Trade-ln.

........

..

19871UICI
VB, automatic, power steering,
power brakes, air, tilt, cruise,
power windows and locks,
defroster. Good condition.

.

Continued on page C2

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111111
IN,_AU.UltGifl
I I

Ill

o'lllt-.-Dtl .,,_.,_,. .

· ,.,.._from the171h eeRtury lpenllh Qelleon·Nueetnt Senora dli
AtcltiNI wiU be on dl1pley June 11ltttaugh 22 ~ C.r~Y~- Jewe(!lra et ~

WHARTON

ttuntlnaton Mell. Trenura ttum.r llell'llher, left; will be on .~d to dl..
OUII
.

*JEEP •MOLE

7TH l PWM ST. PARKIRUUAG, WV

hfa adftnture. ·
.

.

·· ·
.,

.r
I

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•

practiced on Monday under the direction of .Dick
Moyer, Bible Study was held Wednesdlly, ·and
· Junior Choir with Mrs. John Bowman as director
met on Saturdays at 3:30 p.m. The lint official
Bible study conduc~ by !he church was a survey
of the entire Bible. Within a year visitation
evening on Thunl!ay was added to the schedule
as well as youth, softball and bowling. The
church bowling league was held Thursdays .
beginning at 9:30 p.m.
Sporl$ celebrities have visited the church. In
· the early 1980s Ken Griffey Sr. gave a talk there.'·
He was accompanied by his 10-year-old son Ken
Griffey Jr. No doubt there are many who wcte '
there that night who wished 'they had gotten the
autograph of the 10-year-old rather than the
father.
On Sept. II, 1972 the church puithased the
property at Magnolia Drive. A remodeled two car
garage became the sanctuary. On July 28, 1974
ground was broken on SR S88 for a new church
building. Those who participated in the jroundbreaking included: Milt Houdashelt, William
Marrah; Denny Coburn, Waldo Brown and Jerry
McManis. The first service in that structure was
held Easter day March 30, 197S. The dedication
for the new church was held June I, 197S with
guests from Central Christian Church in Ironton
and the Christian Church of Waverly. The mortgage on the 1975 building was paid off in 1986.
An enlargement to the 197S buildin&amp; was
made in 1978. The parking lot was expanded in
1984. In 1986 a building committee was formed
to explore ideas for a new $81lctuary. The church
also hired an associate minister, Derek Stump. He
served until July 1989 when he ~signed to
become minister at the Bradford Churcl) of
Christ: Mic Bowen was hired as the next associate minister.

..

.....

LE. 318 V8 motor, auto., PS, PB,
air, tilt, cruill, PW, PL. AMJFM
stereo caaa., new tires, bedllner,
running boards, rear step
bumper, sliding rear window.
Sharpl
.

,

..

CENTURY 4 DR.

1991 DODGE
DAIOTI414 TRUCK

'

'''JI

·AllOW IS 1

~·I

S1M1r

992-ICUIY
COUIM .2 Dl. LS

ROIEE

SE ·2 DOOR *ll,lll
·TAKE ONE
TODAYI
...~

Ct.rll AMtl

1915 CADILLAC
ELDO..DO 2 DR.

automellc, ipower steering,
power' br•kn, . air, till, gruise,
power windows and locks,
AM/FM a.tereo cassette, X-tra
clean. Local oWner.
.

added.

1992FORD
GL4 DR.

'~-·

f the galleon had stayed in Cuba another week, its precious
cargo of silver and gqld might have reached its destination
in Spain.
.
but the Nuestra Senora de Atocha set sail on its
' doomed maiden voyage on Sept. 4, 1622. One day ·later,
assailed by a hurricane, the 1374ool Atocha sank near Key
West, scattering ingots of silver, pieces of eight, doubloons
and artifacts of gold across a 40-square-mile are.
They remained hidd~n .at the bottom of the ocean
until a former chicken farmer :tumed salvage diver named
Mel Fisher brought them Into the light of day for the first time in more
than 350 Y.ears.
June 19through 22 the public·will be able to se~ artifacts .recovered
from the Atocha at a free exhibit at Carlyle and Co. in the Huntington .
Mall:
"There will be 6-foot-long gold chains worn by 'passengers on the
Atocha and solid gold belts studded with diamonds and ruliies and
pearls," says Crpig Husar; director of the traveling exhibition.
And if that's not enough to daz~le the eye, the exhibition ~lso displays a solid gold spoon and sqlid gold plates.
.
.
"They're truly amazing," Husar says.
,·
· Valued at $4Q million, the artifacts on display this week' represent
a fraetion of the $500 million booty that Fisher's organization has
brought to the surfaee.
·
There's even more to be recovered from the ocetin. ·
"We haven't even come close to getting it all. We have only recovered 80percent of what was on the ship's manifest and the manifes!.
listed only one-eighth of what was on the ship, because 110 one was
interested in paying taxes back then. Things haven't changed much,"
Husar says.
Husar began working for Fisher two years ago, but was admired the

'2999

1997 JEEP

;.1-~

ANNIVERSARY • TM Q.Uipolla Chrl•
.
Church which 11 celebr~l"'! · ,ltl, 2111\·.·.
annlveraary next WllftU.,d met In .lttll
remodeled prage from 1972 to 1971.. 1'M''
church hila had 11M iiiiiM Hrllor mlnlatw toi ·
all !15 yeara • Denny Coburn•
'

LAWN-BOY
.0 •o£\J-5.
.
green savings sale
5

C

·.

In 1990 additional property was purchased ani!
a plan for a new sanctuary (including driveway,
septic system and landscaping) .to cost $488;444
was approved. The vote by the church was.taken
Aug. 8, 1990. Groundbrealcins was held Oct. 29 .
1990. A fund drive called "Giant Step Forward"
was launched with Jay and Lee Bradshaw as leaden. The first services in the present ·sanctuary
,were held May 19; 1991 . The dedication services
followed July 14, 1991 with Walter Brewer as
speaker. Music was supplied by the Wallace
Brothers of Barboursville, W.Va. who will be a 1 •
part .of the 2Sth anniversary week'cnd. The first
marriage in the new building was the uniting of
Richard Anderson and Victoria .Griffin Jan, 17,
1992.
Those desiring more iilformatioit' on next ·
weekend's activities can call the church at 4461863.
JemM Sandi II I

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c:ot'lllpDHIM

or the ~r Tin~••

Ill 1111

II: II WilloW Dr, lprlrlflbtlrol 01110 IIIII

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Pomeroy •Middleport • GIIIUpolle, OH • Point P111e~nt, WV

~.June 11,1117

JENNIFER EHMAN AND GREQORY MULLINS

LORRI BURNEM AND JOHN RANDOLPH

Burnem-Randolph ,
LANGSVILLE -- Lorri Ann
Burneni and John Warren Randolph,
Jr. announce their engagement and
upcoming marriage.
Bumem is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Burnem, · Sr. of ·
Langsville. She is a 1993 graduate
of Meigs High Schoo.! and a ICl96
graduate of the University of Rio
Grande. She is employed at Farmers
· Bank and Savings Co. of Pomeroy.

Randolph is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Randolph, Sr. of New
Haven, W.Va. He is a 1995 graduate
of Wahama High School and attended West Virginia University at Ripley. He is employed at Big Bend ·
Foodland of Pomeroy.

Bailes, Craig and Yon ·as a legal
assistant. She is also employed with
Damon~s Restaurant. •·
Mullins is a 1989 graduate of
Seminole High School in Sanford,
Fla. and attended the University of
Florida. He is employed with MacIntosh's as ageneral manager.
The couple are to be married June
14 in Gatlinburg, Tenn. and will
reside in Huntington W Va
' · ·

ing.
:;
Brown is a 1992 graduate of Gillia Academy High School and" a
~~~ gra~uate ,of the University of
kro Grande. He is. employed at the .
GallipoUs ~velopmental Cen)Cr.
The open church wedding will be
2:}0 p.m,, July '12 at Gnice United
Methodist Church·in Gallipolis with
music beginning at 2 p.m. A reception will follow the ceremony.

i Continued from pep C1
' 73-year-old man's work for decades. .

in the form of silver ingots and silver
pieces of eight. Most ·of that was
loaded in the hull of the ship," qys ·
"I grew up reading stories about him H ·
in National Geographic," he says. ·
~~: has been estimaled that 20
Fisher's obsessive quest to find percent of Spain's net worth was:on
the Atocha began in I %8 when he board when she sank. That was a
moved his fwnily from California to
the Fl.orida Keys. He
little· luck tremendous loss. The Spaniards
looked for many years to find ber
in locating the sunken, ship until but never could."
"
May of 1973 when divers discovWhile the majority of artifacts-on
ered 1,500 Spanish ·coins. Two d' 1
'II
be
months later three silver':ngots bearrsp ay wr nOI for sale, pieces of
,ing series. numbers matching those ei,~t ~old doubloons will..be
on the Atocha manifest were uncov- so ·
sell for up to several
! ered.
thousand dollars, depending on the
,.1
.
• ha he clarity of the markings.
· ·
I was nOI untr1. 198• I I . I
. (Printed by permlllloa fro•
mo\her, lode was dr~c9~ered. We tbe NasbviUe Banner, ad writtell
recovered . ~? tons of srlve.r that year •' by Leon Allllood.)
.
e
h
, id

Recasting nightmares
by light of day may
solve sl~eping scared
. S~ FRANCISCO (AP)- Scued of the bogeyman? There may bC
a solubon .
.Researchers believe recunina nighunares experienced by at least one
of every 20 adults can ~ tamed by rehearsing happier versions of too
dream while awake.
•
The Irick is called "imajery rebeUSII,"accordirtg to Barry Krako;..
and colleagues from the University of New Mexico School of Medicioo
and Wyoming Girl's School in Sheridan, Wyo. ·
··
· :
Teen-age girls w~ used the technique cut their nightm~s ~y 71 pef. cent per month, the researchers said Thursday at an ASsocialed"Professional Sleep Societies conference. Some details on the study were net
·
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available.
·•·1'
Recuning nightniares afflict 1111 estimated .5 percent to 7 percent ~f
adults and larger perce.nlages of young people, the researchers s&amp;id. And
those adults were likely to have suffered nightmares as child~n.
:
, ~ rese~hers qoncluded that counselors and psychotherapists should
try 10 rdcntrfy nrglrtl!rarc-prone youths. Early treatment miallt save them
from chronic. nighl1rrares when they are older. .
, ,, '.
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nNA PRICE AND ·JARED ELLIOTT

Price-Elliott
GALLIPOLIS - Tina Louise
Price and Jared Wayne Elliott, both
of Gallipolis announce their engagement and upcoming wedding.
Price is the daughter of Bobby
Price and the late Peggy NewellPrice. She is a 1992 graduate of Gal-

MARCY HILL AND ROBBY WYATT

Hill-Wyatt
RACINE ·- Marcy Dawn Hill
and RC?bby W. Wyatt announce their
engagement and upcl;lming wedding. ·
. .Hill is the daughter of Dennie E.
Hill of Racine, and the late Sandra
L. Hill Baer. She is a 1992 graduate
of Southern High School and a 1996
graduale of Ohio University, Athens.
She is manager of Bob Evans
Restaurant in Cincinnati.
Wyatt is the son of Terry W.
Wyatt and ll~nda Sue Phalin both

of Middleport. He is a 1992 graduate
· of Meigs High School and a 1996
graduate of Ohio University, Athens.
He is attending the University of
Cincinnati Medical School. Wyatt is
a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Air
Force Reserves.
.
The open church wedding will be
2:30 p.m., .Saturday, Aug. 9 at the
Racine United Methodist Church,
Music will begin at 2 p.m., and a
reception · will follow at Royal Oak
Resort.

- -. Wedding policy-The Sut~day Times-Sentinel
regards the weddinas of Gallia,
Meigs and M419n counties as news
and p11blishes wedding stories and
photomJ!hs without charge.
However, w~ing news must
meet l~nerill tUIIIdards ·of timeliness. The newtpttper prefers to pub. !ish accounts Q( we4dings as soon as
possible after 111o· e"ent.
· To be publl•hld in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
t8en piiCC w!lhin 60 days prior to
the publicatiOII&lt;and may be up to
6jlO words in length. Material for
Along the River muJt be received by
the editorial clepartment by Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date of publication.
Those not m1king the 60-day
de8dline will be Jlllblished in the
daily papen 11 space allows.

•I L:s:'r:,:L:. •I
II J DAYS I
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Photographs of either the bride or
the bride and groom may be published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality ph01ographs will not
be accepted. Generally, snapshots or
instant-developing photos are not of
acceptable quality.
All material submilled for publisub~:ctto~'!!:

College Board plan aims
to lift school standards
By RICHARD PETERSON

~· --

USA TODAY
The College Board, an association of U.S. colleges and universities, on Thursday announced a $10
milli.on plan to help raise achievemenl and standards in ihe nation's
elementary and secondary schools.
The board will set up a Teaching
and Learning Division that will
include two current ,programs:
Advanced Placement, which allows
high school students to take college.
level courses; and the Pacesener
program, which offers professional
development programs for teachers.
About half of the country's public
and private schools subscribe to the
Advanced Placement program; and
"The problem today is that. no
the division's mission is to dramati- standards have found their way into
cally increase that number, in some the classroom," said Gerald nrozti,
cues. l"ith the help o!_the World the Educaiion · Department's assisWide Web. :I1te Paceseuer program tant secretary for elementary and
will focus on math, science and for- ·secondary educlllion:

30 To 70% ·OFF On all Clot.lng
JR.'S, BOYS &amp; IIIU - llkt, C1lvhl lltl11, Fill, UHit . , Alexis,
lt' Top, Jol••• 11t1 ••r Ol•er ln•lls. ,
*IIFIITltrsliFTS:
111•'• lrll t•rr ArrlniJ *
&amp; llrls - Pr••l•• to 16
·
"DRY

lOTI:
,I

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- Will Plclc Up &amp;Drep Offe For 1111•"•
Plloto 0. JIM 2J, I 1:00 ro 4aOO

GALLIPOLIS - - Kelly Lynn bride carried a flowing cascade bouScott and Justin Chad Hesson were quet cons.isting of stargazers, soft
united in marriage May 3 at the First white tulips, heather, brilliant yellow
Church
of The Nazarene in Gallipo- roses accented by miniiuure royal
,,
KENNETH AND KE!LLY N!!WE,LL
lis.
blue roses and mi~ed greenery.
'.
The bride is the daughter of
Maid of honllr, wris Beth Vinson.
Ljnda .Reese of Cheshire, and Bridesmaids were, Chasidy Wray,
•
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Richard Scott of Crown City. She is .Stephanie Scott, sister of .the bride
~ CHESTER -- Kenneth Blaine attached to a Bible that was carried the granddaughter of Dale and Hazel and Erica Hesson, sister-in-law of
'' Newell' arid Kelly Michelle Madden by the groom's mother, sister and Workman, and Lewis and Geneva the groom. The bridal attendants
'were united in marriage in a double- sister-in-law.
Scott, all of Gallipolis. The groom.is wore floor-length gQwns of royal
ring ceremony April 19 at Northeast
Matron of honor was Karen the son of Joyce Hesson and blue satin. Each carried a bouquet of
Presbyterian Church in Columbia, EvjiiiS, Monmouth, Ore., sister of Clarence Hesson, and the grandson stargazer. tulips, yellow roses,
s:c.
the bride. .Best man was Greg Scar-_ of Evelyn Keyser, all of Poilll ·Pleas- touches of roHI blue miniature
The bride is the daughter of Mr. brough of Parkersburg, W.Va., and ant, w"
.•a.
roses and mixed greenery with flow ' : an d Mrs. Bruce Madden of Freder- groomsmen were Jim Newell of
11\e ceremony was performed by ing white satin ·ribbon streamers.
' ' icksburg. Va. The groom is the son Cincinnati, brother of the groom and Rev. Richl!fd Vinson. Organist was Flowergirl was Shannon Smith,
&lt;·Of Mr. and Mrs. J.larold Newell of nm Probertof&lt;;:olumbia, S.C.
\ Ju~y Burdell of Vinton. M.,-cella ·cousin of the bride. Sh~ wire a white
Chester.
Acolytes were Kimberly and ' Rankin along with Mike Reese, tea~length dress and carried a white
The ceremony was perfonned by Ryan Meek, niece and nephew of the step!father ·of the bride pro\&lt;ided basket with royal blue and white
•·· Rev. Julian Riddle of Surfside groom, Mt,Sterling, Ky. Flower girl vocal music. Musical. selections streamers fdled with fresh petals.
~ .Beach, S.C. · and Rev. Charles , was Alyssa Scarbrough, daughter of included, "Years From Here,'' "I Registering the guest was Shea Tol&lt; Mitchell of Wickenburg, Ariz., the best man. She carried a "(hite Finally Found Someone, "and "I liver, cousin of the groom.
•' grandfather of the bride. Music was basket with rose petals. Kimberly · Can Love You Like That." After
provided by Cathy Tisdale ·of Meek als&lt;l registered the guests.
lighting. the unity candle Mike
Best '!'an was Jimmy Hesson,
',Columbia, S.C.
· A recc;ption ,was held following Reese, sang,"Jesus, Me and.You." . . brother of the groom. Groomsmen
I : · Given in marriage by her parents lho ceremony in the fellowship hall
Fresh spring aria, stargazl:rs, pink were Kevin Jordan, Steve Keyser,
~cand escorted to the altar by her served .by 'the women of l)le church. carnations and white miniatur~ car- uncle of the groom, David ~nthony,
I -father, the bride wore a floor-length The parents of the groom, hosted a riations adorned twin brass spiral cousin .of the groom and Adam
~ .gown of natural silk with a sweet- rehearsal dinner for family and · candelabras and an.arch candelabra · Scott, brother of the bride. The
heart neckline outlined in seed friends at the couple's home.
att!te front of the church. The unity groom and his party wore . black
:•pearls.ller veil was fingertip length. · After a l)oneymoqn trip to the candle table was arrayed with soft tu&lt;edos with vests and royal blue
' She carried a nosegay bouquet of Florida !(~ys, the couple will reside spring aria, stargazers and mini car. and white roses . accented with
open white roses aecehted ·with tbse al 320 Camp Creek Drive, tolum- · ndtiorts~il-r.SS candelabras, c.&lt;Were!l babies ' breath boutonnieres. Ringbuds and fern. The bouquet was bia, S.C.
with spring aria . were set on the · bearer was Kyle Scott, cousin of the
piano and alters. Green plants out- bride. He wore a sho~t black tuxedo,
. lined the stage.
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and carried a white satin pillow with
The bride was given in rparriage royal blue and white streamers. ·
by .her parents and escorted to the
The reception was held at the
altar by her father. She wore a gown American Legion Post 23 in Point
made of silky satin and battenberg · Pleasant. The floating four-tier wedlace. The halter neck featured a ding cake w·as decorated with fresh
. sheer yoke inset on a basque waist stargazers ..yellow daisies, miniature
bndice. The full skirt was embell- pink carnations, royal blue roses.and
ished with many cut-outs of batten- heather, on each layer. Duplicate
berg lace th~t trimmed with pearls fresh cut floral arrangements and
and sequins. The full back enhanced floating candles were sel on each
with a bal(enberg peplum was side of the cake. Hosting the recepaccented with a rose at·centerwaist. · ·lion ·were the bride's step-mother,
The extra-long scalloped train was Kay Scott and Diane Scott, aunt of
enhanced with multiple cut-outs of the bride.
battenberg lace. It had detachable
quantlets.
· Her headpiece, was a crown
enhanced with beads, pearls, sequins
· and rhinestones. The fingertip veil
has a tw~tiered, rolled edge. Complementing ·the bride's. gown, the
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.Scarberry-

·j .POMEROY _: ~lee Suzanne '. as bridesti!aiils wlule Jillian Lyons
·.Scarberry · and Matthew David wu the ftQWc:r girl. ·
.
'"Richards were united in marriage
1'1\e inen wore black tuxedo jack,

).fay 3 at the First Southern B.aptist ets, bolo ties, .black jeans and cow\ Church of Pomeroy.
..
boy boots. Corey Hatfield served as
i The ceremony was perfonned by · best man while .Steve Heater, Greg
, Rev. Lamar O'Bryant.
.
· ·Petroski and 'rimothy Shortridge
I The bride, escorted by her moih- were groornsll}j:n. Ring bi:arer was
; er and son,
long-sleeved Jerry Justis. '
. \ white satill gown embellished with
· Guests weri "gistered by Debbie
pearls a~d sequins with a matchinJ Alkire.
.
.
. ..
, headpiece and semi-cathedral !et'gth ' .A rec~tron &lt;was he I~, folio~'"~ .
~ train. Flowers carried by the. ,brido the , ceremony at the Amerrcan
i consisted of a cascadinB bOiiqilet of . Lepon Post 602 in Rlli:ine.
• roses and lilies.
· '
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Attendants. wearing tea-length
The sroom is a police officer fo1
: ~ade dresses and carrying smal~ the awe of OhiO at Gallipolis Devel~ versions of the bridal bouquet, were ·opmental Center while·the bride is a
; Jennifer Hatfield, matron of honor, 1997 graduate .pf the University of
: and P•nla Justis, maid of holl()r. JCII- Rio Grande With a bachelor's degree
~ nifer ~ Roberta Scarberry served in.psychOiogy. . '
. · ·

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Outdoor Gospel Sing
29 6 p111r &amp;

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· ~ -.;_;_Reunion . poliC,y--

Sifurday;June 21~ 1 pm

•:

(IWII or Sblae) ,

u•n CemPifOUild, New Bavea, WV.
.

No Aclmirllioa Cllarp ConNOtliM St.ntl AmUaHe

OVER 60 GOSPEL' SINGING

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wore •

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for all the times you embraced
me with arms·of love.

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. Thanks,·Dad

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With the family reunion se11011 .Qui!lkly llp!IIOI!Ching 1111ny will be submining articles of family acti.vitiesfor publ~on:
.
.
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To ensute pro"!pl pubi!Citicin. lhe.OIIIipolis Daily TMune anil.The Darly
Sentinel requests tblt art1cles be nellly typed anil dou~le spiCed for ~uy
editina. Reunion items lhoUid not exceed 300 words anil m~st be submrtted
within 30 days of occurrem:c. ' ·
· No exceptions will be mlde.
:
All mlterial submitted for piablicadoll is subject to cditinB· Articles will
.
be published u iOOn u poul'ble. ' ·
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TAWNEY STUDIO

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MILLERSBURG - Berlin Christ- .
A reception for 325 guests folian Fellowship in Berlin was the set- ·lowed at the . BCF Reception Hall.
ting for the wedding of Angela Hosts were Jeremy and Julie Ruth.
Yoder and Kevin Peok when the Guest book auendants were Dayna
couple exchanged vows Saturday, -Miller and Vanessa Weaver. Serving
May I0. Pastor, nm Troyer per- as aides were Traci Hershberger,
. forined the ceremony with wedding Andria Hershberger, Summer Hermusic by James and Carol Yoder, shberger, Heidi Hershberger, Riia
vocalists; John McLaughlin,' gui- Miller and Sheila Miller. .
tarist; and Nathan Wildes, on, the
Ceremony hosts were Marlin and
"agpipes.
Linda Wengerd.
'
Parents of the couple are Jacob
Following a wedding trip lo the
and Enna Yoder of Millersburg, and Smoky Mountains in Tenn., Mr. and
Arlie and . Marva Peck of · Rio Mrs. Peck will reside in Berlin. ·
Grande. The bri!le was given in ml"'- .
The bride graduated from Central.
riage by her parents.
Christian High SchooL and is
Anending the couple were: ioani employed by the Berlin Christian
Yoder. maid of honor; Tara Driedi- Fellowship and Paul A . Miller Law
ger, Iris Begly and Danielle Payne, Office.
bridesmaids; Amanda Detweiler and
The groprn ,graduated from .
~mily ·Richardson, flower girls;
Mount Vernon Nazarene &lt;;ollege
Darin Peck, best man; Scott Wey- and is employed by Ontario Systems
man, Hyman Weaver aird Rick Corp:
E.lliott, groomsmen;. and John
The rehearsal dinner was hosted
McLaughlin, John · Ruth Jr., Mike by the groom's parents and was held
Speelman and Leroy Hershberger. . at the Amish Door Restaurant.
ushers.
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lVGieh For Sp!

.r•PageC3

Yoder-Peck

Madden-Newell '

'~ I

$14.&amp;5. Reg. $19.95~ · SAVE
$5.00. We also do .· ·.,.lport
p!;otos, Identification photos
and photo .flnl-'tlng. _,
·

F~day, June

n

·ANGELA AND KEVIN PECK

Let us .9opy your ~d . tJmlly
I phcJtos. ' Special 2-:&amp;X7'a : for

eign languages at the ninth- and
I Oth-grade levels.
The new division could also lead
to a whole·array of assessments that
. are designed to measure individual
performance and predi.ct future
achievement, said division vice
president !'loward Everson.
"II will be a daunting task," said
board trustee Claire Jackson.
The announcement of the new
division comes as educators and
politicians debate the issue of higher .
standards across the country.
Efforts to improve classroom per· forrnance are always welcome, education officials say.
·

t$th .Annual·.

ttelflfil

.

lia Academy High School and is a
student at the University of Rio
Grande.
Elliott is the son of Gene and Ann
Elliou. He is a 1993 graduate ofGallia Academy High School and is
e!Dployed by Thomas Do-lt Center.

~ '··---~

Scott-Hesson

•

·. Treasure ..•

The open church wedding will be
5 p.m. on Saturday, July 26, at
Danville Holiness Church.

Po.meroy •Middleport • c;.u1poll1, OH • Point pfe8..nt, WV

•
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Davis-Brown
GALLIPOLIS - Thm and M~lene Davis of Gallipolis announce
the engagement and upcoming marriaae of their daughter, MelissaArm .
to Scott Anthony Bro--:n. son of .
Stev~ and Yvonne Brown of Galhpohs.
.
. Davis is a 1~5 graduate of GalIra Academy Hrgh School and a
1997 graduate of the University of ·
Rro Grande Holzer School of Nurs-

._ ~nay, June 11, 1117

JUSnN AND KELLY HESSON

AND SCOTT BROWN

Ehman-Mullins
GALLJI'OLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
George and Diane Ehman of Gallipolis announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Jennifer Lynn Ehman, to
Gregory Scott Mullins, son of Terry
and Lyndia Mullins of Deltona, Fla.
. Ehman is a 1990 graduate of
Southwestern High School and 1992
graduate of the Univ~rsity of Rio
Grande where she obtaJned an AAB. ·
She is employed with the law finn of

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.FIRST BAPTIST·I
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CHURCH
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JUNE 16-20

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9:30-12:00
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·.Ages: K-6th Grade

3
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For Transportation Call
448 0324 or 448-1824

Bible atorlea, gym time,
· refruhmenta, and Iota of fun I

--::::::::;;

One of the most profound things the Bib)e says
about God is that He is a Father. Jesus taught us to
pray "Our Father who art in Heaven." God the Father
loves each and every child threafened by abortion as
mu~h as we love each of our children. He feels the
same way about each child killed by abortion as you
would feel about one of your children being
murdered.
Gallia County Right .to Life 446--2896

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rra••••nt. WV

Pomeroy •Middleport • Glllllpotls, OH • Polnl
----------- · -

II d

Polk~

Su~.

June 11, 1887

: SUnday, J~ne 15,1817

IK neiab~Mlrboods, Aid Dick Blau, a

By BmY RUBINI!R
Tht Dll Moln11 Reglftlr
Whll do worlc.ing fathers want?
SOIIIC of the ume things as moth,·e n who work outstde the home, says
James Levine, a national expert on
fatherhood
. .
·
bke women, men who are par, ~nts want a flextble schedule at
work so they can do a good jo~ at
the office and at h~me, says Levme.
Then why don t men get what
' th~y want?
.
_ .
. , .Because u~hke many women,
; me~ often don t ~k~ ~vme says.
:
,;t'here ts !!t1s mvlstble dtlem, ,!lllo, he says. Men too a_re exper~:-enct~g work-famtly confhct.. But u
; hasn t been brought to attenuon too
. .much . becaust men are st1ll men.
: ~They don't talk about th.•s Stuff."
, • To he!!' men. better Juggle work
: and famtly obligations, Levine
: llffe~ encourage~ent and dozens of
,c practlcal.~ugg~ttons m a new book
called Workmg Fathers: New
.Strategies for Balancing Work and
Pamily"(Addison-Wesley).
• "I am a pragmatist and a tacti:ctan," says Levine, who has spent
:t6 years as director of The Father:~ood Project, a national education
•and research project based at the
:Pamilies and Wor~ Institute, a non:Profit group in New York.
. : "I'm trying to give people real
;t.Ools, not theories. I'm saying,
: 'Look, try it. No guarantee here but
~~ worked-elsewhere. •:•
; ' Levine argues that fathers should
;not shy away from pushing for more
::'family friendly" policies at work.
.He believes employers, if presented
:with a proposal that makes business
sense, may just say "yes."
• By family friendly he \loesn 't

Polka hits

Wellingtons to mark 50th

SMITH B. AND BURNETTA RUNYAN

'
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.Runyahs to celebrate 70th
GALLIPOLIS - Smith B. and
Burnctta Runyan will celebrate their
70th wedding anniversary June 16.
They were married June 16, 1927 in
Wheeling, W.Va. They have two

children, Smith E. of Delaware and
Douglas A. of Gallipolis; three
grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren.

Groses to observe 50th ·
,
CHESHIRE - Roy and June
: Orose are celebrating their 50th
; .,..,edding anniversary with a recep·
: 'tion from 2 to4 p.m., Saturday July
: f2 in the fell owship room at
· ' t;:hcshire Baptist Church, ·
: Roy and June lived in Gallipolis
~ from 1948 to about 1958 and in
: Cheshire until . about 1987. At that
: time they moved tti Plain City where

j Galli a

community calendar

I

• 'l'he. Community Calendar Ia pub! lts!led as a free service to non: profit groups . wishing
to
: ltnnounce meetings and special
; .vents. ·The calendar Ia not
· lte•lgned to promote salea or
: .fund-raisers. of any type. Item• are
•Jrlnted as space permits and Cllll" :
; not .be guaranteed to run a apeclf; lp number of days. .
;
Sunday, June 15
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' GALLIPOLIS - Banana spI'11 eat~ )ng contest I p.m. with all proceeds
benefit Gallipolis Fire Depart! l!lCnl.

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! •, GALLIPOLIS · Reg~lar mee~ing

' ·of'Gallia County Htstoncal Soctety
~ .meeting . has. been rescheduled for
1 ~ne 22 at I p.m.
j·

•••

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KANAUGA - Special worship
! .~rvice 2:30 p.m. Silver Memorial
!t;:hurch witli Two for the. Gospel
l ~inging and Dennis Parsons speakl ing.

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they 'reside today.
Roy worked at the Kyger Creek .
Power Plant.
· They have four children, J.D.
Grose of Phoenix, Ari:i .. Dennis
Grose of Delaware, ·Emily Grose
Sullivan of Timonium, Md. an.d
Marie Grose Smith of Hilliard; and
·six grandchildren.
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•••

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GALLIPOLIS - Community
.Cancer Support Group 2 p.m., New
Life Lut~eran Church. ·
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CROWN CITY - Vacation Bible
School j6:~0l to 8:45 p.m. , June 16
througl4--i1 Victory Baptist Church.

•••

EWINGTON - Vacation Bible
School 6 to 8:30 p.m., June 16
through 20 Ewington Church CCU .

•••

GALLIPOLIS · The Wild and
Wonderful Good New Stampede ·
Vacation Bible School 6 to 8 p.m.,
June 16 through 20 French City
Baptist Church for children 4 to 6.

•••

Tuesday, June 17

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Choose to Lose
Diet Class 9 a.m. ·Grace United
Methodist Church.

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ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
· ._fAMILY . .qiCE' ·

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT COITROL

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w~thanewbomortoleavetheoflice

While many men are taking on
more of the daily care of their chitdren. they often don't want this to be
known at. work, Levine says.
There are fathers who skirt their
bosS.s' eye ·as. they do the end-ofthe-day "child care dash" - or, .if
spotted, claim t,hey're off to " anoth· er meeting." Some fathers call in
sick when -they're really home to
tend to a sick child.

•0

'•PigiCI,
I

Tbe Commualty Celt 'a• is
publllhed u a free arvlce t o ' prollt I"IUPJ .......... to . . . . . t
-~ lllld ·~ ~ .... 'l1llt
Celeadar Is aat d • ls"WI 10 , _
IIIOie IIIIa or fuad ra1len oiUJ
type. Items are prillt.ed • .,...
. penaill and CIJUIO( be...,......
· to nm a specific pumber ol daJI.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. Arius Hurst,
pa$1or of the Forest ,Run B~i~t
Church, will be guest minister Sunday, 10:45 a.m., at the Naomi B.,tlst
Church. Public welcome.
CARPENfER -- Mt. Unio~ Baptist Church, to observe 10 1st
anniversary, Sunday. ··Potluck dinner
following Sunday school 9 to . I :30
a.m. Afternoon service to feature
special speaker and special singers
includinlli "Friends of Jesus and
Gabriel Quartet.
·
MONDAY
LETART -- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
office building.

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Workplace muths

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Meigs
community
calendar

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"TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- The Meigs
County Family and Children First ·.
Council, special meeting, Tuesday, 9
a.m. at the Meigs County Department o~.Human Services in Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local
Board of Education, 7 p.m.Wedncs- ·
day, Tuppers Plains Elementary
School,

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Rought, Kathryn See, Carrie Kennedy, Michael
Kennedy, Daniel Laniz, Victoria Cundiff, Debra Folrrier,
Mindy Brini&lt;;er, Carolyn Charles, Ivan Powell, Vicki
Cannon, Barbara Smith, Robert Smith, Lynda Fral~y.
Racine: Jim Freeman. Harry Holter, Grace Holter,
Freddie Simons. Melissa Holley, Mary Curtis, Pat Cor- .
nell, Jeanette Radford, Jessica Radford, and Bridget
Ritchie. ·
Rutland: Christine Napper, Crystal Priddy, Marglll'et
Bishop, Beatrice Wood, Kim Barrett and Kindell Brown.
Minersville; Mary Voss.
'
· ·
Syracuse: Dianna Lawson, Heather McPhail and
Tammy Chapman.
Long Bottom: Henry Bahr and De.bra Ingels.
· Shade: William Cook.
Middleport: George Harris, Jr. Vanessa Compston,
Gloria Compston, Ellise Myers, Patricia Weaver, Toni
Givens, Donna Hawley, Donna Davidson, Cindi Stewart. Elaine Ralston and Nornn'a Wilcox.
Mason, W.Va., Brian Johnson.

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Fathers' worlt-funily dilemma is month by Worlc.ing Mother map- ble hed.ule doe •1
1e ·
"just hitting the ndar ·screen" at zine as one of the 25 Ameri
sc
sn mean lting
many compuies, ~~~:cording 10 who has clOne the most 10 : ' v : ~v~ hang ~oose but rather let1
Levine, but he faults men - and the work-family agenda.
n.~7Jeou lrult them
10 t in
often their wives- for auiODIIIicalLevine also has collaborated with
~ 0 ft me 1
s.
ly assumins that ''family friendly" Vice President Gore on a new fedcr- m•n:
e,n 'thmanaaersl heconfuse
.·
--..emen WI contrp ,
says.
. .. .
po1ICtes
are for mothers on1y,
.
al 1n1ti1111ve to learn more about Good managers h 1 1 1 00·
As a result, if Johnny is sick, fathersandhelpthemmem.
lives ive
.e,~se eear !ICC·
mom stays home from work not
. On the work front he offers achi~velthose";: ~em!ools 1~
only because she feels she should stratesies that men can~ to: nego- tor em lo ees'
sress _ :otmon!"'!t because she .assumes her boss tiate a flexible schedule ("Make the time. p Y
prog
thetr
wlll be more sympathetic than dad's. business case. Make your work On the home fro 1 he ffei.s
And she makes Jess money so she , commitment clear. l;lnlist the support interesting evide~~ ~ to ~~
has Jess t~ lose by a;;lti~g.
of your co-workers and cus- fathers' involvement in their chi
. This kind of thinkin~ nO! only · tomers"); tum down extra work that dren's Jives is so im rtant and
htnders women's s~dmg m the would crowd out family time offers advice on how :;:' et
workplace and men's at home, it ("Show how it wouldn't hc good for involved.
·
g more
may also he wrong, says Levine.
, business. Present options. Delay.")
He cites a 198S u.s. De
ent
Often, he says, men haven't even and manage a paternity leave ("Ask . . of Education study sugge::;'"' the
bothered to ask.
Plan. far ahead. Announce it· don' t strong connection between .; tal
"I don't ~ean to sugg~st there's a hide it.")
'
involvement and a chjld'sp sc~:01
huge reservo1r of goodwill out there
Levtne also· offers advice to man- performance Students who 01
and men and women can have what- agers on how to evaluate requests "A's" rewrt~ involvement by g9l
ever .the7 want-.'' he says. But, "If and acknowledges that not all will petcent of their mothers and 85 perY?U don task, y~~ don't get. It doc;s- be feasible. He cautions tbat a Oexi- cent of their fathers. ·
n t mean you Will get. ·People need
·
to be encouraged to try."
r-----":"!::-:-'"':'-"':"------~----.
Well aware .that the push for a
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father-friendly workplace is someBy BETSY RUBINER ·
·
·
times seen by women as threatening, . . The Dee Moines Regl1ter
Levine argues that the more men
Here are four common myths about too most likely "family-friendthere are who chalienge the system,
·Jy" workplace. according to "Working Fathers: New Strategies for Bai· the less pressure there will he on
ancing Work and Family" (Addison-Wesley; $23): '
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women, who have long fought the
- Female managers are more likely to be supportive. Wrong. Male
battle~
managers are just as accommodating, according to a study by the Fami"Unless we start to include
ly and Work Institute, a New York research group.
.
~
fathers in the work-funily discus:
- Older managers, especially men, are less likely to be supponive.
sion·and in _the creation of a responWrong. Many of these men may not have experienced a work' family
sive workplace, we're eoing to be
conflict, but they have sons· and daughters who now do.
.
respOnding to only·half our employ· -Nonprofit group,s are more supportive than for-profit companies.
ees .. , and limiting women's opporWrong, according to a study comparing practices in higher education vs.
tuniry to really succeed at home and
the privale sector by the Family and Work Institute.
work," be says.
-Change must come from the .top, then filter downwards. Wrong.
Fighting words like this help
Change comes from a combination of movement- top-down, bottomexplain why Levine was named last
up. and pockets in the middle.

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mtdday to take a child to the doctor.
. "What peopl" want is not more
hm~ o~ money b~t more control over
thm ume. That s everyone - not
just fathers.and mothers," he says.
. Lcvme also makes .a case for ~hy
thts ts good for bust~ess, offenng
e~amples of comp'!mes that ~~ve
ptoneered father-frtendly pohctes
an~.reapedbenefits.
.
.
You wtll run a better busmess tf
you respond to the. needs of
fathers," he argues. '.' You get people
who are more commmed, loyal, who
feel that lhis is a place that's really
willing to respond to me. " . .
.The book ts peppered ~tlli ·often
pmgnant, sometimes amusmg, tales
from the front that Levine has heard
while conducting "Daddy Stress
Seminars" at major companies
across .the country. These bring men
together to talk about ways to create
a more · father~ friendly workplace
and how . to be a better parent and
spouse.

• POMEROY - Meigs County residents donated 66
. : units of blood when the Red Cross Bloodmobile visited
: the Senior Citizens Center Wednesday,
: Three first time donors were Carried Kennedy,
: Michael Kennedy and Margaret Bishop.
• Multiple gallon dons were Thomas Hart · were ·
Thomas Hart, 8 gallons; Harry Holter, 4 gallons, Jea/1
Durst, 3 gallons, Joyce Hall, 2 gallons, Barbara Crow, 2
; gallons, Niese! Gerard and Pamela Hoffman, one gallon .
· Retired and Senior Volunteer Program workers assist. : ing at the bloodmobile were Helen Bodimer, Katie
• Crisp, Jane Walton, Peggy Harris, Betty Spencer, and
Ted Hatfield. The canteen was served by Racine United
; Methodist Church.
.
&gt; Donors by community were:
: Pomeroy: Thomas Hart, Dennis Gilmore, Paul Marr,
: Lois Wyant, Jennifer Mora, Donald Smith. Niese! Ger: ard, Mary Spencer, Billy Spencer, Laurie ~ayland.
i l.'a,rela..Hoffman, Patricia Bartqn, MichaeJ Vanmeter,
, Heather -Woods, Eunice Jones, Joyce Hall, Barbara ·
:·trow, Jean· Durst, Bryan Shank, Jane Walton, Gerald

i

AU. club meetings and other news
articles in the s~iety section must
be submitted within 60 days of
occurrence.

time work - which men are panicularly unlikely to take becawe those
options me111 less psy - but flexible scheduling that allows a father to
redesign paternity leave so he can
three da
k ds
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For more information call the Holzer Health Hotline at 1-800~62-5255

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TO ACCOMODAD THOSE WOIIIII PIOPll, .
.WI All OPEl 'TIL 7 P.M. 01 II.SDAYS

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week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.

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GALLIPOLIS
American
Legion Auxiliary Lafayette Unit 27
meeting 7:30 p.m. at post home
McCormick Rd.

•••
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. By AMY BETH GRAVES
Internet services and reference dataAeeoclated Preas Writer
bases to some 700 Ohio libraries.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
OPLIN is conside~ing·· ihe Lihrary
Karrie Fisher feels lost in cyber- Channel as it searches for a viable
space whenever she taps into the . blocking program to keep minors
Internet.
from viewing pornographic materiA simple search for. information al.
on San Juan turns up more than I
"There's 34 million Web sites on
million sites ..Mrs. Fisher, 38. shakes the Net. This revolutionizes how we
her h~ad in disbelief as she scrolls prioritize i.nforrnation," Barlow said.
down the liStings on a computer in
Once users log on, · they have
the Westerville Public Library.
about 20 different "worlds of
"There's got to be a better way," knowledge"to chOO$C from, ranging
she said. "This is all junk."
from science and technology to
Mrs. Fisher's reaction is one the kids' topics to travel. EaCh "world"
Westerville library often hears, lists dozens of relate&lt;! sites selected
which is why it hopes its new soft- by librarians.
ware program --· The Library ChanEvery library that buys the softnet - will be a roadmap for patrons ware plays a role in the design. Each
traveling on the .lnformation High- is assigned .a topic to research; they
way.
.
then come lip with sites to add to
The software was designed at the The Library Channel.
library's behest as a soit of cyberThe program alreaf;ly lists more
space Dewey Decimal System to than 1,000 sites. The goal is to add
make the search for information on another 40,000 by midsummer.
the Internet easier for everyone from
"Sharing this type or research
the uninitiated to .the computer guru. among libraries is unique," Barlow
Just weeks after its introduction said. "We figured that if we can
.in the city's libraries, the software share books, why can't we share the. ·
sas been sold to at least 40 other work in finding good Web sites."
Barlow said most people look for ·
Ohio libraries. And librarians from
California to Massachusetts ·are information on the Internet by typ- ·
looking at it, said Jim Zimmerman, ing in a key search word, which
president of vlmpact. the Columbus brings up a. lot of use.less and wrong
software company that designed the information.
program. ·
"If y'ou type in the word 'holo- ·
The cost of the program ranges caust,' you could wind up with the :
between SS.OOO and · $30,000 Web site ·w.,..,w.skinhead,' which ·
depending on the size of the library, obviously ·is inappropriate," he said.
Zimmerman said. Part of. the pro- "We wouldn't have. that problem
ceeds of future sales will go to West- with The Library _Channel because
·
erville and other libraries to·develop we choose the sites."
more technology, Westerville library
Future plans . include offering
· director Don Barlow said.
compact discs that can be sold to
· An added attraction: libraries can . library patrons and schoOls so they
custom-design the Library Channel can use The Library Channel as a
to keep youngsters from looking at browser.
·
racy Internet sites, while allowing
Not everyone buys in1o the idea
adults uncensored access to the vast of The Library Channel.
·
Internet.
The prog~am has caught the eye
Debora~ Pawlik, · mana~e'r for
of the Ohio Public Library Infohna- collection reso11rces at the Medina
tion Network, a state-funded organi- County District Library. wasn't
zation that provides free access to impressed.

•••

CROWN CITY • Morning worhhip II a.m. Good Hope Church
Revival
J)Vith Pastor Don Black. will speak
Swtck to smg. ·
•••
·
CROWN CITY - Revival 7 p.m.,
Jand Don and Sherry
l· VINTON. Bethel Baptist Church June 15 through 21 Good Hope
:anniversary service 11 a.m. with Church with Elder John Gue speak,Rev. ~alvin Minnis speakin~ and the · ing and special ~~!ic .
Corinth Choir sin1ing.
VINTON - Holy Ghost Tent
;)
Revival
6 p.m. June 8 through 15,
•:
Mllllllay, Juae 16
2099 Mt. Tabor Rd.
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•••

In an effort to provide our reader-.
ship with current ~ws, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings submitted after !he 60day deadline will appear during the

~ean only patemit~ leave or part-

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.T-B'Ioodmobile collects 66 units in Meigs County

____. News policy _ __

Library's softwa.re
prevents children ·from
viewing pqrnography

•

.Fathers need t~ speak up. to bosses to get a more family-friendly work place

ally associated with polka.
Aeeoc18tec1PrMe Wrn.r
co-aulbor of "Polka Hajlpineu," a.
"This is not yoor father's polb
HAMLER, Ohio (AP)- It's hlp. book lhlt tnca polb'a history.
music anymore," said Laura MajchBy Tlle'AISOCIIIIecl Pull
It's hot. It's ... polka?
The Alldrews Silfen' 1938 hit szak, a Toledo nurse who travels
The 10 most popul• polkas itt
Polka festivals nationwide are "Beer Barrel Polka/' wu the fii'St will\ her luis band. Bob, to about I 0
random qrder, accordlna to a Jill
drawing big crowds. Polka cruises million-selling P,lb song. Oeve- polka festivals a year.
provided by Milwaukee polka
are filled. A polka hall of fame near IJnd's Fnnltie Y111kovic: had two
. Carl · Finch, one of Brave
disc jockey· Jerry Halkowslti,
Cleveland attracts thousands of visi- · million-sellew-ln the late 1940s Combo's foonders, said the music
who also is a polka historian and
tors eaeh year and has its OWII Inter· "Just Because-'' and "The Blue Slcirt industry ignores polka.
perfonner:
net site.
Waltz."
His group's name comes ·from
The polka was - aild still is Polka rules.
playina punk rock bars in the late
"Beer Barrel Polka"
Nowhere, it ap~ars, niore so played at weddings, chuich festivalS 1970s and early 1980s.
" In Heaven There is No .
than in Hamler, a tiny rural north- and night clubs. Even teen-aaen did
"People told us -that we had to be
Beer"
western Ohio village that considers .the- polka.
·
.
a brave combo to play those .clubs.
"Clarinet Polka"
itself the very buckle of the polka
But ii faded in the !9S0s, when' B~t they were really the only open"Lindenau" or "Lucky
belt.
rock 'n' roll hit the scene. Teen- mmded venues at the time. All the
Polka," sometimes known ·as
Every summer, the population agers abandoned the polka and straight ahead rock 'n' roll places
"She's Too Fat for Me."
swells to SO times its normal size em.braced Elvis. And ethnic neigh- wouldn't hire us," Finch said.
"Liechtensteiner Polka" .
when some 30,000 polka lovers borhoods where polka was king disBrave Combo blends traditional
"Julida Polka"
descend on the village southwest of integrated aS the suburbs exploded.
polkas into a dizzying hybrid with
"Who Stole the Kee-ska?"
Toledo for an annual festival that
But polka· survived; mainly styles from Tex Mex to acid rock.
"Barbara Polka"
· despite all the · "Polka is the most .powerful
celebrates the lively dance and because the music"Peanuts Polka"
music · developed in Europe ·almost chang~s in rock, jazz, pop and other music there is.- It's always been
200 years ago.
•
genres - continued to offer fans biZarre to me that such a powerful
It's only one of five polka fests happy. bouncy songs with simple, ethnic-oriented music has been so young~r crowd.
" I sec a lot of people my age at ·
staged each summer in Henry Coun- fun lyrics. For example:
thwarted, so misunderstood," Finch
these
festivals . I think they come
ty, but it's by far the largest.
"In Heaven there is no be.er,
said.
because
the festivals are fun. You
"Polka is king in Henry County,"
That's why ·we drink it here. •
Polka purists don't like it. It's just
get
up
and
dance, dance, dance, "
proclaimed Arnold Gerken, who
And when we're gone from here, too fast, says Halkowski .
founded th~ 500-member Ohio · Our friends will be drinking all
Then there is the Cleveland Style said the 26-year·old Mrs. MajchPolka Boosters 20 years ago; The the beer."
Polka Hall of Fame, founded in szak, who learned how to do the
non-pr,ofit group promotes polka
"Polka lyrics are not exactly 1988. Twenty-two musicians have polk~ from her parents.
Festivals arc the key to polka's
festivals .
·
high-tech poetry." said Jerry been inducted into the hall.
·
r
esurgence,
~!au said.
· The '64·year-old retired lumber- Halkowski, a Milwaukee-area polka
The most widely known polka is
"There used to be all these bars
yard owner started the l:famler Su!ll- · disc jockey who plays in a polka the Cleveland style, which hit the'
.
.LEO AND MAE WELLINGTON
·
iri
.these
white, working-class ethnic
merfest nearly 30 years ago. The band.
height of i(s popularity in lhc late
neighborhoods
that had a very lively
first festival in the village or 600
(n the last decade, polka has 1940s and cltriy 19S0s, said Fred
musical
life.
They
have all disap·
drew about I ,000 people.
come back into its own. Festivals Kuhar, the haiJ's president.
·
pcarcd
.
·•
"They come to ,polka and eat: have sprouted up in towns from the
"The thing that made Cleveland·
" Now you have these festivals in
VINTON - Leo and Mae event is being hosted by their chil- They love the music. Everyone western edge of New York through style p&lt;;&gt;lka differeh( from other
Wellington will celebrate their 50th dren:
all
these communities. People know
loves the polka," Gerken said. ·
the Midwest to the Southwest. A polkas was ·that the lyrics were
what
the schedule is. They'll drive
wedding anniversary with an open
Lifetime residents of Gallia
Immigrants from Germany, Gritmmy for polka music was estab· Anglicized and they had an Ameri· house from 2 to 5 p.m., June 22 at County,. the Wellingtons reside in Poland' and other European nations lished in 1986 and at least 150 radio can dance band rhythm section .,- all night on a Thursday night, they 'll
Fellowship Chapel in Vinton. The Vinton.
brought the music and the dance stations carry·polka music.
· piano, bass and drums," Kuhar said. dance the weekend away and then
But Henry County 's 24,000 resi- they.' II drive back Sunday night and
based on a hop and three small steps
Bands such as Brave Comooaiia
- to the United States.
Polkamotion are taking the music in dents arc equally proud of its long go to work in the morning. They'll
By the late 1930s, the polka had new directions, using electric guitars polka festival tradition, especially drive 300-400 miles ·with polka
become popular in ethnic. blue-col- and other instruments n.ot tradition- . because the festivals are attracting a music playing:"

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reveling in renewed popularity

By MITCH WE..

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple1e1nt, WV

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Sundly,June15,1917

OH • Point P11111nt, WV

Pomeroy • Mlddttport •

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·Teems ignore
cancer threat ·
and go for the ·
tan- and burn
'

By TRACY L. PIPP
The DetroH
Back in the '60s and '70s; teens
. and adults alike slathered ·them·selves with baby oil laced with
iodine and basked in the hot summer
.._
sun, to achieve the popular bronzed ·
look as quickly as possible;
Now, of course, they know better.
But just as baby boomers are realizing the risks they took and are
attempting to protect their already
sun-damaged skin, a new generation
is picking up where tll'eir parents left
off. Despite the danger,today's teens
are rediscovering tanning ~ and
sunscreen manufacturers arc·capital·
izing on the desire to be dark.
Banana Boat, one of the largest
manufacturers of sunscreens and
self-tanners, introduced a new line
of tanning products this year called
·Tan Express. 1be formulation, in
gel, lotion or spray, has a sun protection factor (SPF) of 0 or 2 and
·promises a "deep, dark tan" as
quickly as possible. Coppertone,
· another leac!ing f!!anufacturer, has a
similar line called Coppenone Gold.
And several stores with private label
brands, including Arbor and Meijer,
have competitive products.
Clinton Township, Mich., dermatologist Dr. Lenise Banse is among
·thousands of physicians nationwide
who are concerned for the health present and 'future -{)f teens.
"Kids i~ their teens and early 20s
:have a sense of invulnerability,"
Banse says. "They want to belong
and look cool. Peer pressure is
'tremendous, and they just can't
:envision what being sick would be
' like .
"Unfortunately. those are the
years when the most sun damage is
.'done, and the results don 't show up
until much' later."
·Sales of specialized tanning oils that
,produce the deepest tans - and the
,most skin damage from the sun .
.rose sharply in 1996.
. Unprotected sun exposure can
•have deadly consequences. One million new cases of skin cancer will be
diagnosed this year, most the result
of too many blistering s·unburns ..
,And researchers believe the eve.rincreasing rate of melanoma -.., the
pJOst serious kind of skin cancer that
experts now predict will strike one
· out of every 84 people, up from one
•in I,500 in i 930 - is linked in part
:to increased sun exposure, especial- ·
'ly as a child or adolescent. It affects
~bout 40,000 Americans yearly.
The tanning trend among teens is
' 'frightening," according to the
fomerican Academy · of Dermatology. But that doesn't stop teens and
~oung adults.
. "I admit, I don't always usc sun~lock," says Lynn. a 23-year-old
!marketing consultant who asked us . ·
to change her name. "I like having
some
color, so if I go out to tan a lit·
tle,
I
don't
u'se anything."
..__ _..;.;.__.;..,....,_........;;.;=..;.;._::w.;J
"Most of my friends usc baby oil
·when they're outside to tan faster.
Article submitted by:
·My sister docs, too," says 17-ycarold Emily Sizemore of Bloomfield
Janet Thomas
Township, Mich. The Groves High
School junior, who has "very fair"
March of Dimes .
skin, recently suffered a blistering
bum on her shoulders from a toolong day iri the sun despite sun. screen applications . Her friends
don't seem concerned about skin
. cancer. she says, but she is.
"It scares me big-timc,"·she says.
"But I am definitely in the minority
among my friends.·;

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RECEIVES PLAQUE • Accepting Platinum Sponsor PlaquH for Amlrlcsn EleCtric Power
are from left, Duane Phlegar, Gavin Plent Menager; MercedeS Sayre, Gavin Plant Captain; Gary
Jolla, Spom Plant Energy Production Supervlslor; Guyla Walbum, Sporn Plant Captain; Morty
Gilley, AEP River Transportation Captain; Mary K""t, Point Plaesant~aiiiDOIIa Dlltrfct Manager;
Carl Pattry, Mountaineer Plant Captain; Kim Gerlach, Point .Pieaaant-Galllpolla District Captain
and Charlie Powell, Mountaineer Plant Manager.

Tri~County

WalkAmerica awards reception·held

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The 1997 Tri-County WalkAmerica Awards Start Line Sponsor, One Valley Bank;
Reception was held on Monday, May 19, at The arid the Checkpoint Sponsors, AEP-River
I.nwe Hotel, Pt. Pleasan\ Theme for this years Transportation Division, Personnel Temp
WalkAmerica was "Walk For Someone YQU Services and AEP-Mountaineer Plant.
Finish Line Sponsor was Cahlevision.
l.Dve."
Lori Wilson, community director for the
Dianna Ellison presented awards to
March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation AEP as the Top Walk Team for the 1997
announced that this years goal was $80,000. WalkAmerica. AEP raised over $10,800.
"We surpassed our goal," said Lori Wilson. "We
Receiving awards were River Transraised over $89,000. It is YOUR dedicated sup- portation Division, Morty Gilley; Phillip
port that makes the difference in the lives of Sporn Plant, Guyla Walburn; Gavin
thousands of our nation's children."
Plant, Mercedes Sayre; Mountaineer
Lori Wilson presented certificates to commit· Plant, Carl Penry; and Pt. Pleasant/Galtee members in appreciation of their outstanding lipolis, Kim Gerlach.
·
contribution of tune, effort and support for
Carl Penry presented certificates to
WalkAmerica alld their dedication to the March SuperAmerica, as the Top New Team,
of Dimes mission of giving America's babies a who raised over $600 and Fruth Phannahealthy start in life.
cy as Top Team with the Most Walkers.
Tamara Zuspan, Chairman for the 1997 Tri- This is Fruth Phannacy's second year in
County WalkAmerica was unable to attend the a·row to win this award. They had over
Awards Reception. Committee members receiv- 200 walkers.
·
ing awards were Callie Cockerham, Marilyn
·Receiving the award from . Carol
Massie, Dianna Ellison, Bob Mitchell, Dianna Blaine for. the Top School Team was
·
Roush, Margaret Yoder, Jane· Graham, Marilyn North Point Elementary. Carol Blaine
RECOGNI'I;ION
H~;~bc::u~::
WalkAmerlca Ambassador from Mason
Martin, Angela Staats, Carl Pettry, Brenda Jivi- also presented a plaque to Tony
Harley Owners Group-Gallipolis Chap- ty, received a March of Dlmea certificate from
den, Carol Blaine and Janet Thomas.
Dianna Ellison presented a March of DimeS ter, as the winner in the T-Shlrt contest. ·Dianna Roush. Not pictured are Kelsey Dawn
· Others who entered the contest were Shular, Meigs County and Katy Dennison, Gal·
plaque to American Electric Power (AEP) as our
Platinum. Sponsor. Platinum Sponsors con- Fruth Pharmacy, Lakin Nursing Facilily, Ill County Ambassadors•.
tnbule $3,000 or more in cash or in-kind ser- Vaughan's IGA, Holzer Medical Center,
Disease, Thin Skin, No Muscular Mass, and at a
vices.
Shell Chemical Co., AKZO Nobel Chemicals, low Birth Weight.
Gold Sponsors for the 1997 WalkAmerica Inc., Gallia COunty Chamber of Commerce, and
Kelsey Dawn Shuler, four year old daughter
who donated $1,000 or more in money or in- AEP.
Pamela
Whaley and Steven Shuler, Pomeroy,
of
kind contributions received a March of Dimes
Receiving the Spirit Award was Burlile Oil OH, is in preschool at Carleton School. Kelsey
plaque from Jane Graham.
Co, Inc./ Little Johns Food Mart. Margaret
was diagnosed with PKU.
Gold Sponsors are AVI Food Systems, Yoder presented a March of Dimes plaque to Dawn
Katy
Dennison, age 9, is the daughter of
Burlile Oil Co. Inc., Peoples National Bank, Burlile Oil and a wreath to AKZO Nobel ChemMike
~nd Kim Dennison, Crown City, OH. She
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt. Pleasall) Food Mart icals, as runner-up for the Spirit Award.
is a third grade student at Hannan Trace Eleand Exxon, Pt. Pleasant Register, She11 ChemiHonored as the Top 'Individual Walker was mentary School. Katy was born at a low Birth
cal Co., Subway, The Image Gallery, WBYG Linda Williams. She has been the top individual
and is hearing impaired. She is now
Big Country 99.5, WMGG Magic 101, and walker for seven years, and has rai'sed over .Wei$ht
recetving
speech theraPY, and has had a cochlear
WMPO Lite 92.
$8,000. Margaret Yoder presented her with a implant.
'
Dianna Rqush presented certificates to the certificate of appreciation.
Own A Piece of.The Walk Sponsors receiving
Receiving WalkAmerica Jackets from Lori certificates from Bob Mitchell was Farmers
Wilson was Team Captains Morty Gilley, Carl Bank, Star Bank, Gallia Co. Vietnam Veterans of
Pettry, Guyla Walburn, Kathy Hood, Mercedes America #709, Disabled American Veterans, JorSayre and Kim Gerlach from AEP; Melody dan's Gas .Service, Village Insurance, Piercetin
· McKnight, AKZO Nobel Chemicals, Inc.; Terri Trucking, Duke Cleaners, Kiwanis Club, NAPA
Thomas, Fruth Pharmacy; Carol Blaine, Burlile Auto Parts, Thomas Do-lt Center, Beale EleOil Co.lnc.; Janice Henry and Sarah Weddell, mentary PTO, Smith Buick Pontiac, Rio Mini
Holzer Clinic; Melissa Keeton, Holzer Activi- Mart and L &amp; L Scrap Metals &amp; Recycling.
ties Assoc.; Becky Raymond, North Point EleBrenda Jividen presented certificates to Holimentary; Kathy Gibbs and Gale Patterson, day Inn, Kick-Off Sponsor; Moose Lodge, Team
V~ughan's IGA; Kim Dennison, Gallia ~o.
Captain Rally Sponsor; and Lowe Hotel, Awards
·
Local Schools; Donna Hysell, SuperAmenca; Ceremony Sponsor.
and·Janet Thomas, TOPS #OH 1383, Cheshire.
Lori.Wilson presented a certificate of appreTo receive a WalkAmerica Jacket, teams had ciation to each team who participated in WalkAan increase from 1996 of 15% or $500, merica. "Working together, the people of Gallia,
whichever was gr:eater.
Meigs and Mason counties have made the TriDianna Roush presented certificates to the County WalkAmerica the largest per-capita
1997 WalkAmerica Ambassadors. "Ambas- WalkAmerica event in the country.. To all .the
sadors are living illustrations of successful . walkers, helpers and sponsors who made it hapMarch of Dimes research and programs," said pen, we extend our most sincere thaitks and
Dianna Roush.
admiration," said Lori WilsOn. "Many children
WalkAmerica Ambassadors are Mitchell will lead happier, healthier lives because of your
Harbrecht, Mason County; Kelsey Dawn caring and generosity."
.
Shuler, Meigs County; and Katy Dennison, GalNational sponsors are ·CIGNA Health Care,
lia County.
Florida Orange Growers, K-Mart and Kellogg's:
AWARP • Carol Blaine, Burllla
Mitchell is the son of Jeffery and Kimberly
Anyone wishing information on the Tri011 Co. lnc.JUttle Johns Food Mart Haibrech~ New Haven. He is in the second County March of Dimes WalkAmerica, may
received the Spirit Award from Margarat grade at North Point Elementary School. contact Tamara Zuspan .at (304) 675-2763 or
"(~ during the awards recsptlon.
Mitchell, age 8, was born with Intensive Growth Lori Wilson 1-800-313-2911.

seck,

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Camp stamp i·s a.summer lifesaver

You can get a second I ine on ·a nal Dr. Scholl's Exercise Sandal is
·By AI\INE B. ADAMS and
stamp
(for an address or phone num- the Vermont Country Store. The
NANCY NASH.CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN; This ber) for an additional $1.95. Other ones we:re talking about have a
. ear my oldest child will be going to stamp kits arc available as. well as . wooden sole with a padded
~leep-over camp for the first time. some hard-to-find camp items such
adjustable leather strap to hold your
J!Absolutely everything he takes has as mesh laundry bags ($6.95); cot fout in.
!lo have his name on it. I think I sheets ($14.95); and a neat hOoded
The only hitch is the sizes availemember a column about a stamp poncho towel ($14.95).
able arc women's 5-10. The sandals ., the 1997 catalog. Also, the trees aie
·c amp Stamps arc made by pco- (Item 20662) are $29.9~ plus ship- •· available. from and Mellinger's
' or camp. Does ·it still exist? If so,
here can I get one? -- L. p.le with ce~cbral palsy at the Caring ping. To order, call ; 1-802-362-0285 N~rsery, North Lima, 011 44452.
Center Products Division. To order a or write P.O. Box 3000; Manchester
RKINS, Pasadena, Calif.
DEAR L.: Thank heavens for Camp Stamp or receive a flyer with Ctr., VT 05255.
No Credit, Slow Credit
amp Stamp, a permanent ink. ~tam- product. information. call; 1-800
OSAGE
ORANGE/HEDGE:
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
for all your kiddows' camp- SHOP-4-CAMP (746-7422) or 1- APPLES -- Earlier this year ~e
und clothing and stuff. Nan 800-STAMP KIT (782-6754).
wrote about the tree that produces
"We promise satisfaction or the these useful fruits, which have
ows what she's talking about
At Dute~ Mlller (;bE!Vr(llel,
money
is cheerfully refunded,,. Joy insect,repellent properties. Many
ause she has been getting three
WE CAN HEI.P
tpahamian youngsters re.dy for Lynn, executive director of the Car- · readers have told us the hedge
apples discourage spider~, snakes,
camp in Vermont for the last three ing Center, said.
..lfYou Have AI Leutll,300
DEAR
ANNE
AND
NAN:
My
rbaches
etc.
Zears.
·
·
a month Income
We've received stews of letters
~ This year it ~ill. be f~ur kids, 15- or 20-year-old Dr. Scholl's clogs
•
;t~ich translates mto stampmg San- .are wearing out. I cannot locate· a from readers who want to know
. litmna, Thristan, Alix and Colette replacement anywhere. They were where tliey can buy the tree or fruits.
:ri.Jndreds of times. If it weren 't for originally bought to cure a foot We gleaned our information. from
problem, but I now use them as slip-' the Herb Quarterly. For a reprint of · $ SAVE TH()USANDs $
~ stamp, Nan would go cuckoo.
pers or at the pool side. Has Dr. their article, send $3 .to Herb Quar~ The basic Camp Stamp kit
Don1 hy "'-llltlh Kentuclly
11111 0111o ~--t fl*el
fncludes a 2-inch ·long stamp, with Scholl's gone out of business or terly, P.O. Box 689. San Anselmo,
been
taken
over?
-HENRY
CA
94960.
Milly
V.llloltt Ate AYIIIIIble Willi
lPace for up to 14 characters and a
lack or white ink pad. It's $14.95, SKOCZYLAS, Baton Rouge, La.
Osage orange trees are available
NO MONEY DOWNI
· DEAR HENRY: The only place from: Windbfeak, 27635 S. Oglesby
CALL24HOURIADAY·
Ius $3,95 for shipping and 'hanling.
· that we 'know of that sells ·the origi- Rd., Canby OR 97013. Send $3 for ·_..__ _,;,7;;,DAYI;,;;,o,;.A;.;WEE,;,;;;;;,;.;K..--_,

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JTPA services Include:
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;_Child's keen
:eye-spots
:mistake on
· cereal box
"

. PENN TOWNSHIP, Pa. (AP) ·..Nicholas Mauro's fascination with
.dinosaurs 'predates the interest
.'engeodered by "Jurassic Park."
•· 1be 8-year-old has been studying
· · 'the prehistoric creatures since before
he could spell rex, let alone Tymnnnqsaurus.
, So the Westmoreland County boy
_knew immediately that information
on the back of a Lucky Charms box
was wrong. He read it while munch: ing a bowl of the cereal this week.
. "You can't get him on
:,dinosaurs,'' said his grandfather,
, LOuis Nahory of Penn Township.
To Nicholas, a rhinoceros-like
dinosaur pictured on the box was
.,obviously, a Triceratops, bilt the box
identified it as a Stegosaurus. Unlike
' the Triceratops, which has horns and
·a hard piece of skin rising from its
. neck like a fan, a Stegosaurus would
. have spade-shaped humps down its
back.·
"I was pretty sure I was right,''
said Nicholas, who received his first
' dinosaur replica when he was 2. He
now has about 75 models.
He and his mother, Vicky Mauro,
double-checked some reference
books - Nicholas has more than a
dozen - and called General Mills,
•·the nation's second-largest cereal
maker.
"My mom said the woman she
talked to told her to shake my hand
and congratulate me," he said.
Nicholas was 'not the first
dinosaur expert to point out the mistake, said .Greg Zirnprich, public
relations manager for Minneapolisbased General Mills.
The company has fielded several
dozen calls in the last few weeks but
.too late to correct the error, he said·
Thursday. · No more boxes carrying
the dinosaur dmwings were. sched, uled to be printed.
. "Kids are more familiar with the
dinosaurs than most adults,'' Zim' prich said. "We appreciate all the
people who have called in."

;r

... ' rePsgsCJ.

My whole body seemed to be tuming inside out. I h.eard myself
scream.
Suddenly, I awakened. It was
very quiet. A police officer was
standing over me. I uw a doctor. My
body was mangled. I was ut~ted
with blood. Pieces of jagged · glass
·were sticking out all over. Strange
that I couldn't feel anything.
Hey, don't pull that.sheet over my
head. I can't be dead. I'm only 17.
I've got a date tonight.l'm supposed
to have a wonderful life ahead of
me. I haven't lived yet I can't be
dead.
·
Later, I was· placed in a 'drawer.
My folks c101c to identify me. Why

t

did they have to see me like this?
Why did I have to look at Mom's
eyes when she faced the most terrible ordeal of her life? Dad suddenly
looked verj old. He told the man in
charge, "Yes, he's our son."
The funeral was weird. 1 saw all
of my relatives and friends walk
tow~ the casket. Theyc looked a)
me wtth the saddest eyes l've ever
seen. Some of my buddies were crying. A few of the girls touched my
hand and sobbed as they walked by.
Please, somebody -- wake me up!
Get me out of here. I can't bear to
see Mom and Dad in such pain. My
grandparents are so weak from grief
they can barely walk.

ae

My brother IJid sill« . .
zombies. They move lib 1 t • ..
a daze. Everybody. No --~
believe this. 1'an't believe It,
Pleue don't billy a! J'•
.
cte.d! 1 ~ve a lot of livi" 10 do I
Willi 10 taqh and
I
10 sing IJid duce. PleMe dall'l
me in the llfOIIndl I prorniM If
pvc me just one more cJw e,
I'll be the most careful dri¥11'la
whole world. Alii want ischance. Please, God, I'm aely 17. ·
-Sead II" 1'"- toA..a
Creaton Syadlcate, 51'71 W.
wry JmL, Sulle 700, 1M

nan.,...

:$'

c.t1f. 91045

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Church ·to

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mark 25th
anniversary . ·~

GALLIPOLIS - .1be Gallipolis
Christian Church, SR 588 will cel~­
brate its 25th Anniversary June :Ill
through 22. ·
•
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1be church began Feb. 20 in Mr.
and Mrs. John Elardo's living r&lt;dt
with 12 adults and five children ~
years ago. A few weeks later=
church moved to and later pun:
the old Warner property on Mq
lia Drive. On Nov. 12, 197~
church moved to a remodeled tw.
car garage as sanctuary on the s
property.
On May 31, 1974 they pure
property on SR 588 from Olen
ell, and a ground breaking cele"+tion took place. 1be first servicjs.
were held in the new structu(e .
Mirch 30, 1975.
~
Again in Octobei', 1990 anot~r
ground breaking ceremony toqit
place on 588 to build a new .sanctt·
ary to·hold SOO people. The lint ~·
vice·was held in the new·.sanctu~
May 12, 1991. 1be former Slruclole
is now used as an educational
ing and fellowship hall.
. TRIPLE GRADUATION • Alon, Sharon and Daniel Frana •re triplet who will be graduating together frci(ll Ohio Stele UniveraltY lin
Evangelist Denny Coburn ·
.
Columbua. They ""' 1hown here ready to gradult8 June 12. In Columbu1.
been with the church for 25 years~ . .
1
1bere will be a special din:r
6
p.m., Friday in hoJUir of the c
memben.
.t
On
Saturday,
June
21
at
12
P·J!I·
COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP)- They were born ,
"At first it was like an assembly line,'' she ers aren't around, they pursued different areas of
there will be a picnic at 0.0. Mcijitogether at Ohio State University's hospital. So said. "One, two, three..one, two, three. Change study:
.
tyre Park'with a 25-foot long sutm1jtit was only fining that Sharon, Alon and Daniel the diaper and feed, change the diaper and feed.
- Alon will graduate magna c~m laude with
rine sandwich. Special music will fle
Frank would beeome the first triplets to grilduate . And look, here they are already graduating. It a bachelor's degree in psychology. He will start
presented by the Wallace Brothm
together from the university.
seems like only yesterday." .
medical school at the University of Cincinnati in
from Blllboursville, WNa and MiiJ·
Just a few months before the triplets' birth on · · 1be joyousness of the ·occasion was tempered the fall :
vin Whiteman from Charlesuin,
- Daniel. will graduate summa cum laude
Nov. 3, 1974, their parents, Moshe and Sarah Friday when, for only the second time in the
W.Va. · 6 p.m., Sa.turday. Ligllt
Frank, moved to Columbus from Israel so school's history, bad weather forced the cancel- with a bachelor's degree in ·accounting. He has
refreshments will be served after tile
Moshe could start graduate work at Ohio State lation of the university's commencement. . .
accepted a job with the accounting firm of Ernst
concert.
i;
in mechanical engineering.
Rains .washed out the ceremony at Ohio Sta- . &amp; Young in Atlanta.
AI 9:30 a.m,, Sunday, June 22
Though she came from a family with seveml dium. The university last had to cancel a com- Sharon .earned her bachelor's degree in
Sunday School the Tlmothys aP,d
..sets of twins, Sarah.said the news that she.w'ould mencement in 1941, said Ruth Gerstner, an ·Ohio consumer affairs and is pursuing jobs in 'New
Interns and Associates, Evan C~,
give birth to triplets in a strange country without State spokeswoman.
York and Chicago.
Mark N0ner, Derek Stump, Jlitk
"We' ve experienced being away from each
her relatives came as a· shock.
·
The triplets, along with the other 5,516 gradPerry, Fellow Wilson, Russ M~,
"Mom told me that the doctor asked her how uating students, can either pick up their diplo- other," Alon said.
Phil Luckeydoo, Jeff Patrick, Jel!"Yeah, but this is moie permanent," Daniel
many she wanted,'' Sarah told The Columbus mas at the school or receive them in the mliil.
r.oy Wasch, and Rob Sanders will
Dispatch for a story Friday. He held up one finThat the siblings all ended up at Ohip State added.
speak. Letters will be read fr&lt;!in
ger, then raised a second, and then, after paus- . was a matter of ecqnomics and the recommen· associates and nmothys who can~pt
'I know, wherever I go, I always mention my
ing, lifted a third. "When he held up the third dation of their older brother, Tal, who graduated
be p~~nt.
~ i~
brothers," Sharon said, looking from sibling to
finger, she started to cry."
from the school two years aigo.
· The Sunday worship at 10:~0
Though the triplets 'are close, sharing the sibling. "I mean, it's not the first thing I tell peoSlie . marveled at how fast the years had
a.m. will bC lead by Dick Moyer, ~
s'ame friends and hanging out together when oth- ple, but for some reason it always comes up."
passed.
wonhip leader 25 years ago. DenJ)y
I
Coburn will deliver a special sermin
"The DivC!'Sity in the Lot-d'sChuro~"
for the worship service.
Jeff Patrick, associate and
Luckeydoo will present the sen1ilte
Sunday
evening.
"Hercules"
opens
around
the
the hype surrounding the new ani- for the premiere of the movie "Poc- merchants ·tO go alon• with the
For
more information co1n~~t
mated .film.
ahontas."
blackout, Disney executive Richard country on June 27. The parade will
Denny
Coburn
or Jeff Patrick at
follow a screening Saturday at the
While thousands apparently have
But while critics complained Cook said.
church
office,
44&amp;1863.
Street lights, too, will be turned New Amsterdam Theater.
agreed to tum out their lights so Dis- about police-ordered stt:eet closings
.ney's 29 floats - iUuminated with Saturday, Fiftlr Avenue merchants off as the parade approaches and
566,000 hand-dyed bulbs - will were getting into the lights-out spir- turned on as the parade goes by. The
$56-an-hour ovenime tab for a pair
shine· more brightly, some New it
Yorkers fret that the spectacle is the
"Everybody's doing it," said Bob of city electricians is being picked
latest in what local columnists have Johnson, assistant manager of a up by Disney, which has annual revenue of more than $5 billion.
called the "Orlandofication" of Doubleday bookstore."
About 2,000 police officers New York.
"We think it's a great family
Disney recently held a splashy, . eventi' said Beverly Butler, spokes- the normal number for a parade opening for its re~ovated New Ams- woman for the Gap chain, which will be posted along the route for
crowd control and crime prevention.
terdarn Theater in Times Square, and also will participate.
·
two years ago drew 100,000 people
Disney has been working si.nce Disney will pay the added police
•
to a mockup village in Central Park February to recruit Fifth Avenue costs.

Po'!i-

buit·

Triplets first to graduate together from Ohio State

t

:oi·sney to ·darken F·ifth Avenue with 'Herculean' parade
By CHRIS OLERT .
A1aoclated Prea1 Writer
" NEW YORK (AP) -Talk about
, your Herculean tasks.
·
Disqey has persuaded Fifth ·
Avenue businesses and residents to
'tum out their lights after dark for a
'parade celebrating the release of
1be·glowing "electrical parade"
.will make its way through a darkened stretch of midtown Manhattan
.on Saturday night .
The Walt Disney Co. is paying
New York ·City $500,000 to help
cover the costs of the parade, part of

Manufacturers, however, say
· there is a market for these products.

·Areyouss·

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own. Would you pint itqain, Ann? remember bow I wheedled the ar
Ann
--Tyler, TCllu
·out of Mom. "Special favor," I
Dear T)'ler: Hm it .is. Dead at pleaded. "All the kids drive." When
Landers
Seventeen by John Berrio
the 2:30 p.m. bell nns. I threw my
· Agony claws my mind. I 1m a bOoks in the locker ... free until
Sll!tistic. W!len I tint got bere, !felt tomorrow morning! I ran to the
very much alone. I was over- parking lot, excited .at the thought of
whelmed by pf, and I expected to driving a car and being my own
.By ANN LANDERS
boss.
find sympathy.
, Dell' Ann Landers: You have
I found no sympathy. I saw only
It doesn't matter how the acci·
,'ocaaionally .printed an essay about thousands of others whose· bodies dent h~ppened. I was goofing off.,
a 17-year-old boy who was killed in wm as badly mangled as mine. I going too fut, taking crazy chances.
an automobile accident. I'm embar- was given a number and placed in a But I was enjoying my freedom and
. rassed to say I misplaced my copy category. The category was called having fun. The last thing I remem:;ifter loaning it to an elderly friend. "Traffic Fatalities."
ber was passing an old lady who
-"!or ~~on. will soon be receiving
The day I died was an ordinary seemed to be going awfully slow. I
JUs dnver s hcerise, and we would day. How I wish I had talcen the bus! heard a crash and· fell a terrific jolt. ·
,love to ~ve that essay for him to. But I was too cool for the bus. I Glass and steel flew everywhere.
, read before he. starts driving on his .

~•Hercules . "

"

PonWoy • Middleport • O.lllpol18, OH • Point Pl1111nt, WV

Essay educates young drivers on dangers of the road

Health experts are concerned that
. manufacturers of sun products are
' sending out mixed messages by
placing SPF-0 products on sh~lves
next to SPF-30 sunblock.

r------•·------., for a ·i oh?

E

: Sunday, June 15, 1117

.fArchitectural beauty/shows in Las Vegas
.

-

.

.
:By DOROTHY SAYRE
acreage is utilized by .the Secret Gar: It would be hard to choose the den of Siegfried and Roy, which is
• rnQSI beautiful hotel in Las Vegas. filled with exotic white tigers,
5However, for sheer aesthetic appeal, striped white tigers, white lions,
• The Mirage is hard to beat In the •black panthers, snow· leopards and
~ opulent lobby, the wall behind the an Asian elephant Adjacent to this
•
front desk is a garden ·is the bottlenose dolphin
huge aquarium habitat. Guided iours introduce the ·
teeming with col· visitor to this rare treat.
·orfu\,
tropical
Siegfried and Roy appear in tl1eir
fish. The restau- · own theater in The Mimge. During ·
nnts and shops on my six or seven visits to.Las Vegas,
the ground floor Siegfried .and Roy'~ show has been
Atrium area ar~ the only show I've ever desired tb
filled with the see. I've been told they are ·masters
sounds of splash- (If illusion, with an elephant disap.:
ing water as you . · pearing; and huge, ~ined ca_ts grac. :nverse through antinforest or cross · tng the staae. Whtle plannrng our
• stream by bridJC. Real orchi~ · visit to Las Vegas this April, my hus:bloom in the lush vegetation. Down ~ and I decided to lllteod the
:One corridor is the f~mous white show. From Ohio, I called the
:.laer lair of Siegfried.and Roy fame. Mintge a month or so before depar:At the hotel's front entrance, twe and tried to buy tickets. I was
!pvenings find avolcano erupting fire told tickets werwn't sold that far in
~smoke IOO 'feet hiah over the advance.Aiso,thepriceofS89each
~
was very IOberilllJ. I thollpt when
• The • Mirap and ita sister we llrived in Lu Vegu, pahaps I
-lkuino, Tre11ure lllaild, ate could locale a "deal." No dells. SilO
~ on 10
the ll1ter llkina Wll jllll too IIIIlCh. So, I lliU have
:lip only five. Plrt of The Mlrqe's not MOil Slesfried 111C1 Roy, arid I
~

.

aa;

.

'

probably. never will unless I win a added the Forum complete with
upscale shops set in "ancient Rome."
lottery!
Curiously, everything else in Las My favorite is The Museum CompaVegas is basically low-priced. Food ny, which carries affordable gifts
prices are on a sliding scale fr0111 from many large city museums. For
almost free to expensive, but even chocolate lovers, there is The
the budget meals are a value. Buf- Chocolate Chariot Shop, which also
f~ts ~l?ouod with high quality. The carries wonderful sugar-free chocoHoliday Inn Deli offers a 99-cent lates. I first visited The Forum about
shrimp cocktail, which is great!'lf three years ago and was taken by its
you drink·, drinks are free or inex- spaciousness and beauty. The founpensive. Hotel rooms are relatively tains, the statuary, the shops, are all
inexpensive. But, for anyone wanti- encompassed under a changing sky.
ng to see shows, most have The sky transforms from day to
·increased in price tremendously. night, and the hourly talking statutes
While I have only my friends and makes it a memorable experience.
family to tell me, they have unani- Caesar's Palace has. plans for a
mously said the seating in Lu Vesas . Forum II and an additional 800
ihows is "cramped to very rooms.
cnmped." Except for Siegfried and
Everything in Las Vegas races to
Roy, other performers can oa:uionbecome
bigger and better. Arid, the
ally be seen .on . television or in
movies, so why pay high prices to be visitors continue to come.... However, my opinion is The Mirage and
uncomfortable?
Caesar's Palace will be difficult to
Another favorite hotel of eleJant top.
.
.
splcndor·il Caesar's Palace. Caes1r's
llollllhr ..,..............
Palace is celebratins its 30th
.. . . Cllullly. annivaury by addins 1200 new , _ , oA ;...
rooms. About five yean 110 they -lhtrll....... ~ Cllllo jual -

_.... ........--....
D

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3~11

$

oubles

411 Doubles

99$
99
Any _..
Exp.

~ny

Exp.

From .orltln•l 110 or 135 C-41 proeen rollt.

Tt_y Ul Out Fer All .
Your Pheteflnlahlng N••••

�••

·,

•

Entertainment

I

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I

••

June11, ,..,

Section

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Iunday, June 11, ,..,

;.,.._-------.,...-----;--People in the n e w s - - - - - - - - - - - NEW YORK (AP) - Police say two members of the rap lrio Naughly by
"Their lillie boy looked freaked out, and she was pregdant- those guys
· had no right to do what they were doing," Sialana told the Outlook new spa·
·Nature were living up to their name.
Lead rapper Anthony Crisa, known as Treach, and Vincent Brown, known ~r ?n Wednesday. Schwarzcnesger and wife arc "really famous, they make
·
as Vinnie, were arrested in Harlem mtlhons of dollars, but they were just taking their son to school."
along with four other.men Thurs'I'w? JlhOtographers are out on bail, accused of false imprisonment, reckday night and charged ~ith le~s drivmg and battery for allegedly ambushing the couple after a road purweapons possession and reckless sull thl\t led to a car crash.
driving.
Sianala. wh!l was named as a batlery victim, tried to block a photograph.
'The six m' n were pulled over er from taking Shriver's picture.
in two cars, and police found a gun
"I know that women, when they're pregnant, are real fragile. Stress like
in each vehicle, police spokesman that could have a detrimental effect.- and these guys didn't care " said
Sialana, who has a 2 1/2-year-old daughter.
' '
Joe Cavitolo said.
The two rappers awaited
_arrsignment Friday.
· NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- Patsy Cline has been dead for more than 30
Criss and Brown, both 26, . _years, yet she's still got a new live album coming out.
·
make up Naughty by Nature with
"Patsy Cline: Live at the Cimarron Ballroom," due out July 29 from
rapper Kay Gee. The group's first MCA Records, is ml!de from tapes found in a house where Cline once lived.
big hit was the 1991 song 'The singer was killed in a plane crash in 1963.
"O.P.P.," and the lrio won the best
The 1961 concen in Tulsa. Okla. , was her first show following a ncarrap album Grammy in 1996 for fatal car.accident that left her with a broken wrist, dislocated hip and cuts on
"Poveny's ParadiSe:."
face. The album includes her joking with the audience about women drivers
Naughty by Nature's agent,. and her recovery.
· Cara Lewis, had no immediate
."In three months, I go back for more plastic surgery and they say they 're
Arnold Schwarzenegger and
comment.
gmng to give me a face-liftin'- that's going to make me look like new,"
Marla Shriver
·
the 28-ycar-old singer said.
.
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)
The new disc contains 17 track!;, including hits "Walking After Mid·
:- · Even the Terminator needs help now and then, and UPS driver Randall night" and "Lovesick Blues," and three songs she never recorded in a studio- "Shake, Rattle and Roll," "Stupid Cupid" and "When My Dream·
.Sialana was glad to give it.
· Sialana was on the job for United Parcel Service last month when he saw boat Comes Home."
'Arnold Schw'ai-zenegger and Maria Shriver accosted by paparazzi as they
LA PORTE, Texas (AP)- Evander Holyfield says he nearly quit boxing
'drove their son to school.

'Harmony for All' to .be presented at Ariel Theatre
GALLIPOLIS - Good close harmonies will resound throughout the
Ariel Theater at 8 p.m. Saturday,
June 21 when the French City
. Chapter presents its third annual
. · night of harmony -entitled "Harmony for All.'.'
Chartered in June 1996 in historic Ariei Theater the French Cily
Chapt~r of· the . Society for the
Preservation and Encouragement of
·Barbershop Quanet Singing in
America (S.P.E.B.S.Q.S.A., Inc.)
has brought championship barber•shop to sell-out audiences. "Uptown ·
Sound," the 19~6-1997 Johnny
Appleseed Dislrict Champion's, will
be this year's featured entertain.ment, continuing this enviable
. championship tradition.
Dynamic entenainers, ''Uptown
Sound" produces a fast-pace mixture of traditional and contemporary
acappella, four-pan, male, harmony.
. Their varied repertoire embfl\Ces
barbershop, gospel, 60s ·pop, ·songs
.of the big band era and zany comedy tunes. Just a few days after the
GalliP.Oiis show they will be one of
threc!qu·anets representinglthe John,
ny Appleseed District (Ohio, West
Virginia and western Pennsylvania)
competing for : the International
Championship title in Indianapolis,
Ind. Its memberS Jeff Archer, Dave
Calland, Steve Kovach and Steve
Denino hail from Toledo. Canton
and Columbus. They have been
singing as "Uptown Sound'.' since
the summer of 1,995.
"The Treblemakers,'' 28 men from Gallipolis,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Jackson, and Huntington,
W.Va. under the direction of Jim McClelland,
Wilbur McCormick and John VanReeth, are the
French City Chapter's chorus arid the show's
hosts.
·
Out of the chorus. will appear two chapter
quanets "Double Treble" and "Gentlemen
Four." Barbershop ballads, Broadway show
tunes and up-beat selections will be sung by the
chorus and quartets. Chorus and quanet's members hall from Gallipolis, Jackson, Point Pleasant, Pomeroy, Huntington, Milton and pOints in
between.

•

him.

ln Gallia

pie to become interested in singing as a lifetime
recreational activity thiu is as rewarding as any
avocation on e~nh . The program will therefore
conclude with a medley entitled "Teach the Children to .Sing/Keep the Whole World Singing."
Tickets to "Harmony for All" are available
from chapter members and may be purchased
from Haskins~ Tanner, phone number (614) 4460576 and Corbin-Snyder Furniture, phone number (614) 446-1171.
Following ihe show at 10:30 p.m. an "afterglow" featuring the same performers in an informal setting with fond and beverages will take
place just a few doors away from the Ariel Theater in B.P.O.E. Elks Lodge No. 107.

By ODIE O'DONNELL ·

GALLIPOLIS - Relocated inter-sections, wider roads, . cleaner
'creeks, gas and electric lines relocated, and replacement o( bridges all add
up to the biggest highway improve;
ment project Galli a County has· wit'nessed since the Route 35 by-pass .
was completed nearly 10 years ago.
Most of this construction is .centered at the congested intersection of
'State Route 160 in front of the Ohio
,Valley _Bank, Fruth Pharmacy, and
Holzer Medical Center. When completed l;&gt;y late fall, the improvements
'should make a smoother pattern for ·
-vehicular traffic to flow through the

,

He faced Cecil once more, at a
state tournament in Atlanta a year
later. Holyfield said he prayed for a
victory and got it.
Naugh1y by Nature
"I learned you have setbacks,"
.
Holyfield told.the church group. "But from then on, when I lost, I &lt;~ever ·
wanted to quit."

.
.
.
Caribbean
cruise,
and
she
agrees
to
ous chaos and quick cuts, explosions
By BOB THOMAS .
go. Big mistake.
and flying glass, panic and mayhem
Associated Preee Writer
-' · The opening sequence of "Speed
A- fellow passenger on the voyage while Dafoe and Patrie phly a dead.2: Cruise Control" is an homage,_ turns out to be Willem Dafoe, a bril- ly tat-and-mouse game. .
The end of the voyage is truly
probably unintended, to the James liant scientist who plotted all the
Bond series, the granddaddy of the computer controls on the ship. After · spectacular; too bad, it's been
high-tech action . movies. Jason he is discovered to have a terminal revealed in television commercials.
Patrie, a fearless L.A. cop, careens ailment(he thinks leeches will pro- · Patrie, who assumed the role
his motorcycle over hill roads as he long his life), the cruise line dumps when Keanu ·Reeves declined tile
chases a hijacked truck.
'
him.
.
sequel, may well lead a trend to
Patrie's pursuit, though filled
Incensed, he plans to use all his younger, thinking, action stars; he
with stuntS, lacks tlie invention of computer skills to destroy the ship excels in all depanments. And But,the Bond prolol!ues. It does prepare and make ofT with the millions of lock again scores as a natural-born·
the audience for the two-hour roller- dollars wonh of diamonds on board. coward with a trace of reluctant
Ah;how could today's villains func- · bravery.
coaster ride that follows.
Counterpoint to the chase, Sandra tion without the computer?
. Dafoe is perfectly cast as an intelBullock takes a driver's test, barely
The cruise begins with the usual lectual without a conscience, and
avoiding a few crashes to the horror merriment, the camera establishing Temuera Morrison lends strength as
of her in~tor (a hilarious Tim the bores and the lovable passen- a ship's officer.
Conway). When she encounters her gers, .as well as the competent crew.
-After the two ·l s~eds" and
boyfriend, Patrie, at the end of his Bullock and Patrie become ''Twister," Jan De Bont wears the
,adventure, she is appalled to learn he entranced by· the Caribbean . crown as king !If the action-thriller
isn't the sedate street cop he claims ·ambiance and each o!her. As they. directors. He also originated the
dance cheek-tCH:heek, he decides to story with Randall McCormick, who
to be.
wrote the script with Jeff Nathanson.
Bullock has had enough of dan- take the big step and propose. ·
Before he can get the words out,
" Speed 2: Cruise Control" is a
·ger (remember the bus ride?). She
wants to break ofT their romance, but Dafoe commences his diabolical 20th Century Fox reletise produced
What ·follows is continu- by De Bont, Steve Perry and
he surprises her with ticliets for a

Reunion policy

.

Michael Peyser. Rated Po-13 for
language, excitement and a child in
peril. Running time: 12S. minutes.
Motion Picture Association of
America rating definitions:
G - General audiences. All ages
admitted.
PG- Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.
PG-13 - Special parental guidance strongly suggested for-children
under 13. Some material may he
inappropriate fo~ young children.
R Restricted. Under 17
accompanying parent or

Angela ·Bowie·: Diva
and house painter ·
body toned. Painting iswussy, she .
says with a grin.. ,
TUCSON, Ariz. - Angela
Later this year, she will embark
Bow.ie slrides into a coffeehouse a . on a tour to Greece. She's plannin11:
bit bothered thai her company had to do more recording so a fall tour
arrives! first.
.
will include new music.
She's over it quickly. Angela Many of her appearances will be
Bowie wasn't put on this Eanh to with three dancers and singing to a
recorded track.
sweat the details:
She orders a (coffee) latte and .
. "I think people who are not perlaunches into · a conversation that formance artists suffer a lot doing
rilnges from politics to middle age to track dates," she says. "I don't
house painting to rock 'n~ roll to know about you, but when I go to a
horse breeding. With Bowie, the nightclub I don't go 'cause I want to
topic can and does take the most hear someone sing a song exactly
unexpected tum.
like they sang it on the record."
She's plugging her new CD,
She laughs heanily.
"'Ole World Needs Changing."
"I've always been slack, slack,
"I find dance music a great place very slack about track shows. You
for political statements," Bowie can never he that with a band.' A
says. "I think the~e·s nothing better band will make you be right on your
toes."
.. . .
,
. !han the angry voice of.youth.
"I have tcen'age daughters and a
Somehow, her train of thought
grown-up son ·and I would be very shifts to a time when she lived in
indulgent if I were to walk away Paradise Valley and bred horses.
from the things left unfinished that I Which makes her think how many
was railing about in my youth."
good times she's spent in Arizona.
Bowie is not afraid to take a stand
"It's nice, isn't it? We're-close to
for or against something she feels Rocky Point. We.·re· close to the
strongly-about.
Mexican border. You don't feel like
"I'm very fonunate," she says. some isolated, stupid Yank - thl:
"I've had the opportunity of having ugly American- which we've dis. intelligent, bright, ·s'lpan, interested pelled a lot since the '50s which I'm
people ask me whar'l thought for a
"
long time. And because I've had that ~~-.....,;~=---------,;,;;;;~
platform, I hope I've always had
something to say that at 'least made a
person think.''
Bowie.has done a lot of living in
her 40-some-odd years.
·
"No matter which way .I cut it,
I'm middle-aged. That's the truth.
Family Night Is
We've got .to think about that. I
Back ... Only Better/
don't really think that it's an appropriate title anymore because it's not
EVERY IUESDAY IIIGHI
like it denotes any wisdom or
4 P.M.·9 PA OIILY .
respect. It's just a description of
where you are in an age thing.
"I would like it if they called us
the wise, old elders, you know!
Something appropriate like that.
With plenty of bowing and scrap-

Ebentino named to post

tf/e

'

Galli&amp; native named to new position .

N!l exc:eptionil-will be made.
•

•

By .MARK SMITH

. CIIIACIC,

. BLANK"
AND

MiliA IORYINO,
·IJIA KUDROW IN
ROMY AND MICH!LE'B
HIGH SCHOOL RI!UNION •

I,

http://WWW.eurekanet.com

""*

occunence.

Looking for ,aboye-a"erage growth potential?

DAN AVIOIOYO II
GROSSE POINTE

_...

1\ II ' Ill ,
I fl 'II II k I

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set"

Slug control is a matter ·of attrition

She howls with delight at her
halfway serious suggestion, which leads to a more serious thought: a
-panel of ex-presidents that convenes
to answer questions on government
issues.
"Don't ~ou think they should
earn those pensions?" she asks
earnestly.
Eventually, the conversation
returns to music and how Bowie is
preparing to go on the road. She's
been helping a friend paint houses.
"Because.I'm too stingy to go to
the gym,'~ Bowie says.
She prefen heavy-duty tasks,
'though, such as framinll:. to 11:et her

local -Internet access
with asmile.

With the family reunion seuon
quickJ,I approaching many will be
1ubmi1ting anicles of family lll;livities for publication.
To ensure ptompt publiCJitilln, the
Gallipolis Daily 1\'ibune and The
Daily Sentinel requests th.a uticlea
" JIAIIy typed and double if*:ed
for euy editi•l· Reunion items
lhould 1101 e•cced 300 words and
be submiued within 30 days of

ro

BRIDGE WO RK UNDERWAY - An operator
Pharm!ICY and the former Thoola•
·arc~
Th'
·
1 h
1
:
ts proJect, P us t e rep acement
from Smith-Johnson Conatructlon Co. In
When complat!KI thla aectlon of the highway
of the 58-year old bridge spanning
I
will be axpandecl to five lanes for eele1y and
C::hickamauga Creek on State Route
Co um1KJ8ll shown operating a hydraulic hamamoother
·1ralflc flow. ·
588 (State Street), is tenuitively
mer to cut away the wing-walla and abutment
of the S1ata Route 160 bridge between Fruth .
:;cheduled for completion sometime .
during September or October, tift..
Around the corner, nonh toward
depending on the weather. The State
Route 588 span, just west of Gallia Holzer Medical Center/Clinic, State
Academy high school, was erected Route 160 is taking on a new took to
about 1939 during the era of the · approximately Brown's Market, a
Works Project Administration (WPA) distance of2,800 feet. The creek thai
with a wooden-floor and steel spans.' runs parallel to Route 160, across
.•. Empto1ees of Precon Construe- from SEOEMS headquarters, is being
tton Co. of Marietta, aided by . widened and lined with rip-rap stone
employees of utility companies and for better flood control.
Pity of Gallipolis workers, worked
A bridge in front of SEOEMS will
'lirough the night on Sunday, June 8, · have another lane added; making four
and completed the job of relocating lanes of traffic past the entrance to
telephone and water lines about 6 Holzer and Woodland Centers to the
· a.m. on Monday. When completed by traffic signa~ at the intersection.
bite September the new bridge wilt
Also. visitors to the Holzer com. feature a concrete deck.
plex will be treated to a much wider
· The State Route 160 project was and more accessible entrance and exit
actually started in late winter when when the reconstruction is completAmeritech communications and ed by A. J. Stockmeister Construction
NEW HOLZER ENTRANCE· A new bridge and new 1rlfllc la.naa
Columbia Gas lines had to be relo- Co. of Jackson . This new addition to
.
will
make the driveway at the Holzer Medical Canter/ Clinic aafer
cated . before actual cconstruction the Holzer driveway should eliminate
and
mora accaaaabla when completed later thla summer. A
could begin.
much of the congestion faced by peesmoother traffic flow Into the complex end onto S1ate Route 160
This project will he done in phas- pie entering or exiting the facility.
should eliminate much of the currant congestion now laced by
es to enable traffic to be maintained
A contract has been awarded to
motorlste.
.
.
·
thfoughout the construction period. It 588 Incorporated (Jack Swain) ·to
Robens staled this week "that this but .the current location of the Park
will see a new road built from the relocate the City of Gallipolis water
LANCASTER - The Secretary of aggregates, grain, fertilizers, chemiarea
will have a totally new look once and Ride, near Bob McCormick
intersection of Bob McCormick Road aod sewer lines affected by.the conthe
Army recently announced the cats and petroleum products.
we
have
finished
and
people
using
Road,
Will
not
be
disturbed.
to join the proposed five-lane stretch struction
·
Ebetino is responsible for the
.
of Cl!arles A. Ebetino
total cost of the ODOT highway
for a distance of about 1,000 feet
Smith-Johnson Construction Co. this road should find it much easier
Jr,;t
AEI!··
•r:;.
&amp;~neral
managemen\ of AEP's coal
gil. p~·.,ie,t'ill ~nd out pf improvem~nt js projected
toward the traffic Signal in front of of Columbus has the contract for .to pass t!trou_
1 .",r,(oliem a!.ftl no~ -'$3;6~4'.24S:oo·'., Yiith a con,pl~ii..OQ;,;
the Ohio Valley Bank. The &lt;1ld bridge · everything ,'jnvolving the highway the~ fllllilil.•
i~f!t~~~~:~~~--·:·- '!lining,
preparation
and as
transponation subsidiaries,
as well
fuel prothat
a
smah
portton of
Hike and date' for Oct. 31, 1997.
in front of the · former Thaler Ford improvement and Phil Roberis of
curement.
He
also
serves
as
presiBike
trail
will
have
to
be
relocated
building is undergoing a total face- Gallipolis is the project engineer.
dent and chief operating officer of
AEP's nine coal subsidiary compaserve a two-year nies. ,AEP's Riv.er Transportation
term.
Division transpons more than 22
"
.
The 11- million tons of coal annually on the
ties TWilight Vegetable Tour will be EBENTINO
member IWUB Ohio and Kanawha rivers. and their
soil line. The slugs will crawl in each sioil office.
ByHALKNEEN
advises the Con- tributaries.
If you have a computer that has held at Shane Pugh Farms (Doak
night as they are attracted by the odor.
Have slugs invaded your yard?
A native of New York', Ebetino
· The cool, wet spring has b!:en ide- Remove .the slugs daily and destroy CD Rom,capability or Internet access Greenhouses) SR 7 Nonh, Marietta, gress and Secretary of the Army on holds a bachelor of science degree in
Ohio.
Registration
starts
at
6
p.m.
and
priorities
for
construction
and
you can obtain fact sheets by pur-·
al for the survival of slugs much to · them .
chasing
Exten'sion's Ohioline CD tour slilrts at 6:30p.m.. Ohio 'State financing of lock and dam projects civil engineering from Rensselaer ·
Protective
barriers
of
ash,
lime
and
·
the regret of the ' homeowner and
Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y.
,farmer. Slugs eat young tender sand have been mildly successful (contains over 1000' extension fact University Extension Vegetable Spe- required for safety and efficiency of He began his AEP System career in
leaves, plants and fruit Slugs are ani- over the . past century. The barriers sheets and 39 bulletins) or by "surf- cialist, Bob Precheur, · and Plant · barge mo~efnents on the nation's 1977 as an assistant engineer in the
mals that belong to the Mollusk fam- actually work by injuring tl)e slimy ing ihe net" through our access code,· Pathology Specialist, Mac Riedel, inland and intracoastal system of AEP Service Corporation's Materiily. They are not insects, so insecti- protective film that encases the slug http:/www.ag.ohiostate.edu/ohioline/ will -be there to answer your ques- commercially navigable waterways. als Handling Depanmorit, which
tions. Admission is free. Further Its members are representatives of
cides will have no effect. on killing thus causing the slug to dry out. Slug
It
is
important
to
remember
that
details
call 992-6696.
barge lines and shippers ·o f various waS then located in New York City.
them. Slugs overwinter as eggs and baits containing . the 'chemical,
• June .21 • Southeastern Ohio . commodities, ·including coal, .ores,
hatch in the spring. They will mate in Mesurol are available for the flower chemical sprays will not lake care of .
late summer or early fall and .lay new · garden but are not to be used in the all pest situations. Cultural practices -. Hay Day from 10a.m.to4p.m. atthe
home vegetable garden. For funher and crop variety selection can great- Ohio Agricultural Researcl! &amp; Develeggs for next year's offspring. ·
Fraley has been with the compaGALLIPOLIS -.William A. FraThus, slug control is a matter of information on slugs, call my office ly reduce or increase susceptibility of opment Station - C.aldwell Branch in
.
of Genoa, W. Va., recently was ny 27 years.
~oble County. Program includes hay
attrition. Efforts in control will reap and request the fact sheet #20 I 0, plants to pests.
Inco
Alloys
International
is the
appointed
to
demonstr~tion - mowing, tedding
benefits as y·ou minimize the number "Slugs and Their Control" .
world's
leading
producer
and
invensupervisor
I
in
the
Dates to remember:
and rakirig from I0 a.m.- noon;
of slugs available to eat your plants
tor of nickel-base super alloys,
maintenance
•
June
17
Piketon
Horticultural
exhibits
and discussions on forage
and reduce the'·number of slugs that
department · of which are used in induslries such as
grow old enough to reproduce this
The phone lines are nngmg Field Day, Piketon Research Center, crops from 10 a.m. to I p.m.; and hay
!nco Alloys Inter- aerospace, chemical processing, polfall. Slugs feed mainly at night and throughout the local county extension 1864 Shyville Road, Piketon Ohio demonstration on baling, wrapping
national, Inc.'
. lution control, power generation, oil
will hide in the daytime~
offices concerning pests in the flower (just off US 32, I mile east of Rt. 23 and storage from t-4 p.m. Admission ·
and . gas production, automobile
Gallia
The
. · Control measures should include ~nd _vegetable garden. I have person- and US 32 intersection). Registration is free, lunch available at cost. Direcmanufacture,
defense programs,
Academy High
teducing the areas for survival and ally seen or have had calls on Col- stans at 3 p.m.. Field day features tions: take exit 28 offl-77, t.urn south
electrical
heating
and telecommuniSchool graduate
. ~reeding. Clean up those outside orado Potato be~tle, cucumber spot- current horticultural research on high on SR 821; tum east (left) on SR 215,
cations.
·
FRALEY (1965) previously
flower beds by removing deb~is, flat ted beetle, striped cucumber beetle, tunnel tomatoes, sap nitrate testing, proceed one mile make a right and
The
company's
headquaners
is in
was a supervisor in the preventive
' boards, paper, and leaves. Keep European corn barer, flea beetles, drip irrigation, plastic mulch, and follow the signs.
Huntington, W. Va.
Harold Kneen is the Meigs maintenance depanment. .
mulch off garden are'!S until mid June bagworm larvae . and aphids. The much more. Free admission. For furthus allowing garden areas to dry out. Ohio State University Extension does ther information cali 614-292-4900. County Agricultural &amp; Natural
• June 18- Ohio State University Resources Agent, The Ohio State
Capture slugs using ferlilented yeast have fact sheetS available on con. (can use beer) in a shallow dish trolling-most pests. Single copy fact Extension Washington/MeiJ&lt;:S Coun- · University Extension.
placed in the garden level with the sheets can be picked up at the exten-

ing."

At .the Movies: 'Speed·2: ·Cruise Control'

By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
with other local,producen who share
GALLIPOLIS -Tobacco and veg- the same struggles. Light refreshetable prOducers report thai farm ments will be sponsored by the Gal·
labor is less and less available each lia County Pride-In-Tobacco Associ·
year. In late summer, tobacco grow- · ation. For· more information, please
ers struggle to find laborers who are call the OSIJ Extension office at614willing to cut and house tobacco . 446-7007'
.
while vegetable growers are forced
AREAAGRICULTURALNEWS
addres~ the problem for the duration
.BLUE MOLD FORECAST: The
of the growing season. To further closest confirmed case of 61ue mold
complicate the issue, there are very is in Columbia Tenne_ssee.
few resources for producers to tum to
The newest confirmed case is in
for help in 'finding willing workers. Lancaster. Pa. There arc still no conWithout a cooperative situation, most firriled cases in Kentucky or Ohio,
-producers in this area cannot justify however, the source in Tennessee has
the use of migrant workers, but at the put the Ohio Valley at serious risk for
same time, their demand for labor is disease development. Please apply
greater than the local supply.
fungicides as soon as possible and
Ultimately, every producer will do repon alt . suspected cases of blue
what works best for their farm to mold to the OSU Extension office at
.
.
meet economics and work load; how' 614-446-7007.
ever, it doesn't hun to be informed
SHEEP PRODUCERS: The Ohio
about the alternatives ·and employ- Valley Sheep Association would like
ment services.
to invite you to take pan in the their
The Ohio Farm Bureau Federation Summer Show on Saturday, June 21,
and The Ohio State University Exten- beginning at 9 a. m.
sion Service announce a farm labor
The Ohio State University, The
meeting on Tuesday, June p, at 8 p. United States Depanm~nt of Agri- .
m. at Buckeye Hills Career Center in culture, and Gallia County CommisRio Grande. The meeting will feature sioners Cooperating ·
.
Virginia Miller, a Training and
TOBACCO PRODUCERS: The
Employment Specialist of Rural awareness about blue mold seems to
Opportunities, Inc. She will provide be growing. Many tobacco samples
an introduction to the agency, the ser- arrived at the office last week for
~ices offered, and answe~ any ques- diagnosis. Fonunately, NONE of
. uons producers have about securing these were infected with blue mold.
additional farm labor. She will ·also However, this wet, cloudy weather
address the rules and regulations has pr!)duced a host of other fungus
regarding farm labor, including diseases, such as anthracnose and tarmigrants. ·
get spot. -The best thing for this is
Following her presentation, there warm sunny weather, and fungiwill be a panel of employment spe- cides. If you arc not sure what disease
cialists, ·producers, and Ohio State your tobacco .has, do not hesitat~ ·to
Universit¥ Extension staff. T)lese call the OSU Extension office, and
panicipants will provide a practical remember, you are not the only proview to alternative sources of farm . ducer with disease problems this
labor, and share some of the ways
they go about meeting their labor . season.
demands.
·
.Jennirer L. Byrnes is Gallla
In addition to ' the program, this County's extension agent in qrlwill also be ~ri opportunity to talk culture and natul:lll ~oun:es•

:ovP eor,.sponclent

By A.J. FUCK

Demonstrating that barbershop harmony is a
timeless Ail\erican music, "Sideburns," a quanet
comprised of Jackson High School students
David Lindner (tenor), Seth Arqabright (lead),
Daniel Armstrong (baritone) and Nathan Rhea
(bass) will appear on the show.
.
Following the intermission chapter president
Harold Rowan will present an honorary membership to Major General George E. Bush, There
will also be an audience ·sing and drawing for
musical prizes.
The French City Chapter primarily exists to
perpetuate barbershop ·style singing. But, it also
has a mission to promote singing in general. It is
especially interested in encouraging young peo· .

labor meeting
scheduled June 17

~pgraded

Tucson Citizen

Upt!lwn Sound

F~rm

:tiighways

when he discovered the other guy was allowed to hit back.
The World Boxing 'Association champ was stunned when, at ·ll years old,
he was punc;hed for the first time during a match with a boy named Cecil
Collins, he told a church group
Wednesday.
. "I hit him in the face and he hit
me back," Holyfield said. "That
was the first time that anyone hit
me back. The coach asked me what
was wrong ani! I said, 'He 'hit me
back.' He said, 'Welcome to box·
ing."'
Up until that point, Holyfield,
who staned boxing when he was 8,
had won every fight by using his
coach's strategy of ~triking first, he
said.
The fight ended up being Holyfaeld's first loss - the first of two
losses that year to Cecil. Each
time, Holyfield told his mother he
wanted to quit and she wouldn '' let

.,.
&lt;4

.

.,

investment, representative of most
Equities have sectors within the American econohisltoricnlly outperformed bonds and my.
fixell income
To provide you with the potential
securi11ies as . well to grow wealth; Advest offers a
out paced infla- unique way for you to invest in comover · time. panies listed on the DJIA. It is called
investors the Dow 5 Strategy. The strategy is
that invest- simple : first, the 10 highest diviin equities dend-yielding stockS of the 30 com-.
1me,ans
taking panics in the DJIA are identified;
added .risk as mar- then, the five lowe~t-priced stocks of
kot conditions change and compa- these 10 are purch115ed and held for
nies merge and acquire others. How- · one year. If this strategy had been
ever, investors seeking to build applied when selecling -stocks over
wealth also know that they will like- the last 20 years, you could have
.ly receive greater returns from 1~alized a higher total return than by
·
investing in the e~tire Dow Jones
.investing in equities. ·
· The Dow Jones Industrial Aver- Industrial Average. ·I~ is important to
age (DJIA) is proba~ly the best note, however. th'at past perforknown index of equities in the coun- mance does not guarantee future
try, if not in the world. It is used reg- · results, and there is no guarantee the
'ularly to measure. the activity in the objectives. of the trust will be
stock markets. Companies listed in reached. In addition,' since the trust
the DJIA.are known as "blue chip" only invests in five stocks, it may be
stocks, familiar in almost every fllore volatile than a portfolio with
household and r.ecognized for their more diversification.
size. and strength, their financial
Ad vest also ol'fers the same stratresources, and their economic egy applied internationally, providpdwer. Investing in these companies ing you wit~ an opponunity for
provides investots with a solid above-average growth potential

through the global marketplace. The
. Global 15 Strategy selects stocks
from the Dow Jones Industrial Aver·
age the Hang Seng Index and the
Financial Times Industrial Ordinary
Share. Index and combines them into
one portfolio. The trust's ponfolio
contains a combination of the five
lowest-priced stocks of the ten highest divid,end-y\elding stocks 'from
each of the three in~ices. These .15
stocks are chosen jusl prior to the
date · of deposit and remain _fixed
throughout the life of the trust -approximately 13 months.
.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted average of
· 30 blue chip stocks that are gener.ally the leaders in their industries and
are listed on the !'lew York Stock
Exchange. The Hang Seng Index is a
recognized indicator of Hong .
Kong's stock market performance
and iliclu~es '33 companies from
four major market groups : commerce and industry.. finance, properties, and utilities. The Financial
Times Industrial Ordinary Share .
· Index consists of 30 common stocks
chosen by the editors df The Finani:ial Times to represent British

industry and commerce. These companics are leaders in their industries;
and their stocks a,e widely-held by
individuals
and
institutional
investors worldwide.
Of course, ail investment in global equities should be made with an
understanding of the additional risks
involved with issuers of foreign
equities, including, among other factors, the possible deterioration of
either the financial condition of the
issuers or the general -conditions of
the stock market; currency fluctuations, political risk, the lack of odequate financial information conceming an issuer and exchange control
restrictions impacting foreign
-issuers.
The D.ow 5 and 'the Global IS
Trusts are sold with a prospectus.
Ask me for a free copy, including
data on charges, expenses and a discussion of.the risks associatt:d with
equity investments. Then be sure to
read it carefully before investing .
· Mark Smith is an associate vice
president
investments with
Advest, Inc. in ita Gallipolis oftlce.

or

NEW SHOP OPENS· Downtown Gallipolis now'boa.te e new
bualneaa at 35 Cour1 Strae1 tha1 cetera to most women and some
men. Uncommon Scents, fetturlng Hveral well-known linn of
fragt'llm:.s, 101p1, soakl, beauty producte, and aline ofbltsQis
opened lor bualness on Monday, June2. Owned and opeiawd
by Becky Adkins, the store Ia lituated In the former location of
Charlle'a end Company t111teurant. Severll n1me bt'llnd producte
are featured al1d Include Crebtree •nd Evelyn body producte,
EeHntlat Ele!Mnte, Upper &lt;;an1da, ·end a number of Items ulad
In Arometherapy. The ehop will bl opan from lla.m.-8 p.m. Mono
dtly and Frida'; II Lm.-8 p.m. Tuesday, WednlldiY, lind Thu,.. .
dey, and II a.m.-&amp; p.m. on Saturday. Tha . _ number t• 441·
1075. Pictured taft to right are Elllablll Adkins, dlugtltlr, and
MI. Adldnl.
1,'

..

�# r ,

Sunday, June 15, 1117

Pomeroy • Mld:dllp ort • Glllllpolle, OH • Point P11111nt, WY

· Suncl8y, June 11, 1117

1M Hou• of the nek

Homes: Questions snd answers ·
block, brick, and drywall can be Trenton, N.J. 08650-8116.
Q: We bave a f~t that squeals
For AP ....... ........_
tricky, but lhe Rawi47M isM induswhen
it is turned on partially. The
Q: I've '-tt that it's imponsnt to trial-quality handbook thll eM help
squea~~~op~
w11en the f . - il tumec1
make SIR I Rliigerator is lidjusted SO you do the job rilitt.
put.
critical
point. Wbat ~ the
tiW it is level. I always tbouaht thai
It's. 135 pqes of the 111011 thor·
squeal
and
whal
can I do to prevent
this was necessary so the doors oulh infonnalion we have seen 011 .
WOUld C)Oie automatii:aJJy. ·
this subject. Of c:oune the Raw)p)UJ it7
A: A squealing water faucet is 11511A: While it's true that the level company is pitchi111 its produc:IS
ally
the result of a worn washer.
adjustmen( of the RfriJCRIOI' has a here. but 11 least it does a good job.
When
the stem is backed out (some.bearing on the self-c:Iosing action of Each of the company's fasteners is
the doors. a refrigerator runs mosl . illustrated, with cleu drawinga that one turns on the water) llld the clearefficiently when it is level. Also. show how the fastener is installed. ance between the. frayed washer and
some refrigerators have a condensa- Also lislcd is the flSieller's letlgth and the valve seat reaches a critical distion drain pan which may spill its · the dianneter of the drill bit n~eded to tance. the washer will . vibrate and
squeal like the reed in a wind instrucontents if the refrigerator is nollev- inslall it.
el. Most refrigerators have screwThere's other information heR, on ment. A! the valve is opeiled more,
type adjuslable leveling legs under corrosion and load limits for.instance, the space becomes. greater and the
each corner. Other refrigerators have much of it industrial in nature. But if reed effect - and noise - cease to prerollers at the comers. The two front you pay close artention yo,u' II see vent !his annoying squeal. Simply
rollers are adjuslable.
how this applies to f.astening around replace the washer.
The rollers are located behind·tbe the house.
To submit a question, write lo
· base grill, and they are adjusted with
Rawl MChors and fasteners are
Popular
Mecbulcs, Reader Sera socket wrench or a screwdriver. sold 11 hardware Storts; horne centers
Tum the adjustment screw in the and industrial supplY houses. To get Ylce Bureau, 224 W. 57th St. New
· roller's center clockwise to raise the a handbook, write to: Rawl Inquiry Ylll'll, N.Y. 10019. The IIIOit IDter·
cabinet or counterclockwise to low- Handling Center, P.O. Box 8116 . alin&amp; question~ will be lliiiWered In
a future col~
er it. Place a level on top of the refrig·"
erator. Check it for level from side to
side, and adjust it as needed. Next,
check for level from front to back. If
COLUMBUS - James M. Fuller, Fuller and Associates in Athens. He
the refrigerator doors do not ·swing
LUTCF, was elect- has served as a trustee for the Ohio ·
· shut by themselves with the appliance
ed as treasurer of Association of Life Underwriters
level from front to back, you may
' the. Ohio Associa- and has served as tbe association's
need to adjust the cabinet slightly
tion of Life Under- political involvement chai.nilan for
higher in the front.
writers · (OALU) two years and most recently 16 the
Q: I am planning seve.ral projects
. during its annual membership committee co-chairthat involve driliing and fastening to
, meeting on May 7 · man. He is a. past president of the
stone and concrete. Frankly. I'm a litin
Columbus. Athens Life Underwriters.
de overwhelmed
to the
A former Athens City cou.ncilOALU a profes·
variety of carbide
·faSsional organization man and past president of the Athens
teners and other ·
that
of over 6.000 men Jaycees, . Fuller hosts a bi-weekly
need to be
a and v,oomen who sell and service life radio show, "Sound Financial
· guide or a good
'co1nci1se insurance in Ohio.
Advise" on WOUB's A.M:, Athens.
information in this
' Fuller is a broker with Snider,
A: Fastening to stone, concrete,

FRENCH CITY MALL - The G.C. Murphy
building In downtown Gllllpolle hae been glv"' new life wllh the opening thle month of the
French City Mell,leeturlng mont then 100 dl• .
play booll• for 11111, crefts, end lll1tiqHs. Since
the large building- purchaeed by localnlll101' Ruqell Wood, e COII1pilfl!l remodeling of the
lnt8rlor ·hae traneformed It Into en ettrectlve
lhopplng - · The building currently h81 36
booth• occupied by ert end craft displays end
one entique booth with cleelen from Hunting-

.

. By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS

:
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:
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·
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·

For AP Special FMturee
If your garage door has an automatic opener, you probably zip in and
out every day without a worry or a
care.
But don't overlook the obvious: A ·
300.to 400-pound door moves over
your bead on wheels, springs and
meial track. If your automatic opener flils to reverse wben the door
strikes a person or a pet, the ·result
could be tragic.
All openers will, if operating.
properly, reverse if the door hits an
obstruction. Openers made prior to
1982, however, do not have any
backup to this sysicm and should be
replaced. Post-1982 systems will
reverse after 30 seconds if the door
fails to complete a close or open
cycle.
Since 1993, openers have had to
include a monitored backup ~ystem­
typically a sensor .that passes a light
beam across the door opening. The ·
door will reverse if the beam is interrupted. A door will not operate if the
bearil sensor is unplugged or misaligned. The sens&lt;;~r cannot be
bypassed e~cept by holding down the
wall switch.

· If you have tested your garage . damaged hardware. The door must
door recently, \lo it today. Safety travel smoothly to operate well.
experts recommend a monthly test.
-. Clean the rollers, pulleys and
-Place a 2-by-411at on the ground cables; lubricate them with light oil.
in the door opening. Activate the Spray or wipe a TeOon lubricant on
opener. If the door doesn't reverse the weatherstripping where it conwhen it hits the 2-by-4, refer lo the · tacts the door.
·owner's manual and increase the
-Test the door's sensitivity. Stand
close limit.
outside the open door with your
In cold climate, a frost heave can hands held at waist level and posiraisc the noor, causing a closing door tioned to catch the bottom edge of the
·to reverse. If so, you may have to closing door. Activate the opener. If
you can't stop (not reverse) the door
adjust the close limit seasonally.
'Here are some additional safe- with minimal effort, refer to the ownguards:
er's manual to adjust the opener's
- Keep the remote control in tbe force level control. (Always set the
glove compartment of your car.
level at the minimum needed 10
-· Locate well-mounted controls &lt;iperate the door.)
high up, out ofreach of children.
· A garage door may use either of
-Teach older children how to safe- two types of springs to counterbatance the door's weight. In one ver.Iy operate the garage door.
- Never allow young children to sion, an extension spring runs along
operate or play with door controls.
the track on each side. In the other, a
• To operate the door manually. heavy torsion spring stretches hori·
usc the emergency release handle,
zontally above the garage door.
The · safety test described above
You can easily check the tension
will tell you if the automatic safety of both types of spring$. They should
reverse is working. It won't tell you hold the door steady in the half-open
about the door's overall health. Here position, and allow it to move only
are some points to check:
slowly if the door is released slight• Inspect the door yearly for loose ly above or below halfway.
or worn parts.·Replace any worn or

J'be most common types of metal factory treated with chemicals to
roofing are: steel panels with exposed
fasteners, steel panels in which tbe
fasteners are hidden, and rust-resistant aluminum panels that look like
shnkes; shingles or tiles.
Regarding rust , steel panels
achieve corrosion resistance with a
coating of zinc (galvanized) or a mixlure of zinc and aluminum (known as
galvalume or galvan). Top quality .
steel panels have both zinc and a fac·
tory-applied coating.
.
Steel panels attached with exposed
fasteners tend to be used on agricul·
tural and utility buildings, but they
are being more widely used on houses. Panels with no exposed fasteners
are known as standing scam types.
The panels are joined.with crimped
or snap-together seams that stand vertically from the roof.
Wood roofing in the old days'. was
essentially the same product as it
. came from the 1ree. Today's ~ood ·
shingles and shnkes are more sophisticated.
For example. cedar n~ofing tan be

..

rnnm thnmsh large windnw~

SUNDAY PUZZLER

I' 07.Y nrrJliH&lt;'e
Aptu..~e d11rin~t lhe

will

warm 'lhe

c.'onl

hnmt' ..Tht'

ur

Top Min
HOllE EVERY WEEK II
-Wookendtl

._.._

l . t - t Aeqlonal
~
Top Ply I Btnefilt
Soma lllap &amp; Hoole
M'!!o No Touch Freight

lht&gt;

.

the .. ,,,,...

n.... wh•re 8 bal&lt;·uny

lht&gt; rtot'Pplhm Hf't"H.
Tht ma~lt"r "Uilt" ull't&gt;r" a varit"tv
nr HIIIPnilitos: II l'l-runl t•Hlhtdf.Ht
t't"illng, twu walk-in c.:lu"t"l" a•id a
r•rintlr luuh t'II111(Jit"'lt" with dual
"inb and a whirlpfHII tub.
Thrtt• addltinnal hrdruum~ .
shHrt" H l'UIIIJUiflltltrtlhtli:tt"d hath .

11-.U-t

•'

boost its fire rating from Class C to
Class B. Southern Yellow Pine shakes
are pressure treated to help 'them
resist rot and decay, and although
these shnkes have been on the market for only five years, their manufacturers exPo:ct the product to have
a 30-year lifespan. Likewise, a composite wood shingle has been on the .
market for 15 years, and its manufacturer says it has substantial weath- .·
er resistance. · ·
· In case you are wondering about
the difference between a shingle and
a shake, shingles are smOQth and uniformly shaped while most shakes
have a rough, uneven texture. Shingles are one-half-inch thick end while
shakes can be one-half-mch or threequarter-inches thick. To get maximum durability out of a cedar roof,
rootin!! c~ntractors recommend you
dean .11 w1th a pressure washe~ once
or l":'lce a Y~ to remove mmsture~oldmg de~s an~ apply prescrvauves to help 11 ri:s1st sun and weather.

1 Public square
6 Remove, in printing
10 One who employs
15 Harden
18 External
19 Place In Italy
21 Like a whoie lot
22 On - -(equal)
23 PoinUess
24 Get e\len lor
25 Ethical
26 Clamping device
27 Mineo the actor
28 In a - (quickly)
29 Car race
31 Dunne and Castle
33 Wriler Gardner
35 Sword handle
36 Parts of shoes
37 Rest on one's - ·
38 Bogs down
40 Account entry
41 Recedes
42 Certain trees
44 Restrict
45 Iridescent gem
.47 Coupd'. 51 Kind of home
52 Fundamental
53 Extra tires
· 55 Black cuckoo
56 Smells
57 ·-be nimble ...'
58 Planet with rings
60 Speediness
62 Unclothed
63Wood6

65 Bird habrtat
66 Ch!lated ,
67 ~rrida chaer
68 Dollar bills
69 Join, as animals
71 ReNgious Images
73 Sixth sense: abbr.
75 Go, team!
76 Afall
77 Cry of a crow
.78 Harvest goddess
B1 .Supple

126 Individuals

127 Mil. rank
128 Monster in a fairy
tale
129 Equivalent
131 Say from rriemory
133 Homed animal
135 Cincinnati team
136 Napped .leather
137 Loolled
· 138 Racket
139 Letter for plurals
140 Carried
141 Under the covers
142 Desert features

DOWN

1 Balance
2.Of the moon
3 To any extent:
2wds.
4 Forni of Buddhism
5 Exist
6 EVIl spirits
7Build

8 -wolf
9 Sch. subj.
10 Mel Gibson .

film
11 Graven Images
12 Cllhoun the actor
13 N'ollible lime
·14 Trustworthy
15 Backbone
J6 Stand lor a canvas
17 Lack o1 hair
19 Changes
20 Popular kind of
exercise
22 Disinclined
28 TriO
30 Sett1ed after ftight ·
32 Chafe
34 Holy Roman·36 Partly: prefix
37 Coma to know
39 Maladies
40 Flat, circular objects
42 UnH
43 Dwellings
44 Shoestrings
45 Musical work
46 Attentive to dela~s
41i.Job
49 Poker stake
SO Knotted
51 Single: comb. lonn
52 Not wearing a hat
53 Tough alloy
54 Leg part
57 He was swallowed
Shake&amp;p~~are

66 Sheher of branches
70 Lubricate
72 Dromedary
74 Entreaty
76 Silvery fish
79 Procession
80 Toillid
82 Not doing anything
84 Aviates
86 Perfect place
67 ' Enlarged ·
68 Wander
89 Peepers
91 Red color
93 Moved little by little
94 Berlin native
96 tn fllimes
97 Defames
99 Stop marching!
102 Mostimpudent
104 Greek war god

105 Desires .
107 Conservatives ·
109 Clue
110 Named
112 Clever lelow
113 Rang out
114 Fried In a little fat
115 Took an oath
116 Presses
117 Fragrant ointments
118 "Former Saturday ·
Night Uve' star
119 Ripple pattern
121 Another time
122 Meaning
123 South American
mountains
125 Fat
128 Strikebreaker
130 Quid pro 132 Greek letter
133 Cease
1:W Ferrigno or Gehrig

b)' a whale

~Short

sock

61 Too
83 Two score
84 Office employee

e-

D

Fam. Rm.

..

ly ""''"· kildten, dinette.

r••

We're prow;;( of you
for getting f10ur
(jachelor's Degree!
Love Mom, Dact
ami

.

G-59
,

'

'

'

I

•

. }

·.~

•

•

· mudroom provide• ar.r.ess to a service f'nlry and lhe two-car

sa rase. Tbe muter ouite ahar~ Ihe up.,er n,.or with a halcony hall,
. three a~dilional bedrooms and a compartme01ailzood bath.

ALL

~RSOHS

INTERESTED IN THE
FOLLOWING ESTATES ·
PENDING IN THE CIA'

I lA

COUNTY PROBATE
'
COURT. The fiduciary In
eac11 eetala haa flied an
account of hie l!'llel. A
hurlng on the -unt In
HCh CIH will bt held Ill the
dille and time ehoWI1 bttow.

w,.,.,,

AN NO UfJC E:IM: N I S

GIDipolls ,
&amp; VlclnHy ·

PII'IOnlll

lsPORTI ICOAEII UPDATI
EVERY 11 IIIN Bpallo Poinl
Sprtodl 5 Slar ~111 Pick. Uu
A Challenge? T1y Tho Trivia
Game 1-too-,e-uaa, ur.
110711, 12.89 Par Min. llual Be 11
TaCai ....... II02-814-742D.

90

wanted to Buy

J 1 D's Auto Pant. Buying aal. "110' vehicles. Selllf\0 pana. 304773-5033.

Wanted To Buy: Barbie Dallo.
ClolhOI, And ACGIIIOriel. 1959
- 1010 ca• Dayo 6to-381H14014.
Wanlld To Buy: Parll Far 1968
Buick Skytlrk, 814~219.
Dobbie Drive, (Off AGulo tilf -t 1/ Wanled· older ~lcycll, 614 ·992·
2 llttoa F1om 'Witlis Fu'noral 3498.
•
Homt.J Monday I Tutoday.
1D:00-4:00. Rail fSI*w.
Wanlod: Uood Hardwood Floonno

Gl1i1 Glrla Glrlo, Talk To Them
Llwttt 1-~711-11585 ExL 8970,
13.88 ...... 111+ Sof¥.U 8111-1458434.

In Good Condition, Call 8,4·245·

3D Announcements

Garage Sale: Corner Route 141, 1.588=7.:..- - - - - - Lincoln Pika. Man, TUoa. e:oo. 1·
Would like to buy larm lraclor
Crawlord'a Flea Mi1u1 Plua In 3:00, Rain Canctla.
wl11140·50111&gt; PS. 3D4·5e2-5800.
Honda11on, WV. Froo apace In
June. Colt far dolllla. 304-e75· Moving Sale: 13111 Juno Tlh Tho
30th, Loll 01 Evorrlhlng, 123
5404.
EM PL OYME NT
. Foutlh ,...,..,, 0111\pallo. lnalde;

40

Glvf8WIY

T~

SERVICES

~~-·-·Pomeroy,

Givuway, 814-4«-

37.12.

Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

3 Monlh Old -

Hound Pup,
py, To Good Home, 114·4411521.

All Yanl 8a1H lluot It Paid In

~

::;a::r.::::n:~ 1t:0&amp;"'1~
a

8 '""' Old ilntn,lanCI
lllaok·
&amp; 11gor Ulpod, 11401&amp; 4442. '
· lua4ay
Man dar edition·
1...... 1'r!daj.
.

Rio Senior seeks small
house or out of the way
apartment to rent for '!17-'98
Public Notice .
1!::.-.tlnnl year, possibly longer.
H1108, July 15, 11117 10:00
441-0667
o'clock A.M.
'
. · .
Jamea
Lawrence
Wooldridge, 181101, · July
CHANNEL MARKER
111, 1887 10:00 o'clock A.M.
Edllh DeWitt, Hitt!D. July
CONDOS
111, 1m 10:110 o'clock A.M.
N. Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Glenna Davie, 882001,
July 111; 11117 10:00 o'clock
Sleeps 6.
A.M.
Thomae S. Moulton
Dates available in
P10bale Judge
May, June, August,
June15,1ev7
September.
July 5-12 still available.
110 HelpWanted
Call 446-2206 9-5,
cerrietery ulea? Its the ,best kept
weekends.
secret In Amerk:a. High commiaiiona, bonusea. benefill. leads, .
heallh plua 401K. ISOO laalablft
llalnlng banua, call 814·082·
7&lt;140.

1----,-------Drimo
NEW REGIONAl.
OPI'OR1UttnES
1'1\Y UP TOll CPM .
·MEDICAL BENEFrrS
.
-'101K .
·AIIIl VACATION

·AIDER PRDGRAI.I

'

ARCTIC .EXPRESS

Help Warited

'm

m

DANCERS
. 2 PosllioniiMiiabla
. Sbulhlork Show 1111
RL 2 Pt.Pioaoanrwv.
(304) 875-111155.

II

Carri«. Muot Hlwo AClua 'A'
CDL Wilh ttA2IoiAr I 9 ManriW
Roconl O!R EJpOrience

CALL DAVE OR USA
114-178-- orii00-127-0431
EDE

Evlry
Neskend. Family lnourance Paid
Jy Company (Dental. Eye. PloiOO Mill Racllut • Home

sc::riptlon) 401KRetlrement Ptan,
"lrll lrl .. Firat Out Dlapeu:h, Lilt

llodtl Conv. Trac1ora Willi
"latbed Tralltra Competilive Pay
· I'Mc:onllgo 01 GroiS.

· Cllllallll ,llpm.
Adoratile Kllttno, To Glvaawar
Wed """ Sot
PUbliC Slle •.
ToGaocH-.114-24-8143.
· 80
.
.
d Auct
'f
••• AAA OREETI«&lt; CARDS...
ORANT1RUCKINO.INC.
Five 8 .Weok Old Ktnenl, One
81'1
ion
Poltnlial $45K Pall Time Or
841181tts
PII1Siamm,8U 44111118
$110K Full nmo Servicing Local
DN&lt;HLL.CIH10451ill
Wodo!M)'er'a Auction
Sorvl~•. S
--218
F.Moo.gaacl'llamt, IIHglt pup, Golpalo,OIIOII4-3
.70-2720.
101e1. No•·111
- ng, Accounll tn3
1
.
pitt, 11 •742.~
.
.
. eluded . Your SUSO lnvell"'tnt . 'DR ERS. 5
Lotnilr'a Aucuan Setv\... .Los1i. Secured By lrivtniOir. '100-771·
IV
o,q
To Gooil Home: 2 lllacll &amp; Lomloy, Aucdonoor; Houlthald. 3141'
.
OIO'SWilH EOUIP
Klnona, female, I Wuko Old. Ellate fatm Sale Pllonel1'4114 441 .23111AIIor&amp;P.M. ,
:IIIII IIlS . . · · a.
.
AVON I All Areal I Shlrler National Cerrie11, Inc.. A Refriger.
S(looll. 304-875-1428.
lied Carrier, Ia Loolclng For Qual·
To Good Ho!M: Female Dobet• ~-• PHtoon Auction Compan~.
IIY dOlO'o
To Run 48 Slates &amp; Ca·
~,...
4o----'~~~ ft
•· Able Avon RtpreMntaiiYel
M E
w · h GK
.., 2 - · . . - 11 ._.... 1 • 1 .
.
Ume . auc~o~ur, compt•lt nesdod. Eorn money, lor Chrill· nLba a.L ·~~·· Banmply c"a~'gl ;dl I
dF d
aucllon llrYice.r LlaonaH' . ., billo at homo/11 work. t-1100o.. " ng
uo.
•• ay
60 I:.Oit Ill OUR
tee.Oil!c! I -·Virginia, 30M, gD2·835e or ·304·Q2-2845, ll!d. t·80H54-G710.
.
Found: at,tato Coon Haundo, 1 773-57l60r31M-ns,lol4?•. ·
AiP- ·
- • • · · ' · DUE TO EXPANSION
Walur, '1 8luo TICk. Vicinity: Coal 10 · Wanted to Buy
GOVERNMENT POS.TAL JOlt Capli~l Walor Tochnotagito Inc.
....,,_,114 3118111142.
Slaii 'I12.74/IIUO Hr. tnlo .a A laclory dlalrlbutor at Ralnoolt
found: ·I W Old F..,... Kll· ~
.
~:Or.~~: ApplicaUan Call lleloro friday 11 water. .,._inen~ulp.
Ia .- .king
len, On Bab, McC,orm'-k Road, ..nyJrpe
ac.t7 ltl-5011-5354,£11.1218.
MI:IIUfar ,
00. Anlktu ..a, EIC. AIIO Ajlpailil
•
·
. :
7477
4
:!:i!:~o, 81 ·2fll• ' It bltii14470-Zl2tl. ' '
·AuiO IlDdy Repair Man NMCiod.
.
:
.,
AlllaluiO Top Dolor: All u.s. Sit- Mull H... Exporionco. 814-441I .,~1:
Loll: Black And "'"""'· Lone•, vtr And Gc!IG Colna. Praotooll, 118!1- ·
:
Mlllorle*rg:
. ~te~rod Gorman Sh"P!'or: Laal ~ Antique ~. Gold
ILLJNQ DEPT.
Highell por ~otry. comsun emaz, Browna~•arlltl ~IPre-1130 U.S. Currency, Maluro Peraon HavlntE•pari- pany bonalilt. Far lmmodlato
Slolt 1111111t rea. PloUe ,_.,._
· Etc Acquill- "-"1
448-7,.7,. •14·441-4470, 114· ·II.T.
Sllall.
Second .,... In 11-ro ~ ourance omployrr11n1 only\ Call early a1
4111440 .fii!IMI ~
..__ Oil.taiL. 1,h1• 151
·--·•
Blllng. Mull 8t Computer Lllor· paolllono will fill quickly I 304·
a;::
--. •
~a1o, ProiKo! 1111 ~ Rotlobla, II· M-e537 011-2113 3882.
70
' '111111 Slle
A1111quC1t, turnltliro, ..... chino, F Day Shit. Rolllme To: P.O. Box
'.'
catno, IOJ.e. ..... · - · IOalo, ,;13,GIII(III1,0H45131.
' OIHipOIII
oalalta; atao appralsata. 'OJbr
CMLITY OIIDIRTAKI•
,
'""'In""
...........-.7441 •'
Earn $15 ·Itt Par Hou1 +Com·
I IIIIi "7·
AnMueo, . . ,0.0
mlsslono. Exlromoly High dua4 Famlfr; Rain, . _ 111111'*', 1(11 ~ Pomeroy, Ohio, lon\er Demand, No O.t&lt;!\lehl
.'
TUftllar, 1!14.,. 1111fl, Au.. Moore owner. 114·812- Tre.. t. Immediate Oponingo.
Rilad. ~ -..
. .
.~"' llull Bt Availallla To

I

'

v. ~

"""CALL
~Paid T'!:,~L'U ~t·

,

. ; . Cltall Mart 1 GaiMa 1lp, Burl"' Slandlnt Pine, 1 Acre
.
·.._ lOLL PR
Qlrta, ...;., Ladiea I · M- 'hciOrlllp,l14-211,...
_ _;,.·_!:1•!!!;~1»!!:!;13!!11!....___
Clolllllll AI 11-. Towato.
1 Cara Or· Campuler Uaero Natdtd. Work
Houoehaid Kldl Pool I Grallon ~~- Latt
:;:•:!!:'"::.......,..,:::::::::':=.:w:;:;.,.=.;.,;.;IIIL=•;..I• .:=•.=,.:.:~ 1~~":::: own hout• 120k 1a l~r ,_

1

tm--

:*

a

a all

. .

11100~~~·~·:!7~111!!,!11!_!101.~...:._::__:.__
I'

Ouida Chase and
family

.~ sincere and heartfelt thanks to all
the people tDbo comforted our foml/y
during the loss ofour loved one. fhe
:Reverend :Roy :R. yrlf!Jth. Cfh~
1/oa')(!rs, food and em.oflonal support
tDere al/ appreciated cyouare in our

Tri-State Pressure Washing
"We Pressure Wash Anylime"
Houses. Decks, Mobile Homes
&amp; Equip. etc.
Call for Free Estimates
Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
All Makes
Smtth Buick- Pontiac Gallipolis
446-2332

109 Flamingo Dr.
Spring Storage Special... Pay 3
months and get 4th month free.
446-8592

La Cantina Mexican
Restaurant

Uncommon Scents
Bath and Body Shop

Gallipolis Ferry

Crabtree &amp; Evelyn
Upper Canada Essential
Element. .
Gift Baskels for all occasions
Bath and Body Products
Candles• Towels• Robes
• Accessories
441-1075.
35 Court St.

Father's Day Special

Bring Dad- His
meal 1/2 price

900 Square feet. .

446-3481
"Closer Look"
Servic~s
Residential &amp; Commercial
Let us Clean-up
"Low Reasonable Rales"
offers the following services:
Office cleaning, House cleaning,
Interior &amp; Exterior Pressurized
~team cleaning, smalrhauls
Call today 304-675-3497
304-773-5454
1·888·258-3497

Cleaning

LAYNE

ITURE

STORAGE

675-7115

FOR SALE

Office space in
Gallipolis for rent

House Cleaning,
"Call For Appointment"
Loris Hall 614-446-3519, or
Flo
614-446-3325,

614-367-0433

'95 Saturn SC2, dark green,
23,000 miles, auto, cruise,
air, AM/FM cassette, trunk
release, retractable
headlights, $12,500 (seriiousj
inquiries only)
after
. 5:00pm 614-446-4015

Ohlo'a i.algoat Rotl1101111ed

DRIVERS WANTED

110

deepjgrati~ude.

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

emits cwd /inaudtiJi,

smd $4 Ill ""''·" 1!}'/hr H ftk, P. 0.
llor 15~1. fl!ru: t'ork. fll.t ·. HJ/1~. tr6.1. Hr .&lt; ur. 111 in..tudt lhr plan
11umbrr.

Public Notice
Public Notice
Jadob '· wa~n.btrg'er,
The oourt le iooatiAf'·. ~t the
01111.. County Court Houu, 11111101, July 111, 11117 10:00
Locual BlrHI, Galllpolla, o'clock A.M.
Eether Wether, 881038,
Ohlo45e31
Name, c:aA Number, Date July 111, 11117 10:00 o'clock
A.M.
or Haering, nme. .,.
Roger K. Marlin, 181077,
Robwt"'-a. 111,711, July
111,111110:110 o'clock A.M. iu:l 15: 11117 10:00 o'clock
Paul E.
·1711110,
Lawrence Wooldridge aka
july 11, 1111 O:Oo p,!cfocll
Jam
ea L. Wooldridge,
A.M;
.,
Leo Curtle Bll;!mbo, HI082, July 15, 18117 10:00
11,8118, oluly 111, 1887 •10:00 o'clock A.M.
Chartae W. Rlcharde,
o'clock A.M.
•

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
GALUA COUNTY, OHIO
PUBUCAOON OfF NOTICE
. ''TO

. (/•hr 11 nwrr dflailrd• .raltd p/a11 .
hou.,~. i11cludinf{ I(Uide!( In

If{ llli.r;

r~timalin/(

The family of Ruby Lucas
would like to thank all
who helped in any way
during the illness and
death of our M&lt;?ther. We
appreciate the many
prayers, visits,
phone
. ..
calls and cards we have
received. For the fl.owers
and food sent by our
friends and neighbors, a
special thanks. Youi kind
expression of sympathy is
deeply appreciated.
·
Scotty Lucas, Robert
Lucas, Patricia Roush,
Ruth Green and'Families

BULLETIN BOARD

'

DOUBLE. DOORS Introduce the ·two-Atory, receptlon area. whlrh
Rows smoothly lnlo the llvlns Brt!l!f. Th~ llvln~t and dinln11 rooms
are.combined, to the left or the royer. The ioj~d kitchen is adjarent
to the b11yed dinette, whi&lt;h o11eno to the ~.family room. A nearby

005

Jlappy
'Day'
&amp;o Jlappy 6otfi
'Jlirtfiday
'Jlob IJ'ayne
Witfi love, from your
wife, daughters &amp;
grandcfiildren

flm1:1

, Dble. Gar.

' Co"'*', Nlft.

'

Hippy Ad

Card of Thanks

We, thefamilyof
Harold Cha•e wilh to
thank aU our friend.
and relatioru, fo'r the
love, prayer• and
•upport ptthe tirns of
hil death. To thoN
who vilired, &amp;ent
card8, gift• ofrno,.,-,
and pravided food,
we are grateful. Alao
to our beloved
. .J'O'tor, Mark
Morrow, who wa• •o
•upportive, Dr.
Morgan, PVH
'Hosp.i tal Staff, EMS
squad, and Fiiher
Funeral Home, our

Card of Th1nk1

nr 211:6 t"Kleriur wall l'rumiug.
Tht- twu-c~r garugt&gt; indudt-s ~tor­
Hfle SfJHc.·r. and pruvidts an art"a
.nr 480 ~quare rerl.

.....

1 Kinen

£r011word PuZzle Anewer on ·P a;e B-4

EOEtADA Employer

rami•

~x4

0&gt;
'

~umn.

baM-nu~nl ur "lab found8tiun, and

paid,--

of lllalnnY will become four.llnel """' the
ODOT conitructlon le compielld In .... filL

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER,
100 Jor:kaon Pike•
Galllpollo, OH 45831·1563,
Phonl: 61.. 4411-5000,
Fax:st.. 4411-&amp;1oe.
TllD:614-446·5105

Welcome.

Thi• plan htdudeo a .•land•rcl

I

4343 Ell. 8-9.3611.

ha• a tlvin/11

nnun. tlininfl

,

Mctlon

$1,000 SIGN-ON BONUS!

Naw Pay Package I Monthly Bonuo Program! Natd CDL-4 &amp; e
Mos. OTR ECKMI\Ier 800·811 8636, Ownoi O~raloro Also

ruur ht-druurns. lwn and nne
rr
batlu and· a mudrtimu. lnlalintc
2.686 "'tn•r• fftt'l nf living •pal'&lt;'.

~ 22•hl5•4

.•

..,

.eoi~n &lt;;-~9

Coin

ar~u ~· building. Thll

A--

C.ilioro .f~lbed

G-59 STATISTICS

-Rt.&gt;•u•-:·.

. NOh IH·ON IR 110 • A llrgl beclc houM
.._..., -tclnglouplllld 1 Mill crwllthlt
rUn1 -lello ltillll Route 110 oppDIIIe the

.Pin.. CDlli8Ct:
Rollo Ward
Oltec10r Of Hu"-n

'

.'

0

83 5,280 re8t .
84 Be in a raga
85 Pubdrink
87 Avaricious
90 Chimpanzees
92 Bank employee
94 Degree holder, for
short
95 Kingly
96 Grown-up ones
. 98 Compass part
99 Throw
100 First woman
101 Resuh
103 Beer
105 Prison officer
· 106 PosHion lri bridge
108 Travel on
109' Rabbits
110 Made mona tranquil
11 1 Indebted one
113 Yearned
114 -Claus
115 Break-of-day event
118 Transmlts
119 Beer ingredient
120 Cape Canaveral
grp.
.124 Ghost
125 Outpouring

Packago.

1·77 Exit8S
Charloo.,,wv
F01 Mort tnlormadon
Cai •Kan AI t-800-395-1045

20-0di-G

ACROSS

Excallenl Salary And Btntllt

Trucll Sll&gt;p

un·rhmk~

·

' BR-.4

Proctll Oev.lopment And In·
voniOiy Conrol Prelolrod.

And
.Aine 20 • 8:00.1\.11. - 2:00 P.M.
AI The Go.MART

JihU.'t&gt; and Slidhig gloM dun~ tu u
ha•·kyard l~rra•·e ~ "" ideal ""'"
fur H ~put nr lt"H. .
· .
A l,h:lurtt:fU(tir ~lHi.rway ltads 1u .

come patantial. Call 1-100·513-

Or Mull\ -Hospital Syllem Wilh
M•nagerlal ReaponsibiiUies In
Malarial• Managemanl. A Mutefs Degree In Business OR Re·
lated Field With Emphasis ON

Card of Thinks

PC u..,. needed. $45,000 ln-

Must Po11e11 A Ulnlri1um Of 5 1 Years Exp&amp;rience lfl A. Hosphal

'1811RoundW01k
1 Y1. Ttr CDL·A&amp; Good
0.\ving Record Roqulled.
, Come Viall Out Recruit•
June 19 • 3:00 P.M. · Until

The family room l't'atnrt'• a l'ire-

••

FrH Supplies, Into.

No ObU9a~on . Send LSASE To:
ACE, D0p1: 1351, Bo1 5137, Oia·
monel Bot, CA 81715.

cal, Financial And Patient Cl1'8 Rotalod Aapocll Oi A New MaterialaMonalllfl*t Dopar1monL

AIICGM. Fiooll

lar~t' i•laml kik·ht'n i•
U)Jt.lt tu lh~ rarnily . mum Hlld lht"
bayt-d dinrltr. mnking rnr t"'a~y
L'UII\'~~alittll hi"IWI"t"ll tht" ~JUU't"~.

lwo-•lory home has rral curb lltil'ral.

Experi~~nc•.

-

Fuu-n... /Par~Time We Ate Ac· Euy workl Excollonl Pari AI·
copUng Appi\cationa By AppOint· aomblo Producll al Hollll. Call
mont Only For Dodlcatod , Do· Toll Froo 1·100·•11·1... EXT.
pondabla E~oytr, Oulllanding· 12170.
Bonofllll • Wotkll Slrlary. ' In· J..:.::~;_--:=~-:-:--::~
condvo P1og11m Comprohon· E'kpetloncad B.E.IIL ~Tool
live Bonolit Packo91, ' Paid Yo· Drilorl Ag Op
.. II
calion 411« t VIII 01 CanUnuouo I goa wo1k, In aoulll•l1 01111!.
SeMc;o. 1-IIU-772-24&amp;5.
IO"ll torm lloady -r&lt;. ..,.. 10·
I :H-:-0:-:11~..:..===;;::::....___ aumo I rolor.,..a lo P.O. Sax
E IUSINEIS Chotp Sta1t 2158,Aihlni.Oh45701.
Sond SASE + U To C. Ranonl
P.O. Box 7428, Canlon, OH

Wilh 23 Inpatient Rehab Beda
Saoklng A Dlrootor Of A-rc·
01 And llatorlalo llan ..- t
To Direct And Ovo11oo All Ad· I:«:::-70=S· = = = - - - - mlnlt~attan, ManagOiial. Te&lt;hnl· HOMElYPISTS, .

or;..,,

The puo•lhililie• fur family fun
art" endlef\5 at' lhr rrar

WITH ITS STATELY BRI'CK FACADE and •r~h~.t

Earn 11.000 WMkly Stuftin9 En·
i.leiOpes AI tlorM. Slart Now. No

Driver mteded from Pt Pleaunt
IIATI!AIALIIIANMIEIIENT
CDL wllonkor &amp; haz
mal endaratmlnl. 1-800· 508· A 248 · Bed Acute C&amp;lo Hoopltol
6122.

l,y

day. while a

HelpWinted

1101. Neod1

~~~un.

is

.

When selecting a roof, there's a wide
variety of materials to choose from
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Speclll Features
When selecting a roof for new
construCtion, or replacing an existing
roof, there is a wide variety of roofing material to choose from. All have
their unique advantages and ·strong
points. Soll)e also have drawbackS.
Here are some examples of roof
materials and their attributes.
Clay roofing tile is among the oldest and most durable of roofing
materials. It gains its weather resistant. fireproof and insect-proof qualities from being made out of kilnfired clay. Most people think these
tiles are limited to the barrel-shaped
type common in the West.
Clay tiles can be nat, and they
may have a glossy surface. They are
also available in blue and green, aside
from reddish brown. Metal roofing is
available in the widest range of
materials, ·combination of materials
and configurations. It is fastened in a
variety of ways and comes factory
fini.shed with various coating systems.

•:lef!anl aniled window• In pl•n
by llomeStyl~• lle•igner•
Network, provide Hf!limp•e or lite
•un-•plallhed •pa&lt;·e• found in•idt'
thlo dlotinctlve twn-olory home.
It•· lhfns •pare tnl•l.• 2.6116
oquare reel.
A dramatic 21 - rnnt - lll~h reception aru l~ad• to Lhe well·
de•lf!itl'llliving Hre••·
Sun•hin~ will enter I he living

G - ~9.

.,

Fuller named to OALU position

Operate automatic garage door safely

Delivery Drtvora Llltij Caouro
Now Hiring Oolhlory Drlvoro.
Hourly Wago + Cull Corrmllllion
Pold Dally. Flexible Schoduioo,
Unltorm PYovidcrd. Apply AI GaU~
polia!Malion.

By BRUCE A. NAntAN
AP Newafealures

•

110·

110 Help Wanted

Windows make tor sunny spaces

8y POPULAR MECHANICS

ton, Jecbon, Welllton, South Webeter, end
Gellle County. The meJJ Is under the mene~
ment of Patty S.underl, 1 former long-time
manager of Henry's Grocery In Jecbon. ltoure
of operation will be 10 e.m.-41 p.m. lololidly
through Saturday end 12 noon to 5 p.m. on
Sunday. The telephone number Ia 448 9020.
DoDnl of choice boothl ere ltlll IVIIIabte for
rent. Shown above ere Petty Slunclere, left, end
Melanie Osborne, local eitllt.

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

~======::::: '===~~m~==JI
HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN
NEEDED...
Requirements;
RSES
Certificalion
In
Reffldgeration and Heat PtJmp
Systems, Experience in HVAC
a muslf Knowledgable in
manufactured Housing Heating
and Cooling a plus. Interviews
by appointment only: Call:
Bennett's Mobile Home Heating
&amp; Clg. at 614-446-9416 9 am to
5 .pm

I

Reservations needed
NOWII Headcount
essential. Call 256·6870

Protect Your Valuables

Lamin'ations from

2 1/4" X 31/2''
to 12" x 18"
GALLIA COUNTY

Happy 1st Father's
LICENSE BUREAU
Day Doug
328 Second Ave., Gallipolis
Front &amp; Rear Entrance
You're a great ·
daddy and
husband
We love you;
Hayden and El

LARGE SELECTION

LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRiCED $450 TO $995

LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon. thru Sit. 9-5 p.m. 446-0322
3 miles out
Pike

Mandai W. Jordan ·
85th Birthday June 23, 1997
Please send cards to
27100 Rutherford Rd. Albany,
Looking for resident manager lor
apartment complex.
Respond to:
BB414 C/0 Gallipolis Dally
Tribune. 825 Third Avenue, ·
Gallipolis, OH 45631

:446-2342 or 992-2156
!!!!!!!FOR MORE INFORMATION~~~~~
,

�.

'

PoiMroy •Middleport • Glllllpolla, OH • Point Plllflnt. WV

0-

170 MlsceiiMioua
'• HYAC IERVICI TiCHNICIAN
... ~
·
Politi Jobo 3 '···
Poll!lanl
t .._.ecj, .. Requlr-ta; RSES ~- N E
N Avoll·
CwUcation
1n
Relriooraion
And
•-·
o
•
...,
...
~,
-nary,
1
' Httl Pu,.
E_..,.. For lnlormodon, Coll1·818-711"·
~ In HVAC A llu1ll KuooltdgNIH 1•110_1_0.;.E_"'.;.2020
_ ·--.,-.,--:-;
l in llanulocllttd Houling Hooting Pf-lon Pooltion • An AlcohOl
, And Cooling A Plua. lnrarvitwl And 01\tr Drug CollnlllinV IPrt• By Appolntrntnt Onlr; Call: lion· - n Agency locollll 1n Gallla
I nttt"l ..._ Homo Htldng I eta.
Ja
CO ,,_ 11 •··k
:At
8 A.li. To l And ckoon un...., - ·
P.ll
lng An Ambltlauo lndlvlduol To
I • •
Fill A Now Prtvon!lon Poaldon.
-:-::-:::-=-::--:---=~-~ Thlo Ptroon Will Work With All
' LaC- ......... llooltutlnl Ago Groupo In Tho ComrnuniUto.
,
Oalllpotla FMYWV
Quaincatlont: Bachllo&lt;l Dogrtt,
' WIInll -.Apf/t( lion lhru Pftvtntion c..•lltd APiuo, GOod
' Fri lrom 2-Spm. ~'"" 711 5.
Communlcotlon1 Sklllo (Written
LPN part time polltion a""lab4e And Oral). Rnponolbllllloa:

11•-·

et•·•••·t•te

for pragranlve Rahablfllltlon Awarana11 Actlvllltl, Education
Cent., ICF/SNF. Experltnctd Programs, Training Programs,
praferrtc:l, but will conlldM tht And devetopmenl And lmplemen-

210

lualneu
Opportunity

LiconNd adulr care .......
In; 1 1or Pri voIt rooml or ......
-111011
,.....
room, fomllr otmoophlro, Ellm OHIO VAUEY PUBLISHING co.
Homo, 2111 S.•111, lliddlporl.
racommondl lhtl you do bull·
r.-----------~~- ntu wllh ptOpla you knw, and
r•
WantecllO Do
NOT II und mono, llvtuoh rha
180
mall unUl you hlvt lnvtatf..ttd
EKtarlor -•nL .. llllom;:
,_ r
I wttdl trimmed, E&gt;tr Oraamed 01 Owning Your
''tnodacapi''V· lidowalkl odgtd, Own Buolntoo? Htrt'o Your
1"
C IIIII -·
c~
1•til
-e75- ••net ~-H Grocaty IRtoiUir·
tnt Localtd On St. Rt. 7 Soutll
Jul! BaloW Locko And Otm. Str·
luoa lnqulrltt Only. OU-2511·
81-00
carpontry and ...,.. ':'
~·-.,------

r """''• · lnolda and ·ouraldt, Steel building daoltrohlp avail·
~i!'!r'l aiding, add·on •ddi·

able In open mlrkiL O..lera buy

Uon.•. cab1net refacin, or newly fac:torw direct. High profit pottn·

rabullt. Rafertnctl· rae Eltl· tial, aaltl or canttrucrton. (303)

310 Homll tor aN

.f=;"'?WSl
rv-iiililillliiiHiiUilo
.and-HomaL-•ultd
........:Roii•!Oir .... __
nl'' d•ll•• &amp;HI
..,,. Mnlat;AII-ol&lt;*l
Cll....,toran:=

-lionel~·
.... .,....,....,add!buildonga, mull Itt to ap;~;,.: '"· •·
11

84 2382

I Rd..

Rl,.,.,, OH •5789.

IIEDI-HOIIE HEALTH AOENCY.
GALLIPOLIS OFFICE IS CUR·
,RENTLY LOOKING TO HIRE
THE FOLLOWING FUlL· TillE
. POsiTIONS:

man's Hamac:ara, 70 Pine Street,

/

Gallipolil, OH •5831, Anonllon:
liWie.

·

HOlE lji;Allli RN
• Home H10lth !Critical Care

E•porioroc. A Plut.
• Good Orgarizatlon

ICommurictlon Skills
• RN Llconaure WV IOH
If lnteruted Pl1111 Forwerd

RHumeTo':

· -1-H•.. Htanh A;oncy

':~-=~::,.a:,
P.O.IOI117

OAWPOLIS, 01148831

E.O.E.

Nttd Someone To Hal¥811 Mar,
Call For Ottallo; Aloo AKC Gold·
en Retriever Stud Service, 814-

371-2e311.

·- t d Somoono To llow lawn
In Mcintyre Park Dlotrlct Call
01oW48-8134.
•NEEDED : Service Man HVAC
Qrtlfled, ·salary to camerata with

Will haul Junk or trash away. S3S'

••perlenco. benoflto provided.
Card ol Thanks
cotnpan~ vechile. Qrman Hall , -:;;~===~~=:;
.Inc; 1317 Ohio St Pt. Pleasliint r"'
wv.304-67s- 2877·
Sincere thanks
·Part-Time Pooltlon Avallablo:
tO everyone
SUpport Group Faclllator fEducator for Approx. 8 Houra A Week.

Dudeo Include Guiding And MonItoring A Women'o Support
Group Twice A Week, Preparing

who helped In
the SearCh fOr

Educational Matoriall, And
Speaking To High SChool Student
Claaaao. Tho .Ideal Candldatt
Will Havt A Hlah SChool Diploma
And some college cauroao or
E•porience RtltvaniTo lnarpor·

our dog,, Mia.
She's glad to
be home.
Thanks again,

aonal Relaliona And Group Oy·
namlcs. Interested Persons May

Reply To: Poraonnel, P.O. Box.
454, oanipolio, Ohio • 5631 ·

Rick

an d

Carol n Collins

pic:kup lood. 304-875·5035.

In

tR_emembering ·
our 'Dad, Claire
'Boso, on
'fattier's rvay
Loved
missed, Sons

In Memory

In Memory
In Memory'of
Coy Barr
on Falher's Day·
Dad you buill bridge of
failh beiWecn your life
and mine.
My slrcngth tomes from
lhe latowledgc and
respc&lt;l you poured into
my life. ·
I am so proud you were my
falher I miss you, and
love you so veiy much.
"Your Da1J8bter" MillY

a

In Memory

Happy Birthday

................112..

o1....a.s-sau,e1~

Publ~ 8ele , Auction

'

~

11111 Schultz -

Satufd
. ay,, June, 21, 1997

condition, alklng

Loclttd It Portianc:1 • Ohl0 on St. At,.
cona...n-...., form
1-_, WJII *•ke
,.
._ .,,.,. . .
till 4
Frkl
ftOOn
pm On · IYo JUfMt -&amp;VIIIo .

In

•

,.I
i

In Loving Memory of my
Father who left us two years
ago today.
June 16, 1995 on
Father's Day
Carrol H. (Casey) McKenzie

ANNOUN CU.1 E NT S

DENVER GUY
HYSELL
December 1910November 1985
Remembering you on
Father's Day .
You had a certain
about you that made
plain to see you
just about as fine
Dad as there
ever be.
Sadly missed
grandchildren, gn:at'
grandchildren

·BINGO
RUTLAND
.POST 467

6:30P.M.
STAR BURST

$1800.00
$50.00 01 MORE
PER GAME

BEECHGROVE
ROAD

33933 Flatwoods Road

'
'

Racine, Ohio 45771 (Five Polnta)

992-4427
Water Garden Center
Water garden Installation &amp; Design
Preformed Ponds &amp;. Fle.xible Uners.
Water Garden Plants &amp;. ACcessories.

i

'·

•

''

Where there is faith
There is love
Where there is love,
There is peace,
When there is peace, there is
.God.

Where there is God
there is no need.
Wife, Eva Jo McKenzie, DaughterJanice McKenzie, Late Dauther,Nanette
McKenzie Moody, late grandson, John
Michael Sommer, There grandchildren &amp;
great grandchildren are" Candice
Sommer &amp; Casey Sommer.
Always in our heartS. We love.you and
•
miss you Dad.

!

1
• .,....._
2!!"!!!',·~1r"n.doUvorr l aolup:
1te7 FlttiWOOd 14x52. 2 Btd· .

a Auction

$12,000~ 014·
'
11""F===-:;E~~~~~~~§;~?====.

saturday, June 21, 1118711110:01! am
31105 Monroe Hollow Road
Directions: From Oak Hill take 93 S to 140 S go to
8112 deck, on rtnted lot, 11c.
Monroe Hollow Rd and tum right go 3/4 !"lie; Watch for
cond .. uklno 112,500 OBO. signs.
·
304· 175-8051 ltava ma11age.
Owner;
Dan
Kuhn
Mull 51111
•
Hoult and property, approx. 4&amp;· tVV1 14•70 Claylon Northridge 3 Breast yoke, :Gitison Freezer 15 cub fl. plctuea, 3
crtl. Ideal statter home. Beech Btdroomo, 2 llalho, M.P. D.W.• drawer dresser w/mlrror, T back chair, electric power oil
St, Rt,.,., ON. 30&lt;-882·21177.
Awln;1, 2 Dtcko, $15,000 Firm, lamp, cloths hll!11mer, Banguard Bottle Gu StOYe,
014-258'8115,
Or 114-251-e282.
kitchen cabinet; paint, baskets, Electrolux rug
Houao pluo 1bill lrallor. houao
juot palnltd, oood ohapt, bOrh tlle2 Flattwood IIlii&lt;, Ukt Now, shampooer, bedroom suit,-Bookcase, headboard, 3
occu~;g will\ pd r - 1 , 304- All Elaclflc, CA, $14,000, et•·
dral'iar chess, mirror, meqaJ cloths cloaet, table lamps,
E2·
.
..a-2528.
linens, electric meter lamp, Avon bottles, vllilas, radio,
oil lamps, Hoover sweeper, Regina Electric Broom,
New Hnan; WV- rhrH bedroom, IVV3 SpNct Rid;t 18x70 mobile
C.A., oltelric hit~ otorm wlndowo, home,
table Stand, leaf table plus chairs, roper electric range
excellent condition, nublltmtnt, $30,000. OU-882· meroua upgradea includinQ: self cleaning one yaar oiH, pots and pans, kitchen
58•1.
ca-ral ctlllng1, now CIA, gar· utensils; knlle block, cDHee pot, Samsung microwave,
Ntwly ntmodtltd tllrat btdroom, don tub, IWO fUll ..lho, and much Amana 14 refrigerator, kitchen cart, glass Wagner com
mono, $18,000, cal et•·VV2-3335. .
... and 112 ..Ill hor,nt In stick, blander, can opener, kn~ea. wall oil lamps, mixer,
porl 014-VV2-34e5 aflat !ipm,
·
toaster, canister set, electric . skillet, Granite · roaaler,
SHADE RIVER FRONTAGE
flatware, wooden silverware tray, cookie cutters, Fire
locattd on Seoul Camp Rd. out·
King, East Uverpool Pitcher, calendar. plate, napkin
aidt of Chtlltr. Nlct 3 bedroom
N-1aa1
14
Wid0:1
bath,
seliei
rings, collectibles, McCoy tea kettle, cookie jar, salt and
ranch honw and tlmolt rilw 3 car
gara;o pluo a 30'138' polo I!UHcJ. down, S13g/mo, wltllapprovod pepper shakers, refrlgeratOI desk, hen on a nast, tins,
lng !hal lo lnoulaltd and wlrtd lor ...'"ld=iL_CtJ_I...1...
.-.aa-::--1...-e:-7::77...
. :--- · carnival, butter dish, candy. dishes, stonaware, tea
workahop. Almoar 3 ·acre a nice
1ga7
14•70
2
or
3
Bedroom.
pots, table plus 4 chairs, comer stand, sugar creamer
land. o\llclng $58,gOO, Call Wilbur
$885 down. $185/mo, Only at plus tray, cake stand, punch bowl 881, Pyrex bowl,
lltfkJat01«87-81118.,_
Otkwood Homto, 'Nitro, wv. :J0.4. decorative scales, dolls, candle stands, ·cook books,
' llcCarllly- Eollle, Inc.
751H 885.
Btlpno,0111o
1965 Eastern Star Cook Book, Woman's Day Cook
Book, tote box, Hull pottery, Gallus Glass, Alrco salt
Public Sale &amp; Auction
and pepper shakers, table stand, Steubenville Ivory
platter, bathroom Items, warm morning 65000 BTU
gas, tier table, Bassett recliner, pendulum clock, stove
crock and jug, living room suite, Duncan-Phyfle
GALLIA COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS
Hexagon Table, shadow box mirror, drapes and
..
sheers, coffee table, clocks, foot stool, chalk figures,
SUNDAY JUNE 15, 1997 AT 3•00 r.M.
box fan, vanity stool, deek, stereo, Japan ligures, 2
This will be the first of planned monthly dealer comer ceblnets, 2 end tables, hand blown vase, couch,
consignment auctions at the Gallla County JuniCH: Fair : occasional chair; stuffed chair, flower stand, Rainbow
Grounds. Conslgners at theee auctions will be llmtted sweeper, Electric. sewing machine; wooden wardrobe,
to dealers who are set up at the monthly Flea Market. clock radio, wash board planter, deer yard decoraijons,
Dealers will be ofle~ng for sale Hems they do not want buck, ode, lawn, lift chair, Maytag ringer washer,
to haul back home, therefore, the buyers should be Franklin Atlanta Laundry Stove 2 cap, cream can,
able to make some good buys. The proceeds from this . granite canner, skill jigsaw, BTP circular saw, pitcher
commission will be split with the Gallla Counly Junior : pump, Schaur battery charger. hand tools, fishing rod
Fair Board. Come on out. make some good buys, and , and reel, nuts, botts screws, pulley blocks, wrenches,
help support the Gallla County Junior Fair.
hammer, ratchlt, 60 compartment parts cabinet, come
Due to the nature of thiS safe, lm!f~rs Will l1e expected to along, brace and bit, post hole .digger, shovel, grease
pay cash after each safe unless pnor ammqements are gun, Ax, ADZ, forks, pry bars, cross cut saw, corn
made.
jobler, Homeltte XL chalnsaw, sythe wood and
AuctlonHr: Flnle "Ike" liaac
aluminum , king wood and coal stove, flower trays,
Phone 814-388-11370 or 388 8880
apple · butter stirrer, quitting frame, cyclone seeder,
Hassock fan, vise 3 1/2 fuller, kerosene heater; ladder,
. U.censed and bonded Ohio #3728
roto tiller toro 4 HP, bucket bench, fertilizer spreader,
Terms: Cash
single s~ovel plow, double shovel plow.
·
Not r,aponslble for accidents or lost items
Retreshments, Food, and a Porta-Potty will be
·
available
Statementa made d ay O1 sale h88 precedence
AuctlonHr: Flnla "Ike" liMe
over printed materials.
·
Phone 814388 9370 or 388 8880
Ucensed and bonded Ohio 113728
Terms; Cash or approved check
Public Sale &amp; Auction
Not responsible for accidents or lost Items
Stetementa made day of sale has precedence over
printed materials.
•
lsaac'a Auction House
Public Sale Auction
VInton, Ohio
Thursday; June 19, 1997 at7:00 p.m.
L.oc8J dealers are offering the following new and used
tools (Craftsman, Mac, Snapon, SK, Rigid, Plus other
USA Names, some Imports) for sale: Hand tools·
socket seta, wrenches, pipe wrenches, hantmers,
ratch8ts, sockets, . pliers, levels, squares, ·planes,
BIWII-hand, hack, ~ cut, plus much more. Hand
power tools, router, drills, clr. saws, jig saws, plus
SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1997
much more. Weedeaters, 111wn mower&amp;, chain ssws,
farm and garQIIn tools, jack stands, chains, come-a10:00A.M.
long, tool boxes, plus.much more.
.
Looat8d Ill t~' Auction Center on Rt. 33 In Maaon,
Relreehmenta and food will be available
W.Va.
FURNITURE
Auctioneer: Fl.nla "lkl" luac
Outstanding
Barcelona
barrel organ music box on 2
Phone 814388 1370 or ;1118 8880
wheal
cart
all
stancn~
w/5 rollS, 6 songs on each
Ucenllld and bonded Ohio N372EI
roll,
Doctors
buggy,
fancy
oak china bullet, laney
Terms: Cash or BPPfOVIId check
depression china cabinet, oak 42' roll top desk, lg. 2
Not responsible for accidents or lost Items
pc. Burl side board marble top w/claw and ball feel, 2
Statements made clay of sale h" precedence over
lg. il door mlrio.red armoires &amp; matcnlng dressers, 2
nted materials.
pc. step back cupboard, llatwall cupboaid, oak
secretaty, eerly primitive wardrobe, Viet. marble top
table, Viet. table, Viet. rocker, oak ii:e cream table,
Publlq Sale &amp; Auction .
round oak table w/lg. claw feet, square oak table, 3
pc. mahogany BR suhe, 4 pc water falls BR suite,
oak wardrobe, sellers oak khchen cabinet, oak
dresser, oak washstand, . walnut drop leaf table,
wal~ut wash. . stand, balloon back ·rocker, early
Thursday Evening, June19, 1997
vinegar pump, plus more. · ·
·
.
.
GLASSWARE
.
5:30pm
Depression gl•, etch glass bowl, duet figurine, -'ag
From St. · Rl 33 juet north of the St. Rl 7 &amp; St. Rl 33
glass
(90ster, general stark Jim Beam bottle, Virginia
bypass. Located on Salisbury TWP 27. Less than 1
Rose meat platter, green depression stemware, nice
mile to farm. Watc:h for ligna.
'
vases, Buffalo pottery meat platter, I.G. gtasa bowl,
"Antique or Collector'1hlml" .
·several salts, I.G. fish candle holders, Bavaria
Wood chlldl riding hOrle, · Childs ~VBQon &amp;
Dresser .tray, hand painted nippon, I.G. Carnival .
whaelblrrOw w/1111111 whaele, toy Oliver 77 tractor,
Mammy salt &amp; pepper shakers, sat of style house
manure !ljlle8der, tin hay loader, tin strYice truck, tin
fine china rose baroque, set of Johann Haviland '
Bavaria Germany China, Cernlvai giii&amp;S berry set,
G.M. ear, toy lin lll1d bucket &amp;
can, childs Iron,
Dlnaheart
g(BBn lady llg~rine, Donah~go stone jars&amp;.
ltlattle mualc Euler egg, wind up duck, Tweetlll bird
more.
Old
comic, boolls one mans private Collection
toy, rubber toy~, · Lal8le boolc. Iron potS, lanterns,
1940's
herd
covertd, Buz Sawyer,Biondle, Blondle &amp;
wood blcok ~. wood blcok molding plsne, picture
Dagwood, Paper back conilc books, 1960's, Glint
frames, ~ hay .fork. M~k &amp; cream cans, PiE! .
Autry, Tax .Ritter, · Lassie, Maw Gil, Tarzan, lvchie
lllfel, wood ..bolclll. milk lllool, waterlnQ can, wood
Comics, Gabby Hayes, BUster Brown from GallipOlis
rollfng pine, TriMIIer riding nctor, beby stroll8r, childs
Dept store, Hopalong Casaldy; Donald Dude, Patey &amp;
Hedy, Sergeant Preston, Battle, Walt Disney's
aewtrlg fllll9hlne, cjoll beby, toy guns, childs. rocking
Comics, lWeety &amp; . Sylvester, The CIICO Kid, War
cflalt1 chum dalhlr J lid, gamas, Christmas
Battles, Walt Disney's Dave Crockett:ilndlan F~.
deooratiOna, lUll If inachlnt dfivt W/1181 bllll, grain
Joe Palooka, Dale E - . ·Mazie In Jumping Jilek,
ooft1l8 J-, ftal Will ~. wood .iable; large Iron
1977, Blondle. Guns out of an eatate will be tcld 111
ktllll, pink oollwt pot, blue &amp; 'Wtlltl dllh pan, mlac•.
11 :30 a.m. Win. model97 t2 gauge pump shotgun,
dlllhll, buck laWt, ctOII CUIBIWII, &amp; lola more.
Rem. model 514 22 rifle, model eo Wlnt
!"aur."
Westernjleld deluxe 20 gauge pump, model 114
Stewnl 410 lhotgun, model E ML 22 Erma Wtrke
want11 w.Aen Field 22 ca. rille, 12 gL single bamll
22 autQ w/leorie (clip, ~ 220 A 410 lholgun,
rille, Veteran 22 plllol Pat: Aprll28, 1878.
EIBBX
12 gauge, &amp; black powder 45 plllol,
"Houllhold &amp; Mile"
. .
AUCT10NI!!R
NOTE: Out to adv. deldllne thil II 1
Double bed, chelt al dr-., dr 111er, rocking chair,
partial lilting more lumllurlllllln Qpllling ln.

110 Help Wlnted

POSITION AVA,ILA

IUCDICAL fOilUR
IUimiiiCI .CIAIIIC
Applicants must be able to work In cold conditions
and In high places. Shotlld po81188 mechanlcatlkila
and knowledge of11 0, 220/480 volt elect1feall)tllema.
Knowledge In the following 11raas .will also help
applicants: DC controls .and molora, hydraulic and air
contrcil8, testing and repair of electrical ayltetnl,
alectrle fork 11118, welding and cutting torch lilt. A
minimum four years mechanlcsl eJCI)tl'lllnce and two
years electrical axpe~enca or equivalent edooalloll lti
required .
Poeltlon on seCond lhlft~Pay r~ $9.15 to 111.15 per
hour, depending on el!PIIIence. .
If Interested, pleue ltf1CI rwurne to: .
Tile Plllabuly Company

m

cond. Call JD et•·•4e·93•0 or
3DU7S.Ii843- - - ·
Ul88 OokWood t&lt;x70 2bt, 2 ball!.

·.. *••

.

·

2403 S. Penneylvanla AYefiUI, Weillllon, Ohio 458112
-4ttent1on; HR-FORKUFT

EEO/ME

-...·_ _ _ __,

Calli

NO EATS

I

f?,ICIO-

~~~:,·~~~~.:,:s::~·~&amp;;

for Rent .

'

11.,.....151a.

a Balli N0
Otpooll' Rt-

=r!.,~•~r~~~ ~~~·:1•~

fur- ~ :1~11~00&lt;1~1,~Afttr~e~P.~.II~.;~:

1 ond 2and
bedoom
........-.
nlahtd
uniUrliohtd,
MCUtlty
dapoall rtqulrtd, no pots. 014· One

In'.PI

PIN lint
clean
&amp;nice.No
~~~~· No Ptto,' 0na Btdroom Furnl- All U~ll•. ,
'_,.....
• . . Paid 288 Stall SltML a2501

. Two bedroom apartment in Mid:
deport, no poll, 81 ..11112•5858.

450

112·2211.

-...:-:-~-~-~-41 .........,. for Rent
1 Bedroom Near 'Holzer. Exira Mo.,e1.-·31117.

-:: O u.,, -~

Nlct, Ctnlral Air, $2111/llo., +
2 Btdroom hoUat In Now MIIYttL Udlltlto, Dopooh Roq. 01 •• 4...
Rent $250/mo + '100/depolit. 285?. ·
Call 517-•50-7703 collect afttr
8pm.
t Bedroom unlurnlohtd Apanmtnl Ronga, Rtfrigara.,r, Olapo2 Btdroom, run btaomem, nawly oal, Garage provided. wator,
docorallll, rtlortnceo &amp; depooll, s-•t, Garbage Paid, Oopoolt
NOpata.3DU75-5182.'
•
and roforoncto
Required, 131
3 Btdroom Maull In Rodney, Flrll Ava. Roar, Galllpollo, 01&lt;·
S375/llo., PI~• Oapo111; Rtftr· 4o11-251 1
O".e&lt;l3-2018 Afttr 4P.M,.
1-om apartrntn~ llaoon wv.
Furnl- or unfUrnlahtd. P.trloct
Clean thre• bedroom house In for ·conltructlan worker. Call tor
Rtmeroy, oiDvt and rehlgarotor, dllllll. 30&lt;-773-505&lt;.
washer and dr,.,, no lnlldt poll,
relerencel and deposit requlrtd,
. " .
114·11112-30110.
2 Bedroom Apanmonl, ._ontral
Air, Gao Hoot, WID Hook-Up
In l:lalllpolla: Ren111 $3501110., Cloot To Gtlllpolio. 114·•••- .
With Dopoall, 2 Bodroomo, 2 2072·

one-.

Story, No Petl, Oual\lltd Onl~.

Tara Townhoull Apanmanta,
vary Spaclouo, 2·Badrooma, 2
Aooro, CA. 1 112 Balli. Fuly car.
petod, Adult'Pool l Baby pool,
Patio, Stan 13401110, No p011,
lull P1u 1 Stcurltr Dopollr Rtqulrad, e••·•40·3481, e~&lt;·••e0101 .

=

eonvilt araa, al tltcltlc, llr, HUD
approved, S325 montll plu1 utll~ 2 Badroom AporlrMnt; $31115/llo ..
ties, no smoking, no polo, 81•· $100 Dlpolll. AI Ulillltol'lld, No

~06.
·
~~----:-----,-· 2bdrm. apia., total electric, appllancoo fUrnl~. laundry room

facllltieo, cloaa ID IChool In 1own.
AppMcadono avallabia at: VMiagt
Groen Apt1. t•8 or call Ot&lt;·IID2·
·
3711 EOH
·
·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICE~ AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Weotwood Drlvt
lrom sao to 133&lt;. Walk 10 lhop
&amp; movlo1. Call 01&lt;·4•6·2568.
EquoiHoutln;Opportunily. '
Booch St Mlddltport: 2br Jutnlahtd ap~ udlitlao paid, dopoolt
I reltoOtiCti.:IIM-8112-2588.

Coun1ry1ldl Aparlfl1tlnli; 2 Btd·
roomo t 112 Balli. CA. WID Hook·
Up, U•O/Mo.; 2 Bodroomo, 2
Ba1h1, CA, WID Hook-Up, $•50/
~~ Depotlt Roqulro4, 5
,.13'574~

HOUSE FOR SALE

3 Bre, 2 bathe, kitchen, living room, dining room,
den, utility room, 2 car garage. 177 DHnle Dr.,
near Holzer Hoapltal.ll14 448 1223.

Sleeping roomo with cooking.
Aloo lrtlltr opoct on rlvor; .(II
hook-upo. Callallor 2:00p.m.,
004-773-5151,MaoonWV. ·
460 Space for

Rent

Trailer lor For Rtnl, Addloon
Pil&lt;a, 01.....a.7834.
Two campoltos- dna wllh lull
~okup, ontlor bOoting and fioh·
1r1g, 81 ..11112•51150 .

~!:':'.:~,;&amp;:,::~ 1~~~ 490

1

For Lease
j;roloulanii/Buolnou building lor
247-4202.
'
IUbltall. locoltd It 5011 s. Third
Twin Rivors T....,, now occopdng S~oe~ Mlddlepor~ Ohio&gt;• _~~«~!!!'IJ
•""'leo.llono lot 1br. MUD aubold- lor physician olllct or
"tall
.,.,.
opeco. Ample olroot pai1&lt;in8.
lztd apt. for elderly ond hondl· Avalloblt lmmtdlattly. Contocl
capped. EOH 30&lt;-e7S.8878.
R.L. Kunz,,8t4-51133375cxoltct.
tin, dtpooil ond rofwtnceo, 81&lt;·

yttrti!QO. 1 - t dMJl, VOU'I
· - tnd .......... tranquillitY .. you
lilt -*' rolling 'tGul1lr;ildt frQfn tint llvitlg room l dining
room ollhll3 bedoomo, ranch otylt homo. Slwe our - .
onc1 - thla 15 A. of Waodlancl, l'alllft land, l Homollto lor
youraolf, Nice 24'il40' Garaga l WOtklhOp, Pond, 20'&gt;124'. Slorflgt
bldg. Tlltre'l more- Clll Naw 11113

- - out.
a1fnOIIlhtr8 ol -

.

. PHONE 448 8839
W1LU8 LEADINGHAM, BROKER. PH. 448 111311

LEADINGHAM RUL ESTATE

~=::::t:======.JL..:.:::.::::::::::::::.:::=:.....
Raal Eltata General

2 Btdroan'l Apartment, Adjecent
To Ul'llvtraity 01 Rio Grande

614-368-8828.
-=~~-----1 Campuo, Avollablt 011187.11•·
New two ·bedroom home, Harrl· 24&amp;-6851.

Furnished

.. Rooms

MEIGS COUNTY

(;anaday
Realty

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 742·3171 or 1·800-585·710\.,..
~RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

·Piii! Cheryl Lemley.:............742-~171
'

,.

IJl
....,0 ,

I/
~

25 LOCUST ST.- GALLIPOUS

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 44W383

446-3636
YOU CAN BUY THIS FARM WITH OR WITHOUT
THE FARM MACHINERY... APPROX. EIGHTY
ACRES ... LARGE BI-LEVEL HOME ... BARNS ... CORN
CRIB...TOBACCO BASE ... READY FOR SPRING
PLANTINGII CALL SOONI

POMERoY Vlu.AGE. Thll hOme hu IYtryllllng but the
mos1 exclllng fealura is lhe excellent view of the OhiO
River. OWner hu utilized thla view to lhe lullestlldllnt.
Full flnlahed basement with ldiChen, lovely s10ne FP In
formal LR, handcrafted kitChen cabloet8 and oak trim.
Amenities galofe. MBB7
471158 EAGLE RIDGE ROADI Aluminum aldecr I 1/2
story home. living room, kitchen, over aized detached 2
car garage. FA eltlclric lumaca. Additional mobile home
hook-Ill). Muet call today lor an appQI-1 I5SI

BEAUTIFUL LAND ... OVER 300 ACRES LOCATED
NEAR
WAYNE
NATIONAL
FOREST
AREA... PROOUCTIVE FARM, DUDE RANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
GREAT
OUTDOORS . 3. BEDROOM HOME, 3
.
BARNS, OTHER OUTBUILDINGS . POND,
TOBACCO BASE. THERE ARE VERY FEW FARMS
THIS Sl:i!E ON THE MARKET...DO NOT MISS OUT
ONTHISONEI

BARGAIN PRICEDI $48,000 Like new 4
bedroom, 2 bath home. Nice level lawn being
approx. 1. acre. Clean and ready to move Into.
Immediate Oec:tipancyl 100110

THIS HOME HAS ESSENTIAL FEATURES MOST
NEEDED FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING .AT
CONSERVATIVE COST. SPACIOUS LIVING ROOM,
3 BEDROOMS, EAT IN KITCHEN ... UTILITY
ROOM .. .GAS FORCED AIR FURNACE. CENTRAl,.
AIR CONO .. . CARPORT, .. FENCED
BAC~
YARD... CONVENIENT LOCATIDN ... PRICED TO
SELU ,

..

124 Acre. more ot 1- situated a1 Ealon Road. Pnced
at $48,000.0011171

539 w. MAIN STREET! Excellent view of the

Ohio River. Older 2.Jit!mrtwifl 4 bedrooms, .
1.5 baths, IIWIIG-~Ifi.'1fl'n'frig room. Lot size
approx. 5.9' x 122'. Affordably priced at

Rancae. e

$25,000.00. 1121

cute Remodeled
that Is just nght
lor you. s~-g
lddlaport. Call for
.an appolntrnenN
Is today. 1920

LARGE COUNTRY HOME ... 10 ·ROOM HOME
FEATURES A FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM
AND FAMILY ROOM ... FORMAL DINING, LARGE
EAT IN KITCHEN. BASEMENT.. 12 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. PLUS ADDITIONAL 24'X20' GARAGE.
APPROX. ONE ACRE.

e-mail us for Information on our llatlnga:

IG AOCTI
SALE
friday. Jane zo. 1997 at 7~90 P.M.

flrn Vets Post U In Galllpolls•.OH
~ ~rrat ~prtng ~ale ·

· We will helVe wlevlslons. coinpattrs.
880 Grills, StereOs. VCRs. some

, farnltare. collectlbkn. dolls. linens "'
seen on tM shop •t home.channels,

·

. pc1per shrfclders.

·

100'1 v1 ...ne Immel Items. aach as: Cobro,
RCA Chilrl' Foteman, Slla!p, JVC.

fill maJor credit wrds acaptecl.

For IIIOftl Info wll:

l11dl"' fladiOn Wa~Vhoase (614 U61914) ·
Carol Crowdlr
#IZJ

,

12867 PICTURESQUE HOME ON A HILL
10.44 Acres mil approx. 3,900 sq ft, vinyl &amp;
stone exteriQr, formal entry, 4 BAs, 3 bathe,
finished rec. area in the bsmt, WB/FP In
game r®m &amp; den atrium rm, oak cabinets
and trim in kit. 13 total rooms, 2 car garage.
Professionally landscap!!d. Quality and
Luxury through-out. Appt. only. VIrginia L.
Smith 388-8826.

RIVER LOVERS· Enjoy your
weekends fishing &amp; · watching the
barges float by. . This like new
~Is empty &amp; ready to move
1nco.
a1 features ara approx. 1.8
acres, 2 car garage, large cedar deck,.
security system &amp; located approx. 4
m1. 8oulh the Eureka Dam.

m

.-,aoo

144 Acre
Farm

Ct.ey Spenlah In thl Countly. 1hl8
brick bllauty Is nestled on a 2 8C1'II
trl!lt In the rollng hills
Adll8on
Townehlp on McCully Rd. Enjoy )'011'
summers In and around the pool,
e&gt;tlra large patio &amp; gazebo. There ara
too many 18alures to mention but a
lew are the ex1r1 large LR, Family
room with a stone FP, wupletaly
equipped ldll:hen, 4 BR's, 2 112 balha,
2 car garage &amp; a very nlca bam.
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. .

m

RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY·
almost brand ,_ ranch style home
rests In ovar 7 acres of woods with
approx. 800 fl. of c.reek frontage.
Some of the many features are 4
BAs, 2 baths, 16x21 LA w/french
doors, 2 large treated decks, vinyl
siding &amp; an Ll18llached 2 car garage.
If you don1 want to look at your
nelghbonl. YOU MUST SEE THIS
ONE. REDUCED.

A.l. Black

AJ11111 Clltle
RIVIR fROiiiT
to find but you have 7.66 acres mil
wltli this 2 story farm house. With 3
1 1/2 bath, city sphools and a
view fit lor ~ king ell ~led just
minUtes from Gallipolis, you should
not lei this flow by without i look.

Fonl7710 Wide

.

Frmt Trtu:lor '
SlwwRDom
N1wl

'

•

Reduced 10 $89,900

•

,.

rr.

Here's a beautiful brick ranch on a 3.11 ~re lot, mil,
surrounded by scanlc Gallla County countryside.
This home Ia bulh better than most ind featUres 3
bedrooms. 2 beths, IMng room, llfge kltohtn and
dining 11'118. Plus large wlllk out beMmllll, large
deck and a 40 x 60 metal pole building perfect for a
WQrklhop. 140!1

PRICE REDUCED to $198;000.00
i

-

Dlractlona: · Loc1ted

on lulavllle

app!Uifll8t!IIY
. 8 mllel 11om 8R 110. .•.
'

•

high on a hiH In Green Towi18hlp. 1hl8
home Is brand new &amp;located close 10.
town at 1573 Graham School Road.
$45,000 Buy an IIXIrl 5 rm &amp; belh
hoine and blmior an ex1r1 q:~,aoo.
ApproK. 8 acres total.

22 ACRES OF ROWNO COUNTRY
SIDE accompany this secluded block
hunUng lodge. located In Addison
Twp. Gallla County; property offers
loll al possibilities priced at 34,900.:.
csll today for dil edior IS.

RIO GRANDE • COMMERCIAL
.~Ue~tU. SITE FOR APAR11JIENT8:
X 207 Ioiii lol8111cl Ill the cOmer RIVER LOT IN THE .CITY .• 2.3 LAND • FARM LAND • HOME
Spruce &amp; 5th. AJ ~lltles available. acres nVJ, Ajlpro&gt;c, 234 fl. frontage on srTES • YOU NAME 147 acres

•

M&amp;iOf'l, W.VA.

Poelllw 10

a.- ,..C..

.

Public

Resldeuce: 304 n3-5785 or

Auction Center 304·773·5447
Terme: Cull or Check w/lb Out alltale .buyell mull
·
h - bank letter al eredH.
.
Not RBipOillllle For Accidents or l.oee of Property

ltvlfll

llolilte Homo: - • 2 BedFurnlohod, *2311111o., Water I
Truh Paid, 820 Fourtll A..,.,t,
Galllpollo, 814-UO 311&lt;4 Alttr' 7
P.M.
440 Apartments

1182-2343.

'

II '•PegeDI

Furnllhed Elllcltrlcy •1tlllllo.,
Ulllllloo Paid, Share Bath, 107
Stcond Avenue, Gallpolla, 818'
110 :IBU Alw 7P.ll ..

Ill',._

0.58.

room mobile home on 1 acre

AuctiOn Conducted by
Rick Pearaon Auction Co. lt8

OWNifi.IITTY WIYER8MILL!R
DAN IIITif. II~ AUCTIOHIIR
Ohio Ohio 11:14&lt;4 W.Ya.l615

-llpot-

Qroceriea, stock,
land. Clz.:oattr, AIC. 12i,500. equipment,
30&lt;-5CI2·
.
. $70,000. mote Information 304·

TUII8day Evanln{l at 11:30 p.m.·at ihe Howery Auction
House,5-Mjles·W!ISt·ol AthB1'!8, OhiO·On Rl: 32·50•·
Household from family relocating In W; Va. Also from
lf&amp;~nllv In Athans.
Loveseat &amp; chair, wOod table &amp; 4 chairs, color TV,
recliner chair, mlcrowa.ve oven, 6 drawer chests, twin
bed w/matt, mlc:iowave stand,
end tables,
lamps, coHee pot, lots and lots
washer, mahogany server, pots &amp; pans, blankErts,
spreads &amp; drapee, much more.
• .
Mlac: Racing canoe (cost $1 ,500 new), 12 HP Lowes
riding mower, Lawnboy push mower, chalnsaw, Misc.
tools: Igloo dog box, and more.
Terms: Cash or check W. positive ID
Auctioneer: Rodney Howery
88-7231 or 814-284-8380

~

and - . Gallpollo, .,.,.......

38U,Aiw7P.II.

s ••*uom.....,. v.n. Off 110•

poi••••
0..,, 114 •
=-=~=~::.::-~~~=· 1

=

water

.

Co Falrgrounda. 304-075lrom H Y.F.

14x70 Mobile Homo Willi An Ad· For-Caii114-388-17JI'I'
Two
houaa, nice ana
dlllonal llobllo Homo Hook Up
clean, lnlldf pota, dtpooH and
And larQt Shop. $85,000 Call Taking biH·13 acre farm located reference• raqulra.d, 614·892~
814-251-8086.
In Rtrlln:l, Olio- ono story ranch 3090.
houlo, two bulldlngo. Sell all or
Frazlor'a Bonom-2-3 Bedroom parl lllntaroatod send bldo Clo 420 Mobile HomH
mobile homo. $3112. No poll, AI Gary Rupo, 186 Torrace Avenue,
lor Rent
c.30&lt;·582·5840.
RoiiYile, Ohio &lt;13777 or call e14897·7802. Blda 1ubmltlld by July
Frazior'o Bottqm·2br, $225, tuit· 4111.
~~~~2'k~:~~ Home Elaca Area,
obit lor lingle only. Frtt WOitr l
aawage In the country. 304-5e2· 340 BusineSS and
12KB5, 2 bedroom tnaller, 8 milt
5840.
Buildings
our 1•a. no poll, 814-992-37•3
btforellpm.
IT'S .BIG. 1997 4BR, 2BATH 1700 .1quarelool building, downDOUBLEWIOE. $1,848 DOWN, town ~meto" ••• ~2 7384 ~.._ 2. &amp; 3 bedroom mobile home•
$3191110. 'FREE DELIVERY l forolla",;;oraJIOrep;;~• .
- - otard.ng aii2B0-$300, _.,, wa·
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
tor and lrash lnchHjtd, 81&lt;-992·
HOliES, NITRO, WV. 30•·755· Bualnooa apace lor rent. $5001 2187.
5885.llmlllll Oller.
mo gaolncludtd 304-875-7000
·
·
2 Bedroom· Mobile Home. You
llrv• ·otlecUon or u1td homo. 2 llrvo onlco opoce 1or rent $5001 Pty Utilities, &amp; ·Daposi~ In Patttr
or 3 bedroom~ Stardng at $3495. mo.+ utilltita. 3DU7S.1000.
Ar• s2501Mo., 01.-388-8162..
Quick delivery. Call 1·500-837·
3238.
Store &amp; Rootaurant w/Gaf!'t 2 Bedroom trailer lor unt on
Room, now roaf. bUilding In good Chllrnut Ridge. 30•-89S.:Ie03.
both open dofng bull·
Ptleotlne Rd. Glenwood, 3 bed· ohape,
non, owner redrlng, sell building,

·

•••

Furnllt*:t ~ t BldVm.
1211/Uo., INil1lto Paid. t3D ....

:-7&lt;2:-·-:3033:--.-:---:...--:---:--::'-·ll'lii. .01~7.
5070
·
Deer Hunttfl Paradiaa, 76 A;r- Ria Grinde, No ,.11, Oepaait,
Bedrooms Acrou From Unl·
For fltla: .. Acreo Mil South 01 u, 2 Bedroom Hiluao Needo B1&lt;-37G·25o10.
vtroity Of Rio Grandi, Willi Fron1
Eureka Wllh Gttal Hunllng, Work;lacattd: Warn• National ~~;;;;;;:;;,-;;;;,:I Porch, Utl.llllao Paid, 8)•·381·

PUBUC AUCTION

more..·

JJ:s

1hop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl· Thll On Approo. 10 Acroo and
TAO, wv.304·755-5885.
1000 Fool Creek Frontage, with
Five Outbulldlngo, And One
Fir'! Tltnt Buyerol E·Z Financing. llr;o !larn. Clay Townohlp, 1 112
2 or 3 bedroom, $200/mo. Frtt Mllel Up Raccoon R011d, 011 Ro·
dollvary &amp; o0t up. 1-800·251 · ui07Soulll.l1....._7282
·

ANTIQUE
AUCTION

Cnlltiniln f'lldlll 111111 - · toa chalna, -ldlll a
lllckill, tool boxlll, 20 ton Jilek, dwehngle miter &amp;

71~1

8545.

buildl and sella their own Fl¥8 Room Farm Hoult, _,.rfect
h.ornn. For factor~ dlract prices, For Rantal or Mathar·ln-law, All

PUBLIC AUCTION

Chllrroe, Slngn IIWing machine &amp; c«bbnet, push
plow, """ cNirl. IIIII •ol hanli!OOII. Clblnet cllmp.

IOJ!

5• ·
~~~~~~~~~St:ll1 C::1!lu111t1ofonrSR0001&lt;13dmap,
~ Ownor1·111nanclno
111,4·58§·

CA.• 18,900•. 81&lt;•3117·0510 Or Paioltlno Rd. GionwaQd, 3 bod·
814-11112-64211.
·
room mobile homo S385. No
.
.
PliO, clly Wlltr, ale. 30•·582· .
111 Tlmo llu)oors E·Z Flnllncing, 2 5840.
Or 3 Bedroom• Around $200
llonlh Frtt Ooivery I Stt Up, I' Repo'o ~tft, Ntver Uvtd
.800·251·50lll.
In, F100
&amp; Stt Up, 1.1101).
251-!1070.
2 BtdrDomo, Contrtl Air, In Galli·
polio, On Rtnltd Lot, Raady To Rtpo'ol Only 2 loh. Ntvtr llvtd
llova .Into I Dt&lt;-"8-1409, Alter ln. Frtt dtllv"'Y l atlup. 1·8004P.M.
251-5070.
~ji-~~i;;;;;;;;;-- I ProGram
330 farms lor Sale
'W• hava S1 OOD to •~ooo per
liomo In ~loaottr relief rundo
ocro farm lor atla, 81..040·
·available to help you purchlso a
·
r~plactm1inl homo. Call 1·800· 2o10 aero t..m lor ulo, e14-948·
488·7171 10 set appointment for 2033.
-iL
FACTORY DIRECT.
8 Year Old, Four Btdroom, 2.5
NO MIDDLE IIAN.
Balh, $unkon. Uving Room ·Over·
SAVE Sits.
looking Raccoon Crook (HI;h
Oakwood Homeo lo rht only Above Flood Plain) . 20.. Square
dealer In t~e trl·lltll area that Foot, Aloo Nowly Rooltd Older

PUBUC AUCTION

t887 Skyline ax72 readY ·to
move in, Iota or extru, exc.

lndudft 1 months FREE lot tent

)

•
10'•1110' - .....
ntxt ., PTI, Inc. Ill•

rooma. 1 81th, W11htr IDt)'tr,

a

"NOW OPEN"
WATERSCAPES PLUS
.

.

QAN SMITH~ A,U"' I I . .
.
Ceirr: Positive ·ID Refreahmente
....... 14•70. 1!=~=::;:;::===:==~:::=:::::~~~~~':::!
, . • , Public Sale

Olltrl 1fi7 doubiowidf,
3br, 2bath, 11788 down, 12781
month. Frtt dolivtry l aotup.
Only ar Ookwood Homoo. Nluo
WV.:!0&lt;-755-5815.
1;;7 ICKllll!vto bedroom,
Limirad

pltltly
lurlliohtd,
oil now
lljtt, waollwl
.,.,,
undorJurnlpin· Only S181.01 ptr month wllh
nlng &amp; needy Ill move lnlo. On lot t1050 down. Call 1-800-837·
50x100 locll8d In -n. Jl7 Bur· · 3231·
~ Addition. Pt. Pl•aant. Naw lonk Rtpo'al Only 3 lah,
chain
linkPhone
ltncoDty1
and 304-e75·
now out owner. 11nanc 1ng avo 111 bl·0 ' ""
••• •
IIUIIdlng.
7
7070 e-.ga :!DU'IS-2111.
55-mt.
1
tm doubltwldt $1•45 down.
ua?~ 2 RS,::~~~~:i

~oNEER

TOOL AUCTION

an amply
space,
He then looked down from Heaven and saw .your
smiling lace.
He put His arms around you and whispered, come to
rest,
His garden must be beautiful He only takes the best
A precious one from us Is gon41 A voice so loved is
stilled,
·
A place made vacant in the home, That never can be
filled.
We love you and·mlss you.
Mother, Dad, Shirley, David, Teresa, Shawn, David.
Lee, Fay, Elizabeth!, alii, De&lt;orise, James, Willam,
Jean

tVV7 Cltyton llobllt Hom.t-1100

bedroom. tolll electric, cam-

9:00 a.m.

1100 bedroom, Ont both, OKCtlitnl
D&lt;D-2223.

1H7 14ol0 3 or 4 Ldroom,
t 1. • - . t2211mo. Fttt ,Jr,
lklt11no, 1 dthtry. ON,·at Qak·
WOOd Romot Hltnt,WV. - 7885815.

'

s;:a• ·

,;

for Sale

-=====;:===========::;Consignment Aucdon

1

320 Mobu... ......,

lor ·

For Sole or Rtnt: 2 SIDry houot
on U7ocroo, newly romodoltd.
3 btdroom1,. W/50a100 mtlal
birn. In Galllpollo F.rry. :104.&amp;78Servk:tl
.
FJii.
3150.
Gtorgoo Portable Stwmlll, don' ~=:-::===-=-:. PI-nt. Domino'• Pizza
haul your logo to lilt miljull call HARTil IIASONARY • Block, For atla, 1 bedroom homo In PoNow hiring lor dtllvorr, mull bt :!DUO'S-1857.
...lck &amp; • - worlc, 30 Y-• ••· meroy. will oaH on land ccinltteL
-18yra old. 30&lt;-e7S.5851.
:-:-:--::--::-=--:--:-:-:- parlt,.., rtaoonoblt rateo. 304· 11•·992-5858.
Looking For Fuii-Tlmo .lob In Gt~ 805-35111 ohor 8:00pm, no job .to
RN, LPN Or RT, RHponolbia For II a County. Bodj Work. Palnl omallonr BIC]. WV-0212011
Home for tale on RL 2 North
S.Hing Up Infant APnlt llonitor Work, Minor Rtpaltl, Hal OWn
1bou1 1·0 milts from Pr. 5 bedIn 'Homeo And Ooln; llonrhly Tools, Some Air Tool1. WIIHnQ To
roam~ on acrt lot, ahawn br apHomo VloltL Thlo lo A Ptrl·T1mt Work For Right Ptraon /Pay,
polntmanl only. Call 30•·372·
Contract Poolllon. Stnd Rooumo Rtpl)': 30&lt;-1138-57711
&lt;2111rom ..5pm.
Or Pick-Up Appllcallon At: Bow-

: 320 Mobile Homes

Homo·~,1

3
....,...,
Ranch
llrl• llaln·
Whh
Gara..
l Batn,
- F - . localtd: Addl1on·

41edroomlloutt.WindootCL
AaillngiM,OOO :104-e'IS-7000.
1
7 0 . - Rd. lloroan Twp. 5
For oalo by owner- otcludod Ac. MIL 5 Rma., - · Rttdw Ta
county homo localtd an 15 .... Move lniO. Eat In Kltchtn, bak
... 2- 3 bid ....... .,. ...,, largt Cablnato, Rtlrlgarator, Elec.
kllllhln, 11v1ng ""'"'· clring raom.. Rtngo. Fuol Oil Furnace. 1•12
....,nod porch, central heat and .II!Dniat Building. Gardon, Bttullak, 17!50 oquara IQOI, pool, COY· ltli Liwn, Shade Tlttl. 131,000.

right condldatt. Eacalltnt bonaftr tallon Of Now Grant Projocll. malao. Jin S111113DU7S.t272.
~ El&lt;t. ~.
pocklgtlot part timt ornpioywL S.nd Reaume By Juno 23, 19g7
Call814·992 -8808 cr lind rt· To: F.A.C.T.S .. 1770 Jackoon Farm Work $1.00 An Hour, a14· 230 Profn110f181
sume to Rockspringa Rehabilita· Pike, Bidwell, ONo .-5614 EOE, W 251-1m
tfon Cenltr, 38759 Rocklprfngs

't-10 Hom•• tor Sill

Pomeroy • Middleport • Glllllpolla, OH • Point Ple'8ant, wv

; Sunday, June 15, 1997

Sundly,June15,1817

Pll\1

'

WISEMAN lEAL EniTI, IIIC. ·
(6

••• 1644

I!XTRA NICE BUILDING· • OR
MOilLE HOME LOT. Mature Pine
T,_ on the ttwee side~. Accau to
Racii:OOI'l Crallk. Located In Hobart
Cion &amp;D1 $11,900

ti!JIITAL PAOPUII 't lltVES11I!NT:

Thll paclt.age C!Jillills al 2 hol.le.
and 2111ng1e apartmen1s. The Income

the Ohio Riller. AJ utilities available. mil with approximately 1 1/2 miles o!
Old home on p!q)lrly.
. road fiontage on State Route 325 &amp;
.
Ptaasant Valley Rd. Broker owned.
FISI1EJIM!N'8 DREAM • 1'No mllea $450,000
'
below 1he dam you'l lind this older
'
oompielllly flmlllhtd 2 BR mobile ~ DRIVE SUBDIVISION· RIO
home. Thert't In 8 x 24 deck ORAHOe· Cloes to Unlver8lly- Lot
OYellooklng the Ohio Riller with a .
SIOiage bUidlng 111p1 going down to 121 haa water, sewer &amp; alee.
the beach &amp;a~ dock. $17,800. · avallrbla $12,000

from thll wiU more thin make your COMMIRCW.

~~:,:;1~
OFFER

I.I8T1NG Gr!n1a - . 1.8 -ll\11cw I

Rio RIVER

FRoNT LOT • 1.388 IIC1'H

d.on . nW!Ioc PII d 111JP11111. 2 mi. IOUIII of the
35 lnd Eurekl dam. Great potential at

the NE comer of U.S. 4 n
SR 325, loll of pollnllll. $48,000.00

•
/ I,

...

�Pomeroy • Middleport • O.lllpoH•, OH • Point PteMant, WY
~:

110

Beauty aalan lt)'linv chalra

$150 . Dryer chaltt •ao . and
ahompoo bowto $75ta. 30•512!5140.

Ont G.E. AC 3200 BTU: Ono
Soaro AC 11000 BTU; I UprfOI\1
- - . 1 1.........7.

~ H.....

Hoga. 504-175-

tOgal Will oat up -laiL Flah
Tank &amp; "-! Shop, 24 IS Jact&lt;aon
A••· Point Ptouant. 504·175·
20IIS.

Boa10n Torrltr a Chlnooo P~g
Pupplu, Both AKC Roglotorod,
~ 011111v. 11o1
Sholl
&amp; Wormed Now Taltl;rJ&gt;•pooll
Or......,~~~, 114-311-

c-.

--

Tr.. t "Hot Spota.• Kill Floao.
Tlcka, Uoaqultoa &amp; Flltl Orl
Contact. Without lntonal PolaonL Aak J D NORTH PRO·
DUCI lt4 ·441-183S About
HAPPY .MCK Kl~ 011\

570

Sunday,June15,1887
810 F1nn Equipment

f MH1 '&gt;UI'I'llf •;

,\ ll'.'f 'i JOCK

810 Finn Equipment
I~

OFF all farm uac10r patti.
Slclor'o Equlpmont. 304·175·
7421.
1500 ~lion Dtl..olt bulk !Onk.
81--

Muslcll
lnttruments

I 7 hp UiiiUblahl tracior. • whHI
SIOr Guitar, Chtahlrt, Ohio- loll· drwo with 4' bruah hog, call 814·

POll Pluo. Sll•tr Brldgt Plaza.
814-441-0770.
ons and lnstrumenr. plano, guitar lli1d druma, 814-3117o0302.
Purobrtd Slbtrlan Huaky pup·
ploo, 3 loll, .., nlco, blue eyn, 580
Fruns &amp;
maokt, wormed. 40% off, S1oo
Vegllables
81CI\ ... et•812·5144.
Stra-rloo. Pick \llur Own, Coli
Rabblta For Sale: l)warf And Claud&amp; 'M-., 814-245-5121.Sami· Dwalf uollly Moo se And
sa Each, 114-388-1123
Strawbttrleo. You Pick, We Pick,
Oponod: 8·8 Mon. Wed. Frl; Sat
Ready 7/1 : Austiallan Shepherd 8-Naon.
Clas'td · Sunday's,
Pupptoa, Sl 50, Taking Dopoalto. . Taylor'o .Barry
Patch. Kerr Road,
814-3884388.
814·245-11047.
Regla'-red Female Blchon Ftlae
Fo~ Sale ·
I 0 Uonlhl Old Spado All Sholl. 590
Houltbtokon, Very Friendly, 61 4·
orltade
448-3854.
IOU Allro Van-Mark Ill PackAonwellor &amp; Lab Mix Puppies, ago, V-8, 4.3 5,800 hun~red
$10 Each. 814-388-8210.
mlleo, full~ loaded, orlg 127.500
1011 price II 8,800. 304'4175- 1570.

Real Estate General

~~-

Sunday, June 16th
1:00
P.M.

~

• 8:00p.m. 614-992-2528, Russ

1IHI3 Ford 2000 tractor. N•o pow·
or, 3 pt. now radiator, rtbullt molar, brush hog, plow's, disc,
4,200, 814·902·2143 or 814·
llll2-e373 - 5.

a.toare owner."

Seart 3e· cut riding mower, 10

~

540 Miscellaneous

lion, 1345 oso; full aizo truck
IOPP81 $45; new portable phone.
wi!IOII at 112 price. 125; 814·840·

LOG HOMES

.

JUNE SPECIALS

2 Brand Now John DMro Round

Balo11 Lilt Yearo Modola 375 &amp;
385 $250 O.or Coli; Now 17 Ft 4
RHI Tedders Reoular S2.875
$2,:Jgg; Ul8d Round
r Nl Cycltbar mower, netdt re- N&lt;&gt;w
Baler~. Mower Conditioners.
paired, $140; 2-row corn culliVI·. Rakn In Stocl&lt;, Now A Bulh Hog
tor, International, two bar quick Dealer. Carmlchati'J Farm &amp;
hlld1, g.c.. $350; 814-742·2245.
Lawn 814-448-2•&amp;12, t-800-594·
1111.

h.p., Tecumseh, excellent condl·

Charming home with hlu of
·character. Full btUnnent, living room,
dining room, eute kitchen, foncetl-in
Iitle lawn, large decking on rear that '
mak111 barbecuingfon, nice
landscaping and so mru:h more,

1~ ·' ::M0 ~~~n~S~~~~~~mM~O~~--~--- Supat single waterbed, 1 drawer

l•.

1

bed, high Chair,

stroller, ear

dresser with mirror and shelves,

~ • La-z~ ao~ Rock&amp;r R8cllner $ 4o,
'
~ • 614·446·9600.

Treadmill , mic rowave oven, 40.

Baby

-~owing.

304-1!75-4548.

Structures, Inc.
Dept. GDT,
P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271

ca! 614-8-43-5350.

electric range, lable &amp; 4 chair&amp;,
amall Weber gas grill, 614-992- ,

t . Like

New Graco Tod.dlar Bad 3189.
"' With Manress &amp; Bedding; B~by Two 8J17 Wood Flush Gara~e
" B.d With Mattress Used Chain Doors $50 Each; New 8k7 White
~ ~ Link Fence With Post &amp; Gate, Ra ised PBftalModel 530, $215,

I -800-458-9990

i· · :ca:•:6:1:•·:99:2:·54:7:7:·~~~~~ca~ua~t~4-~388-~9~~~5~.~-~~~~~~~~~;.

!I
,1

Henry E. ClelandJr .. 992-2259

l\

Sherr! L. Hart ............. 742-2357

'•

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

••
•

Office .................... ,......992-2259

~

'•

•

~.eso

Uvettock
~~'tl;.e-•r-o"'ld.:;;:.bl~a.;.ck~T•;.;n;.;n..,W~al':"kt-r,
• w«y good dlapollllon, wtM ndl
-•'lor farm lrletor or 12.000. 304·
·: !ie2-5840. '

-aV..y
- Gondo
Old llfacil • White Staltlon
Good Riding Horat
NOD. OrTradt, l1•258-123:t .

ofoeowa. catvoo. bulla, and ••-·
; -!!•742-2123.
'

Nice flat,

Flarlleld

+· Corner lot- Green

ca.-,

Roaal. V-1. aulD, nttda
oft pump, 1275 OBO. 114' 882 '
sm-lpm.
Ford F-150 lq1, fuel lnjac~
..;;.:.;..:;.;;....;...--~~:::-:­ 18111
od,
runa
Auto Loana: Auto Dtalor 'Mil At· 52182. eOod- 12,000. 304· 773·
SS Buick

1"17 Nloaon Maximum 14.500.
•
11114
Cu.Van 14,000. '
_.

a-

=:.: :

"
•

i1881 Ford Tempo, one awntr,

:

eellant condltiDn lntlde/ out,

!
•

~

i

Hay &amp; Ol'lln

roan,

: :.-ct.
•
•
:

:

:

.
:
.:

:;
•

~

:

..

t~,..ca&amp;D-ustlc. 3

•

•
.,;

3

·.

rl

of Winding

.

.

vtnrt'-

7110

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce110rles

II·

BIG

=

Ad . 113,000.00 Clark
VLSChapal
U8·

• PATRIOT AIIIA • -..
Frame and 7 AC. MIL Rtnt
lnoomo 11250 mo. alao mobllo
homo 1200 mo. Income. wortc
thop. bam. Cell Ela.

~
•.

••

'' '

REALTORS:

:!:~~

=flrrily . ,. .. . . .

Who jUit llkt lll1tl IP'QI. 8
bedroom~,

room,

lojer, 1011111111¥111(1

dining room, kRchen,
laundfy &amp; mort. Remodeled
wilh carpet, fu.- &amp;

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

root. Paved drive, 5 acr1t1 mil,
largebam. lt2t .

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE •
Easy car8 Home, ideal for
young familiea. Featuret 3

" '·~~~~

br'a, 2 baths, deck, garage,
over two acree of lawn for the
,'1'~
-0·c ,.;,,
.

• "·

"'~"··.w.

btdrooma,

'·:· ~

dining

...
.

room,

kitdlen, living r.oom. Dttlchtd
2 car . .
Cell UIIOdaY ID

~~-

1oa
Situated
Geotgae C1Mk Rd. . . .

~

·'

.-

USTINGI klelllllrllrl
Priced at $38,900.0(1. 3

=:::··:·on. 1120 .
,

I

•

I 00

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446:.()971
Jeaoette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Reahor-256·6102
-Patricia Ross, Realtor

If

446-4C'i18 '

.._
'•
"·
•

1

lltautfful Now Colonial 2 lty, Alo
Grandt ._, 4 bodrml. 2 112
batltt. loWly IMng rm., dl=ln rm. 21 foot kltcheri
'"
- On lht h 1or .,.,
achoo -(CIIy
or County)
1125,000.00 Vlralnlt 385·

END REALTY, INC.

Wood ·Realty,.Ine

.•

I

Smlti 318 '921.
11021 1274 CORA MILL AD.

riil

.

32 LOcUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45~31'

t

IIIIOCI/3I8-8I2

RUSSBU.. 0 . WOOD, BROKI!Jt

.

'

I

LOT I ac. 111/1'

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

1B

3,800 aq ft,
·- formal ·rae.
entry.atH
4 BRo. 3
balha,
In ..._
baml. W8/FP In room a
don llltklin rm, oak and
trim In kl. 13 total RICIIII&amp;, 2 oar
garaao. . Proltaalonally
- . . . . . . Quality and Luxury
lhrouglt-oul. Appl. only. Vlrglnlot L

==
Uti- --·

1&amp;81 Dodgo $plrlt 104K Runa
Good, Wtfi·Melntalnod, 12,500,
114--

.. 12115. et•llll2-ee24.
tllll2 a-y lumina. 4 dr., 14500,
: :,l:.:ae:::.,r:.:oc:::;v_:::,~.5:;:::Spaa;_d-:-,-:e-:4,-:oo::-o 114·812·2143
or 114·i12-e373
Ulloa, T-Topa, Black, 114·241- aftlrSpm.
: ~·.::•15.=--~....,....,.,..-::--­ 11112 Dodgt DakoiO ·111.000 Ullol.
: ' 1081 Subaru, loadtd, all ppwer. Auto, Magnum V-1, ·114-258·
•. .umJDf, .1,350. S04-t75-33U.
1711.

Land- -Homes. We have several
qualHied buyers.

t11211. ·

I'ICTUIIUQUI HOIII
011 .. IIU,. I 0.44 AciH m/1

s-.

• ~7,000 actual mlloa, loadod,

Ustlng Needed. Almost sold out.

.-yau. ~L-­

X

IIJI-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 ~ •

Our professionals here
at Wood Realty have
just about sold
everything. We have
buyers looking for that
certain piece ol
·
It could be
you have
thtnking of
house
mar~;et. or pOSl!lbly

----yard,

u., aa- a,

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

446-1066

Hm1 IN TOWN tN CHOICe
NIIQHIONIOOO LOCA110N
P'OIIYOUfl~ 3
Bed!l'nl., L.A., Kit., fam .. rm. 1
bath, fill
Groat fltmfiV homo. l'l,be . . . . .

=~----.......;_­
o
sale

:

5 ACRf,iM~err Road. Some

Crossro.wut"

IZ,400, 114 •44...,._. Allll I dtr, PIWIL, AMIFIIICaattllt,
Roar Air, ICtyltta EnlrJ.' AIS;
P.u
' .
1~111081......_7_
.
11115 Buick Conlut)o Sllllon . . . 1 - ....... IIC2, Aulttnalll, Air,
on, .1.100,11 ..37t-2SII8.
Cruiaa, AMIFM
Trllllk
tHe' Ford Taurua o1c. running Rataut. •11,1110 Clll ,_I P.U.
cond .• .• 1,200 oao. 504-1711- (SariOUI ln......lta Onlfll ....
5320. .
.
-·5.

1817 Toyota lupro 1DOK Ma- lr.':!t~a=
" " Ford F-700, DSL Engine 5
Exoolltnt C-11on, 010 Loana A•allable For No Crtdl~ 8p
II 8p Double Frtmt 81•218·
Bad Credit And Bankrup.,y Buy. !13112.
Com for aalo, 13.00 par buahtf, ef4 411 1151.
~e14-llll2·2447.
1817 Trano Am, V·l, .Auto, Air, tta.Collltont81.....,_.172. ·
111110 Dodgt Dakota AutotnaUc.
PB. PW, Gn&gt;und Ellocll, COiot
Tobecco wot• bod jllanta. 304· PS,
lndu·atlon Hood , Louvero, E1c. Ohio VIII., Bank Will OH11 For Ae , Extended Cab, 81•~448 ills-3154,
Cond,lloi-ZI5--.
Salt A 11118 Ch.. y Z24 Cavatltt. 3145.VIN 11Gt.JFIIW5K7171003.
fi1MJ SPORTAr iON
1018 Cavallor RIS AIC, 87K Public Auction Will Be Hold At
t3.1~: 111!12 S-10 AulD, PIS, Pill, Tho OVB Annoa. 143 Third Avo,
SIK, .4.885, Trtdt-lna -omo Galli poll~, · OH On 8121187 AI
CookUolllra8!4-4o48-0109.
,10 :00 A.M. Vthlclt Will Be Said
:r1 Autos tor
To Hlghtot Biddtr 'AI II' With·
...
~~oo~.~-:::C:::-ha~rg~.,~.-:4-:ey::-:l:::lndt!~~.-:.5 1810, ·2 Door Ch"' &amp;trona out
Exprnaod Or Implied Worruna goad, badr good, no I1500, _
Cd814-3117o5056
ranty And
Callruat, chtrrJ rod color, 4 good 1800 Chny Coralca, b'-&lt;k on · lng l&lt;tllh Johnoon AI 814·441·
and atutnnlm rlml, pract II
'"~· cold air, tilt, automatic. 1031. OVB RtltrVtl Tho Right
:...•.15115. ei•742-Z!70.
To Accapt Or Rajtct Atrt And AU
8, 00 actUII mII H r oxca IItnt Bide, And Withdraw Proporty
•1818 ChtYtllt ss. 381. auto conclltlon, book ftluo 14500, will From Sala Prior To· Salt. T11m1
;trana. air C&lt;lntl. 304-e75-l 1311.
aol t3100.114-IU-tl24·
01 Selo: CASH OR CERTIFIED
,1171 .Chryoltr Now Vor~or b~ 1000 Lincoln CondnaniO~ Signa- CHECK.
ture Strln. Gray In /Our; 1 Own-"
11
or~l~:l ownor. mako offor. 3D• or.
81,000 UIIH; All Powar I Auto
SPE........SI til,. SAL
~~~~~~~~
j57 lie.
.
'
Htatw, Gilod Condition, 11,500;
~
'
ol081 Chovy Caprice, $800. 30._ 1182 Cadllllc Soden D.. illt.
Out/Blue Int. AU Po-.
~87~5-8~5~~~·~~~-:--~-:--~ Whitt
58,000 Uloa, Eroollont Contlllon,
1
1812 Delta 88 dltael, needa In- 112,500, Cell 814· 441·1781 , or
...... pump. 3!M-e75-«102. .
el • ...,..711.
'1882 Ford 414 $2,000 ; 1g8a IOQO Toyota Collc1, Auto, Rod,
:Cemoro, Ritbullt Uotor &amp; Tran• Now Tltta, Powtr Sunroof. AC.
·mlaolori, •4,000 080: 1087 Htr- cuao11t
ilootltnt ~
1oy Davlaon SporlltO&lt; 15,000, don, RuN! Grea~ I ciwlttr, ISK
:.14-388-8481, .......2-81171.
Ulloo. sa.ooo OBO 11....._.,,~,

: 640

Rac:COCIO Rd· 18 Ac.-.. 731 Feet
Frontage. Secluded· Tree
l&amp;hiade•d Great Creek view. L.Qvely
or sBB&amp;Onal ~ge s~e.
141170 Deluxe Mobil Home-p~
for pay off. set' upon a private .re~ed 1
lot. Lots of extras. 2 1/2 miles from
cJty to Gallipolis.

LOTS- Jill IJd 6

Motor Homes

........
114-

-:-:-:-:---- . . , ........_4.._
-. ··

'" 175-7421.

Woodlamwv•

4- City loti· Excellant· For condo,
15 yr tax defferedment.

c.mpna

1M3 Ol4lt Cudua, VI. 4toarr.l,
310
IUtllo
-tlapandablo,
. "·-·
.... m ChlwM! ~........ Z·l4,
COnti.,
wry
•1,1110
1
010. can lot -112407 Mol&gt; ..,.. ..., ,.,. - · . _ - .

'-:

.

Bf1~M11lilement.

pali, - - · - - -lprn.

710

=--==....,

""' - -

.. Uftlng 175

::~~~-~""'---·
~-INS
=-~~~"':;.'.;.'
~t1 0 Finn Equipment air
Ofdt r - . ~ ..... -Oil
lOr dataNI,
,_ ...... runa a~.- .,. . .. .
gtlntltr ""-· ' uc 11,2110.
• -miiCII.
-· - ,.., - - - - - _ , _
.•~-,.__ HoiiMd
ii04-27S-4215.
·-~ ~w.:;;;;;,...:.::......,:....
~._.;:.;.:
__.~c':"ho-.--.-:. .....
--,.·I1N4 cuua.. hproma u En- or. I7,100.10M~1•7.
..
,~,
With Au-flo
Trlntlllla-"--- 1.&amp; I ........_
·" l)fitl. Sldtr'a Equipment 504· """'
11o11, Loadtd,
Hu a...
1111 ~v,..,
2-

;

At

~:::-:-;:::.~==~--:·1

•• ••

Green 1\vp- Acl'la +·,
.
Great view Raccoon
Hobart Dillion

Buhl Morton Rd.

Directions: SR 7 North of Gallipolis,
continue until Ch111hire, property will
be on left tUroll from gM station.

..!

''•, .

2· Five Acr•+- Fairfield Church

7843 SR 7, Cheshire

......

1

...

HAL TOll•

.COME tf SEE/

r(,r

~

BONNIE
STUTES
RE11t77JRt
[B
446•4206 . a :

Rd.

_,. IDOd·-

Euro ....... *-• II .000: 110 441-4MIO.
Engtno From 1171 Montt Carlo lilt....._ .........
Engine RHollld Kl~ No Engine v... 1.... ..-, 11 - ·
. . . llll.tl•lol5-11115.
'"P"&lt;
......

••
.....

'

LAND- LOTS. OF LAND
2· tote 1.505 acres, wooded .
Blacktop road. ·

Two $71-AII W.IU.W.A.,

1- . . , . . . _ , . , . _ - 1..1 ~c-.. Uttllt
~ Wot1tt, 1310: 1- C'- llut, LH- Ufolooi"*J, ti•·

Cord Stub Guardo. Henton 530
R.'Balora 5501 17,100. Htuton
540 R. Baloro 10001 $10,800.
Honton R: Billa Sllar. Wrapfll
17.300. Ag-Wrap R. alo Slla~ .
wrapper. $7,300. Ag Wrap FWm
20'1 eooo- se5 ,.. rot 30'1 175 ·por roll. I Uaod Round Ba~
era to Chooat From. Kaaf•'~t
Sor•lce Center St .. Rt. 17 Pt.
Plouant &amp;. Ripley Rd. 30..886·
3174.
.

· Real Estate General

7 Acrn- More or less, Pleasant Hill

Comfort, convenience.
en.ergy . efficiency~
I
Merchandise
I dur~oLility and flexibility
·10110 6 Ft Tall Chain length 2045·
· design arc a few of the
Fenee,814-388·8193.
Sears Craftsman 18hp Lawn &amp;
reasons why 2 ,000
• ' u~· Cak)r T.v. With Built In VCR, Garden, B.S. motor, extra good
fomilics will build a
cond. Asking $1 ,000 080. 304·
: 1250. e14-«1-0948.
· 875-7045.
home this year!
~ 3 Piecaa af_r light green carpet _Se_t_o_f_bu_n_k_bed_s_WI__Ih_ma_l1t_os_se_s,
~ · . S100ea. 3M-562-5840.
May tag washer &amp; df)'Bf', exercise
At•palochian
Log
, · c• heavy cortugaled pipe, 100ft. bike, cOnaole stereo, ca!l e 14·
1 . roll, $21 .99. PAINT PLUS HARD- I9.;;92;:·_7_43;.;5...a.,.flo:.r...5_:30;.;pm.
_ _-,,-,.,.
Structures has bc~n o
: · WARE. 304-1!·75-4084.
SPRING SPECIAL: Central Air
leader in the log home
: ' 4 ooo PSI Hot Cold Water Power Conditionara: 2 Ton 11,195; 2 112
industry
over 15
: Washer. Lots 01 Ellrasl614·388· Ton $1,295; 3 Ton $1,395; 3 112
• 0413.
Ton $1,595; • Ton $1 ,895; Prices
ycat•s, Choose from ovc1·
~
Above Include Normal lnatalla70 stanlla rd models nr
~ , 418 ulility lrailer, all steel, $175 tion. Full 5 Year Warranty. •If You
: , 080. 814·992-5777ahaqpm ,
Don't 'Call Ua .wa Both Loaol'
wC•n custom design one
~ •
.
.
· Free Estlmateal Add -On Heal
~ ; -Are you buying new turmture'? Pumps Only Sllghty t:ilgher. Call
for y.uu.
\ Sell your used furniture to !he Po- Ua Today. 1997 Ia The Twenty
l. meroy Thrift Shop. There is a real Seventh Year In The Heating &amp;
i •. need for couches, breakfast and Cooling Businesar 614-446·6306,
Coil or write for more
' · dining raom sets. We qlso b'uy 1..aoo-291-oo98.
~ : baby ~tds. -strollers. playpens,
information .
z , toddl•r car seats and walkers . STORAGE TANKS 3 ,000 Gallon
t Caii&amp;U-992-3725 Tu.esday thru Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,
. , Saturda~. 1Dam·4 ~m at 2.20 East Jackson, Ohio. 1-800·537-9528.
Appalachian Log
~

710 AldOl tor ....

dera $1,300. Heaston T Lfower~

1.103 acr11, 1.55.87 Road
frontage, Green Elementary

Kitrl&gt;le Console Piano, $850. 814245-5789.
•

~

610·Finn Equlpmlnt

1172 u... Trudl Ring 145,000; Farm~~ll Cub tra&lt;IOI wilh whHI
111111 Hone Pile Drtv~ H..,_: WIIOhiO. good a~nclllon , 11..2471110 GUC Fuol Truck $2,750; 1.2::;72::4:.:•::'*:.1:30pm=;;;;,:·_ _ __
4t" Drum ShHpa Foot Rollor t•
t3,2So; t810 t0.50 ~Troller
Now ' Hoaalon
Hay TOol
t4,200: 1838 Jolin DHro A Sal•472
7'HIYblne
tT,!OO
. ...
11.300: Ulac. Steol llooma 12 To 0' Hayblno l7,8oo. 412 8'HaPfnt
57 Ft. 114·143-2300, 1· 4 P.U .; 18,400. 134 R. Ialor 8501
Allor 4 P.U. 11..a43-2811.
·
U, 700. 844 R. Iaior 10001
1
400 gallon 10lar bulk tank, 814· $13,300. 140 R. Balor 10001
84e-2033.
. Balo Command Not Wrap
115,500. 154 R. Balor 15001
815 Dlac Moworoll' I'
487 N.H...,...,., t2800: - ISO 115.800.
Qallon Ru-.nalci"MIIt trough'a, CUI f4, 700. Houton 30' V Rako
$4,200. Haaatoh TID Dlac Mow$I DO Nd\ 81•742-~ 1 57.
~~~~~~~~-- oro $5,300. Hnoton 10' PvQ Ttd-

2.440 Acl'le +·Green Twp, 182.48.
road frontage .
Buw or 1111. Riverine An tiqu es,
, 1124 E. Main Sueer, on AI. 124,
• Pomeroy. Hour ~: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to e:oo p.m., Sunda)' 1:oo to

::8undly, June 11, 1117

Bonnie Stutes, Broker

OPEN HO.U SE ·..

:.

-~

\t*.• •.

-·' .~ -.

112872 Dfltvl ev.tM JAY DA. u
i!JU ~n:.r~ ~ 8 room Tri-Ln*
hOmO.
:114 boclnna., I 1/2

at

=

bathllcr= LA, dining aroa,

~ Fniynn, IlK

NICE HOMI FOR
MONEY! Apprp•. 1040 Sq.
one floor plan Ranch, aaay
care lawn, 1 car garage. newer

_ DON'T HAVI! 10 WAIT 10
· MOVI! INTO THIS

roof, total olfwo rooms. Won't
laal long -at this prlce.
$45,000.00 1137

RI!IIODI!LI!D HOIIII
IPA·C I 0 U I
YAFIDI
Remodeled a home at . a
modoat price. Over aizld
eat·ln kltchtn, roomy HYing
room, bath. laund~ room.
N - vinyllldlng I lhlnale
roof. Close to churCh,
11f0C81Y, achool, etc .•..
rmmaalate poaaaaalonl
1117

POMI!ROY· Welle T . - 2 cornt11 loti and I .two atoryand
home wilh 4 roome and 112 bath dOWn &amp; 3 bedrooms
1 full bath
Halt a ,_(y remodeled kitchen and main
bath and a -newer roof. Beautiful fireplace, wriiJI'fOUnd

up.

porcll 81\d french doofe. ~

!'

•

WALL TO WALL CHARM ·
•1mpr818iva ancl Newer• two TOO MUCH CITY ._..7
story w1111 tour bedrooms, 2 112 Consider lhlo home, localed .
approx. sh' mlfea from
bathe with 2 c. attached
goraiJo. Extru Include kitchen Gallipolis. 3 bedrooma,
furnished w/appllancoa, largo ··~••hod ll!llllt, balement
wrap around porch, back lawn w/llrOpiEO, vinyl'brlcll-.
Ia loncod ln. Perfect lor lha . EJu:optlonal Buyl--1131
growl~g lamllyll $130,000.00
1131

•

HOIII! ON THII LOT .. For
tho tow price of sa.ooo1 Lot 1a

•

•

•

-

•
I

POMI!IIOY· Mulberry Hta: -Apr8Hn1ly Ulld olftce for a
dootor. Could have many olhltt usn. Hal a ~
liM; 3 eum IIJOIIII, 11ab, ldlcl.n,
Dr. I~·
-*Y'• omc.. a big upellltw. $180,000
.

.._,..,t

pauo tilting on

appro• . 100•60, with rood

IUbcfhllafon,

II

THINKING _9F BUILDING!
Thlt could- be what your

looking for, and the price Ia
rlgtiiiOO, In tho $20'1. 10 ocroa
m/1 with apprDx. 9 acreo
woocltd. mineral rlghlo, ulll.

~---

-

--and a

1117 LtGRANDE • Don' mltl
thla ono11tory homo • located
In family orltnlod ~- Total
of

CHICK·TH· OUTI LOT ·
WITH SIPTIC ALRI!ADY
II PLACI II,ODO.OOI
ApproK. 112 acre more or
..... Coun1Y...,. A llectrlc

.

CaU
·for ·

-· . .

I

I!ION'T Mil UP THIIIUYI

-.ho~Me~

sao·.. .en

....

appointment

·m
IIAUOO

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. G;rl
614) 446-3644 •
&lt; •-

'

'

(

E·MIIll Addresa: wtsernan@zoomnet.net

i
:·

:

DAVID WIS~ROKER,GRI • 446-95$5 · ~
IAJretta MeDII-e.· 446--7729

Carolyll Wild!· 441·10117

·

I

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.

LOT tr,ODO OVW a Aone. lamllY

I

llmlly rm•• -

a car

..

eM~eo.

.

..,_,

• 1 ahod 1 car

1•

· lnQ!OUnd
pool • yard
pool .
r.ouae.
Lovely treed
w/gutllo. dtok In lfll roar,
farictd yaftl.

1,800
County water available. eq. ft. with IIIICMCI 2 car
WOOdld . . '.
gara~ .. Purchaetd with
l U - mort or •or
100 •- ..,., llld men.
or ~-­
Pond
RID
Grandt arM, allY iiOIIJUII
1110111 tppi'OI(.

more .

.l
·~-PRONr.a 011 1111
IIAUTIPUL ONIO IWIII •
D,.,.......,
turn ol . .
con ury home. 3 -m1,
rttnadllld W/MW windows,

l

cann1 air, attto fall, .....
Call

'
, I.'

.

...........
-.--.
=1-t. vu .....

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till II I

=

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1 ACIII...._ LOTI, lllll1.tllllth

approtdmately 1151)' . ol
Caunly ...,lalaablo
. Dl'lltllllf lor IOii

-·~

110

'

AIIIUNI IIOAD•

1

HUNTING - · - lttt'
111000 3 - with
- · thle
or
mort...,..,._
or 1-. IIIIUCidcom•
...,,_
....__
up mo .... ,.... ,,..
,_..,.. I ' dallqwltt Yloodtd. Ownlt ,....._.,. fllmodllld. 2 nlol prdtn
gropll1iee ~ In ·Ollila lfiOII 1 car detached
!lame ... d lid. tr.OOI! lllf QOtdy.
Makt . _ .. otter ~ LOll ol.lnfo. c.ll
lal.0111'1 lllull. Mltlnl . . , 1111
MVC
,.
131
-

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Mllll

Sonar Glrnel446-2787
'

110N • 4 11111100111. a .1/1
balha.iovtiJ-w/Ntln
lltOIIIIfllll- tormal=rm.,
IUnktn IMng rm. "'fl:':d

room, dlnlng room. kltehtn.

.111ti.INCOLN HIIGifi'So PorrltrOv· 'lllur ' - p.yment ·
oould bt ' - then your NftL Nice home for I ~ family.

• &lt;

-It~
w/brlck; at&gt;ovt
ground oiling
pool.
seD'II131

.11 TOWN ca•ac~AL
/OI.M ITRIIT ; Haa apace, atorag~. and

doublanldt, e[lttnQ on a · full ~ment. Home h• 4 ·
btdtiiO!I'II, dining room. f1m11Y .-n, anln-gtOUnd pool,
li1d I lql

._.,diCk....

at SR

11UY A UTTLI OR ALOT
OP ACIIIAGI with 1hll
roomy 4 btckocima, 2 balh
rancl\ IIIYtt hOme. Uvtng

CIIIW liD- A large 1.15 acre lOt with. a Barring ton

-CIOUI IWICH- With a
·prtV.u
IMifllllQ" 3 - - - · 1
1/2 bath, ful baml, alltchtd

-.-.oo.

110.11D .

fir.,._ ...-

porcll, lanced In pool. Chock·
~-outl for lhla ptloo 111,800.00

Tltttt bedroom MObile hOmO,
encloaad poroh, latgt out
building, ahado- 2 .....
,.,, lor

IYiillbtt. "Situllltd

IIIIIIIIAPOfiT• Beta~~ St.· Atwo 1101Y ttome with ·.
vlnylllldlng, wlndaWI, A 1 , _ root. HU 4 to I .
btcliuGaM, flmiiV room and 4 alder

n.. rooma. tnCioaod bock

.

acre. County water
1MIIIble. $15,000. -1 ·

LONG 1t0TT01t1- AppfOK~ 2
1871 mobile
home with 2 btdf'OOml, btautlfut view of 1111 IM!, end I
11011ge bUIIdlflll. ONLY $1s;ODO

BUILD THAT DfiENl

fron1age. Located In Plantz

..

~

VACANT LOTI Convenient

~

it ·1501170 lot. VInyl aiding for

rm, POliO &amp; r.noo. Thlo
charmlllQ clean horill Will mateo
you llnil· Coli VLS 3f18.111W4418808 . will gladl~ ohow you

IOCitiot1 rotd fronllge Ilona
IWO rotdt, lOt approx. 314

POIII!ROY• 1.1ncot!1 Drive- A 1 1/2 11ory hoUie on I lltUe
triiVIled road. COinpltte!y remodeled dOWniltllll wllh 4
rooma down Mel a·bidroOme.up. N - '-I pump, large
~-I\IOW .,,1110

I!Unlwhlrdwood .

•

our lllllnp: .

·
~I

•

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