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Reg,o nal

Inside

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$1'-""''
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HI: 80s
Low: 60s

out of Weet VIrginia

plcm rem~ns
IUicertaln

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• Featured on page C1
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gov. 11olno"lclt's
school fwtdlng

Bob Denver •nd

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([lte fate of

Radio Gilligan:

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Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy·· Pt. Pleasant • July 20, ·199i~iJ§IIiii'JIIifVoJ!3f, No. 23

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

~

unemployed workers fell to

2 8

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[] _..,

Across Ohio, record numbers working
GALLIPOUS -' While the jobless rate fell across 9.8 percent. The OBES reports 900 of the county's
the state in June, Ohio Bureau of Employment Services 8,800-member labor force as jobless in June. .
figures released Friday show that unemployment rates
Other regional June unemployment rates (May figthroughout most of soutltem Ohio increased last month. ures in parenthesis) were: Athens - 4.3 (4.4) pen:cnt;
The strongest local surge in unemployment occurred Lawrence - 6.5 (5.8) pen:cnt; Scioto - 9.2 (7.9) pen:cnt;
in Jaclcson County, where tlte rate increased 4.6 percent Vinton- 13.7 (11.2) pen:cnt; and, Washington- 5.3 (5.5) .
-from 7.1 percent to 11.7 pen:cnt in the one month pen:cnt
. period covered by the ODES report.
· Acrosss the state, Ohio's strong economy is continuThe jobless rate in Gallia County increased by 0.2 ing to improve as tlte jobless rat~ fell to 4.2 percent from
pen:cnt "'- from 8.0 to 8.2 pen:cnt between ~ay and. 4.6 percent in June, the administrator of the OBES said.
June. The OBES estimates 1,200 of the county's 14,200"The drop in the unemployment rate in June is furmember labor force u unemployed in June.
ther evidence of the strength of Ohio's labor market,"
ODES figures set Meigs County's June jobless rate at Administrator Debra Bowland said Friday. "The size of
10.2 percent - up 0.4 percent from the May figure of the unemployment rate decline this month wu greater

Newvs. Old:
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· · ·I" e•llf·
Funds allow program
expansion In region
GAUJPOUS- A request for
increased funding bas been granted by the Ohio Deputment of
Alcobol and
Addiction Ser-

v~tothe"~,~mAlten~m~l

to Street Crime program for Gallia, Meigs and Jackson counties.
The award of $184,878 will
allow the prowani to expand into
Meigs County, said Robert Gordon. director of the Gallipolisbased operation.
The state funding wu issued to
tite program through · tlte GalliaJacbon-Meigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction and Menial Health
Services, Through the combined
efforts of the three county juvenile ·
courts, additiopal funding totaling
$8,500 will also be re&lt;:eived.
TASC was estabHshed locally
in . 1992 through the combined
efforts of the Gallia and Jackson
juvenile courts, a~d the Gallia
County Commissioners. The program targets non-violent, felony,
misdemeanor or status offending
substance abusers, aged 12 to 18.

',,

s~:,~~~~~~~tedbyi~:,;;~es

among service providers were .
offset partially by reductions
in good-producing industries.
Seasonally adjusted emplo~­
ment in local .schools boosr€d
government employment by
3,000 jobs in June. Retail
trade and the .service induslt;i::il:~;:;:;;;;;:i=ii::~~====:::!::i::Z::::===========.t tries
added 3,000 jobs, but
"
unemployment in goods-prothan )IVe expected."
ducing induslries declined by 1,000 jobs in June to 1.31
The national rate was 5.0 percent in June, up from 4.8 million.
pen:cnt in May.
The county rates ranged from a low of 2.4 percent in
A record 5.49 million Ohioans were working last Madison County to a high of 14.7 percent in Jefferson
month, up from 5.48 million in May. The number of County.

Vinton council explores
its village hall options

sir..__,

By KEVIN KELLY
Tliaae Sentinel Staff
~~·····
VINTON- Faced with a
rontiDuing need for repairs
to the 104-yeu-old vUiage
hall, Vinton officials are
starting to look at the possibility of a new base of local
government and ammunity
activities.
But the village council ~
reluctant to see the o11el.tli'be
school building fall by the
wayside, and has agreed for
now 10 pursue grants or
funding sources to keep it
·~ and . available to the
public. • '
:f.~ .:
Council agreed informally in June to study tbe feasi-.
bility of maintaining the
hall or investigate putting
up a.new building. But after·
discussing the idea further
with Mayor Donna 'DeWitt
this montb, it agreed to look
itito \he availability of
repair money and if needed,
get 10me guidance from the.
Ohio Historical Society.
The building is not on
the ~ listing of historical
sites, but DeWitt said she
belicvts that because of its
age, "we'd need their per'
mission to do anything"
~ ·.•
with the structure.
While she agrees it
might be more economical
to build new, DeWitt feels
PONDERING REPAIRS- The Rev. M.vln SIIIIH, left, and Herb MooN, membere of
the current building has VInton Vlll8ge Council, • • • DUIIJIIII the 104-year-old vlll8ge hall and community cenvalue liS a symbOl of Yin- tw 11 IIIey and olhlr vlllllge .Ofllclall cohlemplate IIIII king repalre to the building, or
·
of I MW IIII'UCIUre.
.
ton •s hentalle
an d she wou ld lnveatlgate
.
.the (IOIIIblllty
.
like to sec tt maintained.
During the )930s, it ·even served as an impromptu sec' A new facility would be nice, but the town haU is a part . ond-run movie theater, exhibiting films after their run was
of history that can never be recaptured," she said, adding completed at the Gallipolis theaters.
that she expects no action or decisions will be taken 'in the
The hall is still in demand for weddings, showers, parties ·
immediate future.'
. and other events, and until the flood it had been rented regAlready in need of roof repair, siding and replacement ularly to groups and organizations from Vinton, Bidwell,
windows, the building's structural problems were aggravat- Porter and Wilkesville. .
ed after the March Rood, when it was used to store relief
The hall bas not been used except for council meetings
material for flood victims. The weight caused the Door, sup- since the relief material was moved to the Outreach Center
ported by sandstone pillars, to sag in spots, which Council- . and the Door problem arose.
.
man Larry Burris said .can be corrected now.
"We want to get it cleaned good and have t~is problem
"It can be shimmied up a bit, but that won't last forever, • with the Door taken care of, • said Burris, a former village
he said. "We have to look at it hard and seriously."
' employee.
Burris initially proposed the feasibility study, but stressed
"It's not really known, but you'd be surprised at ho\\'
that whether the hall remains in use or a new building takes many community activities occur in that building," he
its place, it must continue as 'a community center.
added. "It's really the only one of its kind berween here and
The building was opened as a school in )893 and Gallipolis. Anyone can look at our records and see there's a
remained part of the Vinton Separate School District until need. •
1936, when it was sold to the village.
If the village ever opts'for a new town hall, it will have
While it became the village government base, it was also · to keep public usage in mind, Burris noted.
·
used for activities like fire department meetings, social func"We need a community building, not just a council
lions and entertainment.
room," he said.

•

and salary employment rose
by 4,000 jobs to 5.35 million
in June, according to the latest

1B 93

.

'Mock checks'
total $1.2M for
Gallia, Meigs
Ohio's Lt. Gov. Hollister presents
symbolic checks for real housing
rehab projects in area communities
VINTON/POMEROY - Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister came into
the area Friday bearing gifts for Gallia and Meigs counties in the
form of.. funding for local housing pro- . - -- - - - - - ,
grams.
In ceremonies at the Vinton Village
Hall and the . Meigs County Courthouse,
Hollister, accompanied by state Department of Development and local official5y
presented. mock checks for previouslyapproved amounts designed to .improve
housing for low- afd · moderate-income
residents of targeted areas in both counties, as part of the Community Housing
Improvement Program.
The money is part of a $29.9 million
award to 5.1 organizations throughout
Ohio. Oallia County, which will focus on
housing im'provement in Vinton and Hunt-.
ington Township, received $635,000,
,/ ,
while Meigs got $600,000.
•"
Local matches are being added to the L....&gt;._;:-"---;:;,r;insfei
funding. ·
·
.
"CHIP allows the state to assist local communities in their
efforts to create housiQg opportunities tailored to the needs of their
low- and moderate-income residents," Hollister commented.
. "Both Gallia and Meigs counties will use these funds to assist
in restoring homes and providing services to many affected by the
flooding that devastated much of southern Ohio earlier this year,''
added Hollister, a candidate for the Republican nomination in the
Sixth Congressional District next year,
Gallia County looks to use the funding to assist in the rehabilitation of 23 owner-occupied homes, provide. emergency home
repair services for 28 homes, and restore a storm sewer.
Meigs' award will go to the rehabilitation of 33 owner-occupied
homes and provide home buyer assistance in the form of downpayment and closing costs for 15 households.
Of the amounts granted, Meigs got the maximum per&lt;aunty
funding round.
· ·
Galli~ 's award came after rwo previous attempts to obtain housing improvement monies for the Vinton area.
Th~. ~nt~ had ~rev!ously been. awarded funds for housing
rehabthtauon m.Galhpohs and the Btdweii-Porter area.
·
Applications for CHIP are reviewed based on such criteria as
. community distress, applicant's past performance and administrative capacity, cost-effectiveness and leveraging, a spokesman for
the development department said.
The current funding round also saw six communities recei~e
additional awards ranging from $30,000 to $100,000 to assist with
lead-based paint abatement efforts.
While CHIP's primary focus .is on housing improvement, its
funds can also be used for such secondary improvements as public
infrastructure, the ODOD spokesman said.

New residential development promises buil"ing boom
· (Editor'• Not•: Tod•y conclude• • four-patt
..,.,_ on dellfl/opmflnt. In lire TupptK8 PIIIIM CCHII·
munlty, which ha ·~In Tile 0/llly Sent/MI.}
By BRIAN J. REED
Tfme1 Sentinel Staff

OPEl
101.-nt.
Slt9-6

TUPPERS PlAINS - What is now 565 acres'. of
orchards and wOQIIed farmland may soon be a i;Jooming
upscale residential community in eastem Meigs County.
.
Apple 1Jee Estate, owned by businessman Frank
Herald, is located on State Route 7 near Tuppers Plains,
consisting of four former farms: the Cline Fruit Farm,
and farms owned by the Balcer, Bibbee and Dimewood
families. The first phase of development of the property involves 74 hoSidetitial lots, ranging from one-half
acre t6 seven acres.
Marketing of the area bas not yet begun in earnest,
Herald said, because roads are not(passable. However,
tbe roads through the first phase of development should
be completed and blacktopped within 60 days, along

.

with main water lines.
The developmenttakes in parts of Chester, Olive and .
Orange Townships, with possible future access from
Uckskillet, Locust Grove, Baker/Smith and Shumway
Roads.
If total capacity is reached, the development will
have more homes that the community of Tuppers
•Plains does today, providing what Herald estimates
will be a $50 million annual tax base for Meigs Connly, local service providers and the Eastern Local
School District.
.
A model manufactured home and visitor's center are
· located on State Route 7, and rwo stick-built homes are
· nearing completion.
The homes will be sold, lots and all, as soon u marketing begins.
· The hOIISell, one with four bedrooms and another
with five, will sell for approximately $155,000 and
$165,000 respectively, and are typical of the residences
that Herald ~ 10 see in 'his development.

••

Spotlight on ...

Buyers of lots in the first phase will be · able to aid expects that most
choose their home: they can purchase a manufactured of his prospective
home from Herald's bus'iness or from another vendor, buyers will come
Herald will design and build a stick-built home, or buy- from outside of Meigs
ers may contract with another builder.
·
County -- from . proRestrictions apply. For instance, mobile homes are fes.•ionals now living
not permitted, and all homes will be required to have an in Belpre, Parkersattached garage.
burg, Marietta. and
The target valuation for a home in this phase of surrounding commudevelopment is at least $125,000.
· nities -- prosperous
Herald does not plan fur a 'run of the mill" subdivi- and home-proud prosion. The wooded environment at Apple Tree Estate' fessionals looking for
will create a quiet, rural setting; and will allow breath- quiet surroundings.
ing room for families who Herald hopes will soon be
·An incentive for
living there.
these buyers will be
A second step in developing the area will allow for the new $7 million
less-expensive homes in the $100,000 range in another campus of the Eastern ,___ _ _ _ _ __;_;;.:.,.~
section Qf land, and condominiums are also on the Local School District, Herald said.
drawing board for a third section.
"Good schools are important to families searching for
As for the market for such top-drawer housing, Her·
.Continued on page A2 .
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Southeast Ohio
zone forecast

best."
Herald is c:Urrently negotiating
with tbe Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District for poSsible service of the developmcnL
1f tbc district does DQI serve
the area, a package treatment
plant will be required. Tuppers HOliES UNDERWAY- 1"- two hoJMe will be among the lim told
PJains101estcr 'Wiler District will Ill Apple Trw e..... Tuppers "'--DL Tiley
by the
pnwiclc water.
dmllaJWMIII'a - - · Frri Herald. Merklllng of the - m will
begin thla IIIII, • • JMcla .ncl Clthlr lnfrulnlctll11111111 completed.
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July20,1117

OHIO Weather

•

Ribbon-cutting ceremony slated

MICH.

tcr.

TB skin tests scheduled Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS - Extended hours for those wishing to obtain a food
handlers' card have been set by the Gallia County Health Department.
TB skin tests will be given Tuesday from 4-6 p.m. in.the counhouse
lobby. Extended hours are slated for 4-6 p.m. Thursday in the counhouse
lobby to read' the tests.
·
·
·
The skin tests are free and available tp those wishing. to obtain a food
handlers' card in Gallia County.
-

Two-vehicle crash causes minor injury
POINT ROCK -A Wilkesville woman was slightly injured in a twovehicle accident Friday at the intersection of State Route 689 and Meigs
County Road 27 (Point Rock). the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Celia F. Mulholland, 45, was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS following the 6:30p.m. crash, troopers said.
Mulholland was southbound on 689 when her car was struck by a pickup truck driven by Michael E Jones, 44, Wellston, according to the report
Jones was exiting the county road when the collision occurred, troopers
said.
·
Damage was moderate to both vehicles and Jones was cited for failure to yield.

.

Strong winds, some as high as 60
mph, flattened barns in northwest
Ohio and knocked over a trailer and
a traftic light in suburban Columbus
as storms swept through the state
Friday.
No one was injured when the
wind picked up beams in a bam in
rural Van Wert County and threw
the complaint.
them hundreds of yards into a com·
In its order, the· Commission field, said Rick McCoy, county
repeated its opinion that Ohio's Con- emergency management director.
McCoy estimated damage at
sumer Sales Practice Act should
apply to' propane sales, despite a about $200,000.
The debris pattern was studied
Fourth Appellate District, Coon of
Saturday to determine·whether a tor·
Appeals' ruling to the contrary.
Rutland, which serves about nado touched down, said Diane
6,500 customers in 26 counties in
Ohio, is the largest LP gas supplier
in Meigs County and supplies gas
energy to about 65 percent of the
residential propane energy market in
Athens County. About 145,000 Ohio
households rely on bottled, or LP
· gas for some of their energy needs.

PUCO denies regul~tory
authority over propane sales
Last Jan. 10, Rebecca Haning of
Coolville and Melvina Stephenson
of Nelson-:ille, filed tbe complaint
with the Commission alleging that
Rutland Bottled Oas Service of
Athens:
-provided inadequate service,
"Wrongfully refused to maintain
uninterrupted service except upon
unjust and unreasonable terms and
-failed to comply with standards
applicable to natwal ps companies
under Ohio law and regulations of
the
Commission.
1\unday.
. Thursday's ruling by the ·PUCO
The PUCO lUling came as part of
grants Rutland's motion to dismiss
a complaint case.

COWMBUS- The Public Uiilities Ccmmjssion of Obio (PUC'O) has
nded dill tbe Slle of propane is out·
side tbc Ccmmiuioo's jurisdictioD.
. "Historically, tbe business of supplyillg LP ps to customm has not
beea ~ted by this Commission,
and we do not believe, or are we
aware of any indication to the con·
uuy, thallhc state Legislature ever
intended LP ps serv~ to be regulated IS a public ..utility serv~,'
· wrote tbe Commission in its order

Republicans propose tougher standards;
School funding package still uncertain
end to come up with an agreeable
plan to pay for better schools and
reduce residential property taxes.
The accountability plan would
scrap the ct~m~~t ninth-grade proficiency test, which is now 1required
for graduation, and ·replace it 'll(ith a
topgher test ilesigned to measure
learning through the lOth grade.
All students would be required to
pass the reading section of the
fourth-grade proficiency test to
move on to fifth grade.
Schools, meanwhile, would be
graded on how well they prepare
students to pass the tests, reduce truancy and dro!J?ut rates, an~ ~et
COLUMBUS (AP) -The state other academic gc;&gt;als. Dtstrtcts
ia pumping about $350 million into wo~ld ~Jso be requ1red 10 meet. a
19 Ohio school districts to help them senes ~f man_agement _and fi~tyJ~1al
repair or replace rundown or outdat- ,goals, mcludmg keepmg a tamy
cd bulldinJIS.
":" - day:" fund for emergencies, ~ bal. The grapts, iJPPfOYed by the State anced b~get and ~o~ey speclficalBolrdofEducationlastweek,werelhc .Jy set as1de for bud"mg needs and
lalal round of awanls Wider a sdlOOI textbooks. . .
.,
buiJdiag l"'imooo pogram designed
. . School dtstn~ that don 1 meet
10 help Ohio's jlOOICSI dislricls tlp8llde e1ther the academiC or management
buikliDgs _ many of whicll do not standards ~o~ld fa~e jocreasing
meet beaJth and safety oodcs.
state superv1s1on, sa1d Sen. Gene
MOBI of the money was included Watts, R-Galloway. In the m~st
in legislation signed by Oov. George severe cases, the state could appomt
\binovich in May after lawmakers someo~e to ove~ the day-to-day
Stripped the school building aid out ~~110ns of ~e dtstnct.
of the regular stale budget in the . As educa~ton ~m~ ~grow­
wlkc of the Ohio Supreme Court tng state-fundmg pnortty, tl ts clear
decision that declared the state's that t_be citizens of our state and a
school funding system unconstitu- grow1~g num~r o,f educators are
tlonal. About $100 million was left expec_ung thetr legtsl~t~rs to enact
over from previous budgets.
meanmgful accountab1bty measures
An additional $250 million will to ensure enhanced academic perforbe aviilable later this year and next mance and effcct1ve use of tax dolfrom money that was later put back
into the state budget covering the
two years beginning July I.
And under a new school funding
mcdlanism proposed by \binovich
IJid now being debated in the Legisllturc, as much IS $6 billion in state
·'
aid for school buildings l:ould flow
into dillricts over the next 10 years.
The program would be financed by
part Of tbe proceeds of a penny-perdollar increase in the state sales tax,
wbich would generate an extra Sl
billion annually for schools.

COLUMBUS (AP) - ·Financial
IICCOUDtability and academic perforlllllll:e have moved to the bead of
the clasa in the legislative debate
over a new school funding system.
House and Senate Republicans
olitl~ a series of proposals on Fri·
day thai are designed to improve
Ohio's school system - and win
support for a proposed $1.1 bntion ·
sales IIX increase. Lawmakers
planned to work through the week-

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DistrictS share
· $350 million to
repi&amp;Ce buildings .

Innes, a meteorologist at the Nation· ground, causing rapid changes in
al Weather Service office in Wilm· wind direction and speed - have
similar wind strengths.
ington.
· Van Wert County police said
Innes said a small tornado and a
microburst - an intense localized power lines were down throughout
downdraft of air that spreads on the the oounty.

• KANAUGA - A mobile home was heavily damaged Friday by a fire
;that kepi Gallipolis volunteer f~refighters on the scene for nearly three
. hours. .
.
: . The department was called to 129 Hubbard Ave. at 7:50p.m . after
:improper venting from a Hotpoint clothes dryer at first ignite~ a portion
-of the 12-by-55 residence, owned by Bill Aldridge, Marion, and rented
: ~y Anthony D. DeVault, according to a GVFD report.
: · Twp trucks and 22 firefighters responded to the call, according to the
•iepon.
·

~Firefighters respond to tWo calls

: GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Depanment sent two
:trucks and 22 firefighters to a reponed bmsh fire on Bulaville Pike Fri:day, but discovered it was controlled.burning by the property Owner.
· The department received the call at 8:22 p.m. and upon arrival found
:smoke was arising from a bl)lsh pile being burned on land owned by Rus:sell D. Rumley, 3600 Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis.
.
: The'OVFD was called out at 7:08 p.m. Friday to On Cue, 614 Silver
·Bridg~ Plaza, Gallipolis, to investigate an odor reponedly irritating staff
:and c~tomers.
· .
: Aft~r checking out the building, the depanment turned the matter over
~o its owner, a department spokesman said.
·

:Break-ins, thefts reported to sheriff
: GALLIPOLIS- Break-ins at five camper trailers parked at a week:Cnd retreat site on Jones Road were reported t&amp; Friday to the Gallia Counly Sheriff's Depanment.
··
C• Allen G. Hughes, Dayton, o\Niib-of one &lt;11'ihe campers, said the-break~ns apparently occurred at the Raccoon Creek Retreat sometime between
last Monday and Friday. Hughes reponed .the theft of a portabletelevi:sion and VCR, but a list of missing items from the other campers had not
'been completed, according to the report.
.
: John Pennington, 3015. Bulaville Pik&lt;:. Gallipolis, informed deputies
)hat his bicyde was stolen Friday so.metime between I :30 a.m. and 7:30

Includes: 150 Gallon Propane
25 Ft. of Copper Tubing. No Tank Rent
c£O«Vttt, ~ cvntt ~II

-..m.

;

All Orders Must Be Paid On Delivery.

:Rio Grande man jailed on charge
: RIO GRANDE :- The Rio Grande Police Department lodged .a vil'age resident in the Ga!lia County Jail early Saturday on a ch~e of domes·
~ic violence, according to jail records .
: Kenneth M. JarrelL 18, Apartment 29. 725 Pine St. Rio Grande. wa;
Jx&gt;oked into the jail at 6:45 a.m .

·:Marshall center plans registration
:: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Open registration for Marshall Uni•iJcrsity's Mid-Ohio Valley Center has been set for 5-8 p.m. Thursday. July
: ~4 in the library of Point Pleasant High SchooL
: • The fall semester at Marshall hegins Aug. 25. ,For more information,
call 304-675-2627
&gt;

.JP·C asks for water use restriction
TUPPERS PLAINS -

io its customers to restrict water usage .
The affected areas are in Bedford and Scipio townships, in Chester
:Township, Rocksprings Road, Flatwoods Road, Skinner Road, West Shade
Road, Texas Road, Frank Road and Old Salisbury Township. Also included in the request are customers along Abbott Roild. Broderick Hollow
Road, Grueser Hollow Road and Peach Fork Road.
·
Customers in those areas are being asked not water lawns and gardens ,
;..ash vehicles. or hose d,own sidewalks, driveways or parking lots.
: Lifting of the restrictions will be announced. TP-C General Manager
Donald Poole said.

$75 Credit
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SUIIDAY~LY
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COMMUNit,;.tiTic5NS
WIRELESS

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credit to be used ·
toward service or
accessories.

::::.::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::: :":::::: :::~.~
. SINGLBCOPYPRICI!
_ , ..:.~............................................... Si .00
No ,.a,.cripdold by mail permitted in lftll
wtlae niDIIIW Cllrier II!I'YiCe it 1VIil~.

11oo _,n.-.5cnboei ,.;u not be"!'.,...
J'lblisher tai!I'Vellhc riahtiO adjust rates ckir·

..

__, .

lftl lhe .ublctipdon f*iod. St~bscripd~n rate
....,.. IIIII' be
br.&lt;hanaina 111e

i..,,.,...,,..,.

-

tl _

oldie

. POMEROY - Units of Meigs
Emergency Services answered seven
calls for assistance on Fnday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
. 10: 12 a.m .. State Route 248, Elizabeth Hayes, treated;
..
, 2:28 p.m., assisted by Pomeroy,
Hill Street, Harold Wills, Hotze~
Medical Center;
· 5:52 p.m., with Racine, Eagle
Ridge Road , Megan McGee. treated;
· 8:10 p.m.. Third Avenue, Robert
nensy. treated.
. CfiESTER
·
' : 6:06p.m., with to State Route~ 7
.
auto
Pullin&lt;

and Sarah Caldwell. treated :
COLUMBIA TWP.
6:39 p.m.. with Rutland, to State
Route 689 and Point Rock Road. auto
accident, Michael Jones. trcaicd ,
Celia Mulholland. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
10 p.m. , with Central Uispatch. to
White's Hill Road. search and rescue.
Ma. Bratton and Chris Snouffer. The
two 15-year-old boys had been in the
woods during the evening and were
found by emergency squadmen as
they were walking along the road
toward their homes.

R.EAOY FOR NEW GIRDERS - Employees of the Preeon
Bridge Co. In Marietta have completed the removal of the old
wooden-deck bridge that spanned Chickamauga Creek on Gallipolis' State Street, Just west of Gallla Academy High School for

MA
ON!
_..........................................
sn.JO
CwMr

RIO GRANDE - It's been one
year since the Southern Ohio Workforce Development Alliance came

is more co nvenient for the participating business and its employees.
Krishna L Kool, Ph.D .• professor .
into being and numerous businesses of economics at Rio Grande, serves
and employees have benefited from as director of SOWDA.
"The most unique part of our prothe training provided by the drganization, now entering the second year gram is that we have been able to
contact the businesses on a personal
of its 2-year plan.
SOWDA's . purpose is to offer level. sending our counselors on a
resources and training for small busi- one-to-on~ basis with laptop comnesses across southern Ohio. Specif- puters to '.work with employees,"
ic areas of training include commu~ Kool said .
'Tec hnology bas been our biggest
nication skills. teamwork and col laboration, forming and pursuing focus, but now we want to move
goals, and expanding tcchniql and beyond that and into other areas of
instructio~. especially utilizing our
professional knowledge.
The alliance works in conjunction evening program at Rio Grande," he
with educational partners to provide continued. ·:we have expanded our
training . That partnership includes the evening program and we want to let
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande these people know that they can take
Community College. the Loren M. courses in accounting, bookkeeping.
Berry Center for EconomiC Educa- marketing and other areas. That 's
.tion at Rio Grande, and the Ohio going to.be the f&lt;li=US of SOWDA for
University Southern Campus at Iron- this year."
·Kool hopes to make area workers
ton .
Funding for SOWDA is provided' aware of the programs Rio Grande
through a grant from the Ohio Board has to offer through the on-site train·
of Regents and the Ohio Department ing of SOWDA so that they know
they· have a place to, continue their
of Development
Training and classes arc provided studies if they choose.
al various locations, based on which
Kool said that in il' first year of

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) A federal appeals court haS refused to,
rehear its decision that Attorney General Darrell V McGraw k cannot
claim immunity in a lawsuit filed by
the Better Government Bureau of
Ohio.
A three-judge panel of the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeal s in February
upheld a ruling by US. District
Judge Charles H. Haden IL
The full court voted 6-6 on
Wednesday not to rehear the case.
The bureau, based . in Canton,
Ohio, sued McGraw in 1994 after he
tried to keep it out of West Virginia
by filing incorporation papers using
· its name. State law prohibits different companies of the same name

from doing business in the state:

Municipal
GALLIPOLIS - The following
cases were recently resolved in the
Gallipolis Municipal Court:
James R. Gillenwater, 26, Bidwell, charged with obstructing official business. was fined $250. two
days jail (credit time se rved). and
three years probation .
Wayne R. Mott , 28. Piqua.
charged with reckless operation . was
fined $450.
Stephanie J. White . 19, Cheshire.
charged with underage alcohol con·
SUIDptL4ID, was rmcd $!50,_two years
probation and 80 hours community
service.
Bench warrants were issued to the
following per the Gallipolis Muniei ·
pal Court :
Pamela T. Nichols, Timothy D.
Nickels, Hoy L Nitz. Gwa1n l Noga,
Ruth T. Nolen , Thomas E. Norman,

·

446-0315

5 2 -........................................... $i09.

'

•

The
organization .claimed
McGraw infringed on. its First
Amendment rights . .
McGraw wanted to block the
organization from Operating in West
Virginia }1ccausc one of its biggest
backers is Suarez Corp. Industries.
une of I 06 companies he sued Jar
J
allegedly running illegal sweepstakes. Suarez and McGraw . arc
embroiled in several lawsuits in fed'

&gt;

eral and slate court.

The ihrcc-Judgc appeals panel in
February agreed with Haden's ruling
1ha1 McGraw's actions went beyond
the scope of an attorney general's
duties.

II.
-11111!

the past 60 years. Five trucks hauling 83-fool steel beams arrived
In Gallipolis last Wednesday in preparation lor the new deck that
will feature a concrete deck when completed in about live or six
.weeks.

operation. SOWDA mainly served
businesses in Gallia County and a
few in Meigs County, but will expand
on the coverage area this year. adding
Jackson and Vinton counties.
To date. 78 employees from I 8
husincsses in southern Ohio. have
received additional job training
through services offered hy SOWDA
Businesses and organilations

Parade
set prior
to bean
dinner ·
Aug. 2

whose employees have received
VINTON - The annual Old
training through SOWDA include Timers' Parade, preceding the VinBuckeye Rural Electric Cooperative.
ton Bean Dinner. has been set for
College Hill Motel. Davison Land- Saturd,,y, Aug. 2. Vinton Mayor
scaping, Drapes hy Design. Econo Donna DeWitt announced.
Lodge Motel, Fanners Bank &amp; Sav;
The parade will form at Vinton
ings Co .. Foster Sales &amp; Delivery Elementary School at 10:30 a.m. '
Service. the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton and arrive downtown around II
Joint Vocational School District. the a.m. The parade will end at the
city of Gallipolis. Hayes Real Estate. Vinton Community Park. where
Jenkins Memorial Health Facility. the the bean dinner will l1c held from
II :30 aJlL until 3 p.m.
· Meigs County auditor's office,
Mike's Plumbing &amp; Heating Service.
There is no admissiof! .charge •
Minta Inc ., Ohio Valley Publishing and crafts. hingo. cntcrlainmcnt
Co., Ohio Valley Supermarkets. Peo- and food will }1c available. Bob
ples Banking &amp; Trust Co., T Barr Ervin of Jm:kson will be dressed in
Trucking and Thomas Do-lt. Center. cn~tumc as Ahraham Lim:oln, and
For more information. contact plans tn ride J.' the parade and
Kool at 245-7267. or 1-800-282- recite the Gettysburg Address upon
arrival at the park.
·
7201. extension 7267 .. .
, Anyone wi~hing to participate

!ish a Belter Government Bureau in
his office. Since it did so in the legislative session earlier this year, that
issue is moot.
But Better Government Bureau
attorney Roger Furey said the Legislature 's action did not gi~e McGraw
the proper authority.
'

in the parade should plan to l1c at
the school by I 0:30. For more
infonnatinn, contacl DcWiu at
38H-8327 or write to her at P.O.
Box H, Vinton. Ohio 456H6.
De Witt said the parade route

will he similar to last year. II will
leave the school on Jackson Street.
travel down Stale Route 160 to
North Main Street. turn onto High
Street and Clay Street, and then
·head hack to 160.
From ·160, the parade will turn
onto SR 325 to the park. Parade
participants arc asked to l(&gt;llow the
In I 973, American Indian Move- parade into the parte After entering
ment.( AIM) protesters occupied the the park, participants can leave.
village of Wounded Knee. S.D., Those wishing to stay for the bean.
where in 1890 U.S. Cavalry troops dinner may remain parked there .
killed more than !50 Sioux.

McGraw said Friday that Haden ·s ,
initial ruling said the Legislature had
not giycn him the authority to ~stab-

Gallia County court news

Gallipolis

I ) - .--~ew.r
.....................................Sl9.:!S
2 1 - --........................................ U6.7261

,.,

Court won't rehear immunity decision

500 Third Avenue

21 - ............................................Ul.ll
!2 - . .- ............- ................... $iOSJ6

.~. -~- ·~

Workforce developm.ent group
looks to expand area operation

http://www.eurekanet.com

"""""'plloll.

..

•

EMS units respond.to 7 calls

•• &gt;'

local internet access
with a smile.

lible lor adva)cc: p~ymrms nile to earners.

&gt;

Due to extreme heat and high water con-

~umption, the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has issued a request

pi1one

..... OIIice.

'

• GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis City Police cited Otis Bush. 28. Gallipolis, for disorderly conduct early Saturday. according to police records . and
)icketed Craig D. Durham, !55 Main St,. Vinton. on Friday for resisting
'lll'J'est and disorderly conduct/unable to care for selL

-.S ?. 'J 5 l•and-l,eld

MUshed each Sun~y. 825 Third Ave.,
Glllpolit. Olio. "' &amp;he Ohio V11Uey PubliahinJ
Coftiiiiii)'/GIInet1 Co.. Second clnsa poslqe
,..d It Gallipolis, Ohio 4!163 I. Enlered at
aco.c1 elias maillaa matter m Pomeroy. Ohio,

Both incidents are under investigation.

:city officers Issue overnight citations .

"~oW; ?;iw; ~ Cf;lum; cr;~ ~ CWlUf"

~

Patrol tickets driver after accident ·
· CHESTER ,-- Sarah E. Caldwell, 75, 41144 Keebaugh Road.
Pomeroy, was cited for failure to yield by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
' State Highway Patrol following a two-vehiCle accident Friday on SR 7.
· Troopers said Caldwell was southbound at 5:50p.m. when turned left
in front of a nonhbound pickup truck driven by Jason T.Pullins, 18,42249
Alfred Road, Coolville, and collided.
Damage to both vehicles was severe, according to the report

;Fire damages area mobile home

'FAIR SPECIAL

Iars," explained Rep. Randall Gardner, R·Bowling Green.
Gov. George Voinovicb and
Republican legislative leaders
responded to the March Ohio
Supreme Coun decision declaring
the current school funding system
unconstitutional by proposing an
increase in the state sales tax by a
penny·per,.dollar to raise more than
$1 'billion more annually for schools.
Republicans want to vote on the
legislation- along with the funding
proposal - before an Aug. 6 deadline to place issues on the November
ballot. Voinovich wants voters to
decide the tax issue.
That's too soon, complained Rep.
C.J. Prentiss, D-Cieveland.
While she agreed with many of
the concepts discussed by the
Republicans, she. said lawmakers
needed more time to study the proposal.
"We bad 10 hearings on mourning doves," Prentiss said, referring
to a heated 1994 debate on whether
to allow .bunting of the birds.
"We're going to get two days to
debate this?"
Republicans, however, say they
deliberately left out ideas - such as
collective bargaining changes, charter schools and vouchers for private
schools - that would be cenain to
Jose the support of tea.chers unions,
school boards and Democrats. Also
left for another day; popular but.
expensive school reforms, such as
all·day kindergarten and smaller
class si2es.

·

. POINT PLEASANT, wva. -Aribbon-cuttin~ccrcmony forme openmg of the Ohio Valley Bank Point Pleasant office has been set for Monday at II a.m . at 429 Viand St., the former OVB Loan Origination Cen- .

Storms sweep through Ohio
ByllleA ..aollled"'-

,,._...,._., n '•PII!'A3

Tri-County Briefs:

Suuday: Early rnomingfog, then
partly sunny. High in the upper 80s.
Ex11tnd.cl foreult
Sunday night: Mostly clear, low
' in the 60s
Monday: Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms. Highs in the upper 80s.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy with .a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms.
Morning lows in the mid60s. Highs
in the lower 80s.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms. Morning lowS in the upper ·
60s. Highs in the mid 80s.

Conllnuld trom pege A1
a home,' Herald said, "and. this
sdlool facility wnt be one of the

Regional

.-....

.•.

New residential
development
promises
building boom

, I

Sund8y, July 20,19f7'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plaaaant, WY

Fredrick D. Norton, Shawn E Nut!,
Paul W Nuncr. Michelle K Oakley.
Patrick A. O'Brien. Randall K Ochs,
Dav.id D. O'Dell. Pansy G. Ohlinger.
Jeffery E. Oiler. Terry Qualls k.
Angela Quillen . Phillip M. Radford.
Cliff T Ramey. Curtis W. Ramey,
Jonathan Ramey. Collin G. Randolph, Daniel L Randolph, Ferrell G.
Randolph . James R. Randolph.
Thomas D. Rankin. Robert J. Rathburn. Hamid D. Ratliff, James Rawlings , Bryan K. Ray, Eric L Ray. Harry E. Ray. Richard D. Ray. Russell
Ray Jr., and Williams T. Redman . ·
Common Pleas
GALLIPOLIS - The foll owi ng
tascs were recently filed in the Gallia County Commop Pleas Court :
Dissolution granted- Marion E.
Holcomb and VeronicaS. Holcomb .
both of Vinton.

UNITY
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of Southeastern 8hlo

SERVICE
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MONEY BACK

...

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GUARANTEE!

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.,.._ Uawua.llacltKI

Davis·Quickel
Agency Inc.
INSURANCE

+

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+ Flnanclol
Servlctl

AGENCIES Inc.

Bill Quickel 992·66,77

Medical, Dental, Optical Office
3,000 sq. ft. office space available with plenty
of parking area overlooking the valley. Just
minutes near Holzer Medical Center on
Jackson Pike (old Rt. 35). 3 months FREE rent
for the right renter.
·

Call for details al:
614·446·0021 or 614·446·3919

�.

Commentary

.

P~g~~A4

Sundlly, July 20, 1tl7

junbKJI 1timts,. Jentinel Is the Democratic leadership irrelevant?
'E.stllbfislid in 1966
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
1114-448-2342 • Fax: 4411 3008
111 Court Stnet, Pomeroy, Ohio
1114-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

•

a2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper.
ROBERT L WINGEtT
Pulllllher
Hoblln WIIHn Jr.
Extcullve Editor

'llto-=
·
1l'l*l...::"'.!::."::".:.:::,'::..::...

,,.._IOifto _ _ _ ..,.,__
~
~-==:.:
- - - _,.,.._-. s,-N)&lt;•- 11 - . -. . ,.,.,,....
loopooria .. - o r -. ilolllio:..-.IOIM_.,..,..,fiiOoiM •••

I
Mayoral takeover, lawsuits
loom over Cleveland schools

...;·::":MX~·=.,~-==-==·~·~·=~r~~·~~~~~..,.~,.=;~::~,:·"::;_~.u;=~~-=.':.~~·~m~-.:..·_,,._,,..~..,.:..~~"'~"--.:..J
6

. ·•

By Jack Ander1011
and Jan Molter
. .
WASHINGTON •• The b1partt·
san budget ~greement thal'_s wi~ing
1ts way through Congress IS ffiJSSing
some very Important fingerprints.
House Mmonty ~r R1chard
G~phardt, D-Mo., who IS almost certam to ·run for preSident m three
years, has been a re.lu~tant player m
the deheate negouabons bet~een
the Wh1te House and congresstonal
leaders 1n recent months . H~ has delegated much of the heavY, hftm_g t~ a
coahuon ?f more modera!•· JUntor
members of the Democratic caucus
that suddenly enJOY more power
than thetr el~ers. .
.
Ge.phardt s contranan gambl~
~auld pay off 1[ tbe current ~conomIC boom tum_sto bust after a budget
agreement IS tnked. The blame
.would then pre~umably fall on the
. shoulders of Clinton and the GOP.
But nght now, II looks hke a lo~1ng
propoSitiOn for the ambmous
G~phardt, who IS ha_vmg .an ~ncrcasIDjrlY tough lime h1dm.g hiS diSagreements wuh the Whtte House.
The key moment may have come
several months ago, shortly after the
1996 election, when President Clinton made clear that he was interested in striking a deal with Republicans on a balanced budget. For
Gephardt, who had. spent the previous two years fighting day and night
against Republican spending cuts, it
was too much to ask.
In private meetings &lt;if the Democratic caucus, Gephardt argued
strenuously that the Democrats
should develop their own budget
blueprint and stick to it. It was an
internal battle he ultimately lost. as
White House officials had already
begun meeting with a small group of
Democratic and Republican leaders.
Taking the lead for t~e Democ. rats was Rep. John Spratt. D-S .C.,
the top Democrat on the Budget
Committee. With the backing or
moderate Democrats like Rep. Jim
Moran. D-Va .. and othel' Democrats
who represent suburban swing districts, Spratt and his Senate countct-

By JOHN AFFLECK
Assocllllld Pre. . Writer
CLEVELAND - If all goes as planned, Cleveland Mayor Michael R.
White soon will become the most powerful figure in the effort to fix this
-city's troubled school system.
Days, hours, perhaps just minutes later, a lawsuit likely will be filed to
knock him out of that role.
"In Cleveland, nothing is easy,"·said Richard DeColibus, president of the
Cle.veland Teachers Union.
The House is scheduled to take up a bill Tuesday that, 'through a somewhat byzantine process, gives White the most say in creating a new school.
board for Ohio's largest school district.
The bill also gives White sole responsibility for choosing a chief eKecutive to run the district and for 30 months empowers the mayor to remove that
person whenever he wants ..
"The mayor will have significant authority over the schools," said
William Deighan, coordinator of the graduate program in school administration at John Carroll University.
Even opponents of the bill, already passed in one form by the House but
coming back for approval in a slightly amended version from the Senate, say
the measure is virtually guaranteed to pass.
. Gov. George Voinovich has e&gt;pressed support for the bill and could sign
it before the end of the month. Rep. Michael Wise, R-Mayfield, a co-spon. sor with Rep. William Batchelder, R-Medina , is hopeful the new system
could be up and running by the middle of the 1997-98 school year.
It will take some luck.
·
Under the bill, an It-person 'nominating committee of parents, educators
and a busi!"'ss person would meet to develop a list of 18 candidates for a
new school board. White would get to appoint three commitlee members.
White would select nine people from the candidate Jist to become board
members. The presidents of Cuyahoga Community College and Cleveland
State University also would sit on the board as non-voting members.
The ma~or also would be free to name the CEO 90 days after the bill is By ROBERT WEEDY
There are two instruments in
signed.
· .
most
every home . One is called a
No earlier than four years after the system goes i.nto place, Cleveland resthe other is a thermothermometer.
idents would get 'to vote on whether the mayor should continue to appoint
stat.
They
both
have to do with heat·
hoard members. The alternative would be to scrap the system for a sevening or cooling,
J!Iember board elected by the people.
but they serve
\ While it may seem strange for Wise, a Republican. to advocate turning
very differa
•, over control of the 70,000-student school district to a Democrat, he says the
ent
purpose.
aim of the bill is to bring accountablli!Y to the district.
A ther"No one has more accountability and also no one has more political capmometer
will
ital than the mayor of the biggest city within that school district,'' Wise sa1d.
the
measure
''On a personal level. Mayor White brings a lot of passion to this issue ...
temperature
in
Bill White may never get in a position to run the schools.
the
room
or
in
Wise said the new system is dependent on the approval of a federal judge
the
oven.
It
handling the lawsuit that put the Cleveland schools under state control more
indicates
on
a
scale
the
relative
co.olthan two years ago because of massive debt and poor student performance.
Then there arc opponents who could fight the takeover in court. DcCol- ncss where it is mounted. while
ibus said the 5,000-member teachers union would support a court challenge. another thermometer in a di ffercnt
Like other opponents such as the National Association for the Advancement location indicates the environment
of Colored People, he says voters arc being unfairly left out of the reorgani- where it is mounted.
A thermostat though performs in
zation and White has enough to do without becoming an education czar.
.
an
entirely different manner. The
"The bill's a done deal,'' DeColibus said. "Then the courts will have to
thermostat
seeks to control the temdecide if it passes constitutional muster."
For his pan, White remains publicly quiet about his potential power gain. perature in the room or the oven by
operating that which has the potenalthough legislators said he lobbied quietly 'for the hill in the Senate.
"While we arc continuing to closely watch the hill 's progress in the tial to change the temperature . When
House and Senate I feel any other discussion of it at this time would be pre- the desired temperature h.as been
reached, the thennostat slows down
mature." White said last week ,
the operation or stops it altogether.
The set point has been reached and
will he controlled at that point until
the set point is changed. or something breaks 'down.
People. on the whole. arc either
in the category of thermostats or
thermometers. This may be a maucr
of individuals choice, or it may he
because of the way we have been
·programmed in very early life. In
one environment we may he a thermometer, in another we may he a
thermostat. It is easier to be a thcr•
mometer since this simply measures

parts began the sensitive work of
Spratt, meanwhile, dismisses any
11lc news came as a blow to the
craftin~ a deal with Republicans that notion that Gephardt and the leader- cottage industry of conspiracy theathe White House could agree to.
ship have become irrelevant .in the rists who've long believed that FosM~ran, in a telephone interview, curren·l negotiations. "Are there dif- ter was murdered in a sinisttr White
explamed the changes that have ferences (between the Democratic House plot to silence a key partieishaken his party in recent moriths.
leadership !Jnd the White House)? pant in the Whitewater saga.
"The Republicans nearly blew it Sure," Spratt told us. "But mostly
But Carville c90ked up his own
in 1996," he said: "In fact, had the they're tactical. I think it would be conspiracy theory to explain the
e_Jecuon been held three months ear- wrong to construe this as a breach long delay. Carville believes the
her, they would have lost their between Gephardt and the White delay was due in part to Starr's
maJonty (In the House) .... But the House."
reluctance to disappoint his conservDemocrats learned something too,
NOT ' SURPRISED •. James ative benefactof' at Pcpperd ine Uni- ·
and that's that Pre~ident Clinton ran Carville, chief antagonist of White· versity, where Starr is slated to ,
ahead of many members of the water prosecutor Ken Starr, wasn't become dean after his investigation
Democratic Congress."
the least bit surprised by Starr's wraps up. Conservative philan1bat realization, he says, prompt. recent announcement that deceased thropist Richard Mellon Scaife is
ed many De~ocrats to abandon the Clinton friend Vince Foster did, one of Pcpperdinc's most generous
diVI~IVe _ tactiCs urged by their lead- indeed, commit suicide in Virginia's donors-- and one of the prime pushers m favor of a more conciliatory Fort Marcy Parle on July 20. 1993.
crs of the Foster murder theory.
posture.
Nor was Carville surprised that
"(Starr's finding) is the legal
"l don 't think that they (the lead- the long-awaited rcpon on the Fos- equivalent of finding out the world
crshtp) have ceded a lot of their tcr case was mothballed for months is round.'' Carville told us. " He
authority," Moran continued. "but before finally being released. Pub- (Starr) was negotiating a financial
th~y have lost some of their inOu- Jishcd reports have indicated that the deal with Pcpperdinc that was large ence. And I think many Democratic investigation into Foster 's death was ly funded hy Scaife. who is the
members, particularly those in completed months ago. Starr's largest Foster conspirator out
swmg suburban .areas, and particu- report parrots the concrusion that there ."
larly the freshmen. realize that the was reached by several previous
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
president's politics are much more investigations. including that of Spe- Qre writers for. United Feature
representative of what their con- cial Prosecutor Robert Fiske and Sy11dieate, Inc.
stituencies arc looking for."
two congressional commiltccs.

@
CONTENT

'

r1
~4

,.

'

Barry's
World

I

1
. ·_

jll. . . . $. . . . . . . . &lt;;~~"

C!:,.,.,. .....

~r~c.

r

Don Quixote and Sancho Panza search·
tng tor the budget-surpluses windmill.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is sJnday, July 20, the 201st day of 1997. There are 164 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 20. 1969. Apollo II astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin
"Buzz"' Aldrin became the first men to walk on the moon as they ste pped
out of their lunar module.
On this date:
In 1810, Colombia declared independence from Spain.
In 1861, the Congress of the Confederate States began holding sessions
in Richmond, Va. ·
In [871 , British Columbia joi.ned Confederation as a Canadian province.
In 188·1, Sioux·lndian leader Siuing Bull, a fugitive since the Baule of the
Liule Big Hom, surrendered to federal troops.
In 1917, the draft lottery in World War I went into operation.
In 1942, the first detachment of ihe Women's Army Auxiliary Corps,
later known as WACs, began basic training at Fort Des Moines, Iowa.
In 1951, Jordan's King Abdullah Ibn . Hussein was assassinated in
Jerusalem.

By Joseph Spear
Conspiracy theories arc not my
cup of ten, but I have to say the timing of this mission to Mars strikes
rqc as suspicious.
Here we arc. wat~:hing this cute
little rover gizmo creep around and
-sniff rocks while the-sanctimonious
fraud s on Capitol Hill arc handing
out tax goodies to friends and contributors.
I'm relling you. !he Palhfindcr prohe

is a deliberate diversion. If we 1he people
ever acquir~d a true understanding of the
abominable manner in which our
esteemed leaders. gum up governance
with tax laws, it might spark. an uprising
that would make the ·American Revolution look. like a tea pany.
Four years ago, we elected a
bunch of chest-thumping Republicans who promised to get governLast
ment out of our lives
year. we were pounded by politicians peddling nat -tax plans. For all
the sweet talk and jawboning, what
did we get?
A House tax bill that runs 460
pages, not including ancillary material, that's what. A Senate version that
runs 662 pages, ·thai's what. An

•

'

Lawmakers questio merits
of privately-operated prison
By SUSAN THURSTON
Associated Preas Writer
COLUMBUS- The state's first
private prison in Youngstown houses some of Washington, D.Cis worst.
In May, 900 inmates from the
city 's run -down Lorton prison complex took up residence in what prison
supporters call an economic blessing,
and opponents consider a curse.
A flurry of disturbances at the
2.000-bed facility has legislators
scrambl mg to update state laws to
cover private prisons and the felons
within:
Among newfound loopholes : no
law that guarantees an out-of-state
tnmate who escapes could be punIShed under Ohio law and no rules
outlining how much authority - and
liability- the state would assume if
private-prison inmates riot.
"We're sitting on our hands . 1
think we'd beller wake up," said
State Rep. Ronald Gerberry.
The Democrat from Austintown, a
Youngstown suburb. has sponsored a
bill that guarantees such inmates are
prosecuted under state law. The
House has passed it; the Senate had
not scheduled a vote.
There is good reason to worry, he
says.
·
The Nonheast Ohio Corrections
Center houses murderers, drug dealers and rapists - all handpicked to
come to Ohio because they posed a
security risk at Lorton.
Since May, two stabbings have
been reported and prison administrators have imposed three lockdowns
- orders that restrict inmate movement within the prison. Guards also
have had to use tear gas to get
inmates into their cells.
And while no one is predicting
wo~trouble there, some lawmakers
want to be prepared for the worst.

There was no question about the
state's'authority when inmates at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility,
the state prison system's only maximum-security lockup. rioted in 1993.
Nine inmates and a guard died in the
11-day sie_ge.
As the. number of private prison
grow - there . are now 118 private
prisons in 25 states. the District of
Columbia and Puerto Rico that house
77,584 inmates - lawmakers around
the country are dealing with similar
ISSUeS .

,

Gerberry introduced his bill after
two sex offenders escaped from a
private prison near Houston last
November. The men were captured in
Dallas. but couldn't be punished in
Texas because· they had been transferred from Oregon.
While Ohio's Legislature wrestles
with the dcuiils, backers have faith in
the $40 million prison that Corrections Corporation of America of
Nashville, Tenn .. the nati on's large st
private prison operator. owns and
operates.
It was the promise of 350 new
prison jobs that won over the city,
which has struggled with the. loss of
more than 64.000 steel jobs since the
late 1970s. Youngstown gave the forprofit company land, offered multiyear tax discounts and agreed to protect the prison against losses and
court damages.
"We were trying to bring business
here and we felt prisons are just one
kind of business ," said City Council
President Charles Sammarone.
He is convinced the economic
benefits will outweigh the risk. ·
"Problems with prisons go hand
in hand," he said. "When you have
a prison you're going to have problems. "
The prison's operator acknowl-

or reacts to events surrounding and
has no ability to influence those

does education lcader.;hip not want
the public involved in the decisions
events.
of what and how our chiidrcn arc
There are several areas irl life taught'' Or, thirdly. do parents, the
where behaving like a thermometer voter. and the community not really
raihcr than a thermostat can bring care·&gt; Do we want the 'professionals'
most u~fortunatc results . One of to he the thermostat, and everybody
these is in the arena of government. · else the thermometers'' Or should
For a self.goveming people to he we. recognize that parents were the
disinterested . uninfOrmed, and unin- original educators and that when
vol vcd means that someone c Isc is they arc truly involved in the educamaking decisions we arc supposed tion of their children this is the hcst
to make. When we nnw have le ss indicatc1r of success?
than 50 percent participation of eliFederal cdu!.·ation dollars ami.Junt
gible Voters in a general election arc to about seven pcn.:cnt of the cduca- .
we not on the verge of finding out if tion hudgcl. while our . money at
this "government of the people. hy local and state levels makes up the
the people. and for the people" can rest. Iri reality, il is all our money .
long endure·•
Yet we sec the federal hurcaucracy ·
When we -have those who have enticing states w adnrt unrrovcn
lost hope that government can do und even . disprovcn concepts to
anything right , and themselves stay ciTeel total government Ct)ntrol over
. out of the process of placing really the Jivc.s of children to a degree
good folk in places of authority, arc unheard of in a free society.
we not in danger that those whn
The third area is harder to dclinc
.manipulate us for their purposes will by a single term. This in\•o lves our
destroy our freedom ·? These 'ther- being thermometers rather than thcr- ·
mostats ' usurp our legal ri·ght mostats in the r.1ising of our chilbecause we choose to he thermome- dren: the rcsrxinsihility in the home .
ters .
For the so-called entertainment
The second i~portant arcnu of industry to he allowed to hc the therconcern is that of puhlic education . mostat and the parents to he the therThe word is that schools need a fix. mometer is a very grave error. SociMost of ihe ink cove" the suhjcct of ety may never recover from allowmon~ y. while the average voter
ing moncy-grahhcrs to . steal the
today has Iiulc knowledge of hroad- innocence of childhood hy tilling
cr and deeper issues regarding the them with filth and debauchery.
. performance of students and the 'Jix'
Killings and tortures and rapes
heing pursued.
and all fnm1s of violence against life
By the Jack of dctai Is about just in the womh or of the handicapped
what it to be funded arc we being increased dramatically 'hccausc we
told that this is over our head . too have been the the
complex for us to understand? Or. momctcrs. How will the next

episode exceed the last'/
An Opinion Strategies poll of
registered voters recently showed
that Ohioans ranked drugs and
crime. unm otivated · students and
Jack or discipline as the most serious
pruhlcms in their local sch&lt;K&gt;I districts. They hlamcd the government,
school ad9'inist(ntors and staff, and
parents. in that order. fnr the problems.
But what ahout a 'fix''! Finger
pointing l,!Cncrulcs more heat than
light.
One group generally says it's not
lhcir fault. , it is the. nthcr ,guy who is
not holding up his end. And they
have unionS. whose task is to lessen
the hu ~dcns and ind"casc the hcnclits
for ils mcmhcrs. to surport them
when push comes to shove. Well ,
parents have no union . and many say
that even the PTA is in the union's
pocket.
Children also have no union .
M'orc of those whose lives arc
impacted hy t!tc government, the
goVernment schools, and the materials delivered into the home arc of
neces!'&gt;ity going to have to bcc.:omc
thermostats!
Whatever that may cost; heing
content tn he a thermometer will he
devastating hy comparisQn. Parents.
and hy association . their children
have the most to lose if a good 'lix'
docs not result. All who pnssihly can
must hecomc informed · and
involved. Government will not solve
the prohlcms alone.
Robert Weedy is a cornsP9n•
dent for the Sunday Times-Sentinel.

By The Associated Press
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia Joueries:
.
OHIO
Pick 3: 5-0-3
Pick 4: 7-3-1-7
BuckeyeS: 1- 10-13- 16-19
There was one ticket sold with all
five numbers drawn in Friday night's
Buckeye 5 drawing and it is worth
S100,000, the Ohio Lottery said.
The winning ticket was purchased
at the 619 Shell Country Market in
Akron.
There were 188 Buckeye 5 tickets
with four of the numbers and each is
worth $250. The 4,820 tickets show- ,
ing three of the numbers are each

edges that there has been some
inmate frict'ion but says it wasn't
unexpected.
" We are dealing with convicted
felons,'' said CCA spokeswoman
Susan Hart . "What the staff needs is
community support. They are carrying out a tough task."
Neighbors are keeping an eye on
the prison.
Alan Kretzer, who lives a half·
mile from the prison, said local offi.
dais haven't addressed iss~cs about
guard and prisoner safety. inmate
lawsuits o~ government oversight.
"I don't think a great deal of
thought went .into this:· he said.
"They basically rushed this thing
through in a few weeks."
Paul Dutton has environmental
concerns· about the site, which once
was a dump for blast furnace waste
and contains carcinogens. He and
several residents have hired attorneys
to advise them on the risks.
.
" I firmly believe that this site ...
is not an environmentally clean site,"
said Dunon , who lives about 1-112
miles from \he prison.
Others also are watching private
prisons closely.
.
State Rep. E.J. Thomas, R-Columbus, has introduced a bill that would
let the Ohio Department of Rehabil itation and Correction and county
commissioners hire private companies to operate and manage prisons .
and jails housing at least 200 inmates.

incredibly complex pastiche of credits, deductions, exemptions, phase outs , preferences and restrictions -most designed to help fncnds and
fatcats. or to engineer social change.
or to furcc the weary taxpayer into
making economic decisions that he
olhcrwisc wouldn' t even consider.
A provision pushed through by
Sen. Frank Murkowski , R-Aiaska,
rewards whaling captains with a
charitable deduction for sharing
meat, skin and blubber with Nonh
Slope natives.
A clause sponsored by Sen. Jim
Jeffords. R-Vt. , and by Sen. Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., lowers
the taxes paid by hard-cider distillers
from 58 cents a gallon to 22.6 cents
a gallon.
Another Jeffords insertion protects the earned income credit
awarded to low income farmers who
incur capital gains from the sale of .
aging cows and draft horses.
. . There are more, many more, special provisions -- about 300, in fact.
Excise taxes on diesel fuel sold to
luxury boaters would be cut. Planes
carrying skydivers would be exempt

from ticket taxes. Archery dealers
would be relieved of an excise tax. A
small number of wealthy taxpayers ·
would gel a break on certain kinds of
trust funds. There nrc hrcaks for
truck drivers. airline pilots and people who get free rides on corporate
jcis. There is even an cxp.ort tax
credit that would benefit software
manufacturers. including Microsoft.
What the hell , this is America. Bill
Gates deserves a break, too.
The current tax code, hy the estimate of Heritage Foundation economist Daniel J. Mitchell, consists of
17.000 pages of rules, requires 4MO
different forms, and generates
enough paperwork each year to circle the earth 36 limes. And now, the
luminaries of Capitol Hill arc complexifying it even more .
It is the most repulsive recurring
spectacle in the public process, not
to mention a pitiful waste of
resources.
We could fix it so fast with a sitllplified income tax system. A number
of alternatives have .been discussed
in recent years, but I prefer a Oat tax
tha,t would provide generous

I

•

__

,cdiwl .

Pt~gt~

A5

.. .,, .

o.ril --....
·
'

. .' ..
~

·;.~

It also requires a minimum 5 percent

savings to local governmeots and
prohibits prisons from accepting outof-state inmates.
"The idea is that we can get more
bang for our bucks and create more
beds for the same amount of money,"
said Thomas, R-Columbus.
A similar bill passed in the House
last year ·but died in the Senate. The
bill Thomas introduced in January is
awaiting committee hearings.
Sheriffs across the state oppose the
bill, which would affect 66 of Ohio's

.....

'

......

.. .

... ,

.

of America, and marks the first such· holding
facility of its kind in Ohio. (AP)

PRIVATE PRISON - The Northeast Ohio
Correctlonat ·Center In Youngstown Ia operat·
ed by a private firm, Corrections Corporation

88 counties.
"You can never privatize punish. ment ," said Bob Cornwell, executive
director of the Buckeye Sheriffs·
Association. "It's the role of government to punish those who have
violated laws of government and pri vate companies arc not part of gov-

ernment."
The state supports the bill. but is
not likely to contract out the operation of a pri·son now operated by the
sta te, said Joe AndreWs, prison
departmcnl spokesma~.

Lawmakers last year passed legislation to build a I ,200-hcd privately run state prison in Conneaut as an
expcnmcnt in prison pri valir.ation.
"There 's no rca~on to hclicvc it
isn't
good concept. There's a
proven track record that they have a
done a good job. The mission is to
effectuate a cost savings ... said Regi nald Wilkinson, state prisons director.
Columbiana County officials 1n
northeast Ohio says Thomas' bill
could save the county from bank"
ruptcy.

a

' 199~9

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worth $10 and the 44,342 tickets
showing two of the numbers are each
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The Ohio Lottery will pay
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Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
Sales for the game totaled
$1 ,380,656.50.
, In the other daily game. Pick 4
Numbers players wage~ed $390,042
and will share $14 7,800.
Sales for the Buckeye 5 game
totaled $359.774.
_ J'he jackpot for Saturday's Super
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WEST VIRGINIADaily 3: 5-6-3
Daily 4: 3-2-8-0
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allowances to protect the poor, then
assess remaining income at a flat
rate. There would be no other deductions . Charitable interests would
have to compete for alms in the marketplace . Businesses would pay a
Oat rate on all incorric after expenses.
A nat tax would get thc.o;c greasy
po l~ out or our live.\!, or at lca.o.;t severely limit their interference. It would
purge Washington of lobbyists, clean
up politics and save millions of trees
every year. It would be fair and cllicient. It .would be simple. It would
encourage savi ngs and invcslmcnts,
spurring the economy to unprecedented leve ls. Indeed, one Harvard economist, Dale Jorgenson, has predicted
that a nat tax would trigger a $2 tril lion increase in national wealth.
Best of all, with no tax hrcaks to
bestow on their pals, Co~grcss
would be compe lled to recess
around Independence Day.
Now you know why they talk the
Oat tax but never walk it.
Joseph Spear is a syndi&lt;ated
writer for Newspaper Ente\-prise
Association.

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Sunday, July 20, 1H7

Poineroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Nation/World
Stalled hurricane batters
coast without much relief

July 20, 1117

Tobacco lobby noticeably absent
from discussion of cigarette tax

'.
Donald Dotson
GALLIPOLIS - Donald Dotson, 69, fonnerly of the V-Care Center in
Williamsport, dted Friday, July 18, 1997 tn the Logan Elm Health Care Center, Circleville~
Born July 19, 1927 in Miamisburg, son of the late Forrest and Gladys Dotson, be was a retired construction worker and nursing orderly.
He was also preceded 1)1 death by hts wife, Mildred Starkey Dotson.
Surviving are a son, Mtchael Allen Dotson; a grandchild; and a special
friend. Lynn James of Wtlliamspon.
Graveside services will be II a.m. Monday in the Ridgelawn Cemetery.
Arrangements are by the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.

Frank E. McBenge
RUlLAND - Frank Edward McBenge, 9-month-old son of Mark and
Allyson Wolfe McBenge of Rutland, died Wednesday, July 16, 1997 in Children's Hospttal, Columbus.
·
He was born Oct. 5, 1996 on Gallopohs.
He is survived by his parents, a half-sister, Anessa Wolfe of Rutland; and
three half-brothers, Mathew McBenge of Rutland, and Luke and John
McBenge of Buhl, Idaho.
Also sumvmg are hiS maternal grandparents, Claudia Wolfe of Pomeroy,
and Paul Wolfe of Letart, W.Va.; paternal grandmother, Roseanna McBenge
of Buhl, Idaho; great-grandmother, Maxine Tucker of Pomeroy; and two
aunts, four uncles and several cousins.
He was preceded m death by his grandfather, Frank E McBenge; and his
great-grandfather, Harry Gnmm.
Servtces wtll be 2 p.m. Sunday m the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home, Mam Street, Pomeroy. bunal Will be in the Graham Station Cemetery, New Haven, WVa Sam Anderson woll offictate Fnends may call at
the funeral home Sunday from noon until the ume of the service.

Deaths of note elsewhere

By ROB WELLS
AP Tax Writer
WASHINGTON - The tobacco
industry, normally a giant in Capitol
lobbying, has been conspicuous by its
absence in the debate over the proposed 20 cents per pack cigarette lax
the Senate included in 1ts lax bill.
Lawmakers say the tndustry
appears overwhelmed by the $368
billion prospective settlement with
state attorneys general and too busy
for vigorous opposition to the proposed $15 billion tobacco tax hikethe biggest in the industiy 's history.
"I thonk they 're preoccupoed,"
observed Rep. Jim Bunning, R-Ky. ,
a 10bacco advocate. "I don't think
they're ignoring it."
The Senate tax bill would increa.&lt;c
federal cigarette taxes by 20 cents a
pack, almost doubhng the existing
per-pack tax o( 24 cents, and also
push up other tobacco taxes. The cigarette levy, not included in the House
tax proposal, would ratse $15 boll ion
over five years, with $8 billion of that
directed to increased health coverage

a remarkable contrast too," he said. to shoulder more of a tax burden, and
for uninsured children.
To settle state lawsuits agamst the we arc conveying that concern to
In the past, such a tax hike would
have unleashed fierce and intense industry, companies agreed last elected offictals," R]R's Peggy
lobbying by major tobacco compa- month to pay $368.5 billion over 25 Caner said Friday. ,
Officials at Brown &amp; Wilhamson
nies. Tax committee aides note that years. curb adverttsing and oppose
other interests which stand to suffer teen smoking m return for restnctions and the Tobacco Instttute dod not
under the tao bill - real estate on FDA regulation of ntcotine. a ban return telephone calls seeking comagents, Indian casinos, graduate stu- on class-acuon lawsuits and other ment. A Philip Morris spokesman
refused to comment'.'
dents - have launched furious lob- prov1sions.
Congress and the White House
Tobacco state lawmakers. partocbymg efforts. but not tobacco.
ularly in the House, have made it
"'They have bigger issues with the have not approved the settlement.
Asked if the industry was too pre- clear they intend to fight the cigarette
settlement and so forth," said C. Clinton Stretch of the accountmg finn occupied woth the tobacco settlement. tax , a major political problem that
.
' must
Deliotte &amp; Touche LLP and a Conner another Kentucky Republican. Sen. House and Senate negotiators
Mitch McConnell. said: "There is, I overcome before reaching agreement
top congressional tax aide.
The tobacco mdustry has long think, a concern about how thts (the on the proposed S135 billion tax-cut
been a pillar of the Washmgton lob- tobacco tax) fits into a subsequent package.
1
House MaJonty Leader Dock'
bying game. The nonprofit Center for scnlcmcnt ..
Responsive Politics said in the 1996 · Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J .. Armcy. R-Tcxas, saod at least 16
election cycle, the industry gave put it this way . "I think what they're tobacco state lawmakers would vote
more than $10.1 million to polittcal doing os takmg a btg puff and wall- against the tax boll tf ot oncludcs the
· cogarcttc tax in the final fonn. Others
action committees and in unregulat- ing.''
'
A
spokesman
for
one
leadmg
cigwould join them because they oppose
ed "soft money" campaign donations
arette
maker,
RJR
NabiSco,
sounded
any
tax mcrcascs.
to be used for party building.
surpnsed
at
the
perceptoon
the
mdus"The
House docs not want the
Stretch saod the industry's lower
try
isn
't
aggressively
opposing
the
tobacco
lax."
Anncy sao d. "The fact
tax profile reflects a sharp contrast
of
the
mancr
is
we don't hkc raisong
from past tak proposals. "The fact tobacco tax. " We are always contaxes
they have to negottate settlements IS cerned when adult smokers arc asked

Agreement clears path for telephone merger

The commission is likely to vote
By JEANNINE AVERSA
- Academy Award-wonning film
within
a few weeks, Hundt said.
Associated Press Writer
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) cdllor William Reynolds died
merger, valued at $23 btl loon
The
WASHINGTON - Removing a
Dr. C. Earl Albrecht, Alaska's first Wednesday of cancer He was 87. · major hurdle to the second-biggest when it was announced in April
full-time health commiSsioner and a
In a 60-year career, be edited and merger in U.S. htstory, Bell Atlanttc 1996, would create a telephone coloslegendary physictan from territonal helped edll 80 ftlms rangong from and Nynex promised Saturday to take sus controlling 38 million phone
days, died Friday m Bradenton, Fla "The Day the Earth Stood Still" to steps to make it easier for rivals to hnes from Maone to Vorgmoa and
He was 92.
musicals such as "Carousel." "Hei- compete on local phone markets.
would create the second-btggcst
Aibrecht founded an onternatlon- lo Dolly" and "South Pacofic" to
The two regional Bell compantes phone company behind AT&amp;T Corp ..
al organizatoon to share medical cptcs such as "The Godfather."
pledged in a letter to the Federal It mcludes 13 states and the District
informatton among corcumpolar
He won Oscars for '"Ilte Sound of Communications Commission to of Columbta.
regions. The 25-natton group is now Mustc" and "The Stong."
It would be the second-biggest
abide by several competitove safeknown as the International Union for
Eugene Shoemaker
merger m U.S. hiStory behind RJR
guards.
Circumpolar Health.
PHOENIX (AP) - Astronomer
The proposed merger had been Nabisco's $25 billion consolidation
Albrecht came to Alaska on 1935 Eugene Shoemaker, who co-discov- hung up at the FCC for months with wtth Kohl berg Kravos Roberts &amp; Co.
and became the sole doctor at a new ered the comet that slammed into regulators worried that it would sti- 10 1989.
settlement of202 families at Palmer, Jupllcr on 1994, was killed m a car fle competotion. But the compantes'
In the most important conduion to
a rural outpost 50 mtlcs north of acctdent Friday 10 Austraha. He was assurances fix that, three of the four protect competition, Bell Atlantic
Anchorage. After serving on the Anny 69.
· FCC officials said Saturday.
and Nyne. agreed that the combined
during World War II. he became the
Shoemaker died in a two-car acci"I think we can and should company would lei potential rivals
territory's first full-time health com- dent near Ahcc Spnngs dur10g an approve thts merger," FCC Chainnan either lease pans of the local phone
miSsioner.
annual tnp to search for asteroid Reed Hundt said in a telephone inter- network or plug into the network at
He later became assistant director craters His .wtfe, Carolyn, another VICW.
lower pnces. Rivals need to do this
for mental health and correction in Lowell Observatory astronomer who
FCC Commissioners Susan Ness to offer local service.
Ohio and Pennsylvama's deputy sec- shared on the Juptter comet's dtscov- and James Quello agreed. The fourth
The companies also agreed to test
retary of health
cry, was onjured.
commissioner, Rachellc Chong. did their computer systems. known as
Sir James Goldsmith
Shoemaker was known for help- not return phone calls to her off'occ on operator support 'systems, and to
LONDON (AP) - Sor James ong to diScover comet Shoemaker- Saturday. Three votes arc needed for develop unifonn systems through
Goldsmith, a 'bolloonaorc Anglo- Levy 9, whtch broke up and spectac- FCC approval.
the company's tcmtory to make. 11
French financier, died o·· a heart ularly slammed into the·' giant,
attack Friday in Spain. He was 64.
gaseous planet in 1994. Amateur
Goldsmith also had been suffcnng astronomer Davtd Levy was also on
•
from cancer.
the team .
' Goldmsith, a former member of
A gcologi.o;t by lrlioning. Shoethe European Parliament, spent $32 maker was also a leadong expert on
million foundong .the BntiSh Rei co:, _ cra!crs and the ontcrplanetary collo- By JAMES ANDERSON
on alleged cffons by one of the
endum Party, whoch campmgncd '" stons that caused them. He li vcd just Associated Presa Writer
Flctchcrs' attol'l)cys to ncgotoate a
national electlo~s 111 May agamst a short drive from Arozona's famous
KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent
$100;000 hribe on exchange lor hos
continued British membership of the Meteor Crater and first proved to the There were smiles instdc the court- clients' freedom.
European Union
scocntific communoty that ot was house and debate outsode t! when a
Hudson-Phollips also sought a gag
. Goldsmtth's fortune , made m part indeed the result of an asteroid. said Canbbean JUdge ruled that an Amcr- order limiting trial coverage to what
dunng the 1980s when he was a cor- University of Arizona planetary sci- ocan couple charged with killing a unfolds msodc the courtronm
porate raoder on the Unued States, was enlist Larry Lcholsky
popular local boatman will gel a
Ccnac denied the motion. sayong
estimated at between $1.7 billoon and
Shoemaker founded the U.S Gco- speedy trial
,
the Flctchcrs were entitled to a
$2.4 billion.
logical Survey's Center of Astrogc·
"Thts is what we wanted. This is speedy trial and that his court had no
He had several lavish homes in ology on Ragstaff in the early 1960s what _we wanted, .. said a grateful junsdict1on over ''out~1dc mcdaa. · ·
dtffercnt countries and an unconvcn- and served as the center's chocf sco- Wendy Fletcher after her father,
Still, he crottcizcd "the attacks on
toonal private life that included fam - enlist He also taught at the Calofor- James, and his wtfc, Pcnella, received this island's judicial system by hoth
ilics with his wife, an ex-wofe and,a nia lnstnutc of Technology from a July 28 trial date for the murder of print and electronic media."
mistress.
1969 to 1989.
Jerome "Jolly" Joseph.
Under the Bntosh-slylc legal sysRobert A. Hurwikh
Shoemaker also was mvolvcd '"
, Judge Dunhar Ccnac On Froday tem onhentcd hy thts former Brotish
SCITUATE, Mass. (AP)
several U.S space mosstons. mclud- dented a prosecutor's request to hold colony. the news media have less latRobert A. Hurwitch. a former ambas- mg the Apollo mossions to the moon. the trial in October, a year after Itude than they do under U.S. laws to
sador to the Domimcan Republic teachmg tbe astronauts about craters Joseph's body wa.s found floating in report comment and opinion about a
who later admitted to mosusing gov- before they left Earth.
a hay off the Grenadonc island of Ina!. Reponcrs cros.mg the lone
emment equopment and labor, died of
Robert C. Weaver
Bcquia
could face contempt char)!cs
lung cancer Wednesday. He was 76.
NEW YORK (AP) - Robert C
The Fletchcrs. of Huntington
In May, President Clinton urged
He served as a foreogn service Weaver. an educator and economist W.Va., arc accused of kilhng Joseph Prime Minister Sor James Mitchell to
officer for nearly 30 years and was who became the nation's first black after he fcmed them from their yacht ensure the Flctchcrs received " full
ambassador lo the Domimcan Rcpub- Cabonct member. docd Thursday, He to Bequoa, where they were vaca- due process." A U.S. consular official
lic from 1973 to 1978.
was 89.
tinning. If convicted. they could face has monitored the court pruccedongs.
In 1979. he pleaded guilty illegalWeaver was a specialist on labor. death by hanging.
The Actchcrs have been Jaolcd m
ly usmg $17 ,OQO in embassy supplocs urban renewal, federal aid to cducaThat prospect dtdn 't dampen the prisons whose conditions St Vmand labor to buold a swimming pool toon. as well a&lt; housing issues. Begin- enthusiasm of Fletcher famtly mcm- ccnt's foreign mintstcr acknowledged
and prepare a rctorcmcnt home out- nong 10 1933 · he held numerous bcrs inSide the Kingstnwn coon. arc "moscrablc." Family members
side Santo Dommgo. He repaid the posts 10 federal and state government house Fnday: After months of lob- argued the couple's health was at
money out of his retirement funds and with foundations and organiza- hymg lawmakers and even gettong ossuc· Penella has been treated lor a
and was placed on probatoon for two , uons
Prcsodent Clinton onvolvcd. they had pre-cancerous condilion, while relaIn 1961 , Presodent Kennedy won their day in cnun.
tives worry about James' mental
ye";.;'~rwttch was awarded a Bron7.c appotntcd hom admmostralor of the
"I am ecstatic that they arc goong health.
·
Star for bravery during the mvasion. Housing and Home Finance Agency, to get their trial," satd Fletcher's sosWhen· the judge announced his
of Germany whtlc scrvtng on the the predecessor of the Department of tcr, Sally Duncan. "Now we have to decision. "I saw a lot of hope on PenArmy during World War II. He joined Housong and Urban Development. · let the crimonal justice system work " ny and Jim's eyes forthe first time,"
the foreign servoce in 1950 as vice Prcsodcnt Johnson appoonted htm
As the accused were led back to saod Mrs. Fletcher's sister, Eldora
consul in Lima. Peru.
Secretary of Hmlsing and Urban pnson, a couple dozen Vinccn11ans Tharpe, of Dayton, Ohoo. "Penny JUst
Dave Peterson
Development in 1965.
gathered outsode the courthouse and croed woth rehcf "
COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo.
He was active for many years 10 engaged in a bncf but anomatcd dts"The next step ts lor you to take
(XP)- Dave Peterson. fanner u.S. the Natoonal Assocoation for the cusSion. The topocs mcluded race; the . home y,our son," defense attorney
Olympoc hoc key coac h. dtcd Th urs- Advancement
d 1960 h of Colored
h . People,
f.
accuse d arc white, the vicum was Rochard Cheltenham told Fletcher's
10
day of complocatoons after heart an
c was c aorman
ns black.
mother, Kac.
surgery.
He
was
66.
nallonal
board
of
dorcctors.
"No mnrc
f Hudson· Ph'll'
'"
bypass
The trial is expected to Ia" at least
H
th
lh 0 r
h
,
0
I Ips .
Peterson was head coach of U.S.
e w~s e au or
more 1 a~ - one woman said. ti!fcrring to the a week.
Olympoc icc hockey teams on 1988 175 arttclcs and wrote four hooks. Tnnidadian prosccutol. Karl Hudsonand 1992. He also coached three US .
N~¥.ro Labo~: A Nat:onal Pro~ Philhps. "The white people have to
National teams (1985. 1986 and lcm &lt;1945 ), The Negro Ghcno
beset free ltistheywelivcby"
1948
1987), two U.S National Junoor (
). "Th~ Urban .Complex"
St. Vincent depends on t~unst
teams (1986 and 1987) and one U.S
~~~;:~a~n(~ ~;1cmmas of Urban income, and hotels and yacht charSelect team ( 1987).
·
tenng finns have reponed fewer
William Rrynolds
After servmg as HUD secretary bookings sonce the .case became
SOUTH PASADENA, Calif. (AP) unto! 1968, Weaver served as preso- wodely pubhcized.
dent of Baruch College
So me outs 1'de 1he courl house
C. Earl Albre&lt;ht

'
F.

i

I

.I

I

I
I

'

'

'.

St v·I ncent court s Iates
Fletchers' trl"al for July 28

caster for competitors to process
new customers, boll them and complete repairs Thts would also help
competitors who buy local phone service to resell.

~-·""~&gt;;OfJituaries Obltil8rln

n

• I"n a·cc"dent
Veteran t roo per d leS
I

pefd' ion-lnoementa arranged by loeal funeral h-a.'

Oblbw!H- publlallad u raqUMtld to eecommoc1a1e UloM dlllrlng ~
l!lfom•lloll1hl!n .. pnMded In the ao:coonpMytng OMth NotiCH/

Charles L. Baker
RIO GRANDE- Charles L. Baker, 95, of Rio Grande, died Friday. July
18, 1997 at hiS rcsodencc.
Born August 29, 1901. m Clay Townshtp, Galha County, son of the late
Lewis Baker and Martha
Baker. he was a retired mechanic for the
State of Ohio.
He was wodowcd twtcc, by hts
first wife, Helen Henry Baker, tn
1957, and his second wife, Lcahanna
Plymale Baker, in 1970, and was
preceded in death hy a daughter,
Laura Jean Craft; a son, Roger
Baker: a granddaughter, Julia Ann
Butler; and by five sisters ·and a
hrothcr.
Survtving are a son and daughterin-law. Richard A. and Laura Baker
nf Gallipoli!;; a stm-on-law, James H.
Craf't ol Gallopohs, grandcholdrcn,
Charles L. Baker
Rick (Condy) Baker of Logan, Davo~
(Rita) Baker ofTtpp Coty. Linda (Run) Tctrkk ol Pleasant City. Cahfomia,
Condy (Eddoc) Gtln\orc of Mclvcmc. Arkansa.s. Jtm (Gwen). Cral't of Galltpolos. and Ed Butler of Crown Coty . ond 12 grcat-grandcholdren and three
great -great-grandcholdrcn
Services will he 1:30 p.m. Monday. July 21. 1997 on the Christ United
Methodist Church, woth the Rev Boh Steele offoctmong. Buroal wtll follu01
on ~ound Holl Cemetery. Frtcnds may call at the Wollos Funeral Home from
6-9 p m. Sunday. July 20. 1997.
The hndy wtll be taken to the church one hour pnor tu the scrvoces on
Monday, July 21. '1997.
1
In hcu of !lowers. cnntrihutions may he made to the Chnst United
Methodist Church Buolding Fund.
..c.Pallbearcrs woll he Jim Crali. Jason Butler, Kent Butler. Rkk Baker, Curt
Ba~er and David Baker
·
Honorary pallhearers arc Paul Butler Sr.. Charles Jclfcrs. Walter
McGhee. Walter J. Wood and Paul Schastian.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PUCTICE .

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING P.OPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675·1675

UNIONTOWN. Pa. (AP) -:- A sergeant with the st,ale pohcc barracks m
Uniontown was killed in a traffic accident, state pohce satd today
.
Sgt. John J. Arminas, 53 , was travehng wtth hiS wofe on Interstate 80 tn
Schuylkill County Fnday afternoon when a pickup truck came loose from a
trailer it was bemg towed on. and rolled across the median. 'J'!le truck came
onto the opposite lanes of the mterstate and struck the Arm mas vehtcle beadon, Trooper David Martin said. . .
.
. .
Arminasdied at Samar.itan Hospttalon·Pottstown. HIS wtfe was 10 faorcondition at the same hospital.
.
.
Anninas, a resident of Shenandoah on Schuylkill County, was a 33-year
veteran of the Pennsylvanoa state police.
'

OHIO VALLEY
MEMORY

?•

asked why Ralph Gonsalves, James
Rete her's attorney and deputy leader
of the main opposition party, would
defend an American citozen accused
of killing a Vincentian. "He's only
doing hos JOb as a lawyer," one man
said. They refused to give their
mimes.
Hudson-Phillips, a former attorney general on Trinidad and Tobago,
had argued that extensive pretrial
publicity tainted prospects of a fair
tnal. Numerous reports ha_ve focused

·

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./

resort area in 1979.
. sissippi coasts, threatening the Flori"This is nothong compared to da Panhandle as well.
Frederic,'' srud Pleasant Church, 65,
A lack of prevailing winds kept
who has lived in the area for nearly Danny chumtng virtually m place,
three decades. "This is a little blip." said National Weather Service meteNevertheless,
rainfall was orologist Randy McKee in Mobtle.
extreme. In the worst hit areas of
"There's JUSt nothong to push it or
Mobile County and Dauphin Island, pull it, so it's just 111eandering over
nearly 30 inches had fallen since ear- the bay." Me Kee said.
ly Fnday.
Tropical Stann Alberto was simiGround flOO&lt;S in some barnes took lar in 1994 wben ot .stopped over
water and some roads were flooded, southern Georgia and dumped torbut major routes remained passable. rential rains. Stationary stonns " are
There were few travelers, yet some not me , but they ' re not common,"
worked hard to enjoy their vacations McKee saod .
Some I ,600 people sought refuge
despite the severe weather.
• At the scenic Grand Hotel in Saturday in 12 shelters on Baldwin
nearby Point Clear, restaurant guests and Mobtle counues, and hundreds
ate a conunental breakfast as the cen- more went inland to ride 'out the
ter of the stonn moved overhead Sat- storm.
The lone death blamed on the
urday morning, watching ' bayside ·
ad'?ncing stonn was an unidenllfied
pone trees whipped by high wind.
With the help of generators, Grand man whose body was found Friday
Hotel manager David Monroe vowed near a swamped smlboat off Fort
to stage ~ Saturday afternoon wed- Morgan.
Most of the property damage was
dong on the ballroom as planned
lomued to torn roofs and falling tree
"'come hell or htgh water."
On Its crawl toward Alabama, the limbs, but a four-story Gulf Shores
stonn 's outer bands brought rain and condominium project under constonny seas to the LouiSiana and MIS- strucuon crashed '"the strong wond .
I

/
IN THE STORM - GuH Shores (Ala.) pollee
officer Richard King blocked the wind and rain
from his face as he stopped traHic along the
road to Weat Beach in GuH Shorea on Satur-

day. King said the ro·a d was impassable
because of high water and sand blocking the
way. Hurricane Danny made landfall early Saturday along the Alabama coast. (AP)

Johnson Infighting leaves GOP concerned about 1998
airs VP
unease
in·tapes
'

°

96

These and other conditions agreed
upon would make it easier for potential rovals such as AT&amp;T and MCI to
break intn the local phone business.
regulators said .•

By JESSICA SAUNDERS
Asaoclated Preu Writer
GULF SHORES, Ala. - Humcane Danny parked over Mobile Bay
on Saturday, atm10g 80-mph winds
and torrential m10 at Alabama'~ resort
coast, obliteraung electrical pilwer
and floodmg low-lyinB seashore
homes.
After edging across the mouth of
the bay shortly after midnight, the
humcane's movement was vinually
nonexistent for much of the day, battering the same area wtthout reloef.
The threat of tornadoes sent thousands to emergency sheltors or the
safety of inland motels. At least one
death was blamed on the storm.
About 20,000 homes and businesses
lost power.
"The wind got to rock10g the
motor home so bad we got seared and
came 10 here," said Carl Foster, in a
shelter set up at a htgh school. Foster and his wife usually live in a seaSide house built on pilings.
Despote the damage, with maximum sustamed w10ds of 80 mph,
Danny remained a relatively smallish
hurricane, a far cry from Hurricane
, Fredenc, whtch ravaged thjs seashore

•

embarrassments and signs of turmOil.
By TOM RAUM
"I think we're losong" the propaAssociated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Just three ganda battle, Wosconsin Gov. Tommy
years after they seized control from Thompson told reporters carloer thos
the Democrats, Republicans worry week "We have not done the best job
that their chances of holdmg Con- selling our story " HIS assessment
gress on 1998 could be jeopardtzed by annoyed some GOP leaders, but
muddy messages and onternal war- many agreed wtth htm
, Democrats seemed to be scoring
fare.
"Our congressional guys act like points wuh the public in portraying
they can't organize a two-car funer- GOP tax-cut plans as favonng the
al," complamed Mike Murphy, a wealthy. And Republocans were still
reeling from the bad reviews they got
GOP operative and ad maker.
Although Murphy and many oth- thts spnng for delaymg emergency
er Republican strategists sull predict disaster reloef.
Republocans rallted behmd GinRepublicans will keep control- and
history is on theor Side- there's no gnch and hts "Contract With Amerdoubt that the GOP is in a grand old . ica" m 1994 and liit the hustings hard,
funk after thiS week's fatled coup arguing that Democrats had conagainst House Speaker Newt Gm- trolled the !=ongress for too long and
should be shown the door.
.
gnch. '
But now, Gmgnch's negative rat"I thonk all of this has a surreal
ongs woth the pub he are sky htgh and
1 quality to.u," satd Rep. Chrostopher
CoX" of Calofornia. chatrman of the Democrats are gleefully po)'lraying
Rcpubhcans as the gang that couldGOP House Policy Committee.
The failed move against Gingnch n't shoot slraoght.
"I don't know of thts os a bad
was just the latest in a strong of COP

Russtan novel or what it is." Rep.
Marttn Frost of Texas, chainnan of
the Democratic Congressional Camp31gn Commottee, said Fnday.
"It just points up their disarray
and the difficulty in governing And
it makes it easier for us, I think, to
take the House back m 1998,'' Frost
satd. ''I'm just stttong back and
watchong. This ts worth the pncc of
admission."
A group of JUntor Rcpublocans
sought to topple Gingrich last week.
but their effort to enlist key GOP
leaders fizzled. Rep. Boll Paxon of
New York. once a top Gingnch lieutenant, rcstgned hiS leadership JOb
after being implicated by some on the
plot
"None of them trusts any of the
others." said Bill Krostol. tanner
chocf of staff to Voce Prestdcnl Dan
Quayle and now the publisher of the
conscrvauvc Weekly Standard
And Rcpublocans suddenly had
vosoons of Democratic congressional
campaogn ads next year linking GOP

incumbents to Gmgnch, the unpopular leader Republicans couldn 't get
rid of.
Rcpubhcans hold a thon 228·206
majority in the House.
Sull. the party out of the Whotc
House nearly always gains scats in
midterm clccuons, especially tn a
prestdcnt's second tcnn.
Furthermore. the 1990 Census
resulted m an increase in congressional dtstricts thai favor Repubhcans. largely reflecting a population
migration to the Sunbelt.
"We' II pick up scats. Intramural
polittcs thai take place on Washongton
have zero •mpact on the daily lives of
voters." saod Dave Carney, a GOP
consultant who was polillcal director
in the Bush Whttc House
Sull, be said, "It's ohvtously a dis. traction."
·
Larry Sabato, a polotical scocntosl
at the Umvcrsuy of Vorgmta, argued
that next year's election will be "a
referendum on Congress."
And. while ho~tory lavers a Demo.

cratoc loss nf seal• on 1998. "the
Rcpublkans are doong their hest to
cheat htstory. They are proJecting an
omage of chaos and onabtloty to lead." ,
Republicans have been glum.
snmc cxhibitong gallows humor
At a Fnday mectong of House and
Senate GOP staffs, Gingrich stall
mcmher Lcnk Swinehart playfully
fingered a cardhoord cutout shaped
'ioke a dagger. parttctpants satd
Senate Majnnty Leader Trent
Lull, R-Miss .. whn met with Gingrich
1 Fnd.ty mom on g. told reporters the

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -As he
eased Robert Kennedy out of the
vice pfllsidential picture in 1964,
PreSidFnt Lyndon Johnson satd the
:oipcakcr '' doesn't seem too mad ... .
natton 's No. 2 job was a lousy one
He seems to he on very gnnd spirits."
anyway.
"We' II get these (hud)lCI) agreeIn" tape recordings of White
ments worked out, we get them
House te lephonc conversations
passed. and then we get some rest
made pub he Friday by Johnson's
during the August recess. And I
presidential library, the former
thmk everything's going to be very
president said be10g John F.
tine," Lon said
Kennedy's vtce president was
tediOUS.
In 1973, the 1,454-foot Sears
" I found it was very frustrating
. Tower was completed in Chicago.
to sll there and not be able to do'
making it the tallest butldong t.n the
anything in the Senate, to sit there
world at the tome.
tn the cabinet and not have any
places under your JUrtSdoctiOn,"
Johnson satd.
Johnson met with Bobby
Kennedy at the Whtlc House on
July 29, 1964 to give him the bad
news - Kennedy wouldn't be
CLEVELAND (AP) - RepubliMcConnell •md efforts to lomot the
"We need- each one of us - to ronmental regulation should he han- Repu~hcans can accnmplosh that.
Johnson's running mate. That JOb
can National Commmcc members amount of money that individuals, stop lcavong ot to s&lt;;hools and gov- died at the state and local levels, and
eventually went to Minnesota Sen
wrapped up thcor summer meeting political acuon commmces and polit- ernment to be the sole educators ol
Huhert Humphrey.
Saturdav with a look at some issues k:al part1cs can spend on cand1datcs our children and take more IndividIt was a ticklish meeting, and
expected tc play a role on the 1998 and campatgns onfnngcs on the First ual responsibohty for ourselves and
Johnson recounted it that afternoon
elccloons - campaogn finance. edu- Amendment guarantee of free our young people," Racicot saod.
in phone calls '" two close adviSspeech.
cation and the environment.
He said parents have the rcsponers - Clark Clofford and McGeBEAUTIFUL SPLIT LEVEL - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
He sa1d prcvcntmg more hmils on sobolity to be the front-hnc teachers ol
Sen. Much McConnell, R-Ky.,
orge Bundy
'
campaogn
finance
is
vttally
omponant
started off the final day of the threevery peaceful setting, surrounded by farmland, Y.
thcor children.
.
Usong nil the pohtical wtlcs for
day mcctong urging the 135 delegates to conservatives 10 their efforts to
"I hCiocvc thl)t ts where we most
Acres, M/L.
whoch he was famous, Johnson
to encourage Republican rcpresenta- · combat loberal messages from the urgently need to rcfonn education praised the younger Kennedy, told
uvcs and senators to oppose mcdoa. acadcmoa and Hollywood.
tn our homes and families," he saod
1 mile from Thurman, 4 miles from Oak Hill .
him he had a bnght future and
increased hmus on campatgn spend- " "We oughi to never. ever let them
State and local @Ovcrnmcnts also
attnbuted hos decosion to the
Located at 2373 Cherry Fork Road, Thu,rman
take away our abiloty to compete," he should be allowed to set thcor own
ing.
Republocan Party's nomination of
"You have a constnutional right to sao d.
soluttons to problems on education
conservative Sen. Barry Gqldwa, Reform on cducatoon and the cnvo- and other areas. Racicot said.
contribute 10 the candtdatc of your
$115,000- Make Offer
ter Then he asked for Kennedy's
choocc." said McConnell. chmrman ronmcnt was the subjeCt of speeches
Ms. Norton stressed. the omporOffered by Nea S. Henry, Agent for
help m the upcoming campatgn
of the National Republican Senator- hy Montana Gov. Marc Ractcot and tancc of 'tate and local efforts in
Johnson saod he told Kennedy.
tal committee and one of the Senate's Colorado Attorney General Gale Nor- environmental issues.
"I need your help lth10k you're
.
most outspoken opponcn\s of cam- toq.
The co-chairwoman of the Coahbnl~ant. I think you' rc dcdicaled.
1Rac1cot smd the discussion of edu- uon of Rcpuhlu;ans lor Environpa•gn finance changes "That · s not
I thi'llluiua you're good for the
huymg onnuencc. that's supporting catiOnal rcfonn must not be limned menial Awareness sntd more cnv1to fprmal educatoon.
your version of Amcril.:a."
country."
And he tncd to sell Kennedy on
the odca that' not be10g vice preSIdent wasn't much of a loss.
Johnson said he told Kennedy:
" I think there's much that you can
do that woll make yourself better
Sojourner rover con11nucd·lo operate
By JANE E. ALLEN
understood and.better prepared for
wtthout a httch and h;lvc radioed
AP Science Writer
any rcsponsobilotles or ambotlons
PASADENA. Calif - Commu- home a new view of a distant peak,
you may have than JUSt hcarong the mcatton from tile Mars Pathfinder NASA reported Fnday.
roll call in the Senate "
The camera ahoard the Palhhndwtll be hmncd this weekend as scoOther tapes showed Johnson cntosts send up a software ghtch fil&lt;'. cr lander sent back a high-rcsolutton
was unsure whether he htmscll
The Mars exchanges also will be omagc of the northernmost of the sowanted to run m 1964, beset by
reduced because the Galilco mission called Twin Peaks that loom on the
doubts over whether he could lead to Jupucr ts competing for time on honzon m an ancient flood plain
the nation and angered by "damn the Deep Space Network of Earth- called Arcs Vallos.
lies" on the press
based antennas, 'saod proJect managThe camera caught only "the very
"I )lave a dcsorc to unllc the er Bnan Muorhcad at NASA's Jet top ol the peak," smd prOJeCt manpeople. and the South is aga10S1
ager Bnan Mmrhead at NASA's Jet
Propulsoon Laboratory
me. and the North os agaonst me.
The new commands were bcmg -PrnpulsLOn Laboratory. __
and the Negroes arc agaonst me. sent by nussoon control to halt autoThe peak ts a lottie more than a
and the prc.s doesn't really have ~n matic computer resets that have half-mile from the landtng site and at
affection for me." Johnson told ho. slowed carlocr Pathfinder transmis- that diStance the camera docsn't have
press secretary. George Reedy, the
si on~ Scientists were to upload the great resolution, Mmrhead satd.
day after the Democratic Convcn- software durong the marttan day that
But by using a techmquc that
toon opened in Atlantic Coty. N.J
began Fnday night and ends early mvolves taking muluple pictures,
Johnson said he told Kennedy
today. the Pathfinder's 15th day on each sloghtly shifted from the previhe became the 1960 vice presiden- the red planet.
ous one, the camera team can
tial nom once because 11 "was good
The lander computer should store omprove upon the camera's abiloues
fO( my country and good for my
the new material on its m~mory and and create a more detatled omagc, he
party. and good for my state. I reset itself the next day. Controllers
saod.
thought a Democrat was much expect the spacecraft to "phone ·
The camera also took a series of
more preferable than (Rochard) home " Sunday to show II has reboot- shots from Thursday qight to Fnday
Nixon. And t)lat's why I dod 11. And ed, MUirhead said.
mornmg. showmg Sojourner
1saod, 'I don't think that you'd be
Software engineers determined ' approachong the whitish rock ntck- ·
happy there. '"
that the computer overloaded whole named Scooby Doo and placing its
Shortly .,Ctcr thcor conversa- performing too many tasks at one alpha proton X-ray spectrometer on I
tion, Kenne&lt;itf decided to run for time. No data was lost, but controllers the rock. Once IR place, the tnstruthe Senate fllom New York Johnwere forced to go back each time to ment began a I0-hour analysis of the
son campa1gped for hom. In 1968: the potnt in the previous data trans- rock's makeup.
Kennedy was assassinated whtle mission session when they were
JPL will release tbe rock anal~sis
running for presodent.
and new pictures dunng a news coninterrupted
Meantime, the Pathfinder and ~IS ference Tuesday morning.·

RNC closes summer meeting focusing on election ·issues

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I

New ABC
drama irks
Catholics

Police-believe killer planned
crime ~uring ~uiet hotel stay
By OSCAR MUSIBAY
Auoc:lld8d Preu Writer

ti_ng equipment and fashion magaZines, and usually paid $230 cash
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. - In the weekly for his room.
weeks leading up to the killing of
Police say Cunanan is a gay aigoGianni Versace, a man who fits the lo who began a cross-country killing
description of Andrew Cunanan SJl!l'e in April.
stayed at a Miami Beach hotel,
An AIDS counselor in California
patronized a sex store and became a said in today's edition of The San
regular at a local pizza place.
Diego Union-Tribune that he met
"He was very soft-spoken, neat with Cunanan two rDQnths before tbe
and clean," hotel manage~ Roger · first killing.
Falin said Friday. "He didn '1 look
Cunanan ;_ who never said outlike a night clobber, though he went right that he had the AIDS virus out at night. Nobody seems to vowed R:venge on whomever might
remember him coming back wiih have mfecled him, said Mike Dudley,
anybody or even talking with any- a counselor at a nonprofit agency for
body."
people with AIDS and HIV.
Cunanan is the prime suspect in
"He became agitated and he got
Versace's slaying and four other up and kicked the wall and said, 'If I
killings, but was cleared today as a find out who did this to me, I'm
suspect in a sixth killing, the Thurs- gonna get them,"' Dudley said.
day slaying of Dr. Silvio Alfonso.
At t~ Normandy Plaza hotel, yelMetro-Dade police said today they · low cnme scene tape was strung in
arrested 28-year-old Yosvan.i Her- front of the entrance Friday night.
nandez and charged him wiih first- Investigators did not comment, but
degree murder, ballery on a police clerk Miriam Hernandez said agents
officer and armed robbery.
searched all6S rooms on Wednesday.
Witnesses had said they saw a
"They had to go through each one
man filling Cunanan's description because they said he might still be
running away from the doctor's Mia- here, " she told.The Associated Press.
mi Springs home, about 15 miles She said the guest always wore sunfrom Versace's mansion.
glasses, and carried a U.S. driver's
In the weeks before Versace was license and French passport with
shot at his South Beach mansion names similar to Cunanan 's known
Tuesday, Cunanan may have been aliases.
less than four miles away at the NorThe owner of a pizzeria next door
mandy Plaza Hotel, authorities say. said someone matching Cunanan's
The guest did not register under description was a regular customer
the name Cunanan, and Falin would for at least a month. And the managnot say what name he used. Falin said er of an adult video and 'sex toy store,
the guest left behind some hair-cut· the Pleasure Emporium, said a man

who looked like Cunanan carne in
~ucntly over the past month to buy
gay porno magazines and other items.
"He was very well-dressed," said
Jeff Walter. "He had on expensive
clothes. He was very well-spoken.
very quiet."
·
Falin, the hotel manager, said he
saw a R:d pickup truck in the parking
lot from time to time. But an attendant at a city parking garage said a
R:d pickup that Cunanan is suspect- ·
ed of stealing remained parked there
from June 10 until police found it the
day Versace was killed.
In the truck were the eyeglasses.
clothing and wallet of murder victim
Lee Miglin, a Chicago developer. the
Chicago Tribune reported. A gold
coan reported stolen from Miglin was
pawned July 7 at a shop called Cash
on the Beach, WPLG- TV in Miami
reported Friday. Investigators also
reportedly found a pawn ticket signed
by Cunanan m the truck, along with
his passport. No one answered calls
to the pawn shop Friday naght
Police haven't uncovered any evidence that Cunanan knew the 50year-old Versace, who was remembered at a Mass here Friday as rc latives took his ashes back to Italy.
Mourners, many in Versace au ire,
crowded St. Patrick's Roman
· Catholic Church in Miami Beach.
About 700 packed the sanctuary;
another 250 or so listened on loudspeakers outside.
, "What Salvador Dali did for an.
Versace did for clothes. He brought
colors and dreams to clothes," said

DETAILS OF STAY - Miriam Hemendez, a clerk at lhe Normandy Plaza Hotel In Miami Beech, Fla., apoke to reportere Friday about Andrew Cunanen, tht prime auapect In the murder of
fashion de,lgnar Gianni Vereace. Hernandez believe• cun1111an
stayed at the hotel for aeveral Wftlce prior to the murder. Her·
nandez aald pollee have aearched all _
65 room• of the hotel. (AP)
David Barcenes, 34, a longtime
admirer.
The FBI warned South Aoridians
to be on the lookout for Cunanan,
whale concern over has whereabouts
spread across the country.
There were false alarms in the airport in Madison. Wis., and at Detroit
Metropolitan Airport in Romulus,
Mich.
Baltimore police also confronted
a man Wednesday at a shopping center who resenlbled Cunanan.

"He fit the description to a 'T '"
said Lt. Wayne Wilson.
'
Minneapolis FBI spokeswoman
Coleen Rowley said investigators
believe Cunanan has stopped wearing
the flashy clothes be had become
known for.
"It seems that Cunanan is dressing down now," Rowley said. "It
would appear that he will be dressing
m tank tops, T•shins and sweatshirts.
He docsn' t want to stand out."

scheduled to accompany Anatoly
Solovyov and Pavel Vinogradov
when they lift ofT into space Aug. 5.
''That poor guy," one Mir crew
mem_ber was overheard say inS to
Massaon Control. "He's gone through
so much. It 's a shame."
Solovyov explained that the
French experiments would take more
time and energy than the hobbled st~tion can provide. "Until we restore all
these things. it's useless to carry out
the French program," he said.
Eyharts was to study the effects of
low gravity on human and animal
physiologies. If his, mission is canccled, the experiments will take place
early next year, Fn!hch space ~fficials
have said.
Solovyov said discussions with
the French arc continuing, and an
official decision will be announced
Monday.
The decision to wait for a new
creW also means that American astronaut Michael Foale. who boarded the
station in May. won't take pan in the
· tricky repair operation. which
involves going into the ruptured.
depressurized Spektr module.
·

Cambodian leader spurns offer of help
PHNOM _P~NH, Cambodia (AP) Sen lo relinquish control in favor of
--: Cambodta s self-declaR:d ruler ~ caretaker government until clecreJe_cted an offer today fron:t netgh- taons can be held.
bonng Soulh~asl Asaan nat'?"' for
Hun Sen staged a military coup
~lp t~ ~esolvang the country s pohtJuly 5 that left dozens an the capital
acal crasts.
dead and his co-premier Prince
r · •
h
Hun Sen met oor a1most two ours Norodom Ranariddh in exile.
· he
· 1 Ph
p h ·hr
..
.
m t capata, nom en , Wtl_ .or~
We thank that at present the royeagn mamsters fr?':" . Thaala~d, al government docs not need ASEAN
lndonesaa and the Pluhppancs to dts- to take part in helping solve the
·
. ' s tunn01·1·tnth.e wake .· ·assue, " Hun Sen ·s spokesman
cuss_Carnbod ta
Svay
of has bloody
Satha said. .
·
' . coup.
..
_
The .oreagn mmastcrs representmg
Another daplomatic effort is being
· t.aon of southc~t Asaan
·
· .•• h "' .
.
the .Assocaa
or~ant77" y nashmgton. whach said
Nauons had hoped to convmce Hun Fnday at wall not accept Hun Sen's

2.1°/a API

takc~vcr and plans to confront him in
Phnom Penh with a message that the
coup is illegal and intolerable
U.-S. envoy Stephen Solarz ·was 10
fly to Asia today to rally support for
·
the us
r
Ch'ana Japan
. . posa·1aon
orom
Indonesia Tha·l d M 1 '. .
d,
•
I an ,
a aysaa an
Cambodian
King
Norodom
Sihanouk. Ranariddh"s father He
also will see H s · Ph·
un en an
nom
Penh.
Solarz ·asacyoacctcsame
· J"k 1 t f . h
defiance •rom H s
h h
en, w o as
repeatedly" warnedunASEAN
·

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PINI,y:to•·• .. • !1M ..,_, . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . ., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .. _ _ . . , _ _ ""'1)1 . . . . . . . 01 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _.,.__...,._,., .......... .

The crew continued Saturday to
fix the damage from a massive power blackout on Thursday. They reac. tivatcd the station's gyroscope systern . allowing the handicapped station
to regain its precise orientation
toward the sun and conserve precious
fuel supplies.
Since losing power, the stit.ion has
rela'ed on thruste rs - wh.ac h use 1·aquid fuel - to keep its solar panels in
. the sunlight. Solovyov explained that
once the gyroscope system is on line, ·
it uses no energy.
"We still need 10 work with {the
gyroscopes), to rest them. But on the ·
whole we are nqw in the regime of

expense-free orientation," Solovyov
said.
The Mir's misfortunes Have
included a fire in Fcb!1Jary, break- .
down of the oxygen system in March.
a breach of the oooling system in
April and the cargo ship collision in
June.
The station's next crew has hccn
preparing for ihe Spektr repair job by
practicing in an underwater tank at
Russia's eosqmnaut training center
outside Moscow.
The job will require one cosmonaut to don a spacesuit to venture into.
the depressurized Spektr module.

Major league
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By BARRY WILNER
CANTON, Ohio (AP)- For 33
years, he stood on the sidelines, his
granite jaw almost as prominent as
his record. Don Shula was the epitome of the pro football leader even
before he became the winningest
coach the game has known.
Shula will be inducted into the
Pro Football Hall of Fame next
Saturday; joining other legends,
such as Halas, Lombardi and Brown.
The only reason he wasn't there
League contest in Cleveland, where the Red
FLIPPED - The Cleveland Indians' Brian
sooner is that he was busy ·lrying to
Sox won 6-3. Glle.s' efforts didn't keep Frye
Giles
(22)
fllpa
Baaton
aecond
aacker
Jeff
Frye
win games until last year.
from getting the throw to first in time to retire
Into the tilr after being forced out at second
"Coaching has been my life for
Pat Bordera and get the double play. (AP)
baaeln
the
fifth
Inning
of
Satitrday's
American
more than three ~ades, and that
was a reward itself," Shilra said.
Shula is the headliner of this
year 's Hall of Fame class, which
also includes Wellington Mara.
Mike l;iaynes and Mike Webster.
They bring to 189 the number of
inductees.
None had a beuer career than
Shula. The numbers arc overwhelmThe Reds took a 2-0 lead in the second on Eric
CLEVELAND
ing: a record of.347- 173-6 with
Owens'
RBI single and Sehourck's run-scoring single.
(AP)· John
Baltimore and Miami, a winning
Noles:
Schourek. on the disabled list with tendinitis
Valentin hit two
percentage of .665; 17-0 in 1972, the
in
his
left
triceps muscle. was aclivated Friday and
solo homers and
only perfect season in NFL history;_
threw R I pitches in his five -inning stint. .. . Reed 's
If
redo
Cordero
17 first-place .finishes; only two loshad a three-run homer was the third by a Mcts pitcher this year. Murk
ing records in 3 3 years; youngest
double
Saturday Clark and Armando Reynoso have the others .... Morris
coach to win lOll' games, 200 games
as
the
Boston
Red went 2-for-4 and is 12-for-33 since the All-Star break
and 300 games.
Sox
beat
the with eight RBis ... : The Mcts arc 7-2 against the Reds
"I always felt as though greatthis season.
Cleveland
Indians
ness is not measured by success
Pirates 13, Phillies 3 -At Phil-adelphia. Dale
alone but by success over an extend- 6-3.
Svcum
homered and drove in three runs. and the
A day after knucklcballcr Tim Wakefi¢ld llullercd
AND AWAY IT GOES!- Sweden's Jeaper Pamevlk tees oH al ed period of time," said Kansas City
Pittsburgh
Pirates used a season-high 17-hil attack to
the .s econd hole aa the gallery behind him watches during third- Chiefs coach Marty Scho11enheimer, his way to a six-hit shutout of the Indians. JciT Suppan
snap
a
three-game
losing streak with a 13-3 rout of the
round play In the Brlllsh (Jpen Saturday at the Royal Troon GoH one of Shula's closest friends and a shut them down with a more conventional arsenal.
Suppan (4-0) allowed one run and five hits in six Philadelphia Phillics.
Club. Pamevlk look hla lwo-atroke lead Into today'a final round. longtime admirer. "Certainly Don
The lirst seven hillers in Pillshurgh's lineup each had
innings,
retiring the lirsl I0 batters in order before Tony
(AP)
.
has met each of those criteria that I
at
least
two hits, and Kevin Young added three RBis .
consider to be a part of it. He has Fernandez bunted safely in the fourth .
Svcum's
two-run shot. his seventh, started a five-run
Terry Clark (0-1 ). making his second start of the seadone it for as long as most and heller
fourth
inning
off Philadelphia starter Tyler Green (0- ().
son, allowed four runs and six hits in seven innings.
than most.
Kevin
Polcovich
added an RBI double and two runs
''His ability to adapt to the Clark, who has pitched portions of 19 seasons in the scored on Philadelphia shortstop Kevin Sefcik's ·throwchanging face of our game was what minors, walked two and struck out five in his longest
ing error.
set Don apart. He won in the '60s in major league outing since 1988.
Steve Cooke (8-9) allowed three runs and tO hits in
The Red Sox have won four straight and live of six.
Baltimore and in the '70s and '80s
six
innings for the win .
in Miami. H¥.; ability to get people while the AL.Centrai.Jeading Indians have lost two in a
Green.
who missed all of last season because of·
to. accept the fact that hard work and row ..
·
shoulder
surgery,
allowed eight runs - six earned Boston took a 1-0 lead in the tirst when Valentin hit
allention 10 detail will enable you to
and
ei~ht
hits
in
four-rlus
innin£s. Because of elbow
~el that little edJZc that probablv is a solo homer to left. The· Red Sox made it 4-0 on problems .this year he was making just his second start.
Cordero's
two-out,
bases-loaded
double
in
the
third
.
ture.
the difference betweeq being a
. By DOUG FERGUSON
White Sox 3, Orioles 0 - ~ Baltimore. James
Suppan was splendid. After Fernandez reached on
_
Starting
the
day
13
strokes
off
the
championship
team and a winning
TROON, Scotland {AP)
Baldwin
allowed two hits in seven-plus innings and a
his bunt hit toward third, Thome singled to right and
Jesper Parnevik took advantage of leaa. Woods' 64 tied the record at team. or a mediocre team and a win- Fernandez advanced to third when Troy O'Leary hob- wild pitch by Mike Mussina pnlduced the lead run as
another calm day at Royal Troon Royal Troon. set by Greg Norman in ning team. or a mediocre team and a bled the ball. Suppan escaped the jam by gelling Manny the Chicagp While Sox broke a four-game skid hy heatlosing team - that was Don
and a surprising collapse by Darren 1989.
ing the Baltimore Orioles 3-0 Friday night.
Ramirez to hit sharply into a double play.
Woods
saved
his
round
on
the
Shula."
Clarke, shooting a 5-undcr-par 66 10
Alben Belle hit his 21 sl homer in'lhe cighlh "'' the
David Justice led off the fifth with a douhlc and
The masterpiece. of. course. was
take the lead after the third round of lith hole. where he once again tried
White
Sox sent Baltimore to its ninth loss in II games.
to play out from rough surrounded the Dolphins' spotless 1972 season. scored on a single by Brian Giles a~ the Indians dosed
The
only hils off Baldwin {7-9) were a lifth-inning
the Brit.ish Open Saturday.
to 4- L Valentin stabbed, Pat Borders' sharp grounder at
Parnevik holed a 15-foot putt for by the prickly gorse bushes and was capped by a 14-7 victory over third and started a nifty 5-4-3 double play to end the 'single hy Cal· Ripkcn and a single hy Mike Bordick
Washington in the Super Bowl.
birdie 'on 16, then took the lead with sti1171 yards out after three shots.
leading oiT the eighth. After Bordick's single, Tony
·
But
unlike
the
triple-bogey
7
he
Each
year. members of that team- threat.
a four-foot birdie on the 223-yard
Valentin led off the eighth with another homer to left. Ca~tillo came in and retired the side.
17th hole. He was at 11 -under 202, had Thursday on No. II. and the from such familiar personnel as his ninth. against Alvin Monnan to make it 5-1.
Baldwin (7-9) walked three and struck nut live to
two strokes ahead of Clarke. Fred quadruple-bogey 8 he had on the Larry Csonka, Bob Griese, Larry
improve
to 5-2 i" his last nine starls.
The Indians scored twice in the eighth off Jim Corsi
Couples shot a 70 and was five lOth hole Friday from the gorse. he Linle and Nick Buoniconti to the on Fernandez's two-run single.
Roberto Hernandez allowed one hit but got thr~c
w.alkcd away with Qllly a bogey hy lesser-known players from the Nostrokes back.
Boston added a run io the ninth on an RBI triple hy . nuts for his 24th save.
· Clarke looked like he might run hilling to within four feet and mak- Name Defense - quietly, but Nomar Garciaparra off Jose Mesa. Heathcliff Slocumb
Norbcrto Martin singled in a run in the Chicago
emphatically, root for each NFL
away from the field - and take ing the pull.
ninth
against Randy Myers to make it 3-0.
pitched the"ninth for his 14th save.
some of the luster off Tiger Woods' · "Things like that keep rounds dub to lose at least once, preserving
Baldwin
and Mussina were locked in a scoreless duel
Cleveland squandered a scoring chance in the sixth
theirsole claim on perfection.
course record-tying 64 - ·when he going," Woods said.
until the Chicago seventh. ·
when
Vizquclled
olf
with
a
double
and
was
stranded
at
Indeed: He birdied the 12th to get
"We'd win the toss, keep the ball
was nearly perfect on the front nine
Harold Baines singled and went to third on a single
hack
the
stroke,
then
hecamc
the
seven
or eight minutes. score a third. Mall Williams doubled with one nul in the sev- by Lyle Mouton. who wok second on the throw tn third .
with four birdies [or a 32.
enth oiT Ron Mahay, hut Giles struck out and Borders
That put :him at 13 under for the first player to make caglc .on the par- touchdown, hold them thrce-andgrounded to third.
.
. Mu!&lt;isina got two straight groundnuts hcforc walking
tournament. four strokes ahead of 5 16th, a 542-yard hole into a steady . oul. hold the ball seven or eight
Notes: Boston's Garciaparra hit a line drive off Ouic Guillen to lnnd the hases.
P:imevik. But after a two-pull par on breeze that WOods reached in two . more minutes. score another touch- Clark-' s glove in the seventh that Vit.qucl hare-handed
Mussina then threw his first pile~ to Martin in the .
down, he ahead 14-0 and the first
No. 10, Clarke started slipping back holing a 12-foot pull.
din.
The hall bounced oil the screen, and Baines came
And when it looked like he was half's ncar over," Shula said with a and threw to tirst for a spectacular out. ... Cleveland
home
with Chicago's lirst run.
to the pack.
manager Mike Hargrove failed in his second attempt at
He missed seven straight greens in trouble again at the par-3 17th. grin. "That's great coaching."
Mussina
(10-4) gave up seven hils and walked one in
It seems filling that Shula enters his SOOth career victory. Only three active monagc..,;
until No. 18. and despite saving Woods played a )'lerfcct bump shot
eight
innings.
The right-hander struck nut seven but lost
have 500 wins with their current team - Bohby Cnx of
bogey twice with smart decisions. into the slope guarding the green. the Hall of Fame with Mara, owner Atlanta, Cito Gaston of Tornnto and Tum Kelly of a second ~lraight decision for the first lime this season.
standing over one par-saving pull the ball rolling into the cup for an of the New York Giants . II was Minnc.-.na .... Clark pitched 7 2/3 innings for Calil&lt;&gt;rnia
Baldwin held the Orioles hitless until Ripken opened
improbable birdie. Woo~s saved par Mara who introduced Vince
after another began to take its toll.
the
lifth inning with a single that dropped went in front
at Texas on Sept. II, 1988 .... Thome snapped an 0-forHe went ar.ound in even-par 71 from a pol bunker. making a .10- Lombardi as an inductee in 1977: 17 skid with his single in the fourth .... Cordero was 1- of center fielder Dave Martina. Ripkcn tuok second on
Lombardi and Shula generally arc
- 39 ori the back - and goes into footer on the 18th for his 64.
Woods
,
13
strokes
back
to
start
considered
the game's greatest for-10 before his three-run double .... It wa' Valentin's a groundoul, but Jeffrey Hammonds struck nut and
t&lt;lday's final round two strok~s hack
sixt~ career two-homer game and ~econd thi~ season .... Chris Hoiles tlied out.
of Parnevik at 204. Woods is at 210. the round. had .said Friday he still coaches.
Af1cr Mouton got a one-out single in the second for
thought he had a chance to win .
Shula is the patriarch of a family Rocker Sammy Hagar. who had a concert in Clevela,nd the White Sox, Mussina retired 13 straight before
eight strokes behind.
"I figured if I eliminated the bad that has devoted ilsclf to the NFL. Saturday night. threw out the tirst pitch. It was not even
Parncvik. who wasted a chance to
Martinet. singled with two outs in the sixth . Frank
holes
and pulled hellcr. then I'd be His sons. David and Mike, have close to 55 mph.
win the 1994 B_ritish Open al
Thomas
lollowed with a single before Belle grounded
Mets S, Reds 3- At New York. Bernard Gilkey's
coached in the league and will pre-·
Turnberry by making bogey at the OK." he said Saturday..
three-run homer broke a tic in the eighth inning and nut.
His 64 took shape o~ the front. sent him at Saturday's ceremonies.
72nd hole when all he needed was a where
In the Orioles sixth. Bmdy Anderson walked and got
gave
the New York Mcts a 5-3 victory Saturday over
he birdied three of the first
Mara joins his father. Tim. the
par. made three birdies on the diffito third hasc with two outs hdorc Geronimo Bcrroa
four holes. One of those was a 30- founder of the Giants and a charter the Cincinnati Reds.
cult closing nine .
Rick Reed (7 -4) hit his lirst major-league homer in llied out to center.
. Clarke showed just how difficult fool pull up a ridge on No.-2. where · member of the Hall. in Canton.
Notes: Mouton went2-h&gt;r-4 and is 12-for-24 against
"That"~ the first time it· s hap- the fifth, a game-tying two-run shot, and pitched eight
the back stretch can be, even with Woods began striding _confidently In
the
Orioles this year. He's 6-lnr- 13 lifetime against
hole as the pun was still live feet pencd. so naturally I feel good about innings. The right-hander allowed six hits and matched
only a mild sea breeze c01riing in off the
Mussina
.... Anderson wa"i moved from center field to
away from falling .
that." " said Mara. 80. who has been a sea~on-high with seven strikeouts. He walked one and
designated
hitler because of a sore calf. In the eighth he
the Firth of Clyde .
He had to seule for birdie at both part of the NFL since he was eight. retired the final 13 batten he faced.
He took his first bogey of the
grounded
into
a double play for the first time this seaThe Mcts, whO had played six straight one-run
round by driving into the gorse on par 5s on the front. but 'picked up " I know my father would feel good ga!lleS, have won three in a row and have ' come from son ... . Hoilcs. activated from the disabled list before
No. II, then ran into problems again another birdie on No. ·7 when his about it. too.
the game, went 0-lor-3 in his lirst game since June 16.'
drive bounccd .oiT a five-'- "1 -fcel as ·though .my chief behind to win 28 times.
when his approach into the par-4 slicing
Brell Tomko {5-3), who relieved Reds starter Pete ... Thomas extended his hilling streak to a ·season-high
13th went behind the scoreboard year,old girl's head and ricocheted attribute is'' longevity. and I'm cor- Schourck, gave up a bloop single to Rcy. Ordonez to nine games.
,
toward the right rough. He hit a tainly not knocking that."
into rough so thick he could barely hack
Cubs
7,
Rockies
0
At
Chicago,
Steve Trachsel
high. spinning sand wedge that
Mara admits he'd love to have open the eighth. Two outs later. Edgardo Alfonzo's atpitched
s~vcn
shutout
innings
fnr
his
first
win since
find his ball.
bat was prolonged when Cincinnati left fielder Deion
had Shula coach for him.
He took a penally drop . then rolled to within 10 feet for birdie.
June
14
as
the
Chicago
Cubs
heat
slumping
Colorado
7.
Some early scores reflected
"I'm very hononed to go into the Sanders made a long run but dropped a ball ncar the
saved bogey with a 10-foot pull.
0
in
the
opening
game
of
a
doublehead
er
Satarday,
the
Clarke also made another huge pun. another perfect .day for scoring - 1 Hall of Fame with Don Shula, " he stands.
Alfonzo then singled before Gilkey hit Tomko's first Rockies' seventh straight loss .
this one for par, on the next hole . unseasonably warm temperatures said. "You must include Shula,
Colorado has now dropped 14 of its last 15, and hiland bright sk,ies. Some fans had their Vince Lombard• and Tom Lanclry as pitch into the Reds' bullpen in left field.
But he lost the lead with a bogey at . shirts
ting
star Larry Walker went 0-for-4, lowering his averFor Gilkey, miR:d in a season-long slump and batting
off, and a number of sailboats among the greatest coaches. We had
No. 15, then three-puned the 18th
age
from
.402 to .398,.
the Firth of Clyde drew near to the pleasure of having L9mbardi and .213 entering the game, it was his second clutch home
for his fourth bogey over an eight- on
Trachsel
(5-7) allowed four singles, walked one and
the shore.
Landry on our coaching staff at the run in three games. ·
.
struck
out
eight.
Turk Wendell pitched twn hillc ss
hole stretch.
And for a while, Clarke was'taj&lt;- -same time. I felt I learned a lot about
On Thursday, Gilkey who has 10 homers, started the
Couples got into the thick of it by
innings
to
complete
the shutout.
ing full advantage. But he had never all aspects of football from all three Mets ' game-tying rally with a solo shot in the six.th
holin~hort iron for eagle on the
The
Cubs
broke
a
scoreless tic in the fo~rth as Dave
against Chicago. New York went on to win 4-3 in 10
been in contention on the weekend of them.
lith. ·
e missed. the 17th green for
Clark
doubled
off
Jamcy
Wright (4-6), Dave Hansen
a major el!ampionship, and the
"We've been very friendly innings.
and took is first bogey in 42 holes
walked
and
Tyler
Houston
hit
~n RBI single.
Greg McMichael pitched the ninth, allowing a solo
back nine at Royal Troon is difficult throughout the years . We worked
and wound up with a 70.
Wright,
who
lost
his
fifth
straight and hasn ' t won
even without a strong wind.
together on the competili!)n commit· home run to Willie Greene, for his fifth save.
Justin Leonard, who started the
since
May
3,
gave
up
a
double
to Mark Grace to start
·Jim Furyk, who shared the first- tee for many years. I've admired
Tomko, who wits scheduled to start Sunday, gave up
third round two strokes behind
the
fifth.
Sammy
Sosa
walked
and sto.le second and
round lead· with Clarke, shot a 70 him as a coach and a man and
runs on tbR:e hits in three innings .
Clarke, made only pars for 10 holes, and was at 209 with Eduardo regrened it just didn ' t happen that ·three
Grace
scored
on
Clark's
sacrifice
ny. Dave Hansen then
Ordonez singled with two outs in the fifth and Reed
then began to fade. He shot a l-over Romero and England's Stephen we had him coaching for the Giants.
dropped
down
a
sq·
u
eeze
bun!
to
score
Sosa and give the
followed with a home run, his first in 72 career at-bats
72 and was tied with Couples at 207. Ames.
Cubs
a
3-0
lead.
Any time we might have an opening, to tie it 2-2. ·
Clarke's inability to hold course
he never was available."
•
brought Woods back into the pic-

BoSox beat Indians 6-3;
Mets get past·Reds 5-3

Bul&amp;ru &lt;ieo IliuM Be Diorho

1993
White, AS, auto, AJC, PL, cruise, tih,
reliaple transportation. JUST '169

Sunday, July 20, 1987

inductees

atltt\S NORr11 ~~
..
DODGE · "·
1997
3.5, V6, All Power, White, #042

B

HOF

No Credit, Slow Credit
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?

Don~

Section

·shu/a
heads
list of Pro
Football

NEW YORK {AP) - Two
months before the premiere of TV's
"Nothing SacR:d," a Catholic antidefamation group is demanding the
drama be pulled from ABC's schedule for its "sick look" at priests.
,"They're belittling what is
sacred," Bernadette Brady, vice president of the Catholic League, said Ftiday.
ABC is standing by the show.
which stars Kevin Anderson as a
young priest in big-city parish. It is
scheduled to air Thursdays starting in
September. . ,
The 350,000-member Catholic
League can't threaten a boycoll
against ABC's parent Walt Disney ·
Co. because one already exists: the .
group urged Catholics not to patronize Disney because of the 1995
movie "'Priest."
Catholic League
President
William Donohue hadn't seen the
show before calling for its cancellation. He was angry about a Disney
news release describing Anderson's
character as an "irreverent priest who
questions the existence of God, feels
lust in his hean and touches peoplc.'s
souls ...
Brady said she has seen ··Nothing
Sacred's" pilot and was upset by its
·" very, very negative portrayal of the
priesthOod."
·
Anderson's character unwisely
counsels a pregnant teen-ager to fol low her own instincts. she said. The
show is also riddled with faciual ·
errors about Catholicism, particularly in its depiction of a rehearsal of a
baptism, she said.

Replacement crew will relieve stressed Mir astronauts
By ANNA DOLGOV
He added that he told them not to
Associated Press Writer
blame themselves for the collisionMOSCOW- Russian space offi- · one of many· mishaps to befall the
cials broke the news to three tined orbiting outpost over the last six
men aboard the Mir space station Sat- months.
urday: They will go back to Earth
"You, the crew, have done quite a
witl)out completing critical repairs to lot." he said, recounting his converthe spacecraft, leaving the job to a sation with the astronauts. "A lot of
fresb ·crew.
experience has been gained. There is
Mission Control told ihe Rusiian- no need to engage in self-flagellaAmerican crew over a 30-minute tion ."
·
·
video link that two Russian cosmoThe decision takes some pressure
nauts scheduled to arrive next month ·off the crew, which had expressed
would repair the Mir's Spektr mod- deiermination to make the complex
ule. A cargo ship collided with Spek- repairs despite showing signs of tentr on June 25, punching a hole in the sion.
module and causing the station to · Mir commander Vasily Tsibliyev,
lose half its power.
has shown signs of extR:me stress,
"They reacted with understand- including an im:gular heartbeat. He
ing, although ori a purely human lev- was to undergo a medical examinacl I understand full wei!, that. they tion Sunday, including an electric carwere, of c?urse, u~s~l, Massaon diagram, 10 determine if his heartbeat
Control . chaef Vladtmtr Solovyov-- -bas ~tabilized, the !TAR-Tass news
tol~.reporters later.
.
agency reported, citing unidentified
They would have_ laked to. do Mission Control offiCials.
m?re and they are fechng s~ and
One conseq~ence of Saturday's
dasappomted. But they are reasonable decasmn. which is to be formalized
people and they unders.~and that at Monday, is the likel~ postponement
was, the nght dccasaon, Solovyov of a scientific mission by French
saad.
astronaut Leopold Eyharts. He ~as

arts

Sundly, July 20, 1117

'

I

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH .. Point Pleasant, wv

Romero hits homer :
in debut to help
Padres top Marlins :~

K.C.

Raiders and
Mead~s Body Shop
record victories
In the sixth, .one,out singles by
Wigal and A.J. Dickens preceded
Taylor's !Tare into right field. Though
Tahor misplayed the ball and was
charged with an error, his no-hop
throw to the plate was fi!llded by
Spaulding. The Indians pla:r.ed it safe
and kept the bases loaded.
,
After Spaulding got Bell out on a
called third •trike, Chucky Davis
popped out to Spaulding n!'Jlf first to
end the contest.
Spaulding's c-omplete-game elTon
resulted in a five-hiller that also
included his giving up only two
walks. Smith, who also pitched a
complete game. struck nut eight,
walked three and hit one hatter.
K.C. 's hitten; were Woodall (3-4).
Craycraft (2-3), Spaulding, Tabor
. and Thompson (all 2-4 ).
Middleport's hillers were Wigal
(2-3), Davis ( 1-2): Bell and Dickens
(both 1-3)..

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sparta Writer
Armando Romero's homecoming
was homespun.
Romero, a'IO-year minor leaguer
brought up this week, homered in his
first major league start Friday night
to lead the San Diego Padres to a 53 victory over the Aorida.Marlins.
Playing in ·front of about 40
friends and family in his hometown
of Miami, the 29-year-old catcher
gorto live out a ballplayer's fantasy.
"In my heart I knew I could play
in the big leagues," Romero said. "I
was on cloud nine. I was blank. so
excited I came into the dugout and
put my gear 0n."
Romero was p~omorcd from
Triple-A Las Vegas on Sunday after
backup catcher Carlos Hernandez
was placed on the disabled list The
switch-hiuer went 2-for-4 and scored
twice against the Marlins.
"It couldn't get any beller al
home in front of my family aod
mother who never has seen me in a
pro unifonn," Romero said. "Unhelievablc."
Another Miamian, Alex Fernandez, who played with Romero on an
area all-star team that traveled to
Mexico ahoul IS yean; ago, took the
loss.
"Congral! to him," said Fernandez, who didn'l remember Romcrn.
"But it won't happen again. He did
a good job with the pitches he got."
11lc Padres have won five straight
road games.
Edgar Renteria hit a pair of solo
·homers for the Marlins.
Renteria, who had his third threehii day, struck out with runnen; on
lirst and· second to end the game.
"I'm not very happy I lost the
game hut I'm &lt;eal happy I hit two
homers," Renteria said. "ll's the first
time in my life I ever hit two homers
in one game."
Renteria homered in the fourth oiT
Pete Smith (3-1 ), and again in the
eighth against Jim Bruske.
Florida manager Jim Leyland
wa.•n 't in the dugout at game's end
after injuring his ankle when he
slipped in lhe runway during the
game. X-rays were negative and
he'll undergo an MRI exam today.
Elsewhere in the NL, it wa.&lt;:
'Houstcln 2, Montreal 0; Philadelphia
8, Pittsburgh 6; Atlanta 4, Los Angeles I; and St. Louis 6, San Francisco 5. Colorado at Chicago was post-

poned by rain.
Astros 2, Expos 0
At Montreal, Ramon Garcia (4-7) ·
pitched eight scoreles• innings to ··
outduel Pedro Martinez ( 11-5).
.
Garcia, who joined the Astros'
rotation June 17 when Shane
Reynolds was placed on the disabled
list, scancrcd six hits before. leaving
for a pinch-hitter.
·
Luis Gonzalez had three hils for
the Astros, who won lor the eighth
time in II games.
Billy Wagner put .two im in the
ninth hefore getting his) 6th save. ·
Martinez allowed two runs in scv,
en ·innings and saw his NL-leading
ERA rise slightly from 1.62 to 1.67.
Phillies 8, Pirates 6
AI Philadelphia. Mickey Morandini 's three-run double capped uri
eight-run sixth inning for the'
.Phillies.
·
;
Mark Leiter (5-1 0) struck out a
season-high nine in six innings hw
his first win since May 20.
Ricky Bottalico pitched the final
two innings fur his 16th save.
A 1wo-run cmor by lel'l fielder AI
Martin and the hullpen's inability to
throw strikes cost the Pirates in tho
sixth. Philadelphia pinch-hillers
drew ahrcc consccu1ivc walks tu

Friday night at the · Kyger Creek
Employees Club field with the
Kyger Creek Raidelll beatinl! the
Middlepo!1 IGA Indians S-2 and
Point Pleasant Mead 's Body Shop
HEADING FOR THIRD- The Kyger Creek Raldere' Bryan Work•
tallying a 6-3 win over the Gallipoman rounda aecond baH and heads for third on ltyan Spaulding'•
lis Yankees.
line-drive elngle to right field In the first Inning of the opening game
Ralders 5, Indians 2
of
the Kyger Creak LitHe League Toumament Friday night at
11lc opening game featured '3
Ctieahlre.
Though Workman was later ·111rown out trying to score,
th~·RBI effort by Kyger Creek
the
Raiders
ecored twice in the aecond en route to beating the Midshortstop Nicky Craycraft that
dleport
Indians
5·2. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Olbome)
helped the Raiders outla.&lt;t the Indians' second-inning rebellion.
One inning later. teammate Tommy Thompson's two-run homer
helped put the game out of the Indians' reach and gave the Raiders the
right to commence second-round
play today.
Middleport denied Kyger Creek
in the first inning. but the Raiders' lllnin&amp;Mik
filllt three hitters in the second I;!Ot Middleport
020-000=2-5-3
hits off hurler Jimmy Smith. Cray- K.C. Raiders
030-120=5-11-3
craft's two-run double, the second of
WP- Spaulding
the frame, scored Colin Woodall and
LP-Smith
Joey Tabor and put K.C. ahead 2-0.
In their half of the second. the
Mead's 6, Van.kees 3
Indians g01 on the board when Casey
In the nightcap, Nick Dalton's
Dunfee, who reached on a three-base RBI single helped Mead's Body
rorcc in lwo runs.
.
error by left fielder Josh Wamsley. Shop break a 3-3 tie in the firth. and
Braves 4, Dodgers I
scored on a wild pitch. Chet Wigal, help the West Virginians earo a sec.. At Atlanta, benny NeaJJ'e joined
who reached on a narc single to left ond-round herth.
teammate Greg Maddux a.&lt; the NL'~
center and got to second base on a
Gallipolis drew lirst blood in the
only 13-game winncn; and Andruw
passed hall, scored the tying run on t.n;t, when Nick Craft. moving to
Jones
hit a two-run homer.
·
GETS THE OUT- After taking the lllrow from Gallipolis YankMI
Brandon Bell's two-out single to third base on Chris Bia.&lt; ·one-out sinNeagle
(
13-2)
threw
a
five-hiller
;
catcher Roy Sayre, pitcher Angelo Hardy (wearing gray cap) puts
right center.
gle to right, scored when right field- down· the lealllar lllat means an out on Mead's Body Shop's Lea
over eight innings to beat the :
From that point on, Raider pitch- cr Nigel Thompson 's throw to third Plante at the plate In the sacond Inning of the nightcap of the Kyger
youngest pitcher in the majors. 20= ·
cr Ryan Spaulding was in charge. In hase got past Lee Plants.
Creek Little League Tournament's first doubleheader Friday night
year-old Dennis Reyes. The Atlanta ;
the next four frames, the leli-handcr
The Yankees carried their 1-0 lead • at Cheshire. Mead's shook off a 1-0 deficit to win 4·3. (Times-Senlefl-handcr allowed only nne runner ;
tallied seven of his I0 strikeouts. Hci' into 'the third, when Chad Sayre, the tinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
past lirsi until the seventh, when ;
struck 'out the side in order in the No. 5 hiller' lor MBS, singled to
·Raul Mondesi hit his 19th homer.
third. No Indians g01 past second score Dustin Morrison and Mark Humphreys' at-bat
(2-3) and Eric Taylor ( 1-2).
Mark Wohlers worked the ninth :
until the •ixth.
Humphreys. Sayre scored seconds
MBS pitcher Chad Sayre struck Ionine .l2!!li
for his 24th save.
.
Meanwh~e. Craycraft earned his
later when he beat the center field- out the side in order in the GallipoReyes ( 1-1) allowed nine hits and·
Mead 's Body Shop CXJ3-012~6-o -O
place among the tournament's indi- cr-sccond baseman-catcher relay.
lis fifth. This continued a delcnsivc
four runs in 6 213 innings.
'
I02-000=3-3-0
vidual honorees by driving Smith's
However, Mead's saw its 3-llead run by MBS that kept the Yankees Gal. Yankees
Jones, who is four days younger:
'wP- C. Sayre
2-1 pitch beyood the light pole in left evaporate when in the Gallipolis from gelling a runner beyond first in
than Reyes, lined his eighth homer ;
LP- Hardy
field for a solo homer in the fourth. third, Bias' singled to right before the last three innings.
into the lcft-,lield stands in the sec- ·
Thal'pul the Raiders ahead 3-2.
Thompson 's error allowed Craft to
Chad Sayre struck out 14, includond after Fred McGrill' singled.
Here what's on today·'s agenda.
Thompson's fifth-inning blast to score. Bias, who went to third on the ing seven of the last II bailers he
Cardinals 6, Giants 5
.
I p.m. (first-round game). right created the final score.
play, scored the tying run on a wild faced, walked three and gave' up
Al
St.
Louis,
Stan
Javier,
forced
·
Poim Pleasant Fruth Pharmacy vs .
Middleport wasn't into going qui- pitch during B.J. Denny's at-hat.
three hits in a complete-game effort.
to make a rare start at lirsl hase after :
Bidwell I
ctly into the night. The Indians got
After no one got a runner to sec- ~ngclo Hardy, the Yankees' starter,
J.T. Snow accidentally scmtched his :
2:30 p.m (first-round finale)two on base with one out in their half ond base in the lourth, Mead's broke , pitched 5 113 innings before giving
eye,
made a wild throw to help the :
Pomcroy Yankees vs. Rio Gmndc II
ofthe fifth, but the annored Thomp- the tic when Ken Dun;t, who walked · way to Craft, the staning shonstop.
.
Cardinals
hrcak a six-game. home •
4 p.m. (se&lt;:ond-rOIJIIII opener)·son, stepping.from behind the plate and moved to second on catcher Roy The pair combined to strike ·out ihree
losing
streak.
Kyger Creek Raiders ,vs. Mason
10 field David Boyd's fieldcr'sSayre's throwing error to first, scOred . and walk eight
VFW II .
Ron Gunt homered as the Cardichoice grounder, threw out Bell at on Dalton's single to center.
Mead's hillers were Dalton. N1ck
nals heat All-Star Shawn Estes ( 125:30 p.m. (setond-round
third for the second out. The Raiders
Mead's got its last two runs in the · Smith (both 1-2 ), Durst. Morrison,
4)
game)- Mead's Body Shop vs.
ended thai rally when Man Thomas sixth when Thompson and Morrison Chad Sayre and Thompson (all 1-3).
.grounded out to the ·pitcher.
- · scored on a wild pitch during
Point Pleasant Home Care Medical •••••••••••••••••'!~~••••••••
The Yankees' hillers were Bias

a, DAVE HARRIS

T..S C01TIIp0i1dent.
ROCK SPRINGS Scott
George fired a two hiller and Meigs
took advanlllge of two four run
innings to defeat Logan 10-0 in
Eighth District American Legion
Action Thursday al Meigs High
School.
The game was called after scveri
innings because ol' the 10-run mercy rule.
George was in control the entire
contest striking oul seven and walk-

ing four. Bohhy Blosser was the losing pitcher for Logan.
Meigs had 14. hits led hy Josh
Merkle with three singles, Joe Kirhy continued his torrid hilling with
ll home· run, his third in two days.
Collin Roush added a douhlc and a
single, Matt Dill and George each
had a pair of singles.
On Wednesday, Meigs spotted
Oak Hill a 4-0 lead and stormed hack
to post a 11-4 victory. Oak Hill still
~cld a 6-3 lead heading into the lifth

inning. but Meigs score a pair of runs
Logan ai Meigs High School. ,,
in the fifth , one in the eighth and live . lnnin&amp; !2liti
in the ninth to post the win. ·
Logan
000-000-0=0-2-3
Kirby slammed two home runs- Meigs
140-401 - x~I0-14-0
a two ron shot in the li hh and a solo
Bobby Blosser (W) and Gerald
shot in the e1ghth- to lead Meigs. Covert
Brad Davenport picked up the win,
Scott George (L) and Man Dill
scattering eight hits in a complelclnoinal!!mb
game effort.
Meigs
000-320-015~11-10-2
Oak Hill
022-200-000=4-8- 1
Meigs (9- 15 &amp;.8-7), which closed
Brad Davenport (W) and Man
Dill
.
out league play Saturday with a douhlcheadcr. will open tournament
Leighton Adkins (L) and Adam
play Monday at 5:30 p.m. against · Haines

I

lished.
photos and relal.ed articles, ·from . THowever, certain deadlines for ball to the majors. as well as other
submissions will be observed.
spring and summer sports. is the day
The .deadline for submissions of of the last game of the World Series.
local baseball- and softball-related

~~\-COUllta-.

.

WNBA s~ndings
''

•::ase,..rn Ph'islun

»:

IriuD

L l!n.

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1997 FORD CROWN VICTORIA 4 DR. LX

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VB, auto., PS, PB, air. till. cruise, PW .. PL. leather mt. ,. cast
aluminum wheels, remote keyless entry, Climate Control, anti-Jock
brakes. traction control, spare tire, cornering lamps, AM/FM stereo
cass. LOADEDI
* $1,500.00 Rebate OR 1.9% A.P.R. for 48 Months*

I
~

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•

• Complete tank set
• 200 gallons of propane
• Safety inspection of your outside propllne system

So get set to save--call Fetrellgas today!
Offer ends August 29, 1997.

446·2264 •• 800·488·2264
Today~s ~ames

or.

SJlt.'lll'\'r '"

01 111t&gt;·y•·m ~· unlr..1· 1

~:tr~&lt;'lll

Right now, you'll save big with the Ferrellgas Tank Set
Spectacular! For one low price,' you'll receive:

Kelp Futl t:uiiOI'I'IeQ mult q~,~allty tof orHII. Mlnlmwm Pt~rch&amp;M requrrto.
Yllld tot new OUitDIMI' onf1.
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1134 Jack&amp;on Pilce • Gallipolis, OH 45631

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{)'Fitllll'rly dm:elor uiJ•lnycr 1~r~unnd .
Slf.netl D ~brlri Vidll':IO ft.&gt; a IW •I·}'~ar
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tmcl.

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BUFFALO WINGS : A&gt;'l!UIJCII F Kur1

~ik.'l' fnlfn New kr~y f11r F M:vli Majur.

•

1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM 16691, Blue, A/C, AM!FM
can. tilt, cruise ........................................................ $9&lt;KID
1996,CHEVY CORSICA 16631, A/T, A/C,tilt, cruisa, PL,
34 000 miles bal of llctory warranty ..................... $9995
1!195 GEO PRIZM LSI16782, Red, 4 Dr, AlT. A/C, AMIFM
cass, PW, PL. Sport wheals .................................... $9950
1995 CHEVY CAVAUER 16787, Green, AfT, A/C, AM/FM

SATURN SL 216795, A[T, A/C, AM/FM cass,

I.~.::I)!LIC

~ 1J4i

1996 CHEVY CORSICA 16660, Blue, A/T, A/C, AM/FM
cloth int ..................................................................... $9995

1995 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 16738, A/T, A/C, AM/FM
ca81, 1111, cruise, PW, PL, sport wheels .............. $11n5
1994 FORD PROBE GT 16785, A/C, A/T, AM/FM cass,
cruise, P. sunroof, PW, PW, PL. till, c~uise ................
FORD TAURUS GL 16781, 29,000 mtles, bal of
warr, sport wheals, A/T, A/C, AM/FM cass .... $13595
1993 CHRYSLER LEBARON convert.,l6780, Aff. A/C,
AMIFMcass, tilt, cruise, Proof, V6, PW, PL,PS .....$9595
FORD THUNDERBIRD LX 16786, Green, 21,000
bal of fac. war., A/C, AfT, AM/FM cass, tin,
PS, aport wheels ......................... $12500
GRAND AM #6655, AfT, A/C, AM/I'M

C.'IN('INr-.11\1'1 ttrtJS Ar lll .ttc·d l .HI'

,,

1994 MERCURY TOPAZ 16759, Green, 3.3,000 miles,
AfT, AJC, AMIFM can, sport wheels, Rear def ... :...$7995
1994 OLDS ACHIEVA 16629, A/T, A/C, AM/FM cass, 1111,
cruise, PW, PL ...~ ..................................................... $7995
1993 FORO TEMPO GL 16741 Red, 48,000 miles, A/T,
AJC, AM/FM ca81, sport wheals .............................. $7210
1995 CHEVY CAVAUER 16584, Blue, A/C, AfT, AM/FM
air bag ....................................................................... $8995
1995 HYUNDAI ELONTRA GLS 16718,36,000 miles, bal
of llctory warranty, AfT, A/C, lilt, cruise, PW, PM.. $9665
1995 HYUNOAI ACCENT 16779, Bal of factory, A/T, A/C,
AM/FM rear claf..............;.......................................... $8560
1995 PONTIAC SUNFIRE 16788, Green, A/T, A/C,

PL, ........................................................................... $13800

.1~' 1 )!11 ·

11~111

Oh·i~lon

. .-17

ll•r

C:trlm; Villalnhl" IH lit~.• IJ.:tr~~~t I'IJ.!l'r' 1Pr
RHI' Clm:1r (&gt;lil' , \11.'~ :1111.1 Hill' 1:,.11111.' l.11"1
li'X ,\S ttAN(ii'RS l'ur~h · " •· •l 1hc•
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THkdt• u( th•• lnwrn,ol u•n:d l.~.·.t)!ll•' 1&gt;..·,.

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•
•
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•
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SE!\'1'11 .1: MI\RINERS· Tr:ukll Hill'
Sl'~&gt;~tl S:~iltkrs. H.HI' lkm1 Crt•w :m,l lll

NL standings
•
IriuD

Tim

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Totbly's aamts'

•

•

l.lt:~i .,:n:~l\'tll'

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tilt cruise PW, PL, ................................................... $64.95

1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 16751, Red, 4 Dr, A/T,
A/C, AM/FM cass, tiH, cruise, PS, PW, PL .............. $9595
1995 FORD TAURUS GLI6702, Green, AJC, A/T, AM/FM
ca81, tiH, crulise, PW, PL. PS ................................ $11400
1995 HONDA CMC EX 16640, 31,000 J!!lles, balance of
factory warrantY, AJC, AfT, AM/FM cassette, PW,
·

K~~:h ' l":l.ud .ttm tlll· l~·dit)thlklllktl li 'l

IRL!!h)' 0-.11. -t·O.'i lUll.
N. 'I'. Y:mkL'I.'~ (W\.'IIs IJ~l !II Mlllfo':lll·

1993 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM 16742· Lt. pewter, AfT, A/C,
AM/FM,IIIt, crillse .................................................... $6995
1991 BUICK LESABRE 16638, Blue, AfT, A/C, AM!FM

1995 DODGE INTREPID 16757, Black, A/T, A/C, PW, PL,

r1·trnoKII\~

ll.tlril:lll&lt;l
.

dual mlrrora .............................................................. $7495

AM/FM CIU ............................................................... $1-GSSO

,\mrrk:.n l.l'IIJ:Ul'
1\NAHEIM 1\N(iHS lllaH'tl fUll'

Wlnll.• Snx Cl&gt;rah&lt;:L ft. H .11
Uallimun.• cKmnU.'IUl'dl 0-4). I 05t••u

1983 DODGE SHADOW 16676, Red, 2 Or, AM/FM ca81,
sun roof, A/C .............................................................$5395
1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 16692, Rect, A/C, AfT.
AM/FM ca81, IIH, cruise, PW, sunroof .................... $4995
1993 FORD TEMPO GL 16570, A/C , A{T, AM/FM cass,
PL. PM ........................................................................ $5395
1992 CHEVY CORISCAI8778, White, V6, AfT, A/C,
AM/FM ...................................................................... $4595
1993 FORD TEMPO GL 16727 While, AfT, A/C, AM/FM
ca ............................................................................. $5995
1995 GEO METRO LSI16659, Green, A/C, AM/FM cass,

AM/FM ...............................................................;..... $9890

Jlu,.b•ll

CIJ :VEI.ANU

caH ........................................................................... $4995

1995 CHEVY CAVAUER 16~, Red, AfT, A/C,

I

_ J Transactions

(."hu:a~ ''

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l .••~ ''nj!d\·,,ul 'h;lri&lt; t ll l' . 7 '"t•nl
l'll· ..·m.\ .11 s,,.,,u lll' lll" H \IJ I'm

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cruise, tltt ................................................................ ~$4995
1991 GEO METRO CONVERTIBLE 16726- Blue, AM!FM

cau ........................................... ~............................... ,9890

Friduy's ..,.,••, .
llu~M• 7. CI.IWEI.I\NIJ II
(1•i~·:•r.u Wl•i•~· Sox I, llallimun.· ()
Milw&lt;tlll.'l:h. N \" Y.mk~'\.'l\4

1992 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM 16761, AfT. A/C, AM!FM

AIIJFII ................................................................... ~ ... $9584
1993 FORO PROBE 116777, Red, A/C, AM/FM cass, 1111,
cruise, PW, PL.......................................................... $8195

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•

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They ployed Saturday

'••

"

Basketball ·

AL standings

IJnillln

Set For

tJQ;a

the lhrcaL

B.aseb811

1 ,, . ,

•

The deadline for photos and related articles for football and other fall
sports is the Saturday before the
Super Bowl. ·

soggy grass, hut then dropped.
.. Again we pitched well. Wc.'re
nul the kind nf team whu ~:an J:! IVl'
four outs in ;.an inninl!. ·w c·w ~t lllu
make the plays.·· Knighl said.
Jtlhnstm scored on Sanders· crn1r
and Morgan than walked Tudd
Hundley hcli&gt;rc Edgardo· Allonw
single humc the sccon~ run ol the
iniling.and Butch Hus~&lt;:y doubled to
sc,lre two mure.
New Ynrk'S four-run third wiped
out a 2-0 Re-ds lead und the Mets.
pitchers delcndcd the margin over
the next six innin):!:s. although the
. Reds threatened scvero1l times and
NICE SHOT, ED! -Cincinnati third base coach Joel Youngblood
!.a:orct.l ~mcc in the six.t.h nn Curtis
congratulates
Ed Taubensee on his second-Inning solo homer durGuudwin's R,BI double oil CrawIng Friday night's National League game against the host New York
•
lord .
Mets, who won 4-3. (AP)
.
CrawfonJ's appearance in relief nf
rip.ht-handcr Jones uiTcctctl ~he Red ~.
Willie Greene opened lhc ninth Fr&lt;.\0(:0 then struck out Joe Oliver
whu had must of their lcll -handcil with ,, ·douhlc hut was unahk to anti Brei Boone.
hillers in the lineup.
advance on Hal Morris' hunt ami
" When he (Valuntinc) goes to the
lcft-handcr after the . rain ~ay, I
l.'Oult.Jn ' t turn cvcrytmdy round
there . You knnw it's guing to he
aguinst Franco und I just sav~ll my
two hcst right -handcrs unul the
end." Knight said.
-\ In· the eighth. a hit hatter ami a
461 SOUTlt THIRD
PHONE 'il92·2196
walk by Acevedo. followed hy two
stuh.·n Oases gave lhe Reds runners
4ftoolEPORi, o\'\
a1 set.:lllld and 1hird wilh two oul, hut
Franco struck nut Mike Kelly to end

Scoreboard

,,.

..

---------'-----Sports deadlines------------The GallipoliJ Daily Tribu11t and
the Sunda\' TimtJ-Stlltine/ value the
contributions their readers make to
the spo!1s sections of these papers,,
and they will continue to he pub-

. NEW YORK (AP)- Joe Crawftlrd will always remember his firsl
mujnr league vktory. l'or more than
the nhVJOUS fCi.tSOO .
· "It's more special hecausc it
L.-Jmc against Cmcinnatl. a team I
grew up watchmg." said the New
York. Mets' lcft-hander. who earned
his lirsl major league win in Friday
n'ight's 4-3 victory over the Reds.
. Crawford (.1-1 ). who grew up in
Hillsboro. Ohio. ahout 40 miles ca.• I
nf Cincinnati. worked 4 1/3 innin~s
anti allowed two runs on three hits to
g"in the win with relief help from
Juan Acevado and John Franco. who
earned his 24th save.
Crawford got i"tn the game
I hanks w a onc~hnur. 2M-minute rain
delay that led Mets manager Bnbhy
Valentine to pull starter Bobby Junes.
who worked the first two innings.
Crawford got the win in large measure lhank!'i to Dcion s.amtcrs. whu
' drnpped a lly hall in left licld thai
fueled a fnur-run Mets third .
.. Aflcr 30 minutes, that 's enough
for me. " said Valentine. cxphlining
· his removal uf Junes, ahh&lt;Ju~h Reds
manager Ray Knight allowed hiS
starter. Mike Murgan (~ ·7) to return ·
nftcr the delay.
Mnrg.an issued a nne-nut 'walk hl
Lance Johnson in the third and &lt;Jnc
oul later. got Juhn Olcrud to hit a lly
kl left that Sanden; run duwn on the

Get A

Meigs Legionnaires beat Logan &amp; Oak Hill

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll1, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Mets down Reds
4-3; Crawford gets
first win in majors

•

-·-

I.,

~unday, July 20, 1997

~~~~~~~~~~

Kyger Creek LL Tournament begins

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmw-Sentlnet Stlifl
CHESHIRE -1be Kyger Creek
Linle League Toll!'llament began

Sund8y, July 20, 1917

Nt;W JHRSEY ROC'KIN ROLLERS:

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�PageB4•~

M'~

British Open continues

&amp; Red Sox use pitching

straight complete game and won for
the first lime since June 25 at ToronRandy Johnson can make hitters
to.
seem scared, Tim Wakefield can
" I don 'tlike to pitch in the cold
make them look silly.
and it was preuy hot. That's usually
Either way, as they showed Fria linle better for the knuckler,"
day night, the result can be the same. Wakefield said.
·
Johnson, featuring a fastball near
'Scon Haneberg and Jeff Frye
· 100 mph, struck out 16 as the Seat- · homered for. the Red. Sox.
tie Mariners beat Kansas City 5-4.
The Mariners, meanwhile, sent
Wakefield. Ooating his knuckleKansas City to its team-record 12th
ball at barely 60 mph, pitched the straight road loss. The Royals have
Boston Red Sox past Cleveland 7-0 dropped 16 of 17 overall.
for his first shutout in two years.
Johnson ( 13-2) fanned at least 15
Indians manager Mike Hargrove ·for the fourth time this season, and
had nu id~a how to handle those
reached double digits in strikeouts
knuL·klcrs.
forthe lOth time. The 6-foot-10 left· "Stick your tongue out the left bander leads the majors with 198
side of your mouth in the 'even · strikeouts.
innings and out the right side in the
"I felt I had to step it up and get
1ldd innings. I don' t know. You just
us through the game," Johnson said.
hupo he throws one that hit~ your " I wasn't coming out."
hat .. Hargrove said.
. In other games. Anaheim had its
Johnson threw 154 pitches. and
10-game winning streak stopped by
[!itched out of a lim-and-third. one- Toronto 2-1. Also, Chicago beat
out jam in the ninth inning.
Baltimore 3-0, Milwaukee downed
"During the game it didn't seem New York 6-4, Detroit defeated
li~c Randy had a lot of strikeouts,"
Te•as 5-4, and Minnesota beat OakScaulc catcher Dan Wilson said.
land 7-3.
" But 16 is a heck of a lot."
Blue Jays 2, Angels 1
Wakefield (4-10) limited the IndiAnaheim fell one victory short of
ans to six hits at Jacobs Field. He
the longest winning streak in team
struck out nine and walked .four in history, set in 1964. The Angels
his first shutout since July 9, 1995. . matched Montreal for the longest
Wakefield pitched his second winning,streak in the major.; this sea-

--Area sports

.,.,

....,

·Notice posted
SYRACUSE - The team pictures for the top four finishers in tfi!:
Hubbard Memorial Little League
Tournament were not available for
publication in The Daily Sentinel
because of a camera malfunction.
Camp dates announced
RIO GRANDE - Here are the
remaining dates for the University of
Rio Grande's girls' summer basketball camp.
,
July 20-23: Individual camp
(grades 4-8)
July 24-26: High school team
camp
Team camps and one-day
shootouts will be limited to the first
12 teams that apply.
Call 245-7491 or 1-800-282-7201
for applications or more information.
GAHS helmet·fitting

varsity head coach Mike Chancey at
304-773-6453 or 992-2158 .
SUS junior high fOotball
meeting Tuesday
RACINE - There will be an
organizational meeting for any boy
interested in playing junior high
football at Southern Junior High
SchOol Tuesday.
The meeting will start at 7 p.m. at
the football field .

...- -

Sports medicine class slated·
ROCK SPRINGS ·- A sports
medicine class will be held on Monday, Aug. 4 at Meigs High School.
This clinic is required by the Ohio
High School Athletic Association for
all coaches and advisors. The class
will be held in the library from 5
p.m. to 9 p.m. Registration will be
held from 4:40 p.m. to 5 p.m. The
cost or the class is $10.

If the weather remains as calm
TROON, Scotland (AP)- Royover the weekend as it was on Friday,
II Troon was the11: for the taking, and
many birdies will have to be made to
Darren Clarke, Justin Leonard, JesS\BY In contention. Several big names
per Parnevik and ·Fred Couples
were not able to do that in the secgrabbed a healthy handful in the second round.
ond round of the British Open.
Furyk, the co-leader with Clarke
But a bunch of others - includ- · after the first round, shot a 72 to fall
ing Tiger Woods, Nick Faldo, Greg six strokes behind at I 39, a number
Norman and Jim Furyk - let oppor- matched by Tom Kite, who climbed
tunity slip through tbeir fingers on a back into contention on the strength
near-perfect scoring day in sudden- of a 67.
ly tranquil west Scotland.
Others were not as fonunate.
·The wind that whipped off the
Norman managed only a 73 and
Irish Sea on Thursday turned into a W&lt;IS atl42. Faldo's mediocre 73 pul
bitofabreezeonFriday,andCiarke him at 144 along with U.S. Open
warmed the balmy day with a hot · champion Ernie Els. · Defending
putter on his way to a 66 and a two-. champion Tom Lehman had a 72 to
stroke lead over Leonard, who also be. at 146 along with Woods, who
shot a 66.
shot a 74 marred by a quadruple
. "Yesterday was the toughest bogey.
Open course ever and today it was
" Obviously, if you don't shoot a
easier, with birdie opportunities on good number today, you feel like you
the back nine. " Pamevik said after didn't accomplish what you wanted
also shooting a 66 to. trail Clarke's 9· to." Woods said. _
under-par 133 by three strokes. CouHometown favorite Colin Montpies was four back after a 68 .
gomerie, perhaps the best player in
"It's onl~ Friday," said Clarke, a the world without a major champi28-year-old rising star from Northern on ship victory, shot a 69, bill that
Ireland. "But if I do get into con- wasn't good enough to make up for
tention on Sunday afternoon·, I, a 75 in the first round. He was also
believe I can give it a go."
at 144 .
He will have plenty of company.
·Perhaps the most surprising move
Leonard, Pamevik and Couples all of the day was by David Tapping , a
played as brilliantly as Clarke in the 22-year-old pro from England who
second round.
earned his European Tour card after
"Tomw;row, I'm not worried failing three times and was playing
about Darren Clarke," Couples said in his first British Open.
after turning in the only scorecard
Almost unbelievably, he made
among the leaders without a bogey birdies on Nos. 10 and II - two of
on it. " I am worried about the way the most difficult holes on the course
1
- and shot a 66to be tied with Cou-

..... .

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ESCAPES JUSTICE - Boston second baseand complete the double play in the second
min Jeff Frye (upper lett) avolde the sliding
inning of Friday night's American League game
David Justice of the Cleveland Indians after makin Cleveland, where the Red Sox won 7-o. In the
Ing the throw to flrat base to retire Matt Williams
distance Is shortstop Nomar Garciaparra. (AP)
(3-3) was ruled a solo homer by sec· cd pitchers Felipe Lira and Omar
tivc-gamc losing streak, winning
ond base umpire Larry McCoy, even Olivares to Scanle for pitcher Scan
for the tirst time since June 17 as
though replays showed the ball hit Sanders and two minor leaguers .
Minnesota defeated Oakland.
the padding ori top of the right&gt; lield Sanders will start Sunday.
Man Stairs hit his Jil'th home run
wall at County Stadium. BurnitllatTwiJ!s 7, Athletics 3
in Jive games for the host A's, who
er hit a 430-fool, three-run homer
LaTrny Hawkins snapped hi\; · had their klllgcst winning string of
into the bleachers.
the season stopped at three .
Tigen S, Rangen. 4
Willie Blair won his fourth
straight decision as Detroit downed
host Texas.
Blair (8-4), who sustained a frac tured jaw when hit by Julio FrarK:o's
liner earlier this season, set a career
high for victories. Dean Palmer hit a
two-run homer for the Rangers .
ST. RT. 7
COOLVILLE, OH.
Before the game, the Tigers trad-

THE

:BIBBEE
*

..

.
.
.pies at 137.
Royal Troon played decidedly
different in the calm than it did in
Thursday's wind.
" We were hitting 3-, 4- and 5irons into the par-4s on tbe back nine
today," Clarke said. "Yesterday we
were hitting 3-woods in."
Only .. IJ players bellered par on
Thursday while nearly four times
that many took advantage of the gentle conditions in the second round to
shoot 70 or below . .
Getting oJJ .to a good start is the
key to Royal Troon. The first six
hOles ,include three par-4s that are
391 yards orless and two par-5s that
can be easily reached in two stroke&gt;.
Clarke played the course the way
it needs to be played- auacking the
front nine with six birdies and two
bogeys. He began the much more
difficult back side with a bogey on
No. I0 but managed two birdies in
three hole~ starling at No. 14.
Clarke's fine round came on the .
strength of solid putting. Five of his
eight birdies were from 20 .feet out.
"The past few weeks I've had a
lot of lip outs," Clarke said. " But the
last two days I've made up for the
· last few weeks."
Leonard, who had a chance to
shoot the lowest round of the tournament until he had a three-pull
bogey on No. 18, matle eagles on
both of the par-5s on the front nine
as he shot a 3 I.
"I was a little bit surprised to see
the · wind lay down like it did.''
Leonard said. "It's still a hard golf
course . We've , seen the lwo

••
••

THE PRIZE -A 1997
Century could be
the prize of some lucky
In the American
Heart A1180Ciation tournament on Thursday, July
31. h will go to any goHer who cen make a hole-

'
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.,

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•,

.•.

·~

POMEROY - The annual golf
tournament of the· Meigs County
Division of the American Heart
Association has been set for Thursday, July 31 at the Meigs County
Go If Course.
Golfen; are asked to sign up at the
course or call 992-6312 to register.
On the day of the event, check in
time will be from II a.m. until noon.
Lunch will he provided.' A calcutta
will he held from noon to I p.m nnd
the shotgun start will he gin at I p.m
for the team drawn scramble.
Dinner, door prizes and wurna·
!llent awards for first, second and
t~ird place teams and confcsts will be
l!cld immediately after the play.
Don Tate Motors, Inc. is the
sponsor for the three hole-in -o ne
prizes which include a car. $10,000
c11'h and a vacation for two.
Kroger of Pomeroy is sponsor for
t~e lunches and dinners provided to
all guile". In addition various dour
prizes and special tournament pri1.cs

: ·~

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'-yne Center sl~te

1992 PONTIAC GUND PRIX 2 DR.

ICONOMY IIGIIT 1IIICII UDUl
FOI VANS, I'ICIIWS AND W'S

RIO GRANDE - Here is th.is
week 's schedule fpr events at lhe
\)nivc,.ily of Rio Grande's Lync "
,
Center.
Fitness center, gymnasium
and racquetball eourts
Today- 1-5 p.m.
Monday- 9 a.m .-9 p.m.
Thesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 9 a.rn.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-5 p.m.
Sunday, July 27- 1-5 p.m.

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Pool

Today.- 1-3 p.m.
Monday- 6-9 p.m .
Thesday- 6-9 p,m.
Wednesday--:- 6-9 p.m.
Thunday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday- 6-9 p.m.
Saturday - 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, July 27- 1-3 p.m.

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His only bogey came on the fir"
hole when he three-putted from 30
feet using a putter he switched to
overnight after making three good
birdie putts on the closing holes of
the first round.
"My putting felt terrible all day
yestcr~ay," Pamevik said. "It was
just incredible how I could shoot
one-under par on the back nine."
He continued his mastery on thai
nine on Friday with a 33.
For the second consecutive day,
Woods ran into trouble early on the
back nine. On Thursday; it was a
triple bogey on No. II. On Friday,
the Masters champion made a
quadruple bogey on No. fO.
After driving into the left rough,
his second shot flew over the green
into heavy rough near a thorny gorse
bush. He swung at the ball but went
right under it without moving it.
Woods then hacked it about 1ix

"
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......

'

I
LEADS TOURNAMENT - Northern Ireland's Darren Clarke tees
off at the second hole in the second round of the British Open Friday In Troon, Scotland. Clarke leads the tournament by' two strokes.
(AP)

•CERnFIED
: TECHNICIANS

Clark Reed
Doc Hayman

I

1n-4~ne on
9.
are~oger Jesse
(leh) of Don Tate Motors, Inc., the sponsor and
. Dick Warner of Kroger, sponsor for the lunches
and dinners the golfers will receive.
·

l:&gt;I;II'IAI~t:JL.t: These
Gallipolis
Club committee members are
planning a charity golf scramble scheduled for
Saturday, Aug. 9 at Cliffside Golf Club. The tee-

•·

1

i

Notes

• A Lyne Center m~!".hership is

~;quired to use the facthue~. Fa~ul­
'
tH• staff, students a~d adm1mstratton
·, , ~jill be admitted wtth thetr 1D c~rds.
• Racquetball court reservauons
..
~ . ~~n be made one day in advance by
.: 9~1ling 245-7495 or 1-800-282-7201.
• All guests must be accompamed
by a Lyne Center membership hold($2 fee).
.
.
. • Gym time w1ll be available duriug the times when sports camps arc
not in session.

er

-will' be awarded to participants.

For more information ·golfers

may call Becky Triplenat 992-5485
or Sandy lannarelli at 992'7039.

QUALITY PRE·OWNED TRUCKS

96 GMC 15

off time Is
a.m. From left to right are Shirley
Pierrotti, Wanda Boxdorfer, club president Lana
Ferrell and Danelle Hardyman.

PURCHASE AHIGH·EFFICIENCY
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Meigs AHA $ets golf tournament for July 31

' i.

Bladtwall.

the green. From there he chipped to
12 feet and two-putted for an eight.

extremes.··
Couples started his round with a
birdie and ended with a birdie. At
one point, he made 13 consecutive
pars.
"I tried to be. aggressive," Couples said. "I hit driver and drove it
very well, solid, long and straight."
Parnevik, second to Nick Price in
the 1994 British Open at Tumperry ·
when he bogeyed the final hole after
failing to check the scoreboard and
-rr hr was leading. played a nearly

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**********************

SERIOUS

Wesson steps
down as Urbana
football coach
URBAJij.A, Ohio (APJ - Dan
Wesson has resigned after three seasons as Urbana football coach, the
school announced.
Wesson, whose resignation is
·' effective Thursday, will become the
football coach and athletics director
at Shenandoah High School near
Sarahsville in southeast Ohio.
Urbana announced Wesson's departure on Friday.
He coached the Blue Knights to
a 4-26 mark.
The university also announced
that Chuck Cangelosi was hired July
12 as the men's basketball coach.
. He replaces Bob Ronal, whose
contract as coach and athletics director was not renewed. ·
Cangelosi "(ill continue. in ~is
jobs as an ass!stant to untve!'llttY
!'Jesident Franc1s Hazard and director of alumni affairs and developJJ!Cnl.
He has five years of coaching
experience, including Lwo as an
Urbana utittant when the team
went to the NAJA national tourna-ment.

.

•Page

~: ~ . I •

**
OR CO.:
*

~Monday

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy's football team will hold a helmet-fitting session for players entering grades 9-12 this fall on Monday
at 8 a.m. in the Blue Devils' locker
room on Fourth Avenue in Gallipolis.
Football camp Monday
GALLIPOLIS - The 1997 Gallipolis Area Football Camp will run
from Monday to Thursday from I to
3:30p.m. daily at Memorial Field.
The camp, for boys entering
grades 5-8 this fall, will cmpha.•ize
fundamentals. It will also cover all
pha.o;es of the game.
. The entry fee is now $55. Registration forms may be picked up at ·
GalliaAcademy High School from ·8
a.m. to 3:30p.m. Rcgistralion will be
held at Memorial Field on Momjay
at 12:30 p.m.
.
Gallia Academy . coaches Brent
Saunders and Man Bokovitz arc the
camp directors. They will be assisted by the ri:st of the Blue Devil varsity coaches.
For more information, contact
Saunders at446-3354 or Bokovitz at
. 446-2399.
MHS football instructional
session Monday
ROCK SPRINGS - Any boy
interested in playing football at
Meigs High School are reminded
that the I0-day instructional period
will begin Monday from 6 to 8 p.m.
Players are asked to meet in the
varsity locker room at Meigs High
School by 6 p.m.
For more informnlion, contact

.

By RON SIRAK

son.
Ale• Gonzalez and Benito Santiago homered for visiting Toronto.
Santiago broke a 1-1 tie with his
home run in the seventh inning. In
. the ninth, the Blue Jayscatcherthrew
out Tim Salmon trying to .steal second.
Woody Williams (5-8) blanked
the Angels until the sixth. Rookie
Kelvim Escobar worked the ninth,
extending hls scoreless streak to 9
1/3 innings.
White Sox 3, Orioles 0
James Baldwin outpitched Mike
Mussina and Chkago stopped its
four-game losing streak. Baltimore
lost for the ninth time in II games.
Baldwin (7-9) gave up just two
singles in seven-plus innings . The
game at Camden Yards was scoreless
until the seventh, when Muss ina (I 04) threw a wild pitch with the bases
loaded and two outs.
Albert Belle hit his 21 sl home run
in the eighth.
Brewers 6, Yankees 4
Jeff Cirillo hit a disputed home
run and Jeromy Bumitz hit a nodoubt drive that lifted Milwaukee
over New York at County Stadium.
Jack Voigt also homered as the
Brewers ended the Yankees' threegame winning streak .
Cirillo's shot off Dwight Gooden

not~s

,_

......_,cu..-~

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

Clarke corilpletes second round with two-stroke lead

to shackle Royals and Tribe
By BEN WALKER
AP Belebaii .Wrller

-

Sundey, July 20,1997

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Page B6 • , t u• ._..., II I

Tlmu 5••11•111 Conwponclent
Baseball fans m far more knowledgeable about
their sport tb~ most people realize. jlie All-Star
game was a primary example of this
Usually, fan balloting sees popular players starting for more deserving ones. Recent All-star history is replete witb such examples. Popular players
past their prime get the nod over players having
career years.
This year, howerer, fans and players differed on only two players. The
fans elected Cincinnati's Barry Larkin to start at short, whereas the players,
beeause of Larkin's injury-plagued season, chose Atlanta's Jeff Blauser.
Larkin's statistics are impressive, but Blauser, who is healthy for the first
time since his last All-Star appearance in 1993, has had a tremendous season. He's one of the many reasons the Braves are the best team in the
Nationall..eague.
.
Fans also chose Baltimore's Brady Anderson to start in the American
league outfield over the players' choice of Chicago's Albert Belle. Considering Belle's attitude and the amount of times he's given obscene gestures to
fans, it is easy to understand why they elected to go with Anderson.
The fact that fans imd players agreed on 16 of the 18 starters is quite
remarkable. This is a far cry from the time when eight Reds started an AllStar game with Stan Musial.
.In other words, fans might .know more about the game than people realize. The problem, however, continues to be baseball's failure to excite more,
younger fans to its game.
The most fascinating aspect of this season ·wm continue to be 'Tony
Gwynn's chase of .400. The Padres' rightfielder is one of the true gentlemen
of the game. He's also one of the best hitters in.the history of baseball.
Many of you are now asking why I didn't mention Colorado's Larry
Walker along wjth Gwynn. But with interleague play and over 70 games to
go, Walker, even though he 's led the league in hitting for most of the season,
will begin to fade as the season continues into August.
Gwynn, however, has a legitimate shot to become the first player since
Ted Williams in 1941 to hit .400. After all, he's already won seven batting
tides in his career.
Let me go on record by saying be will not do it. I can also state that no
. one will break Roger Maris' record for home runs in a ileason. Since this
hasn't been done since 1961, the odds are on my side. Every baseball analyst has already made these predictions. That's why I cheer for both these
milestones to be ~roken. It will be good for the game and attract younger

f4ct.

.,

.,'.

Nemechek captures pole
position for Pennsylvania 500

Tapia beats Romero to win IBF junior bantamweight title

BY SAil WILSON

'

By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Johnny
Tapia hugged his wife in triumph.
then turned his attention to the prize
he had just won.
"Get me the belt. Gel me the
belt," he told his handlers.
From across the ring, Danny
Romero's IBF junior batamweight
title belt somehow appeared, and

Tapia could afford to be gracious name at (he UNLV campus arena. •
made its way hand by hand across
He was rhe easy winner after&lt;
. after adding the IBF II 5-pound
the ring into Tapia's comer.
Tapia wrapped it around him, his crown to the WBO version of the · putting on a boxing exhibition that~
reward for a 12-round unanimous tide he already held in a decision lhat left Romero frustrated from 12:
decision Friday night over Romero was closer on the judge's scorecards rounds of trying desperately t\) land
enough big right hands to change the .
thai settled a bitter grudge match than it seemed in the ring.
tone of the fight.
.
The
biggest
fight
in
the
division's
between the Albuquerque, N.M.,
"He's
very
tricky."
Romero
said.
history
had
ended
witb
Tapia
doing
rivals.
"Let bygones be bygones," Tapia a victorious backflip in the ring "More power to him. I did what I
before a delirious crowd chanting his thought I had to do to win."
said. ""It's over now."

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Last week, I watched San Diego and Colorado play a four-game series in
that hellhole known as Coors Field. You know, the place where no lead is

sate. That hitters' haven where a 10-run lead vanishes in the blink of an eye.

What fascinated me was.the hitting clinic put on by both Gwynn and Walker. It was exciting to watch.
.
Baseball has a pletbora of new and old stars improving the quality of the
game. Hideko Irabu is 0 ne of many new faces to make headlines this season.
Roger Clemens and Gwynn are part of the- old guard continuing to define the
limits of the spart. Unfortunately, it will take a feat like hitting .400 to get
the notoriety they deserve.
Remember, last year Sports Jllustrated named Tiger Woods athlete of tbe
·year over Michael Jordan and Brett Favre: What would it take for 'a hockey
or basebali player to achieve such attention?
For all the great things Gwynn has done over a splendid career, he's still
relatively unknown when compared to this young golfer. Regretfully,.this
only illustrates how far baseball has fallen in the eyes of American f&amp;!IS.

a-

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Elks Aeeoclllion pall state president Fran Mullen shortly after winning ll8te dlvlalon and a~roup CMmpionshlpsat the Elks' June
8 ll8te aoc:cer shootout In Circleville.

Gallia pair win .Elks' state.
soccer shootout ·honors
CIRCLEVILLE- On June 8, four Galli a County· youths representing
Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. I 07 participated in the Elks' state soccer shootout.
Eric Mullins and Meghan Saunders won their division and age-group
titles.
Mullins, the son of Steve and Kathy Mullins of Gallipolis, won the boys'
9- 10 year-old bracket. Saunders, the daughter of Kim T. and Lori Sounder's
of Gallipolis, was the girls' si~-and-younger state champion.
Justin Saunders, the son of Eric and Kari Saunders of Gallipolis, took
founli in the boys' 7-8 year-old bracket. Michelle Elliott, the daughter of ·
Richard and Belinda Elliott. came in fourth in the girls' 7-8 year-old bracket.
These competitors were shoot out champions in their respective divisions
and age groups in district competition in April. In the state competition, they
were part of a field of eight in each bracket.

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QRekrences

,......, • .__Jhdbwl• Page 87

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

Fan balloting
'

Sunday, July 20, 1997

J

Sunday, July 20, 1997.:,

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

Bonkrupt, slow cred1!, no cred1P

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'

OPEN
SUNDAY 1-5

, Monay•Frfday
II AM- 8 Pill
S.tutday

e.,...Pm

1 Sullda,.. .

'

.

are coach Roger Spaulding, players Ryan
Spaulding, Nicky Craycraft, coach Dave Woodall
and players Joey Tabor, T.J. Thompson and ColIn Woodlill. Player Chris Nida dldn 't make the
photo session.

By DICK BRINSTER
.
LONG POND, Pa. (AP)- Joe
Nemechek found himself under a
dark cloud, and that was enough to
give him the pole and a qualifying
record Friday for the Pennsylvania
500.
The 33-year-old driver from
Lakeland, Fla.. nicknamed "Front
Row Joe," put his Chevrolet there
for the third time in five events by
turning a lap of 168.881 mph at
Pocono International Raceway.
"I wish is was 'Race Win Joe.'
but hopefully that will come soon,"
he said. "We're getting better, and
even if we dotl't win a race this year,
we're learning every week."
Nemechek, whose speed eclipsed
the 1996 record of 168.410 by Mark
Martin, is winless in 107 career starts
on the Winston Cup circuit.
"We just put a totally perfect lap
together," said Nemechek, who fell
short of the track qualifying record
of 169.725, set in June 1996·by'Jeff
Gordon for the Pocono 500. "I
couldn't have done anything different to be any taster."
Nemechek drove the same car he
put on the pole four weeks ago for
the inaugural California 500.
Second was the Ford of Ernie
Irvan, which toured the triangular
layout at 168.464. Nemcchek was
the 30th car to attempt a lap, and
lrvan 1he 43rd. That Wl\5 significant.
"I really though that lap wa.&lt;
· fast ," Nemcchek said of the qualifying effort of Sabeo Racing team mate Wally Dallenbach, who went
out lOth, when the -sun was shining
and the track slower.
Dallenbach's lap of 168 .108 held
up much longer than e~pectcd, and
he wound up on the inside of the sec. ondrow. Ne~ttohim inthe$1.4million race today will be the Ford of
Irvan's teammate, Dale Jarrell ,
which covered a lap at 167.763.
Nemechek didn't minimize the
importance of changing weather during the session that began 45 minutes
late because of a shower.
"As soon as·I went to go, we got.
a cloud," he said. "I think it also
helped Ernie, maybe dropping the

temperature another 10 degrees. "
Also benefiting from the late
cloud cover was slump.ridden Dale
Earnhardt, who took his lap two minutes before lrvan. Although he put
his Chevy fifth on lhe grid in hopes
or ending_his career·worst drought at
44 straight winless efforts, the scven-time Winston Cup champion
Ih oug h t h e could have been faster.
" I lcl'l something on the table
over there in the tunnel turn ," Earnhardt said. "I was a little lazy on the
throHic .·· ...,
Earnhardt said his team. led by
crew chief La~ McReynolds, hus
"been · improvin dramatically in
recent weeks.
"[ feel like we're going to be
tough to beat Sunday," said Earnhardt whose speed of 167.75 1 put
him inside Gordon in the third row.
Gordon, seeking .a rare Pocono
sweep after winning 10 June. went
167.635 in 3 Chevy.
He stands three points behind
teammate and reigning ~cries champion Terry Lahontc: , ·wh~ could dn no
better than 21st as positions 1-25
•

were

167 "'
' ''' 0 ",. Eo- t. ·-. -K""'""';,
_ NC.
C'hevrolrc. lb7 7~1
.
&amp;. t241 Jeff Gordocl.
. lnd . C'tlevr*t.
167m
7 (J .\) Ken S..:tr.ll.k.T. n·niOfl. Mil. ~ ...ro~ .
l67.m
H. (29) JdT Gr«tt. Ow.:n~i1llf!l, Ky .. Cuhf.
Chevmlel, 167 479
~ (bl Mink Manin. R;1100vilk. 1\rL Funt
1674~ 1.
10. CUI J Bottb)l l.utw.Jmc.Curpu" O•ri~li . Tc•a~.
.Pun!iac. 107 H .~ .
11. tHl M•l...: Sklnnl"f, Su 5:1lll'lll\.' . C 1lif
('ht'vmlct. 167 ~71
12. 1.41) S•~·v.: G r i~st ml. GOO~n . J\l:1 . (l~\'TII­
&gt;

SCI.

Bobby Hamilton, who won the
po le in June, was unable to cmnplcte
hi,s lap hccause of a hrokcn rocker

·arm.

'"It just started missing on the
backstretch." said Harnilton. who

tried to quah'fy saturday. when p&lt;)SI·tions 26-3K wero determined.
--ftJ;~ ftm.:cd inlO SC\;'Ofld-nmnd
qualifying was defending rucc chumpion Rusty Wallace. 37th fastest Friday.

Here is the qualifying Friday for
positions 1-25 fur Sunday's Pennsylvania 500 NASCAR Winston
Cup race Sunday at Pocono lntcrnutional Ruccway. with starting pusition, '-=ar number m parentheses. driver, hometown. type of car and
qualifying speed in mph (Qualifying
continues Saturday):
I. 142) Ju.:

Ncnk:~h.:k.

•

I.&lt;1Ldand. H:1 .. Clk.'HI'·

11:1 ."167 2tH.
1.\ IIIKI Juha.- Aa11h111 . llkl•;,•~&lt;•l"''•"· .Ftlt'tl,
lb7lbl
l.l, t2 ~l Jmm 1~ SJ-.'IIt."l,.. Rt"TWick. Pa .. Ft"!fd.
lb7IOM

1~ tlJ-4 J 11•11 Ellltllt. l&gt;;•w~m~·•lk:. G::•. fnnl.

)(17 ~

lfi 1111 1J:1rrc11 WallriJ'· !=r:1utlin . Ttnn.
Cht.ovruk• . IM i'~''
17. {.171 kr.:my &amp;.hyfidtl. OWt!llS~ll"tl , Ky..
F••"· IIMll
Itt oUJ K.:nny ·w ,lll••c.:. S1. l.uui~. f•ll"d.

ltlfl.i~'Jno 1
""'·'"

R•cky lhuiJ.

(.'tw..·!&gt;i•J"-'•Ih·.

v....

F111"ll.

·

20 t9C)J Mf Run nu . St•u,h l\us11111. V:1 . Funl.

IM 24~ .

21 ·I ~ I T~rry L•~"~~lh.'. Cmpu~ C'hriSII. 1i!•as.
rh.. ~·wlt·t. IN' ~ .\r,
•
2~ I 16) 1i:U Mu ~ j:rot\'1.' . Fmnl..lm . W1 ~. F11nl.

"'"·' ·"

2J 1-41 St~·rli11~ M;1rlm . t'ulumh1:1. T.:m• ..

CIII.'Vrllkl.

lfl(l

I )l.j

2-4 (K I Hul

'"' 1111

·s11 . .. L t 11 ~.

C 1kr,1. f\la .. h•r•l.

2~ i!ll M1dn.•l W:1llnp. llWl'IIShill11 . t\y . hKtl.
1fi(J ON
•·ailrd 1u quulif~
11) k ffy Nat.il'iLU. ll:llllmry. Cnllll . t•nnl lat:.
lflllt)-4(,
n 1 G~·nn nn1hn&lt;.' . ( 'lkmlunj:. N v. rt•rtl .
tf'lfdliJtJ
(+I) K} l\' l\•i'1y, K:~ntll••m:m . N C. l'u,mtac,
1(1(, 1m
11~1 R, •.~., M a~c Rn.lttml~~· ll:!th~. Vu .• 1:urd,
tfl~ !(:ill
t ill urc 11 ll11tli"''· n,.·m•l"l!· NY . hKd.

,., "1

( .\flr-!~11'.

SJIOIIIOIW :Iy.

IM.71K

Wa~h

11t&gt;llliat:

1-'111 Knllllv &lt;;,,r,l.. n. C:t·mlll~. c:,hf Chnruk.1
·
( l~J~il'ky ( 'r;l\'l'11. N.:whuf!!h. M:llttt.'. Clk'\"l'tl·
k 1. IM ~KI.
1:!2) WarJ Hurtuu. S11l.llh ltt~~lun. Va , l'tllllitl:.

,.•.&lt;.71! .
16-" -'~·' ·
(1.1(,)

Do1vi,J

Grt'\'11 , Owl"ll~~·m.

1\y , (.'hl'\" r&lt;~k:l .

f(• .~ J~h

f/tl! 1\t~hl'l)' H11lm. M~tll;uuL T··~"' · ' Funl

u.qKtl

'

tll Ru~ty W;~ll:~~o·c , St . l.tlUi~. Ftll"tl. lfl~ . l 1lK.
t')?! ,(.1., 111 Lint... .. Sl"'k;uk.'. W;tsh.. l'.ttttt;-.:.

HH.".\H.

tW) Dick Tncklc. WiS~:~Mt~m lt:ljllll~ . Wi, . hntl.
ln.&amp; hi.N
'
'
Pil l On:j: S;k:k ~. M:~uiu":k, N.Y..· tlk'Vnlll-1 .
lb.l,t171.
.
(77 1 Mnrj:&lt;tll Shq1hcrJ. (.'nuu'&gt;cr. N .l".. l'urtl.

1.:1. H~ . H1il ,
2. t1KJ Ernie lrvom. S01lina$. COthL. rurd .
lbK,4M,

Jh.Uhl.
( l -'1 Steve l1ark. Ea~t Nnr1hptlf1, N.Y.. l'111.:vru·
kt. lt,:!.f•'JII.
t.\I)Jhilmny lk11Sillt Gr:11ttl Ko111itk Mirb . l'nn·

.l ~~t.l Willi)' Dall\.'nh:a:h. 1\a.'itll. Culu.. l'l11.·vro,.
lc1 . IflH. IOK
4. tKKl U:1lt! J:1m:ll . Hid:nry. N.C.. Furtl

l61.l!IJIJ.

tii~t:.

\flDII .
(71) U:w.:

M :u'l:i~. W:ttl~:tu, Wi~ ..

Cbcvftlk1.

Jurgensen ~ · Pooley share second-round
lead in Deposit Guaranty Golf Classic
· from here last year: I just wanted to ~.;rcditing instructor .Jim Flick. ~· He
By STEPHEN HAWKINS
made changes in r.ny setup and my
MADISON, Miss. (AP)- Steve come huck ."
swing.
It 's a lot of fun to hit the hall
Pooley,
45,
·
winless
since
the
Jurgensen is taking full advantage of
well
again."
1987
Memorial,
shot
a
68tojoin
Jura sponsor e~emption in the Deposit
Pooley's birdjc run ended on his ·
gensen at 11 -undcr 133 on ~he
Guaranty Golf Classic.
fourth
hole -!fie 414-yard 13th Annandale
Golf
Club
course.
He
hnJurgensen shot a 5-under-par 67 .
when
he
salvaged a double-bogey 6
ishcd
with
three
consecutive
hirdics
on Friday for a share of the second- ·
after
hitting
his tee shot mil of
Thursday,
and
opened
with
three
round lead with Don Pooley. who
hounds.
He
was
,even ror the next
more
Friday.
·
.
hasn't won on the PGA Tour in 10
seven
holes
hcli&gt;rc
reeling on three
''My
game
is
a~
good
as
it's
been
years.
in
many.
many
years,
••
said
Pooley,
str~ight
birdies.
Jurgensen. who had a career-best
lOth-place finish in last year's tournament, eagled the 522-yard lifth
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
hole. His second ·shot, .a 5-wood
from 224 yards. stoppod a l'oot shnrt
TO .PROVIDE CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT SERVICES
of the hole.
AT HOlZER MEDICAL CENTER GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
"That got me going, and created
some momentum," said Jurgcnsen , a
35-ycar-old from. Houston player
Holzer Mepical Center is planning to construct an Ambulatory
making hi• lirst PGA Tour appearSurgery Unit at the main campus at 100 Jackson Pike, G~ll.ipolis,
ance of·thc year. "I'm playing well.
Ohio.
The project scope will include a three-story add1110n of
I just don't have a place to play."
approximately 60,000 SF and renovation of 12,000 SF of surgery on
He had his PGA Tour card last
the second floor of the existing building. The construction budget is
year, but linished I 52nd on the
moncy_list lllld was forced to return
approximately $9 millioQ. Holzer Medical Center has hired Design
to the Nikc Tour as a non-exempt
Group, Inc., Architects and Planners of Columbus, Ohio, as architect.
member. Because of that, he has gotThe Hospital plans to utilize the services of a Construction
ten into only four Nike events this
Management firm to assist the owner and design team during the preyear.
construction
and construction phases. Interested Construction
Earlier this year, he wrote a letter
Management. firms shuld telephone the Holzer Medical Center
to OOGC e~ccutivc director Robert
Morgan inquiring about a possible
Administration Office at (614) 446-5051 to obtain submittal
sponsor •~emption. Jurgensen
requirements. A Statement of Qualifi~tions should be sent to Cha~les
reminded Morgan of the top-10 lin1. Adkins, Jr., President, Holzer Med1cal Center, 100 Jackson Prke,
ish a -year ago.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-1563. Submittal responses must be received in
"I pulled out everything possible:
the Hospital's Administration Office no later than 12:00 Noon, July
After I wrote him, I had a friend who ·
28, 1997.
pestered him by calling," Jurgensen
said. "I had such good memories

OSU hires Bluem as soccer coach
.,"

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Ohio State University athletics director Andy Geiger has chosen John
Biuem as the new men's soccer
coach.

~

Blucm, 44, .comes from Fresno
State where he compiled a si~-year
career mark of86-27-12. He led the
Bulldogs to four NCAA tournament
appearances.

MTIIIIT Ll"l

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:!H(•-71H I
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~- iippiOrlpoNI, lize1 &amp; bockground$1
5u11joct 1M al $US pw .....- plwoo"*'aphool, payablo
wh.n portwoitl ON talctn. No limit or~ ltle r~urnbel:; pi od&gt;lertised
coHediOtll per fomil)o, bu1 only one odve.rti~ collecti~ per-Jt:.tect
• plllllse. Additiooal powJ Ioken for optional !)Oftfa11 collodion wilh no
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obligoNor~IO

purd'ICIM Porlfoillinl appro•imolll .

,

THE F'OLLOWING KMART HAS A STUDIO OPEN EVERY DAY
Mon•.sat. 10 am- 7 pm On Sun. 10 am )or store opening, H
later)- 8 pm (or store closing, H nrller) GALUPOUS ·
CI IW1JCAWI. ..

�..
Outdoors

...

Along the River

:.. . . a

~

Local St. Jude
bike-a-thon
collects $835·

Section

C

SUndey, JUly 20, ,..,

Ttlla year marlca file

GALLIPOLIS - The St. Jude
Children's Research Hospi1al sponsoml a bike-a-thon on June 7 in the
Gallipolis City Park, in which $835
in donations was collected by several local youths.
All riders received St. Jude certificates and T-shirts, McDonald's
hamburger coopons. Those collecting at least $35 received a St. Jude
T-shirt. Those connecting at least
$75 received a St. Jude sports bag.
Among the Gallipolis area businesses donating to the event were
~---------­
Coaches Comer, Fantastic Sam's,
FOURTH·PRIZE WINNERS'- Four·p81'-old Brltney Hunl ~)
Johnson's Supermarkets, K-mart, and three-year-old Brandl Hunt rode a total of elx mllee.
h
McDonald's, PJ!t On Shop and Shoe collectad $38 IIIICh and won free hllrcute from Fentutlc Sem'e
Cafe.
of Galllpolla.
•

.

'

'----- -======-

return ot the stemwheeler P.A. /)eMY. .
ahown he,. during an
aarller vlalt. StertJwheflllll' rldetl will be
available Salurday.

,.
THIRD·PRIZE WINNER Courtney Sandere 7, rode 10
mllel, collectad $80 and won a
free bike tune-up from the Put
On Shop of GalllpOIIe.

'
TOP THREE RIDERS - Grand prize winner Bradley Hunt, HC·
ond-prlza wlnnar Celeb Sendera end first-prize winner Margo
Fralav (L·R) wara tha top thrft rtderl In tha St. Jude Chlldran'a
Re... rch Ho1pllal-aponaorad Blka-a-Thon held In Galllpolle In
June. The 1G-par-old Hunt, who collactad $401; rode 10 mllet and
received a blcvcle donated bY K-m~~rt and a "boombox" from the
hospital for hla efforts. The aaven-yaar-old Fraley, who collected '
$146, rode aevan mllea and racelvad e $10 certHicale from tha i
Shoe Cafe of Gelllpolla. The nlne-yaar-old 5andera, who colleclad \
$132, rode 13 mllea and received a soccer "Kickm11ter" from
Coaches Cornar of Gelllpolla. ,
.

Ohio to develop management
plan to control foreign species

I

f

By JOHN WISSE
issues , interagency and interest
Dlvlalon of WlldiHa
group coordination of Ohio ANS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - plan strategies, and the assessment
Exotic aquatic species - such as the and development of information and
round goby, ruffe and zebra mussel educational materials related to
- introduced into the Great Lakes aquatic nuisance species.
and other inland waterways could
"An area of special interest for
threaten the well-being of popular many Midwestern and Great Lakes
sport fish such as the walleye and states. including Ohio, is focused on
yellow per&lt;h.
preventing the invasion of gobies
Only recently, ·Ohio became, the from the Great Lakes through
third suite, joining Michigan and Chicago's canal system and into the
Wisconsin, to develop and imple- Mississippi River watershed. Our
ment. a statewide Aquatic Nuisance concern in this effon is to help preSpecies management plan. These are vent the gobies from entering into
designed for states to work with the Mississippi Riv.e r drainage
inter-government ·agencies, special becausc.they could then move into
interest and constituent groups, and the Ohio River," said Randy
private industries to address the pre- Sanders, an assistant administrator
vention, control and reduction of of fish management and research for
aquatic nuisance species.
the division.
Illinois and Indiana are. expected
The round goby was first collectto soon develop and implement their .cd in 1990 in the St. Clair River,
own plans.
which joins Lakes Huron and Erie . .
In June, the U.S . Fish and It was likely introduced through the
Wildlife Service awarded a $25,000 discharge of ship ballast and follows
grant 1'0 the Ohio Division of- !he Slll\le paucm that led to the introWildlife to begin implementation. ductibn of ze~ra mussels. The goby.
With an additional $21.000 in is a bottom-dwelling fish known to
matching state money, projects be an aggressive feeder and characfunded by the USFWS grant will terized by defensive behavior. It
: include regional and national coordi- equid compete with the walleye and
nation of aquatic nuisance species yellow perch for food.

Remembering Ohio's only Civil War battle

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PORTLAND - The Meigs County Historical Society will sponsor barl&lt;ed at a site just
the fifth annual reenactment'of the &amp;tile of-fluffington Island (n Portland below where the
Racine Dam is now
this weekend.
·
located
and walked
The Battle of Bu~ngton l.sland took place on July 19, !863, between
approximately 2,000 Confederate cavalrymen led by General John Hunt across the neck of the
abattle cost Morgan more than 120 dead or wounded and 700 captured.
land known as "Great ~~~~~=~=~~~==~_;_::;;_~==-=::-:.:~=~~=~~~~ ~....::.. . !:.-'~=
Bend."
;-;
Union artillery reeniiCfors manning a Parrott rifled canMorgan was captured a week later in Colwnbiana County.
Modem sites along
The Battle of Buffington lt~land
non await the command to fire upon Confederate raldertl. A
The Meigs County Historical Society has been using
the river include the took place
July 19, 1863,
contingent of the 1st Ohio Ught Artillery will have two Civil
the annual reenactment to draw awareness:::.---:;:-;;
General James Gavin between approximately 2,000
War guns from the Ohio Statehouse on dlspl::.o:.~:.
to plans by Richards and _ _ _..,.
power plant, the vii- Co.nfederate cavalrymen llld by ·
Sons Gravel
On Saturday, the Civil War camp will open to the' public and demonlages
of Middleport
Company of
and Pomeroy and the General John Hunt Morgan and
strations will be presented throughout both Saturday and Sunday. A conRacine, a subtingent of the 1st
Racine Locks and Union forces numbering nearly
sidiary . of the \.ooltJ/1..
Ohio
Light Artillery r,:--'!111111Dam, but the trip B,OOO and was the only Civil War
Shelly Company
also passes stretches
will ' have two Civil
. of Thornville, to
of
uninhabited battle fought In Ohio or north of
War guns from the
mine gravel in a
areas,
offering
a
the
Ohio
River.
The
one-aided
Ohio
Statehouse on
6()0-acre
area
glimpse of what battle cost Morgan more than 120
display for the weekassociated with the
the
early
settlers
end.
battlefield in Portdead or wounded and 700 capmay have seen
Strolling musiland.
tured. ·
and
felt
as
they
cians
"The Faire
In addition, the
passed through
Wynds" will be prehistorical society has
to the wilderness of the Ohio Country.
senting
period music
established a Battle
Reenactors will begin setting up camp on Friday, but no demon- Saturday and Sunday
of Buffington Island
strations or programs are planned for that day.
with a children's proTrust Fund for restoraCivil War reenactors from Ohi~. West Virginia, Kentucky, Vir- gram planned for
tion and preservation of
ginia, Tennessee and the Carolinas are expected to participate in Saturday at 2:30
the battlefield or the
the weekend activities with several boarding the bo,at at Gal- p.m.
marking
of
lipolis to be brought to the battle site.
A company drill
involved . with
The cost js $25 from Gallipolis (no transportation between will be held Saturday
advancement of Morgan's
ports) or $40 (including bus transport from the parking lot at at 10 a.m. followed by
Raiders .across Meigs
the Buffington ·Jsland Battlefield in Portland to Gallipolis).
introductions and
County and the ensuing
People taking the bus tour will also receive a short,
a program presenbattle at Portland. Last year
A nanative tour of the Civil War
tation at I p.m.
the historical society was
Confederaff1
battlefield.
with unschedaoldler foraging for food.
awarded an Ohio Travel and
uled skirmishes
Two Fedikaleoldlertl enjoy il 1/ghtheart·
Tourism Grant to mark the
throughout
the
ed
moment of tUn wfth an unlucky prisonroute across Meigs County and
day.
er during last year's reenactment. Rnl
. sites at the battlefield.
The baule Civil Wer captives were generally not So
Weekend activities will
fortunate.
reenactment
actually begin in Gallipolis
will be held
with a 55-mile stemwheel cruise
in 'two separate settings, with the invasion of Portland occurring on
aboard the P.A. O:enny,·· sponsored
Saturday afternoon. The Battle of Buffington Island reenactment
by the 91st Ohio Volunteer Infantry
will take place on Sunday afternoon.
reenactor unit. The boat will follow
Mock "village business buildings' will recreate Portland of
the same route taken by Union gun1863 and an official Buffington Island Battle Commemorative
boats in 1863.
Postal Cancellation will be available in the mock "village post
It was over this same waterway
office."
that the Frenchman,_LaSalle, believed
The Sunday morning worship service will be held at 11
to be the first white man to discover
a.m. on the park lawn and the public is invited to attend. At
the Ohio River, traveled in 1670. The
noon the Meigs County Historical Society will have barbeFrench called the river "La Belle
cue chicken dinners available.
Rivere", the Beautiful River. In 1681, a
Bo~t excursions aboard the
map maker oombined this with the
Drill and ceremony wes an every- P.A. Denny will be offered·
American Indian name, Ohio, and the
day, oflen monotonous part of life for Civil War sol- on Saturday.
.
river has been called the Ohio River ever
dlers, Confederate end Union alike. Here a Union sergeant leads Those wanting more inforsince. In 1no, George Washington came
a small squad In rifle drills, nece8811ry to ensure soldlertl would automat/cal- mation, may call the histordown the Ohio River to inspect and survey
1_
/y P'f(oml crlt/cal task• during the confusion of balfte.
ical society at992-3810.
land. On the return journey, he disem·

on

HOLLEY BROS.
CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.
UP o• fill IIU
~t'] 10

..

'

�Sunday, July 20, 1991

Pom.roy • Mkldleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plan nant, WY

~unday, July 20, 1997

,....bwi •Page C3

Jtwcbg ......

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

•

MR. AND MRS. PAOL ROBERT SIMON

Enrico-Simon
GALLIPOLIS - Paul. Roben rion stood in for Sen, and Mrs.
Simon and Maria Agnes Bernadet.te Alben G. Romulo. The seco ndary
A. Enrico were united in marriage in sponsors
. were Gerry and Mahalia . !
Enrico.
David Dixon and Dr. Maria
··
a double-ring ceremony wedding
ceremony on May 24, 1997 at St.
Louis Catholic Church.
,.
The groom, a business manager, is
MR. AND MRS. LAWRENCE 'TOM''WOOTEN
the youngest son of Dr. Mel and honor, while Sr. Sherwyn Simon
Lydia Simon of Gallipolis. The bride, was bcsl man . The bridesmaids were
a pediatrician, is the eldest daughter Dr. Noreen T. Sheehan. Rochelle
of Dr. Roy and Mea Enrico of Ane- Brillantcs,. Mi chelle Romero and
Bernadette L. Simon. They wore rose
sia, Calif.
brocade prince ss gowns with an
GALUPOLIS- Shari A. Wedemeyer and Lawrence "Tom" Wooten were
The church was decorated with
united in marriage May 13, 1997 at the Wedding Chapel By the Sea. Myr·
, cap sleeves and ballet
.
.
~ . ·
white and dusty rose tulle ribbons and empire. waist
d
d ·th 'lk
tie Beach, S.C., With the Rev. Rtchard Moretz ofltc.atmg.
nee
kl
me
a
orne
WI
s1
rosettes
.
.
.
·
· ·
swags. A thousand roses in pretty
d
h b k E h
.d
The bnde ts the daughter of Marlm and Joyce Wedemeyer of Galhpohs,
1
shades of pink, lilac and white, hun· an h pe::r sdat ~ e ac · fac . ckame d. · The groom is the son of Bill and Ruth Wooten of Gallipol·is.
dreds of pink carnations and ivory • and ".e
ouquet 0 pm an
The bride wore a white fringed , western-s tyle wedding dress with white
er
roses.
. dendrobian orchids arranged in white 1avcn
Th
S
1ace boats, an d a wh'ue western hat w1t· h a 1ace ve1·1,
' ·wicker baskets with ' baby's breath H d e Jtroo~smcn J wer~ ~uan
The groom wore a black, shan western-style tuxedo wilh black boots and
and greeneries adorned the altar and
y en, · gar anno, onat .an arz- a black cowboy hat.
·
· Mud Cree k Road, Galtpo
1· 1·ts .
' the pews. The flower arrangements aba and Ash Shehata. They wore
The couple restdes
at I 039
··
were made by Enchanted Garden or bl ac k shaw I co II are d luxe dos by
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Mrs. Lydia Ralph Lauren. The ringhearcr, Ross
· Michael Dixon, and the coinbcarer,
Simon and some close. friends.
The nuptial Mass was celebrated Dedrick P. Sarzaba, wore the same
by Monsignor William Myers. Mr~. tuxedos as the groomsmen. The
Evelyn Casanova was a eucharistic flower girls, Lauren Michelle Dix on
. · minister, and Christian Casanova and and Isabella Marie G. Enrico, both
ested in printing their pictures at
. Stephanie Cain were the altar servers. wore white brocade fl oor-length By RICK SAMMON
home directly from their computer;
The music for the ceremony was • dres~s and carried white and pink For AP Special Features
planned by the groom and provided baskets, wrapped with ribbons and
mgital photography and digital inkjet printers that also print 8-by-10· ,by Mrs. Paula Chal. director. guitarist tulle , and filled with fresh rose petals. image-making is becoming more and inch p1ctures and 11 -by-14-inch doc·
. and vocalist, Mrs. Carol Lander,
After the Mass, 100 pearlized mo~e popular among amateur pho· uments (like lcttcrs·and newsletters).
. pianist and flutist , Mrs . Noreen She· white balloons were flown and rose tographers -,and for several good rca- and photo quality printers that only
prim pictures up to. 4-by-6 inches.
, hata, lead 'co- vocaliSt. all from petals were thrown to the bride and sons.
· Cincinnati. and Mrs. Jenny Dyer, lead groom as they left the church in a
Digital cameras are coming down which is ·the standard size for con: , co-vocalist. of Gallipolis. Musical horse-drawn carriage for a ride along in price; snapshot rnodcls ·are avail· ventionally printed pictures. As with
· selections included "By My Side," the riverfront and around the park.
able starting at $200, and you can digital cameras, features and benefits
· "Come Share the Lord," "Friends."
An outdoor reception followed at pick up a zoom-lens model witli a · including speed, rcsolulton (picture
"We Are Many Pans." and "The the French An Colony. A harpist, built-in flash for about $400. Many quality) and supplied software Mrs. Lucille Jennings of Athens, makes and models of digital cameras should be considered before you buy
We~ding Song" for the prelude.
The bride was given in marriage entertained the guests during the are available. When evaluating a · a printer.
Imaging problems make it easy to
: and esconed to the altar by her par· cocktail hour with selected love camera's features and benefus, also
work
in the "computer darkroom ."
· ents. She wore an off-shoulder, can· songs. Belinda Burnett and Janel consider the features and benefits of
For
approximately
$50, you can gel
· · 41elight silk gown designed by Oleg Simpkins registered the guests. who the software that is supplied with the
program
that.
with
a few quick
· Cassini, with a princess bodice traveled from as far as Australia, the camera. Naturally, you'll need the
clicks
of
the
mouse.
let
you fix "red
qmbellished with rc-embroidered Philippines, Guam, Hawai1. Califor- software to get your pictures into
·· lace, pearls, sequins and rosettes. The nia and many other stales. as well as your computer, and you need to get eye," darken and lighten areas of a
the software that matches your com· picture - and create one-of-a-kind
. basque waist dropped to a full, c.athe· lecally.
A
dinner
buffet
catered
by
A
Taste
.purer's
operating system, More posters, greeting cards and calendars.
(jral-length train. Her pearl and
Image managing programs, which
!lf!quins tiara headpiece had a two- of Class, and a night of danctng· and important, some software programs
se
ll
for about $10. make II easy to
ce
lebration
followed
.
Music
was
prooffer
more
creative
possibilities
and
tier, fingenip -length veil.
mi:tnagc,
organilC and share your
VIded
by
Fred
Morgia
Entertainment
easier
operation
than
others.
For her "something old" and
photos
via
e-mail.
of
Baltimore.
Md
.
The
five
-tiered
Many
photo
labs
and
photo
ser"something borrowed," she wore a
weddin£!
cake
was
made
of
cheesevice
finns
offer
affordable
scans
of
matching set of South Sea pearls, and
diamond earrings and pendant. The cake and surrounded by six satellite existing slides and prints. For exam·
bride's cascading bouquet was made cakes. A gat.cbo with a hand -porce- pic. for about $20, you can have your
1•f ca!tleya and dendrobian orchids, lai n bride and groom figurine inside photos scann!'d and placed on a Pho·
lolephanolis, bridal white roses and was adorned with roses. orchid~ and to CD when you have a 24-exposurc
ivy, symbolizing love, lidelity and haby\ breath. Underneath the tiers roll of color printlilm developed . If
you prefer or need to have your picwas a nowing lit fountain.
tenility.
tures
on a disk, the cost tS ·ahout $5 .
Photographic services were proThe groom wore a black shawl
Scanners for 35 mm slides and
: • 1:ollar tuxedo by Italian designer vided hy Dale Lear and David Snowcolor
prints· make getting a picture
den
of
Gallipolis.
while
Cr~ative
·
l'umagalli. with a white paisley silk
into
a
computer
relatively easy. Con·
Video
Pradw.:tions
of
Cincinnati
prouest and howtic. He wore a white
sumer
slide
scanners
range in price
vided
vidcographic
coverage.
The
dendrobian orchid and rose ·boutonfrom
$200
to
$1.000,
When
choosing
rehearsal.
dinner
prior
to
and
a
brunch
uicrc.
a
scanner,
note
!hat
quality
and
speed
the
morning
after
the
wedding
was
The · plliJnary sponsors present
of
the
scan
increases
along
with
the
hosted
at
the
residence
of
the
groom's
.
1~en: Dr. and Mrs. Manuel Casanova,
pncc
.
parents.
.
ldr. and Mrs. Pio B. Enrico. Dr. and
Best prices of the
For under $500 you can get a col'
The coupled honeymponed in Old
lrlrs. Feliciano Jiminez. Dr. and Mrs .
or printer for your computer. Basiye~r! Hurry, Sale
1~ntonio Oposa, Dr. and Mrs. Daniel San Juan. Puerto Rico. and cruised in cally, there are tw·o groups of print·
fantos, Mrs. Aida Q. Scguerra. Rcmy the Southern Caribbean Islands. They
ends August 3!!!
crs for amateur photographers inter' · Simon, Dr. and Mrs. Anthony G. now reside in Gallipolis.
11ola. and Dr. and Mrs , Rogclio Ave ·

CARRIE INGELS, BR•~N[)ON

;~d:~,r~~::;:~~i~~i;~~~:~;i:: ~

l:tH.IW

B~unicardi-Hively

11A. AND MRS. T1tOIIAS SAUNDERS

Barnett-Saunders
GALUPOLIS- Linda Lou BarThomas Glenn Saunders
were united in marriage May 10.
199'7 11 lhe Ddlbie Drive Olapel,
Gallipolis.
The ~&gt;rid!: is the daughter of Qiffonl and Dorolhy Barnell of wese
Columbia, W.Va.. The groom is the
son of Sue Ramey of Gallipolis. and
Thomas Saunders of Gallipolis.
The uremony was performed by
Pastnr Jim Paru:rson. Pianist was
Sharon Eblin. Music included a IJICd..
ley of songs bef&lt;n the ceremony, and
"Only Ood Could You Love More"
during !be ceremony.
The ahar of the church was dec&lt;&gt;rated with a brass archway decorat·
ed with a bouquet of flowers at the
top. and one on each side. Th!:y were
made of pink carnations and bur·
gundy roses. 111!: remainder was
decorated with ivy. and white flowcro and ribbon. On each side of lhe
archway were two bouquel5 with
pink carnations and burgundy roses.
The first four pews on each side were
decorated with white, pink and bur·
gundy bows.
The bride was given in marriage .
by her parents and esCorted to the
altar by her father. She wore a gown made of white satin. Her gown fea·
. tured a princess neckline and ·was
embellished with white pearls and
sequins. The skirt was full and the
back waistline feawred a bow. The
·detachable train of four layers was
gathered at the waistline and made of
sheer fabric. with cording around the
edge.
The headpiece was made of white
nett and

ros&lt;;s and carnations, and had six.
strands of pearls flowing down lhe
fingenip veil, and was edged wilh
pearls. 111!: l&gt;ridl: carried a bouquet of
flowers fealuring six light pink ros..
es, three burgundy miniature camalions, larkspur and baby's breath,
wilh mixed greenery.
Maid of honor was Carol Bamen,
sister of !be bride. Bridesmaids were
Terri Ray, sister of the groom, and
Robin Barnen. cousin of the ~&gt;rid!:.
Each wore a white floral ptirit dress
and canied a bouquet of white, pink
and burgundy roses mi•ed with
baby's breath and greenery wilh pink
ribbons. Registering the guesl5 was
Debbie Kuhl, cousin of !be bride.
Best man was Jobn Saunders.
brotbet of lhe grooJ11. Groomsmen
were Bob Saunders, brolher or lhe
groom, and Paul Barnen. brolher of
the bride. The groomsmen wore gray
IWiedos with tails and vests. 111!: bou·
tonnieres were pink roses accented
wilh burgundy flowers and baby's
breath. The ringbearer was Justin
Ray, nephew of the groom. He carried the rings on a Bible decorated
wilh white lace and miniature pink
and white roses.
' J'he reception was held at the
AMVE'I;S Building in Gallipolis.
The wedding cake w.S a calhedral
wilh a bouquet of pink and white roses on each of the bottom .round layers. Serving the cake were Becky
Carr and Pauy Davis. aunu· of the
groom.
Following a honeymoon in Gatlinburg, Tenn:, the couple now resides
m Galhpohs.

One of my favorite restauranl5, the
Sunsc,t Grill in Nashville, Tenn ..
serves a spicy dish called Voodoo
Pasta.
Matching this dish with a wine can
be tricky, though, because of the pungent seasonings used. The dish is full
of shrimp. chicken and andouille
sausage in a marinara sauce heavy on
pepper and crushed red pepper.
No meek wine will last long with
siJCh a dish,' whether you buy this
spi•'JI pasta in a restaurant or make it
yourself.
So, I issued the challenge to iny
wine e•perts to find a wine to go with
Voodoo Pasta. We blind tasted and
rated the wines first by themselves
and then with the food .
· Here is what we found :
• 1993 Vino de Eyzaguirre
Mostazal Cabcrnet . Sauvignon at
$6.99. What a nice bottle of cabernet
for les. than S I0. This wine wa.&lt;
blended with shiraz, giving it chocolate and cherry tastes. The fruit was
vivid, deep and rich. It had a short
finish , but we did not complain too
much.
.
The tannins were soft. making it .
drinkable now. Tannins arc the chemicals in grapes that help give wine
character. Too heavy tannins can
make your teelh feel griny and your
mouth pucker. ,
This was my cxperts' favorite
wine b~ itself. With the pasta, the
111ine was okay but the spices crippled
some of the wine's character, making
il seem lighter.
• 1994 Foppiano Petite Sirah at
$14.99. This well-balanced wine was .
young and tannic. Dense in color, it
showed strawberry, spice, plum and
currant flavors. 111!: plum laSte stayed
through a long finish.
By itself, this wine was our second
favorite. With lhe food, though, it
rose to the top because it held up to
the spices well. It allowed us to liSle
the individual seasonings and flavors

•

Your house. Your car.
Your business. You.
.

invites you to drive a little
• ltK:illted just 5 ~ninules
and save a lot!
Save big on complete home furnishings including
carpet, living.room suites, bedroom suites, dinettes,
appliances, and much, much more!

a.

Strait
1213 Rear Eastern Avenue
614441-1104
.

.

RUTLAND
HOME · FURNISHINGS

..

--

•

,Amateur shutterbugs sharpen
focus on digital photography

a

~~egistration

Bedding by Simmons, Serta, and Namac0

,., ,..., In 11 - · · ...... Iaine In ,..Oil' ndo 18 tile on1J plaae to be:

Wedemeyer-Wooten

The ·groom-to-be i!-&gt; the . ; on or Mr.
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs .
John C. Ingels of Middlcpo11. and Mr. and Mr..; . Ronald L Saunders of Gal and Mrs. Thomas (Karla) Blackburn lipoli s. He IS the grandson of Mr. and
of Columbus, parents of the bndc. Mrs. C. Leon Saunders. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Clyde (Pat) Ingels of Gal- Lois Shaver nnd the ]nt(: Wayne
lipolis, grandmother of the bride, Shaver. He is abo the great -grandson
announce the engagement and of Mrs. Nam.:y Saund(:rs.
He is a 1994 graduate of Gallia
approa'c hing marriage of Carrie LeanAcademy
H1gh School. and is a stuna Ingels to Brandon Ashley Saun.dcnt at Oh io Univ ~.:: rsi t y. majoring in
ders of Gallipolis.
·
She is the granddaughter of the clcctncnl cng tncc ring. .
The couple will he hnv int! an opo.::n
Rev. Robert W. Kuhn and the laic
\:hurch
wedding on Saturday. Aug. 30
Beatrice Miller Kuhn. and the great· ·
at
4:30
run. at the Grnc~.:: UnitcJ
granddaugh!Cr of Mrs. Viola Miller of
Methodist
Church in Gallipolis. Dr.
Twin Falls, Idaho.
David
C.
Hogg
will officiate. assist The bridc-lo·iho is a 1995 gradued
by
the
Rev.
Rober!
W. Kuhn and
ate of Gallia Academy High School.
Pastor
Alvis
Pollard
or
the
First Bapand is a student at Ohio University,
Church.
tist
majoring 1n electrical engineering.

Movie's use of footage irks White House
USA Today
The White House is keeping the
heat on "Contact" for its cx.tcnsavc
usc of Bill Clinton press conference
footage, but a Warner Bros. executive
says if the president would just sec
the Jodie Foster film,thc complamts
would stop.
· "It's all hcnign ," said Charlotte
Kandel. head of Warners' worldwide
publicity, who says the studio has
r~scrved a print for Clinton if he
wants it. " We feel on very solid
grOund hccausc,the president was not
parodied in any way ."
But that's what the White House
objects to, White House spokesman
Mike McCurry sa&gt;d at a Monday
press hricfing . Earlier. the White
House counsel sent a lcltcr to direc tor Robert Zemeckis complaining
about th~ .footage .
McCurry says legitimate parody is
protected by th~ First Amcndmcnl.

16lllain St~ 11gt111, Olio
386-2831,310-3301
Man.·Sat. 1:30 atn It 5pta

St. Rt. 612 &amp;33, 1he Plaits, Olio
1#387·5657, 797-4567
Man..fri. lnlll7 Jill. Sat. Ito 5

DeliYery

•2 l.ocatiaOs To Serve Yau Beller"

•

'

slated

RIO GRANDE - Area students
wanting to get a jump on college can
~Jo so through a summer program
offered · by the University of Rio
Orande/Rio Grande Community College.
The Rio Education Awareness
Program (~P) is offered each
~urn mer in QOnjunction with Rio
,Orande 's summer school sessions.
' REAP is ;,_ended to prepare stu·
(~nts· to entCf college by fostering
ureater sclf.,.:onfidcnce. building
IJigher self-e1~eem, teaching more
~ffectivc stud)! skills, and developing
~ career and life plan. The program
lso focuses 011 improving individual
ommunicati~n. including reading,
(filing and spl"aking.
Students ·~ho complete REAP
1(ill earn five hours of college crediJ that can be applied toward com·
~ letion of a d~.gree program.
•
High scho&lt;JI juniors and seniors, ·
: ~- tdividuals w!jp graduated more than
• lve years ag~ and those receiving
: ' ED certification by August and are
: 3 years old or older, are eligible to
· e~roll in REAf',
'
The second REAP session is.July
: ~ 1-Aug. 21, in conjunction with Rio
: (irande's second summer session.
·
There is an application fee for
: QEAP that must be paid by the
! .e!~rolling student. All other fees,
: iltcluding books and tuition, will be
· P!'id by the institution.
.
. For more information, call 245. nl2 or 1-800-288-2746.

Refrlt~erators

Drastically
Reduced

Washers

MAYTAG

Going on NOW
The

NTH!

Dryers

~

'·

CELL
TALK
With
Karen Skidmore
Manager

Shoe Cafe

QUALITY FURNITURE PLU
Announces

hut "Contact" isn't hccausc it takes
footage nut or cont ext and gives the
nnprcssion .Clinton acted in the film :
"The president 's imag~:. which, is his
alone und to control. is us(:d in a way
that wnuld lead a viewer to imaginC
that he had said someth ing that he
didn't really say.'"
That's OK with ··contact .. producer Steve Starkey. who says Clinton really did say everything he SJY:\
in · the movie - hut ahnut other
events.
" h\ intcmlcd to and it docs look
very rc&lt;.~l. .. Slarkcy says.

0 N C I • A· • Y E A R

l

Choose from brand names such as Broyhill,
Boy, Lane,
Keller, Frigidaire, Maytag, Zenith, Howard Miller, Vaughan,
and more••.

Gallipolis

William

POMEROY - Debra Jean Mcll- groom, who wore a shon dress in •
wrailh and Bruce H. Gheen of Shade pastel colors.
were united 10 marriage m an outdoor
The groom wore a western-style
wedding ceremony on Sunday. May tuxedo with tails and bolo tie. His
25, at the home of David and Carol best man was Don King of Shade.
and the ushers were his twin brother,
Riggs. Pomeroy.
. The Rev. Robert E. Smith Sr. per· Bryan Gheen of Pomeroy, and Carl
formed the double nng ceremony for Gheen, also a brother. of Aorida.
the daughter of Hugh R; Me II wraith They wore duster jackeu and bolo
of Stoneham. Mass., and Christine A. ties for the wedding.
Penny Jones II, niece of the bride,
Green. Pomeroy. and the son of C.
Vincent Gheen o!Pomeroy. and Car- registered the guesu.
ol M. Riggs of Pomeroy.
A reception at the Riggs home fol '
For her wedding. the bride wore a lowed the ceremony. Best man Don
white formal wedding gown in off· Kjng and the bride's bro.ther. Butch
the-shoulder style. accented with Mcllwraith. played guitar and sang
pearls. She wore her hair in a French country songs. They were joined by
twist decorated with pearl stick pios. another brother of the bride, Phillip
·
and wore a pearl necklace and Green.
The newlyweds reside at 1hc
bracelet.
Iris P. Han of The Plains was maid Country Mobile Home Pan at Shade.
The. new Mrs . Gheen is a graduof honor and wore a pastel lavender
dress. Bridesmaids were Phyllis ate of the Tri-County Adult Education
Johnson of Shade. attired in a pastel Center in Nelsonville, where she
blue gown, and Penny L. Jones of majored in accounting and comput·
Racine, sister of the bride, who wore ing, and received a state vocational
ccnilicatc. Gheen owns and operates
pastel pink.
The flower girl was Breanna h1s own painting hu.~incss. Rem·
Gheen ot Pomeroy, niece of the brandt Patnting and Decorating.

'Rutland :J{ome
'furnishings

in this dish. a high compliment for a lhcy compete mcrctlcssly. 'lltc same
applies to marrying spicy wines to
wine with food.
• 1995 Rabbit Ridge Zinfandel at spicy foods.
I woula have guessed lhis combiS 14. This was a young. fresh and
zesty wine, full of cherry, black nation would' have worked in !his
cherry and raspberry flavors. True to case. but it didn't. The food spices
zinrandcl wines, it was nice and overpowered the wine so much that
spicy. Rabbit Ridge makes a consis- we could barely taste the wine.
• 1993 Renwood SangiovcS. at
tently good zinfandcl.
When pairing with .foods. there is . $19.99. So why not pick a heany Italoften a temptation to marry a ·spicy Jan red to go with a marinara sauce ·~
wine with spicy foods. but that can be This wine offered' a Slrong aroma ilnd
flavors full of black fruit. It was very
a dicey proposition.
dense
in texture and taste. which
Sometimes two spicy foods work
made
it
stand out distinctly from the
well with each other; sometimes
olher wines in the tasting.

'

Mcllwraith-Gheen

.
GALUPOUS- Annanda Maria Th!:ir off-white saun dresses were
Brunicardi aDd B~ Allen Hively made by Dot lbomas and were
were united in marriage on May 17. accented with boWs and lace. They
1997 at Sl Louis Calholic Church. carried baskets designed by Laura
with Monsignor William Myers offi- Brunicardi Northup.
The groom wore a Ouistiait Dior
ciating.
The bride is the daughter of John full dress black Parisian tuxedo with
and Katie Brunicardi of Gallipolis. white vest and lie. Best nian ChriS!&lt;&gt;The groom is lhe son of James and pher Hively and groomsmen Matt
Casey, Tom Meek and Jerry HoskinWanda Hively of Patriot.
The bride was escorted down !be son wore formal black tails with
aisle by her father and given in mar· black accessories.
Music was provided by Edie Ross,
riage by her parents. She wore an
Alhed Angelo gown of satin moon- organist. with Jean Knight as vocallight white. The cathedral-length ist and Laramie Roush on guitar.
train was altomed witli sequins, Rowers for the wedding and rece~&gt;c
pearls and lace. The fitted gown had non were destgned by That Special
a sweethean neckline and featured re- Touch.
embroidered lace. pearls, sequins ,
The reception was held at the Uniand Queen Ailne sleeves. Her acces- versity of Rio Grande Rhodes Cen·sories included a pearl necklace from ter, and the wedding cake was made
her late grandfalher, and pearl ear· by Jean Henderson. It was decorated
rings - a gift from her parents. She with flesh flowers and topped with an
also carried a crystal rosary. a child- "H" initial constructed of lhymc
hood gift from her parents.
leaves.
Her cascade bouquet included
The bride is a clinical dietician at
white gardenias, lavender sweet peas. Gallipolis. Developmental Center,
pink lizanthius, lavender pink bella and · the groom is a pharmacist and
. OPEC embargo
embargoed oil shipmen15 to the Unit·
donna delphinium, stephanotis. owner of Apolhecary Services of
In 1973. under the banner of ed Stales, Wes\UJI Europe and Japan,
caspia and Italian ivy. . ·
Ohio.
OPEC (Organization of Petroleum and crude-&lt;&gt;il prices soared from $2
Matron
of
honor
Laura
BrunicarFollowing a honeymoon in Exponing Countries), the Arab to as high as S34 a barrel by the ·end
·
di Northup and brother-in-law Jeff Hawaii. the couple now resides at II S.
nations, protesting support for Israel, of the decade.
.·
·
Nonhup provido;d lhe readings for the Ba;tiani Drive. Gallipolis. ·
ceremony. Maid of honor was Anita
Brunicardi, and bridesmaids included Judi Douglass. Mary Ames ·and
• :19 year iliS!IiOdilltion
Michele Beach. They wore premier
blue Alyce gowns made of crepe
willa Rutlillnd
tiara, and were accented with
Furniture .
L' Amour satin. The bridesmaids carried bouquets of lavender roses, pink
lizanthius. llivend'er sweet peas.
stephanotis, caspia and' Italian ivy.
• Silllfte greillf !ierYiC:e ,
. Flower girls were Kara Cisler and
Krystal Hively, nieces of the groom.

.Not just any wine goes with spicy foods
Br FRANK SUTHERLAND
The Nahville Tlrli1811Nn

HIVELY

lngels-Saunders ·

Thinking of a summer
vacation for the family? Have
you ever had· a nat tire, auto
accident, run out of gas, or been
late in getting to your hotel?
With your cellular phone you
can call and confirm your hotel
reservation or get emergency

services.
Why not stop by Cellular One
and select a phone to take with
you and enjoy the convenience
and sec~rity that Cellular
Service offers.

Our
"HDT SUMMER SALE"
offers you areat pPica
tor CeiiUII' Service.
' FREE ACTIVAriDN"
AudiOVOX Hand Held Phone
S15
Audlovox Bag Phone
S25
plus 1or 2months IPee
service according to IIIII
pllll you select.
Stop by our store at 150&lt;!
Eastern Ave . in Gallipolis and let
Karen, Mindy or Renee help you
select the phone plan for you,
Offer valid thru 7/31/97

42123 St. Rt. 7
Mon. •Thun. 9·5

Fd. 9·6, Sat. 9·4

Acro11 StrHI from Formen laak

Tuppen Pial•••

614·667
1·800·200

CELLUlARONE
"Clearly the Best"
1502 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

441-0547

�b

Sunday, July 20, 1997

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

'11-....jlc:dbwl

Nature's bounty brightens summer dinners ·
By DOROTHY SAYRE
Several people. have asked me to
devote a column to food ... one of
my favorite subjec:ts. no problem!
This is a
wonderful time
of the year with
the garden vegetables ripening.
An entire dinner
can be niade
with vegetables
and no one complains!
· The first taste of any vegetable or
fruit straight from the garden makes
me wonder how city dwellers, with·
out gardens, can tolerate missing out
on such goodness. Last year's com
was exceptionally tasty and brought
back memories for my husband,
George. He remembers growing up
in Meigs County when August din·
ners were steaming platters of roasting ears. All you could eat. Earlier in
the sea~on, if they were lucky, Saturday night supper might be strawber·

DREMA AND DICK SMITH

Reception set for Smiths

ry shoncake. His aunt made it in
dishpans to ensure; everyone had
enough.
With new potatoes available, and
peas in our garden, I leafed through
my recipes to find a favorite one. It
is an exceptionally low-fat, but delicious, recipe for new potatoes and
dill gravy. (I like tQ use red potatoes
for a splash of color· with the green
dill.)
Boil approximately one pound of
new potatoes (8 to 10), with (heir
jackets on, until tender. Drain and
cover to keep warm. In a large skil·
let! saute tl/2 cup finely chopped
on~on m 2 tablespoons of margarine
(or butter). When the onion is tender, sprinkle 3 tablespoons of flour
over the onion and cook one minute.
stirring constantly over medium
heat. Add 12 ounces of canned vegetable broth and stir ' until thickened
and smooth. Add 2 teaspoons of
fresh, minced dill (or 3/4 teaspoon
of dried) and pour the gravy over the
potatoes. Serve immediately. No salt
is needed, but pepper to taste, if

POMEROY - A reception hon· Smith, who formerly lived on Lin·
oring Dick and Drema Smith on their coin Hill. have two other children:
40th wedding anniversary will be another son, Rick (Donna) Smith an&lt;J
held Sunday, July 27, from 2:30 to a daughter, Tracy (Jimmy) Vance of
4:30 p. m at the home of their son and Blount, W.Va.
They have five grandchildren,
daughter-in-law, Greg and Vicki
B.J
., Cody, Dakota Smith of
Smith. State Route I 24. Pomeroy.
and Brillany and Ashley
GALLIPOLIS - "Kids Rocket· and weight checks. Kid Care IDs.
Pomeroy,
All friends ·and fanner neighbors
ing
to Good Health" is the theme for fingerprinting by DARE Officer
Vance of Blount.
are invited to attend the reception.
Holzer Medical Center's sixth annu· Wayne Sweeney, and a Jive remote
In addition to Greg, Mr. and Mrs.
al Kids Fair on Monday, July 28 from with Magic 101.
Two grand prizes will be award·
10 a.m . to 4 p.m. in the French 500
ed,
including a girl's bicycle and a
R,oom .
·
boy's
bicycle, donated by Bowman's
Coordinating the event arc Nancy .
CROWN CITY~ Monroe and Lillian Hall of Crown City will be cele·
Home
Medical · Supply Inc .. and
brating their 50th wedding anniversary on Saturday, July 26, with a recep· Casteel, R.N., Pediatric Unit patient
BorgWamer
Corp .. with helmets protion given by their children and grandchildren at their home. 802 Wells Run care manager, and Dawn Halstead,
vided
by
Eastman's
Foodland. Pepsi
director of Volunteer Services.
Road near Crown City.
Bottling
Co.
is
providing
7-UP. ·
· Highlighting this year's fair is the
· The reception begins at 2 p.m. and is open to all friends and relatives .
In
addition
to
other
prizes,
games
The couple was married July 27, 1947 in Gallipolis by the Rev. Earl Cre· Center of Science and Industry 's
(COS!) BODYBuilding: Bionics and and refreshments, children and their
means.
.
.
Mrs. Hall is the fanner Lillian Arlene Daniels, daughter of the late Tom· Transplants. a traveling science pro· parents will receive important health
information. including nutrition,
my and Myrtle Daniels. He is the son of the late John and Bertha Hall. They gram.
exercise,
safety, asthma/smoking,
Klds
will
engage
in
first-hand
sci·
are lifelong residen!S of the Crown City area.
.
dental
hygiene,
poison prevention,
encc
investigations.
attempt
to
do
They are the parents of six children: Dan (Kathy) Hall of Cincinnati, Sher·
WIC/Gallia
County
Health Depart·
simple
tasks
without
the
usc
of
their
ry (Gerald) Rankin, Francie (Charles) Unroe, Bill (Carla) HaJJ. and Brenda
ment,
Genesis
home
therapies,
child
up
a
thumbs.
maneuver
a
wheelchair
(Dale) Sheets, all of Crown City, and Kay (Gary) Woodall of Proctorville.
care
resources
and
more.
ramp,
reconstruct
a
skeleton,
h.
a
ndle
They also have nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
For mbre infonnation, .call 446different prosthesis. and contemplate
5075 or 446-5056.
organ transplantation.
Other activities include height

HMC schedules sixth
annual kids fair July 28

desired. I have added fresh, cooked
peas to the mixture with excellent
results, too.
Time is precious to all of us and
my sister and I both enjoy using
crackpot cooking for easy. yet sub- .
. stantial. meals. One of her recipeS
I've repeatedly used is a pot roast in
the crackpot. For a 3·4 pound. bone·
Jess pot roast. 1- I/2 to 3 inches
thick; rub and pour 1/4 cup Worccs,
tcrshirc sauce, mixed ·with 3 table·
spoons soy sauce, ont_o both sides of
the roast. Place in crockpot: cut a
large, peeled onion in slices. and
spread over-the roast. Add a bay leaf
and cook on low all day or until very
tender.
One of George's favorite crock·
pot dinner entrees is chicken. The
best pieces for this recipe arc thighs .
I buy a family pack of 12-14 thighs.
Remove the skin and all the visible
fat from the chicken, rinse and pat
dry. Place in crackpot and pour 112
to 3/4 bottle of a favorite barbecue
sauce over tlic chicken. Again , let it
cook on slow all day.
With the two meals above, a
salad and potatoes/rice or bread
makes a hearty dinner. This time of
year, fresh fruit is an excellent

choice as dessert, either alone or
over frozen yogun or ice cream.
Recently, we had tofu stir-fry and
rice for dinner. The vegetables were
simple: onions, celery, bok choy.
green pepper and lots of pea pods
from our garden. We ate cantaloupe
for dcssen. While George prefers
chicken or beef in the stir fry, he
admitted he thought the tofu was
okay. We don't eat a lot of tofu, but I
added it to our "occasional diet"
some years ago. It is high in protein
with no fat.
A long-time tip from , my sis for
more jui.cc from citrus fruit :
Microwave fruit for up to one
minute. depending on the power of
your oven. And. many years ago I
accidentally discovered keeping .
dncd onions in the vegetable drawer
of the (cfrigcrator stopped the tears'
It is easier than peeling under cold
walC'T, which is the usual recommended procedure. As Julia Ch1ld
says. "Bon Appetit!"
(Dorothy Sayre and lier husband
George·, rormerly of Meigs County,

moved back and noW re.side in a house

facing the Ohio River, just below
Syracuse.)

The Community C.landar Ill publllhad • a free service to non-prof·
It groups wishing to announce
meetings and spacial events._The
calendar Ia not designed to promote ealea or funcl-ralaera of any
type. Items era printed •• apace
. permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a apaclflc number of daya.

•••
Sunday, July 20
•••

...

LECTA · Spencer Carey, from
Bible League, to speak at Walnut
Ridge Church 10:30 a.m. Sunday
school 9:30a.m.

Ical Center Kids Fair on Monday, July 28 from 1o a.m.-4 p.m. at
the hospital.
·
'

•••
•••

GALLIPOLIS ·Community Can·
cer Support Group, 2 p.m., New Life
Lutheran Church. For . infonnation
call446-8657 or 446-3538.

•••

...

'

Thesday, July 22

•••

•••

••

•••

Revival
GALLIPOLIS · 'Vacation Bible
. School at Bulaville Christian Church. ·
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
July 20-25.6-8:15 p.m. Wild Frontier
Rev1val services at Lifeline Apostolic
Bible Theme Park.
Church: Route 2: with evangelist
•••
HARRISBURG · Annual union Brother Rainwater and the Rev.
meeting at New Hope Baptist Robert Davis: 7:30p.m. Services run
Church, with Pastor Moses T. Cuffle. until Thursday, July 24 . .
•••
Afternoon services. 3 p..m. with the
GALLIPOLIS
·Third annual VicRev. Ted Willis, Park Avenue Baptist
tory
Missions
Camp
Meeting July
Church, Piqua. Lunch served fol23-25.7
mghtly.
Gallipolis
City Park.
lowing morning service.
Guest speakers include the Rev. Bill
•••
GALLIPOLIS · The Rev. Elven Staten. the Rev. Roy Johnson , Pastor
Harvey will speak at Providence Samuel Ashidam and the Rev. Joseph
Baptist Church, Buck Ridge, I I a.m. Koomson.
service.

•••

Effective 'filtration takes worry
out of swimming in public poo'ls
cleaning the water arc effective, careBy DR. ROBERT HOLZMAN
ful attentiOn to maintenance is essenFor AP Special Features
tial
to ensure sanitary conditions.
Those who swim in a public pool
Disinfectant
systems in public
this summer can cool off with confi·
pools
require
particular
attention
dence. The water in a well-main·
large
swimming
crowds
spur
since
tained pool is not likely to result i.Q,..
the growth of many microorgan:
the spread of infections.
Any pool can transmit infection. 1sms.
Most outbreaks of illness assoc1· When people swim in pools. the
germs come off their skin and into the ated with swimming pools have been
water. There they can be picked up by linked to lapses in pool maintenance.
Although the most common of
other swimmers when \hey swallow
these
illnesses are ear infections,
water or get it in their eyes or ears.
But modem water treatments and unsanitary conditions have also been
pool maintenance techniques are known to cause skin infections, in fcc·
keeping the majority of sw[mmers tions of the respiratory tract or gastrointestinal tract, and less common~
from gelling sick.
.
Jy,
infections of the urinary tract and
The reason for this is that pool
water is usually treated with a com- centtal nervous system.
To protect swimmers' health, it's
bination of filtration systems and
important that pools have an adequate
chemical disinfectants.
Filtration systems generally disinfectant level, a pH value within
remove hannful particles and the recommended range, and that the
microorganisms in the water, some of filtration system is cleaned regularly.
Some conditions associated with
which cannot be eliminated through
the disinfectant" added to pool water. swimming pools are, in fact, related
Likewise. those genns which can· to the area around the pool. For
not be eliminated through filtration example, people often blame pool
are generally killed or inactivated by .water when they contract foot fungi
the disinfectant chemical, usually ·or are infected with the virus that
causes plantar warts on the feet,
chlorine; added to the water.
Although these two methods of

By JAMES SANDS
GALLIPOLIS- The Ariel OperaHouse, also known as the Gallipolis
Theatre, has been the scene of a lot
of good performances since its open. ing in 1895, but probably none quite
as bizarre as a show there in 1958.
On Thursday" evening. Nov. 13,
WSM Grand Ole Opry star Hank
Snow, his Rainbow Ranch Boys, and
comedian Sleepy McDaniel gave
two shows, 7 and 9 p.m. at the Gal·
lipoli s Theatre. But in between ·
shows, Snow was handed an attach.
ment for his 1957 pink Fleetwood
Cadillac convertible by Gallia County Sheriff Oscar Baird.
The whole episode started Tues·
day, Nov. 4, 1958. The Downtown
Coaches Association of Gallipolis ·
had booked Snow for a show to be
held at the Gallia Academy Audita·
rium.

· : The club had gone all out in advertising the show. even dropping advertising leaflets from an airplane over
Gallia and Mason counties. Eddie
Adkins and Lonnie Thompson

dropped the information sheets then began yelling at Snow·as to who
telling of Snow's show at 8:30p.m., was. to pay for the advertising.
Snow said in the Gallipolis Daily
which cost $1 .25 per person. Nov. 4
arrived and the doo~ . opened at 7 Tribune of Nov. II in an ad paid for
p.m. The people came and the pre· by Sn1&gt;w's fan club: "I am indeed sor·
ry folks that things happened as they
liminaries started at 8 p.m.
·
Snow was supposed to come on at did. but we have no control over car
8:30p.m. But there was no Snow and failure, or horrible unpassab!e roads.
the fotecast didn't seem to indicate We believe in the Great Almighty and
any Snow in the general vicinity. At that is why I am casting all other
about 9:10 p.m., organizers of the appointments aside and have made
show began refunding ticket money arrangements to come to Gallipolis
to most of the 400 persons who had just to prove my sincerity to you, the
paid admission. As ·the last few fans wonderful public, who have bought
were "mavin~ on," Snow and his my records these many years. This is
show arrived. It was reponed that his not an easy life by any means.
car had broken down in Kentucky friends, and there are times "when we
ahd he was unable to get to a tele- -have to drive 800 miles a day to make
phone. Snow did play pan of his our jump from one show to another,
but we always try to keep at our best
show for what few fans remained.
According to Snow's later retol· and have a big smile for everyone,
lections, he blamed the Downtown when at the same time, we are ready
Coaches Association for so quickly to fall over."
It appears that the Downtown
sending· people home. But Snow
claimed that he would'return on Nov. Coaches Association, in a special
13 for the sake of the club. Snow said · meeting, decided not to panicipate in
that when he suggested this, members Snow's second show. They sought a
of the DCA just laughed at h1m . They legal remedy instead. It was Snow's

fan club that sponsored the Nov. 13
show. Earlier in 1958, Hank Snow
had been named by Billboard Maga·
zine as one of six living members to
that magazine's.Country Music Hall
of Fame.
Snow's s career actually began in
Canada and Australia, where his
records were big hits even before the
release of his first American record in
1949. Snow was born in Nova Scotia in 1914. In 1950. Snow's song
"Marriage Vows·," hit the Top I 0 and
he became a regular on the Grand Ole
PERFORMED TWICE -In November 1958, Hank Snow sang
Opry. His most pOpular song . 'Tm
twice in Gallipolis In a space ol10 days. His second apperance
Mavin' On," was the No. I country
was at the Gallipolis Theatre. In between shows there, he had his
and western song for 49 straight
pink Cadillac confiscated by the sheriff of Gallia County.
weeks in tt!e mid-' 50s.
Snow lat;r had such songs as
"Rhumba Boogie." "I Don't · Hurt
Anymore," "'I've Been Everywhere"
and "Ninety Miles an Hour." From Baird, accompanied by the club's round up enough cash to get his car
1950 to 1976, Snow had 36 songs attorneys , Bill Sowers and John back, which he did. but Snow never
make the Top 10 in country and west· Epling, served papers on Snow allcg· returned to Gallia County in that pink
ing that Snow owed the club Cadillac.
em ffiUSJC.
(James Sands is a special _corA good crowd turned out for $2.208.35 in damages .
respondent
lor the Sunday Times·
Snow remained in the Old French
Snow's second appearance in GalSentinel.
His
address is 65 Willow
lipolis. In between- shows, Sheriff City for an extra day or so try~ng to Drive, Springboro, Ohio 45066.)

By KAREN S. PETERSON
USA Today
Teens and expens .both agree the
word is getting out to young girls
about the dangers of eating disorders.
But they caution just because teens
know more doesn 't mean they arc
changing their behavior.
" Kids may be able to talk more
about eating disorders," says Carolyn
Costin of the Eating Diso rder Center
of California and author of " Your
Dieting Daughter: Is Sbc Dying for
Attention?"
(Brunner/Mazcl,
·$19.95). "But we still have an uphill
battle.
"It ·is an epidemic; it is everywhere ."
Anorexia nervosa is virtual self~
starvation resulting in an unnatural
thinness. Bulimia nervosa is binge
eating and then purging through
!lomiting or laxatives . A bulimic
!•en'• weight may appear nonnal.

Although increasing numbers of boys

But knowing more doesn't mean

Costin says, "when in fact it is in
control of them."
lescents know they should not smoke,
She, Wibbclsman and other
have unsafe sex, but we have learned cxpens mention Heidi Guenther. the
that knowledge unfortunately does 22-year-old. Boston Ballet dancer
who had eating problems. collapsed
not change their actions ."
Costin, who was anorexic herself and died June 30 while with her fambetween 16 and 22. says girls that age ily driving to Disneyland.
"She was in a car with her fami·
are trying to figure out their own
identity and are very aware of soci· ly, not on some death bed, and her
hcan gave out," Costin says. Teens
cty 's dictate that only thin is in.
Straight-A students, trying to be should realize that is the way anorexperfect in every way, are prime can· ia can kill .
Teens tell USA TODAY that they
didates for anorexia, Costin says.
"They are very tenacious. And when arc are well aware of eating disorders .
they diet, they go bananas." Costin
About 400 applicants for USA
also stresses that research suggests lDDAY's Teen Panel wrote ihe paper
some may have ,a brain chemical about the concerns of young people.
imbalance that makes them more dri· About one-fifth mentioned eating
disorders. (Panel members will- be
ven.
Experts stress nlost victims arc in announced in August.)
denial, believing with the faith of the
"The most pressin~ con.cerns of
young that they are invulnerable. teenage girls are diet and weight,"
"Mostthink, 'I have this in control,"' says Ractiel Lynne Levine, 14, El

•'I' developing eating disorders, suf- changing niindsets, he says. "Ado-

ferers arc still" overwhelmingly
female.
Bulimia is thought to affect four of
every 100 women betwcen.17 and 25,
while anorexia claims about I in
every 100 . says Kathy McCoy, coauthor of "The New Teenage Body
Book" (Body Press, $14 95).
"Talk show s. teen magazines are·
talking about eating disorders," says
Dr. Kathryn Zerbe of the Menninger
Clinic and author of "The Body .
Betrayed" (Gurzc. $16.95). "But the
behavior is getting worse. Young kids
as early as 8 and 10 arc starting on
diets. ''
Dr. Charles Wibbelsman. chief of
The Teenage Clinic at Kaiser Pennanente Medical Center in San Fran·
cisco, says withi.n the last five years
among adolescents, "eating disorders
are out of the closet."

~w

we

. We tfiank. YOU, all of our loyal customers, for your
patronage tfirougfiout tfie past 47 years and look.
forward to serving 'you for many more. 'To tfiose of you
wfio fiave not visited our store, we look. forward to .
serving you in tfie near future. We invite you to stop in
and talk. witfi one of our courteous sales staff
.Jfennan 9rat.e tfounder) Jofin :Miller (Sales Jvfgr)
Jofin 9rate·(Store :Mgr.) !Aaron 9rate (Sales/Bookkeeping)
~
9loria 9rate (Sales/Bookkeeping)
m
m

m

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Name Brand·Furniture &amp; Appliances
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VMAYTAG
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:- POMEROY ~ Meigs County attending the Teen Institute, where
students under the leadership of Reg- . they will Jearn leadership techniques
gie Robinson are a part of over 350 and strategies on how to influence
of Ohio's top teen leaders at Kenyon their peers to be drug free.
College in Gambier this week for the ·
The panicipants of Tl are youth
0hio Teen Institute. sponsored by the iii'Volvcdjn drug prevention activities
Ohio Department of Alcohol and . in their communities. The state confcrcncc proviJ:Ics advanced tcaining
.Drug addiction Services.
. , Young people, representing near· and infonnation on new programs ·
I~ all of Ohio's 88 counties, will be and proJects the teens can take hack

·Paso, Texas. "I believe this is because "Seldom do pictures show the perfect
· of the unrealistically thin bodies guy who JUst1ost five pounds in five
..
•
shown on tele vision and in maga- days.
zi nes." Girls arc targeted, she says. ·

'One Slop Bridal Shop'
Stop In and Get A Free Estimate.
We Have A Nice Display of Bridal
Bouquets and Combs.
•Large seleclion of bridal garters
•Unily ·Candles &amp; Tapers •Beverly Clark Collection
•Rental- Brass heart shaped &amp; 7 branch candelabra, arch,
kneeling bench, aisle candle,
•Reception ilems: brandy snifters, hurricane globes/mirror.
•Rose floating candles can be dyed to malch your fabric, has
10 be ordered ahead 3-4 weeks

• 20% off Weddlnglnvltationt the month of
July. Fres "Thank You" cards with order of
100 or more Invitations•
for a ut of Fostoria !-tad
Crystal Toaatlng Glasaet to be given away ·
the first of November.

•Register

Meigs
youth
to
join
in
state
Teen
Institute
'

Monday, July 21

RIO GRANDE · Open Gate Garden Club will meet at the home of
Arlene Miller. Program "A Bouquet
KANAUGA · Special worship Garden" by Nancy Skaggs.
•
service at Silver Memorial Church.
VINTON · Regular meeting of
Rand Avenue, 2:39 p.m. Special
singing with White Oak Church American Legion Post 161 . All mem·
Choir. The Rev. Carl Ward . preach- bers need to anend for planning scsSIOO.
ing.

•••

KIDS FAIR ACTIVITY- Face painting will be just one of 11ev- ·

era! activities children will enjoy at the Sixth Annual Holzer Med-

VIINlDN • Baptisimal service at
Clark Chapel Church, noon. l)elow
Vinton dam.

GALLIPOLIS · Keith Eblin will
CROWN CITY · Vacation Bible
"be preaching at the 6 p,m. service aJ _'School at Mount Zion Missionary
Church. Valley View Drive. 6-9 p.m.
Debbie Drive Chapel.

Country legend Hank Snow played
Gallipolis twice
within 10 days

More knowledge doesn't stem incidence of eating disorders

Halls to note 50th anniversary

Gallia community calendar

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

.

or suppon peer prevention programs.
Ohio Teen Institute is one of the
oldest and most respected alcohol and
other drug peer prevention programs
in the United States. Since Ohio's
program began in 1965, over 35
states and innumerable local com·
munitics have adapted the TI model.
''Ohio is considered a· premier
training ground for young leaders
who arc significantly affecting alcohol and other drug abuse in their
communities," said Doug Wentz.
community services director at the
City Park. at 7 each ev~ning. Chil- Mahoning County C~cmical Dependren's services will be provided each dency Program, the coordinating
evening, featuring. New Life Victory agency for the conference.
Center's "Joy Jump."
"The Tl participants develop
'action plans' for projects and programs to be used when they return
home. It's those activities that make
Tl
an essential part of alcohol and
TUESDAY
other
drug abuse prevention in any
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday.
community,"
said Wentz.
6:30p.m. Star Mill Park, New mcm·
hers welcome.
to their schools and communities.
The youth participants arc joined
by over 60 adult panicijlants as Teen
Institute Advisors. The adults work
with or suppon peer prevention programs in their local communities.
The conference is supported with
the assistance of 150 volunteer professionals , 60 youth staff and 10 college interns. all of whom work with

NEW ITEMS:
• Bridal Jewelry
• Head Pieces
~Bride &amp; Groom Cake Tops
• Bridal Registry

Victory Missions Camp Meeting set this week
GALLIPOLIS - New Life Viclory Center of Gallipolis will host its
(bird annual Victory Missions Camp
~ecting Wednesday through Friday
of this week.
: This ye.ar's event will be staged as
~n old-fashioned tent meeting. For
the last two years, Pastor Bill Staten,
ihe host, has introduced missionaries ·
[o the Ohio River Valley. This year,
(ltinisters from three West African
nations will be guest speakers.
From Ghana will be Pastor
Samuel Ashidam. He is the director
of over I5 adult Bible schools in
Qhana. By June 1997, there were
over 1,500 graduates from these
schools honored in the ceremony. ·
larger than the graduation from
· Ghana University a few days earlier.
The Rev. Joseph Koomson, reprc·
senting Burkina Faso. is pioneering
an adult Bible school this fall. These
Schools arc designed to train men and
women as ministers w reach the multitudes.
Along with these directors will be
the co-host of the camp meeting , the
Rev. Ray Johnson. international
director of all schools established by
Victory International Mini stries.

Johnson projects over 3,500 graduates for the 1997-98 school year.
:rhe camp meeting will be held in
downtown Gallipolis. in a tent in the

1462 Sailor Road
(614) 388-9311

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
SUNDAY
CHESTER -:-. Northeast Cluster
Hymn Sing, Alfred United Methodist
Church. Sunday, 7 p.m. Public invit·
ed.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Bikers. Sunday, 2 p.m. at Stanley's .
MONDAY
LETART - The Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday. 6 p.m. at
the offie'c building".

POMEROY - Meigs County
Emergency Planhing Committee
(LEPC). regular meeting, Tuesday,
II :30 a.m. at Emergency Operations
and EMS training center located
hchind Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.Pomeroy. Agenda, .LEPC compliance report. Haz-mat plan update.
update of LEPC projects, LEPCIEOC
operations in disaster. Questions to be
directed to Robert Bycr, director.
992-6617.
WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS '- Athletes interested in playing junior high football
to meet Wednesday. 6 p.m. at Eastern
school .' Helmet fitting following
meeting.

mon•l

4
-R

6

.

,..

Five
times in

15 .

tho

---

months!

mo •• ~.

12

Vinton, Ohio

1-800-548-9311

OutsldoAr.,.
St. Rt 35 eXIt at R1o Grande Oh1o 3 m1les
Nort11 on St Rt 325. leN on Sa1lor Rd 1 5
m1les !rom mtersec11on

Meigs community calendar

Is there a baby
in your house?
-2

../WHITE WESTINGHOUSE

Pat's Pos-ie·Pateh
Hours: Tues.-Fri. 10-8, Sat. 10-6
and

Marl( W. 1\{p{an, !M.'D..
Mark W. Nolan. M.D.

has rea:ntly Joined the team ol physldans at

"""'nt VllleJ HospitAl. specializing In obstetlk:s/~.
Or. Nolan rec:dYed his bachelor's degree In microbiology frcm
eailfomla State Unlvelslty, Long Beach California ( 1977); a bachelor's
degree as a physician associate from the Unlvelsity of Oklahoma. _
Oldlhoma Oty, Oldahoma (1978) and his medical degree. also from
the Unlvenlty ol Oklahoma I1986).
Prior to coming to PVH. Dr. Nolan has served as chief resident of
. obsletrlcs and 8)'necology at the bllowlng fadlltles: Hlghllne J:!ospltal,
Seattle Washington (19Q5h 814th Strategic Hospital, Beale Air Force
Base, Calll'ornla (199()..19QI) and the RlvetSide Regional Medical
Center. Newport News. VIrginia (1989-1990).
. Mast recently. he worked In privati! practltt In Des Moines, Washington (1991·1996) and a

group practice In Aubum, Washington I 1996).

·

·
.
Or. Nolan'' o111ce will be located In Suite 214 of the Pleasant' Valley Hospital Medical Office
Building. For rnofe Information or to make an apJl&lt;l_lntment with the latest addition to the PVH
medical stall please all, (304) 675·3400 or (304) 675·1 PVH •.

month.

.

Store!

GRADUATES - Angela D.
WhHe, daughter of Bill and Judy
White, Middleport, · graduated
hom the University of Rio
"Grande with an associate degree
of applied business In office
tachnology on June 8. She Is
currently seeking employment
•• a medleal secretary.

15

• 91{Jw Patients Jlre Current{y tJJeing .9Lcceptea · .

mondu

Free Vaccines For
Gallia County
Health Department
446-4612 Ext. 292

mft Pleasant Valley
IlLII Hospital .
lSZD Volley Olive • 1'1*11 l'lelod. WV 15550 • !l04161S..:WO

'

'

�Sunday, July 20, 1997

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

For 75 years, publication has made better homes a reality ·
" Our editors felt that, with families
being reunited after the war's separation, they needed a casual place to
rebond, and the formal living room
wasn't it Dining spots in kitchens
also were a 'futuristic' concept."
The concept of barbecuing also
was a 1940s introduction by the magazine. "Our food editor picked up on
the idea in California and introduced
it to our readership, "lemMon says.·
"Needless to say, it caught on."
In the 1950s, families were looking for spaee, air and gtass. Could the
suburbs be far away? A building
boom and the do-it-yourself phenomenon took off. So did the "baby
boom" and Little league, which
went from 776 teams in 1950 to
5, 700 in 1960.
On the down side, there was the
Korean War and the McCarthy and
Kefauver investigations. lemMon
credited President Eisenhower's heart
attack for creating awareness ·about
healthful eating.
Because of suburban commuting,
baby-sitting became a thriving business. The trends to Early American or
Danish modem furniture al)d anything pink were alive and welL
Microwaves and hi-fi home sound,
along with solar energy, were tweak·
ing the technology age. Increased
family travel meant more exposure to
foods of different areas. Salads
became popular, as did camping.
Families now wanted fresh air and

By CAROL McGARVEY
Not~veryone had these, of course,
Tbe Dee Molnel Rllfllllter
but tHe public knew about them.
Have you ever tossed a salad, read
"While the magazine was black
a book in your family room or invit- and white, we started introducing the
ed friends over for a barbecue?
idea of color in the home." LemMon
Then you' ve been touched by Bet- said. Color pages came in the next
ter Homes and Gardens magazine, decade.
which is celebrating its 75th anniverThe stock market crash in 1929
sary of chronicling the changes that started ihe Great Depression. That
affect America's homes aod families. meant poverty and homelessness for
It is published by Meredith Corp. in · . some, but radio dramas in comfy livDes Moines.
.fflg rooms for others. A few years !atFruit, Garden and Home debuted er, the first man-made fiber...:. nylon
75 years ago this month, in I922, and - was making its mark on consumer
was changed to Better Homes and ,goods. labor unions enforced a fiveGardens two years later.
day work week, Prohibition had been
"The f~mily .is continually repealed and the Big Band era was
redefining itself in response to vari- under way, she said, and there were
ous innuences, which include pPli- products to combat bad breath, body
tics, economics, technology and fash- odor and aging skin.
ion," says Jean lemMon, 64, editor.
"In the I 930s, marriage .roles
She became the magazine's twelfth were preuy traditional, but we did
editor in 1993. "When the magazine start to see the emergence of the male
started, not everyone frequente!f cook. And frozen desserts were the
speakeasies and danced the rage, a result of betterrefrigerators,"
Charleston. There were still plenty of she says. There were stories on ourspeople, parti~ularly , in r~ral areas, ery school and practical furnishings.
whQ hved qUtctcr hvcs, dedicated to
"The 1940s were a funny decade.
creating better environments for their · It started well , then plunged into war
families."

and· sacrifices. Our stories were on

A 1926 issue ·gave tips for better
parenting and how-to's on building a
play area. In the marketplace, cham
stores al)ll supermarkets sprouted.
and national radio and syndicated
columns predicted trends. Credit
became available, as did the automobile and electric washing machine.

wartime living , coping with war
nerves and growing and preserving
food . We told families how to do
without rationed l)leat by growing
and substituting soybeans. We held
their hands."
In 1944; BH-and-G introduced a
brave new concept: the family room.

In a blender or a food processor.
puree the berries with 2 tablespoons
of the sugar.
In a medium saucepan, combine
the remaining sugar and the water,
bring to a boil, while stirring, and
cook until the syrup is clear. Remove
from the heat and let cool to room
temperature. Stir in the berry puree
and lemon juice. Cover and refngerate I to 2 hours, or ~ntil thoroughly

chilled. Stir in the cream.· .
Tran~fer to an ice cream maker
and process according to manufacturer's instructions.
Yield: I quart.
• Recipe from "Sorbets and Ice
Creams," by lou Seibert Pappas
(Chronicle Books, 1997).
NECTARINE-ALMOND SORBET
I tablespoon grated lemon zest
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 cup water
5 nectarines (aboutl -1/2 pounds),
pitted arid sliced
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
114 teaspoon almond extract .
,
·'
Mash the lemon zest with I teaspoon of the sugar to release its oiL
In a medium saucepan, combine
the remaining sugar and water; bring
to a boil while stirring, and cook until
the syrup is clear. le\ cool, cover and
refrigerate for I to 2 hours, or until
thoroughly chilled.
In a blender or food processor,
puree the nectarines and the le1f10n
- juice. Blend in the syrup and almond
extract.
·
Transfer to an ice cream maker
and process according to manufacturer's instructions. Or to freeze
. without an ice cream maker: Pour
into a 8-inch square metal pan or J/2gallon plastic container. Cover with
aluminum foil, plastic wrap or a lid,
and freeze until firm, about 2 to 3
hours. Transfer to an electric mixer or
food processor and beat until light
and nuffy. Transfer back to freezer
container, covei, and freeze until
firm, 1 to 2 hours.
Yield 1 quart.
,
• Recipe from "Sorbets and Icc
Creams," by lou Seibert Pappas
(Chronicle Books. 1997).
CR~SON

PLUM-RASPBERRY

SORBET
I cup sugar
2/3 cup water
·2 tablespoons light corn syrup
I pound frozen unsweetened raspberries. thawed
· I pound ripe plums. preferably
red-noshed, halved, pitted and sliced
Fresh raspberries and mint leaves.

for garnish (optional)
In a small, heavy saucepan over
low heat, combi ne the sugar. water
and com syrup. Stir until the sugar
dissolves. about 3 minutes. Increase
the heat to' high and bring to a boiL

Remove from heat and set aside.
In a food processor fitted with a
metal blade, or in a blender, place the
raspberries and their juices. Puree
until smooth. Strain the puree through
a coarse siev.e set over a bowl to
remove seeds. Press firmly on the
solids with a rubber spatula to extract
as much liquid as possible. Discard
solids.
Return berry puree to the processor or blender. Add the plums and
puree until smooth. Add the reserved
syrup, and process to mix welL
Transfer to a bowl and refrigerate
until cold, about I hour.
Transfer to an ice cream maker
and process according to manufacturer's . instructions. Transfer to a
container, cover and freeze until
firm, at least 4 hours or up to 3 days.
To serve: Scoop into serving ·
bowls and garnish, if desired, with
fresh raspberries and mi!lt leaves.
Yield: aboutS cups. or 8 servings.
• Recipe from "ICe Creams &amp; Sorbets;" edited by Chuck Williams,
recipes by Sarah Tenaglia (Time-J,.ife
Books, 1996).
LEMON-LIME GRAN ITA
2 cups water
I cup suga'r
113 cup fresh lemon juice
113 cup fresh lime juice
4 118-inch thick lime slices, 'for ·
garnish
In a medium-sized heavy
saucepan. ~ombine the water and
sugar. Place over medium heat and
stir until the sugar dissolves, about 3
minutes. Increase the heat to high and
bring to a boil. Remove from heat
and .allow to cooL
Stir in lemon and lime juices and
pour the mixture into metal bowl.
Freeze, whisking every 30 minutes ,
until semi-firm. about 3 hours. Cover and freeze without stirring until
frozen. solid, at least 8 hours and as
long as 24 hours.
At least I hour before serving,
place 4 margarita glasses or wine
glasses in freezer.
1
To serve, using a fork, scrape the
surface of th~ · granita to form icc
crystals. Scoop the crystals into the
frozen glasses. Cut a slit into each
lime slice and place the slice on the
rim of s,ach glass. Serve immediate"
ly.
'
Yield: about 3-1/2 cups, or 4
servings.

S~reenings

5 to 8 PM

·-.-

cence, t(c wants to know who

•

INFORMATION The Our House
In Galllpolll will otter
a seminar on "Genlng Started In Civil W1r Re:.
enacting" on Saturday, Aug. 9 from 10 a.m.·2
p.m. Topic• covered by the seminar Include
clothing, hair, resource Information and·more
for the women Interested In starting to do re-

..•=
....
~

~

,.•

:•

enacting, or just Interested In how it's done.
The seminar will be taught by members of the
Iron Hills Soldiers' Aide Society of the 91 st RegIment. Class size will be limited, and a fee also

g~:;r:ya~~g:.t1l~~~~;._~=l~~=r~useu!" at 445-

~

High tech's advancement shakes
~ the . halls of nation's public libraries
~

"

All Items Subject to Prior Purchase

Over 100
In Stock

20%·60% off

·20%·70% off

Navy Floral High Leg
Reg. $1575
SALE '599
Beige Print, Loose Pillow
Reg. $1199
SALE 5686
Beige, Burg. &amp; Navy Stripe
Reg. $171 o
SALE 5655
Green Brushed Twill
Reg:.$2025
SALE *992
Rose, Green &amp; Beige Floral
A~ . $1~30
SALE *965

Navy Floral Club Chair
Reg. $698
SALE *399
Green Wing Chair
Reg. $635
SALE 5315
Floral Chann,lll Back
Reg. $897
SALE 5448
Burg &amp; Beige Print Wing
Reg. $1475
SALE '399
Beige Fl~me Stitch Wing
Reg. $900
SALE 5499
Burg. Floral Club
Reg. $1065 SALE $499

Plus 35 More .Sofas
All in stock

20%·75% off
All Pictures,
Lamps &amp;

;- Allin Stock
Leather; Sofas,
Chairs, Recliners

50% off

Accessories

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

• FREE DELIVERY
HOURS:
MON-SAT 9:30-5
FRI. 9:3o-8

SECOND &amp; GRAPE ST.
GALUPOUS, OH • -446-0332

Wednesday, July 30
Teen Day
Spe(:ial activ~s
2 to 8 PM
Blood Pressures

Thursday, July 31
Kids Day
Specia) activities
2 to 8 PM .
Blood Pressures

Frid~y,

Aqg. 1

Cholesterol checks
l-4PM
Blood Pressures
2-8PM

1/o/;,er .lledical Ceuter - Cl'lehrating 15 years on .Jack\'0/1 Pille -

..
..

E

£

• FINE FURNITURE • CUSTOM DRAPERY
· • CARPET •INtERIOR DESIGN
• FREE PARKING

By CATHY LYNN GROSSMAN
computer terminals· among 30 of the Year·award from library Journal and Gale Research, publisher of
USA Today
·
branches all wired to the Internet.
reference
books.
:
Microsoft multibillionaire Bill
Miami-Dade has a $33 million
MatTison
and Somerville say a
t Gates announces a $200 million budget and a mission to offer a
library's
primary
purpose is to
~
high-tech booster shot for more than "refuge for the mind in a hostile, hurenlighten,
acculturate
and empower.
:- 3.000 libraries.
ried world ."
All
that
is
changing
is
how it's done .
~
Oprah Winfrey, whose TV reading · Somerville says, "We want every"Our
attitude
is:
Who
is here and
:: club has book sales hopping, requires one to have a sense of home in their
what
do
they
need'"
Morrison
says.
:: publishers to distribute 10,000 copies library. When Oprah sends peqple to
Yoriko
Allen,
who
homeschooled
.. of each selection among libraries the library, it might surprise them to
• nationwide.
her children for 13 years, needs it all .
..
find a real community center.!'
Her son, a student at Broward
::
The nation's nearly 16,000 public
Miami-Dade's promotional literaCommunity
College, uses the North
•. libraries, which have barely gotten a tur~ shows few people simply read- regional library,
while her daughter,
• whisper of attention in decades, are ing . Instead, photos highlight pro,
a
lOth-grader,
relies
on the nearby
~ · making big noise now. And some of grams , exhibits and events for a polyTamarac
branch
1n suburban
~·
the ballyhoo is the sound of dispute. glot population in which only about
Broward.
,..
Beyond the obvious challenges- 40 percent grew up speaking English.
" We use the computers in the
aging buil~ings •.starv,ed budgets fore- . The library holds citizenship
.. ing cutbacks in staff and hours, classes and awards new Americans library, and we link up from home for
: dwindling literacy, changing immi- with library cards when they take reference and research and reserving
: gration patterns- is one that could their oath. Miami-Dade pioneered books. But my children sti ll use
: determine the 21st century library: adult literacy programs. Another pro- books a great deal, and I love to
• Should precious funds go for hard- gram,JumpStart,afavoriteofformer . escape with a book."
•• covers or high tech?
Making inroads
children's librarian Somerville, has
;
Traditional book lovers, nostalgic Girculated 4,124 reading readiness · Of the 450 U.S. public libraries serv:
for quiet reading rooms, extol til&lt;; free story and craft kits in English, Span- ing 100,000 or more in 1997:
• 95.4 percent have on-line public
~
and easy pleasure of a book in hand. ish and Creole to half a ·mi llion
access catalogs ; 80.2 percent can be
::; Who cah read Oprah's 740-pagc preschoolers.
t summer selection , "Songs in Ordi"Our need for books is tremen- accessed from outside the library.
· • 49.6 percent offer commercial
: nary Time" by Mary McGarry Mor- dous. People are reading as never
" ris, on a screen?
before. Kids need to be both literate databases.
• 75.3 percent have Internet access
:
The wiled camp insists that and logged on," Somerville says.
directly
by patrons.
~
libraries become bustling computerIt's a struggle. Dade County pro•
70.2
percent provide local infor:· ized community centers, the new vi des only the operating budget,
mation
databases
such as local news.
: town hall of the informed. Wbere else nothing for materials.
papers
and
government
information.
• can the electronic have-nots researc'h
All that now comes from a Book
•• the past and direct the future?
•
70
percent
provide
computer
terTrust, a two-year tax approved by
minals
for
patrons
to
usc
in
the
;
"Every day we have some people voters in 1988. It was invested with
library.
E who come in and get upset," says the idea that it would support book
• 61 A percent provide some soft• j)ebbie Busch, director of tiny River- purchases for a decade. Somerville i.s
ware
for use at the library; 24.7 per: •ide Public library west of Chicago. trying to stretch it to the year 2000,
cent
offer
software to be used outside
:
"Some are upset because we don't but she must invest her hopes in the
the
library.
• have the old card catalog. It was com- voters. Next year she'll ask them to
• 96 percent have CO-ROMs for
: puterized ,last year, and the cards were tax themse lves again to renew the
usc
in thG library ; 38.9 percent offer
•• taken away. The others are upset trust.
; because we don'thave all the newest
Even if taxpayers or Gates pay to usc outside the library.
Source: Public Library Assocomputer products." Most libraries install computer systems, wiring and
ciation,
1997
• . can't have too much of either- or software, libraries still face mounting
: afford too mucli of both.
upkeep and update costs.
The sleek new San Francisco
Somerville will seck discounted
•• • main library has been slammed for rates, newly mandated by the Feder: . dumping old books and favoring al Communications Commission, that
: , 1:omputer programs over page-tum- can cut 20 percent to 90 percent off
a library's utility bill, depending on
: : o:rs.
: :
The ,San Francisco Chronicle calls how many disadvantaged people it
GALLIPOLIS - An organiza: : it a prime example of a library serves.
tional
gathering of local talent has
: : ''moving dangerously away from its ..
Due north, in downtown Fort
been
scheduled
for Thursday, Aug. 21
- inission to preserve the past, connect lauderdale, Broward. County
at
1
p.m.
at
the
Our House Museum.
; .: 1:ultures and generations and promote Libraries director Samuel F. Morrison
Anyone
interested
in performing
: ' 'I proper reverence for books."
negotiates public/private co-ops and
in
a
community
setting
and cncour- ,
For proof, the editorial quotes an sponsorships to fill Broward's 33
aging
downtown
activity
is encour~ ,,merican library Association (AlA)
libraries with technology and supaged
to
attend.
• l,tatcmcnt ' to · Congress sayi ng the plement his budget.
This group's focus will be on
., A new small business resoUrce
••• ''priniary misiion Of libraries. in this
lilcctronic age, is to provide the center is funded by a $500,000 cor- regional and historical re-enactments;
'' ,,mcrican
public with access to the poratc sponsorship from Nations- performances and events. For more
lull panoply ~·electronic information Bank. Another SI00.000 donation information, co~tact Barbara Kemper
'' resources."
from HIP Health Plan of Florida, a at the Our House at 446-0586 .
While CX(!CrtS spar, the public health maintenance organization,
)'Otes with its feet. The San Francis- supports an on-line Health Reference
• 10 main library is stagge ringly pop- Center in all the branches. Vendors let ·
Film banned.:
tllar. Visits ju10ped to 2.1 million a the Broward libraries test the latest . In 1973, a New York &lt;;ity judge
: - i·car, comparcJ&lt;l with 1. 1 million in software for free.
ruled the pomograhic film "Deep
:· the 12-month period before the new
Morrison keeps a tight lid. how- Throat" obscene and banned it. The
r branch ppened in Aprt·1 1996 . ever. on the degrec of se If·promouon
·
film went on to make $30 million.
: r~ain
: 1he volume CJ1'materials checked out donors receive. At best it's a name on
OSHA created
: ~,as doubled , ~nd registration of new the door or a logo on the first screen
In 1970, the Occupational Safety
• qard holders has tripled, library to pop 'up when users sign on.
and Health Administration (OSHA)
: spokeswomar1 Marcia Schneider
The North and South regional Was established by Congress to pro: s~ys.
branches are public/college libraries, mote a safe and healthful working
:
Proof, ALA leaders say, that partners with Broward Community environment.
~ lj braries can Sljride both paths.
College. The main library serves -----------~:
Library usa1 is "way, way up. We Florida Atlantic University.
: ~(ill have mo,ie (U.S.) outlets than
In the Fort Lauderdale main
UP
: ~!cDonald's. We are the people 's uni- library, the sparkling computer lab
TO
: versity," san Mary Somerville, classrooms are partly funded by the .
: i!mrtediate pasj president of the ALA. public schools and used to train
'
I Somerville is director of the Mia- teachers as well as the public.
w:~~=~·~=.:...
~ ~~i~Dade Publj1c lib~. the nation's
"Why tax the public twice?"
IIONfYSACKOIMI!Atm'E
C ~inth largest library, a system with Morrison asks.
·
fcsa.RUooT.,..H PcouH-llliU
-UMITc'1y
t:' ~X&gt;ts a ceniury old.
His creative programming helped
:: · Today it serves 816,000 card hold- earn Broward, the nation 's II th • Gatllpolla, PH
ue
e.fS with 3.5 million volumes and 900 largest system, the 1996-97 Library
-

""•

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...

Organizational
meeting for local
talent set Aug. 21

•

p LOSE
- - - J - - -.

I .IN 3 DAYS
0 LIS. 1·

1
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H20.

Beat of the ·send ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Everything you've always wanted
,to see in the way of model trains
should he at your disposal soon at the
Meigs County Public library, 216 W
Main St., Pomeroy.
The sixth annual model train show
will be held at the library from· July
28 through Aug . 3. Not only will
there be six sizes of trains operating,
but there will be 10 sizes of the model trains on displ~y. In addition, tbe
show will include railroad memorabilia and videos of the local area.
There is parking these days on both
sides of Main Street, at the library
and the bUilding is wheelchair accessible. An added plus these days, of
course, is that the library is air con- ·
ditioned.
Hours for the show will he 9 a.m.
to 9 p.m., Monday through Friday,
July 28 through Aug. 1, and 9 a.m . to
5 p.m., on Saturday, Aug. 2, and I to
5 p.m: on Sunday, Aug . 3.
'
There will be an interesting photo of the old Hobson yards on display,
with many employees in the picture .
By tbe way. if you have any photos
dealing with railroading that you
would like to have on display at the
show or if you 'have any questions in
regard to the event, just call 9927541

snatched the book before he could .
Block's book is among the latest
selection of hardcover novels of
mystery and suspense that includes
works by Patricia Cornwell, Margaret
Truman, Elizabeth Peters, Edna
Buchanan and Phyllis A. Whitney.
Cornwell, who abandoned Dr.
Kay Scarpeua in her 'previous novel,
brings her back for "Unnatural Exposure" (Putnam). No. 8 in the series
has Virginia's chief medical examiner inspecting a corpse whose extremities were expertly removed and who
was infected with a rare virus. It
looks like the work of a serial killer ·
who last struck eight years ago and it looks like Scarpetta might have
the virus.
"M urder in the House" (Random
House) is Truman's 14th "Capitol
Crimes" caper. Paul Latham, respect·
ed congressman and secretary of
· state ~ominee, is found shot dead .
But it might not be the suicide it
appears to be - especially after
latham's appointments secretary
vanishes.
Amanda Peabody, turn-of-thecentury Egyptologist, unearths more

.

••.
•
••

(Now in our new location between the arena &amp; beef barn on the old Midway)

Pressure

"'

•

Holzer Medical Center
invites
.
everyone to visit the Mobile Unit
Bl~

.'

.••

--

Tuesday, July 29
Seniors Day
Cholesterol checks
2-4 &amp; 6-8 PM
Blood Pressures

By RON BERTHEL
Associated Pre1s Writer
A whodunit with an English-style
inn, snowbound guests and a corpse
in the library isn't necessarily written·
by Agatha Christie.
·
lawrence Block uses such a set·
ling for "The Burglar in the library "
(Dutton), eighth in the series featuring Bernie Rhodenbarr. New York
bookseller and burglar.
In this caper, Bernie goes to a New
England inn for some Rand R-and
R, as in "robbery.'' Stealing through
the library in search of a rare book,
· he . st~mbles , upon the corpse. And
while he's trying to prove his inno-

"'•·'•

It's time for the Gallia County Junior .Fair!

Mon~ay,_luly_ 28 .

puzzlers

•

a

Icy treats for hot summer days
By MARIALISA CALTA
If you have kids (and even if you
don't) you've probably had your
Tupperware popsicle-making set in
use for some time now: There's
nothing like an icy cold treatto hit the
spot on a hot summer day. And it
doesn't take much to move up from
a popsicle to a sorbet, granita, gelato or oth~r frozen confection attractive to kids, and worthy of the
most elaborate grown-up summer,
time feast.
In the summer, I like to make ices
of all kinds:· unlike ice cream, ices
don't call for egg yolks and most
recipes don't even call for milk or
cream. Ices (or sorbets, or whatever
you wantto call 'em) are lighter.than
ice creams, and in the summer !like
to make them with seasonal fruits.
Two new cookbooks have kept me
supplied with terrific recipes for
light, frozen confections: ''Ice
Creams &amp; Sorbets" from the
Williams-Sonoma Kitchen Library
series (for info on the series, call SOD621-7026), and "Sorbets and Ice
Creams," by lou Seibert Pappas. a
food writer whose cookbooks have
always proved both inspiring and
reliable .
In addition, I've worked on my
own tricks for simple frozen desserts:
Try freezing watermelon slices (separate slices with waxed paper). Or
free.e plam apple c1der or pmeapplc
JUICe '" an ICC cream machme for a
simple, refreshtng, not-too-sweet
gran ita .. Puree frozen bananas in a
food processor (the res~lt is some,
thing like a frozen banana mousse).
And don't forget store-bought popSI·
cles: I once served fudge-cicles on
fancy plates at the end of a dinner
party, and I had a lot of happy grownups at the table.
STRAWBERRY GELATO
4 cups fresh strawberries, rinsed
and hulled
213 cup sugar
213 cup water
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
213 cup.heavy cream

Mystery
authors
offer new

-space away from the 'burbs.
Cal&lt;?fie-cuttmg and mtcrowave cookAnd the next 7S years? "Our
"By the I960s, assassinations, ing were timely topics.
. aging population will increase in
the Vietnam War and flower children
The nation's bicentennial caused a numbers as baby boomers get older.
were matters to reckon with," Lem- resurgence in interest in country dec- Our natural resources will continue to ·
Mon says. Retirement communities orating, crafts and cooking.
diminish, and guns and drugs will be
appeared, and single living was a
In the 1980s, the country was issues facing families."
.stronger factor. Homes reflected a wired for cable TV and personal
LemMon says: "This magazine is
strong awakening to color, the new computers. There were features on a unique editorial hybrid. It's a
concept of plastics and more small move-up houses, home gyms and women's service magazine, but doesappliances. Cook-your-own-food "his and her " cooking stations in n't cover beauty and fashion. It's a
entertaining, mostly with fondue larger kitchens. There was more shelter magazine, covering housing
pots, was hot.
interest in international foods and issues, but has a family and ,parentFamily life was changing, too.
garden-fresh produce . There were ing.emphasis."
Early 1960s covers touted stories hints on caring for elderly parents atKI
She said BH-and-G likely couldon "How To Please Your Husband" dealing with the aches and pains of n't have such success if started today.
or " What Men Are Having for growing older.
As for her own marks on the mag.
.
Lunch ." A later cover showed a fea"In the '90s, ,our focus is on eat- azine, ·LemMon says: "Partly
ture on 'The New Baby Comes ing right, being better parents, taking because I'm female and partly
Home,' and Dad's just as involved as care of our health and our environ- because I come from a design backMom," says LemMon with a smile. ment, saving money and showing our · ground, we have given the magazine
By the 1970s, the magazine had individual style," says LemMon. a softer look. We have the power to
stories on high college costs, energy "While we've seen many changes, influence with visual senses. We
conservation, underground housing we also renect that some things are have changed the typeface and aired
and car pooling. With more women constant. Magazines are history the pages out. It's a calmer looking
working outlide the home, food bOoks of family culture, mitToring the magazine.''
feature included "Meals in a Hurry." times in which we live."

to church these days and get around
as . much as she would like, she
would really enjoy your phone calls
just to say "hello."
· It must not only have been a surprise for Dick Roush, former Middleport resident living in the Des
Moines, Iowa, area these days, hilt
also again a realization that it is a
small world when he picked up his
dail.Y newspaper the other day and
read about southeastern Ohio.
Chuck Offenburger of Des Moines
had been here on the Great Ohio .
Bicycle Ride recently and wrote a
column on his experience which. by
the way. he found to )le quite pleasant.

Offenburger lirst visited southeastern Ohio two years ago when he

was on a I00-day bicycle ride acro!s
America with some 300 other
nclists. The large group had pedaled
from Kentucky into southeastern

Ohio.

sci Offcnburgcr, and some of hJS
rclmivcs and friends. came in from
Des Moines this year for the Great
Ohio Bicycle Ride. which started and
ended in Lancaster and of Course. the
large crowd of nders did have a lunch
break in Rutland when they were
traveling through Meigs County. .
Offen burger and his group had a
wonderful time and loved the communities and pcoplc they encountered
' during their ride. In his column. the
writer mentions several people he
. met and some highlights in communities Lhat the bikers visited. One contact even sang "Beautiful Ohio" for
the group.
Yep, it is, indeed, a small world.

Ruby Frick of Pomeroy had a
great 86th birthday anniversary on
July II, thanks to friends and relatives.
·
Ruby was surprised with fruit
basket from tire Willing Workers
Sunday School Class of the Enterprise United Methodist Church and
received cards, gifts. and phone calls
from her children and their families.
The group includes Bill and linda
I love the quips of Martha ChamPullins, Carl and Paula Hall, local:
bers.
Martha, who like the rest of us
.Charles and Jerry Ball of Jacksonville, Fla., and Ed and Sue.Frick .is getting a little older, remarked the
of Hillman, Mich. Ruby also heard other day:
"''m old enough to know all the
from the many grandchildren and
great-grandchildren as she celebrated answers, but no one ever asks me the
questions."
'
the day.
Ruby really appreciates all the · Do· keep smi ling.
than ancient artifacts in her ninth gestures, and since she. is unable to go
mystery, "Seeing a large · Cat"
(Warner). When Peters' heroine digs
in the Valley of the Kings, she discovers the body of a woman who disappeared years ago - a victim of
foul play.
Newspaper reponcr Britt Montero
cd father and a philandering drunk;
has a fifth outing in Buchanan's By BENITA GREEN
Assoclatad
Press
Writer
.
that Jackie's mother, Janet lee Sou"Margin of Error' \ . (Hyperion).
There .is always room for another vier Auchincloss,wa.&lt; a chilly, socialThere's another shooting'isiamibut it's a feature film, and Brt 's giv- biography about Jacqueline Bouvier climbing stage mother-type who
ing its star advice on playi g, a Kennedy Onassis, the graced and pushed her into all the best circles:
reporter. What isn 't io the script is the spirited legend of conte~orary and that Jackie's sister lee was a
Amertca.
, .
devoted, sympathetic car who faded
woman who is stalking them.
If
it
doesn't
come
wit
·
the
at the edge of her older sister's spotWhen Nicholas Trench's beloved
promise
of
previously
unpublished
light.
granddaughter and heir to his fortune
photos,
there's
always
the
chance
that
Davis describes the awe Jackie
disappears from his home on North
it
might
oJTcr
some
insight
into
the
must
have felt after reading Grampy
Carolina's Topsail Island, the ailing
mysterious
beauty
ofthe
former
first
Jack's
self-published Bouvier family
Trench seeks help from her childhood
lady
and
heroine
of
a
national
history,
"Our Forebears," which told
friend, in Whitney 's "Amethyst
tragedy.
of
a
knighthood
granted to one genDreams" (Crown) .
"Jacquclinc
Bouvier:
An
Intimate
tlcman
Bouvier
by
louis XIV, and of
Those sleuthing seniors. Angela
Mcinoir"
·(Wilcy.
$6.99,
paperbackf
many
other
French
honors bestowed
Benbow and Caledonia Wingate,
is
written
by
her
cousin,
John
H.
upon
the
family.
take on an eighth case in "Murderer
But Davis counters that vision
Ole'" (Donald I. Fine) by Corinne Davis, who uses carefully worded ,
polite
prose
to
display
more
than
a
with
his own research:
\
Holt Sawyer. Their trip to Tijuana,
few
skeletons
in
their
shared
family
"I
discovered
that
both
the
BouMexico , with their retirement com. viers and' the Vcrnous came from
munity is marred by the suspicious closct.
The
tenor
of
Davis'
exploration
humble pctite-bourgcnisic stock, that
deaths of two members.
into
what
shapcd
Jackie
into
the
great
the
founder of the family, Michael
Five women who have dated the
woman
she
became
is
tinged
by
a
sta·
Bouvier,
hailed from a family of carwealthy and socially prominent Di•
tic
reminiscent
of
sibling
rivalry.
It
is
pentcrs
and
cabinetmakers, and that
Trevellian have vanished. When
difficult
to
scan
even
the
book's
chaphis
wife
louise's
father, John Vcmou,
Dane Coleman's sister becomes No.
tcr
titles
without
sensing
a
quiet,
sarhad
been
listed
in
the ' Philadelphia
6, he devises a plan to catchTrevcidonie
seething.
Directory'
as
a
'hairdresser'
and tal!Jan. in "Soon She Will Be Gone"
Davis' honk ends at Jackie 's cr as a 't obm.:comsl.
· ·: ... Th esc d'1s~
(Forge) by John Farris.
Private eye Sharon -McCone's enchanted wedding to John F. covcrics d1d not endear me to conKennedy .in 1953 - pcrhaps to con- temporary Bouvicrs.
18th adventure is "Both Ends of the
elude on a high note, after flaving · "The point of all th iS is that the
Night" (Mysterious) by Marcia
played so many low ones.
'Jacl' of one's ancestry can make no
Muller. s·haron's friend Matty, a
The
reader
is
told
that.the
dashing
difference
in nne's self-image if one
pilot, asks for help in finding her
"Black
Jack"
Bouvier
was
a
devol'believes'
since
the age nf ten that one
boyfriend, but before Sharon can
is a horn aristocrat.''
begin, Many is killed in a suspiciou s
plane crash. Other choices:
• "Deception on His Mind" (Bantam) by Elizabeth George. An English coastal town is aroused when an
Asian resident is found murdered on
the beach.
• "Hillf Past Nun" (St. Martin's )
by Monica Quill. A serial killer is at
large in this ninth case for Sister
Mary Teresa, .written hy "Father
Dowling" author Ralph Mclncrnv.

a

Relative's biography offers
insight into Jackie's mystique

SILl

Drapes By
Design
46 State Street
Gallipolis, OH
614-446-4199
All Custom Window
Treatments

. .,, 80'/, off
Large selection of 'Mini,
· Vertical, Wood, Cell
and Pleated Shades
July 15 to July 31

r

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f
)

f

�f&gt;lleC8·.t

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. . . .,

Entertainment

II I

Farm/Business

July 20, 1187

'Rough Riders,' charge up San Juan Hill
•

By DENNIS ANDERSON
ism IIIII also "turned the page of history," Milius
AIICI cr.lwd " ' - WriiM'
observed.
WS ~OELES (AP)- Wbo is the only 20tb cenRoosevelt's troopets left the battlefield celebrities
tury prestdent to be ~pte&lt;! on Mount R~?
IIIII heroes. Within three years, be was our 26th presiWbo became the nation's youngest p(eSideot?
dent, yet never forgot his band of brothers.
. Who propelled the United States into world-power
Of the Rough Riders' cowboy contingent, Roosevelt
status when he led a band of volunteers up a Cuban hill wrote: "They were a splendid set of men ... with weathlo victory in 1898?
er-beaten faces and eyes that looked a man in the face
Bully for you if your answer is lltcodore Roosevelt, without flinching."
whose regim~nt of cowboy and Ivy League warriors
Of his Ivy League brethren, Roosevdt said they
fonn tbe bastS of "Rough Riders," a four-bour TNT joined his banner to get "their best chance for seeing
miniseries starring Tom Berenger as Roosevelt.
bani IIIII dangeroUs service."
·
The nat.ion's first real leader of the 20tb century
Bercoger, a leading man with meaty roles in films
called the bloody triumph atop San Juan Hill "the great like."Piatoon"lllll "The Substitute,'' is difficult to
day of my life." It's also great material for an epic wu ognize disguised by Roosevelt's distinctive pince-nez
movie! and "Rough Riders" unfolds like classics of that glasses.
genre, such as "The Great Es!:ape" or "Patton."
· "Watching Tom, you can really see the impact the
The miniseries was co-written and directed by John battle had on Roosevelt," Milius said. "You can see the
Milius, who profiled Roosevelt as president in his epic man changed into someone who is ready to he a great
movie "The Wind and .the Lion." RatedlV-14, "Rough president."
Riders" will be shown in two puts at 8 p.m. EDT SunMilius sweats the historical details, right down to the
day and Monday.
Krag-Jorgensen carbines with smokeless powder ammuThe real Rough Riders never rode ujl San Juan Hill in nition issued to the Rough Riders. ·
a .glorious cavalry charge. They fought their way to the
"All the things I've leuned through the years, I used
htgh ground on foot under heavy fire from Spanish the best generalship and best guerrilla tactics,'' Milius
artillery.
·
·
said, smoking a large cigar that looked suspiciously like
Col. "Teddy" Roosevelt, however, began the ascent a hand-rolled Havana.
on horseback - until he had to dismount and shoot a
Oetting historical details right is part of his mission,
Spanish regular with a Colt pistol retrieved· from the said Milius, who disdains tnday's action blockbusters
Maine dreadnought whose sinking triggered the wu.
· with their explosions and high body counts.
Reality became legend in that tiKlment.
Fonner Marine Dale Dye, who trained Berenger in
The significance of "Roosevelt's "splendid little military arts for his Academy Award-nominated role in of "Gany·Owen."
As producer, Berenger assembled a cast of splendid
war" outlasted its brief duration and the patriotic war "Platoon," ran a cavalry boot camp for the "Rough Ridsupporting actors, including Sam Elliott, Gary Busey,
fever fanned by Williun Randolph Hearst's " yellow ers" cast in Thxas.
press."
.
,
Soldierly skills taught by Dye - who appears in the Christopher Noth of "Law and Order," Geoffrey Lewis,
"The Spanish-American War lasted only three film as Roosevelt's 'commanding officer - included Brad Joltnson and George Hunilton.
A melancholy Brian Keith makes a final appearance
months, and it had the least amount of casualties, but it guan1 duty, marching and singing, Bercnger said. "In .
as
President
William McKinley. ·
changed America," said Bercnger, who also serves as those days, men who went to war knew how tci sing," he
Twenty
years
ago, Keith played a vigorous Teddy'
producer of the miniseries. "Oddly, it was our most pop- said:
· .
Roosevelt
op~ite
Sean Connery's romantic brigand in
ular war."
So histo,Y' buffs who know their cavalry airs .- or
"The
Wind
and
The
Lion."
·
The conflict turned the United States from isolation- . their John Ford movies - will enjoy hearing the strains

...... .

bull,_-.

·

Movie special . effects have
become so sOphisticated that they
barely rank as an attraction for
movie-goers anymore. · .
Sure, crowds · flocked to "Lost
World" - but because they ·hoped
Steven Spielberg could somehow scare
them as much as he did in "Jurassic
Park," not to see the latesl advances in
romputer-generated imagery.
Yes, they're rushing to "Men in
Black" but because it's funny and
exciting, not because of the explosions and morphs.
Just because you have the technology, however, doesn 'I mean you
know how to make the movie, as
"George of the Jungle" shows.
Uke "The Flintsloncs," "George
of the Jungle" uses oompuler effects to
reinterpret a 1V cartoon as a liveaction film, while retaining .tbc realitybending capability of animation. Uke
"The Flintslones," "George of the
Jungle" works so bard at making reality into ti cutoon thai it forgets to
make the cartoon into 11,11 actual movie.
Based on the short-lived 1V cutoon series by Jay Ward (creator of
"Rocky IIIII Bullwinkle"). "George"
was a Tarzan spoof in which George,
king of the jungle, was also incredibly
clumsy and noi particulu1y bright.
The brains of .tbc outfit was a talking
·gorilla named Ape, who inevitably
gol George out of scrapes.

For this live-action version, writers Dana Olsen ("Encino Man")
and Audrey Wells ("The Truth
About Calli and Dogs") make
George (Brendan Fraser) sman but
naive, a jungle savant who still
relates to life the way a gorilla
would. But their idea of humor is to
rely on jokes about gorilla flatulence
IIIII elephant dung (into which a villain makes a kid-pleasing, face-first
pratfall), while missing the potential
of the material itself.
A take~ff on Taaan, "George" :
focuses on a youngster Ieist in a jungle plane crash who is raised by the
, animals of the jungle and becomes
their king. Despite his dazzlingly
defined pees, however, George has a
tendency lo smash into trees while
swinging on vines and, occasionally,
to fall out of his treebouse.
He rescues heiress Ursula Stanhope (Lc:slic Mann).·who is on safari
studying the great apes, from ti lion
thai has •ttriM her and her cowardly
but rich fiancee l.¥le ~ Haden
Onm:h). George takes her back to his

lrcchousc, where he IIIII Ursula get to
know each other, while Lyle and his
safari assistllnts search for her.
George eventually goes back to
San Francisco with Ursula, where he
runs afoul of ber dragon of a mother'
(Holland Taylor). Even as he tries to
decide the right thing to do, he gets
an urgent message: Ape, his .trusty
companion back in Africa, has been
kidnapped by hunters, who figure to
make a fortune in Vegas with the
talking primate.
. Unsurprisingly, the funniest character here is Ape, voiced by John
Cleese. As written, he's the simian
equivalent of the John Oielgud character in "Arthur." Unfortunately,
Ape gets distinctly less screentime
than he deserves.
Which leaves way too much of it
for ·Fraser, 'Mann and Church to try
to interpret Olsen and Wells' idea of
what's realiy funny. For good measure,
there are (Greg
a couple
of buffoonish henchmen
Cruttwell
and

'.

I

Bercnger and Milius shared a historical enthusiasm
for Roosevelt, who was an environmental crusader,
political reformer, Harvard scholar, big-game hunter and ·
cowboy. Roosevelt brought boxing and judo to the Executive Mansion - which he re-named the White House.
"He was volcanic," Milius said.
"Playing Roosevelt was exhausting," Berenger said.
"Having to be like that every day was fun, but it was
draining.''

446·6939oi
446·1370

VIDEO
TUISFERS

' .

mRY TUESDAY IIGH1
4 P.11.·9 PJL OILY

·

zles, 80-100 psi and carefu lly following the label3 .) Destroy any left
plants, and sanitize grccnhous-

tucky, Tennessee, North Carolina,

Virginia, Pennsylvania, Georgia,

the plant's immune system making it
more susceptible to disease. '6.)

Texas. and now Ohio. Currently

Acrobat may he tank mixed only

threat to the area. Producers Should

with Orthenc and cndosulfan. 7.) Do

the ·correct equipment and foll owing
label directions is necessary to
coverage will reduct; the risk of

A~.:rubat and Ridomil.
Acrobat rc-;istac~ strain

not tank mix:
because an

these

arc nvt presenting a

new sweet corn varieties available in

. 'JWo promising tomato varieties
are Asgrow's varieties: Sunstartr &amp;

the farm markets and grocery stores
are com,ing real close . Ask for some

!Sun Gem. I have been picking both
varieties for two weeks. They are
early maturing ~ 6-9 ounce large fruit.
The other varieties in the trials are
Red Rider, Majesty, Springfield,
Sunbright, numbered Ferry Morse
variety. Mountain Fresh and the cur-

o(the new varieties like: bicolors Temptation, Sweet Rhythm, Sweet
Symphony; white Argent , Sweet Icc,
Sweet Magic; and yellows. lncredible, Gold Nugget.
•
If you are growing some of your
own sweet corn. kept an eye pealed

rent local standard , Sunbeam. More

for European Corn Borer larvae and

details wilt be fonhcoming after the
harvest season.
.
All fruit are judged according to ·
United States Depanment of Agriculture tomato standards. 1'\tere are
four size classifications based on
fruit diameter. The four size classifi ~
cations are: small (2 4/32" - 2
9/32"), medium (2 8/32"2 17/32"),
large (2 1(¥32"· 2 25/32") and extra
large (2 24/32" or larger) with only
one size allowed to be packed per
container. If you are interested in the
final trial repon in September,
please give the Extension office a
call at 614-992-6696.

Com Earworm hirvae . Both insects
can~1er forming . ears Qf corn and
cause damage to 'ifle ' corn kernels.
Control through chemical sprays is
determined by ·a combination of air
temperature and locally trapped
infestation rates . As air temperatures
increase over 80 degrees the silks of
the sweet corn. ear~ grow more
rapidly than at lower temperatures.
The spray interval to keep the silks
properly protected from initial insect
hatching ·from eggs decreases to
once every 3-5 days. For more irtformation, call the Extension office and
ask for Fact Sheet #VC-2, USweet

harvested tomatoes: Tomatoes
should be kept at 60 to 70 degree
temperatures and kept out .gf direct
sunlight. Cold refrigeration causes
the cell walls of the tomato to break
down and allow entry of bacteria
and fungus rots.
Sweet corn aficionados should be
enjoying the effons of several years
of plant breeders' research. Growers
now have the Choice to grow sugar-

enhanced (SE) corn; super sweet
(SH2) com, normal (SU) sweet corn
and many cross hybrids. These

Corn Integrated Pest Management in

Ohio" .
Rcmetnber to mark your calenders if
you arc interested in attending any

of the following events:
• Ohio State Fair- Aug. 1- 17,
Columbus, Ohio.
• Meigs County Fair - Aug.ll16, Rock Springs, Ohio.

*

Farm Science Review - Sept.

16- 18, London. Ohio.
Harold H. Kneen is the Meigs
County Agricultural Agent, The
Ohio Stat• University Extension.

Local doctor retains
membership in AAFP

....

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Douglas D
Hunter MD of Racine. has completed continuing medical education
requirements to retain active mem-

bership in the American Academy of
Family Physicians (AAFP), the
national association of family doc-.
tors.

AAFP members are required to
complete a minimum of 150 hours of
accredited continuing medical study
every three years, The AAFP. which
has ·more than 75,000 members, is
one of the largest medical spec ialty
organization in the country. It was the .
first national medical group to require
. members to keep 'up with medical

advancements through regular continuing medical educa tion .

Dr. Hunter has been an Active
AAFPmembersince 1987.Asa fam·
ily ppysician, Dr. Hunter is qualified
to work in all major areas of health
care and trained to treat patient' of all
ages for the vast maJority of health
problems. '
The AAFP, which is headquar·
tered in Kansas City, Mo., provides
education , legal, insurance and lobhying services to its members and

publishes American Family Physi cwn, a 150,000-circulation cli nical

journal.

Holzer's Dr. Yodlowski named
to Ohio Public Health Council
I

GALLIPOLIS -· Holzer Clinic
physician, Dr. Lawrence Yodlowski ,
was

recently

appointed as a
member of the
Public Health
Council by Ohio
Gov. George V.
Voinovich. The
term

will

run

from July. 1997
through June.
2004.
. .
The public health cou nci l is a
health care advisory hoard to the
governor

th~t s tri ~es

to make Ohio a

better place to live and raise a fam ily. Gov. Voinovich has indicated his

control

research does not sup'port breaking
out ;he top and allowing the top
sucker to become dominant.

CATTLE PRODUCERS: The
Gal lia County Cattleman's Associa;
tion announces their annual banquet
and membership drive, scheduled
for Thursday, August 21, at 6 p.m. at
the Bob Evans Shelter House in Rio
Grande. Enjoy a steak. dinner and
entrainment by Dean Armstrong and
Paul Brown. Watch the mail for

Because Gallia coUnty producers
..ycrc willing to alter their pract i C~s.

spore tran sport.

TOBACCO
PRODUCERS :
Early bl oomi ng is becoming a problem in the '-!rca. The

reprodu~:tivc

Jennirer Byrnes is Gallia County's extension agent in agricullure
and natural resoun:es.

·

OSU facility

is honored
COLUMBUS - In a survey or
nearly 2,000 public and private hos- ·
pitals, The Ohio State University
Medical Center is recognized as one
of "Ameri&lt;a's Best Hospitals" in the
July 28 issue of U.S. News &amp; World
Report. This is the fifth conset:utive
year the Medical Center has been on
the magazine's list of best hospitals.
The magazine specifically mentions
the · Medical ' Center's
endocrinology. gynecology, otolaryngology, pulmonology and rehabilitation programs as being among
the best in the nation .
, R. Reed Fraley, executive director
of The Ohio State University Hospi-

sweet corn . Howe-Ver, some of these

That's not too much to ask for, is it?

of s u~ker

be most concerned with blue mold more information, or call the Exten·
spread in Gallia county due to local sion office for a reservation.

of blue mold may develop.

developing a strain of blue mold that
is resistant to Acrobat.

st&lt;.~ tc s

combination

chemicals is recommended. The

'picked until the time it is cooked for

Homeowners, do not refrigerate

•

order to have control. Spraying wi.th
obtain results. furthermore complete

tier maturing tomato that tasle good.

You are invited to join us on Thursday July 24, 1997,
5:00PM to 8:00PM, at Point Pleasant High School,
Point Pleasant, WV, for an open registration evening.

Directory • Fax SA1'1&gt;~i.-.•'
We offer 10% Discount to Senior Citizens
· . Rlclne, OH St. Rt 124
Ha.torlc.l Look
Csll Ken Rausch Mgr.
949-2526

blue mold , furthermore it destroys

two components, one that is Sy.s~
tcmic, and one that i~ not: wbal:&lt;.:o
lea\'CS must be covered entirely in

evidence of disease , using drop nozove~

Bl each is not an effective control for

ing correctly. Because Acrobat has

hormones of these plants were confused early in the season by several
days of cool , cloudy weather. Unfortunately, there is nothing we can do
for these plants, except try and maximize the leaf potential that is thera.
Top to a small leaf that is approximately six inches in length and a

varieties of tomatoes. Local growers optimal sugar retention. It iS- hard to
are looking for a high yielding, ear- . beat backyard grown , fresh picked

Family Niglac Is
Back••• Only Becter!

./ Bachelor and Graduate Degree Opportunities
./ Admission and Registratio11 Information
./ Financial Aid Information
./ Academic Advising
-/ Refreshments by Subway of Pt. Pleasant ·
./ CaD 304-675-2627 or 1-800-906-4723 for more
information

.

To combat the probleni: 1.) Scout
your fields everyday if possible.
and taking into consideration other beginning in the ·greenest. fastest
management practie'es, it is speculat- grow ing areas of the field and tf
ed that infection occurred around the needed, seek help in identifying the•
middle o.f June by airborne spores disease, 2.) Protect your plants with
from Tennessee or Kentucky. Other· Acrobat MZ BEFORE you see any
Using previous blue mold forecasts,
the age of the lesions on the plants,

recording field trials of some. newer

ONI

. Come and See Our New Look
. Great Fishing!
Super Group Rates!

efforts must be focused on the local
spores.

The following facts are prompted work together and obtain plants
by the most commonly asked ques- locally. we arc facing thi s issue
tions: I). The possibility of carrying much later in the season, than in
blue mold spores from one farm to recent years .
another on your shoeS or cle~thes is
Beca use of the mold's late arrival,
remote. because spores are killed producers who begin spray control
almost instantly by ultra-violet light now arc likely to be topping before
2.) Blue mold spores are airborne. blue mold presents a severe prob·
but on ly survive transpon on cloudy !em. Tobacco set within the last coudays. 3.) Cool, cloudy, damp, and ple of weeks, will have a greater
foggy days arc prime conditions for · struggle with the disease. Continue
blue mold development and spread, working together for the protection
but producers should not rely entire:. of the crop . For more inronnation,
ly on hot, dry weather to fight the call 614·446-7007.
disease. 4.) Acrobat has excellent
AG NEWS
A key component in. controllmg
rain resistance, and docs not wash
BLUE
MOLD
FORECAST: The
this problem is recognizing the off after drying on the plant. 5.)
sources
of
hluc
mold
include: Ken·
imponance of spraying, and spray-

es, 4.) If possible, apply V2 pint of
Ridomil Gold to row middles at the
time of the last cultivation to kill any
Ridomil sensitive blue mold, 5.) Top
as early as possible and use good
sucker control. but do not cut fi elds
early to avoid losses. 6.) If blue
mold is confirmed m your field,
begin aggressive Acrobat treatments, every 5-7 days, and consider
destroying infected pl~nts if caught
early enough 7.) REPORT any sus·
pee ted cases of blue mold the OS U
Ex tension office at 446-7007.

BY' HAL KNEEN
·sweet corn hybrids have improved
POMEROY - Locally grown the quality of sweet corn that is
tomatoes are finally reaching the being muted through the delivery
local markets. Isn't it great to taste system from the farm to the family
an Ohio River Valley field grown dinner table. Sweet com docs need
tomato. there is nothing like it. Ohio to be kept at cold temperatures
State University Extension is (3234 degrees ) from the time it is

They cut each other's tangents short. icky,"· Mrs. Denver said. "All these
She caDs him, "Honey.•
actresses, as I gel older I see how
The Denvers, who will be mar· hard it is to keep it all together."
ried 20 years in September, met
They want listeners to feel like
while acting in a play in St. Peters- they are sitting in the Denvers' livburg, Fla., and have been working ing room reminiscing about music
.
together since.
and listening to Denver talk about
"We :ve literally beeR together 24 Hollywood at
time.
hours a day for 20 years," said Denver, 62.
Mrs. Denver said a radio show
hilS advantages for older actors.
"You don 'I have to get yourself
dressed up to the nines. If you gain a
pound, you don't have to get pan-

__

llur!Uy, July 20, 1117

Thers's nothing like
homegrown tomatoes

OUTTOSEA-

Ohio River Campgrou11d

sources will still be of concern to us,
however, awareness and control

Now. in the early stages, tobacco
infected in the field will have clear-

Wedlhgs, l1sn11Ct,

Spadal Ev.rs.
let IS ptl tlis 01
video tape.

generall y 'infect the same plant or
the plant closest to it.
Thus, the disease spreads very
quickly. Spores coming from other

tobacco around the count y may have
also been infected ·at the same time.

MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
Mid-Ohio Valley &lt;;enter
.Open Registration

vw.roN•..r.f

Those spores are released and

is -sensitive or 'resistant to Ridomil.

Abraham Benrubi), who are even
less skilled as physical comedians
than the writers are as verbal ones.
The special effects (such as a
computer-generated elephant who is
· as frisky and rambunctious as an
Irish setter) give the movie a rubbery ·visual look that's cartoony
without calling ·attention to itself.
Rated PG, mild profanity, bodily
function humor.
GEORGE OF THE JUNGLE
(PO, mild proranity, bodily function
humor) Two Stars (Fair) A vaguely .
amusing live-action film version of
the late-1960s' TV cartoon series
th"at will amuse children (with its
slapstick) and make sentient adults
wonder just what's wrong with the
world when someone will spend
$50-million-plus making ·a movie
like this. Starring Brendan Fraser,
All SillS 4
2873 PIEDIIONrRD.
Leslie Mann, Thomas Haden
IH STOCI&lt;I ""
IIUNTINOTON, WY •.-l--.7111
Church. Directed by Sam Weisman.
M-F9:31Hi:Otl'9:
T.
'
.,.._ _ _ _.__ _ _ _.....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....-,;,;
..;,;,··;:-;;_

PorAIIl"our

ly defined hot spots, where evidence
or the disease is concentrated in one
spot and tends to lessen 'as you move '
fanher from the original infection
site. Blue mold spores will land on
tobacco, produce a yellow lesion on
top the leaf, and produce reproductive spores under the le~f.
.

ing at the University of Kentucky
will tell us if tlris strain of blue mold

.'George' gets lost in a jungle of special effects
By MARSHALL FINE
G11r1net1 SUburban Nlw 'lplfiV1

By JENNIFER BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - Late last week,
the first case of blue mold in Ohio
was discovered near Bidwell in Gallia County. Since then, this case has
been confirmed by University of
Kentucky pathologist, Bill Nesmith.
Since the first discovery, another
field a mile away from the original
site ·has also been confirmed with
blue mold. Both sites are being treated aggressively with Acrobat
according to label and University
recommendations Test results pend ·

Gilligan a~d wife become oldies dee-jays
The show was Syner's idea. He
met Denver while working for
WVVA-lV in Bluefield, Mrs. Denver's hometown and where thC Den·vers have lived for six years. Syner
now is promotions manager for
WOWK-lV in Huntington and
Charleston.
"We . had not tl)ought about it
until that point. We chose oldies
because, I hate to admit my age,
that's my favorite music," said Mrs.
Denver, 47.
''That was really my era. Bob was
in Hollywood working. ... Those
were my years, the '60s, I was growing up,",she said.
Mrs. Denver will choose the
music and research songs and anists
from the '50s, '60s an~ early '70s.
On a. demonstration colilpact disc
for stations, she tells offbeat, littleknown facts gleaned from rock-'n'roll trivia books. while l:lenver interjects memories of singers he 'met
and his work on TV. They both chat
about their memories of lhe muSic.
The fact they are married makes
their on-air rapport unusually casual.

D

Blue mold is confirmed in Gallia County

rec-

By JENNIFER BUNDY
AAoclmd P.... Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)Who better than Maynard G. Krebs
and Gilligan to spin oldies on the
radio? No one, says actor Bob Denver.
Denver and his wife, Dreama, are
launching a weekly two-hour radio
show featuring oldies music,
celebrity interviews, comedy, and
show business news.
Uke a Beatles tune, Denver is a
fond memory for babY. boomers who
remember him as the beatnik best
friend on "The Many Loves of
Dobie Gillis' from 1959 to 1963,
and as the star of those marooned on
"Gilligan's lslandn from 1964 to ·
1967.
"Weekend with Denver and Denver" will be produced in Charleston
beginning Aug. 2 and broadcast initially on stations in West Viminia.
The Denvers, .and producers Tom
Syner
and Dan Johnson, plan to
BOB DENVER, bettw llnRn •the 1t1r ollhe 11111011 tereVIIIoli ehow
"Gllllgltn'a laland,• and hla wife, Drwma, .,. launching a Meldy two- muket the show nationwide in a few
hOur ,.c11Q ehow r.turlng aldlft m1181c, oelabl1ty lnt1lrvlnl, carnedy months. Siations will air it on weekand ehow
ends. ,

Section

tals, said the magazine''s recognition

of University Medical Center as one
of the nation 's best medical facilities
is another confirmation of the quali·
ty of care available at the Medical
Center' and the expenise of the staff

.
GRAND CHAMPION HONORS - Grand champion bred-and-owned female honors went to
Champion Hill Lady 391 at the 1997 Eastern
Regional Junior Angus Show held June 27-29

"

in flarrisonburg, Va. Neenah 11lll, Bidwell,
exhibited the January 1996 daughter of GAR
Precision 1680. Sha first topped the entries in
the junior division.

and phy sicians.
"lt's an honor ~d achievement to
have U.S. News &amp; World Report rec-

ognize the Medical Center as 'one of
the nation 's best in its annual survey,"
said Fraley.

'

Should you take advantage of temp~rary tax
Careful planning now could save
you a large chunk of money in taxes
so it is wise to consult your fi~ancial
adviser. People close to retiring may
investors have
want to cash in some or all of their
too
much
retirement savings before the year
money saved
1000
if they will soon need the
for · retirement.
money
anyway: for example, Sue
Typi cally to
.' ..
stops
working
and .wishes to with.
ensure a steady
draw
from
her
40
I (k} to ·purchase a
stream
of
new
home.
It
may
be wise for her to
income
take
the'
lump
sum
before December
- ~
throughout
31.1999
so
she
can
still tise the fiveretirement,
.
year
forward
averaging
tax strategy.
retirees withdraw each year only
dn
the
other
hand,
if
she is conwhat they need from their savings.
cerned
with
leaving
a
large
sum of
And those with larger savings balmoney
to
her
heirs,
and
she
is not
ances will most likely have more to . mUch leftover in his account. In · received the income over a five -year .
concerned
with
current
income,
she
addition , John needed to con!lidcr period even though they actually
enjoy. Sounds simple, right?
may
want
to
enjoy
the
benefits
of
Unfortunately, it is hot quite that that when he reached age 70 1/2, his received it all at onGC. This could
tax-deferred
growth
even
though
it
clear-c ut. Prdblems can arise when minimum distribution allotted by the save them a grca.t deal or money,
may
be
subject
to
higher
taxes
in
the
either too much money is taken ·out IRS may have exceeded $155,000. especiall y if they are in a high tax
future.
per year or if too much money is le ft If he h,ad withdrawn less than his bracket. But, after December 31 ,
in the retirement accounts at the calculated require~ amount. he 1999. this henefit will he repealed.
Paying income taxes on retireBefore yo u consider taking this
time of death. When either of th1:sc ·would have been charged a 50 perment plan distributions is inevitable.
thin gs happen, there is an excess ce nt penalty on the amount not approach , think about the fact that But, with carefu l planning now, you
penalty charged hy the federal gov - taken. Seems like th~re is no way by· doing so you lose the advantage could lower the ~are that Uncle
or tax-deferred growth that is availaround it, righl'!
ernment. It works like this:
Sam will get.
ahlc through rno~t retiremen t plans.

By BRYCE SMITH
. GALLIPOLIS- It is a remarkable
state of affairs indeed when
~

··
··~···!..~.

'

0

A retiree could ha ve withdrawn

up t6 $ 155,000 per year (th is amount
is indexe d eac h year by the IRS)
be fore the excess distribution rcnal -

ty kicked in.

·

·

Any amoun t in c.xccss i.Jf the lim it
was subject to a 15 percent tax in
add ition to the normal incomC taxes
that were due on the withdrawn

.ary I, 1997 andDecember31,1999.
Another .benefit offered by the
For exam ple , John wanted to
withdraw $300,000 from hi s IRA federal govCrnrnent nght now is a
tax strategy cal led five· year forward·
balance.
·
He would have had to pay an averaging. If you tap into your nest
excise tax of $21 ,750 ( 15 percen t of egg in the next three years: you may
the $145.000 amount above the be lucky enough to enjoy the 'bene$155,000 limit for 1996) m addition fit • of five-year forward averaging.
to his income taxes. The only way Those who wai t until after January
he could have avoided this tax was I, 2000 will not .be able to take
to take distributions less thaij advantage of thi s strategy.
This method of favorable taxa$155,000. This strategy may have
appeared like a viable solution. tion all ows certain recipients of a
lump sum distribution from a qualiHowe~er. if John passed away, his
estate would be c harged an excess fied retirement plan tu pay the
accumulation penalty for having too im:omc taxes owed as· if they
amount.

· Fnr the next three years. un til the
end of 1999, the federal govcrnmCnt
is offering some relief for people in
1hi s .o;, ituali on. Recent legislation

signed hy 'Presiden t Clinton in
Aug4SI· of 1996 tcmporJn ly repeals
the exc ise lax. relating to distribu -

tions in excess of $160.000 (1997
imJcx.cd) withdrawn between Janu-

The power of lax-deferred growth
should not be underestimated. ·especially over lon g period s of tif!ic.

Another fact to contemplate is that
tapping into retirement funds prior
to age 59 1/2 cou ld result in a 10
percent early withdrawal penalty in

addition to ordinary taxes.

But. you must act soon ... these
temporary tax breaks end on January
I , 2000

Bryce Smith is an associate
vic~

president of investments of
Advest, Inc., in its Gallipolis
office.

Regional office established Keys to determing water quality
IRONTON - A new ' office in
Ironton offers a boost to sou them
Ohio's manufacturing com munity.
A regio!lal office of Mtami Val-

Icy Manufacturing Exten;ion Ce nter
(MVMEC) a divi sio n of the Edison
Materials Technology Center. rcc~nt·
ly opened at Ohio University
Southern Campus. The oftice is locatcd at the University's Center for
Development and will assist small

and -medium size manufacturers by

supplying a variety of support ser·

.
Gallia, Highland, Jackson. Pike. Ro&lt;&gt; By STELLA GIBSON
GALLIPOLIS
How
do
you
tell
and Vinton counties. TI1erc aFc rough-

ly )60 srnall manufaclurers in the lO- if the water you li ve ncar is good
quali ty' One of the ways is by detercounty region.

Neil Chaudhry is director fur
MVMEC Headquartered rn Dayton .
Dr. V. Patrick ilcll is the Dtrcctor of
the Center for Development at Ohio
Unrversi ty. The joint effort by
MVMEC · and Ohro University

mining wt)at kind ol hugs arc. ttt the
water. These bugs (or macromvertibraics) arc classified into three dif-

ferent groups. Gruup I is not tolerant

of pollution and therefore IS ~ound m
good quality water. Group 2 1s someSouthcm Campus will achieve cost what pollut;on wlcrant and can he
effective ass istance tu arc~l:O. of fo und in fair quality water and Group

Suuthem Ohro that had previously

3organisms arc r.oll ut ion t?leranl and

can he found in poor quality water.
vtces.
been difficul t to scn·c.
The wtal number of organi sms
commi tment to the citizens of Ohio
MVMEC is part of a national net-. -.
~Villi an~ Jett. a ~anufacturing
found
m eac h group indit:atcs the
to seek ouL the brightest and most work of Manufacturin!! Extcn'sion . cngmccr. ts the rcg10nal program
qualit
y
of the water.
qualified individuals such as Dr. Panncrships created to '"'help nwnu- ·rnanag~~/ficld cngin~cr. Bill h.a_s :n
For
examplc,lfyou
find larvae of
Yodlowski, to serve the state. Gov. · facturers improve their competiti ve- years o l manufactunng cxpcncncc.
sw
m
.
:
ll
y,
may
ll
y.
water
pennY and
Voinovich welcomed Dr. Yodlowski ness in the markct. .MVMEC opcrutcs Hc _st~tcs that the sma ll ma_ n.ufac~urDnhsonlly
(
hdl
grammit~:)
in ahun· to the council by expressing in a let- in 23 cou nties irl south\~y·cst ,Ohio and cr IS Important t.o the rc~:uon al and
dunc..:
.
then
the
\
trcam
migh(
he conter, "Your leadership skills;cominit- offers ass istance in busmL· S~ man ~ natio nal econom y. Unfortu.natcly
sidered
good
quality
hct:ausc
these
. ment to your commurl ity and dedi - agcmcnt , manufacturing technol ogy. .inno~ative production methods ~nd
particu
lar
orgnnisms
arc
nut
tolerant
cation to improving . the lives of manufacturing operations. quality, qulll. lt~· programs .may be expc n ~!vc
,
those aro und you arc evidence of a.nd conducts focu!'&gt; group workshops or dJff1cul t to obtam. MVMEC oll cr.s of polllJiion. These
orl!anisms
arc
fnund
iri
Group
I.
your ability to serve rhe' public."
in several areas .
economical .'loluti o n~ to the manu...I
r
yt
m
find
a
lot
of
lan·ac
fur
cray ·
Dr. Yodlowski is a urol og ist and
The new field office wil1 se rve facturer. The phone number ol' the
fi
:
.
h.
:-.owhug.
crancny.
dmnscllly.
has been affiliated with HulLer Clin- Lawrence. Sciolll. Adam;. Br'"' 11 • new offi ce is (614) 533-4642 or (800)
dragon n) and clams with out the
ic since 1979.
626·0513 .

group I organisms being present
then the water would be considered
fair quality. These are Group 2 organisms.

These· are group 3 organismS.
What we find in .streams occasinnall y is a mix of dif(erent group
classifications. Then to.dctermine the
quality of that particular stream we
would count the number
of specimens found in each group and
give 'them an evaluative number (for
example , each Group I organism is
given a value of 3, each Group 2
specime n is given a value of 2 and
each Group ) specimen is given a
value of I). The tntal of each
classification would then determine
the quality of the water.
l f you would like to learn more
about the bugs in you water, please
call us at the Soil and Water Conservation District at 44 7-8687. Bugs are _
a great way to get to know
your enVironment
Submitted by Stella Gibson of
the Galli a Soil and Water Conservation District
·

�.... D2., ,.....,

II

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

Sunday, July 20, 1997

·· Sunday, July 20, 1997

Good glues can res.u lt in
excellent woodworking efforts
By POPULAR MECHANICS

· For AP Special Feati.t,..
Many fine woodworking efforts
and repairs on furniture have been
spoiled because the person who did
the job simply did not know how to
worll: with glue. Two good wood
glues we recommend to get the job
done are white glue and carpenter's
aliphatic resin glue. Both have supem
holding power, but white glue gives
you a bit more working time than the
professional carpenter's glue.
The single biggest error in gluing
wood is to use too much of the stuff.
Ex~essi ve glue actually produces a
weaker joint. The correct way io use
glue is to spread a thin layer on both

~lor~.~~~!l':-c~a~ru~~J~~:,

::vl~x.::.':k!~J:~~~~::'s':~':~~:.s::,~
Howard, Jerry Deel, Bill Kuhn, Tlm Massie, and

nlghl Front, left to,right, David Graham, Mark .
Jividen, Kennison Saunders, David Bryan,
RoctntY Alderman. Paul ~ker. and Exten·

Assistant Traaaurer Kathryn Massie. Not pictured, Eugene Ellion.

merntJer. mllde final preparation&amp; Thursday

--------

EState taxes-

By KIM HARLESS

.
JACKSON · It is often said that
farme..S live poor and die rich.
What this means is that very often
fanners have much of their asseiS in
capital investments, such as land,
equipment and buildings. While "oli
paper" the farmer may appear
wealthy, in reality the farm family
may live modestly because liquid or
cash assels an: not readily available.
When it comes time 10 divide the
estate after the death of the owner,
Uncle Sam can take more than half
of the assets, which .makes it difficult for the family to keep and operate the farm.
' "Farmers Yiork a lifetime to build
thelr businesses," Ohio Farm Bureau
President Irv Bell said recently.
"They pay taxes on their land, on the
profits; on the improvements.
They pay ·incomc.ta~es on fheir
earnings before they invest it hack
into their operations.
·It is wrong to tax those earnings
again when they die." Ohio Farm
Bureau is working with American
Farm Bureau in a massive campaign
to kill this so-called death tax. This

unfair lax punishes fanlilics who have
spent a lifetime saving their earnings.
In an era when we hear about how
Americans do not save enough for
their retirement. why does the federal
government punish those individuals
who have saved and invested?
Because of estate taxes. i1 is often
more expensive to pass the family
farm on to the ne~t generation th?n it
is to sell the land and get out of agri·
culture altogether. As a result,
because heirs cannot afford to keep
the land for farming, the land
becomes an inviting target for urhan
development.
Currently, estates with a gross
value up to $600,000 are exempt
from federal estate taxe&amp;. But that
amount was established in 1981 and
does not come close to representing
the value of most farm operations
tnday. lnflati,on has increased the
value of land, buildings and equip·
ment to the point that even small
farm s have more than $600,000 in
equity.
·
"The federal government can
claim as much as 15 pereent of a per·

.

son's assets at the time of death.
depending on the size of the estate
and the combined value of income
and estate taxes," according to Karen
,Kerrigan of the Small Business Survival Foundation.
"Federal estate tax rate s range
from 37 percent to 55 percent, and
there is an additional 5 percent on
very large estates. A full repeal of
estate taxes may not be feasible for
this session of Congress, but a good
stan would be increasing tbe exemption from $600,000 to $2 million and
cutting the estate tax rate in half on
assets over $2 million. Farmers and
small business owners who would ·
like to join the "Killtbe Death Tax"
campaign may send letters to their
congressional representatives in care
o( tbe Ohio Farm Bureau Federation,
P.O. Box 479, Columbus, Ohio
President lry Belt will deliver ail
letters to Ohio Congressmen in July.
If you Bureau before July II , send
you leiter directly to your representatives in Washington D.C.
Kim Harless is area Farm
Bureau organization director.

Irwin join_
s staff of HRS, Inc.

1 Traverse
&amp;Imprison
10 Fold in a skirt
15 Fragrant wood
20 Jacket part
21 On in yaars
22 Insect stage
23 Roman goddess of
the dawn
24 Marble
25 Unmatched thing
26 Attach
27 Unlawtul acts
28 Actor Gibson
29 Call
~ 31 Stylish
33 Well-to-do
35 - .tide
36 Senor's concem
37 Put on. as weight
' 39 Anention·gellet
41 Moved back and
. fonh
44 Got! stroke

l'OMEROY · Maggie Scolllrwin skills will be invaluable 10 the qual· expert in geriatric substance abuse.
has joined the staff of Health Recov- ity delivery of services for Hocking Irwin presented workshops at the
ery Services, Inc. as the program County and Meigs County.residents. " national convention oflhe American
director of the Hocking County and
lrwin .served as the manager of the Society on Aging (1996) and was
Meigs County Clinics.
- - Chemical Dependency Program for interviewed by Time Magazine
In making the announcement Sun Health Corporatioq in Sun City .( 1996). In 1995 she published LateExecutive Director Ken Pickering West, Ariz. prior to joining Health onset Chemical Dependency: The
said, ~Maggie brings to this position Recovery Services, Inc.
Unexpected Health Crisis.
45 Rel8xation
a wealth of experience and knowlShe graduated from the UnivcrsiImmersing herself in the commu - . 48 ExclusiVe group
edge. Her clinical and managerial ty of Iowa with a BA in 'Political Sci- nity led to Irwin being named Vol53 Willow rod
ence and Psychology. Irwin received unteer of the Year in 1994 by the Sun · 54 Showing good
jUdgment
her M. A. in Counseling Psychology Cities Governor's Alliance Against
55
Playground .1 tem
from Prescott University.
Substance Abuse. In 1996. She
57
Water
wheel
Additionally, she holds ccl1ifica- receiv ed the Community Service
58
of
Riley
GALLIPOLIS - Bob Evans tions as a Professional ' Counselor Award from the Sun Cities Alliance
59 Actuality
Farms. announced the appointment of (CPC) by the National Board for for the Mentally Ill .
60 Kn1ght's Iitle
Michael J. Gasser, chairman of the Counselor Cc11ification , Sub&gt;tance
61 Pa1d athletes
Health Recovery Services, Inc. is
board and chief executive officer of Abuse Counselor (CSAC) by the pa11ially funded by the Athens/Hock63 OUick as a 640bese
, Greif Brothers Corporation , to its National Association of Alcohol and ingNinton and the Gallia/JackDrug
Counselors.
and
Compulsive
65 Our eleventh
board of directors. Gasser fills the
son/Meigs Alcohol , Drug Addiction
presKtent
Gambling
Counselor
(CCGC).
seat vacated by J. lim Evans, who
and Mental Health Services Boards.
66
Regulations
Rcco~ni
7,cd
nationally
as
an
retired from the board in 1996.
68
Female relative ·
. Brief Brothers, located in
70 A leller
Delaware, Ohio, manufactures ship71 Mild-mannered
ping containers and container board.
72 Country 1n Alnca
After. joining Greif in 1979,
74 Field cover, lor shon
Gassc;r. 46, served in several financial
• Fast, easy installation
76 Loathe
. posts and was named to the board of ·
79 Wear away
• Goes directly over old roof
81
Sha!p flavor
directors in 1991. He was appointed
• Won't rust or corrode
83
S11ling
room
vice chairman and chief operating
• Reduces noise
87 Purple vegetables
officer in 1'994. auaining his current
• Provldell added insulation
88 Indicated amount
position later that same year.
• Lifetime limited warranty
A CPA and graduate, of Ohio
Northerp University, Gasser worked
at Coopers &amp; Lybrand for six years
before moving to Grief Brothers. ,
'"We are pleased to welcome
Sheet
Michael Gasser to our board."' said
(26.3 sq. Ft)
Daniel E. Evans, chairman of the
board and chief e~ecutive officer. "As
White *Brown *Red Black
CEO of Greif•. he has successfully
*Gray Green Tan Blue
e~ecuted an ~mbitiou s expansion
11111!11!
......
PI
Fill
1111.
• In Stock Colors
program in tho midst of a challeng-·
AI least 32 squares in stock
ing eitvironm~nt in the container
industry. Mike 's expenise in finance
and ovefllll business strategy will add
funher d~pth t1) our board."
BEF. Inc. currently owns and
operates ;197 rq$taurants in 18 states,
Your one source for all your livestock and pet feeding needs!
principally in j1he midwestern. mid·
Atlantic and southeastern United
We offer a cdmplete line of feeds for: .
.states as well liS Texas.

Gasser named
to BEF's board

ROOFING SALE

gl~

110 Church i&gt;art
111 Saulle - Mane
114 Notion
1t 6 Money m Milan
118 Make a cho•ce
119 Coconut JUice
120 Remain

121 Concise
123 Spuds
125 Unmixed
126 Put
127 Kind ollhiet
128 Portent

2 Great anger
3 Iridescent gem "
4 Colteclion ol th1ngs
5 Not at all chubby
6 Makes tranquil
7 Fever

·8 Become more solid
9 Train
10 Si(Dple
1t Knight's weapon
12 Sea eagle
13 Declare
14 Carlor hire
15 Mongrel
16 Ireland. poetically
17 Hem1sphencal roof
18 Length tunes width
19 Coarse file .
23 Hurt
~0 Say further
32 Strike
34 Reprimand: 2 wds.
36 Arch with a po1n1
37 Blow
38 Billy - Withams
40 Hankering
41 Canine anirilal

129 Feed lor horses

42 - Mu'\Or

130 Inclines

43 Present
44 Choose

131

~ro

- rs human ..

133 Place bets
136 Detergent
137 Wander
141 Egyptian goddess
144 Cripple
145 Town
146 Depot: abbr
149 Umted. as '" war
• 151 Military decoratiOn

153 Unyieldmg
-155 Delayer's mollo
157 Jets
158 Jackpol
· 159 identical
'160 Put forth effM
161 More rafoonat
162 Wise men
t63 Unfreeze
164 Bathrobe matenal

DOWN

·'
1 Ctase-moulhed
one

46 Legless creature

47 Poet Teasdafe
· 49 Not high
50 - the Red
51- Motion picture
52 Serze

54 Strode
55 Farm structure
56 Put up

59 Enemy
60 Certain

62 Cnsp cookie
65 Human beings
.66 Mice and rats
67 Red color
69 Swing lpr an '
acrobat
71 Maxim·

72 Old Tesla(Mnl
leader
73 Edible bulb
75 -minister

76 Rudiments

77

78
80

82
84
85
86

90

93
95
96
99

n

JACKSON COUNTRYMARK ·

Repprt earnings

JAC~SON • Oak Hill Financial,
Inc. Thursda)l reported record net
earnings for fhc si~th consecutive
quarter. .
Net earnin!F- for the three-month
period ended June 30, 1997, were
$924,000, or $.32 per share, an
in~rease of li .I.·percent over the
$796,000, ~ .28 per share in net
earnings rec ed for the second
quarter of I . .
Oak Hill nancial 's total assets
ended the qu111 at $269 million, an
increase of 11.S perte~~r over the
$221.1 milli011 in assets recorded at
June 30, 1996, ~d nine percent ovrr
the $246,9 million in ass,ts postql fl
year end 1996.
l

BEEF
DAIRY
SWINE
HORSE
SHEEP
SPECIALTY
As well as custom grind and mix.
Stop in ud ue utf M-F 8 1111 to 5 p111

"

By BRUCE A•.NATHAN
AP Newsfeatureo
Plan G-63, by HomeStyle1

room or a family room.

This ·spacious Uvlns room flows
into an all -purpose dining area ,
where French do.ors open to a
coVered porch and a .patio. Both
outdoor spaces are. ideal for summer parties or barbecues.
The Iorge kitchen has numerous
amenities - an island cooktop, a
Windowe d sink and a pus through t o th e adjoining sun

DeaiKners Network, ta a cozy

countr;y-atyle home that features
an Inviting front porch and an
equally welcoming Interior. Its
llvinc apace totals 2,190 square
feeL
.
One steps directly from the cov·
ered porch Into the living room
which Includes a firepla ce and ·

The private master ! uite Is
secluded In the rear or the home.
A carden spa tub, dual walk-In
closets and separate dressine;
areas are featured in' ttie master

Drtv.,.
NEW REGIONAl.

OPPOATUNTIES
PAY UP TO 35 CPII

Delivery Driver Seasonal, Farrelgas Is Seeking A Propane o,ll't'·
ery Driver To Work Through Fall
And Wmter Season. Excellent
Opponunity For.Someona lookmg For Additional Income, To
Qualify, Uust Have COL Class B
With Hazardous Materials Endorsement. Call 614·-446·2264, Or
1·600·468-226...

-~EDICAl8ENEFITS

...01 K

-PAlO VACATION
-RIDER PnCX.'RA~
ARC nC EXPRESS
II

OhiO'S largest Refrigerated
Car~il!f. Must Have A Class·A·

COL With HAZMAT &amp; 9 Monlhs
Recen i OTA Experience
CAI.L DAVE OR LISA
614·876-4008 or 800·927·0431

OONJ BE AQ TH!SI

Help Wanted

"' AAAGREET!Nl)CAADS ...
Potenti al $4 5K Part Time Or
$110K Full Time Serv1ci ng l ocal
Sto11s. No Selling, Actounts Included. Yo ur $8.950 Investment
Secured By Inventory. 'B00·77t ·
3H1"

EOE

562.0373.
ACCESS To Human Resource
Development /ACCESS Head
Star t Is Acce pting Applications
ForTna Follow;ng Pos1D00 :

MENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST:
Ap plicants: Must Have A
AVON 1 All Areas 1 Shirley Bachelors Degree in Social Work,
Spears, 304-615-1429.
Coun&amp;e'ing Or Related Fiel d.
~=~:..::.;,:...:.,.::;___ _ _-;! Mental Health Experience Work·
As A NiJASE, Do You . Prefer ing _With Xoung Children And
Wor ki ng 12 · Hour Shilts? We T.he1r Fam1l1es Preferred. BegmHave A Part·Time Position Open· n~ng Rale Of Pay $10.00 /l·k
ing For An AN Or LPN In A long Applicants For This Position May
Term Care Facility. Apply In Per· Slltimit A Re sume To Jeann ie
son AI Scenic Hills Nursi ~ Cen· W1111ams. Human Resou rce Man·
. ter. 311 Buckridge Ad .. Bi dwell, ager, Access To Human ReOH. NO PHONE CALLS, source Developmen t, P.O. Bo x

Orlnrs: Onl y I n Amer ica • A
New Start In You r Own ThiCk .
No Credit. No Problem! NO
MONEY DOWN ! Treat Your••lf
To Our FREE Tru c k Program.
Cl ass " A " COL &amp; 1 Yr. OTA 1·
800·377·3 101.
Exper1encad Carpen!er W1th Own
Tools, References Requ1red, Call
614·441 · 1136 Between a:30 And
•tOO.
Fast Track To The
W1mersCirc:IB
OIL COMPANY
Ai de With A 3 Time NASCAR
Champion Cale Yarborou gh And
With A 18 Yea r Old Oil Company
01stnbunng It's H1gh Performanc e
Pr oducts To Company Prear·
ranged Accounts (i.e. ) Walmart,
N.A.P.A.. Quick Lubes Etc. Begtn
PJT And Grow Into A Very Profit·
able FIT Business. This Ia A First
Time Ollerl &amp; Re quires An In·
'Vestment Of $ 17,500. Dy son Oil

PLEASE.

316, Gall1poi1S, OH 45631.

Suv ing Stan ding Pine, 1 Acre
Tract Or Larger, 614-256 ·6038.

AVON · 18 -$ 18 tHr. No Door To
Door. "Bonu ses• Quick Conhll1 ·
BOO·B27·4640 indlsiSirep.

Clean l a1e Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Bu1ck ·Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Babysil!Vf needed in my home.
Mu !&gt; l hav e relere nces. Send to
Box G-12, %Pt Plea san t Reg·
ister. 200 Main SL, Pt Pleasan t

The Deadline For Acce pting Ap·
plications ts Tuesday, July 29,
1997 5:00 P.M. For Additional In·
!ormation Call 614-441-3tl l0 8:00
-5:00 P.M. MondaY Th ru Fri day.
Access To Human Resource DeOf Ohio, 1·800·42 t -6682
ve lopment Is An AAIE EO Em-

wv 25550.

~ ayor.

Across the home, two secondary

bedroom• ldi:nUcal 'In size, share
a companmentalized bath . .

BULLETIN BOARD

sun room iS large enoush to serve

windows that overlook the rront

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

.......

•.tnu .

LAYNE FURNITU

lt-4 I l).1

D

ealgn G-63 has a living

room, dining room,
k.U.chen, sun room, three
bedrooms, two and one t)alf baths
and a utility room, totaling 2,190

......

square· feet of livtnc space. This
plan includes a standard basemen~ crawlspace or slab found&amp;·

.tJ'.'".l.

UIIOOM

tU.Udl
U4•tN

tion, and '2x6

Treasurer

Meigo Local Board ol
Educetlon
P. O. Box272
Pomeroy, OH 45769
. PH (614) 992·5650
171 1, 7, 13, 20; 4TC
,---~~-:--­

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
· Tht Vli11g1 of Mlddlepol1
l'llhll to r~colvo oeeled
''d• lor Hlllpltallzallon
; ~auronc1. All, bide oholl be

Facility.
. Spinal Mant,pulationa and
Adjuotmonte
12 Month Rate Guerentee
Moll-in Praocrlpllono, 90
d~y oupply • $5.00
(7) 18, 20, 21 3tc

number.

Public Nollce
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
POUCY
The Melge County
Council on Aging, Inc. and
tho
Melga County
MulUpurpo• Senior Canter
lo totally committed to
providing equal opportunity
tn employment and aervlce
accees, without regard to
race,

color,

religion,

ll!

I

~

N~CII

1tternlty ,.. pny
'
TQ BIDDERS
111-1.
Th C:l),oltr Tolljnthlp
•uo_!'.I•icrlpllon Clld TI'Uit ~
1c.,pt •••ted
(to H u"'! II Phlrmuy)
_pldt . ~

,,u

Public Notice
Chtotor, OH 4S720
,
Truck een be viewed July
2~
to Auguot 6 by
contacting tht clerk, Janel
Lllit II 614-1149-323.2.
Truck will 1111 ao Ia.
Tru-• re11rve the right I
to accopt andlor rtJecl any
or 111 blda.
(7) 20; lTC

1---------+--------ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

ATTRACTIVE AND LOOKINO

national origin, handicap,
aox, odueetlon, age, or
abl 11ty to pay.
Oarla J~dHaw 1e y, C11ent
1 m1n1 a1ra11v8
Advocate~
.,ICIIYed Jrl, end bid Aasletant, Ia the Equal
· pp,cfllcotlon~ end a tlat ol Employment Opportunity
ov•red employe.. may be Officer lor the agency.
bl1 1 d fr 0 th1 VIllage
II you teal you have bHn
ne, IOCilfd
1" ,111137 RICe dla·erlmlna'·d
file..
~ egatnat with
ll'ftl, Middleport, Ohio. All regard to receiving •rvtcaa
ropo11le ~uot bt oub· or ·obtaining employment,
J 1 contact the EEO Officer at
. !Hod by 2: p.m. on u Y the Senior Clttzana Center,
1
1 ;.~:'r~turellet Company either In parson or by
null bt uo,notd 111 do cllllng (6141 992·2161.
~utlneot In jt ht State ol (7) 20; lTC
phlo and ohill hovi •n A.M ..1..:..:...._P-:u,-b-li_c_N_o_tl-:c-e-11tjng ot A+ IP' bttltr, The 1--..:....:=:::..:=='--nouronce All1'nt (IIUit lito
·NOTICE TO BIDDERS
i•, tht
llcenltd t1r do l&gt;utlnt'"
Tht Cheoter Township
of Oh!jl,
,.Th,1 Stoto
VIII•ol UJddltport Truottee will accop1 1ealad
bide lor a
'reoorvoo lht•·otght, .to lfCIP1 1981
International Dltatl
r reject ~ny 1"41 l(ll DumD Truck, Serial I
uotot ono '\' to . rt~u"l tHTAf/'11E9BHA19213 ·
uture bid quplltlont II II• ~ldt I'll! ~ opened Auguat
~~:~~11;7dder wjeht~a fo • ltpJ •t 7:1l0 p.m. et the
•
h1t)tr townhall,
ltljd !lido marlted ,"Truck .
,,ubmlt llltrnf'• ~uot I1tnt
II"1y
thott whlc~ "' eptpliltd 111~·~
do If with 1~11 r
1 If Ql •
I
~plon1llon 'II th' op~on1.
~'o. "'x ~ "•
allaltt m~ll hiVI I
C....llr,l'tj45J20
Ulflnlttcj ~11 lor 1111111
Tnlfk o•n t" v1owed July
moojt114.
J1 to Auvu•t 6 by
IIIQI!'Ic:A'I'IQNe:
·~~at,'grtr~
.•~!k
· tiiO lncllvt4utl/t45A t11n·
.,...
• .,. . • Jan••
1 111
H)tncliar Y'"' dt~~OI·
k 1 a,llaelo.
It~ cq-pt~ to III,IIQO
~~ ,.",.,. the right
1,100,000 p~r "roon ljft• ~ICPIP.I .•nd/or re)act any
~m• moxl;J"'"
·
111 blqa.
f'O co-p y pocjOro Oftlct
IIO; 1Td •
(No
~Gil~lt!
, tnaluqeo: K.nye, ~~~ ,,._.,....,..._......,..._ __
li,ork, and Pl"""''c T•ll·
P~bllc ~otlce

at~ar

Boz IJ6J, New York, N.Y. 10116·
IJ62. Be sure ro include lhe plan

1983 Chovrola1 011 Dump
Truck,
Serial
I
1GBL7D1BOOV122483
bldo will be opened Auguot
9,. 1997 at 7:00 p.m. at the
Cheater Townhell.
Send bldo marked "Truck
Bid" to:
Janet Ule, Clerk
P.O. Box46
Term Life Insurance
$15,000
Home Health Care, Hoa·

FOR FUNUI
1-100.245-0074 EXT. 4562
12.99 t.til'l.lte /18+
Sotv-U ~619)645-6434

60 Lost and Found
LOST: gold c:haln wtdiploma &amp;
graduation cap, ·ee·. lo sr bel·
ween Galtipotis pool I Krogers.
Reward. 304-G75-757S.'

70

Wanted: Craft i1em1 on consignment lor local shop. Far inlorma·
lion cal/30•-675-709-&lt; aker flpm.

Be Plld In Advance.
QfAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
!lie diJ belo,. lllo •

G
40
lveaway .
·:-3:-le-m-:al-e-p.-p-:pi-es-,-pa-r:-'
1C:::ho:=-w-:.-:B::;:il

lito rvn. Sunday
edition. 2:00p.m.
frldor.llondiJ odHion

Haw~. t sl blue house on left past
Langsvil~ Slore.

-::'--:---::--:-:-:--:-;::-:--;:7 Puppie s: Part lab &amp; Part S.
Husky. tee Blua Eyes. 614·3670029 _

Barn To Giveaway, Must Remove,

814-368-9946.

Black Chaw mix puppies, rwo makl
and six female, 614·7&lt;42·31 18.
Female Black &amp; White Killen,

614-446·9450.

.

Four 2 Month Old Mixed Beagles.
Wormed, 614-379-9455. 614·446·

7300.

· 10:DOI.m. Salurdoy.

Community Yard And Bake Sales
AI: E&amp;E Countr~ Store, Nisly ·n·
Mc:Comba, On Hannan Trace
South 01 775. New Lawn Furni1ure, &amp; Crahs, Rugs, Oish•u,
Clothes, J11ms I Jellies, New
Handmade Quilts, Qu ilts Will Be
10% Off Regular Price. Big Variety
Of Baked Goods, Fresh Made
Donuts i COffee All Day, Ouii1S 4
Bake Sale Will Benefit Our
Sc:hoola. From Gall!polis Rou t&amp;

,.1 Soulh To

Jlj'

HUOE GARAGE.SALE .
MONDAY, JULY 21st &amp;

Four Kittens, 10 WOO'ks Old. 614·

Free Puppies: Half Golden Ra triever, Call 614 -379-2871, T. l. C.
Requi red.

ns Soulh Go.6 112

Miles To Hannan Trace Road On
Lo!t.
25111, &amp; 26lh.

-79.

Free Puppies, 112 Coc ker~ 112
Beagle, 61,.·441 -0417.

Yard Sele
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
.A1J. Yard Solnllual

30 Announcements

TUESDAY, JULY 22nd
t:OO A.M. · 5:00 P.M.

,

LARGE SELECTION
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $995
LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
MON. THRU SAT 9·5 P.M. 446·0322
3 MILES OUT BULAVILLE PIKE

square feet. The

eltimotlns case. and ./inancins,
send $4 10 Howe Q/the Wuk, P.O.

Public Notice

Public Notice
Poyo llrot S300 lor each
and over'{' a&lt;:cldtnl (no
deductible)
Wollnon Package: $200
per ye•r per lneured for
Routine Phyolcala, Gynecological and Pap Tooting,
Well Cera and Child lmmu·
nlzatlona {No deductible) 1

pice Car and Convalescent

48~

(For a more detailed, rcaled plan
Q/ this llo!Ue, Including guides 10

(1811-lhrollllh to the aun room. French doors lead from the dtnlnc
room to the covered porch and patio In back. The oun room and a
. utility room nank the hallway leadlns to the maoter bedroom,
which hu a private bath..Acroao the home, two secondary bedrooma obare a compartmentalized bath.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Melgo Loeet Boord ol
EdueeUon wlaheo to receive
bldo lor tho lollwolng; Fuel,
and Treoh Hauling.
All bldo ihell be received
In, and bid opeclll~atlona
may be obtained from,
TREASURER'S OFACE, 320
E. Main Street, Pomeroy, OH
i5769, on or before 1:00
p.m., Monday, Augu•t 4,
1997.
.
The Melgo Local Board ol
lducatton r..trvao the
right to reJect any and all
qlde, ond the aubm!Hing ol
ony bid oholl tmpooe no
liability or obligation upon
the uld Board.
All envelopes muot be
I)LIARLY
MARKED
1JCCOrdlng to the type of.bid.
Cindy J. Rhonemua,

wall fram-

storase area 'provtdes an addl·
tional 54 square feel of space.

THE COVERED FRONT PORCH leids directly Into the opacl~ua
11v1n1 room. The lehuul kitchen oerveo the dining room, and olrera a

Public Notice

e~terior

Ing. The two-car sarase covers
an area of

G-63

Iff'"'

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page B-7

Help Wanted

bath.

room among them. The bright

,
=

or Call 800-333-6088 or (614) 286-6481
61 Dickason. Street
Jackson, Oh 45640

t;; 3

as another ea"tin@ area, a r.oaby

I

Sat. 8 1111-Noon Cloud Sun.

110

2526.

porch.

o

11

Unless vou want to Lose Weight
&amp; Feel Great. CA.Ll NOWI (304)

Wanted to Buy

Ant iques, ·top prices paid, River·
ine An tiq ues, Pomeroy, Ohi o,
Ru ss Moore owner, SU-992-

welcomlnA" features.

Actress Anhur
That gi~
Decompose
Republicans· g!p.
Workroom. for shon
Unit
Serling ov TV
Synagogue ·
-andvoid
Furnishings
Slam
Men who coun

101 Bursts
103 Invite
104 By - and starts
105 Perfect place
106 Nothing but
108 Metric unit
110 Venlilates
111 Laurel or Kenton
112 Diplomat's forte
U3 Peepers
115 - - maner of fact
117 Had lunch
119 Silent
120 Hit
122 -out ~make do
Withj
124 Sch. subj.
125 Fortune teller
1:2s Skit
129 Kimono sash
130 'Drunken one
132 Clears
134 Fill with wonder
135 Men
136 Tendon
137 Slangy talks
138 Slew pot
139 Aida or King
140 Excavation
142 Devilkins
143 Animal fluids
145 Insensible state
146 Ending lor pun or
gang
147 Region: abbr.
148 Dilenanllsh ·
150 Always: poetic
152 Use a spade
154 Go. team!
156.Cutting tool

$1148~~

..,.;.uao

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

SHUTTERED WINDOWS, an lnvitlp« front porch and keyotone accents are

women

SALE

a

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
auct1on
service.
licensed
166.0hio &amp; West VirQinia. 304·
773~ 5785 Of 304-773-5447.

Antique s, furnnura, glass, china,
coins, tor s., lamps, 9uns, tools,
estates; also appra1sats, Osby
Martin, 614-992·744 1.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
89 Commotion
91 Word with grand or
player
92 Container lor m1lk
94 Walch over
96 Incline
97 Set firmly
98 Burden
100 Horror writer King
102 Labyrinth
104 Opp. of masc.
t07 False co1n
109 Word w~h talent or

Shephard LOQilinQ Buytf Of SlaninO Timber And Land. Pine, Pulpwood, And Saw Timber, eH-682·
84a2.

wanted: Used Hardwood Fktorino
In Good Condition. Call 01•·245·
5887.

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
D1amonds, Anlic;ue Jewelry, Gold
Ring s, Pre- 1930 U.S. Currency,
Steflin g, Etc. Acquis1t1ons Jewetrv
• M.T. S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
Av9flue, Gall1polis, 614-446·2842.

11o Help wanted

J &amp; O't Auto Plrll. Buying salvage vetwcl... Selllnt parts. 30•· -Computer Us&amp;rt Needed. Work
713-5033.
own hours. S20k to SSOkJyr 1a:&gt;o-348--7188 xtsoa

Complete Household Or Estates!
Anv Type Of Furniture, Appllanc·
es, Antiqua's, Etc. Also Appraisal
Available I B1 4-379·2720.

sixteenths diameter rod so that i! is
enough for a one-half inch rod.
Example of a pinch point to avoid: a
wagon with wheels mounted close to
the wagon bed, where tiny fingers ·
could be caught when the rider grabs
the side of the wagon.
·
• The leading causes of child
injury from toy chests and boxes are
failing lids, pinching hinges and
entrapment leading to. suffocation.
Always equip a lid with a positive
support mechanism · and never with
an automatic locking device. Drill
ventilation holes so that a trapped
child can breathe: Make the gap
between the front edges of the box
and the ·
·

Wanted to Buy

Wedemeyer"s Auction Strvice,
Galipolis. Ohlo 614·379-2720.

PATIO

ACROSS

Public Sale
and Auction

80

90

,

By READERS'S DIGEST BOOKS
less than I 3/4 inches in size.
For AP Special Feature•
• Sharp comers and thin, sharp
. An important aim for every do-it· edges on drawers. coffee tables and
your.elfer is to avoid building any- other furniture can cause more than
thing that might be hazardous for , scratches and bruises. Remember
children.
that children are sho11 - a hazard that
Here are some of the areas recog- might jab you in the thigh is at a
nized as posing risks to children:
child's head and eye level. Round ail
• A chil&lt;j's head can become exposed comers. and edges that chii·
entrapped in openings between slats, dren may encounter - or pad and tape
railings and other spaces that young them.
children are likely to peek through.
· Pinch and crush points ·can cause
To avoid that hazard, keep those painful injuries. These are tricky to
spaces to less than 3 1/2 inches wide. assess because adults don 't have tiny
· Small parts can be a choking fingers and wouldn 'tthink ·of grabhazard for children under age 3. bing things the way children often do .
Make sure that no toy or removable To prevent finger pinching. enlarge
part of furniture (such as a knob) is any opening that might admit a three-

Garage sa:e- July 21·22. Lawn
mower. t1o1s. mix. One mile on
SA 143, Lee Ad.

Welcoming home

carefully remove it will) a razor-sharp
wood chisel, bevel edge up. Hold the
blade edge ata slight angle to the glue '
line to remove flakes of hardene4
glue as yoo slice them off the joint
Follow up by sanding the joint with
a piece of 120-grit paper backed up
by a wooden block.
Glue spots on your projects can be
another problem. They comll!only
appear when you get glue on your
hands and transfer it to the proJect ·
Your obvious reaction is to wipe your
fingers either on your trousers or on
a rag. Unfonunately, this generally
diles not remove all traces of the glue
from your hands.

90

Pomeroy,
Middleport
· &amp; VIcinity

The House of the week

B •1 d •
f I f
h •1 d
.
Ul 1ng s.8 e y Or C I ren

sion Agent Jennifer Byrnes. R~tar, left to right,

GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRBOARD

surfaces ro be joined, lei the glue get
tacky to minimize sliding action and
then press the pieces together. Except
for contact cement, you should apply
clamping pressure immediate_iy and
let the piece rest at least 24 hours.
Wiping off the' excess glue that
squeezes out of the joint is the wrong
. thing to do as there will be an almost
invisible layer of glue left on the soft
and absorbent wood surface. You
may not be able to detect it before
staining or otherwise finishing the
· piece, but watch it p&lt;\p up as soon as
staf,
' is applied.
· e correct method for removing
e ess glue from a joint is to let the
we I of glue dry untouched. Then,

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

NO ElBL'f BIRDS!! !II

Liberty Ave., (Road To The Am·

\lett Building) Off Bu 1nen Ad .
Watch For Signs.

NOTICE
The Ark Pet Shop
758 Second Ave.
is now the dealer for
DIAMOND DOG Food
446·BARK
Bulaville Christian Church
Vacation Bible School
July 20th thru July 25th
6 :00pm to 8:15pm
Wild Frontier Bible Theme Park

Denim &amp; Diamonds
Labor Day Spectacular
Beauty Pageant
Saturday, August 30th
. Comfort Inn
South Point, Ohio
All age divisions offered
Call Sheila at (304) 7572885 for entry forms
Simpson Chapel United
'.9Methodist Church &amp;
Calvary Baptist Church
Invites you to attend
Vacation Bible School
July 21 -25 6 :30 to 9 :00
· Ages 4 thru 6 grades at
Simpson Chapel Lake
Drive, Rio Grande, Ohio
"The Circle of Friends
Ranch .. . Being friends
with Jesus"
Any questions call
245-5678

Summer Image
Hair, Nails, Tanning Salon
New Nail Tech
Debbie Bryah
Nails $45.00
Balance $20.00
Call 446-6959

Old refrigerator, doean1 work; othet metal parts, must cake all. 814•
992-l!WI.
Poodle To Good Home, House·
broken, Good Companion, 614·

4-41-Q372.
Pupp~s. "lhe bold &amp; lhe beautilur
or •tha young &amp; the restiGit'",

61U49·2822.
60 Lost and Found
FOUND: 7-18·97 Smal l black

Room Sui te, Ve nlles s Gas Heat·
er, Porcelain Dolls. Mise:. Collectl·
bfes, Entenainment Cenrer. Misc.
Ch ri stmu Decorati on s, New
Lighted Houses, New Village Ac·
ceu oriea, Rack Stereo, Bikesr
Baby Items, Misc. Dishes, Glassware, Clothing; Furnitu re, Toy s,
Portable T.V., AndNewTraJnSet
• Also, Leis Of Other ttems.

TMre Is Somathing
FOf Everyone I

·

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

Sc:cmlah TaHier, Poplar Heights -::-::-::::::-;::;::-;;::::;-;;::-;;::;;-;:
area. »4-675-21105.
All Yard Saln Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline : 1:00pm the
Found : on Rt e2 i1 mouth ol 8 day bttore the ad 11 ro run,
Uile Ad , red &amp; while male Bea· Sundty • Monda~ tdlllon·
glo. 304-GJ'S.1:1-W.
1:00pm Frldoy.

Lost "Whlsken", large black and Fridav and Monday- Silver Ridge
whi tt malt cal with whitt whisk· Rd. acrou rrom Eastern High
en, Middleport vicinity, 8t&lt;4·982· Schopl on SR 7 berweeo Chestet',
3057. ·
Tupptn Plains. Wardro be, 125;
tJid COJIOCti blel; (:OUch , $35; fill 8
bag, $1 . )0, Tu pperware., 25Ciea.,
h1uch more.
.. .

..,,.,,._ ..,.v._,., CONVENIENT MINI

BOOTS
All Leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engjneer ...... ,........... ...... $49.00
Wellington ........... ... ,....... $49.00
Loggers ....... .............. :... $50-55
Harness ............... ........ ..$59.00
Carolina-Georgia · H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE

CHANNEL MARKER
CONDOS
N. Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Sleeps 6 .
Dates available in
August, September.
Call 446-2206 9-5,
446-2734 weekends.

Vacation Bible School
Mt. Zion Missionary

Mobile Home for Sale

on passing your bmudslll

in Inverness, Fla.
55 plus park, clubhouse,
heated pool, security, 2
BR, 2 bath, LR, Dining,
Eat-in kitchen, sunroom,
utility room, carport, fully
furnished .
Ph .' 441·0708

Baptist Church
July 21-26
Congratulations
Melissa Davis Brown
to become an

"R.N."

HELP WANTED
TOMATO
PICKERS
Bob Morris
Letart Falls, Ohio

614-247-3421
For Rent
Country Quiet 4 mi from
Gallipolis, lg. kitchen, dining
area, living room,. 3 bedroom,
garage, storage buildings.
$425.00 + Deposit
614-446-4254 or 446-0205
FOR SALE
24,000 BTU air conditioner 220
· volt, 3 years old. Excellent
condition. $375.00
614-441 -1136 days ,
614·446·3106 evenin s.

HELP WANTED
Tomato pickers &amp; packers
Gary Roush

&amp; ·Sons

o14-247-3901

After 6 or leave

HELP WANTED
Experienced Carpenter
· with own tools. References
Required. Call441 -1136
between 8 :30 and 4:00
General Refuse
.Service
is now accepting
Residential Trash
Service for $11.00 .
We can also provide a
90 gallon cart for $14.50
per month .
Call 1-~00-967 -4 77 4

450 Case Dozer .w ith

&amp;

Innovations

tilt blade. Verf g o od

Photography Studio
in Middleport
(Behind Mitch 's 1-'rCIOUt:e)l
Only $10.95 Session Fee
Per Family!! ·
Choose from a large
selection of backgrounds
and props
For quality portraits at
affordable prices
Call Kim or Barb at

Phone 614-245-5439

992-0028

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

Hunter Safety Course
Aug. 5 &amp; 6
Hi to 3
Registration Required .
Call Noreen Saunders
446-4612 or
Bob Donnet
. 388-9436

trailer. Power angle

~;::_-::--::----....;:-:-:• ! Queen· Si ze · Waterlfad, Dining
Ki tte ns To Giveaway, 614 · 3670200.

Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
. All Makes
Smith Buick· Pontiac Gallipolis
446-2332

condition $18,500
Mornings

&amp; evenings

446-2342 or 992-2156

"" . .,MORE INFORMATION

�Sunday, July 20, 1997

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

10

API'IICA110HDEADI.NE

.YJ&amp;lMl

. . . . .Cl

snz

.IUbJ"

Manegement Position Avtilabfe
At local Retail Store Pleue
Stncf Reourne To P.O 8oJ 141
Glllpafl' Ohio 45831
Mobile )( Ray Tech W•ekend•
Coli 1-BOD-090 970D In Gotiopoloo.

Pro
With Con
Dry /Wet Batc:h
lmmodlo• Nood
PftoH Stncf
571
VA

OhioAroa.
Nood 8 ladies To Soli Avon Coli
814~

sa.

The Solary FO( Thlo I'VIItlon Wli
Nogouolod Bend On Ouolillcatlono And Erporionco.

a.

Gallia County Adheres To All
Sill• Pbllc:iH Portoir&lt;ng To Equll
Oppo&lt;tuh!y Emplojmont IAfllnre

MA&lt;oon

APPLY TO
Goliio County Ccmnlllionorl
Gotlio Courry CourhMIIO
18 Locu115nel. Room 12112
Glllpollo, Ohio 45031
Phone 61 ..~74
Gov't I'Votai Jolll Start $12 84
S1174 /Hour Now Hoong ~Olio
And Othor Areas F.. Info IAppli
cation Coli Befort St1UrdtY 7128
818-506 5354 Extll255.

-·lion

cem.r

~roduCll

i ••t

Rooa Produc!l
ArrtJ
-~ Inc.
545 Sirmool Road

Memory

Coaombuo Ohio 43223
In

Ann Stove Bake

Memory of

SHARON

Shephard logging Anyone E•
paorlenc, With Cha1n Saw Al•o
0pota1D&lt; 114-8112 8402.

E.

MCMIWON

who paeaed awey
July 23, 1996
No

Happy Ad

one knowe how

much we mila you
No

one know• the
bitter pain

Wehllvelllffered

IInce ww loll you,
Ufe hll never been

the lime
In our hearts your
memory tlngere
Sweetly tender, fond
and true,
There le not a dey,
deer loved one,
Th8t we do not think of

you
Sadly mliiHd by
Mlllhall, Bill,

Yllu're naw a liaif
century old
Some people tfimf. rt
qutte nifty
We all want to wrsfi
you
'Da111d Stamm·

a very .J(appy so'

any 9rey rroupon?

UNITED STATES

CELLULAR
WIRELESS

COIIIIUNICATIONS
United Stales Cotlullr Is Expandng Its Team
We Are Seek ng Prolelllonal
Sales Consullanls The De14rable
Cand date Uust Be An Aggres
•1ve Self Staner W11h Eftecl ve
Commun c:at Q,ns Sk lis A Sold
Work EthiC A. Posllve Alll\lde
And Must Po11e1 Good Custom
er Service SkiUs
Stioa E-ience Roquored.

We Offer
• An Excellent Starting Base 5al-

ary And Ccnmissaon
• Cellular Phone
• Full Benefill Program
• Monthly car Allowance
• Local Celular Tra~n~ng

Tht lltlga County Council on
Avfno Inc. Ia acooptina aoollca
ttan• ror 1M poalllon of Aetlred
and Slftlor VoluntHr Pragr1m
(RSVP) Coord nator The •u~:
cn1ful candida... 1hould have
on Asaoclott llegrH In buolniH
or c:omput ..• or social work bl
I \0 I iarad rt wrning wilh communir, oroanlzatlan• agencl..
and the agino population have
bollc olfici lkilo lncluctmg ccm
putar data tntry lncflor computor
programming, and ha~• ba1lc
knaWiedgeJiklll in lftl and crahl
and planned programming tar
adults age 55 ond oidio! Applica
ttont and a posllion description
can bo Obtained tom Doria Haw
ley Adminl•uarlve A11lstant at
the Melga Mullipurpo11 Senior
Corllt! 112 Eaotllomorlal Drlvo
~ Ohio. Doldtlne lor appi
c:alion •ubmlnlon Ia Julv 21
1907 An EEO EmployoriProvodoo
ofStMcn.

Can lied Nursu"'g Assistant Quail
ty Care At Rea so nab e Rates
814 446-1754
Expeflenced carpenuy and remo
dehng ln11de and oultlde
decks vtn~l s1dmg add on add1
ttons c:abmet relac1ng ar newly
rebUilt References Free Estl
malel J1m ShiH 304-EI75-t272.
Georges Portable Sawm II don t
haul your logs to lhe m I JUSt call
304-6~1957
Home Or Ofhce Cleamng Rarer
antes, 6t4-2-15-5887

Vocalist Wanled For Metal Band
Mull Be 1a Dependable And
Will ng To Do What It Takes
614-448 2859 814-387 7890

WANTED HVAC HEAD IN
STALLERS
3 Years Expenence In HVAC In
s1alla1 on EPA Relrlgeruon And
RSES Cerhficat on A Plus CNer
11me Requ red When Nec:euary
Beglnn ng At $7 00 Per Hour Or
Commensurate W th Expenenc:a
Vac:at1on, Health Insurance And
Gr-. A&gt;"'"'Bi
Call 614 985 4222 Or Sand Re

sumeTo
Warner Healing &amp; Cooling Inc
P.O. Box8
Chaste&lt; OH 45720
WANTED Part Time Po a lion
AvallatMa At A ComtTl.lnlty Group
Home Far Persons With MRJDO
In 81dw&amp;ll Hours 4 e P:N Frl
845 AM 715 RM Sot 8 AM
6 P.M SOn 2 Hour Weekly Staff
Meeting Or As 01herw1te
Sche&lt;i.Jlad H1gh Scllool 0 ploma 1
GED Val d Drlver s l censa
Good Dr ~ Record A.nd Three
Years L1c nsed Dr v ng Ex pen
enca Req red. Salar)' S5 50 /Hr
To Sl8rl Tra n ng Provided send
ReS!Ime To P.O Box 604 Jack
son OH 456&lt;40 ATTN Cec: lla
Oeadhnt For Appl c:anls 1J':rJJ9 7
Equal Opponunl~ Emplojor

SEASONAL DAYCARE
Opens Aug 25th till June 5th
l m ed Enrollmenl!
Cat Now :Jl4-&lt;575-57BB

the

staff

Will BabySit In My Home Expet'l
anced In Daycare 614 441 1nl7
W1ll bebys 1 three meals wllh
care excellent care 1n my home
or yours. call61&lt;4-992 7847

ATHENS MORTGAGE

II..._, 3 units, ,_ windoWS
and carpet painted clean
1541100 81 .. 828-&lt;18!10

COIIMNY
When tho bonk ..,a no ttl
Alhensl.4or1QaDOIIY yHII let
our stalf l'leiP p.~ get tKt loan you
ro&lt;Hid
w..peclotlzo In

Raeremen1 Date Is Near Whk:h
Mahl Me Want To Cheer •Pet
Shop For Sale• If You're 5et'IOUI
About Buytng As I Am Aboul ReIling Call Today AI 814 448
7507

Financing tar hovoe and rnobllahomoo

SoiHinployod ralnuoctng.
Homo llnpN•-•11111
RIJNUon. tnunb;wwt Ptopero
1yo Caall out for any IIIOd.
No lppliiCIIIon 1M- AIIMII Of
--10opply.

co.

Steel bu1ld1ng dealership avail
able 1n open market Dealer~ bu)'
tac1ory d rect High profit paten
tial sales or construction (303)
759 32110 E•t 1950

Col10do¥ lora,_.....,.,
--14021114-112-40111.

Professional
Services

ATTEN110H HOIIEOWNEASI
Attend a frM mortg~ge lnrarma
uon 1emlnar I learn How to
save 125 000 or more lrom the
inttre•t you are paying on rour
11om1 "' mobile homo WITHOUI"
REFINANCING! 'How to got 1
REFUND from yo111iondlor on In
torost you'Va ovorpaldi'Mo1'111•DI
ltrat8glll tuch II •How 1D gel: a
home Improvement loan or consolidate bllll when my bank
••)'• no • and •How lo flnd the
money I need aven If I t'lave not
oo-goed to just pllln "bad' crldit
WHEN Saumlay July 28 111117 at
10 OOAM 11 30All WHERE lla
eon County Llbr:arv Point Plea•
ant WV Call P.remllf Eqult)'
Wortgage ai1..US 343-o&amp;738 And
Rewtt 'lllur StatTodllyt

HARTS MASONAAY
Block
bt1ck &amp; stone work 30 years ea
pe lence reasonable rate• SO.t.895-3591 after 8:00pm no job 10

or., BIG WV.021206

Key1trokes Plus Resume/Sec:re
tllr181 S8rv1ce call814 742 7404
L1v n~ston 1 basemen! water
proaltng $11 basemen! repa r1
done free estimates llltttme
guarantee 10)'rl on JOb expen
once 304-875-2145
REAL ESTATE
Homes

tor Sale

12 Rooms Ranch Stvle Home
3Bedroom 2 112 balhl larQt
kitchen I dmlng room I fam 1,.
rooms. 2 parchallsaeened 2 car
garage 8f10 mile out Sandhill
Ad and lots rrore 304-eJS-4571

M~

To quat fled bUyer 3 bedrooms
and bath, s.,ry on 41b1110 io~
now carpet kitchen and bath
Small down payment $160
month 814 9D2 252i ond leave
and phone numbef for ap
Public

GOV'l FORECLOSED Homeo
Feu Pennlel On $1 Delinquent
Tax Repo 1 REO 1 Vour Area
Toll Froa (1) 800 218 9000 EJL
H 2814 For CUrr8hli,.ngo.

Ohio R1ver 1n Southeastern Ohto IS seektng
qualified applicants for the pos~ton of Parks and
Recreation D1rector ThiS IS a responsible

paople Candidates should possess

good

commun~cat1on sk1lls the abtltty to Interact wtth
the publ1c 1n a pos1t1ve mannar knowledge of
parks mamtenance and of the pnnc1ples of

etc

for

the

care

g1ven our daughter
Lorn Straight. over
the

last

weeks

three

espectally

Nancy Smtth
Unda

&amp; Ted
Zarnoeh

Manager 518 Second Avenue Gallipolis Oh1o

Business
Opportunity

fNDTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
ness With people you know and
NOT 10 send money through the
ma11 unul you have Investigated
the offenng
BE YOUR OWN BOSS Local
Vend Ate For Sale B g Cash
Wkiy Cali Today 800 350-8383
Bu kl1ng For Rent For Speoal Oc
C&amp;IIOnS By The Hour Day Or
Week St Rt 33 New Haven
WI/A 614-898-2613
Busmen Space For Rent 2000
Sq Ft St Rt 33 New Haven
WVA. 61"-"698-2613

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Part-time

Experienced
Construction
worker for Meigs
County Area
Rooting, Electrical,
carpentry
Supervisory akllla
preferred
Send resume c/o The
Dally Sentinel, ~ 0
Box 729-47 Pomeroy,

~ut4oyears

ago tlirs lrttle babe
made tfie front page
Jlappy '13irtfiday

Muat have an EPA Refrigerant Certification,
knowledge of oil, gaa

&amp;

electric fumacea,

Including air conditioners &amp; heat pumps
•Excellent pay baaed on experience
•Peld vaCIItlona and holiday•
•Paid overtime and medlcallneurance
•Veer around employment with new atate of the art
. .rvlce van with tool• aupplled
Call Bennetts M.H Htg. &amp; Clg. at 446-9416 or
1-800-872·5967 or aend resume to

We the fam1ly of Rosa J.
Coughenour would hke to take th1s
t1me to thank all the fnends &amp;
neighbors for the1r love and support
after the death of Rosa J
Coughenour on June 18
Oaughter
lma Jean Henry

f

'

Th• Mortgegt Savlnge
Proaraml
Call lor FrM lntormatkm
Toll F,..
1-8811-343-4731 EXT 11

1---------320
Mobile Homes

Thanks

FIX~D BUYS ANY SINGLE
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE
304 13&amp;-:1401
l_:_:_:_:_:_:_::.;_:_o:-_ _ _ __
$aU 00 DOWN a 99'!1. APR
FIXED BUYS ANY DOUBLE
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE
304 736-34011

1391

OH 45631

COST ANALYST
Cost Analyst needed Immediately Duttes 1nclude
preparon11 budgetary cost and other ftnancial
onformattontreports as well as jOurnal entnes
Responsoble for monthly bank reconctliatlons and
other spec1al -projects QuallfiCBttons tnclude
Bachelors Degree In Accountong or Business
Admin strat1on required as well as prevoous
expenence 1n an accounly posttlon
Compet1t1ve wage and benefit package
Contact Rosie Ward Director of Human Resources
Holzer Medical Center
100 Jackson Pike Gallipolis OH 45631
Phone (614) 446 5105 Fax/TOO (614) 446 5106

Sale &amp; Auction

THURSDAY, JULY

Lar\'e

family, Franch City Baptlst Church, Rev Charles
Stansberry, Rev John Wood, McCoy Moore

to

Funeral Horne, the pallbearers, and
all those
who sent food flowers cards, or whatever they
did to help us through thfs difficult t1me A
special thanks to Pat Mtller Maxie Camden and
Denise Michaels
Our sincere thanks Husband Quentin, Children
Tom lim, Tammy Terllllll, Kathy and spouses
and grandchildren

24, 1997'-

t088 14x70 Claylon Newport
2bedroom 1bath cia new car
pet. 1 porch w/roof 113 500 304
8 ~ 25.

&amp;·00PM

ON

•vaR

eold
Oak dressers table 6 chatrs rocker metal cabonet
metal bed recliner bookcase porta TV atr cond
refngerator 30" gas range wnnger washer 2 yellow
WICker chatrs assortment of glassware some
anttque glassware pots &amp; pans comforters rakes
shovels post hole dogger potch forks mad1c axes
sledge hammer mowong sylh com kn~e m1sc tools
chain saw Wizard rotot1ller 3 5 Bnggs &amp; Stratton
lawn mower Lawn Boy lawn mower plus more
Auctioneers Note Small Auctton Be on tome"

MAGNI:T. . .0~ WORK AND ~LAV AT NAONIQUI:NC.H
WI: Sllll THI: PO.SialL.ITII:S THI. CAN PR0¥101: FOR
OUR NIIDDTMIUM IliON aOIION MAGNII'T. AHD POW
AS A

ltAPIDLY GROWING I NDU.TR'f' LI:AD&amp;R WI: .I:IIK TI:AM
PLAYI:II. WHO JIIAIITNallt TI:CMNICAL aXPI:IIrTISI: AND

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Mason, W.VA.
Residence 304 773 5785 or
Auction Center 304 773 5447
Executr x Merle Smrth
Terms Cash or cneck w/10
Not Responsoble For Accodents or Loss of Property

AaiLITT THAT WILL LaYtRAGI: TI:CHfr40LOCIY 111'011 THI:

SOCIAL WORKER
A Soctal Worker Is needed to provide servloes 1n
the Hospice selling Must be a graduate of an
accredited school of social work licensed to practice
In the State of Ohl9 Competitive salary and excellent
benefit package
Please Contact
Rosie Ward
Director of Human Resources
Holzer Medical Center
100 Jackson Pike Gallipolis OH 45631
PhOne (614) 446 5105
Fax/TDD (614) 446 51 06

• b""''" ,. 4•"1••&amp; l'wderl4 lleiJI tool•&amp; and/or
• Frof"Kitno • dot "" of lootoUol dr&gt;hinc sol1wa"
• II!Owltd!f ol 011/Wt 1oi1wart """ lor CNC modo nto
• ll&gt;iny 10 m woth 1ht !killed
and
HIM"I to lOire prablorns woth fabncat~• I"~'~
..n.ls etc
• C.,.W. of dnltill&amp; pan pnnt dmn"ll alii ,..,,.. ""'C
prt/1101"'1 ~
• t...lodp of '""""" Unlwan ....
folt

t""" '""""''

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

420

Moblla Homas
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob1le homes
start ng at $260 $300 s8'N8r wa
1er and 1 ash Included 81-4 9d2
2167
2 bedroom mob le hOme on 2 I"'
el acre! $275 per month plus
utllt es $200 depos t references
requ ed, c:a I 614 992 9052
2 Be:droom Uob le Home All
Electric: $250/Uo 1250 Deposit
814 387 7802

ITS BICl

1D87 4BR 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE $1 949 DOWN
$319/MO FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES NITRO WV 304 755
5885 LmoiBif Offer

30

ext1nguostter manuals for Kohler B&amp;S Tecumseh
others
Owner Kathleen Thompson
Dan Smith Racone Oh Auclooneer

&amp;

STAR BURST
$1500.00
$50.00 OR MORE

&amp; Auction

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

ESTATE
AUCTION

_..r

,till. . . .

• Pnftr """"" wiG dolipitc toolio&amp; for Cio&lt;ioull,
Gdant '" pmlll
• Pnftr ntadtitt do"ll ..,.,.....

~

"1'1"1 mlltJINill.... iiiMfill
""" pot&lt;~lial Ploa11 111111 JOII' "'""" ID Vlco

llolp U1 ..... dol futuN whilf

Pnoldtnt Hu,... leoourus, Coole TD at
Mqnequench laternadonal, Inc , 64]5
s-rtlekl lid , AtNienon, IN 460 l l or fu

765-641-6965 Equal Opporiolllly Entpioror r

26, 1997

Fancy oak dresser 3 pc depressoon poster B R
sutle 3 pc Waterfall B R Suote lowboy chest oBI&lt;
stdeboard oBI&lt; rocker old trunk old sewing machine
fancy story &amp; Clark organ metal Cabinet floor lamp
old radio comic books Buggs Bunny Haunted House
etc old Blatr bottles large select on of glassware
sa~ &amp; pepper shakers 8 pi setting of china Ins &amp;
Herrongbone vase Ruby glass Hull glass Jewel T
pteces Vlrglma Rose places Carnoval chalk
set of wheat pattern china pitchers Bull Bell 0 1
lamps lamps Avon store jars old newspapers JFK
4 Days book &amp; others several Wanama High School
yearbooks varoous years 1927 PI Pleasant Central
School picture costume jewelry set of silverware &amp;
case lg nativity sel old country &amp; western 33
records &amp; r'ller 78 s &amp; 45 s pocket books Uncle
Sam Bank &amp; others Griswald kettle wntd No 9
lardpress lg mounted drtllpress plus more
Auctioneers Note Many surprises In thos auction
still unpacking Hems

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
~
Mason, W.VA.

Today!
Speak w1th our
psychics
LIVE 24 Hrs.
1·900-263-6000
Ext. 9201
$3

99 per mtn

Must be 18 yrs
Serv U (619) 645 8434

I

TIRED OF
BErlNG.,
ALQNE?
1~\JI"\IL..L.. ~!OW TO

MEET THAT
.SPECIAL.
SOM~ONE

\)J

..u..+------ 1t1e PROMISE or PROGRESS

4 BR

21/2 BA

Large front porch brick axtenor
w1ndows, new central heat

&amp; a1r

1 1/2 story,
New v1nyl

Close to GAHS

$79,900 00 Call 446·9627

Residence 304 773 5785 or
Auction Center 304 773 5447
Exewtor Charles Roush
Terms Cash or Check w/10
o
Not Responstble For Accidents or Loss of Property

1

900 285 0074
Ext 7469

Sleep n~ rooms With cook ng
Also trailer space on uver All
hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m
304173-5851, ~Ma~son~Wil~_ _.Jb~~~~~~~~~~~==------..1

Noce 2 Bedrooms 4 112 II las
From Galllpoh Wll&amp;f SIOVI Ralr gerator Furnished No Pe11
S275rMo 814 256 1884 514

81 ..-446-7323

B86 9236

Apartment For Rant/New Haven
WVA One Bedroom Furnished
Pmne 614-898-2613.

1:.:=:::.:::!:::=.:::.:..::.::..:.:::;,_

Real Eatate General

Wood Realty, Inc

446-1066
32

LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631

REALTORS:

Allen C Wood ReeHor/Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Realtor/Broker 446 0971
Jeanette Moore Reattor 256 1745
Tim Watson Realtor 256 61 02
Patnc1a Ross Realtor
, - - - - - - - - - , TOO
MUCH CITY UFE?
Our protess1onals here
Consider this home localad
at Wood Realty ha\18
epprox
six mu.. tram
lUst about sold
Goil polis
3
bedrooms
everython9, We have
altachod gerage basemeno
buyers looking for that
w/flreplace vonyl/bnck extanor
certatn ptece of
Exceptionol Buyl 110 • 1131

FOR

~

J.!=:!..---...,..,-.,....,..,..,.=-1

Lla11ng

mp essed as you step 1nto the
oversized formal Uv ng room &amp;
dining room with 2 II eplaces Cozy
fam y room Kitchen and bath
Upstairs yo u w1 I find 2 3
bedrooms pus a large bath w1th
wh tpool tub Ample outdoor area
teatur ng large porch sun pa110 2
ca.r garage wth shed and 2 horse
s ails Located on 46 acres m/1
Call
lor
cnance to
P ced at

THE

n

JZU~~~::~~::~~;?.~~~~!~:~~~~ olNewHome
bvlt41na

comfortable
and a beautiful senlng
you II f nd when you vtew
lovely 2 story colon at home
w II be mpressed as you walk
formal enlry lovely formal
·•-__ r_oo
__ "m &amp; formal dining room
floor n ce k !chen w th
open lo cozy tam 1y
gas og f replace was
afamly nmnd 48Rs 2
and the conven ence of
(no more
• l~.,r,;h;~ I laundryuproom
&amp; down the
jlaomo~JiVIni

:

~j~~~f~t~n:·~=~~~r-,.,

., . ,.

yours
comfort
make MIDumum
you want to
make
qua ty to numerous to
th1s ad for $189 900
PfiVBie IJI9W ng

OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER -

uoo 8841068

AN ADDRESS TO BE PROUD OF
551
DEBBY DRIVE Call about thiS summer !tme
spectaltoday Immaculate 3 br 3 bath br1ck
home also features an enormous fam11y rm
w1th a WB fireplace large entertainment rm
leads to the 20 x 46 lazy L pool which 1s
surroundad by custom landscapmg as mce
as you II see anywhere ms1de a wooden
pnvacy fence If you throw
equipped kitchen
other extras 11 s

ma

completely

a

2 car garage &amp; a few
a steal at $149 000

MEIGS COUNTY
BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

m

(614) 742·3171 or 1·800-585-7101
RUSSELLD WOOD, BROKER

..:;:t
:or-.:

Cheryl Lemley

742 3171 ,,. ,0 ,•

NEW LISTING! 1282 DUSKY STREET SYRACUSE
Alumonum soded one story home lhat has 2 bedrooms
bath hvong room doning room kllchen FA electric
furnace/central air conditioning anached carpon Rear
porch Noce $45 000 00 1941
NEW LJSTINGI 34260 CREW ROAD Lots of living
space comes with lhos extra nice Ametlcan home
lnciudong 3 4 bedrooms 2 full baths llvong room dlnong
area/famoiy room combonahon loft area kttchen
complete w th Jenn a1r range Large mea deck on rear
Lever lawn being approx 2 acres more or less Come
see you woll be Impressed Lei us show you all lor an
appointment N940
NEW LISTINGI 724 Main Strttl In Rutland
Remodeled 1 t/2 story home living room with atrium
doors that leads to a covered deck lots of cabinet apace
In kitchen ~ bedrooms donlng room Immediate
possessoon $29 500 00 N936
TAKE
ADVANTAGE
OF THIS EXCELLENT
OPPORTUNITY We are offering two restaurants for
sale One on Syracuse and one In Mlddlepon Every1h ng
Is set up ready for a new owner buolding equipment snd
lnventoty Included n sales price Bolh currently on
operation and thena os even room to e~nd lhe hours of
you want Take a look at be ng your own boesl Call
Cheryl todayii&amp;02

tha
I
ai2130SA
acr•os w~h 2 barns partial fane ng Older 1 1 2 story farm hOlose:ohal hall!
been remodeled where 11 counts I v ng oom d n ng oom
breakfast nook 3 bed ooms 2 baths full basemen! pat o and
porch free gas both county and c s1ern wate All h s pnced at
If you don't 1'1Ufry and ca 1now you may be too !ate11 1623

POMEROY VILLAGE This home has everythong bu1 the
mosl excltong feature Is the excellent view of the Ohoo
Rwer Owner has utilized this view to the fullest extent
Full finiahed basement with kitchen lovely stone FP on
formal LA handcrafted kllchan cabinets and oak trim
Amenities galora MB87
41158 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD I Aluminum sided 1 1/2
story home IMng room kitchen over sized detached 2
car garage FA electric furnace Addillooal mobile home
hook up Mu8t call today for an appointment! 1558
124 Acru more or less siluated at Eaton Road Priced
at $48 000 00 1878
a-mall us for Information on our listings:

11 You Want a home In ths c:ounlry but nol a ol of vard
rna ntenance then lh s IS for youl Newer 2 bedroom 1 bath home
s tuated on a 8 acre ot m/1 oca ed on Uncotn P ke Ca I tor an
appo ntment today! $34 900 1221

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446-3644
E Mall Address w1seman@zoomnet net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI - 446-9555
Loretta McDade.

446-7729

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1007

Sonny Games 446·2707

•

Crav ng a I ttle

,;.;;;;;;;;;:..;;;;;:;;;;.;.:.:;:;;,;;;;.;;.;:.;.._-:1 southern elegance n your life?
Then you must see th1s home Be

IN TOWN COMIIERCIAL
IOUVE SlftEET Has , _
space
storage
and
warebouae $50 a 15001

IN TQWN CONVENIENCE
Wlttnn waking diStance to
Two to three
one floor plliln Ranch easy shopping
care lawn t car garage newer bedroom home would make a
roof total of five rooms Won 1 "ea1 staner or retirement
nome 30 a 1134
laat long al this price
$471100 00 1137
THINKING OF BUILDINOI
"SUPER SIZE HOME" That Tt'lls could ba what your
Is only two years old w/ a looking for and the price IS
growing family tn mind Four rlgh1 coo in the $20 s 10 acres
bra 2 1/2 baths real nice m/1 with approx 9 acres
ki1chen large wrap around wooded mineral rlghta ulll
porch 2 car attachtll garage are avaMable 12008
baok ponlon ot yard 1 fenced
in EXCEPTIONAL BUYI 12001 BUILD THAT DREAM
$130 000 00 1138
HOME ON THIS LOT
For
the low price or $8 0001 Lol 11!1
COMMERCIAL INVESTIIENT approx 1001180 w th road
Convenient locat on w th fromage Located n Plantz
large parldng .... .ubdivlafon
HOllE

Lletlng Look ng lor the
perfecl low maintenance
located n town under
~ eN&gt;??? Then you bette hurry
I on th s property Located at
Sunset Or ve th s home Is
tor you to move lnlo Lovely
oom/d n ng room cozy
3 bedrooms 2 112 baths
basement 1
storage shed and
w1th lovely landscaping
at $98 500 Don t m ss out !I

DON'T PASS UP TH1S BUYt
Three bedroom Mobile 1101110
encoose&lt;l porch large out
bulking ahade 1rees 2 ac:res
mil tor 1341100 oo 14001

ra FoR vouR coNVENIENce T~
1

BLACKBURN REALTY. 446..Q008

Why wonder
about tomorrow
when you can
call for answers

Furnished
Rooms

Uiddeport one 1 bedroom one 3
bed oom clean new carpet and
Windows relarences end deposit
requred 814-82&amp;4gSCJ

3 Room Furmshed Apartment
651 Second Avenue Galllpahl
Nut To Bollard Library $3501
Mo Plul Deposit Required No
Pets Allowed Relerencll Re
quested Call Dob\tle Or Judy A1

IIOitEYt Appro• 1040 Sq

and downtown

2 Ml FROM TOWN on
Bulaville Pike. 4 bedroom
bnck, 5,400 sq ft tncludtng
full basement wtth 2 car
garage, c1ty schools
1 1/2 A , 446-0390

ll~~~~:t.~::~~

Lalayene Mall L1rg1 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths S450JMo In
Cludll Uti! II... Oeposll Required
614-«&amp;-24n

2bdrm apll total electric ap
phanceslurnulhed. laundrY room
taclUtles close to Khooltn town
Appliceuons awaUabee at VIllage
Green Apll 149 or call et41i102
3711 EOH

NICE

Announcements

6:30P.M.

Gradous hVIng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V lage Manor and
Rivers1de Apartments in ~lddle
port
From Eqval
$230 1304
Coil
81 ..
992 5084
Housing
Oppor
tunitlos

·--11.

looking tO buy give US
a cell. let US handle
your real estate needs!

RUTLAND
POST 467

'Used Parts
Rebutlt rear end for Sears starters tool box tores ftre

1 and 2 bedroom
fur
Nshed and unlurnllhtd
security
-··-"
depost required no pets 81•
992 2218

putt1ng your house on

BINGO
all tractors

Furn11hecl 3 Room1 &amp; Bl«t'! Na
Pets. Rolorenca And c_,..,t Ro-~:~~~~~~~~~~
quwod,81.. 448151D
Furnished Elf~elency l1g5JJ.Io
U1 hun Paid Sharo Ba1n 807
Second Allonua Oall polis 011
ue 31144 Allor 1 Rll

the market or posstbly

F'or Sala by owner

for Rent

8251
2 Bedroom Trail.,. Sconoc Road,
Vinton , 2501110 DtPOIIt No
AltJ,e14-448.0785.
p--ts
440 A..
uuvu
for Rent

property It COUld be
yours! II~ have
been lhonkong of

FACTORY DIRECt
NO MIODL£ MAN
SAVE US$
Oakwood Homes Ia the only
dealer In lhe trl state area that
bullda •nd aella their own
home1. For faC1ory d rect prices
shop OAKWOOD HOMES Nt
TRO. WI/ :114-755-5885.

2 Be-droom T~alter For Rent 8
Moift Down 218 Gallipolis. $2251
llo • Ooposll Aof«tncu Aoquktd 814 UHI12 114 251

Or leasel3br 2 112 balh 3 c:ar
garage w/c:ar Uft SWimm ng pool
wldeck e•l a 70x50 bUild ng lo
cated on 23 ac:res 304-675-&amp;431

4 llodrooml. 2 8atho, $500 Down.

ple~s

• Pnftr ..,.,_. wiG SnnCam for CIIC 1"1""""'1
• Pnftr """"" wiG Allllllll toltwan! for illlrfaaoc 10

u4 aulm

Gall polls Ne 1gh

22 Ac:res 12• 000

l225llolo 304-738-7295.

9 OOA.M

t"" do"l• """""" with thf

--

co

GALLIA
borhood Rd

756-5885

Located at 3314 Franklin Ave In the north end of
PI PleaNnt W ll In the Bell meade Addition
Watch for algna The estate of Helen Plantz will
be BOld Mrs Plantz waa a cook at Wahama High
School for many years

PM PRESSING OR
PM FORGING PROCESSES

'"'"'""' """ '"'"' """'

6 ~4-7?5- 9173

1987 doublow de $1445 down
1228/mo Free clellverw &amp; ntup.
1-800-8111-8777

SATURDAY, JULY

TOOL DESIGNtR
l"n of

BRUNER LANil

Rent
Furnished 2 - - o\plr0110n1.
Ac:roll From Park AC No Pets
Roloroncos Ooposil 132 5/Mo
114-441-BZI5.814-448-0577

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON One bedroom apartment In Pt
ESTATES 52 Wesrwood Drive Pleasant Furn shed Very clean
lrom $280 to S334 Walk 10 shop
No polL 304-875-1388
I movies Call 814 4&lt;41 2588
Equal Houq Opportunity
R1ver Bend Piece Apartments n
New Haven WV now renting 1br
Conven ant to PVH 2bedroom HUO subsic:I1Z&amp;d apanment tor el
k Iehan bath LA No I&gt;OIL $3()01 derir &amp; handoaoppod Rent basad
mo $300 depoSIL304~7S.5788
on mc:ome AC all ulllllll pa1d
House For Lease $350/Mo Plus
EOH 304-882 3121
DamageDeposn. 614 38s. 4n 8
Cottage lor renl 1br k tchtn
bath 1175/mo + utl1t1e1 112mo Tata Townhouse Apartment•
House n Pomeroy lor sa 8 or ren1 for depos11 304-875-2495 al 'Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors. CA 1 112 Both, Full)' Cor
rent, 614 ggz 3090
ter 8pm
peted Adult Pool I Bab)' Pool
In M ddleport 4 bedroom b c:k Downtown Galllpahs Modern 1 Patio Start S350/Mo No Pe11
new c:arpet S350+ deposlvreler Bedfoom All ElecUIC Carpeted lease Plu• Security Depos1t Reences ut hues not tncluded no Complele K !Chen ElectriC Heal/ quired 614·~46-3.t81 814 446
pes 614 992 3457
ArCondiUonmg. 814 44e-Q13Q
0101

tDU 14M80 3 or .C Bedroom
11 3511 down 1229/mo Free air
lklrUna, &amp; tielovery Only at Oak
wood Homos Nitro WV 304 755

suce••• o,. ourt •u•u••••

~llowi"' ............-

locating Need 3 Bedroom Ohto
Home In Country Good Roads &amp;
Schools W11h1n 1 Hour Of Galli
poh Have Pell 014_.58-1228

!?

THIE

~IEitMANII'NT

DI:R---ANO FO. DUll P•OFI:•• IONAL Tlloll.M

Real Estate
w..nted
...,...

Ohio
W th300
All u
neral Rights
Wanted
Secluded
AtretAnd
In
No DeYelopmenc Potential CraiG
Lande fold
60410 Apache
Waahlnglon Ml 48094 Phone
810 7S8-1439.
Rental Wanted Homeowners Re-

Fr endly R dge 8 Acres $8 000
8 5 Acru S7 500 Or 19 Acres
$18 000 Teens Run Ad {2) 10
160 Clayton Northridge 1.- 11 70 2 Acre Parcels 110 000 +
Bedrooms 2 Bathl Fireplace
CA Futnished 2 Porches Out
CO Between Chester+
building. Per'lect Starter Home For Tuppers Pia ns The Best 5 A"a
A ~ung Couple: 81+583-3521
Parcels On Keebaugh Fo lrod
Ad S~• 000 Each Both S27 500
10SI3 Flemmg 14x70 2br 1bath Near Albany Remote 10 Acres
control air &amp; heat ••• cond $9 ooo O~y $1 ooo Ocwn • SHl8
~ o 304 273 3214 or 304 A Mo Or 5 Aero• S7 soo Ale•
, ,.,..,.57
andna Schools All New Lots
Opono"D SoM In DarNIUol
1003 Spruce Ridge tlx70 mobile
home excellent cond1tlon nu
Call For Free Maps + OWner Fl
merous upgrades Including nai\Cing Info Take 10% OH l sted
cathedral ct11lngs new CIA gar Pnces On Cash Purchases!
dan 11111, - full botho and much
more caJI814-9927690
R1ver lot Older T a1ler Oec:k &amp;
Dod( S17 900 Blackburn Really
Now 1DD7 14 Wldo-1 balh $8991 814-4-48 0008.
down $139/mo w11h approved
credltCII11 BQ0.691-67n
Three Seen c Water Front lots
Raccoon Creek Olde MobiLe
1G97 Ux70 2 or 3 Bedroom Home Rural Water &amp; Sep c Sys$905 down $195tmo Only at tem.814-9278575
Oakwood Homes Nitro. WV 304

Locatecl at the Auction Center on Rt 33 In Mason,
W V8 The estate ol Paul Worthy Kinnaird will be

PER GAME
THAN

360

1

1D87 Clayton 14170 3 Bedroom~
2 Beths Fireplace Cenlral A r
81.-.37'9-2957 Aflar4 P.M

Cash Pas ttve 10 Refreshments
"Not responsible for ace dents or loss of property"

Mo••

F.::::::::..:..:.::.:::..:;:.:.;.___

3BodroomTraiar 814...111148

Phylhs Mason PHR Otrector of Human Resources ts
receiving appltcations from July 15 through July 31
for the 12 month full ltme Dorector of RSVP posotton
at her Allen Hall office or from her campus P 0 Box
F 27 Tel 245 7228
The Director of RSVP reports to the Grentee (URG
President) through the Grantee Representative woth the
advoce and support of an RSVP AdVISOry Councol The
pOSition reqUtres a degree 1n a related fteld and/or
outstandong related experoence along wrth language wrrtong
and soc1al sk1lls needed for progfam management propoSal
writing speakmg engagements commumty events etal
Knowledge of accountong computer operations and
community and SOCial seMces ts a plus The dut1es nclude
day to day opera! ons of office and program Identifying and
assessing volunteer needs woth the 3 county RSVP slatoons
and 1esponsoblhty for RSVP volunteers A complete profile of
pos~lon Is affixed to lhe offlcoal appl cation form
Tile appllcatoon process requ res a completed application
form (avaoiable at the Unoversoty Human Resources Office)
and a lener tn the applicants own words and handwr~lng
stating quahfical ons and 1nleres11n the
EOE

W. ""' It ~ut l

Limited Olforl1907 doublawlde
12791
ntup
Onlr 11 Oakwood Hom•• N tro

s

UNIVERSITY OF RIO GUIDE
RIO GUIDE, ONIO 45674
DIRECTOR FOR RmRED SENIOR VOLUNTEER
PROGUII IRSYPt
GALUA, JACKSON AND VINTON COUNTIES

DIE~IENH

For Sale Or Trede 32 acre• 5
y 11 e1 From Gall palls on Stale
Routo 218 WHI Soli All or Part~
$25000 014-256-8574

Paleatne FJd. Gl&amp;nwood ~~ mles
from U lton h1t Johns Creek
Ad 2 B•droom 2 bath mobolo
Houses for Rent
-:-:-:----------1 home on 314 acre C Jy water 410
1178 14170 SChJit With E11pando cantral a r new carpet $34 000 2bedroom house 1n Hartford
Uvong Room And A 1988 12X42 304 se2 5840
, 2501mo No pots dOnt asl&lt; 304
Add A Room Four Bedrooms 1
•-·
112 Baths. Famly Room, New Fur Wes~¥~~ood Home Show Inc
882 20 1&amp;a•.., 5pm.
nace, Heat PUmp And carpeting. Chack this out! l m1ted lime off
3 Bedrooms Near North Gallla
C&amp;l 61'-2o&amp;5-5565
er No down pll)'ment to qualified High SChool No Pets 400JMo
buyt:ra Double w des aa low as Plus Deposit, 814 4146 -8495
1971 t4x70 Schull With Expando $24lil pe month smgle w des as
living Room And A 1988 12x42 tow as $149 per month Call for AliBI able soon c ean 2bedroom
Add-A Room On A Rented Lot freaapproval 1 800 251 5070
new appl anc:es basemen! Rei
Four Bedrooms.., 1 112 Belhs
erences Depos 1 No pets 304
Family Room Undarp nnong 2 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
875 5182
Covered Porch11 And Outbu ld
lng Upgrades Include New Fut Apple Grove Stan c Valley
Executive Home For Lease 2 000
na.c:e Heat Pump And carpeong BealJt1ful 2acre lots public water
Sq Fl Near Galt Course $8501
Portable D11hwashor Stays c Bowen Jr 304 5715 2~36 or Mo Ava table lmmed a1ely 614
111950, Cal 81 ..245-5565
Wodll" Roatr 304 87 !&gt;-2722
446 2957

POSitiON liiNOUNCEMEIIt

Now

gpm.

3231.

1874 Cameron mobllt home ax
celent condilion. $8500 814 ~2
3831

45631·1219 by 08/01/97 EOE

WORLD

bl

51185.

Ao..c.d-

family of Mary (Bui'Mite)
would like
to express our thanks to all our friands and

Sale

1=::-::c":':-=::::::--:-::-::c,.-,=
$418 00 DOWN I II% APR

Destre BA Resume to Office of the C1ty

HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN NEEDED

Safford School Rd.,

The

HOW?

FINANCIAL

210

==:n of uaed home 2
Staring 11 $34DS
Oulck dlllvorr Coli 1 000 837
0

2 AC Oak OinoNe ~iii:4~:!s~:l ~Wil~~-~755-~·~·~w;~---Frotzor lluch Moro 8
New 1i97 1411.70 lhree beckoom.
~nc:lude• 8 months FREE lot rant
Onl~ Stat 86 per month wllh
$1050 down Call 1 800 837
3238
''-----"---,---------~---------1 :-:
1D70 Skyllna 12 •60
,
New Bank Ropo 11 Only 3 ialt
HOI"nt 2 Bedrooms. Uke New
owner 1nanc ng available 304
Furnace Fair Condlt1on $2 500 75S.711i11
814-4CI7 2385.
:...;...;._:;::;__ _ _ _ _ , Palastln• Rd GlenNood 15
1872 Freedom 2 Bedrooms 1 m1let from M1Hon Exit Johns
Acre land Sc:anlc Road V1n1on Cree!t. Rd 2.,bath 3 bed oom on
110 000 Or Beat Offer 614 4&lt;48 1 ec:w City waler central air
0785
S35 000 ~ 582 5640

and
Program works on mobile home
loans 1001

Public Sale

Card of Thanks

Card of

-12150
;: Mclnarch Plu1

recreational programmmg and the destre to

W1ll haul JUnk or ttash away 1351
pickup load 304-815-5035-

Box 729-47 Pomeroy,
OH 45768

rtoday '13eanme
'13abes are all tfie

eiiiVIIIIIit.CiobooodHo...

ESTATE
AUCTION

We w1sh to thank
the doctors, nurses

lton..-Oownon&amp;llectm.~td
llrionl.23or4 Bedraommod-

20 Acros &amp; 2br t101ier cll'f ,..,.,
lont•d on Bud Chanin Rd
142 000 304 875 1482 afltr

MDNM~;;;Wil;;:I!4-~~7~55-~588~5;;;;j3br
2bath S17DD down
month Frat delivery &amp;

for

Thrve bedroom two bath on
large corner lot located 33164
Now Lima Rd Rllttancf $35 000
OBO D41 783 5782 ovanings

148000Moonsotio&lt;angtoHC-

lor

three bedroom
one and 112 bat&gt; 110mo In Middlopor~ 814-i!l2 3485aflar 5pm
1 &amp; 112 story Victorian s1y1e
Mouse w1th Qtngarbfead and l11h
ICIIinD DOrtOO ond carpor~ throo
bedroom large bath ornate oak
flroploca surrounded 1&gt;1 plc"t
...... S30 000 ., .. 742-2348

t TIWE ONLYl
IH..Q-W-0-U Tl

t~~~~§~~~;;

N-'1 temodeJed

For sale. 1 bedtoom home In PD
rneroy will Mil on land contract.
.,..11125058

build upon a successful recreatton program

Send resume c/o The
Dally Sentinel ~ 0

Holzer Hospital

In Rutland 4 bedroom. 1 plus
lOriS 118 000 OBO 814 UD2
4514 or 114-GD2 2817

Wtll Clean Houses Weekly Or Bi
weekly Trustworthy: Reasonable
614 «t-o804

business Flexible

of

All brick 3bedroom Ranch full
bnement central air Camp
Ccnioy 304-815-1371

and development of pao ks and recraat1onal

per week

To

basement
lanced
bedrooms 1vinyl
too"' siding
large kltclltn
backyard Reduced to S87 ooo
:J0447!5-8310

acltv~tes and special events for a c1ty ol 51 00

Meigs County

of Thanka

2 year old sectional
3br 2 lltths centra\ air NtCEI
Somorvlae Raohy 304 11!&gt;-3030
.. 304-87!&gt;-:~G1-.

ca....

Pr•Enginoorod StHf BldOL Na
donal Company -dong O..ior
shop In Opon Markat. Hogh Profit
Pottnl.al Consttuc:tlon Or Salel
303-758-4135 En 11200

31 0

i~iFi~~~~~~~;.~¥;32~oFiu~o:bl~le~H~~;me;s~~:f~~~====~i420~i~~a~b~~~:;mft;~~44~0~Ap~•~b:,~:n:ts~~~44~0~~~~~n~ts~~r=~iii
for Sail
sa~
lor Rent
lot'

Sale

tor

By ownor
v.rnon .-.......,
Polnr Pteaqnt e rooma. 2 or :S

pos1t1on dedicated to the coordtnatton oversight

hours 15·25 hours
Card

e 8 Acrtl

Convenience Store For Lu1e
lncludtla Ali EQulpmlnt, 51. Rt 33.
New Ha11en W.VA.: 114 e;e
2613

~mBI

Homes tor

-nt

The Htstonc City of Gallipolis Siluated along tha

Secretary for

Mell118,1nd
Emily

for

GIIE/T PRICE

com-ciol BuDding Fo&lt; Sole Or
Lilli 4000 Sq Ft Sl RL 33
Ntw Haven WVA e14 •va
281:1.

230

310

310 HOmas sale

Jh*u ~---JhatbW • Page OS

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

OREAT LOCATION

Director of Parks and Recreation

rTfie 9um Wfio s

Happy Ad

310 Homes lor sail

ButlneU

A~111ered Nurse Will Do Baby
sotung For 1 Chotd ~ 3 Days Par 1-':-'--'-:.:.:..:.:.:..::.::.:.:::.::~_::__
Week In My Home Excellent 3 Bedroom Home With Garage &amp;
Care V Ctnll)' Holzer MediCal Barn Mamtenanc:e Free Locat
Center Relerenc11 Furn shed
ad Addison Township 814 446
614-33754792

If You Are looktng For An Op
pomm ty That Matches Your AmbiJM&gt;n Here Is That Opporou~ty_

Bob Wilson Sales Manager Will
Be Holding A REJCrJillng Sam nar
Froday July 251h 10 00 AM And
2 00 RM ONLY At Tho Days
Inn On Nonh Bridge Slrett In
CHWcothe

210

Opportunity

Help Wanted Timber Cutrer 1
POSTAl. JOBS
Stw Opota,.. Loader
112 el IHr To Start. Plus BeM ara10r Sickle Expenenced
80 W nted li Do
fits Carriere Sor1er1 Clerks Nood To Apply Call 814-6112-- 11 1
B
0
Compuler Tra nee1 For An Ap
7455.
ANY ODD JOBS Eltenor paint
ptiCIIIOn And Egm lnlormat10n
mg shrubl &amp; wteds trimmed
Coli 1-800-8:J8.54D3 Ext 6438 D TOIIACEW'S FAMILY ENTEfi.
landscaping 11dewalks edgad
TAINIIENT
-.,._To D P.M 7 lloyl.
North Second A11enue Uld lawn care etc: Call 81!1 304 67S.
7112.
B1Uiard1 ~Ideo game•
co"" Cart f ad deycare on Salley Run
July
Ad. -~ 614 992 3509

-.ring And ChlltonltiOD Alai
tion Avollaltft For An LPN Wlot&gt;lna To Work Wi1h Tho Darnenua
HOIIETYPIS'IS,
PC users needed $45 DOD In Population In A Secured Alz
come potential Call 1 800 513 hoimtfo Unit Patt Time 2 P.M
10 ~M Shltt Wllh FuN Time A&gt;a4343 Ext 8-D308
liblt In Near Future Unique
Local Non Profit ADeney ~ Stak Pr_, Programmlno And Upbeat
lng A Part Time E.acutiWI Oirte SUc:caasful Sarff Apply In PoriOn
tor The 0Htctor Works Under At Scenic H1ll1 Nur11ng Canter
The Direction Of A YaluntHr Ad- 311 Buckrldge Rd Btdwell OH
visory Commtnta And Accom NO PHOIIE CAWI PLEASE
phahll Work Through A Cadre
01 s.rv ce VolunMarl In A Var Flockoprlngo
lo ~ I ful timo/pRr1 '""" RN
io!y 01
Corrml.&lt;li!Y
- Will
- Be Ef for
11 7 1hlft Experience pre
Tho
Ideal
Candidate
factlvoe At L•nd1ng An Eflort To forrod, but will conolder the roghl
tncroou The 0tDOniZI1ion s Pro- condldota Eacottont bonof~ podo.
tile CommunetJ A. .,.,... And 100 lor full ... . , port limo ....
Fund ng level Interested lndl ployoao Apply at Roc.,prlngo
viduala Should Send A Currant Rehabllltatk»n Center 38750
Atauma To CLA 41 e cia Gam -sprlnao Road. I'Vmoroy. Oh.
polls Oaoiy Trl~o no 825 Third 457811
Allerlle Gallipo"~ OH 45031
Tt'le Area 1 Lar
010 Soaks Team Good Pay E•
And Oldest Maintenance
cellent Drhnng Record tU4 258
nd Janitorial Supply Company
11121
11 Preunur Setktng A Sales
Potldon Open For Part Time Hu- RepreMntaliVt For Gallla Jac:k
mono Ofllclf F.. Gal• County To aon And Vinton Counties The
lnvealloate Animal Abuse Ne- Saiactad Cancfldete Should love
glect And Cruelty C11e1 Sue In GaiiJ&gt;&lt;&gt;Is And Be FomiUar Wit&gt;
cauful Completion Of Ohio ThosoAtlll.
Peace Officer 1 Training Valid
Orivw s llc:onso And Dopondablo Ron lo Staking An EJperiencO&lt;I
Transporlatlon Required MUll Salta Reprel8ntauva Who Has
lOYt Animoll. Pttftronca Will So Tho Ability To Dell With Tho
Gl- To Cand da1es Woth PriVI Many Prasen1 Cu11omera And
ous Experience And /Or Knowl Al1o Call On New Prospect ve
tdgo Of Ohio Animal Cruelty OJsiiDmera.
laWI ~ By The Colt Plus Mil•
•DO Li.obollty lnouranct Provided. RoH Offor1 An Excellent S18rting
II lntarnfed Please Submit Rt Solary Commission llonu~ A Full
oume Including Tlvtt Reloroncos Size van, HHllh Insurance Profit
By July 30 1907 To Gallla County Sharlng And An On-Go1ng Tram
Animal Welfare League Inc. P.O Ina f'r&lt;9am
Box 218 Gill~~ OH 45831
Plea• Send Resume To
In

Helpwanted

Sunday, July 20, 1997

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

Sunday, July 20, 1997

Fumlshld
Rooms

Sunday, July -20, 1997

PttslorSIIe

TF1Ar1SPORTA TIO! I

fAR!.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVFSTOCK

Aegllltrod AutVollon Shepherd
Puppies, Red MerrUie'a, &amp; Slut

MenOio'o, l100,8t4-31la-W25.
892·311&amp; or 81•·902-38&lt;68.

570
At&lt;C Aeg1attttd Yorklt pupptea,

O'dell True Vakle
A&amp;GFood
Ctnnl SUpprr
ValovSUpptr

ready 10 go $350oa. 304-US.

3112e

Btownt~rv.-thl

Motor Cross Gtar Air Bruthed
Painted Helmel. Alpine Star, AXO
Boors S1ze 9, Chett Protecror,
Thor Jersey jpanta, Gloves, Scan
Goggles, Knee Pads, Sh1nn
Guarde, Snow Skit, Riding Dtna·
merle Mower 35 8 HP 814·448·

27• Zemth TV, remote , c:abl6

1.1ERCHANDISE

read~. 185: wh1te refrigerator,

-good,$50, ato~-m- 784t .

510

Floirl&gt;ow · 2 "'·
old;-used,
5 h~
Crafllmln
shredder,
newr
Xerox
cop1er,
table
lop,
reductl,
Built-In ovtn S20. Stovt top 4·

Goods
Appliancta:
Reconditioned
Walllttrt, Drym. Aangeo, Aafrl-

gratora, 80 Day

Guarantee!

French City Uaytag, 814·•487795.
Fonclng, Baaktd&gt;all Bockboard,

Briclt-._ 814 HI

0028.

GOOO USED APPliANCES
Waahtra, dryers, relrtgeratora,
rang11, Skaggs Appllanc:ea, 78

Vine

Stree~

Cell 814·448·7398,

UJOO 4QD-34DO.

$150: Horvttt Gold Aefrlge&lt;aror
Frost FrH, 1150; Whirlpool At·

WOU'FTANNING BEDS

Tan At Homo
vending
Bur DIRECT and SAVEl
candy machines; teat tolored w11h
Comm&amp;rciaVHome Units
Air Condltionera DiHarent Sizea, oak llain stands; 111r1 your awn
From ltW.OO
John Deere Lawn Tractor, 1882 :;bu::li::nm=::.·8:;1_:4·_:992::_-t::J~::.70::·_ __
Low Monthly Paymorns
Toya• COrolla. Brawn Rocker Re- Seats 220 Volt AJr Compreasor 5
FREE Color Catalog
16:;.1.:;0._ _ _ _ 1 HP 30 Go lion $300; Seors 1B
4_:48:_
~ci:;.ntl&lt;.:;;_,1:;.1_4_
CIIIITTJDAY 1·1100·711.0158
Air Condlnoners R•Conditioned Inch J1gsaw St 20; Task Foret
All Slz11 Guaranteed, 814·886- 10· Table Saw $120; Delta 12 Trampoline 1120. Nordic Rider
7531 .
Band Saw $120, Ot111 18 Jiguw $200, 614-24H15-t

enlarges: 13 quarter

bumoro 1211. 304-a7s-4038.

Aluminum
Size
$150; Four 15•

Decker Partible Table Saw $50;

Heit E&amp;actrlc Forced Air Furnace,

Treadmill, eletlrit, 503 Health·

1120, 814......8·1311.
Full 1120 truck topper S45; new
phone, Will sell at 112
:pnco:;;
' :::.:·$::2::5.~6::_14:.:-ll:.:4::i·.:2114:.:.:S:___
Set Of American Racing Wheels,
14 Inch, Paid 1440, Will setl For
$300; Headhght Covers For Be-

Aeg illered
Auslrallan
Shepherd Pupp1e1. Blue Merrills,
Black Tntt &amp; Reel Tuea Vat
7

Ched&lt;ed, 814-388-83811

Beau t•ful AKC, Black WJTan
Uark1ng1 Cocker Spaniel Puppy,
Champion Sired, 12 Wttka old,
tiOO 080. ,&amp;14)441-1417 leave
Messaoe

10gat tank set up spec1a1s. F1sh
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
A11e Po1nt Pleasant, 304·675·

2083.

A Groom Shop -Per Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Sheett. 373 Georges Cr11k Rd. .Canary's: pair $50. w1cage seo
B14-44&amp;4Zl1.
flflt 1hree pair sold, gel a free
AKC German Shepherds, 61 ~- hen 30oi-07s..eo3.

2847.

1
- -Building
---550
Supplies

~pe

~Full~~~:~~~::~~~ ponablt

vr Pick-Up 2 Mounted Mud &amp;
Snow Tnta, S150; a· Black &amp;

Green Refrlgetatot Froa1 Free,
frlgtlltor Very Nlc:e, 1 Year War·
rani)' $300: A1r COndibOnlr 5,000

Plus

71J_IIII,_,~...
~ UOJC38$25.

Household

7 -8 Wtek Old Oalmation PUP·
pies, $50 Each, CaU Tom Mnc:hell
At 614-381-8922.

742·2258.

AKC Reg Blood Hound Puppies,
IMII&lt;s old. 30o&lt;-882-381 3
AKC Reg BOIUU pupp1e1, de-

Block, bnck, sewer pipes. wmdows, lintels,· etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 014·245·
5121 .

Rat Terrier Puppin, 7 Weelc1
Old. Scot.y Lucas. 814-387-7518.

304-458-1877
Used Garage Ooor Opener S&lt;IO;
Garage Door SSD, Two
4'xe"7" Sliding Patio Doors No

e·xe·e·

0657.
Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Now Open· Beach's farm Mar1utt.
Stale Route 1ti0, AI Evergreen
Home Grown Tomatoes, Half AJ~
ner Green Beant, Corn. Fresh
Watermellont And Cantalopes,
We Also Buy Local Produce

BTU. $125; Weltinghouse Air
Conditioner 11,000 BTU $250;
G.E. Womer $95; llartag Woohtr 1150 , Hotpoint Dr1er SQS,
Eltctrlc Ranga, $95: Hotpolnt
W.thlf l Drror Stl $205 Each,

WITH A WINNING TEAM!

Motorcyelel

Real Estate General

1981 28 Ft. Tiatka Clan A Mo·

gallon Rubbtrrnaicf water trough's.

•ell.

: Horaa Drawn Buggy Antique,

:Gqod Conditlon, 814-448-3782
~

We make hydraulic: hoae aaHm·
l blioa. Sidor's Equipment 304·
;.;1;.:75-:.,:7:;;4:.21;;..- - - - - - '. 630
Livestock
1,

clips tot 71 &amp; 80 Olda Cutleu • eo LeMana. 2.8 ChiYY
V.e wllrant, auto. eo &amp; I 1 VW
Rai;K&gt;ilt. 14 Dod;• Omn1. 15
Cavalier. 715 Olds, _.55 wlfront
wnool drivo. 304-578-8005

Full line of auto bodr ptntls,

1 (18&lt;1 Plymouth SW, good tlrtl,

T•1n alze race car bed, frame

5730.
UHC:I Furnilurt Store, 130 Bula·
ville Pilto, Gat Cook SIIIY8, HideA·Bed Couches, TeleviSions,
Oeskl, T~pewritera, Baby Bed,
Matlrtllll, Beds, D1nene1,
Much Morel 814·448·4782. Hrt.
1~, Chock Ut OuL

Vorr Nice 2 End Tables Wrth
0....: One Round, One Square,
Wilh o,.wers, Humidifier, 814·

_,223.

Air

VCR, Washer,
Dry•. Aaf"-101, Stow, NHZ·
ar, Microwave, Colar T.V. 61•·
258-1238.

2 Story w/front &amp; side porch.
Formal entry, living room and
dining. Family room features a w.b.
fireplace . Lg . master bedroom.
Complete kitchen w/lots of
cabinets. 2 car garage. Lg. bac~
deck an.d gazebo. Thinking of
burldrng maybe you should look at
this.

C~ndlrloner,

530

NEW LISTING- Fairfield Vanco
Road. One acre more ·or less.
Restricted.

Antiques

Buwo or Hll. Riverine Antique•,

1124 E. Main Street on Rt. 124,

Pomerowo. Hours: M_f_W_ 10:00
&amp;m. "e.oo p.m., Sundoj 1:00 10

--·

8:00p.m. 814-a92·2528, Rues

NEW LISTING· For only $20,000.
You can own your own mibile home
and 2 acres of land wrth nice
shaded lot. This would be less than
paying rent. River Valley School
District.

he

WINDS • Four lots remain.
Bee1uiiiful home sites. New homes
under construction there also.
Fairfield Church· land choose
size lot. Can have horses and
animals. Build your dream
Just a little country.

540 llllcellaneous
Merchandise

We have houses for any need! Prices
ranging from in the 20's to in the 90's •
From 2 b&amp;drooms to 5 bedrooms - from
town lots to 92 acres • From fixer-uppars
to Newly Remodeled - Some have had
BIG Price Raductions - Each house has its
own specialty and only needs you to make
it a homel We can also help you arrange a
low-inlarast rate loan for qualified buyers.
Slop in and let us pre-qualify you!

'/

.

~- ~,r... ·~.
I

I&gt;

Henry E. Oeland Jr..992-2259
Boott Br Rodwlng, Chlppowa.
Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed
l.owst Prien At Shoe Cafe, Gol·
llpola

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

J

..

v:' ·,~

Remember • 1t doesn t cost a nylhmg to
l ook at any of these hou ses !! Call Us 1

1W3 Fllllt Whtal camper, S&amp;nd· anteed, 814-381-881'1.
tr:t Cobra, priYIII bedroom,
complete bath, tteeps 8, central 840 ElectriCal and
air, gas furnace, 18000, 014-IU2Refrigeration
23SI3 or 014·SIG2-2881J, ..k for

Bel!r
20 Ft. Argosy, (By Air Stream)
T.T. Very Lighl, Pull Wllh Any
MediUm Size Car, Compkttely R•
tur~shed. l2.800.

81+448·2957

Residential or toi'Mllfc:~l wlrtng,
new sBlvtca or repaira. Master Ucensed electrician . R1denour
Eltclfical, WV000308, 304-e75171!6

Hill5 Mercurwo Grand Marquis,
AutomaiiC, 302, V·8, Rtmanurac:turad Engine Hat Onlr 35,000
MUll, Full Pow.,, Aluminum

Wheels, Sl'etp Car, 11,900. 11190
Dodge Carovan. """matic. 2.5L
: 1990 AQHA Btooel Mare llel' 151 • Cyl .. 25MPG, Cletn, Rtllobl
•Good Blood Linea, Gondo, Good Volticlo, $3.1100, 814·448-7215. ·

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

Oitpolitlon, Broke To Ride. Rea·
~ aonable: c1a 11 y t997 weanling,
• Col~ Big, Gentle, Good Dispotl·
: lion, Good Confirn111ion, Excellent
, Bloodlines, For More lnlormadon,
: Ctl1614-258-8085.

19Be Ford Taurus. exc. running
cond., 11.200 OBO. 304-875·

:5320=;:,
· --:---:-:-~:7

1881 Toyota Camry 5 Speed, N;,
PS, P8, Crulte, Till, tt,dli, OBO

12037 Vocont Lind 73.5 AC.
1111. In Grttn lWp. Great pilot
to hunt and 18\'tfal ntce IU8U to

•2110 IN TOWN IN CIIOICE
NEIOHBORHOOO LOCATION
1'011 YOUR CONVENIENCE. 3
Bedrms., L.A , Kit., tam. rm, 1
battr, tuH buernent, fenced rord,

build your dream hamel Natural
sprmg, land level to rolttng . Nice

pnce Col Pllty Hoys 448-3884
11012 VERY NICI:. HOllE on

G&lt;oot tomlly hOfno. I'll bo lltoro to
8hOw you. VIrginia L. Smhh 388·

ftiiO IIULAVIUE PK. HOllEY Oakwood Or. 4 bedrooms, 2.5
8828. 159.000
r.t•7 PICTURESQUE HOllE ALL BRICK RANCH IS baths Formal entry, apacioua
ON A HIU..: 10.44 Aeroo m/1 WORTH YOUR CAREFUL LA. FR, DR, kllehen equipped
apprO&gt;C. 3,1100 &amp;q ft, vlnjl &amp; stone COIISIDEIIATlON. 3 bo&lt;lrmo.. 1 with d11hwashef, refrigerator and
exterior. formal entry. 4 BRa, 3 1/2 battrO. liYing nn., Largo ... In stove 2 car anaehed garage,
ba1ht., finlahld rec area In the kit. w/woodburnlng fireplace gas heat, central ak' Thta Ia a
bamt, WB/FP In game room &amp; INEAT) full drvlded baoomont must ' "· Call Pany Hayt tor
dtn atrium rm, oak cabinets and wlrec:. rm., PatiO, 1 car garage , prtvoto-. 448-3884.
trim In lett. 13 total rooms, 2 car Approx . 1 ac. WHAT A BOYI -144,800 REDUCED ......
garage .
Proteeslonally VLS 388-81128. $89,5011. MAKE tor o quick
3 br, 2 - ·
large LA wt-.t coiling, DR,
IOndocoped Ovolltj and luxury OFFERL
Utilhy
Am
,
above
g&lt;ound pool,
H73
PRIIIE
DEVELOPMENT
lltmugh·aut Appl. onlj. VIrginia L
766 acre mJI Very nice home II
LAND 117 Ac. MIL Close to
Smith 388-8826. $359,000
0021 82TC CORA IIIU AD. freeway &amp; hospital. Old home a ottordtllliO priCO. -I/POtter
area CaU Patty Hall 446-38114.
Ra&lt;luoed $118,000.00 Beautllul and bam Gallra Co. VLS
New Colonial :2 1ty, RIO Grande 12032 RIO GRANDI! area, 2 12888 B I G IIARKET •
area. • bedrms, 2 112 bathe, acre lot MIL. Raccoon Twp. BUSINESS ONLY. Hero's your
lovely living nn., formal dining mr. Aa&lt;luotd $12,000 00 Vt.S 388· chance to own your own

-1

WIDE OPEN SPACES .. 300 ACRES LOCATED IN
ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL AREAS IN
GALUA COUNTY.. HOME, BARNS, FENCED
PASTURE, TILLABLE AND WOODED LAND. POND
AND HUNTERS CABIN. COME LOOK AT THIS
PROPERTY.. YOU WILL LOVE Ill

soon to be constructed.
watt until its all sold out

Save Hundreds On Relldtntial
Aoolrc. JB Rooting. DeciUng /Siding, Free Estlmales. Work Guar·

on. Runa &amp; Looka Good, 11,100.

PRICE REDUCED ON THIS 3 BEDROOM HOME.
LARGE
LIVING
ROOM,
EAT
IN
KITCHEN .CARPORT ... GAS FURNACE, CENTRAL
AIR COND. CONVENIENT LOCATION IN THE CITY.

w:!~~!~l~ CROSS ROADS-New

8323.

14:.;'3
:8.:.
::79-.:.:2561
:=;...·- - - - -

GREAT PLACES TO UISE YOUR FAMILY!

only, exc. cond., 175, 304-773-

C&amp;C Gtntral Home Main·
tenence ... Pelnting, vinyl sid1ng,
carpentry, doors, windowa, bllthl,
rrcbill home rePair and mort. For
fr11 estimate call Chet, 814·t02·

piper

81'-742-2792.

614-441-1318.

Fumlturw, 814-448-7444.

m5.

21111 .

painll and aupphtl, a so glass,
I!Qht a11embly. Oxygen and ac•
IW'Ittne tanks filled and exchanged,

·0t28.

IRACCC)ON CREEK· What a view
sits high and dry. 731 feet of creek
frontage. Build a boat dock and
enjoy the rest of the summer. 18
acres more or less.
4 CITY LOTS- You could build four
five duplex and have an income
pro·duc:lng' property. Ask about you

Appliance Parts And Service· All
Namt Brandl Over 25 Ytart Ex·
per•tnct All Work Guaranlted,
French Cit)' ~a.-lag , et•·••B·

1984 Prowler 22' AJC Awning;
1878 Swiss Cotonr 20' NC lwtning, 1875 Mallard 2T With Awn·
lng; 1699 McCormick Road , 81._
448-1511

&amp;too
814-247·1100.
new battery. nta&lt;lt htad gollto~
, Har Bator New Holland Round $400, Bt4-W2·!i&amp;IS.
· -No.ll4e, Col6t4-882-t173.
1985 Buick Century Station Wog-

CanadayG.l
Realty

Wa18&lt;proollng.

HJ85 28 loot Amer~can travel
camper, axcellenl condillon,
$4,500, till! aher 6pm, 614·742·

c:orn and peppers. 1Qam-?
1
Farm, Syracuse, Oh10,

t&gt;lllne:H, 78 VIne Strttl. GaiNpoils, 11&lt;1·4&lt;11-7388, 1-IBI·818-

Kltctwn Corpe~ $8.50 Sale On All
Room Size Carpets, Mollohan

Acceuortta
IIASEIIENT
New gu lanka, 1 tan truck
WAT£RFR,
lllltHII l radlatoro. D l A Auto,
Rlploy, WV. 304·372·3t33 or 1• UncondiliOral llttbme guarantee.
loeaJ rtl~enc:ta turnithed. El·
1100-273-n!i.
tabltahed tn5 Call 18141 4410870 Ot 1-800·2a7-ll578. ~
790 Campers llr

Motor Homes

Sso

1 Veer Warrantwo. Skagga Ap·

Klng·slze waterbtd, new aeml·

Sale

for

Home
Improvements

110

780 Auto Plrtl •

Holland Finishing Mowor: 4 Ft. 1982 Malibu Chevy Wagon, v-a,
King l&lt;ultof Brush Hog, 5 FL King ...
· y. 1 OO 080 a
Kuntr Scraptr Blade Call 8U· """lomalic. 8, tli ,
144-4~~~~30~19~,500~--------1=~~-8='~~·----------1883 Old• Omega, 4 new tires,
tenk.
1
·;;~;:;.&lt;! new bantry. new txhauat, 10,000
tor•llzor oproedor''"'.""'"'
Ktuol rroea ,., 11111. 11.11115, 114tr typo hrgh
.:.m:.:..:-882::.;•;...·- - - - - - - - - - muld pUrpoN - r. Ultd VIIY t983 Pontiac J2000 Wogon ~
IIIIo. 304-875-e408 afte&lt; Bpm.
Crlindor, Auto, High' Miltago,
487 NH. hoybino, $2SOO; too&gt; Hill GoodWorkCar,614-44-8518

1984.

HAYES REAL ESTATE

wave manre11, lighted mirror
hot-At. f1110. Maytag nlhor
$75. Bactrlc dryer $75 304· 7735870aitlfCpm.

750 Boats &amp; Motors

011 Home. 454 ChM Enolnt, Urit
With All Exttll. Mull StH For
Whitt Owed. 814-44&amp;·1311

Open 9-7 Oallr, Coil 614 ·448·

25 LOCUST ST.· GALLIPOLIS

T..c, soo. 614-388-9265

740

1953 John Deere 8 , runs good, tUt Buick Regel Sport Coupe,

clawed &amp; talla docked, 111 shall
&amp; wormed tw~te 304-875-3M8.

720 ltUCkllor Salt

Autos for

' homomadf 3 pL, $850 080, 114- 1W0 door, appfOL 35,000 mliol on
7.t2-2367.
rtbt.nll engine and tranamlalion,
Pr~co reduced· 1983 Ford 2000 V·8 automatic, tlif, PS. PB, CNOI,
Ill~ Alpine ............. point lttp
tractor. llvt pow.,, 3 pt. new ra· and tirea. many new parta, OOod
diator, rebuilt motor, brush hog, Interior, asking $2e00, Mil offer
plow't, disc:, $3g()O, 114-Qi2-2143 or uadt for boat. camper or
-or 81&lt;1·QQ2«173ahtr 5.
something of lnttrtll, 114·182·
·1W4 Ford 1320 4 WD 5 Ft Now :30::7~8.:__ _ _ _ _ __

Pure Dta&lt;l Daoglt Pupa For Salt. 814-992-3985 diJI or 614-992·
::a=14=·38=8-=8=72=t=
. :=:=:=:==::Jl.:588=a:..:"':lll::'"~~!,'::____.__

master, automatic: wic:ountera,
3~,. old, onlwo uted several
weeks. Paid $800, atkln9 1400.

24,000 Wana, 220 bil SSO, 814· rotta, Paid $40 w,u Sell For $20;
245-SS!ia.
614-446-8605

·Musical
Instruments

a Piece Royet Drum Set. 1150:
Epiphont Guitar 1150, 81&lt;1-387-

580

o

111111 Camara Rtd With Black
Srrlpea, 47,000 Mll11, Nonllatdtltog Numboro, 350, 4 Spood,
EIA:ollonl Conciti&gt;n, 17.100, 0110,
.,.............142. LMit.... 01

~even months old, $150, 814 ·

4410 SpKe for Rent

71

te75 HO Sporlltor 11000+1, lf1llfl
new pariS, mull ' " ' 14800, 81._
W2·2511t

Aeglstera&lt;l mlriaturt Clihuahua.

~ ' 1 ·---~bel• Page 07

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

26 fool kitchen wjealiog area. On
the line ror anr, schOOl (City or

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
IJJ 1-800-~85-7101 or 446-7101 lit

County! Virgin a 388-88261448·
6806
12187 LEVEL LOT 1 ac. m/1
utltltln available, Clarlt Chapel
Rd $13,000 00 VLS C48·
6806/388-8826.
fta80 • PATRIOT AREA • A·
Frame and 7 Ac. M/L Rent
klcome 1250 mo alao mobile
home $200 mo. 1ncome, work

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER '
446-4618
Judy DeWiu ........................... 441-0262
J. Menill Carter ....................... 379-2184
Tammie DeWin .........................245-0022

Ce1 Efta. $72,900

Martha Smith .............. ... ... .... :..... 379-2651
Cheryl Lemly ............................ .. 742·3171
Dana Atha ....................................379-9209'
Kenneth Amsbary .........................245-5855

'iT'rumw

THIS
I
HOME HAS 6 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS ..
LIVING ROOM AND FAMILY ROOM BOTH HA'~EI
FIREPLACES FORMAL DINING .. EAT IN KIT,r.HJ'N I
PATIO, BASEMENT. 2 CAR ATIACHEO GARAC;EI
PLUS ADDITIONAL 24' X 20' GARAGE ..
APPROXIMATELY ONE (1{ ACRE.. liALLU'ULJ:S 1
CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM. NICE COUNTRY SETIING.

ELEGANCE

THIS QUALITY

PRODUCTIVE FARM, 250
Acres m/1, 60 acres or more,
level tillable land. Lots of good
pasture and looks to be a
great amount of trmbor A

LARGE FARM LOCATED JUST OFF STATE ROUTE
850. 3 BEDROOM HOME. BARNS AND OTHER
. SUITABLE FOR FARMING OR
DEVELOPMENT.-. SEVERAL BEAUTIFUL BUIILIOINCI.I

tobacco base, county water,
farm pond, developed springs.

•

••

Including farm machrnory. 2
Tractors and equipment lor
farming all included in sala. 16
Head of whke face cattle and
16 calves and 1 bull. They are
In good condl,tldn. Let me

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

NEW ON MARKEll
Charmer, and you will be
charmed after you ontSf tho
front door on this 1 1/2 story
newer home. 2 full baths,
dining area &amp;
·ump from town , almost!
area, attached
argo srzed rooms Attached
detached 20' X
garage and a 30 • 40 pole
on front
bam Lots more call for more
info . OWNER• WANTS
SOLDII875
REDUCTION! You
are missing a groat doall
Quality bnck ranch home
that has over 2.5 acres &amp;
only just a hop, skip &amp; a

l

;:; ,;,;;;;

HOME. One owner onlyl Formal
amy, living rm , din. rm ., fam. rm.
whh woodbum&lt;ng fireplace, lg kn.
&amp; Cherry cablneta, range, o.w..
Ret , new carpet, copper
plumbing. Andar~on windoW&amp;,
oak utm. Central atr Blacktop
drive Something S~al Call
,~. 388-118281446-6806

8826/446 eeoe

UITI VACANT LOT IN
VINTON. Good for parking,
garden etc. Located on Clay St
Flood zone area. $3,000.00
Vl~nla448-6806/388-B826 .

12171 SPK: &amp; SPAN home In
VInton., Juat lovely for a family, 3
bodmr. 1 ballt, LR, DR. Kit, larg
lot, &amp; out bklg. Owner wants
action on INs low price VLS 388118281448 81106. $40.000
12002 NEW IRICK RANCH·
Some dllc:rimlnaling family will
take pride owning a beautiful
BRICK home Central toyer entry

:

h0fno.L1.::1

·-··· ---~·· ;-··:·

the

Hay&gt;

.~

r

-:~~·i

11012 OPPORTUNITY

12113 8

IS

KNOCKING lo own a GREAT

AC. w.nctowa, porch, tiding,
carpet, cement drlvewawo.
appllancaa, Pool &amp; Hot TUb.

Como 1001 Come fo Buyt ~S
3ee 182tiU&amp; eeoe. $88,ob0

will be waiting for your call.

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

carr Patty Horn. 4441-38&amp;1 tor
more cteiiiiOIOdtyt 127,!500
~~~:Nr~!WRd. LISTING
SpaciOUI on4

wleld:ra large rooms through out.
2800 SQ. ft 2 car auached
garBQt. £lee H.P loads of walkfn closets. Laundry rm ., kit.
wlitland bar, oak cabinets, all
appliances..., . , driveWay pad
&amp; walks. Huge dedi. \ILS 388·
8826cw ue 6908
·

home In the city. 3 bedrma, 2
bolito, Hugo LR w/gtl fireplact,
nn1y rllf110delod, now tumooe.

show you something niCe. We

bullntlll Inventory left 11. ll'le
time of ttH will go with the
bus1ness Equipment lnctuded:
meat COOler, k:e cream treezer,
pop coolers, weg . cooler,
refrigenltor, olove. double door
commercial oven, Hobar1 meat
sheer, Hobart meat grinder,
scales, all lhtiYel. much morel
All thlt for one very tow price!

USnNGf IIIWON

OOLLAR VIEW OF '"E OHIO
AIVERI 310 4 bedroom
brick home just minutes away
~om lito citY perk. 2 full battrO.

... k1 illcl1on. dining room.

-

ut:lltty rm , famlty rm w/stone
fireplace, ltvtng rm. W/ltont
firtplatt. 2 car garage. Citwo
SChoolo. For """'"ntment, coli

Panr Haya, 448·3884 .
$208,700.00
NEW UtiTING IN CITYI
Btlck ronctr w(fin- attic. 4
bodroomo. 2 belhe, L.R • O.R.,
goo htat. control air, 3 ceiling
fans, fenced In back yard.

eo.ored ,.,.. porch. Grtol prloe
at$59,900. catl Pany A18 3811.

COncrtll &amp; Pfa1t1c Septic Tanka,
300 Tbru 2.0011 Gallons Ron
Evant Enterprises, Jadl.son, OH
t-8(10.537-11!128.

MULBERRY AVENUE· A 3 story building that could be :J.4
IIP8nments. Has had some remodeling on a couple of the
leVels. Has a great rental potentiaL Also has a new storage
pulldlng and newer windows on tho 3rd story. $40,!JOO.

OFFICE 992-2259

Cub Ctdll 1872 18 hp. 80' ,.,..

FLATWOODS RD.· a newer one atory willl part basemen~
pno car garage, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, dining area, all silting
Qll 1.73 acres. 1149,500

or dock, hrdroltatlc, 450 hra.,
$4000, 814-992-8468 days or
814-11112·2219 ooenlngt.
E11ta Nloo Wlirlpool Aafrigo&lt;atrlf,
With Auromatlc Ice Maker; Extra

eo

CLELAND RD.· Langsville
acres of lOvely rolling lanll 7
1/2 acres.of It rn hay-many beautiful homesite&amp; some oak
and walnut trees all mineral rights Included $50,000 or buy
so acres for $25,000.

.•.

Nice COuch l Chair, B FL Topper
For Pt:~&amp;.T111ck t30. 814-37a2720,
aP.ll.

SPACIOUS LIVING ABOUNDS
THIS COUNTRY CLASSIC. Historic
two story house offers 3 bedrooms, 1
t/2 bath, LR, OR, Fl, full basement
and detached work shop. Bring in the
outdoors rn the window covered
knctren with attached walk-in pantry.
Priced to steal at $74,900.

show clothes, like
new, slzn amall, 3· 5Jr., veat,
tuxedo lhir11, suede chaps, Ed-

Glrra

Wtl~trn

dio- 304-882-20118.
Grubb'l

Piano- tuning

&amp;

repan.

Problema? Nltd Tuned? Call tho
Dr. 814-4411-4525

Comlut·t, convc:nicncc,
energy
cfricicncy,
durability and flexibility
in dcaicn arc a few of the
re•sonl why 2 , 000
will build a log
1hio year!
0

Appulachiun

Log

Struclurcl has been a
llead&lt;&gt;r in the lug irumc
for over 15
""·•••• Chuosc from ovea·
standtrd models

Call or wrilc for
information.

Appalachiau
Structures,

Log

Ide.

Dept. GDT,
P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271
11J00-458-9_990

•

Classy Spanlah In the Country. This
brick beauty is nestled on a 2 acre
tract in the rOlling hills of Addrson
Township on McCully Rd. Enjoy your
summers rn and around the pool,
extra large pabo &amp; gazebo There are
too many features to mention but a
few are the extra large LA, Famrly
room with a stone FP, completely
equipped kttchen, 4 BR's, 2 1/2 baths,
2 car
&amp; a
nice barn.

g:"~NlrEERi ci"eiai~,j j

A WEALTH
OF AMENITlES
AFFORDABLY PRICED. This frame
ranch offers 3 bedrooms; 2 baths;
Large family/sun room over looking
an 18x36 inground pooL Pnced at
$82,900 00. H's a must see.

to town.

,.

MIDDLEPORT· North 5th Ave.· A 2 story house completaty
redone and looks new upstairs and a large living room with
newer carpet, dining room, front porch, largo utility room,
and kitchen. S35,000

NEWLiiTiiiiilsiit.iateii
edge
find
home,

FISHER ST.· Almost an acre lot with lots of frontage. Could
have 2·3 building or mobile nome sites. Has older homa
that needs to be tom down. $11,000

trees.

Ac,. of vecant property on Rowoavlllt Rd. In Gallla
~::~.~hand dug and drilled wells, on srte. Electric
~
15 acre hayfield some timber Very sectuded.

gr.laal! D~~~~H Home
NEW UBnNG· POMEROY· 1 1/2 Story Frame
wRii 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, gas space
heat, public water and $8ptlc located on Anno
Straet. ASKING 18,000
NEW USnNG- P.OIIEROY· LOOK HERI!II
Real
I Older home, remodeled with
2 bedrooms. off street parkhome now rented for
$3'!iO.OO/rrront~. Uve In the house and lot the
' Make Your Payments. ONLY
2 story office building with
air, garage apartments.
previously used as Doctor's
....500
ONE 18 GOIIOEOUSII Located on tho
comer of SR 7 and Locust Grove Road. ClOse
IM~IRK.HAN ROAD TWP. RD.· W243·
to Tuppers Plaine. Approx. 1 acre With a 1 story
af vacant ground,
brick ranch home. In Ilks new condition. 3 bed·
level. Immediate po888Ssion. Call
rooms, 2 baths,
abun·
Information ASKING $112,500
dance of ciOaet apace. M.t'"'··"·
olflc:a and recreetkln
HOLLOW· 1.75 Acres, remote arsa,
room, 2 car garage.
to Forl&lt;ed Run State Park. Electric and IMU'CH,, MUCH, MQREI You must
water close. ASKING 17,000
Make Your Appointment

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY rs hard
to find but you have 7.66 acres m/1
with this 2 story farm house. W~h 3
BR, 1 1/2 bath, 'crty schools and a
view fit for a king all located just
minutes from Gallipolis, you should
not let this flow by without a look.
Reduced to $69,900

COZV lWO BEDROOM COTIAGE
high on a hillrn Green Township This
home IS brand new &amp;located close to
town at 1573 Graham School Road.
$45,000 Buy an extra 5 rm &amp; bath
home and barn for an extra $29,900.

with 2 acres 10 15 acres
Storage burlding &amp; more City
schools. 1934

NEW LISTING! LOOKING
FOR A HOME IN TOWN?
Heres one to cons•der L1ving
laundry, 2·3 bedrooms, central
air, vinyl sldrng and lots more.
Call &amp; let ua shaw rt to youl

lt35

Heights· A 2·3 bedroom railch homo
A very neat looltlng place with a large
I and schOOls. ASKING $58,000

Approx 8 acres total.

RIO GRANDE • COMMERCIAL
IDEAL SITE FOR APARTMENTS:
LAND • FARM LAND • HOME
150 x 207 lot Is located at the corner RIVER LOT IN THE CITY • 2.3 SITES • YOU NAME
147 acres
of Spruce &amp; 5th. All utilities available. acres m/1, Approx. 234 ft. frontage on m/1 with approximately 1 1/2 miles of
the Ohio River. All util~ies available.
$19,900.
road frontage on State Route 325 &amp;
Old home on property.
Pleasant Valley Rd Broker owned.
EXTRA NICE BUILDING· OR
FISHERMEN'S DfiEAM • Two miles $450,000
MOBILE HOME LOll Mature P1ne
below the dam you'll find thiS older
Trees on the lhree sides. Access to
completely furnished 2 BR mobile LAKE DRIVE SUBDIVISION· RIO
Raccoon Creek. Located in Hobart
home. There's an 8 x 24 deck GRANDE· Close to Unrversity- Lot
Dillon Subd. $11 ,900
overlooking the Ohro River with a 1121 has water, sewer &amp; elec.
storage building, steps going down to IMIIIable. $12,000
GUN COLLECTOR'S SPECIAL
the beach &amp; a large dock. $17,900
- One of Southarn Ohio's
RIVER FRONT LOT • 1.368 acres
COMMERCIAL USTING • Rio
tar~est dealars. Established In
mil located approx. 2 mL south of the
Grande area, 1.6 acres m/11ocated on
1968. Large volume. Contact
Eureka dam. Great potential at
the NE corner of U.S. 4 lane 35 and
Ranny Blackbum.
$19,900.
'
SR 325, lots of potential. $49,000.00

rr.

I'

Broker..........................IIZ-5182
IMD-2131

111183 • C BEOROOIII. 2 112
batnl, lovely kitchen w/eiA In
breeldlll1 ..... lonnol dklinQ rm..
sunken living rm. wfftref)lace,

famly rm., ,.... furnace, attached
2 car garage, detachltCI 2 cer
garage. lnground pool &amp; pool

flouae. Lovely treed yard
wlaazebo, ctack in the rear,
foncodjtlrd. $185,000

r.tl88 C BEDROOII 2 both

double wide on I acres MIL tn
Morgan Twp 12 • 18 enclosed
back porch. Formal dining room

Lefs set your

prue a nice eat-IR kitchen. ~
$48,000 thll one will not last
long. Call Claude Daniels tor

PRICE LOWERED $4,300 l
OWNERS ARE WILUNG TO
LISTEN TO AN OI'FEIU
Your mraslng a neal/clean
sectional home that offers alot
of lrvrng space . Large srzed
rooms Include 3 bedrooms,
Irving room, family room, 2 full
baths. dining area &amp; more.
Nice dock on rear and lront,
lots of landscaping. Approx . 1
acre lawn Lei us show rl to
youllll12

VERY
WELL CARED
FOR .. Nrce cheerful home
wilh lots of chorm and
appeal . Dining room wilh
nice harwood lloor, bright
living
room
w/nOYier
carpetrng kllchon, bath. lull
basement, enclosed front
more lust a porch. Large overolzed deck
on baclt, that Is great for
;
' own.
;
barboquelng this summer.
fenced-rn side lawn. Must
soo to appreciate. motrvated
sellers. Call today for an
apporntment, you will be
soldllll18

areu. Several fPCcellent bu•lding
11111. Rural water. For a ·LOokSit~ call Claude at 448-oaoe or

448-7801.
120011 IIAIIIUNG TRI·LEVEL
P!Rf!CT
FOR
THE
I!XECUTIYE 4 bodroorne. 2 112

me

IDEAL HUNTING LANDI
235 acres more or ·less
Wooded. Owner ltquidatrng
properties owned rn Gallla
county. Make lhom an offer
they can't retuse. Askrng
$55,000.00 '*YC
$45,000 Comfortable ranch
home with 2 BR, LA, DR,
kk, FR, carport and garage.
lmmediale
possession

-

SO LOVABLE &amp; UVABLEI
Enjoy tho comforts ot this
well maintained ranch. Bay BUY A UTTLE OR ALOT
window enhances thle nice OF ACREAGE willl this
roomy 4 bedrooms, 2 bath
sized living room, eat·ln ranch f11VIe home. Uving
kitchen, 4 bedrooms, family room, dlrnng room, kitchen,
room. Lots of remOdeling, flat family room approx. 1,600
lawn , storage. building sq. It with attached 2 car
$11,000.00 IS TliE ASKING. approx. 12'x20'. Expecting a garage. Purchaaod With
PRICE OF THIS 20 PLUS b1g price? Noll Let us show 11.5 acres more or lass or
ocr• tract of land. County n to youl Call today. 11115
100 acres more or less.
Water available. County
Pond, barns, ond more. Rro
CHEERFULLY COZVII Put Granda area, city schools.
achoolsii8M
down roots in this easy to 1889
VACANT LOn Buy Them All love 3 bedroom ranch .
for $14,900.00. 3 level lots. Kitchen &amp; dlnrng room LOTI Approximately 1/2
County water available'. combination, Irving room, acre, septic/leach field
den, 1 car attached garage ·alrsady In laC!, county water
County achoolsll908
Nice sized lot w/fencod-in available. Frontage along
LOT 57,000 Ovor 3 Acrea, back lawn. And more wrth a SR 160. Good !lite for
county water avarlable. comfortable price of mobile homo or house:
Wooded , _
$49,500.00 11111
$5,500 00 11123

a-mall us for Information on our listings:
blgbend@eurakanat.com

I2UI 40 JAY DRIVE Cozy 2
bedroom hQfno, LR., LMgo 001·
In U ., Utllltr rm., Gao lreet, 2
porchtl ond geroge. Very large
lot to make a garden. Onlwo
$55,000 00.
t!

12888 COMMERCIAL AND
WOOO£D lond In ttro Cheshire
810&amp;
68011. Ctl1

VIrginia 388 - -

ot 448·880e or 448-. ftiiO NEW U8TINO VACANT
7801. Malle ortor.
klt with waltf tap on Bull Run
12881 171 ACRES 11/L In Ad Call now for more
Morgan Twp Lots of fenced 1n lnlonnallon.
pasture land and many acre1 of 12871 PRICE REDUCEDIII 3
good t1unt1ng and/or camping
Oj)p()lntmet

WELCOME MAT'S OUTI
Tempting large 5 bedroom 2
bath home, famUy room with
cathedral ceilrng, d1nrng
roam, krtchen, large wrap
around deck, basement
aprox..690 acre
::,:;.;;::.;:.::;

Good

room, eat·ln kitchen, bath,

RIVER LOVERS- Enjoy your
weekends frshing &amp; watching the
barges float by. This like new
eyecatcher is empty &amp; ready to move
&lt;nto. Spec18J features are approx. 1.8
acres, 2 car garage.large cedar deck,
security system &amp; located approx. 4
mi. south of the Eureka Dam. $69,900

IDEAU
ENOUGH
ROAMING ROOM l
ALMOST NEW HOME that
has a1ot 10 alief besldea a 3
car attached garage, 3
bedrooms. 2 full balha,
dlnrng area, nice kitchen
w1111 atrium doors ,1hal lead
to a deck overlooking 45
plus acres of wooded land,
living
room,
partial
basement. Just a short Q-ivo
appointment totlay. 1933

RESORt PARK UVING· a 121134 Park Home with one
bedroom ond lots of extras. All year Irving or ]1181 a getaway.
Senlng on a leased lot at Royal Oak Park wllh lull
memborahlp that passes 3 generatklns. Owner may accapt
land contract. $30,000

For sale, Norge refngarator; 1
SCA Wolle tanning bed and 1

~bodica1Bt+W2·2489.

NEW USTINGI ACREAGE,
25 acres mil house, mobrle
home, bam &amp; misc. burldrngs
sHu8tod at Teens Run Road.
Great for some horses, cows,
etc. City schools. Purchase
with or w..lt.h;·;o._u;t:,.c;·;;r;; ni. r,,;ri

LOCATION SAYS rr ALLI
Very well maintained bnck
ranch home that has elbow
room. Easy to maintain lawn.
3 bedrooms, 2 1/.2 baths,
hv1nroom, dining room, rec.
room, kitchen, 2 car attached
garage. IV26

Dl1ltl, fomtal IIY1ng nn. W/goo log

foyor.
above

equip

WindOW,
light fbdurea,
ante etorage,
porch, much more. ·-" ,._, ~--,
home II melntenance
~· 388-8828. $149,000

11013·

LUXURY

HOllE

combining elegance wtmodern
convenience 4/5 BAs, 3 baths
formol DR G- mt w!WBFP, ftllt
-MIA hOI tuD Oal&lt; COI&gt;Inell'ln
kitchen, breakfut area overlooks
a pond 7 rro old, lOrge lot. coli

VIrginia 388-8828- 4'8 6808
12b3C EXCEPTIONALLY
SMART we hlghty teeommend
you see thla ranch home before
you buy Buli k11991 3 bodmll,
1 112 balhs, Huge kll w/oak
catMnets, 2 c:ar anached garage
with trees galore.

e Acre• m/1

388-118281441 6801.
12012 LOCATED ON SA ISO
~s

Older 2 aty. 4 bedrma.• 1 bath, 3
acres m/1 ptue a large barn

$35,000 .00 Call VLS 3aB·
118281448-6806
•1099- Common:lol Bldg. 82
Olivo 5I Como&lt; locollan. 1990

n.

roor.

sq. gooc1
Owntr wtH Mil
inYen1ory 0&lt; building _,.,. or
logelht&lt; 1110.000.

12011 NIW • • tun..,lno 11'
• 10' Outatandlng mot&gt;llt hOme
wllh a deck, apec:lll ctbinetl,
windows, and bullt·ln mualc
cen111. 3 bedrma, 2 baths,
lletutllui tree n ac ~. c - ro
town. VL8- 1121
112173 OHIO RIVUII'RONTAOE
W/CLEAN AND CLASSY ·as
Ookwood 2 bodnn. · 21tottr
- GrilliOt
tllldHOIIII!WOOD
r.tiM
LOT 011
Dlt 1 oc. ~- wollf, eaplk:, olac.
$19,000. VLS .

nice--

stone lreplace Fonnol dining rm.
very
k1 the kitChen,
Huge entertaining rm , master

bedroom la •Really Ullra, Ultra-.
Approx. 4500 sq. h., deck 1n the
rear. 2 car garage 1 ac. MJL level

Brm, huge living rm/Wb. Or

Wlbajwlndow,eentnrl H/A, petio,
1 1/2 aty worl&lt;thop/g&lt;-..
wf'NB.

garden-""",...,

approx.

1 3 acre m/1 lot
S7S,800.00 Call Cara Casey
245-8430.

1101S LAIT LOT 011 LAKE
VIEW CT. 2 3 ac. Mil: 122.900
also a oc. on •Whilo Ad $2!1,900
~s

11017

""""nlmtnt 388-8fl28
, .,¥,.

·~

12111 REOUCEOI LOVE A
SPECTACULAR VIEW? New
manufactured home and 1.5 ac.

MIL. offering 3 bodrms , 2 bOlito,
eat-ln-ktt. wtoak cabinets, lOvely'
carpet, paneled doofl, cathedral
ceilings, cement porch,
bf'eezeway, patio, ~ car garage,

Du,ldlng. IlLS «6·6808/368·

1

ASSUMPTION ·

bath, deep lot VLS

town. FREE GAS. Coli Vi&lt;git'ilt

tor on

~OAN

Mill CrHk. good rental or
3 bedrms, LR, Lg. eat·ln

8826. 182.500.
11034 10 acre• m/1 of prime

d-

development land clOse to
freeway and State Route Public

utllllies available. Land levet to

rolling.
Excellent ""
or
commercial use. 5155,000.
Coli Pony Hall 448-3884.
12001 VACANT LANO 1.13 or:.
~. gently oJoped Raccoon Rd.
Accos1 IO boot rtiii1P on Aoccoon
Creek &amp; pariclng tor your boat

traitor Beautiful lot lo build your

dream l'lome Call Patty Haya

12111
NEW USnNGI
BEAunfUL I IIIIIACULATE, 3
br l 2 1/2 bath home. Lorge
ma&amp;tllf bedroom w/bath, lovely
formal L~ w/stone fireplace,

equ'ppa&lt;l knthen w/lndoor grill,
spacious family rm w/built In
book
lar~ Ronda rm
w/dry bar &amp; entry to palio In
back Offloe. 2 cor attacfltd garv.
wJworkshop. Shed . 24 x 24
workshop building wlalectrk: &amp;
phone Th1s 11 a house that
you've got to see. Call Pany

the"'"

Hall 441·3884/o·moll Potty ®
VLS.cmr.
12112 WHAT A DEALI 145
ere~

of Umt.1and along a ll8le

tr¥-1· bord.,. on both oldee
ot tht roa&lt;1 Coli Wilma tor more
Information

at

286 ·0036.

$145,000
12113 GREAT BUY. 2 bedroom
moblll homt w•th niCe front

porch aM on 2 acres morw or leN

wllh largo and outbuilding.
col \\lima. ., 9,1100.

12112 VACANT LANO 13 fc.
11/L In Margen lWp. Exct41ent.
Building Site, Claude Daniela
448-7801. $18,000

�Ohio Lottery
Pomeroy
Yanks.win
in KC meet

Pick 3:
427
Pick 4:
2518
Super Lotto:
12·19-30·36-43-45
Kicker:
420038

Sports on Page 4

Chance of showers
tonight, low in the 60s.
Tuesday, showers, high in
the mid-80s.

,

en tine
....I

I

~.48,N0.87

I

2 Sections, 12 Pegoo, 35 conts
AGannett Co. Nowapapor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 21, 1997

c1rm; Ohio Yalley Publllhln; company

Feds propose relief for black lung claimants
say he doesn't.
'" I've had this and that test I don 't
Associated Press Writer
know
how many times;"' sa1d Cline,
WASHINGTON - Retired mine
72.
who
toiled in West Virginia coal
worker Calvin Cline has bounced
mines
for
30 years and must now
from one doctor to another for the
inhale
medication
to help him ,
past seven years. He's almost ready
breathe.
'"
It'&gt;
such
a
hassle.
I didn't
to give up fighting for disability benwan\
to
fool
with
it
myself,
but my
efits.
·
wife
wanted
me
to
keep
fighting."
He has been subjected'to a slew or
Now, the Labor Depanment is
X-rays, blood tests and medical
~onsidering
relief for Cline and othreviews. Sometimes the doctors said
er
ailing
mine
workers, proposing
he has black lung diS.ase. Somechanges
to
14-year-old
rules governtimes, l09king at other results, they

By ANICK JESDANUN

·.~. "'

... ,.

mg black lung compensation. The
new rules would spare miners from
having to undergo countless medical
exams.
Advocates for the workers back ·
that idea but fear that other aspects of
the new rules could make it harder for
miners to assemble a convincing

case. And the mining indusll)' opposes the proposal, considering the
restrictions an infringement on their
right to submit evidence.
Hearings in Washington begin

Tuesday.
Mike South, president of the
National Black Lung Association,
said cases sucli a• Cline's are not
unusual. He said .coal companies
reluctant to pay benefits often drag
cases on for years - until the miner
gives up or dies.
At least 7,000 Ohioans currently
collect black lung benefits.
Federal black lung benefits exceed
SI billion a year and are funded by
coal companies and.a federal tax on

coal. The illness'. also known as
Pt:teumoconiosis, is "caused by long·
lcnn inhal ation or coal mine dust.
· Miners complain that the rules are
stacked in favor of coal companies
willing to spend thousands of dollars
to fight awards that could reach
$200,000 per beneficiary. According
to the Labor Department, only about
7.5 percent or claims are approved.
"The intent or the proposal is to
streamline our process as much as we
can, to make it faster so that miners

and survivors can gel a decision.
promptly," said Shelby Hallmark, ·
acting director for the Office of
Workers' Compensation Programs.
" Cases can drag on i.n .the appeals

procesS for years and yeaTs and take

a lot of lime and mllncy ...
The department expects the rules
to sli ght ly boost the approval rate, to
about 8.5 percent, partly because
each sioe would be limited to two sets
of mcdi~.:al examinations. Currently,
Continued on page 3
.

Kauff's case
bound over
to grand jury
A preliminary hearing in the
case of Willie Kauff, charged
with felonious assault in conneCtion with the July 8 death of
Todd Johnson was concluding at
press lime.
Kauff appeared before County Court .Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien, for the purpose of ,
determining probable cause in
the case.
' Among the·evidence present·

OFFICIAL VISIT • Ohio Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, foreground,
toured the state's oldest standing courthouse, in Chester, on Sat·
urdiy aftemoon. She Is pictured wHh Dale Colburn,-left, and Delmar Baum, both.members of the restoration team, and Elizabeth
Schaad of the Governor's Regional Representative for EconomIc Development.

ed in today's hearing was a taperecorded interview with Kaufl'
which provided details about the
altertation betweerr Johnson and
Jason Hysell which preceded
Johnson's death.

PIONEER CRAFT • Donna Davidson of Rutland demonstrated the pioneer craft of rug
weaving on her antique loom at Saturday's
Cheater/Shade Days. A chenille ljllg like the one ·

Davidson Is weaving here takes about an hour
to complete. (See additional photos on page
8).

Four school districts Woman ·becomes crusader
share $350 m·i llion to
against nation's tired truckers
replace old buildings
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state is
pumping about $350 million into 19
Ohio school districts to help them
repair or replace rundown or outdated buildings.
The grants, which the State Board
of Education approved last week,
were the latest round of awards
under a school building assistance
program. The program was created to
help Ohio's poorest districts upgrade
structures, many of which do not
meet health and safety codes.
Most of the money was included
iQ legislation that Gov. George
Vpinovich signed in May.
Under a new school-funding plan
proposed by Voinovich and being
d~bated in the Legislature, as much
~ $6 billion in state aid for buildings
could flow into districts over the next
10 .years. The Ohio Supreme CoUlt
r1!led in March that . the state must
d~vise a new funding plan because
11-, current meth&lt;X! is unfair to poor
di,stricts and unconstitutional.

''

The proposed program would be
financed by part or the proceeds of a
penny-per-dollar increase in the state

TOLEDO (AP) ...:.. A .woman
whose son died in a 1995 trucking
accident is lobbying legislators to
change federal rules regijlating the

sales tax, which would generate an

amount of time · truck drivers can

extra $1 billion annually for schools.
The latest awards more than dou, ble the amount of state aid for school
buildings since the first awards went
out in .1991.
Tops on the new list:
- · East Cleveland City School
DiSirict, which got nearly $80 million .
- Western Brown Local School
District in Brown County in southwestern Ohio, $40.5 million,
- ~ Minford Lecal School District
in. Scioto County' in southeastern
Ohio, $28.7 million.
- Claymont City School District
in Tuscarawas County in ea~tern
Ohio, $24.3 million.
Depending on the particular district's wealth and debt burden, some
of the grants requir-e a partial match
with local tax dollars . .,

spend on the road.
Althea Banner has become par1 of
an organization known as Parents
Agaihst Tired Truckers. She has traveled several times since last summer
to Washington and Columbus to
speak to lawmakers about its agenda.
Ms. Banner said by jdining the
anti-fatigue campaign. she is '"putting
a face to a number," referring to her
son Michael 's ·death on Dec. 29.
1995
Michael Banner, 18, died when his

'

'

COLUMBUS, (AP) - A judge
who can 't understand how youths
S'ifm to have easy access to guns has
fQpned a task force in hopes or trac~­
inlf down the sources of the weapons.
Judge Susan Brown or Franklin
Cvunly Juvenile Court said the most
s&lt;fious criminal offenses committed
by&lt; youths who come through her
court usually involve usc; or a fire&lt;UTll.
" It is just so commonplace to have
a gun involved in the offense,"' she
said. "For some kids, I think a gun
has become par1 . or their getting
dressed in the morning. And it is hard
to get kids to give you any information on where theY got the guns."
The task force includes Sheriff
Jim Kames, Prosecutor Ron O' Brien,
other representatives from local and
federal law enforcement agencies,.

Nevertheless. Ms. Banner believes
her son's death was caused by driver
fatigue .
.
.
Daphne lzer of Lisbom Falls.
Maine. formed Parent&lt; Against Tired
Truckers
after her son and three friends
were killed by a truck whose driver
had fallen asleep and drifted into their
disabled car.
·
The group proposes that truck
owners pay their drivers by the hour.
instead .of by the mile, as is the common practice in the industry. It also
has urged trucks to be equipped with

computers to replace manual driver
log books.

Amid fears of revenge and a hit list,
FBI continues Cunanan manhunt

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)- As
authorities probed hundreds of tips on
the whereabouts of suspected killer
Andrew Cupanan, the FBI has reportcdly begun warning his acquainlances they may be his next targets.
Cunanan, a suspect in the slayings
of fashion designer Gianni Versace
and four. other men across the country, may be seeking revenge against
those he believes have crossed him,
FBl sp.o_keswoman Colecn Rowley
said in today's editions- of USA
.,
Today.
The FBI was reviewing interlawyers and coun officials.
views
with people who knew
Its top priority IS to trace the guns,
Cunanan
to detennine who should be
Ms. Brown said. Police will question
warned.
The
agency was reportedly
a juvenile arrested with a gun to find
concerned he was working his way
out where it was obtained.
The judge also is putting together down a hit list or wealthy gays and
a form for arresting officers or pros- an patrons.
"We want to see if he talked about
ecutors to fill out on the type, manuother
people,"" Rowley said. "If we
facturer and serial n~mber or the gun.
do
come
across those names, we
Besides identifying the sources of
would
be
remiss
if we did not convey
the firearms, the task force hopes to
that
information
to them."'
push for stiffer penalties for people
Authorities
have
said they believe
who supply guns to youths.
Cunanan,
who
could
be posing as a
Authorities have several theories
woman,
is
still
in
south
Florida. The
on how guns •get into youths' hands.
manhunt,
however,
is
national.
Some are acquired through thefts and
More details have emerged about
burglaries. Some juveniles purchase
Cuminan
"s actions in the days before
a gun from a,n adult who can legally
Versace's
slaying last Tuesday on the
buy the weapon. Some guns are
steps
of
his
South Beach villa found in the home.
including an infonnal get-together at

Task force tries
t,o determine how
1(0Uths aet guns

eastbound car collided head-on with
a tractor-trailer driven by Earl
Phillips. 6S. of Blisslield;Mich., on
State Route 2 in Ottawa County.
Three other vehicles collided with the
rig, inclu&lt;Jing a pickup truck driven
by Stewart Jimison. 29; of Toledo.
who was killed. Nine others were
hun.
Phillips told authorities after the
crash that there was a period before
tlie accident when he could not
remember what happened, but he
denied that he felt tired that evening.
In October, an Ouawa County
Municipal Court jury. acquitted
Phillips of two counts or vehicular
homicide.

the mansion two days before the murdcr that was apparently attended by·
Cunanan .
A Brazilian woman told authorilies she has photos and video showing Cunanan and Versace together at
the July 13 gathering. USA Today
qltoted a Brazilian police official who
con finned the woman's claim and
said the photos have been given to the
FBI.
A frie.nd ofCunanan's told the FBI
thatCunanan had a crush on a momber of Versace's entourage, Time
magazine reported. Authorities have
tried to determine whether Cunanan
and Versace knew each other.
A week ago, a day before the July
15 slaying, security cameras al the
News Cafe recorded Cunanan about
30 minutes before Versace made his
usual appearance to buy magazines,
Newsweek reported. The cafe is
within walking distance of Versace's
home .
Before all of this, Cunanan had
left a brazen trail across Miami
Beach .
Two weeks ago, he walked into a
. pawnshop, used hi.s real name and
"left a thumbprint as he pawned a gold
coin from one of the men he is
. accused or killing. He also left a
record of the hotel and room number
where he stayed until the day before

Versace's slaying.

At the pawn shop. Cash On The
Beach, clerk Vivian Ol iva said she
followed Florida law requiring her ti&gt;
mail a copy of the receipt , thumhprint
and all , to Miami Beach Police within 24 hours .
It was nol clear whether police
received the receipt. Calls 10 Miami
Beach police and the FBI were not
returned Sunday.
Oliva didn 'ttalk to police unti I the
day after Versace's killing, when she
called to tell them about the receip t
she still had . They confiscated lhe fin gerprint card and the coin. which
investigators said was stolen from
Lee Miglin, a Chicago developer
Cunanan is accused with killing in
May.
'
Th·c pawn shop is Within sight of
the Normandy Plaza Hotel, where
employees said Cunanan stayed for
lhe lwo months before Versace 's
murder. Manager Roger Falin said
Cunanan used an alias, nashed a
French passport and went from paying daily to week ly to monthly.
Even before Versace's slaying, the
FBI Was receiving reports of
.Cunanan sighlings from all comers of
the country - boarding airplanes. at
a laundry in Oklahoma City, in the
audience at the Geraldo Rivera show.

Hysell pled guilty shortly after
Johnson's death to a ·charge of
murder, ~nd was sentenced torl5
years to hfe. /
.
After the presentation of evidence, Kauf'f's case was bound

over to the Meigs County Grand
Jury by Judge O'Brien for further action .

. Prosecuting . Attorney John
Lentes said at the beginning Of
today's hearing that the case "is
nearing completion. ~ ·

Details of the hearing and the
taped .interview will appear in
Thesday's .edition of The· Daily
Sentinel.

Meigs fair
tickets arenow on•sale
Membership and season tickets
for the Meigs County Fair, Aug. ll16. are now on sale.
Membership tickets which gj vcs
voting privilege on members of the
Meigs County Fair Board arc $15,
while season tickets which provide
gate admissi on "and free park ing du ring I he entire fair arc $12 . Membership tickets arc on sale at the Sugar
Run Flour Mill, Pomeroy, and may he
purchased from any fair Board member.
Season tickets may he purchased
at Joe's Country Market. Rutland ;
Waid Ci"oss Sons, Racine; Baum

Lumber Co .. CheSler. Sugar Run
Flour Mill. Pomeroy : Swi&gt;hcr-Loh&gt;c
Pharmacy. Pomeroy: Litt le John \,

Food Man, Tupper&lt; Plains and MidJicpon ; Gloeckner's Rcstauranl ,
Pomeroy; Whalcy ;s Grocery, Dar-

win: Helen Baer. Syracu&gt;e: Dorscl
Larkins, Long Bottom: Dan's Middleport;

Five

Point ~

Ex prc:-.~.

Pomeroy; Reed's Country Store.
Reedsville: and McDonald 's of
Pomeroy.
r:or those C)(hibit ing in the !'l~ nJOr
fair departments, purchase of a membership or season ticket i; required .
The entry deadline is Aug . l at 4
p.ni. at the ·secretary's offi ce on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. No entries
will be taken by telephone but they
can be made by mail. The offi ce will
be open on Aug. 't and 2 rrom 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Again this year the Fa1r Board is
offering reserved parking in specified
areas for $20 for the week. Payment
is lobe made and 1hc site picked on
Aug. 2 with those interested to go 10
the secretary's office.
Cost of parking a camper or trailier for the week is $60, or for putting
.
Continued on page 3

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