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                  <text>Reds, .Phi/lies action . Page a1

,4 pilgrimage
to 'JIItlma'

•

So~ring

~on,...c1

gasoline prices . Page 01

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tmes •

A Gannett Co . Newspaper

Gallrpol1s • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleilsant • April 28 . 1996

Students challenged: 'Make a world

·. eo~ ~an. ·ov~-~ ~trr): ~Bob~'s.
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.Maso~~: o~ (;allipo·lis_Lo~a_tion·· . ·:: ·.
··For Qu~liiy Pliznts ~nd.Jhe_· ·. ·

'Best·. -.Selection in
the
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··T~~ounty ·iirea!

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, A SOLDIER'S LIFE... ·

difference'

POMEROY - "Make a world of difference.:· That was the challenge
himded down to Pomeroy Elementary School students at a brief Arbor
Day ceremony Friday afternoon by Meigs
County Litter Control and Recycling
.
director Kenneth Wiggins.
Friday marked the !24th celebration of
National Arbor Day, a day of tree planting
by school ·children, neighborhOods and
community groups.
Arbor Day was the brainchild of J. Sterling Morton, editor of Ne~raska's first
newspaper, who rnoved to Nebraska City
frorn.Michigan in the mid-1800s, according to the Natlot\!ll-Arbor D,ay Foundation.
• StC&gt;ry
cin page ••C5'
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.... _ ...,...;..:,...-.. ....

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Vo l. 31 . No. 12

· development·!nltlatlve

.'

· Valley Bank announced Friday pl~ns for an
initiative for
. the.creation of250 new jobs for the

'·

The .
. ·
$12,500 to_apro~osed consortium of economic deveJopmen!
between the Gallia -county Chamber of Commerce, the Community Improvement Corporation and the Regi01,1al Economic Development Association. . .
OVB Chairman anjl Chief Executive Officer James L. Dailey said the
bank would make available $2.5 million in low interest loan money for
economic development in the business district of Gallipolis, with loan
ammints varying from $20,000 to $250',000. • .Story on page A3

Demonatratlng how soldiers In the
Civil War lived and prepared lor service waa one of the features of the
annual Gallla CC&gt;unty SC&gt;Idlers' Homecoming In the Galllpolla City Park
this waekand. CJvll War re-enactC&gt;rs, ..
balow-frC&gt;m tett; Allen McNealy, Sam . ·
HC&gt;IbrC&gt;ok and Adam Childers, trada!;l
; . nC&gt;tes C&gt;n camp IHe, while 14-yllii(·Oic\ ·
Jason Kennedy, right, of Kents Store,
'1/a., chopped flrewllqd fC&gt;r me)'llbars
C&gt;f the 25th OhiC&gt; Infantry Dlvlajoo.
AlthC&gt;ugh helping CIUt the ,UiiiQfl
cause this WHkend, Ktnnldy Ia· uau·
a CC&gt;nfedtrate
the v
. ,irainia
Gallla
Hlat&lt;ll'lcal SCICiety
membara E8tlvaun Matthewa,
anll Pa~.lllne RHe examine some.of
the liQclety'a Pllbllcaliona at a dis•
play bOCJih.

1.~

GDC honors 120 volunteers
GALLIPOLIS - Around 120 people who
contribute to the Gallipolis Developmental
Center's volunteer organization we~ cited for
their contributions during Thursday's Vohinteer's Recognition Banquet held in the MultiPurpose facility, capped with the Outstanding
Service Award presented to. Jake Koebel of
Gallipolis.
The 240 who attended the banquet also heard
a brjef address by Carol C:remeans, wife of Gallipolis Congressman frank
.Cremeans.,a tribute to the Gallipolis Garden Club, the Fosler GrandGood
Morning
;:=!!!!::!!!!::!!!!::!!!!::!!!!::!!!!::!!!!::!!!!::!!=:::!!!!=; parents Club, Senior Companion
Program, and Adopt A Cottage ProToday•scaa.•.,mtbul gram. Dozens of individuals repre16 sections • 164 Pages
senting area churches. local banks,
community garden clllbS and all
C2
Calendar'
levels of state, county and city government
were praised For their con•
03-8
Classified5
tinued efforts to improve tlie quali· Comics
Insert
ty oF liFe For clients.
'
Editorials
A4
The banquet culminated a year of
Obituaries
A6
programs and activities, includ·ing
•
the reading of a proclamation of
Soorts
Bi-8
"Volunteers' Week" from Governor
A2
Weather
George
Voinovich.
Qhlo Yollov PubUohlng
' • SIC?ry on page C3

•

TREES * TREES * TREES
'

• rMMF FAUITTRI;E$ (~. et*ry. PMch, f'-)
. •PIIIIotl '(1'\Q '!'ll'tl

, .'

• DOGWOOD (Red. Pink)

•CRABAPPLE

' •REDBUD
• WEEPING CHERRY
• BRADFORD PEAR

• Fl.O'NEAING PLUM
• FLOWERING PEACM

FULLY STOCKED WITif~.
•Nuoom

~ ,_1(1011
•VIIKAV.

·.

• IIUI.Cit!.B, .
•MARBLE .CHIPS
'
· • RED LAVA ROCK
•PLAY SAND
•AND' IIOAEI

AT
OUR.GALLI
• WIOE.SEI.ECJION CLAY PLANTERS
.• CONCROE BIRD BAlHS
, GRAPEVINE WREATHS
· •GARLAND
eLARGE SELEOION RUSnC BASKOS

•$1'111&amp;DIFIIII
• SPillS'

SGARDEN CENTER:

. .• ~YPTUS ( 1.. padcage)
' · · •LARGE SEUC:OON OF LOCALLY GROWN
AND CWAAnZEP TREES &amp; Slt-UIS .
'""
. • FLORIDA TROPICAL PLANTS (ladr•a

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.Stop· By One Of Our Two Convenient Locatio11_1:
1/4 Mile North of Pomeroy, Mason Bridge ·
M~)n,WV

(3().4) 773-5721

2400 Eastern Avenue (across from Kmart)
•
Gallipolis, OH ' . .
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446-1711

By TOM HUNTER
Tlmes-Santinet Staff. .
POMEROY -· Candidates staging races for
t-feigs County offices in the March primary spent
a total of $31,944.06 during their campaigns, with
Republican candidates outspending Democratic
candidates by a nine to one margin.
five contested races, Rep'!blican candidates
for Meigs County offices spent a ~otal or
$28,821.19, while Democratic candidates spent a
total of $3,122.87 in only two ~o'ntested ·races.
according .lo ihdi~iaual state ca111paign financial
re,ports filed Friday w1th the Meigs County Board
of Elections.
·The most costly race fot candidates proved to

In

be the race ·for the County Commission seat of fines on H.oward for her failure to file the cam'
Democrat incumbent Janet Howard, with a tolal paign fina~cial stalements beFore Friday's dead;
of $13,240.85 spe'\t oy the six Republican and line, Smith added.
·
four democrats in the race.
Republican candidate Patty Goeglein Pickens
This figure is expected to increase, because . was the top spender amo·ng all primary candi'
. Howard's campaign finance reports. were not • fites, tallying a campaign total of$4,732.60 in ati
turned on to the county Board of Elections before unsuccessful b1d aga1nst five other candl!lates
Friday's 4 p.m . deadline .
who so ught an opportunity to face Howard in the
Howard will now be required to file an appeal fall election.
with the Ohio Elections Commjssion, warranting
Other Republican campaign figures in the rac_ii
"just cause" for failing to report her campaign for Howard's term included : nominee Jud)
financial information, according to Rita Smith, Williams, $2,487.77; Joseph Stobart, $1,611.75;
director of the Meigs County Board or Elections. John Blaettnar, $588.19'; Ernest ~e ncer;
If "just cause" is not shown at the time of $732.46: and Mary Powell, $1,743.64. ;
•.
appeal, the Elections Commission could impose
Continued on page 2
·

Who gets welfare

: GIVEYOUI
FLOWQIIDS IIII 'IASIEIS

• PO I liNG SOILS

·Meigs primary·candidates ·sp~nd ) over $30,000 :

Welfare retonn has socal, economic and political implicatiol¥;.

.

Here is a look at scme of the issues that have rueted the debate.

Edrt~r'e Note: Thlo Ia the fourth In a continuing eerlao at . the state's southern
·Gennett News Service, Sunday nmee-Sentlnel articles, Morgan. · '16.9
percent;

enlltled "Report Card on Amerlce,"· lOOking M tha crucrar
;ssuao at thla ele~tlon year.

If the objective of the American welfare system was
)o substantially reduce poverty, the overall result has
been failure.
. •
· Despite a raft of individual success stories, the 1990
census Found 14.5 percent of Americans livin~
below the poverty line. That's the ,highest
. . poverty rate since 1964 when President
· Lyndon B. Johnson declared war on
311d created..the battery of
programs on which. the cuJTent
refolrnl4ebate pivots. .
~!;~:;~::~~· residents of counties in
Ohio rank consistently
· ainong the poorest in the state; an~. report ,
per-c~pita incomes well below both state and national
averages.
·Southeastern -Ohio ..,ounties are also plagu¢ by the
highest unemployment raies i'n the state. In Mlirch, II
of Ohio's 88 countie!t had jobless rates above 10 percent.
,
.
..At least 10 of those C(lunties are co~i~ part of

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a

lion a year; food stamps. disRac o
Spond1119
tiibuted to 27 million AmenAdult Federal
Adams. 15.1 percent; Vinton,
cans for $28 billion; and Aid
13.3 percent; Monroe, .13
to Families with Dependent
percent; Pike and Meigs, 11.6
. Children, cash assistance for
percent; Muskingum, 11.5
'· 14 million recipients. AFDC
percent; Scioto, fl.4 percent;
· has -ballooned froin $1.5 biiGallia, 10.6 percent; and, : ·
lion in 1964 to $22 · billion
Perry, IO.'l · percent. These ·:
·· · today. •
.figures compare to a '
Although the value of perstatewide average of 5 per- :
· capita benefits has fallen
cent for Ohio; and, 5.6 per· ·
about 40 Jier~ent .since' the
cent for the natiOfl. ·
. ·
1970s, critics say the entitleThese fl!i:tors - hiAh
mi:nts are lutes for teen-agers
poverty, low employment and ·
and other people 'who.should
under-employment, coin·
be self-supporting.
bined with one ,o f the lowest
· Worse than that, say some
college-going populations in
rcfonners, not requiring anythe state- directly inOuence
thlng 'in exchange for public
the high rate of regional
~d bas licensed a dependency
dependence on one of the
and idleness that feed some of
hottesttopics of '96 election _yeat
welfare.
the counuy's "'om . social llls:
The largest and most expensive components of what . ·unwed parenthoOd, teen-age preg-.
is generally called "welfare"llie Mcdic&amp;id, whK:h buys nancy, child abuse and 11«'&amp;1cct, drug t~~~~~~~~i!~~~=-i~~~==~~~!!~
health care for, 3(hnillion P!'OI'Ie at 1 cost of $120 bilCanUriutd Clll pege A2 ,
t.:

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Regional

• _Aprii21,1M6

,.
OHIO Weather
Sunday, April 28
AccuWeat ~ foreQSt for

:' --~~iiiiiiiiiiiii

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Personnel matters highlight
action by vocational boar~ ·

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daytime condi tions and

MICH.

RIO GRANDE- Numerous per- Tracey Hunt, Mathematics; Patty amendments to boeld pohcJe~ onspef ,
sonnel matters we~ acted upon by Jones, OWE; Leesa Lewis, Multi- · ctal educa!Jon and dtspos1t1on
the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Jdint impaired; Tom Neal, Building property.
,
Vocational Board of Education at last Trades; Phyllis Rose, Math specialist;
• Accepted the followtng donaweek's meeting at Buckeye Hills Dorna Smith, vocational evaluator; tions: a 1996 Buick. Century from
C~r Cen1er.
Chri'stopher Tribby, Multi-impaired. ,Randy Roff, Jackson; heating ductIn the Adult Education Division,
Continuing -'- Harold Benson, ing, bOots, takeoffs, transitions and
,!he board nonrenewed the contracts Vo-Ag; Beverly Chapman, readmg pipe materials from Yates Heatin~ &amp;
of Glenn Graham, fapn business specialist; Sheila Oehler, physics.
Cooling, Rio Grande; and a telephone
planning consultant, and Betty
• Approv~d the . non renewal of power supply unit and 15 telephones
Adkins, Displaced Homemaker Pf9- supplemental contracts .for the f~l- from OSCQ Industries Inc., Jackson. ·
gram, for the 1996-97 school year. .lowmg: Thomas Jenkms, Phtlhp
• Appointed Vocational· Director
Adult
Division
personnel Powell, Tho~as Neal and Charles Kay B. Mic!tael as the di strict's Title
employed for next year included Harper, planmng penod;, and Carne VI, IX and Section 504 coordinator.
Julie Bays, Business 8t Education Chambers, yearbook advtsor.
• Authori~d the superintendent to
Partnership, and Phyllis Brown,
• Approved limited supplemental
services.
Adult Health Occupations coordina- contracts for 1996-97 for the followtor, both on one-year contracts; and ing:
.
+t..~'
Pl!DI Moran, Practical Nursing, and
Five days -Amy Barr, Ira EggleThe
ou~rs
Manin Wallace, DiverSified Indus- ton and James McCarley.
trial Training. Placement coordinator,
10 days - Jean Curtis, Bernice
both .on t!u;ce-year contracts..
Duffy, Donna, Gorre.ll, , Sherry
Hourly contracts approved in the Headley, Laura McFarlin, John
adult division included Julie Bays, , Richards and Penny Roush.
computer instructor; Richard
· 15 days - Patty Iones, Collette
Eubanks, fire extinguisher training; McClaskey, Tom Reid altd Jon
Crystal Harmon, adult clerk; Helen Rothgeb.
20 days - Tom Jenkins and MarHiggins and Melody Robinson,
ABLE instructors; Roy Jones, first tin Wallace.
·
responder; Kelly Kisner and Melody
30 days - Doma Smith.
Robinson, PETE instructors; Robe11
35 days - Mike McPherson.
Muller, machinist training; Doma
60 days - Harold Benson ,
Smidt, Adult Evaluation; Rebecca Charles Bush and Lisle Dill.
Stump, LPN instructor; and Jody
• Approved the following non-corWalker, Viriton County recruiter.·
tificated personnel contracts:
Bonnie Crabtree was approved as
Casual/part-time Stewart
an adult substitute instructor, and the Holmes, night watchman ; Janet
board accepted the resignation of Hutchins, treasurer 's office clerk.
Michael Bentley, Adult Industrial
Continuing- Kimberly Phillips,
Help her remember
Maintenance instructor, effective at assistant treasurer/financial aid offithe end of the current school year.
cer; Marcella Rankin. administrative
the smiles,
· The LPN and Adult General cal- · spe.cialist to the superintendent; and.
the
endars for 1996-97 were also . Tammy Ring, educational aide.
and the
approved. · ·
Employed the following substitute
events that
In other matters, the board:
personnel for the remainder of the
· • Accepil:d the resignations of current school year:
fill her life. Choose
Amy Shriver, Severe Behavior HandCertificated - Gary Harrison, " from our selection of .
icapped instructor, effective June 4; off-campus, and Fr~ncis O'Donnell,
classic handcrafted
and Curtiss Jayjohn, Security Ser- · general merchandlsmg. ·
Mother's Rings"' set
vices/Law Enforcement instructor,
Non-certificated -. Charles Parkwhich was effective April 11 .
er, educational aide ~nd custoliian.
with lustrous stones
In other action, the board:..
• Apjlfoved the following certifito :mark the
cated personnel contracts for the
• Approved tuition, ~ees, credits, .
birtlunonth of each
1996-97 school year:
hours, dates and regulauons for 1996
child. ·.
"' drie-year - Tim B_anee, FoOd summer.school at BHCC as one 15pteparation; Canie Chambers, Com- day sesston, startmg June 13 and endmunity s·ervices; Bernice Duffy, ing July 3.
GRADSnmpact.
. • Approved first reading on .revic;}wl¥1rw, ~He ·
Two-year- Elva Davis, Diversi-· s1ons to the followmg board pohctes:
tied Health Occupations; Tom Jenk- equal empleyment opportunity, aftir404 Second Ave. Gelllpollo, Oh.
ins, Agriculture, Recreational, Diesel mative action, and rights of disabled
Order Now to Insure
Mechanics.
·
employees.
Mothet's Day Delivery
Three-y~ar- Lisle Dill, yo-Ag;
• Approved second reading ' of
Sherry Headley, GRADS/Impact;
Dewey Hortop, Soc:ial Studies;.

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•lcolumbusl600

IN YOUR FACE manager fcir USF-Hoi!Md Molor Expre... Galla, gl- Bob Burllle, ownar of
011 Co., • good look lit 1 coconut Cf'INIIII pie bafore ...
eo~~lml hla fllce with II u 111111 of 1 -k~ong promotion to IMnlflt the 7th annual Tri..COUnty
lkAmer1ca for ,._ March of Dlmn. Employee• of Burllne 011 purchaud Uckllta for the oppor·
.t nlty to give their boa 1 pl1 In the fllee. ThiiOCIII WalkAmerlce will be ._ld today lit 3 p.m., at
Harmon Pllrll: In !'oint Plutll'll•

I

· Welfare: FaUures are clear, ·but solutions elu~ive

.M

Continued from page A1

· Rain remains in picture
·f or week's early section
· .By The Associated Press
.
·
A warm front is expected to push north in Ohio on Sunday night and linger
into Monday.
·
Rain and possiblt thunderstorms arc possible statewide .both days.
_ Highs Sunday will vary from the 50s in the north to the 60s in the south.
· :·Highs on Monday will be in the upper 50S in the northwest to around 70 in
: · :che southeast.
·
•
.
· · · Saturday was cool and breezy, with winds gusting to 30 mph and tem:
peratures in the 50s.
,
WeatJoer foruast: .
· Sunday... Rain likely north and west... Especially in the afternoon. Cloudy
:with a chance of rain elsewhere. Highs from the 50S north to the lower 70S
far south.
Sunday night...Rain and a chance of thunderstorms. Periods of heavy rain
possible north and west. Lows in the 40s north and in the!! 50s south.
Monday ... Rain and a chance of thunderstorms. Heavy rain still possible.
Highs from the upper 50s northwest to the lower 80s southeast.
Extended forecast:
.
Tuesday .. .A chance of rain. Lows 35 to 45. Highs in the 50s.
Wednesday ... Fair. Lows in the 30s. Highs in the 50s.
Thursday... A chance of showers. Lows 35 to 40. Highs 55 to 65.
·~.
.

Meigs primary candidates
didates running in uncontested conContinued from page A1 .
test races reponed no campaign
In the Democratic race for expenditures, . because Ohio state
Howard's seat, the following cam- law requires only expenses over
paign figures were reported: James $500 to be reported on campaign
L Davis, $286.44; C. Ed . Evans, financial reports. ·
$600.00; and Diana Duff Phillips,
Am~hose reporting no
$98.00.
e.penses were: James M.: Soolsby,
. In the Republican race for the Democrat incumbent Sheriff; John
. seat of incuml:!ent Robert. C. Hanen- R. · Lentes. Democrat :incumbent
::: bach, challenger Gary D~ll outspent Prosecuting ~t,omey; Steve ·. story,
. ·-: Harten bach $2,221.04 to $1 ,831.37, ...R~publican · candida~e for Prosecut.: • Ill .a close race whtch saw Hanen- ing Attorney; Larry Spencer,.Repub·
lican incumbent Clerk of Courts;
:· : bach defeat Dtll. ·
·:: Democrl\tic challenger Jeffrey L. Robert Buck, Republican incumbent
.:: Tho!nton, who w?n the.right to face Probate Judge; Douglas Hunter,
:. Hartenbach 111 th~ fan ele~tton, .was Republican. incumbent County
• : the top spender 10 hts btd for the Coroner.
•• : Dec:nocrauc
· nommauon.
· ·
Th ornton
Campaign budgets appeared to
:: talhed a campatgn total of $964.59, not be a determining factor in the
: _compared to challengers Jack R. success of bond issues for proposed
• : Slavin ($706.29) and Clyde R. Mor· new school construction in the East:: ris ($467 .55). ,
em and Southern Local' School Dis:
In the Republican•race for Coun- tricts.
·.: ty Engineer, incumbent Robert H.
C
h ll
E
. The Southern Local Levy om:: Easop outspent ~ a enger uge~e miuce . sp9~t $3,037.72 ·on . t~eir
• • Tnplet~
, • .4~ to $2,310.03, 'n unsuccessful campaign for passage
- .· h1's su cess'ul campat·gn to regairl
of a 6.1 mill bond issue, which
:_- another four'' year tenn.
'
'
- . · In the Rep'ublican race for Coun- would have financed construction of
a new K-8 school along with reno: · ty Treasurer, challenger Edward W. vations and additions to the e.isting
-: Durst outspent incumbent Howard
: :E. Frank, $3,291.11 10 $2,820.33, in high school.
. : ·an unsuccessful bid at defeating the
1)1e Eastern Local Levy Committee spent $1 ,980.98 on their success:·. veteran county offic_ial.
·.: ln .the Republican raceJ\lr Coun- ful campaign for a 4.5 mill bond
~
issue, which will finance construe.. ty Recorder, incumbent mmogene tion of a new K-8 school and reno:~Hamilton outspent challenger Debo- vations to the existing high school.
'•rah J. Watson, $1,003.81 to $264.00,
.
. •

::in~neofthemostinex~nsiverace~
·G
.durmg the March carnpatgn.
The race for the Republican nom iriation for Sheriff proved to be the
least costly campaign, as candidates
Michael R. Canan and .Gerald · E.
:Rought spent a t'?tal· $800.00 during.·
·their campaign efforts. Canan, who
.spent a total of $513.77, defeated
Rought, who tallied a campaign total
.of $286.83 .
Several 'count . officials and can-

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g."~- 'iimtt _:-jtnlintl
1fl'

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(USPS 525-1114!)

Published eech Sunday, 82~ Third Ave:,

Gallipoli1. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publishing
Compan)'/Gannett Co .. Second clast postage
paid 11.1 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . Entered .as
second clw mailing matter nl Pomeroy, Ohio,
POllt Office.
MtmbH: The Associaltd Press, nnd the Ohio

Newspaper Anoci11tion.

SUNPAYONLY
' SUBSCRIPTION RATES

ly C.IT'ieror Motor Route

One Wed&lt; ..................... , ........................... St .ll

. One Yet~r ........... :..................................... S6.S.OO

abuse and an assortment of violence.
"The classic pr.oblem is, when
you target these benefits on the
income- and as;.~-poor, you
inevitably create penalties for t!tose
who are working and saving," said
Dr. Thomas Corbett, assoCiate director of the Institute for Research on
Poverty at the University ofWisconsin. :·You wind up _giving more benefits to those with larger fljlllilies or
making it easier for single families
to get benefits than for two-parent
families."
Because of its political, moral
· and economic implications, the
reform debate has been discordant
and protracted. .
At the . state· level, 94th District
Rep. Johri Carey, R- Wellston, · has
supported reform efforts in the Ohio
House · that have dramatically
reformed the welfare system.
Provisions of Ohio's welfare system overhaul enacted·tbis year carry
more than 50 revisions - a combination of incentives and punishments designed to m,ove the state's
recipientS from welfare to work.
At the Congressional level, both
incumbent Rep. Frank Cremeans, RGallipolis, and'his challenger for the
6th District seat, Ted Strickland, DLucasville, have publicly supported
a change in the welfare system; and,
have found cqnsensus on tw9fundamental points: reform mu!i( include
· time limits on benefits; and work
requirements should be the fulcrum
of an improved system.
But how much time is enough
time, and where will recipients find

jobs?
,
the new law 's enactment "indepen- run. " Burtless said. ,
"There isn't anything the matter dence day for families on welfare.':,
· Success, he said, will depend on
with expecting people who are
Notwithstanding the nearly um- !he country's economic health, the
adults and collectinl! public aid to do versal suppOrt for work requ!re- recipients' work ethic, CIJ!ployer '
something in exchange for the bene- fnents, Burtless says welfare recipi- attitudes about hiring low; skilled
fits," said Gary Bunless, an econo- ents should brace for a difficult, per- workers and the 'sturdiness of incenmist with the Brookings Institution. haps even miserable, transition from tives.
But, he cautions; "Just because there the old ,entitlement programs to a
"Even if we can create the 1.5 to
will be jobs doesn 't mean there will new job-based system.
2
ll)illion
extra jobs that it takes to
be good living standards."
"I anticipate that we 're going to find positions for all of these extra
Both job requirements and time see much, much more suffering on a job seekers. their life is not going
limits appear in some form in every wider scale, at least in the short be a bowl of cherries," he
welfare plan under serious ·consideration - whether from Democrats or
Republicahs, governors, the White
House, aeademia.or special-interest
'·
groups. ·,
St. Rt 7, Cheshire, Ohio
Proposed time limits range frQm ..
one to five years. In some cases, it is
a lifetime limit. In others, it applies
only to .consecutive years, allowing
30 &amp; 35 TON GROVE
a'recipient to exhaustl)is or her limit
ROUGH TERRAIN CRANES
and return some time later.
DOZERS 07 • D-9 ·1150
Invariably, able-bodied.adults are
LOADERS 988B- 966 ·1845
required to get a job, train for one or
at least demonstrate they're searchTWO 631C SCRAPERS
ing for one. Some plans provide
CASE 580 BACKHOE
assistance in the job quest; some
allow exceptions for women . with
.
CAT 320 TRACK! E
children below school age or call for
MACK
WATER T CKS
subsidized childcare so mothers may
work. Others allow no excepti.ons to
35 &amp; 50 TON LOW·BOY ERVICE
the mdst-work rule and provide no
WILL DO COMMERCIAL
assistance.
•
· DIRTWORK
Wisconsin, a leader . in welfare
reform experiments, ;on Thursday
614-992·6637 or
became the first state requiring
AFDC recipients to either find work
614-446·9786 .
·or enroll in job training. Republican
J~Hall
Gov. Tommy Thompson declared

INC. ·

EQUIPMENT BENTAL

·

Taft pushes
citi·z enship
information

P.'"-d • "
;,
IC: ge IS o .. ere
~ •o al"d co
· nsortium

area

~

r:··~;inady:. ruled that th'ose flies ,'
· ·t~clujiing leiters be\~een t~e ,state
ilgency &lt;ana the ll-Y• Brook, N.Y..
!:ompany,.were exempt· from release .
~nder. (he st~te Freedom of Informa!¥JnAcl.
,

24'- $1,225•

: "rhls uto try to flush QUI the rest ·
of the hidden papers into the day·
l.i iht," said Gazette Editor Jim
Haught.
.
'• The $l.l billion mill bestde the
'•' River would create ab.out 600
. Ohio

II'Jiklt G1lll1 County

· I) Wccko ................................................. S27.l0

26 Woob............................. :................... Sl3.82
l 2 Woob............................................... SIOS.~
Aoltt OuWdo Golllo CGaniJ
ol) Wedu .......:.......:............... ,•• ,. .. ,....... , .$29,25
·:16 Wccko ................... .............................. $!6.68
:l 2 weo!lc................................................ $109.72

•••••

1) .

•

~@])OlJUiJ

jobs. Gov. Gaston Caperton is .a
major booster of the project, which
opponents say would pollute the river with dioxin, a toxic byproduct of
bleaching.
· The Gazette has been investigating financial incentives and tax
b~aks Par.aions &amp; Wllittemore is ,

from the~st;at;•;.
· - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....
•

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.J-~'•kr HDMIB ·

••

. .,. MPIATINO 80 WAN Ofl HOf . . . IM DING

, Coli today lor a flee cataloi of homo desl&amp;ftl ot visit your neamt sat.. office. .

1-800·492•5837 (Ask for Extenslon.60)

ll

15X30 - $1,795•

,I

tears

that is ililportjlnt to our economic work together, not only to stop the
vitality in Gallia County - and that decline of the downtown, but to bring
is·the business di strict in downtown it to n~w heights for.the people of
' I'
Galhpohs," Oatley satd to a group today and the generations of tomor~ GALLiPOLIS - Ohio Valley gathered on the parktrom .
row," .Dailey .said.
· As a commitment to enrich the
,. Bank announced Fridlly plans for an downtown area, the OVB has develThe announcement carne as efforts .
~ economic development initiative for
h
to
launch
development in the down·
0 ' wn
•" the creatiOn
. of~ new JO
. bs .or
' t he aoped
the
program
Project
25
I
are
. toge th er. ·A shopgoal of creatiQg 250 new jobs.
own
commg
~ downtown bus egs district.
. With an available pool of loan .ping complex is planned by local
:
The b3nk a! o !edged $12,500 to fund s in the .amount of $ 2 .~oo.ooo, Foodland stores owner Bob Eastman
" a proposed con so IU.,,
· ~ of economt
for the lower end of Second Avenue,
It
" ·c the OVB wilf loan to any qualified
;• development efforts between the Gal- borrower a minimum of $20,000, up · and the Gallipolis City Commission
4 lia County Chamber of Commerce, 10 a maximum of $2SO,OOO at a rate is puttin!l final touches on a ·pr6posed
th• Commum'tY Impr ovement Cor- of1-112pe
. rcentfora 10-yearperiod, revision of the community reinvesttl.on
d
the
Re
·onal
Econom
para
an
g• . .
- with astipulation of using these loans ment ordinance addressing down" IC Development Associ&amp;Uon.
te newJ·obs in the downtown town construction. .
~ &gt; OVB Chairman and Chief Exec- 10 genera
·
The proposal to consolidate devel- ·
: ~tiveOfficer ames L. Dailey said the area. .
·
o~ment efforts by the chamber; CIC
~hqnk would make available $2~5
Oatley added ~~~~ these loa~s and REDA was disclosed at a com~ib(tiq.IOW inte~stlD,ll!l money for ·.,should al~o be ·ehgtble ~~r Ohto . munity' roundtable discussion spononomic development in the busi- busmesses under the state s ,Ltnk sored by the groups Apnl 18.
.. _
ess di~trict of Gallipolis, with loan Depostt Program, reduc.mg the mter,
The groups appealed for partial
mounts varyl)1g fro111 $20,000 to est rate anothe~ 3- to 4-112 percen~ for local government fundmg to supplei?250,00o. .
,· .
• __the fi~st · two . y~ars, With posstble ment commitments from the private
.... "We. at OVB firmly believe that' e~tens10ns at that rate.
. ..
sector.
·
POMEROY- Units of.the Meigs
"We (OVB) can't do 1~1s ·alone.
Dailey said the loan fund and the
:·\lnless something is done soon, we
County
Emergency Medical Service
· ·may lose something that is not only We urge all · of our governmental pledge to !he consortium "is ourcomrecorded
nine calls for assistance·Friprecious to all of us, but something agencies to support this project. Let's mitrnent to this cause."
•
day, including four transport calls .
Upits responding included:.
.
MIDDLEPORT
8:25 a.m., South Front Street,
(: GALLIPOLIS - A 15-year-old Phillips Funeral Home. Ironton. The and Tuck~r gave pursuit in his car..
Harry Tipton, treated auhe scene;
:l'ronton male is· expected tO' face driver, Tucker observed, was opera!' The dnver later stopped the veht. 10:14 p.m., Maples Apanments,
:~haiges in Lawrence County related ing th~ vehicle errat!cally, weaviqg c~e and fled on foot. Tucker pursued Carol Lunsford, Holzer Medical Cen;10 the theft of a minivan that w3's fr,om Side tostde raptdly. .
hi!JI on foot through a yard nearEast- ter.
•iecovered Frid~y by Gallipolis City· · The driver, aware Tucker was f~l- ern Avenue and apprehended h1m on
POMEROY
tt"olice. .
lowing him, motioned to Tucker that Chatham between Galha and
8:56a.m., Senior Citizens Center, .
! •: The youth was apprehended i.n the he was stoppmg. Reports sa1d that the Smtthers streets.
Opal Tyree, Veterans Memorial Hos• "ity's. east end around 1 p.m. after .· vehicle stopped at the corner of
The suspect was taken to .the pital; ·
:~ading city police Detective Michael Chatham and Central av~nues. , pol~ce de~artment for an mtemew,
10:57. a.m .. Dark Hollow Road,
:rucker on a brief chase both on the . Tucker asked the dnver for bts d~n~g whtch officers learned that the Charlene Goodman, VMH.
:..oad and ·on foot, according to police. license, whtch he reportedly told mmtvan, was reported stolen from
TUPPERS PLAINS
, : Reports indicated that Tucker was Tucker was m Ironton. Tucker also ':Iarmon s Auto Sales, Ironton, some9:30 p.m., voluiueer fire depan:i)lfoc:med at 12:46 p.m. that a grey asked for the regtstrahon, and the dn- ume ~ursday mght or early Fnday. ment and squad to State Route 7, ·
:~odge minivan was driving around ver allegedly told h•m. that the mtm- The h~ense plate was also stolen, motor vehicle accident, William
:lite ChatharnAvenue area and the dri - van belonged to h1s fr~ e nd .
accordmg to reports .
Adams, Daniel Batten and Jason
Tucker asked the dnver to shut off .
The Juvemle, who reportedly had Banimus, VMH . Pomeroy squad ·
•ver was reportedly actin g suspi· f4iously.
· ·
th~ motor and exit the vehicle: The . previously lived in Gallii,Wlis, was assisted.
t~: Tucker located the vehicle and ran dnver then put the mm~van m gear later releas~d to his mother s custody, Committee to meet
registratio~ check that initial~ and drove over Tucker s fool. The officers sa1d.
•ii:ported the vehicle was owned by vehocle proceeded north on Chatham
WELLSTON - The advisory
1
~;.,.;...
•
'
·
committee to the policy committee of

j:iy JENNIFER BI'NDY. Associated Press Writer
t~ CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The
j:Saily Ga~elle Co. Inc. , on Friday
. asked the state Supre{Ile Court to
~~lease more documents from the
~tate Development Office dealing
. ~ith a proposed pulp min In Mason
County.
·
: • The ·court; did not immedi~tely
~cide-whether' !o 'hear the case.
f~· The· Daily Gazette Company,
I.Yhich owns the Charleston Gazette,
• I!Jready won release of some doculwents last December fo~ the Pars?ns
~ WhittemQre Inc. proJect at Apple
Qrov.e.
·
_
:- But Kanawha County Circuit
I J~dge Herman Canady said the state
J'evelo11ment Office could wnhhold
!!'i~~t 44 document~ ~nd all of 25

and research centers. The waste
would come from six member states
· of the Midwest Compact - Ohio,
Indiana, Iowa. Minnesota, Missouri
and Wisconsin.
. Guarding against . leaks into
ground water is a maj,or concern.
Karsts can acceierate such leaks.
The state bas . no maps showing
where all the karsts are. Some of the
authority's directcirs said thl~Y were
worried that it could be I~ cosUy to
.find them once II con~lr)tcllon stte 1s
. proposed. The \KJard " prepanng to
look
to do
I for
. a contractor
k
• the sue
se ectton wor ·
. . .,
The bo"!d su~gested elunmatmg
from co~stderauon a huge reg10n
wtth maJor. hmeslone an~ dolomue :
rock formauons. The
mcludes all
,
of 36 western counties.

18' -SttS•

Dolly ond Sunday
MAll SUBSCRIPTIONS

~

"harleston newspaper petitions court ~~n.~!J'i'~~~:es~~~;!~~~i~?s~
:,•n effort to obtain more pul~.
mill data Wellston
~~·d~~~:e:~~~:
fi~luf~:ys:~
r."
.

,

15' -'St2S• '

1be Sunday Times-Sentinel will not be rcspon, sible (Of advance payments mode 10 canien.

for
city's
downtown
d

·:a

·ROttND PQ()LS·

No subscri.pllons b11 mall permitted in areas
where motor co.rrier lti'Vice is availab~.

~ initiative

tJuv~nile apprehended after chasEJ

rule out waste dumping

SINGLE COPY PAICIIi
Sunday ................ ,....... :............................. S! ,00

~ OVB launc·hes ~evelopment

t

e0 ·10 g·•cal factors· may

•
COLUMBUS \AP) - ':' state
board might elimmate sectiOns of
Ohio as possible l.ocations for a proposed t0 w-level radioactive waste
storage site because of the prospect
of underground caves and ·crevtces.
l'!&gt;.eOhioLow.J.&amp;vel Rad10act1ve
Waste Facility Development Authority is concern¢d about karsts, which
are cracks that occur in ·limestone and
dolomite bedrock and cat( be f9und
·through 'much of western Ohio.
"I think karsts are the most significant threat to the integrity of !/lis
'l'ty, " bo3fd Vice Chairman
J. BarfaCII
.
.
ry Maynard, a hydrogeologisl, said at
a meeting of the authority Friday.
The authority intends to build and
operate a 'disposal centerfor low-level radioactive was1e from nuclear
power plants, hospitals, universities

VIsitor• Ctnter Director Kim
In costume for the annual
Civil War
In the p1rk, llttentd at
right. (T·S photo by Jill Wllllama)

Meigs EMS .runs

COLUMBUS (AP) - · Disappointed by the low turnout in last
month 's primary election, Secretary
of State Bob Taft has developed a
resource center for local\ state and
national citizenship projects. •
Taft on Ftiday introduced the
Ohio Democracy Clearinghouse,
which he said would be a "one-stoJ)
shop" fpr information related to
political activism. The projects.range
fro.n corporate. political activism to
getting students involved incommunity pl'!)jects.
The c1eanng
· house
· grew out o(
"'
· h I he Nauona
· 1Com.af1•s work Wit
mission on the Renewal of American
·
!)e.mocrac~. The co~mission studied
Clttze~ parttctpauon programs across
!he country for three years to develop the program .
Any individual or group interested in more infonnation can get materials by calling Taft's office at (614)
466-0565
·
· •

. LOAN ,.••u .....,.,
' chairman of the board and chief executive offi·
•• car of Ohio Valley Bank, tnnounced the bank.
~ was making available $2.5 million in loans for
, development of Gallipolis' downtown. He made,
~ the announcement Frldty In the city park as .

Ring®.

•

.,..llllloo _ _ _ _ loo.IA.II.toii'JI., lun.l P.II."'IIIIL

'l.fti#A~ ................ O"fiDII*~...,. ........ III.~L.Ml . OIIrQIIOOIO

.tpt10. taNo . . .,.or...,.._,..Prb...---.
G ..... LUll

.. ,

Pt'OIO.._...,.'OM.., ""'_.IICkMiolll....,.

4/lllllllt.U-.....:!allllt'f.a. l..aMA....,._ M.~M.tt!Km , ~..(J:.1201f, A.oCACUIWJii,
PIH!7147.NC-lC*D.C.10T1l.f'N.23M.~01CM3M.~·.., ..... HIImatlc.1-~

ttiiiW .................... __.HDIMial~lne .
t

•
' I

CROSS.LANES, WV
414 New Goff Min. Rotd
Pho111: 3041778-1700

.

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•

�..

•

.:c;ommentary
•

•••

iunbav ~im5· ientinel
'EstlJifisfrd in 1966

•

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Ohio/W.Va•

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...----~~~~~--~~~~~------~~.--------~~---------·--~

By JACK ANOfRSON .
lnd MICHAEL BINS I Ell'f

WASHINGTON
Former
House
Speaker
Jim
Wright's.
new
•
825 Third Awnue, Gallipolis, Ohio
book chronicles his working rela814 448 2342 • Fu: 448-3008
tionship wn'• nine U.S. presidents.
111 Court StrMt, POIMioy, Ohio
But many of the spiciest moments
814-m-2158 • Fu: 912·2157 were too sen~itive to be included in
this tome.
During a one-hour interview with
us last week, however, the Texas
Democrat told a few tales out of
school. The insights Wright shared
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
with us provide a fascinating appen·
•
dix to "Balance of Power" (Turner).
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Perhaps the mosl-l:xplosive story
Publlaher
not told in the book was lyndon
Margaret L8hew
Hobllrt Wll8on Jr.
Johnson's private opinions about
E"K'dlve EdHor
Controller
John F. Kennedy 's assassin'ation.
Despite the fact that Johnson pub1..-w to 1M edlttH .,. wetcame. Ttr.y 1hould be IM• than 3l1tJ llllrJida.
licly
embraced the findings of the
AH ,.,.,.. .,. aufllecl to edltlngMtd mutt be 1/gned and lncluM edt~~ ...
Warren
Commission, LBJ confided
and
number. No una/gnad,.,.,. will be publilhed. ~
to
his
good
friend and fellow Texan
ahould be In (10«1 tute, Hd,.a•lnll 1.,1111, not pwafiM/11111.
that he thought Kennedy was the
victim of a conspiracy.
"l:.yndon believed · that there
probably had been some form of
conspiracy involving Cuba and
(Fidel) Castro absolutely,"
Wrightlold us. "He didn 't have any
: · The recent decision to reopen another high school thi!I,EOUnty made by
nce .. . but he believed that Cas·
I)Je Galli a County Board of EducatiOn and Mr. Lannmg wa'f a good educa- evide
tr6 wanted 10 kill the president, and
tion for our children.
he supposed that Castro was someIt taught our children that the majority of people (one-third supported to how involved."
two-thirds opposed) doesn't matter when you're on the school board. It
Fe\\( people know that Wright
, taught our children that when you are spending somebody else's mone~ (tax· was in the motorcade during that
~ayers ') there is plenty more :-"here that carne from . It ta_ught ou_r chtldren fateful day in Dallas·, three ·cars
that if you have a survey _(lads retumtng from other dtstncts tf another behind Kennedy, because the presiSchool opened. you can justify any figures you want).
. .
dent was visiting his congressional
It taught our children ·that if you are laced wtth some hard dectSions, 4istrict. '.'1 don 't think I had a more
don't think about it, just go along with the crowd (5·0 to reopen and .5·0 to . eKhilarating ' experience than pre·
renew Mr. Lanning's contract). It taught our children that is to better to carry senting John Kennedy that morning
signs, whine and cry (we don't fit in/we're not welcome- Mr. H~lley and to my bometown people," Wright
students at meetings) than it is to sacrifice something or try to do thmgs 10 a said. "But then I heard lhe 'three
diplomatic manner like Parents United for Academic Excellence. .
shots ... That day was the biggest
It taught our children that if a person who is in favor of somethtng and emotional roller-coaster of my life."
truly believes it will benefit the county, don't go out and try to get support
The funeral of another man who
for yourSelf, send the treasurer out to do it (the treasurer has been to vanous was in that motorcade, Texas Gov.
schools for support). I fail to understand why Mr. Lanmng cannot speak to John ConnalLY, brought Wright
the public, instead of through the treasurer.
together with a presldenl with whom
The most important things that our children have learned is that you ·are · he rarely agreed: Richard Nixon.
not required to answer any questions asked b~ the public, if you do not want When Connally died in 1994, Nixo,
to if you are a public figure. It taught our children that m Amenca the hard- and Wrighl struck up a conversation
w~rking people do not mean diddly squat to a politician if yourmother, aunt, . at the funeral.
uncle or father-in-law is in the right position (board or comm1ssmner), you
Shortly thereafler, Wright wrote
will have a job waiting for you in time (board hires Mr. Lanning's niece and Nixon . a long letter about current
Mel Caner's daughter-in-law). .
.
.
.
politics 'and the past. Nixon sent
And last, it taught our children forgtveness, because after wasung money, back an equally long leJer and ·the
• hiring family, disregarding the majority ~f the people, not being n:uthful 10 · two former adversaries ' bQcarlle
taxpayers, hiding in executive session unul the people are gone! promtses for secret pen pals in Nixon 's ,final days.
n,ew books and computers, and t:aptng the system of any credJblltty _the board
When we asked Wriglit to name
mem'bers and ~r. Lanning ever had, lhey tell the public the dectstons have the worst president during his 34·
been made, let s have a meetmg to plan for a new htgh school and a bond year career, he demurred, not wanti·
levy.
•

,.lap,_

·Letters to the editor

./)ecision offers a lesson to kids
!n

93~crq~E~

• · 1D

f n
b
ay 0 rrayer 0 . Servance .

•"' to single out 111yonc. But he did
allow thai the wom c:vent oca.r,cd
on Ronald Reag111's w~h: the quadruplinc of the national debt. ·
Wright concedes thalltcaian wu
the president who most frequently
"drove me up a wall." But Wright
also had great respect for Reagan,
and their relationship was much
more complex thaq the panisan pos·
turing that the public saw in the
1980s.
In a rare concession by such a
prominent' Democrat, Wright told us
that in hindsight he now believes
that Reagan was mostly correct in
dealing with the Soviet Union : The
best way to win the Cold War was to
spend so much on defense that the
Soviets would crumble as they tried
to keep up.
But Wright believes that Reagan
overdid it by pummeling the Russian bear even when peace was at
hand. "I don'tthink it was helpful to
\completely) e;llapse their economy," Wnght old our a5soctatc Ed
Henry. " We' suffering from that
right now because the average peopie in Russia have a lower standard

o(livinc. less security, less SCDSC or
hope aad confideocc ill the futute.

11wt makes (the Russius) more
dancerous than they were ."
WriJht says Reapn faded tn ~
that Mikhail Gmbachev was willing
tocasctc:nsionsabouttwoyearsearlicr than when the two nations actu·
ally came together.
· At the first summil _betwecn Ru.·
gan .and Gorbachev m. Geneva m
(98S, for example, aides described
the landmark talks as "frank" at1d
"businesslike." But Wright_says the
infonricd speculation he p1cked up
at the time was that "Gorhacbev was
charmed with stories about the
movies."
.
Wright says Reagan 's backstage
maneuverings before the Reykjavik
sumiJl,it in October 1986 were m~
revealing. Just before be met wtth
IJorbachev, Reagan callea Hoii5e
Speaker 'np O'Neill. D·MaSs., ft;am
Iceland. Reagan pleaded ~kith
O'Neill and Wright to stall a bill in
Congress that would stop funding
Star Wars.
" Rea gan 'lold Tip, 'If ~ou·r~ ·
going to de-fund it, don't do 11 until

.

after ~.y. ~tinc.;:,:~c:a~'"You rw~ ~y . ·...
use
it as a bargaiDeruag ~"i'~ """"ld
·
mocratlC •
.....~II', end of the bargain, b_ut Req111
didn t. He ~y ~nared the

'!he

fruitfulnegotJ~~~·'!xGorbac~

because_ the ov~et ;..., r wanthe
concesstona on tar ars very move that Rc:~an told the
Democrats heafrwa_sdWJthllmaGtorbomakhee.
''He . got 81
.at.
ac . ~
was got~· to take him up on II._.
Wnght s&amp;Jd of the pok_cr-hkc negoballons.
.
"Reagan offered up S0J11ethmg
else pretty bold .•n~ Gorba~hev
agreed~ r&amp;Jsed hi!'~ by offenng a
bold s.ovtel con.cesst~n;;
Wngh~ contmlied . . Reagan ~ot
very pan1cky that peace was gomg
to come '':"' fast. And he reported lo
us upon his return that he was really,
at the moment, siU.nne~ that . Garbachev had taken htm up on 11• •He
thought he ~ad o,ffered s~:netht~g
Gorbachev couldn t accept.

~-=~

:.;,:'1:..MJ..~ ~~:

ture SyndiC1118.)

·
~iiiiiij;Jiiffj~
'll

•

-

What about Bob New polls ·spoo

,.

r

g GQ"

Edward Kennedy,
(despised lion of lib~
eralism to the
r~ght) beal back aD~Je
amendment
savmgs accounts. Modefate
are trying to cut a deal to raise th~
minimum wage, something Dole opposes.
'
· On Earth Day, while a strapping:Jooking Clio·
ton and Vice ·President AI Gore moved logs in.a
flood-damaged state park, Dole went to the Sen,
ate floor and delivered .an uninspired speech
about the importance of the environment.
• ·
For the moment, the Republicans are badlY
losing both on image and issues. Back .on their
heels, they've not taken the credit they could for
forcing the balanced budget debate onto Clinton's
desk.
They've allowed Democrats to dem~gogue
some. issues, like Medicare, by translating a slowdown into the increase of spending into outright
spending cuts. And no one has pushed Democrats·
on why, if the minimum wage needed raising,
they didn 't do it when they had both the Congress
and the White House 18 months ago.
,
Worse, Republicans have srarted complaining
about press coverage, a sure sign of a party seeing
disaster on the horizon and searching for scapegoats.
It was not the press who dressed Clinton and
Gore up like Euell Gibbons on Earth Day whil~
Dole retreat"" once agairi lo the sterile environ·
ment of the Senate.
Right now, Dole is in a bad spot. He is the heii1
of- but does not yet lead - a defensive, tinji
party. They have allowed their opponents, some .
times in extreme terms, to label them extremis~. :
· One press release not long ago from Colle$~
Democrats labeled Republicans as "Natural-Bdtr(
Killers" during the heat oflhe gun-control debate.:
One wonders about a political system that pro.
duces such savage cynicism at such a delicate
age.
Can Dole show the heart to become more than
the sum total of attack lines? What about Bob? ' :
.

Kr••:!~~~= Democ.rats ca_
pitalize on minimum wage issuen
The
Today in history

. By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Speclel Comtapondant
WASHINGTO~ ~To drainatize
the Democratic drive for an increase
By The Aaeocletld p,....
Today is Sunday, April·28, the I 19th day of 1996. There are 247 ~ays left in the minimum wage, President
Clinton ncted -that congressmen
in the year.
.
'were
paid more during a month of
Today's Highlighl in History :_
.
.
. .
.
.
,
goveinment
shutdowns than work0n April 28, 194S, Italian dtclator Bemto Mussohm and his mtstress.
Clara Petacci, were e~ecuted by ltahan parttsans as they attempted to flee ers at lhe bottom of the pay scale
make in a year.
'
·
1M rountry.
·
Millionaire
corporate:
chiefs
got
On thit date:
•
I
In 17,8, 1he fifth president of the United States, James Monroe, was born an average 23 percen1 raise in 1995,
Labor' Secretary Roben Reich said,
in We11moreland County, Va.
,
.
.
. In 1788, Maryland became the seventh state to ratify _the U.S. Consttlu· and the minimum wage h11sn't
budged in five years.
lion.
·
·
fthe
B
·
·
h
h'
A House Dem~~~:rat held out · a
In 1789,•!here was a mu1iny on the ~ounty ~ the crew o . nbs s tp
let Captain William Bligh ' and 18 sallon adnft in a launch m the South begging bowl to plead that Republi·
can leaders pul the minimum· W&amp;Je
Pacifu:.
rded "P
I . 6 ilii:re140 to a vote.
·
In 1940, Olenn Miller and his Orchestra reco
ennsy van1a •
They
say
they
don't
intend
to; the
~" tor RCA Victor.
·
. Jn 1947, a ai~t-man· expedition sailed from Peru aboard a balsa-~ood ~aft White House calls thateruel.
· "This is ·theater," Republican
named 1M Kon-'nki on a 101-day journey that lOOk them across the(''ac•fic
Sen.
Alan Simpson complained as
()l:ean to Polynesia. .
.
. ·
1 19~2 war wilh Japan officially ended as a treaty that had been stgned Senate Democrats man~uvered ·on'
the issue the other day. He's, right;
by
Uni~ Slates and 4Lylher,nations ~ook effect. ,
.

J:e

:;t~

trouble for RejluJ?Iicans is that do, advance reasoned economic the- so hurt the very people it is supposed
the drama, the rhetoric and the emo- aries against the increase, soying it to help. ·
·
,
tiona I argumenls work to the hurts low-income workers more
But that appraisal acknowledg•s ·
. Democrats' ~dvan(age.
than it helps, because it costs jobs.
that the arguments for an increa$e :
They can stir sympathy for the
It hits small businesses hardest, are emotionally appealing.
· •:
Jorking poOr. The polls report over- they argue, and one worker's pay
And the Democrats are goitrg io
whelming public supporl for an raise is another's · lost opponun_ity. keep playing on them. It is a rene~­
'increase. Economis1s on the other They call it~ ~ayof!' to labor, whi_ch al of a political tra_p that has snapMd
side of the ssue don't get sympathy wants the mmtmum upped to ratse at tbe GOP ever smce the first, New
votes.
the floor in negotiations with indus- Deal minimum wage was set at 40
The federal minimum wage has try. The AFL,CIO . is planning .to ce an h~r 58 years ago.
,
beenat $4.25 an hour since 1991.
invest $3S million in the 1996'eon·
. this campaign year, it ha5 pu\.:
The Democrats' propow now ls -grossional campaicn to boost Dem&lt;!- D e i_n the middle, . leading to.
a two-step increase to'SS.J S 111 hour, cratic candidates.
· .
epubhcan nfts, and displaying the .
and they say ~ will keep p111hing
The&lt; trouble is tliat a 45-cent . problems that go with managing the :
it in Sen11te amendmen!J to other hourly pa,Y raise for eac:h of the hext Senale anil running for president at !
bills every chance: they get.
two yean IOUnds like a pittance. The the same time.
'1
. The laCtic already has fOrced Sen. a:onomic: theories are al,)stracl. A
The,- Democrats seized .on the :
Bob Dole, the Republic~ leader and 90-c:ent rtiiC is not.
'
issue this. spring, with the simple :
presiden.tial nominee·tO•be, . into
The conservative Heritage Foun- StrateJY of demanding a straight, •
· retrca!J on two major bills, sbelved dation has ~ust iaaucd a study hold• yes-or-no vote on the .. minimum i
temptn.rily to avoid minimum wage , lnJ dW 10 Jllefease to a SS;I' feder·· wage, and trying to force one at !
amendment votes.
al minimum waae would. reduce the every opponunity. The mlljor.i(y l
It is an issue that has . ~aggcd number of new entry-level jobs by Republicans haven't produced a •
Republicans before. They can, and 200,000 in the neJtt lhree yean, and , clear comeback. . .
! •l

'

, , By 40HN CHALFANT

Thai would have a direct impact on
,AIICI ~1'*&lt;1 P ..... WI I...
the populatioo or the herd,.. Lons
. , ' eQUJM!iUS- Know fJVm the said in an interview.
_ou~t that the Humane Society of the
"We're DOt advocating that nec, Untied States does not necessarily essarily. We have to learn to live with
,advocate a doc-only hunting season some of these problems that we
· ,to control Ohio's deer berd. But the caused," he said.
group believes a serious management
"Hunters don't want to shoot doc.
plan would consider that alternative. They want to shoot the antleredA special House-Senate commit- deer," Long said. "But the fact is that
, tee has been holding hearings into · slaughtering more deer obviously
damage that w.ildlife causes orchards hasn't helped. We' ve raised the numand other farm J:rops.
bers of deer killed every year, and we
. William Long. deputy director of still have a problem."
. government relations for the humime
Total deer harvest has risen from
hry;iety, agreed with an Ohio Division 98,486 in 1990 to 179,543 last year.
of Wildlife assessment. that some Still, the herd grows about 4 percenl
. growers were experiencing signifi- a year.
' ~ant damage.
Patrick .Ruble, division adminis"Our point is that if the Division trator of wildlife management and
pf Wildlife is"seri9us about reducing research. said there is no doc-only
~eo population for the farmers or season at present.
whomever they ought to be looking
" I think there's an infinite number
·at something like a doc-only season. of ways you can design a system. We

need to try to kill X number of deer ,
every year to meet our objective. You
can do that in 25 different ways,"
Ruble said.
"Obviously you need to harvest
anderless deer and make that a bic
pan of your harvest to control herd
levels," he said. "Thel:e are folks out
there that are just interested in trophy
hunting and then: always will be."

..

The division said recently it
intended to maintain liberal harvest
regulations in an anempt to reduce
th~ herd, now estimated at 500,00\).
"Ohio is one of the national lead·
ers in terms of harvest regulations
that maximize the kill of antlcrless
deer," Ruble said.
CHANGE IS OFFICIAL - .Peoplea Bank of
A survey of nearly 4,000 farmers
estimated annual financial .loss from Mllrlelta made lte ecquleltlon of the Bank One
wildlife at $46 million, about half of bl'llnth offices In ~y •ncl Gltlllpolla offlciel Frldey with sign chtmgee at the ~s.
it from deer.

"
"

FrtctaY

Sign t:rNa Installed this \empol1lry sign
eften)GQn et the dli.,. up bnnch et Second~
. Lynn streets In Pomeroy.

,C onvicted inmates .stage hunger strike
: By SONJA BARISIC
prisoners had been drinking water but getting his way over religious issues.
"Thl\t has to do with their leaderAssociated Press Writer
abstaining from solid food since Nine inmates and guard Robert Val- ship," he said. "They've hccn proven
CINCINN AT! ~ The five Monday.
Iandingham died during the II -day to be inmaie leaders and organizen
inmates sentenced to die for their
"WI are watching them closely," siege.
and we can't have that, even on death
Sanders, Were and Robb were row."
' roles in a fatal riot at Ohio's maxi- Andrews said. "Doctorsarechecking
: mum-security prison are on a hunger them daily and monitoring their sentenced to death for the aggravat· s_The inmates also were upset that
ed murder of Vallandingham:"
th~~re not allowed to go to the
: strike to protest cohditions on death weight. They seem to be OK. "
: row., ,
·And.rews Saturday said any
Skatzes, also convicted in Val- prison s law library, Andrews said.
' · "They said con&lt;¥tions Ihey are in weight loss would not be released Iandingham 's death and-sentenced to They may request bOOks, which are
: caused a prisoner to hang himself because it was medical information life- in prison, received the dealll delivered to their cells. ·
, penally for the aggrnvated murders of
: recently," said Edward Williams, and therefore confidential.
: coordinator for the Cincinnati-based
The inmates - Carlos Sanders, two inmates.
Andrews said he did not think an
· Ohio Prisoners Righls Union.
James Were, Jason Robb, George
Lamar was sentenced to death for inmate's suicide was related' to the
: "They felt that this prisoner was- . Skatzes and Keith Lamar- are at the the aggravated murders of five hunger strike.
: ~ 't being monitored enough by Mansfield Correctio
Institution. inmates . ·
Steven Christopher Kidwell, 25,
o officials were
Andrews said the prisoners on the of Cleveland, was found hanging in
: guards," Williams said Friday night. The prison sai
· "He was despondent."
available to omment today on the hunger strike had complained about II¥ cell early April 12. He was senbeing placed under administrative tenced to die for the 1994 kidnapping
: Williams said the inmates a so are ·hunger stri e.
: protesting their sentences.
lnvestig tors said:Sandcrs, a Mus- control, which means they are con- and strangulation of a 12-year-old
' Joe-Andrews. spokesman for the li led
April 1993 riot at the fined to their cells most of the time Cleveland girl.
•Ohio Department of Rehabilitation Sou
hio Correctional Facility and their movements are highly
J
:and Correction, _confirmed that the near Lucasville in retaliation for not restricted.
"He was a fairly new inmale who
. had some mental problems and hung
himself," Andrews said.

CHARLESTON, WVa. (AP):Anomey General Darrell V. McGraw
J{. r:anrot claim immunity in a lliws)!il file4 by an Ohio direct-mail com·
!f'"Y·~ according to a U.S. Dtstrict
~ rull!lg..
,
1, •
Clllef'ltldge Chilrles Haden )llso
hjls ruled that McGraw's investigator,
Qarbara H. ~lien, is in contempt of
'd!urt for failing to tum over documents thai have been requested'in the
'
case.
The ruling means McGraw must
jifoceed as a defendant in federal
toun and could be found liable for
rilonetary damages.
• • The Beuer.Govcmment Bureau of

Canton, Ohio, sued McGraw in October 1994 after he filed incorporation
· papers using its name,· to keep the
group from establishing itself in
West Virginia.
. State law prohibits differeni companies of the same narn~ from operating in the state. The company
alleges McGraw infringed on its
First Amendment rights.
- · The_bureau is loosely linked with
Suarez Corp. Industries, one of I06
compani~~ McGraw sued, saying
they run illegal sweepstakes.
McGraw hi.red Allen as a special
investigative counsel to determine if
anyone in his office had given office

.

_
O
hio,
W.Va. lottery picks
'
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'By lJle Associated Pref$
· · The following numbers were
selected in Friday 's. Ohio and West
Viiginia loueries:

··

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omo

Pick 3: 1.·8·7
Pick 4: 4-3-6-o'
Buckeye 5: 5,14--27-30.35
No tickets were sold naming all
five numbers drawn irtFriday night's
Buckeye 5 drawing. the Ohio Lottery

bid .

· A winning ticket would have been
worth $100.000.
: ' Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
' $443.112.
There were 15.0 Buckeye 5 tickets

with' four of the numbers, and each is
worth $250. The 4,597 tickets show·
ing three of the numbers are each
worth $10, and the 48,743 tickets
showing two of the nu':"bers are each
worth $1. · .
.
. Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1.575.389, and winners 'will receive
$769,030.
Pick 4 Numbo;rs players wagered
$373.068 and will share $121,600.
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Louo drawing was S20 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 8-4-8
Daily 4: 2·1-6-2
Cash 25: 4-5- 11 -16-1 7-22

memos to the Ohio company.
Allen was ordeced in February by
a U.S, magistrate to answer questions
from the Better Government Bureau
and hand over documents in the case.
Allen has refused to comply. cit- •
ing attorney-client privilege.
Haden said tircumstances sur·
rounding Allen 's hiring make the
allomey-client assertion questionable.
·
McGraw i'eferred to Allen as a
"special investigator" when she was
hired. he said. _
''The court infers and concludes
Ms. Allen was retained, at least in
part, in an auempt to shield relevant
and discoverable information from
disclosure to the opposing party."
Haden said.
Haden also said McGraw must be
accountable for actions he has used
against the Ohio company and can.not proteCt himself wi'th the immunity granted to the office of anomey
general.
McGraw did not thoroughly
investigate the company and seek
coun relief under the West Virginia
Consumer Credit and Protection Act
or other consumer protection legislation "when or if he discovered potential fraud," he said.
Allen and McGraw did not return
telephone messages seeking comment.

•-~----.

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control Ohio's deer population

!Federal court finds McGraw not
tmmune to. Ohio firm's litigation

By CHUCK RAASCH
made Dole, like Movie Bob, uncomf9rtabfe in the
GNS Polltlcel Writer
. re_al world. They wonder whether Dole coherent·
We can no more separate ourselves from prayer .and honoring God than
WASHINGTON - Republicans are re-enact- ly can ·connect this message in real terms.
we can disassoci&amp;te ourselves from the -rounding fathers wlio brought us to ing the hit movie, "What About . Bob," and the
Movie Bob eventually endears himself to
these shores. God and ~ adherence to His moral and ethical te~chings in political reviews are not prelly.
dou~ters and wins friends by showing a good
Scripture have been and must remain the very glue that bolds our nation
In the movie, ·a hapless character named Bob, heart.
together.
,
. .
.
pl,ayed by Bill Murray, keeps showing up on
Can Candidate Bob do the same thing? That is
Thank Gnd, Congress unanimously sought to protect our nght to pr~y tn doorsteps whew he 's not wanted .. He is listless, the question of '96 for Republicans.
1952. Signed into law by Prestdent Truman and later amended by ~stdent lacks pas·c interpersonal skills, has no goals ·
AI several moments over the last month,
Reagan, the National Day of Prayer, the firs.' Thursday tn May, remruns the ~bcfclnd
taking the next few " baby steps," and Dole's heart has not seemed in 1une with what his
day our nation turns its _hearts toward hononng God tn prayer.
_ can
going outside the safety of his home. mouth is saying:
.
Historical records will bear out the facts that God, not chance nor favoruld call the remake, "What About Bob
• Dole's adviser&amp; think attacking Clinton's
0
able winds, led our founding fathers to these very shores. Once on dry S?ll, Dole?" Some Republicans riow are questioning judicial appaintrnents is a winner to a public ·fed
they honored Gnd on their knees. They thanked H_im ~or safe passage, rehed the eriergy and focus of their presump~ve presi _. up with crime and lenient courts. But before .a
on him to find provisions and sought Hts protection 1n _thts ne\1( and some- dential nominee. They say Dole lacks energy and group of newspapef editors and publishers, Dole
times dan11erous land. As time pas~d, lhey soughl Hts_gutdance as they focus and seems comfortable only inside his delivered ihis line of attack so dispassionately
fashioned this nation's government, tts laws and 1ts cpnstttutron. .
home, the Senate. Sound familiar?
that some in the audience concluded he did not
'· Meigs CountY's observance of the National Day of Prayer begins on Su~- . 11 is far too early to write anything in stone. really believe what he was saying. ,
day at 4 p.m., with the beginning of the Bt~le Readmg Marath?n at the pav!l- Ask President Clinton, who just a year ago was
• Appearing at the Mexican border during the
ion on the levee in Pomeroy. ~prayer vtgtl at P~m~roy ~nned Meth~tst reduced to arguing whether he was relevant. But California pdmary to high~ght the problems of
Church will begin at the same time. These two acuvmes wtll conunue dally, some Republicans clearly are spooked by polls illegal immigration, Dole left virtually all the
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesd~y and conclude at 10 a.m. showing Dole trailing Clinton by 20 percentage auack' lines to Gov. Pete Wilson, no stranger to its
Thursday.
· .
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,
points.
.
.
· raw edges. Dole seemed uncomfortable with the
At 7 a.m. on Thursday, there wtll be a prayer breakfast for pubhc offictals
Bill Bennett, the GOP's chief scold and vinue- prospect of denying school and social services to
pnd members of the clergy at t~e "omeroy Un1ted Methodtst Church. From crat, tells fellow Republicans that Dole is "too children of illegal immigranls.
11 :30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., we wtll ~nne togelher tn P!"yer at lhe courthouse carefully scripted'" and short on "passic4''
.
"It's nol an easy choice.:· Dole said of goversteps in Pomero~. Please plan to JOin us for five mmutes or for one hour.
Party loyalty is apparently not ·a virtue. But nors. "Their heart lells them .one thing~ their head
Public prayers wtll be offered on beh~lf of national, s~te and local govern- Bennett did have the co~~ragc;, to say in public tells them another."
ment leaders, an~ for churclles, famthes and commumt•es. At 7 p.m. a Con- whal many Rep!lblicans are saying in p(ivate. - • His campaign labeled Pal Buchanan an
cert of Pray~r will be held at the Mtddleport Church of Chrtst.
·
And Bennett did lay out a plan that many GOP exlrernist in lhe New Hampshire primaries, but no
If our children, the famtly and soctety are to survtve_, we must return 10 strategists outside the Dole campaign believe will one who knows both men thinks Dole believes
God for the same reasons: _to honor Htm, offer thanksgtvmg, seek safety, ask work against President Clinton, but has come that in his heart. Dole stopped the name-calling,
for forgiveness, rely_on Htm for provtstons an~ appeal for gutdance.
only in spurts so far from Dol,e.
but the damage slill remains with Buchanan and
This May2, dectde to become mvol_vc;d w1th mtlhons of Amencans on
That script? To hammer, day after day, =t Ciin:-"' his supporters,
their knees as they tntercede for our natton. You can make a dtfference.
ton for saying or doi 11 g anything to get re-elected.
Some Republicans think they can tum around
Stev~~:he, The proof, they say, is that Clinton already has'"CIIsmal spring pcills . by focusing on several big
. 0
fp
C
,:n~ · come down on both sides. of issues the public legislative showdowns wtth Prestdent Chnton.
and the Melga County L: ~. ~~ c:::::ne:; wants handled, like welfare reform and a bal- They may be right. But so far, they ' ve hccn ou~y
' Steve Bella anced budget. The kicker to this argument: Elect maneuvered by a newly coherent Democrauc
Peggy Crane Dole and he will sign the reforms the GOP Con- minority. . .
Glldys Cumlnga gress already has passed.
.
.
Dole:s 'Republican c~al.ition unraveled over
Bill Frazier
But privately, some Republicans are worned health care and the mmtmum wage. Fellow
Cindy Mayle that 35 years of congressional insulation has Kansas Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, atded ~Y Sen..

Nattona

Committ~e consider• proposals

Ex-speaker's book outlines the Wright stuff

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Tri-County Briefs:
Gallia Local Board meets Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Local &amp;.rd of Education will
meet in special session at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the administralive office,
230 Shawnee Lane. .

·Gallipolis schedules spring cleanup

Contractors chosen
for ·f irst construction
phase.of steel plant

GAU.IPOLIS- Spring cleanup in Gallipolis has been set for May
6-JO, City Manager '-Catthew Coppler announced.
'
"The cl~anup provides us with the opportunity to do our spring
cleaning and maintenance, with the end result being a more attractive
city," he said.
During cleanup days, no household appliances, such as hot water
heaters, washers, dryers, stoves, refrigerators or related items will be
accepted.
All material is 10 be set at the curb line. Material must be prepared
for easy handling. Tree branches less than 2 inches in diameter should
be cut into four-foot lengths and tied in bundles.
Other materials shoUld be placed in con..ners and should be at the
curb by 6 a.m. during cleanup week. In case of questions or missed
pickupS, call General Refuse Service at 1-80()..967-4774.
"In order to save landfill space and reduce lite amount of material
which will be coUec:ted during cleanup week,' we encourage all resi·
dents to recycle," Coppler said. ·
A dumpster is now pennanendy in place at the rear of the municipal parking lot across from the Ciry Building at 518 Second Ave.

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Authorities lodge three

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Aubrey R. Bonecutter .

ot 'infant
,won't be
\.,..-

··released
. BY RICHARD CfOLE

·

AssoclatM Prase Writer
MARI1NEZ, Calif. -A 6-year:old boy chl!1ged in the near-fatal beating of an infant was ordered · to .
remain in custody after prosecutors
said he may have planned the attack
and tried to lie abuut what had happened.
.
"This young man is very angry ...
he should J!Ot be released. period,"
Deputy District Attorney Harold Jewett told J uveqlle Coun Referee
Stephen Easton.
.
The boy is accused of kicking,
punching and using a stick to beat 4week-old Ignacio Bennudez after
.breaking into •an apartment· with 8year-old twins Monday to steal a tricycle. The infant's babysitter was in
another room.
,
. The baby remained in critical
. :condition Friday and likely will have
.pennanent brain damage, doctors
said.
The 6-year-old boy ·is believed to
·be the youngest person ever charged
with attempted murder in the United
States. The 8-year-old"lJotners were
charged with burglary in the attack.

Clinton presses GOP
to aid White House
on .balanced budget

FOR THE DEFENSE - ~tra Costa County (C811f.) Public
Delerider l,etrle Bialik spoke to. the media gall oared In front of the
county jell in Mettlnez Friday. Bialik Is tept euntlng a &amp;-year-old
~ eccuMCI of bletlng e 4 'Neek -old baby In Richmond lest week.
( ) .
The 6-year-old boy had previously gone to the apartment in· Richmond, about I0 miles northeast of
San Francisco, and had "expressed
the belief the family there had been
hiU'assing him, looked at him .the
wrong way and he had to kill the
baby," Jewell said.
The boy had threatened a female
witness, who.was not identified, after
the attack, Jewett said, adding that the
boy also had tried to deceive authorities about what had happened.
" He lied about it ... He beat this
baby in the head with his feet, his
fists 'and ultimately with a stick."
Jewett said.·
The boy's poblic defender, Leslie
Bialik, told Easton she was concerned
that Juvenile Hall-was "not set. up to
deal' with someone of this age."

But Easton agreed with Jewett and
ordered the boy held. His next court
appearance was set for 1May 3.
If the referee finds the allegations
against tbe boys true, they would
become wards of the coun and could
be placed in a mental institution, foster care or other rehabilitative program..
·
The boy looked curiously around
the courtroom Friday but showed little eljlotion; He hugged his grandparents but ignored his mother, who
also was in court.

Authorities said the three boys
broke into the apartment and tipped
over the bassinet, where the infant lay
sleeping. His 18-year-old stepsister
was in another room and tbe rest of
the family were out shopping.

As guns fall silent, refugees return home
: QANA, Lebanon (AP) - Buses,
vans and cars lined the coastal road
out .of Beirut Saturday as 500,000
!'Cfugees began to return home. :rhe
guns that had targeted the road just a
few hours earlier were silent.
A U.S.-brokered cease-fire ended
Israel's . 16-day war with Iranian• bacKed Hezbollah guerrillas at 4
: im. Saturday (9 p.m. Friday .EDT).
Except for five Israeli 155-mm shells
that fell in south Lebanon shonl y
•fter the cease-fire. both sides quiet' i;d their guns on schedule.
.,.. The war ldlled at'least. I $9 people

Gallia jail

!

I 11"

Two cited in alleged bombi~g plo~

attacker

WILLISroN- Aubrey R "Boney" Bonecutter, 84, Williston, died Fri·
day, ~126, 1996 in the Olterb'ein-Ponage Valley Retirement Vtllage; fol·
lowing a lengthy illness.
·
,
Born J1111. 8, 1912 in Henderson, W.Va, son of the late Charles F. and Hazel
Roberts Bonecutter, he was a 40-year employee of Columbia Gas Co., Tole·
do, retiring in 1m.
He was a member of AfL..CIO Local 349 and held various offices in the
local berween 1948 and 1952, including president. He was a graduate of the
University of Rio Grande, where he playecH'ootball and obtained an associate degree in education. A U.S. Marine Corps veteran of World War ll, he
was also a licensed pilot for single and multi-engined ain:raft.
He married Eleanpr A. Fenstennitker on July ·4, 1936 in Malenton, Ky.,
and she preceded him in dCath on Dec. 20, 1984. He was also preceded in
death by a son, Danny Bonecutter; and a sister, Violet Elaine Tomai.
Surviving are three daughters, Wineva I. "Lucky" (Thomas) Miller, and
Roxanne (Terry) Adler. both of Walbridge, and Amber P. "Pam" Wolfe of
Northwood; two sons, John C. (Pam) Bonecutter of Toledo, and Charles A.
(Judy) Bonecutter of Williston; 10 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren;
two sisters, Floris Bonecutter of Williston, and Mrs. Bette Bias of Modesto,
Calif.; and a brother, Bob Bonecutter of Charleston.
Services will be II am. Tuesday in the Robinson-Henn-Brossia Funeral
Home. SOl West St., Genoa, Ohio. Burial will be in the Allen Township
Cemetery, Willis10n. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-9 p.m.
Monday.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Luther Home of Men:y,
Williston.

Clyde W. Kirl&lt;land

.. Theft of money bags reported to police
..

Sunday, Aprll28, 1986

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Three contractors were selected and con·
tracts awarded for the West Virginia Cold Drawn Phase One Plant.and pl11111
~tei'IUite, in a meeting last week at the Mason County Development Author·
tty office.
Follow.ing the award. of con~ts. ~ pre-construction rneeling was held.
Construcbon .w!ll tentatt~ely hegtn on the project on May 16_
West Virgmta Cold Drawn will construct a finishing pl1111t along State
Route 62 North, near the lraffic circle and railroad tracks.
A subsidi~ of St. ~:-&lt;&gt;uis Col~ Drawn, the 'county Wsiness will be operated· by _Wilham McNatr Jr.. prestdent of St. Louis Cold Drawn. The targeted openmg date wben the manufacturer will begin shipping steel is set at Oct.
I.
. McNair said the company's capital investment will be $2.S million per
hne. At first, 12 to IS workers '¥ill be hired, with the company committed
to hiring 35 employees within three years
•
. Tile three contractors chosen for ~·'j;';oject were Jo-Del Inc. of Hunt·
mgron, TKS Contracting Inc. of Buchanan, W.Va., and South Charleston Electric Co., South Charleston.
·
The contract, company and bid amount included the following:
1
TKS Contracting, building fabrication, erection and insulation, $538,800;
1
Jo-Del, concrete foupdations, e...cavation and backfill, $162,569;
GALLIPOLIS- Free immunizations will be provided by the Gal• Jo-Del, concrete flatwork and granular subgrade, $123,335;
lia County Health Department this week at two locations.
• Jo-Del, mtscellaneous steel and erection, $21,120;
Immunizations will be offered at the courthouse lobby Tuesd;ly from
Jo-Del, masonry and prec:ast concre~. $21,830;
4-6 p.m. and at Washington Ele111entary School Tuesday and WednesJo-Del, carpentry, $3;868;
day from 8:30-11:30 a.m. and 12:30-3 p.m. ·
1 Jo-Del, plumbing.$33,914; and
'
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a par1
•
South Charleston. Electric, electrical, $161,291.
·
.
.
ent and bring ·a current immunization record with them.
Assisting .in the ~ontracl process was Regional II Planning and Development Counctl. RegiOn II IS administering a Small Cities B.lock Grant of
. KENTON- Clyde W. Kirkland, 80, Kenton, died Friday, April 26, 1996
$500,000 for the county commission and development authority for use by in the Hardin Memorial Hospital, Kenton.
·
GALLIPOLIS -· The theft of two money bags containing more than
West Virg!nia Cold Drawn.
'
Bol)l March 5, 1916 in Bellaire, son of the late Dr. C. Walhice and Ona
$2,000 in cash and vouchers from Johnson's Supennarket, 85 Vine St.,
Jebb Kirkland, he retired from Ohio Power Co. in 1978 at Kenton.
is under investigation by Gallipolis City Police.
He joined the company in 1940, went to Kenton in I946 and then to .
Officers were infonned that the bags were removed from-the store
Zanesville in 1950. He later worked for the firm in Pomeroy and returned
office sometime around 4:30 p.m. Friday. The ftrst bag contained
to Kenton in 1962. During World War II, he was a lieutenant colonel in the
$1 ,417 in WIC coupons and $356 in food stamps, while the second
ordinance
department of the U.S. Anny Air Force, wheli. he served in North
. bag contained $517 in cash, according to reports.
·
Africa and Italy. and receive.;! lhC Bronze Star.
r
A 1940 graduate of North Carolina State University. he was a member of
POKI'LAND - A Maumee man was cited by the Gallia-Meigs Post
the Trinity United Presbyterian Church at Kenton, Kenton Elks Club 157,
of the State·Highway Patrol for failure to control following a one-car
the Kenton Rotary Club, wbere he was a recipient of the Paul Harris Award,
crash Friday on State Route 124.
and a member .of the Ohio Power Veterans Association .
By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
favor ·of more partisan confronta·
Troopers said Christopher A. Rodriguez. 27, was eastbound in
He marrie4 Helen Johnson on No'v. 2k, I 945 in Gilroy, Calif., and she
Associated
Press
Writer
tion."
Lebanon Township at 9: I0 a.m. when his car went off the left side of
prec:eded him in death on Dec. 30, 1992. He was also preceded by a brothWASHINGTON - i.Sident
"Let me be blunt. I refused to er, Elmer Jebb Kirkland.
the· road and struck a culvert.
Clinton told congressipnal epubli· accept extreme proposals for the last
Surviving are a daughter, Linda (Gene) Sentz of Choteau, Mont.; two sons,
The car was moderately damaged.
cans Saturday that if they,_torpedo a year and a half, and I will not accept
Richard
Jebb Kirkland ofEI Paso, Texas, and Van Wallace Kirkland of South
Troopers are also investigating a hitskip accident in Gallia County
balanced budget lo create a campaign extreme proposals for the future."
Lake
Tahoe,
Nev.; and six grandchildren.
late Friday.
issue this fall voters "will see through
"If it is yoar political strategy to
There will be no services or visitation_Burial will be in the Grove Ccme:
..... · Details were incomplete Saturday, but a pickup truck driven by
that with their eyes closed."
concoct a budget that you hope I will tery at a later date. Arrangements are by the Schindewolf-Stevens-Stout
Edgar E. Eberts, 43, 196 Gavin St., Bidwell, was slightly damaged a!
If Republicans choose partisan not sign, you ought 10 think again," Funeral Home, 200 E. Columbus St., Kenton.
·
II :21 p.m. on SR 160 near Gallipolis, according to preliminary reports.
warfare over negotiation and coop- he declared.
in
Clinton urged Republicans to
eration they will have made "a terrible
mistake,"
Clinton
said.
"take
the high road 10 progress" and
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police IOIIged Tony L. Johnson,
In
a
sharply
worded
radio
addm;s,
follow
tbe course of bipartisan coop23,914 ThiRJ Ave., Gallipolis, into the Gallia County Jail at5:11 a.m.
the President intensified pressure on eration that Jed in recent weeks to
. Saturday on a charge of domestic violence. ·
the GOP majorities that control the passage of anti-terrorism, telecomAlso cited early Saturday by police were Dirk L. Coyan, 26, WayHouse
and Senate .and, by implica- munications and lobby reform bills.
nesville, disorderly conduct; and Tamara D. Beman, 32,219 Windsor
tion,
his
rival for the presidency, SenHe said that should be done not
Drive, Gallipolis, obstruction.
ate Majority Leader Bob DOle.
only on the budget blit on legislation.
Cited by police Friday were Franz Hofer, 71, Columbus, driving
"We're within inches of agree- to raise the minimum wage an4 to
under tbe influence; and David C. Wright, 36, 63 Franklin Cemetery
ment, and nothing - not politics, not adopt health care refonns that would
Road, Vinton, DUI and left of center.
partisanship, not presidential cam-. permit workers to keep their health
other matters, Gallia County sheriff's deputies placed Emil M.
paigns- nothing should be allowed insurance if they change jobs or lose
Seagraves, S6, IS42 ~lory's Run Road, Cheshire, in the county jail at
to
stop us," Clinton said.
a job.
2: 12\a.m. Saturday on a chatge of domestic violence.
"If you torpedo these negotiations
Tile president noted that he· had
Angela J. Powers, 22,381 Buck Rid~ Road, Bidwell, was lodged
today
after
so
much
progress
has
said
a year ago that while he dido 'I
in the jail at 9:38a.m. Friday by Gallia County Common Pleas Court
been
made
on
a
balanced
budget,
want
a "pile of vetoes," he also
on a charge of parole violation, aQ:Qrding to records.
.
simply to create a campaign issue for would not accept spending cuts that
. later, the American people will see ' place at risk "our ability to care for
through that with their eyes closed," our elderly, educate our children and
. SHADE - A truck reported stolen Thursday from Athens was
Clinton
.said.
protect our environment."
recovered Friday evening on Carr Road in Meigs County's Orange
The
Republicans
did
not
address
"Unfortunately, a lot of Republi·
. Township, accprding to the Meigs sheriff's department. .
the balanced-budget issue in their cans in Congress didn't believe me,"
The 1991 Chevrolet belonging to Ohio University student Ricky Lee
weekly radio response Saturday, but he said. "They shut the government
Eikleberry, Shadyside, was last seen Sunday evening and was report·
Dole
·and House Speaker Newt Gin· down. They refused to cooperate. But
ed stolen Thursday, according to OU police.
grich,
R-Ga., said Thursday that look what happened. When they
A resident of the area said the truck had been parked along the road
Republlcans will write their own bud·. tried to impose these drastic measures
for three days. The stereo was missing from the truck which was towed
get
before considering renewed talks 1 was forced to stop them, just as I
back to Athens.
with Clinton. They offered to meet said I would."
with the president on their own terms
He asserted that Republican lead·
"if
he
has
a
serious
offer,"
Giners
face a similar choice now.
COOLVILLE- Meigs County sheriff's deputies are investigating
grich said.
"They can go it alone and we will
the reponed theft of a four-wheeler and two saddles from 'Trudy Avis,
Coolville, according to Sberiff James M. Soulsby.
While it is widely assumed that end up going nowhere, or they can
chances of concluding an election- come on down to the While House
· Avis reported the theft oCcurred between S:30 p.m. Thursday and
3:30p.m. Friday.
year deal to balance the budget by and we will get a good job done for
2002 ·are ~lim, Clinton insisted it can tbe American pc;ople together," he
Stolen was a 1992 Yamaha four-wheeler, an Arabian Blue Ridge sadbe done - if Republicans jettison said.
dle, light brown with a silver medallion on the hom, and a Western
BRIDGE WORJ( - Employ- of the H.C. Nutter Co., ColumThe OOP:run House and Senate
ideological baggage and concentrate
Pleasure saddle, black with a stamped Dora! design. Both saddles have ·
15-inch seats.
·
on the dollars and cents needed to Budget committees will develop bUd- bus, ere '"" perfonnlng soil borings required for the design of •
Also, Larry Wright, Langsville, reported Friday afternoon that be
reach agreement.
get plans for fiscal 1997, which the Bulavllle Pille br. . replecernent project planned by the Gel- •
''I'd like to take a moment to begins Oct. I, as early as next week lie County Highway Department County Engineer Joseph Leach
discovered a stainless steel 9-mm Smith &amp; Wesson handgun missing
from a nightstand in his bedroom.
speak directly to the Republicans in and participants said it will resemble selcl the existing slngle-lene span Is to be replaced In 1997 with
e tWc&gt;Jene bridge. Estimeled st $30!1,000, the project Is 80 per·
Congress,:· he said. "I know some last year's proposal.
Gloria Kloes, Minersville, reported a 20-inch Wizard mower was
cent funded through the federal highways bridge replacement
people iii your party are urging you
stole n from an outbuilding at an unoccupied Harrisonville resid~nce .
program, I.Nch said.
to reject bipartisan negotiation in
.,

Free immunizations offered this week

~~--------~·--------~~--------------~~~--------~---suttct.y,
·Nation/World

,

Pomeroy • Mlcfdleport • q.IHpolla, OH • Point PII 111nt, WV

1

-. mostly Lebanese civilians - and
wounded at least 339 people on both
side\ of the border. It sent some
SOO,OOO Leban~se· civilians fleeing.
north, away from the Israeli · air,
naval and artillery attacks. About
2Q,OOO Israelis fled northern border
towns.
When day broke Saturday; the
Lebanese refugees began to stream
home to the devastated south, their
vehicles laden with suitcases and
mattresses. The convoy · crawled
along· the Beirut-'Jyre coastal road,
,.

punctured by artilfery fire from Israeli
g'Unboats. Cars snaked through bush·
es .to avoid craters.
"We are returning. All of us are
resistance," said leaflets distributed tc
the motorists by Hezbollah guerrillas,
who call themselves "resistance
fighters ."
·As the refugees returned, the
stricken south quickly began io
spring back to life. In villages where
only stray dogs had dared venture
into the streets, people strolled down
the main streets.

ROBERTA, Ga. (AP) -Ten pipe
"StilT said that whoever wanted · said if a bomb aoes off • lie
bombs and bomb-making materials one COIIId have it but they were to Olympics they would 8el NM ~ f(lr
were confiscated after the am:sts of bury them ill their back yards. On it." Stem said.
two leado;n 1&gt;f a small militia group other occuions, Starr had said that
~ul CBS, which brotc die .u.f,
which federal officials $aid was the pipe bombs would be to defend stood by its report that federal apnb
preparing for a government invasion. their ri&amp;hts against invasion of the had uncovered a plot by a miliqa
A top federal law enforcc;ment government," the affidavit stated.
group to set off bombs at OI)'IIIPic
official discounted early reports that
Despite ear~er reports, federal sites "to disrupt the plannina for die
:
the bombs were to be used to diSfllpt officials said there was oo indication GIUles.••
the Summer Olympics in Atlanta.
Several sources initially cotof any connection to the Olympics.
Robert Edward Starr III and
"The Olympics only came up finned an Olympic coimection to the
William James McCranie Jr. were once durina the investigation wben at AP, but it was subsequently denied
'
charged Friday with cOnspiracy 10 one of their. meetings,
one member
.
.
possess unregistered explosive
..
devices. Both were held at a county
jail in Macon pending a hearing on
Monday, Justice Department
spokesman Carl Stem said.
Agents oi the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Fireanns displayed 10
·pipe bombs they said were found in
*HOW FEED IS MADE
raids on the men 's rural homes *BASIC EQUINE NUTRmON
nine made from one-inch diameter
*FEEDING FOALS
'
metal pipe•with caps screwed on each
end and another made of plastic about
LEAfiN HOW TO GET 2 FREE
3-112 feet long and four incbes in
diameter.
BAGS OF FEED!
The agents also displayed explosive powder, precut pipe and other
Date: May 4, Saturday
..
bomb-making materials.
Starr and McCranie headed the
Tune: 7:00 p~m.
. Georgia Republic Militia group,
Location: American Legion
which officials said has II to I 5
. members. The group apparently
HaUPost 60l
wanted to store the bombs at their
homes in case of government invasion, according to a federal affidavit.
An informant told ATF agents on
Apri I 5 that he had attended a meeting with McCranie. Starr and others
at which McCranie talked about
blowing up a bomb on his property
'
.
I
and said he had enough chemicals to ·
make 40 bombs, according to the afli •
davit.
McCranie said he alrelldy had
Street Pomeroy, Oh~ 45788 ·
'399 We1t Main
completed pipe ·bombs stored on his
. 614-992·2164
property.

Leam more about

Racine, Ohio

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RES~RVE YOUR PLACE TODAY!

. SPACE IS LIMITED! RSVP AT:

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY
'

I"

Deputies recover truck stolen in Athens

•

And·What -Can It
Do For Me?

FREE PRESENTATION

Theft reports made to Meigs sheriff

New,policy.puts responsibility .for discipline on parents ·
KETTERING (AP) - Principal
Ron Sinclair used to think the way to
turn a bad kid around was tough dis·
cipline at school.
No1 anymore.
The Kettering Middle School
principal has designed - and is
reporting preliminary success witha policy I hat puts the burden of discipline on parents.
Discipline, says Sinclair, begins at
home.
,
" If you help the parent get control
• of the. child at home, we 'II improve
school behavior," said Sinclair. "That
is a total philosophical change in dis&lt;;iplini.ng in schools."
·
Gone are detentions and Saturday
classes. Instead. teachers at the school
wiU• I,ioo students in grades 6-8
keep detailed accounts .of misbehavior. On the first offense, students are
warned. Do it again, and a note is sent
home .. For repeat offenders, a parent·
teacher conference is scheduled.
, If the misbehavior persists, school.
officials issue an intent-to-suspend
unless the parents and the child come
up with a home-discipline plan. The
school offers counseling for parents
who need help.
"This system says We believe that
parents still are the most effective,"
said Sinclair.
" We're going to be communica·
tors, supporters and trainers, but

The old disciplinary methods did- .
Sintlair's discipline system is n~w and can be effective - if it is
we're no longer going to be the pun·
ishers."
n't work, he said.
being phased in at Cincinnati's enforced..
Dorot)Jy Lewts. president of the
"Schools got into the punishment Princeton Junior High School, which
"However, the problem is there
PTA wtSg has a child in Sinclair's game," he said. "But it seemed like is attended by 1,100 students in
are parents who do not want to get
school, said she thinks the policy ... the more we were suspending, we grades 7 and 8.
implemented two years ago has ·a still weren't seeing any changes in
"It's gone very well," said Prin- involved," he said.
"A lot of them just bow out."
chance to work.
behavior."
cipal Aaron Mackey. "We find that
"I like the concept that parents are
AI the same time, many. parents this plan really gi'ves teachers a
responsible for their kids," said began to hold the schools responsible roadmap4l'to follow and· fonnalizes
Lewis. "If they're not doing well, I for disciplining their children.
. what good teachers do instinctively."
do want to know abuut it and I do
Sinclair began developing his plan
Mackey cited a 3S percent drop in
want to take care of it. Unfortunate- - in 1988. aslcing·students, teachers and incidents that 'would result in discily, a lot of parents don't feel that way, parents what c~nsequences they · plinary action after the plan was pur
and they're struggling with this."
thought were best for ~ontrolhng into plac\l.
Parent Donna Lupton said .the new behavior. Most students said ptione
Bill Rieck, professor of curricupolicy looks great in theory bcca11se calls to thetr parents and a teacher, lum ;..,d instruction at the Univenitoo milch responsibility has been parent conference were the most ty of Southwestern Louisiana, said
the home-discipline contract is not
. placed on the schools. She says time effi:cbve.
will tell.
He believes' most parents take con" It's too bad you have 10 force the trol of the. situation.
parents 10 do their job," said Lupton.
. "The onlr parents that are strugSinclair, a middle-school principal ghng wtth this are the ones that either
for 22 years, said the discipline prob· don't have control and want some,.. . jciu where you
tern has worsened in recent years, in body else to do it, or the ones that
'WIIId
to' gol
part because students are more don't have the skills," he said.
.
sophisticated 1111d hilvc less supervi·
"What we're t~«?ing is getting at
oftllllild
sion at home.
.
the root of the problem, other than the
oDiplr'odlble
He said 'there is a public miscon- symptom."
•AffofHIIe '
ception that severe misbehavior such
Sinclair said there is evidence the
U..We WMJt To
as fighting and drug use is the biggest plan is working. The school's susproblem for sehools:
pension rate, which had increased 35
"That's still a minor, minor ele· . percent in the 1994-95 school year
ment," he said.
and 65 percent the previous year, is
' The prilllliy problem is classroom down 3 percent this year.
tnisbebavior that disrupts the learning
''We're breaking the cycle," said
of other students.
Sinclair. .

can

'

Bossard

•

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BY EUREKA ·NETWORKS
Wednesday,
.'1st, 7 p.m.

•

orial Library
-

GALLIPOLIS
641 SECONDAVE.
.
Answers to yo~u questions and
other useful information.
,,

A memorial .
should tell a
story to future
generations.
•

'

r

About ~ century ago, our founders mimed us The Peoples
Banking and Trust Company, but why stand on ceremony?
Our friends just call us Peoples Bank. We were built by people in southeastern
Ohio for people of southeastern Ohio. And we've grown. In addition to our
Middleport office, Peoples Bank now serves you from Gallipolis, Pomeroy and ,
Rutland. We also have offices in Athens, The Plains, Newark, Belpre an~ Marietta.
· And while.you won't find any Peoples Bank offices in West Virginia, we do count
•
•
quite a few friends among our neighbors. Maybe that's because we're people
people. We .consider our customers and our people (including our new people!)
our ~eatest assets. Hyou're a people person, get acquainted with Peoples Bank.

1.« us heJp you

p

tell 'your stnty
to your.· ptal

sreat~-

srandChildren,

_Now AvaDa~le In Meigs Count~!

1

POMEROY
NNr Pomltoy "r ron Bridge

892-2588
VINTON

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GillEt County '-*' YIRI
155111Inllt.-

3881,111S

IsignRadio
Up In Meigs Co.
Shack In

.

f·
~

Middleport
Sweet Greetings
Bakery In Pomeroy
.

.

'

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•

NOfl! serving Gal/fpolis, Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland ·

Sign Up in Gallla Co.
Take 2 Video
Corner of ·
Third and Vine
Gallipolis

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Page AI•~ •••.__.. •IM

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

Surlday,Aprl128,1998

Sheppard's son utilizing new
techniques to clear dad's name

•

By SHARON COHEN

prosecutor. "He was not prone to vio- struggled with the man until he was
Anocleted Pre. . Writer
lence. You'd have to believe ... he · knocked out again on the beach. He
OAKLAND. Calif - · He slept batters his wife to death in the room described the assailant as a "bushythrough hi s mother's murder. Then, next to where the child is sleeping. haired intruder" ·_ which later
became a one-armed man on "The
the nightmares carne.
That's asking a 101 ."
The little boy was tormented by
Despite that, Marino's office Fugitive."
Police were suspicious: There
harrowing images of his father- or opposes Sheppard's claims.
himself - strapped in an electric
"It's too old to make a conclu- were no signs of forced en!ry, the
chair. He felt he should tlie. "It was sion-," he says. "I don't think there 's doetor wasn't wearing a T-shirt he
my fault,'' h~ thought, "that my enough evidence to declare anybody had on that night, he refused to take
a lie detector test and he was caugbt
mother wa~ killed."
innocent."
This was Sam Reese Sheppard's
If a judge declares Dr. Sheppard lying about an extramarital affair.
The media pounced fast with
childhood.
innocent, his son could file a civil suit
accusatory
headlines: "Quit Stalling
On a July morning in Ohio near- seeking millions of dollars for wrongBring
Him
In," ''Why Isn't Sam
ly 42 years ago, the 7-year-old was ful incarceration.
Sheppard
In
Jail?"
"Getting Away
awakened and hustled down the hall
B.ut others believe that's highly
With Murder."
past the bedroom where his pregnant unlikely.
•
His son, whQ had moved in with
mother lay dead, her face and hands
"There isn't anything that prosean
aunt and uncle, was · shielded
bloodied, her skull fractured, her nose cutors haven 't known for 30, 40
'
from
inuch of that - he didn't even
broken from a frenzied struggle.
years," says David Doughten, a
"
His mother 's murder was horrible ·Cleveland attorney for Eberling, who attend his mother's funeral to avoid
cameras in his face. But he still
enough. But there was more: His declined to be interviewed.
father, Dr. Sam Sheppard, was
Doughten says Eberling did not · remembers catcalls in school and
charged with delivering the 35 . kill Mrs. Sheppard; he argues the elderly women "who would just
vic ious blows that killed Marilyn son's campaign is a ploy to drum up grab this poor little orphan waif and
Sheppard. h was one of the most · interest in a book he recently co- · cry and slobber over'me."
Dr. Sheppard's nine-week trial
spectacular crimes - and one of the wrote.
captivated
the nation as prosecutors
most sensational trials- of the but"This is preposterous," the anorBATTERED BUICK - High winds toppled
belongs to Michael K.
of Dock Street,
tore
into
his
vague account. The corotoned-down 1950s.
ney says. "It's good for publicity."
according to Middleport Pollee. No Injuries
this tree onto an unoccupied car near the int.erDr. Sheppard was convicted and
Ohio Judge Michael Corrigan, ner said Mrs. Sheppard probably ·was
were reported. (T-S photo by Dave' H.arrls)
section Second Avenue and Dock Street In MidI'
'
.
imprisoned nearly 10 years before the whose father, John, prosecuted the killed with a surgical instrument, but
dleport Friday afternoon. 'The 1984 Buick
U.S. Supreme Court, in a landmark second case and now suffers from none was ever found. And there was
conflicting testimony about whether mistress and had his illegitimate
decision , ruled that reckless media Alzheimer's disease, agrees.
~
coverage )lad violated his rights. A
"This case has been visited and Dr. Sheppard's wounds were super- child.
second trial ended in acquinal.
rev isited every four or five years ficial -and self-inflicted- or seriJll. his second trial, Dr. Sheppard,
represented by Bailey, was acquitted•.
The doctor regained his freedom since 1954," Corrigan says. "From ous .
but couldn 't rebuild his life. To some, the perspective of access, motivation,
He was convicted of second, . · But prison had taken its toll.
he was the man who had gotte n away ability ... coupled with physical evi- degree murder and sentenced to life
·Broken spirit
w1th murder. His drinking escalated, dence. overwhelmingly there's no m pnson.
" He walked arf'd talked and
hi s medical career collapsed and he question who commined the murWithin .less than a month, he dressed like a convict, " his son
der.
''
faced even more devastating news: recalls. "He was this crude,
'
died at age 46.
.
_
'
Now, 26 years later, Dr. ShepFeeding frenzy
His mother shot herself to death and weightlifting guy who ihought in
. pard's 48-year-old son has set out to
Sam Reese Sheppard, called his father died. And in 1963, Marilyn kind of devious ways."
Sheppard's father fatally shot himcl~ ar his father 's name. He knows "Chip" as a boy, still has' fond child' Still, he says, father and son sus•
many authorities in Ohio remain hood memories: learning to swim, self.
taine~ one another.
c.onvinced the d.octor was not a talks with hi s dad, and walks with his
" Dad' would not have survived if
Dr. Sheppard served nearly 10
wronged man : they believe all the inother along_ the beach of Lake years in prison lie fore a judge freed he hadn 't had a son,'' he says . "If he
signs point to him as the on ly possi- Erie. in back of their Dutch Colonial him, saying he was denied a fair tri- had been executed, \:enainly I wouldble killer.
home atop a bluff in Bay Village.
al.
" 't have survived. "
· But with new DNA testing techAll that was shattered lndepenDr. Sheppard fought to win his
Two days later, he married a flamniques , old evidence and a possible dence Day 1954, with his 31-year-old boyant German divorcee he had been medical license back, but soon there
suspect - an imprisoned murderer mother dead and his father the sus-. corresponding with while iri prison, were malpractice suits, a failing marwhose stepsister was married to Nazi
riage and, in the enJ; a shabby prac- Sheppard hopes to prove his pect.
propagandist
Joseph
Goebbels.
father was unjustly incarcerated.
His father told police he had been
tice in a motel /
Two years later, in 1966, the
" It was just kind of a cruel joke,"
"This is not just some horrible'lit- napping downstairs in the pre-dawn
tie homicide that we can tum the rock hours when he heard his wife 's des- Supreme Court ruled Dr. Sheppard's Sheppard. says. "He knew a lot of
people were just seeing:hirn as some
over and forget," he says. "Our fam- perate cries- "Sam' Sam'" He said trial was tainted by "massive, pervasive,
prejudicial
publicity"
and
that
curiosity."
ily doe sn't deserve to live in perpe- he rap up the stairs and was knocked
Dr. Sheppard, who began drinking
tuity with this wrongful conviction." out from behind. When he carne to, the news media created a "carnival"
heavily, took up wrestling, adopting
" It's my obligation, " Sheppard he said, -Mrs. Sheppard was dead, her atmosphere in court.
Jurors, for example, were not
the name "Killer Sheppard. "
says, " to pursue the truth and set the pajamas were pulled above her
sequestered
and
there
were
numerous
":rhat was kind of an act of
record straight. "
breasts and below her kl\ees.
false
media
reports,
including
one
by
despair,
cynicism," says his -son,
'Making millions'
After hearing a sound downstairs,
who recalls his father visiting him in
Before O.J. Simpson, there was the doctor said he saw a figure run- Walter Winchell that a woman arrestcollege in Boston, his life's posses- /
Doctor Sam .
ning toward the lake, gave chase and ed in New York was Dr. Sheppard's
Tite Sheppard case didn 'I have the
sions jammed in a car.
, . .--~~---""!'--":"'~~---- ~~~"!!"!'!~~
glamour of a famous athlete or glitz
of California life,in-the-fast-lane, but
it had all the tantalizing tabloid
·'gredieius: a murder mystery, a ·handsome, pipe-smoking osteopath
from a respected medical family, a
mistress who had .sex with him in his
green Jaguar, and a brash young
lawyer with blazing ambition - F.
Lee Bailey, who, 30 years later,
stood' by Simpson's side.
It sounds like a Hollywood plot
and, ultimately, it helped shape one:
The Sheppard saga supposedly
inspired "The Fugitive" TV series
(later a movie).
"People have made millions of
dollars, literally, over the bodies of
my dead loved ones," Sheppard says
with an edge to his voice.
·
These days. Sheppard, a Buddhist,
anti -death penalty activist and unemployed dental hygienist, lives sparely '" a rooming house in this Cali,,
fornia community. A bachelor with
closely cropped sandy-graying hair,
blue eyes concealed by tinted glasses and an affinity for plain, dark
clothes, he has long resigned himself
to his notorious name.
"I never have and never will deny
I·
the connecti on, however much it
hurts," he says. At times, he notes,
people have blurted out: ." Are you the .
• \ ~.
doctor who killed his wife? ... It has
'
made it extremely difficult socially
over the years ."
'
I ,, r
l;lut he has gone public to lobby
for his father in a legal campaign
waged 2,150 miles away in a Cleveland court ; the Sheppards had lived
in suburban Bay Village.
Sheppard's attorney, Terry Gilber;t,
has won coun pcnnission to ex..amine
old files, autopsy repons , hair and
other evidence and is focusing on one
suspect: Richard Eberling, a murderer who washed windows in the Sheppard home.
"Our main goal is to exclude Dr.
-Sheppard as the perpetrator of the
crime," Gilbert says.
He hopes to use DNA techniques
not available 42 years ago to test a
drop of blood preserved from the
crime scene to see if it matches a
blood sample recently taken from
I ; ,
Eberling.
·, ·. q
Police never typed the trail of
J :~ r
blood at the scene, but a defense
,. l'
criminalist at the second trial testified
the pattern of the drops fit a bleeding
person - not drops from a weapon
or clothing. Dr. Sheppard had no
open wounds.
· What makes this quest unusual is
that a top member of the Cuyahoga
County prosecutor's office -. which
"
tried Or. Sheppard twice - believes
' ~J
the doctor was innocent.
l·•~
"!don't think he killed his wife,"
'"'.': Q
says Carmen Marino, an assistant

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•

.
II

~imt•. ttntinti
'

Section B
.

Sunday,April21,1998

-. In major league basebs/1 action,

: B lue Jays and Phils among victors
pi!Ched two innings for the combined
five-hit shutoot.
The loss dropped Boston to 6-18
- the worst record in the major
leagues. .
Kansas City led just 1-0 before
scoring three runs.off Aaron Sele (12) in the fifth inning, then chased
him during a five-run sixth. Sele
allowed seven runs and seven hits in ·
S 113 innings. He walked four and
strucl\ out six.
Lockhart gave the Royals a lead
in the first when his sacrifice fly
sc~d Johnny Damon, who had
doubled leading off. Damon also
doubled in the fifth and scored on
Tom Goodwin's single before Lockhart hit a two-run horner.
Athletics 4, Tigers 1
• At Detroit, -Mich., Mark MeGwire's frrst hit of the season, a two-·
run horner in the first inning Satur:
day, sent the Oakland Athletics to a
4-1 win over· the Detroit Tigers.
McGwire, who missed Oakland's
first 18 games with an injured right
[oot, was 0-for-8 in his first three
games. In the first, he hit a 3-2 pitch
from Felipe Lira (1-2) over the leftfield wall to give the A's a 2-0 lead.
The homer was his 19th at Tigers
Stadium and the 31st in his cru:eer

' ·• TORONTO (AP)- Clrios Del~ado hit a two-run home run and
•drove in four runs and Joe Carter had ,
three hits and three RBis Saturday as
-'the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the
Cleveland Indians 11-6.
_· .. The win, only Toronto's second in
its last nine home games, snapped ~
· lttree-game losing streak while the
Indians lost for just the third time in .
--their ~games.
.
The Blue Jays scored three runs
iri the first inning against Charles
Nagy (1-3). Toronto gal four straight
· b!ts, RBI si~gles by Cedeno and
'Carter, and a run-scoring double by
I;lelgado.
·• · Julio Franco hit a three-run homer
(o~ the: Indians.
.
. . Tony Castillo (2-0), relieved
starter Paul Quantrill in the fifth, and
.. pitched 2 213 hitless innings for the
win. ·
· ..... Toronto upped ig lead to 5-1 i
the second inning on sacrifice flie
by. Cedeno and Delgado. Carter's
· tlo-run single in the fourth extende the Blue Jays' lead to-7-1.
" ·
PhliUes 3, Reds 2
.
At Cincinnati, Ohio, the Cincin..
Reds lost their seventh straight
g e - their worst skid in three
...ylars- as Mike Lieberthal singled

in the ninth inning Saturday afternoon to give the Philadelphia Phillies
a 3-2 victory.
The Phillies extended their winning streak to a season-higll five
games behind Terry Mulholland,
who pitched seven strong innings.
Dave Leiper (1.0) pi!Ched the eighth,
and Ricky Bottalico closed for his
eighth save in as many chances.
Mark Portugal (0-4) struck out 12
-one shy of his career high- and
allowed just three hits over eightplus innings, but took the loss. He
walked Mark Whiten to start the
ninth, and Marcus Moore came on
and gave up singles to Todd z.iile
and Lie bertha!.
Cincinnati fell to 9-15, its worst
start since the last time it had a rookie manager. The. Reds opened 1993
with the same mark under Tony
Pcre,z, who was fired after 44 games.
Royals 10, Red Sox 0
ston, Mass., Kevin Appier
struck o t nine in seven innings and
Keith
khart drove in a careerhigh five ns on Saturday to lead the
Kansas City Royals to a 10-0 victory over the dreadful Boston Red. Sox.
Appicr (2-3) allowed four hits and
walked none to snap a personahwogame losing streak. Jason ·Jacome

. PJ MIKE HARRIS

tiers able to surpass 192 mph on the of the Daytona USA entertainment
warm, windy afternoon.
facility in July.
Irvan, who missed both Tallade"That car was obviously a great
ga races last year, has won the pohl one, and these two cars we're driving
for this race in four of his last six ure are real good ones," lrvan said.
spring starts here- the lasttwo with "Then we've got the car Dale won
Yates and the two previous with the Busch Clash (at Daytona) with ,
Morgan-McClure Racing.
and out there on the truck we'.ve got
The pole is the 17th overall for the car that I tested here.
Irvan, but his flrSt since July 8, 1994
"There's a lot of teams out there
at Loudon, N.H .. That pole was the who wpuld give anything for one
lasi before he was nearly killed in a good speedway car. We've got five
practice run at Brooklyn, Mich.
great (speedway)'cars. You:ve got to
Irvan sustained critical head and give this team .a lot of credit."
chest injuries when he hit the wall on
Jeremy Mayfield, driving for
Aug. 20, 1994 at Brooklyn and was longtime NASCAR . star Cale
out of racing ,until bealnping hjs .Yarborough, continued to showcase
. comeback at. North Wilkesbddl, his team's improvement, taking the
.N.b.. Jast OCtober.. · •i";·;....::!i"""·,.
·
·
His second-place finish last week third spot at 191.862 in another
at Martinsville, Va. - his third top- Thunderbird, followed by Sterling
10 of the season and second. in a row Marlin in the fastest Chevrolet
-was lrvan's best in the 11 races Monte C.arlo at 191.623.
since he returned to the driver's ~eat.
Ted Musgrave's Ford was next at
·- - "Figishing sixth at North Wilkes191.194, with series pan-timer Mike
boro (two weeks ago) and second Skinner, the defending Craftsman
last week were a big step for us, and Truck Series champion, putting a
winning this pole is another big Richard Childress Chevrolet in sixth
step," Irvan said. "But.there's a lot at 191.168. ·

· ~rvan capture_s .pole position
·'=or today's Winston Select 500
•• TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)
EOlie Irvan won his first pole Friday
ce a serimlS crash over 20 months
a , taking the top spot for today's
, .. 'nston Select 500.
.i lrvan's fast lap of 192.8.55 mph
WfS just 11ood enough to rel,egate
R•bert Yates.Racing teammate Dale
Jitt to the outside of the front row
w a lap of 192.560.
Those two, driving Ford Thund birds identical except for their

.tl

i~~k~~t~P

.

·ea\ts.
:a•~ao
.....
..

•)

By CHU~K MELVIN

.;'CLEVELAND (AP)- Anthony
·~~on dominated the inside, colle~:ting 23 points and 12 rebounds
Saturday as the New York Knicks
the Cleveland Cavaliers 84-80
'(Of' a 2-0 lead in the best-of-5 series.
~The Knicks can wrap up the first
roUnd with a victory Wednesday
nitht at Madison Square Garden,
· wt~ere the Cavaliers were 2-0 during
the regular season.
· ~The visiting team has won 12 of
th~ last 14 New York-Cleveland
meetings, including regular season
ani! postseason games. The Knicks
art 7-1 at Cleveland's Gund Arena
si~ce it opened in 1994.
· ;Cleveland trailed 44-41 at halftirf,e and never caught up in the secon):! half, although it twice got within 1a point. Both times, Mason
an5wered - . with a put-back that
ga~e the Knicks a 50-47 lead early
in !he third quarter, and a lay-up and
foal shot that put them ahead 69-65
wilh 7: 16left in the game.
· :mle Cavs closed to 80· 78 on Terrel. Brandon's 19-foot jumper with
18.6 seconds to play but could get no
closer. The Knicks made four of their
sill.'• foul shots in the closing seconds
to:S.al it.
•
•. ratrick Ewing scored 16 points,
14 of them in the second half, and
grabbed 12 rebounds for the Knicks.
Brandon led Cleveland with 21
points and 12 assists.
.. ,The Knicks, who set a team
record with 17 three-pointers in
G\lme I Thursday, wereo'Lnearly-as
sh:up from long distance Saturday,,
· although·they made four in the first
half and 6-of-16 for the game. Cleveland was horrible from long range,
. making 4-of:23 attempts..
The Cavs led by as many as 10
points _in the first quarter, but John
Slllf~ scored II ofhis 16 points in
the· second quarter to . push the
Knicks ahead bY three at the half.
· . N~w York outscored Cleveland .
1'5:.41 op fast breaks.
·
· · NC~te*: New York committed six
Ul'll\overs in the first half and 12
more in·the &amp;eaond half, after totali~· five in all Qf Game I. ... The
' Cavs missed their first nine threepoint attempts before Dan Majerle
made one with four minutes left in
th 'third quarter•••. The Cavaliers,
woo are in the playoffs for the eighth
tlttm in nine seasons, have made it to
me·second round only' twice during
that span..... J.R. Reid, who started
die Knicks' last six regular-seison
games while Charles Oakley. was
si~lined by a broken bone below his ·
· eye, has not played 111 Ill since Oak. teyletumed for the playoffs.... The
back of a fan's hclld wu c.ut when
Oakley crashed into the seats under
. the·basket in the _thitd quuter.

*'

•• '

'

more.

·•

"The only way I'll feel my comeback is completj: is when I'm back
here running for the champienship,"
added lrvan, who is·currently 16th in
the points. " Bu!, in a way, my
comeback was complete the day I
got back in a race car:"
Talladega and Daytona are the
only two Winston Cup tracks where
NASCAR mandates the use of a carburetor restrictor plate to keep the
speeds below 200 mP.h.
.
The Yates tearq~'1ainly seems to
have figured out hOw to get the most
out of those restricted engines, with
Jarrett winning the Daytona 500 in
February and now the two cars on
the front row for the race on Talladega's 2.66-mile, high-banked
oval.
Making that even more remarkable is the facf that Jarrett's Daytona
car is now on lease for the opening

..

Rounding out the top '10 were the
Chevys of Jeff Purvis, at 191.100,
and Roberto Pressley, 191.077·, the
Ford Of Jeff Burton, 191.042, and the
Pontiac Grand Prix of rookie Johnny Benson Jr., 190.943.
Among the other who nailed
down spots amo11g the top 25 for
today's race were defending Winston
Cup champion Jeff Gordon, I 1th at
190.909; last year's Talladega polewi~ner -Terry Labonte, 13th 'at
190.753, and current series point
leader Dale Earnhardt, Skinner's
teammate, 16th at 190.427.
The top 25 secu'red spots in
today's lineup, with the rest of the
42-car field determined Saturday in
further time trials.
· ·

against Detroit - the most he has
against any team. McGwire finished
1-for-3 before being replaced in the
seventh inning.
·
Carlos Reyes (3-3) stopped the
Tigers on six hits in 7 1/3 innings.
Bill Taylor, recalled Saturday from
Triple-A Edmonton, pitched I. 113
innings for his first save.
Rangers 4, Orioles 2 ·
At Baltimore, Md., Bobby Witt
allowed four hits in 7 1/3 innings and
the. Texas Rangers scored three
unearned runs in the eighth inning
Saturday in a 4-2 victory over,tht!N'__/
Baltimore Orioles.
. Kevin Elster hit a two-run double
for the Rangers, who snapped a tie
in the eighth and improved to 5'0
.against Baltimore this season.
;., :
Brady Anderson hit. his American
League-leading lOth homer for the
Orioles, who have lost eight of 10
after starting the season 11-2.
FIRES TO FIRST - Cleveland second baseman Carlos Baerga
makes
the throw to first after retiring Toronto's John OleR!d at aec· Mickey Tettleton started the
ond
base
In the third inning of Saturday's American League game
eighth:inning uprising with a one-out
In
Toronto,
where the Blue Jays won 11-6. Baerga'i throw didn't
double off Scott Erickson ( 1-2).
arrive
In
time
lO get Shawn.Green. (AP)
' '
Dean Palmer struck out before Rusty
Greer hit a sharp grounder to first McGriff's three -run sliot in the Bones- (1-4). After Ricky Jordan's " ' " ~.lf~
that zipped through the legs of eighth off reliever Rick Honeycutt sacrifoce fly scored the tying run, Jay
..
Rafael Palmeiro.
was his third homer in four games Buhner, who had walked, moved to
Anderson homered in the bottom after going 18 games without a third on a single by .Russ Davi~.
of the inning, chasing Witt (3-1) and homer.
·
Reliever Mark Kiefer then balked,
tying Frank Robinson's clLb record
Donovan Osborne (1 -2) gave up scori ng Buhner.
for home runs in April. Robinson hit four runs' and eight hits in seven
The Mariners picked up three
10 in 1969.
innings for St. Louis, which has lost · quick runs against Bones in the first ,
Braves 7, Cardinals 2
six of its last se.ven.
jumping on his first nine pitches. He
At St. Louis, Mo., Javy Lopez had
Gary Gaetti and John Mabry each . allowed a sacrifice fly by Maninez.
three RBis and Fred McGriff hit a went 3-for-4 for the Cardinals.
an RBI-double by Buhner and Paul
three-run homer Saturday, leading ,
The Braves (ook a 2-0 lead in the Sorrento's RBI-single before settling
Greg Maddux and the Atlanta Braves second iiming on Lope.z's two-run down.
to a 7-2 win over the St; Louis Car- single.
The · Brewers got a run back
dinals.
Mariners 6, Brewers S
against Sterling Hitchcock in the
Maddux (4-1), allowed eight hits
At ~ilwaukce, Wis., Edgar Marthird when Jeff Cirillo walked, went
over seven innings. The right-hander, tinez delivered an REI-triple to key
to third on a doub.le by Pat Listach
seeking a fifth consecutive Cy Young a three-run eighth inning and the
and scored on Kevin Seitzer's sacriAward, walked none and struck out Seattle Mariners came from behind
fice .fly in the third.
six.
to defeat Milwaukee 6-5 Saturday.
Reliever Bob Wells (1-0) got the
Jerome Walton, making just his
Luis Sojo started the winning ralwm
.
second start of the season, went 3- ly with a si ngle and came around on
for-4 with two doubles for Atlanta. Martinez' triple against loser Ricky

,

Johnson carries flame on first
l.e g ·of Olympic torch relay r~n
By BETH HARRIS
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A fingernail-sized name symbohzing the
. spirit of the Olympics arrived from ·
Greece Satut:tJay to ignite the first
torch in a 15,000-mile relay odyssey
to the summer' games in Atlanta.
The first of 10,000 people who
will zig-zag the country in the coming 84 days jogged from the Los
Angeles Memorial Coliseum - site
of Olympic games in I 932 and 1984 ·
- down a grassy path nanked by
nags of the 197 nations competing
this year.
Olympic decathlon champion
Rafer Johnson, who was the last per.son to carry the torch on its international journey to the 1984 Summer
Olympics, handed the torch off to
·Gina Tillman, granddaughter of .
Jesse Owens, who won four gold
medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
· After running her leg Owens
embraced Janet Evans, who will seek
a record fifth swimming gold medal
in Atlanta, ami' Evans ran her halfmile leg.
The relay's path took it through
Los Angeles communities rich and
· po9r, including Kore.alown and
South Central Los Angeles, torn
apart by riots in I992. '
Bruce· Jenner, the 1976 Olympic

decathlon champion, ·was also
among those who will carry the
flame to opening ceremonies July
19 .
Je nner saw the start of the torch
relay as a proud moment for a city
wracked by .the ri 0ts, fires, an earthquake and the O.J. Simpson ·murder
trial.
"The name has the ability for
healing. We have been through so
much in this city for the last few
years," he said. "Maybe everybody
can ki'nd of forget about what happened in the past and look to the
future."
A helicopter bearing the name
descended from overcast skies into
the coliseum early Saturday, where
a throng of dignitaries and onloqkers waited.
Maria Pambouki, a Greek high
priestess, gingerly carried the flame
through the Cohseum's famed peristyle and out of the stadium onto a
stage, where Billy Payne, president
of the Atlanta Committee for the
Olympic Games, ignited. the first
torch.
He then lit another name in a
large, ceremonial cauldron on which
"Atlanta '96" was engraved, drawing a roar from the crowd of about ·
1,500.

.

"The flame we sec today, carried
here from Olympia, represents a
symbol of unity of all peoples," said
Athens Mayor Dimitris Avramopoulos. "Good luck Atlanta, good luc~
Americ;a." '
The cere mony took place against
the controversial backdrop of two
nude, headl ess statues erected at the
entrance of the stadium forthc 1984
Games'.
· The anatomically correct athletes
created a stir earlier this week when
it was reported that Atlanta Olympics
officials wanted them covered up so
as to not offend a national televis ion
audience . They were in place Saturday, uncovered.
Some onlookers, like 19-year:otd
Penny O'Brien of Valencia, regretted
missing the Olympics here 12 years
ago.

Panthers
get past
Bruins 4-3
MIAMI (AP) - The Florida
Panthers. won their first-ever playoff
se ri es Saturday as Bill Lindsay
scored with just under live minutes
left in regulation to beat Boston 4-3
Saturday .
Florida, which won the Eastern
Conference quanerfinal 4-1, became
the sixth team to win its lirst StanIcy Cup playoff series .
Boston had tied the game for the
second time at 3-3 at 12:29 or the
third on a score by Sandy Moger on
a controversial power play.
B~tjust over two minutes later,
Lindsay broke down the right wing.
With only four-time Norris Trophy winner Ray Bourque in his way,
Lindsay faked and skated toward the .
goal. Bourque tripped him up as he
went by, but Lindsay batted the puck
between Boston goaltender Bill Ran. ford's legs at. 15:03.
Bostou could not recover. Ranford was pulled with 27 seconds left
. the game
' to no avail as the Brum
ins fell in the first round of the playoffs for the second straight year.
Florida was once again led by
goaltender John Vanbiesbrouck, who
had 27 saves. Panthers wing Dave
Lowry also scored a key goal as the
Panthers took a 2-0 lead, then
watched Boston tied it at 2-2 midway through the second period on
Josef Stumpel's goal ana again in the
third on Moger's score.
Brian Skrudland and Paul Laus
also scored for the Panthers.
Bourque had two assists for Boston;
while Ted Donato had the Bruins·
other goals.
·

l
"

�•

•

\ ,.82·~ ) .~~..-

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

Sunday, April 28, 1816

E;Q;~~~d Padres notch victories to keep win streaks alive
By The Associated Press
With an eight-game winning
Expos arc off to their best
s
1nce 1981. And unexpectedly,
u-eal has a league-leading 36
home runs.
"We ""'n 't really a powerhouse.
The"' isn'ta home run history of any
of our guys," Expos manager Felipe

~

Alou said after Friday night's 6-2
win at the Colorado Rockies.
" We don't hh "too many tape..
measure hqme runs. Some way,
some .how, they arc clearing the
fence and just making it."
David Segui and Moises Alou hit
two-run homers as the Montreal
won its eighth straight. The Expos,

on thetr longest winning streak since
July 1994. won its 16th game and
tied the cl ub record for April wins, a
mark set in 1981.
"It is somethmg we don 't
e&lt;pect," said Mike Lansing, who
drove in two runs with a solo homer
and an RBI single. " We don't walk
into a park thinking we are going to

rely on the three-run homer every
night."
·
Montreal's Tavo Alvarez (1·0)
allowed one run and three hits in six
innings.
Artnando Reynoso ( 1-2) gave up
three runs and seven hits in six
innings as Colorado lost its third
straight overall and fiflh straight at

•

-

CINCINNATI (AP)
Mike
has taken
Grace's story of setba
a turn.
The Philadelphi Philloes pitcher
who couldn't stay ealthy in the
minor leagues is st ing to make an
impression in the majors. He retired
the first 16 batters Friday night and
threw eight shutout innJng ~ for a 20 victory over the Cinci~i Reds.
The hard-throwing right-hander is

4-0 and finally emerging from hard
work and hard times.
" I've gone through a lot of faolure in my career," Orace said. ·• Anyone who knows the story knows that
I' m trying to come back from all
, !hose surgeries and all that. I've been
hit a lot. The only thing with faolure
is you have to learn from it."
On Friday, he handed the Reds
their latest failure in a season that's
already tottering.

The Reds have lost six in a row
and nine of I0 to fall to 9-14. their
worst mark since the last time they
had a rookie manager The Reds
opened 9- 14 in 1993 under Tony
Perez, who lasted 44 games.
Manager Ray Knight used his
23rd different hneup in 23 games,
but ot couldn 't get anyth,ing gomg
aga inst Grace.
"Toni ght, we had good pitching
and no hitting," said Jeff Branson,

'

.

'

By DAVE HARRIS

T·S Correspondent
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va.
Meigs scored six sev~-inning
runs to pull away fr\)1'1\ a ~im 4-3
advantage and went on post a 10-5
victory over the Red Devols m baseball action Thursday at Ravenswood.
Meigs with the victory raises itJ;
record to 9-5 overall . The Marauders will put their 6-4 Tri-Valley Conference record on the line Monday
when they host the Nelso nvilleYork Buckeyes.
Ravenswood jumped out on top
2·0 at the end of the second inning
but Meigs came back to take a 3-2
lead in the top .of the th ird inning
•

Robert Qualls and Matt Auh led off
the innong woth songles. Two ground
outs scored Qualls before Gary Stanley slammed his second home run of
the year scoring Auh ahead of hi m.
Jason Romeo hit a solo home run
in the fifth innong to toe the score at
three whoch os the way It slood unto!
the seventh.
Scott George led off the mnong
striking out, but he reac hed forst on
a passed ball. Chad Burton followed with a sacrifice bunt Gary
Stanley walked 'and Rock Hoover
was hot by a potch. Cass ClclaosJ then
reached on a error. One out later
Brad Whotlatch and Quall s hit backto- back doubles.

Los A n g~les I, Ch1cago 0
S!lo D1 ego J. Houston 2
Flor1do 3 Son FrancJ!&gt;c:o 0

AL standings

r..m
' »:
Balli more... ... .. ... 1J

They played Saturday
J. &amp;1.

TOJonto . .......... 9

9
9
13

591
550
409

0eUOII

9

l:'i

.17'i

Boston ................ 6

17

.26 1

New York ......... II

.

...

.

lill
I
4

'

7~

Central DiYision

CLEVELAND .
Chkago
,

14
12

7
9

b67
57 1

2

Milwaukee . . .. . II I0
Minnesora . . ... . 10 I I
KtlnSILS City . . . .1 16

524
476

J
4

.» f

8

WHitrn DiYidon
Teus .. .. . ... ..... 14 8 6J6
SeiUtle .. ..• .. . .•. 14
9 609
Cahforma. . . .. ... ,. 12
~land

..

.. II

Philudelphl&lt;~ (Mulh oll and 1-2) ;u
CINCINNAl I (Portugal O~ JJ. 2 15 p m
Allanl u (Maddux J- 1J ,It Sa Lou1 s (Osbor(l ~ 1-1).2 1'ipm
Montreal /Cormr er I I J al Col orado
(Freeman 2 2). 1 05 p m
Aonda (B ur kett 1-1) :11 San Franmcu
(M Leiter 1-)), 4 05 p.m
N~w York {Wt lson I I) at Pi!!sburgh
CDarwm 2-2). 1 05 p m
Ch1 c o~o (Nav&lt;UTO 0-J) at Lo s Angeles
(CandJOCIJ 1-2). 1005 p.m
Houston (Reynolds 1 I) at San D1ego
(Ashby l -0). 10 0 .5 p m

Meigs scored the soxth and final
run of the onning when Atilt reached
on· a error to gove Meigs a I0-3 lead
headmg into the bottom of the seventh.
The Red Devils scored a pair of
run s in the bott om of the mning to
close out the scoring. R~ve n swood
took advantage of three songles and
a doub le to score the two runs but
Me ogs was ab le to hold on for the
won.
George went the route to pick up
the won The junior scattered II hits,
walked on ly two and struck out four.
Whot latch led Meogs at the plate woth
a single and a double. Stanley added
his home run , Brett Hanson, Chris

San Antonto 120. Phoe mx 98, Sa n
Antomo le:uts sene~ 1-0
'today's game
Pho enax at Sa n Anton to. J p m
IN DC)
1 Wednesday's gamf'
Sar. 1\m omo at P hoe m ~ . 10 '0 p m
(TNTJ

'II

9

571

I 'it

II

500

3

Friday's scores ,
Detroit 14, O:ikllllld ~

Scaule 6, Milwaukee 5
Kansas Cit)' 4, Boslon 3
CLEVELAND 6, Toronto J
New YorkS, Minnesoca4

Te•as S, Bo.ltnnore 4
Cahforiua nl ctucago, ppd , min

Today's games
Knnsa s Cac y (Gu bu:za 2-1) &lt;~I Bo.saon
(Moyer 2-1). L;,05 p m
CLE VELA~ (Lopez 0-0) at Toronto
(Ware 0-2). I 0~ p m
Oakland { Wojc1ediD wJb 1-0) a! Delrolf fGohr 1-2). I: Up m.
Mtnnesola (Hawkins 1-0 ) ar New York
(Key 1-3), I J~ p m
Teltllll (Hill 1-2 ) a1 Ballimorc (Muuma
1-2). 1:35pm
......
Cahfornaa (fanley 1- 1) at Cha cago
(Baldwm 1-0), 2.05 p m
Seanle {Me nhan 0-2) at Milwaukee
(Sparks 1-1), 2 05 p.m

NL standings

\\'edne:sday's ~:amt
U!ah ar Portland. 9 10 p m , 1f necessary (I US)
I•.A.. l.akers vs. Houston
Thty played Saturday
Houston at LA Lakers. 1:10 p m
(N BC)

14
I]

381

Cenll'lll Di~ulon
St. LouiS ........... 12 12 500
Houston ......... II 12 418
Ptllsburgh . . . . . II I 2 478
Chko!o .
10 l l 43'i
CINC NNATI .. . 9 14 WI
Wesltm Division
San Daego .
16
7 6%
Los Angeles . . 12 12 'iOO
San Francasco . II 12 418
Colorlldo .. .. .. 10 12 4~5

Fi-iday's scores "
P111sburgh 10. New York 6
Ph1ladelphta 2. CINCINNATI 0
A.!lanl n 6, St Louas I
Monll't'lll 6. Colorado 2

NBA playoffs
Eastern Conference
Chlugo vs. Miami
Frad;~ y's score
C h1 cago 102, Mram1 8 ~ Chr c ap.!'l
leads ~eneS 1-0
·

I.

1f

Toronto vs. St Louis
They played Salurday
Toronto at St Lours, 7 JO p.m

Tuesday's ga mt

Monda)' 's gamt
St Louu at Toronto , 7 30 p .m , 1f
necessary

NHL playoffs

Wfdnesday's game
Ch1cago at M1 om1. 8 p m ITNT)
Orlando vs. Dftroit
Friday · ~ score
Orl aodo 11 2, Detr011 92. Orland o
li ads series l 0
Today 's game
Dctrurt .11Orl;mdo, 12 10 Jl m (NBC)

New York at CLEVELAND I p m
(NBC)

Bay 7

~

p.m

Pilhhurgh vs. Washing•on
.
Frid11y's Kore
Pt ~t sb urgh 4. Wa shtngt on I : Pm s·
burgh leads sene~ l- 2

Tuday's ~:ume
Pmsb11rgll at Washaagton. 1 Jl m
T~~esday•~

gam e

W:ashmgton at Putsburgh , 7
1! ncCC$5llry

~0

p.m.,

N.Y. Rr:mgers v§. Monlreal
Friday"s Kort
N.Y Rangers J. Montreal 2. NY
Rangers lead scncs l-2
Tuday 's gamt'
N.Y R :~nge rs m ~ dntre&lt;~l , l p m

Tuesday's gamr
Orlandn 111 Detrou, X p m (TNT)
lndlnna u. 1\llanta
They played Saturday
All:wa nt lnd111na. 8 p m (TNT)

Tamp:~

Monday's game
Lunpa Ba)1 at P hll&lt;~ d elp lua, 7 :\0
p m , 1f necessa ry

Today 's ga me
M1nm1,,t O uc:1gn 'i lO p m (NBC )

Shon er , WR Larry Stallworah Jl nd CD
M1chad Swift.

Hockey

''

T uesday 's gamtMonii C,\1 ut N Y Ranger&gt; , 1 JO p 111,
1f IIC ~t'~S .ll y

Florid II vs. Hoslon
They playtd Saturday
Buston at F!onda.• I p m.
Today's game
Ronda"' BostQn, 7 10 p m , 1f neles-

"'Y

""

Na1ionall..tagut
PHILADELPHIA PHILLI ES . A~-:11 vtaled IF Make BenJamm from lhe 15-day
d1 sabled hst Opt1oncd IF Kevm Sefcik to
Scramon-Wilkes- Barre of the lmernati onal l..eague.

PI TTS BURGH PENGUINS RcG Pnmck Lalimc from Cleveland

c :~lled

&lt;lit he IHL
WASHINGTON CAPITALS: Senl
RW Rrchard Zedmk, 0 Serget Tenysh By,
.md D Patrtck Badeau 10 Ponland of ltk=

AHL.
Eas• Coast Hoc:kty Leque
COLUM BU S C HI LL Annou nced

the resignauon or Moe Mamha. coach

Roller Hockey lnkrnaUonaal
LOS ANGELES BLADESo Named
Cuws Uclllf:uner

Soccer
National Prolts.'lional SMcrr l..ea.gue
C INCINNATI SILV ERBACKS Announced that George Fenmndcz wtll serve
ns" plnyer-&lt;~u l sl :mt coach ror lhe 19%-97

reason.

1-T TAKES ACOMMUNITY TO

PROTECT ACHILD

~
~
I~'
2&gt;

4~

5
5'11

Western Conference
SeaiUe vs. Sacra mt nto
Friday's sco~
Se:lltl c: 9J , Sacramento 8$, Sealllt:
le¥Js senes 1-0
Today's gami
Sucramc:nto nt St"nllle , 9 p rn (TNT) .
Tuesday's game
Seoule nt S!lc romenlo . 10 30 p m

!TNT)
San Antonio va. Photnix
Friday's !K:Ore

FARLEY'S FISH FARM
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421

"

., .

· Foster Ho.mes are needed for
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call992-2117 for information and
to be part of the effort.

•

Basketball

1980

Football

DDVIS

GREEN BAY PACKERS Signed DL
Hmd Keeney , DL D1rk Oc hs, DL Walcer
Scott , OT Troy Stark and WR En c
Manhews

For one game, Cecil Fielder and
his friends figured out how to overcpme Detroit's pitching problemsoutscore ' em!
The Tigers overwhelmed the
·Oakland Athletics 14-5 Friday, night,
ending 3A eight-game losing streak
with thei~ highest-scoring game of
the season.
, Detroit began the day with a staff
7.46 ERA - \)n pace to break the
major league mark of a 6.10 ERA set
by the 1930 Philadelphia Philliesand was coming off 24-11 and Ll-1
losses to Monnesota
Danny Bautista scored three runs

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)- For
. !'early t~o years, a battle over aerodynamics has raged among Winston
tup competitors. NASCAR's latest
inove to even up the competition has
'done little to quiet the controversy.
: After studying wind tunnel data
(rom last month's tests on the
,c;::hevroletJ;; Fords and Pontiacs that
qompete in its lop divismn
NASCAR announced last week at
Martinsville, Ya., ·that beginning
next monlh at Charlotte, Ford will be
allowed to reduce the rear portion of
i)s Tbunderbird roonine by one-half
i)lch.
' The rule will be in effect ·every,where except the two road courses
whereJhe Winston Cup cari race and
NASCAR's two longest and fastest
tracks - Daytona and Talladega.
: "I'm sure if you talk to the guys
ipthe Chevrolet camp, you 'd think
: ~ just received the biggest gift
NA,SCAR could ever give anybody,
but it's not true,'' said Dale Jarrett,
one of two Ford drivers to win this
'
season.
: "Will this rules change help? Yes,
little, but at what cost? Things are
•~ till not equal, and' the guys in our
:!hop and at all the other Ford race
: Ohops have to spend money and time
•kl cut up their cars a third time to get ,
:their fractions of equality.

SUBURBAN
4x4, V·8, avto, Gray w/gray cloth
interior, A/C, stereo, New short
block, Local trade. WAS $4500

NOW $3900

1983
LET
S-10 BLAZER

''ROOT AWAKENING" SALE

4x4, V-6, auto, Blue wlblue
interior, new paint, looks
runs good, local trade.
$4500

Give your lawn a "root awakening"
lhis spring wilh a Stihltrimmer. lis
lightweight design and dependable ./
starling power will help you mainJw:~irl
a healthy, great-looking lawn. Get one now while iYs on sale.

and draggong his
arm. That hun his control. But his

ann strength is good and his velocity is right about wheR it was at this

time last year."
Hershiser struck out six and didn't walk a batter, giving way to Eric
Plunk, who struck out two in a perfeet eighth. Jose Mesa pitched a I2-3 ninth for his eighth save in eight
chances. ,
Eddie Murray, who 's been struggling as well ,this season, had two
hilS and two RBI.
'
"He knows how to drive in runs,"
said Hargrove. "But \hat's what
makes Eddie speciaL He has that
mindset."
'
Murray hit a two-run, bases-

I~ single in the third, llild Man- or the.seasQn in the Toronto f~.
ny Ramirez followed wilh an RBI Carter hit his seventh home run of
single for a 5-0 lead.
the season, a two-run shol to left that.
The Indians took advantage of according to tile television replay,
two errors to score a pair of unearned went foul in the sixlh.
runs in the second.
Third base umpire Lany Barnett
Jom Thome reached with two out ruled otherwise.
·
when second baseman Domingo
_"I haven't had time to analyze the
Cedeno misplayed his grounder and replay yet," Hershiser said. " But a
Sandy Alomar singled to extend his ' lot of people think it could have gone
hitting streak to 12 games. Omar · the Olher way. But only one person's
Vizquel hit an RBI single that got • opinion countJ;. Fortunately, it didn' t
past left fielder Joe Carter, allowing affect tha outcome."
another run to score.
Erik Hanson·(2-4) struggled ear"Very nice when your team ly and fell victim to some sloppy
jumps out to a lead like that," Her- deferse. before .he s~~ to come
shiser said. "After !hat I was able to around on the m1ddle mnrngs. .
just let the ball go."
"It wasn 't bad, but it wasn't
, Ed Sprague hit his sixth home run• good," Hanson said. "It's a linuep

and drove in three, Fielder scored
three times and Chris Gomez hit a
three-run double. The Tigers stopped
Oakland's five-ga111e winning string,
breaking open the game with three
runs in the fourth Inning, four runs
in the fiflh and five runs in the sixlh.
''We needed a good solid win like
this. It gives us a chance to turn ot·
around," starting pttcher Greg Keagle said.
Mike Christopher (1-1) relieved
Keagle and worked 2 113 innings for
the victory. Gregg Olson, acquired
by the Tigers earlier in the day from
Cincinnati for a._minor leaguer, and
Richie Lewis each pitched one
inning.

Garnetime temperature at Tiger
Stadium was 44 degrees; and it
steadily dropped because of strong
winds. The blustery condition s contributed' to 20 walks and a couple of
misplayed fly balls.
"I've never played in a game like
this before. It was freezing,'' said
Pedro Munoz, who teamed with
Terry S ~ei nbach for consecutive
home runs for the A's.
·In other games, Seattle defeated
Milwaukee 6-5. Kansas Coty beat
Boston 4-3, New York downed Min:
nesota 5-4 and Texas beat Baltimore
5-4. The California at Chicago game
was rained out.
Mariners 6, Brewers S

you can't make any mistakes agai~st.- ~ight home games ... The Bfue lays

And you can't give them more than
lhree ouiS or they're going to capitalize."
.
· Hanson gave up fi
earned. on eight hits in · ht innings
as the Blue Jays lost
ir third
straisht and seventh in the r )ast eiglit
home games. Hanson U:ed l S of
the last 16 ba~rs fac
y.zquel ~apped the .scoring wilh
an tnfield smgle ~If nan Bohanon
to drive in Thome : the ninth.
,
Notes: The l tans have scored
98 runs ov~t)lieir last 13 games. ...
C:leveland ~ I 3-4 at the SkyDome
stnce the start of last season. .. .
Toronto is just3-8 at Sky Dome this
season and has lost seven ofthetr_last

Randy Johnson left in the fourth way Park.
with pain in his low~r back.
C!emens struck out II and gave
and Seattle ra?lied to win without up five hits. The Boston ace has a
hiin at Milwaukee.
4.17 ERA.
,
. Johnson, 4-0 this year and with an
Michael Tucker hit a solo home
11-game winning streak spannong run for Kansas &lt;::tty and also robbed
two seasons, was to be examined Mike Stanley of a homer in right
Saturday. He expects to make his • field. The Royals and Red So• each
next start; in Texas on Wed'nesday. . entered the game at 6-16, tied for the
The Mariners got the go-ahead poorest record ioi the maj ors.
run in the ninth. Luts Sojo walked,
Rangers 5, Orioles 4
took third on a single by Ken GrifWill Clark hit a tiebreaking, twofey Jr. and scored on a double-play run double in the seventh inning at
grounder by Edgar Martinez.
Camden Yards lhat stopped Texas'
Royals 4, Red Sox 3
four-game losing streak.
Roger Clemens, already off to the
M1ckey Tettleton, in a 3-for-25
worst start of his career, fell to 0-4 slump, homered and had three hits.
despite seven strou innings at Fen- Reliever Mark Brandenburg earned
in~ing

..
..

"I'd say 1f you're a Chevrolet
Fotd drivers," he said.
Even though Monte Carlos won team, you'd better won while you
2S of 31 race,s last year and six of can; If they stack it enough against
eight so far Ibis season, the Chevro- . you, you're going to wal&gt;e up one
let teams aren't buying Ford's theo- day and it'll be too late. The only
thing I'm waiting for is to see if
ry of a major Chevy advantage.
"I don 't understand where the big they ' ve gone too far, if the:,i' ll balproblem is, but they're whining so ance it back."
they (NASCAR) keeP. giving," said
Larry McClure, whose Pontiac is
Rick Hendrick, ownerof the Chevro- driven by Sterling Marlin, is anothletJ; dri'ven by Jeff Gordon. Terry er car owner who thinks Ford has
Labonte and Ken Schrader.
been given too much.

Pedro Astacio (2-2) allowed five
hits in eight innings and Delino
DeShields homered for the second
straight game, a fifth-inning drive off
Steve Trachsel (1-2).

·"'••••.

1984

Crosiword Puzzie A~swer

and (ondling, which included a suckling ... of the left side of her face,' '
Graddock said.
·
Club offici als, as well as one of
August's friends, have said the bo•er did nothing wrong. .
Tyson, who at 20 became the
youngest heavywe ight champion
ever, regained the •wac heavyweight totle m March with a thordround victory over Frank Bruno.

There were 10 winners of more
than one tournament on the PGA
Tour m 1995, Greg Norman and Lee
Janzen each winning three tim es.
•

I :

See
Jeny Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh ,
Doc Hayman
Clark Reea

~
I
'

,,

, .Cronworci PuzZle on Page D-2
..

I

I

.

•Corporate Bonds
~U.S. Treasury Securities
•Mutual Funds
•Insured Tax-Free
MunlcipaliJ'onds
•Insured Money Market
{\ccounts
•IRA's
Contact:
Jay Caldwell
John Miller

Account Executives
441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH~ 45631

(614) 446-2125
1·800-487-2129

NOTICE

All property owners north of the Gallipolis City Limits. ·
The City of Gallipolis is planning to circulate a petition
to acquire signatures from property owners in order to
have the property annexed into the city limits.
Please Note: The City of Gallipolis does not have to
place this Issue on a ballot for vote- they only need a
petition with 51% of the property owners' signatures
that favor this annexation.
If you are not In favor, please read anything that might
be brought'to you for signature.
Pd. fqr by Committee Agalnat Annexation, 633 SL Rt. 160, Galllpolll

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his first major league win 'as Texas
improved to -4-0 against Baltimore
this season.
B.J. Surhoffhomered for the Orioles, who have dropped seven of
nine si nce their 11 -2 start.
Yankees 5, Twins 4
Bernie Williams hit the third
grand slam of his career, capping a
five-run. so&lt;t h inning that rall oed
New York from a 4.0 ljeficit at Yankee Stadium.
.
Dave Hollins and Pat Meares
homered in the second, putting Minnesot~ ahead against Kenny Rogers .
The Twms blew a bases-loaded
threat in the fifth when Ron Coomer
grounded into a double play.

OFFERING:

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St. Rt. 248 (~ester
985-3308

mpk:s
ATLANTA (AP) _ Re uced
capacity at a critical water treatment
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Olympics, the Atlanta Business
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•

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have not attempted a sto!elt base in
their last 10 games.... lulio Franco
is I O.for-22 •gainst HansQI!. ...
Toronto turned three double plays to
give it'a league-leading 28 .... Shortstop Alex Gonzalez had 13 IISsists,
tyong the AL record for nine-inning
1
game set by Bobby Reeves of the
Washington Senators on Aug. .
7
1927.
~
_ _..

''The rule chan ge J USt gives them
"That car can't be too bad,'' he
another way to adjust their car," saod. "We just don't think it's fair."
McClure saod. "They can lay their
spoiler down and reduce the drag
quite a bit. It's going to give them .
more natural downforce.
"We feel they' re at least as good
as us now, and thts is just gomg to
give them an advantage, along with
their engine program, which has
more horsepower than we do We 're
Member New York Stock Exchange
behind the eight ball "
Men'ber SIPC

Chicago police ·clear Tyson
in alleged incident with-woman

' L games..•

lliis in seven shutout innings and
Ffed McGriff homered and doubled
tl!lice as visiting Atlanta won for the
~enth time in II games. St. Louis
l(t;·lost five of six.
•·- -Andy Benes (1 -3) allowed six

vinvll

"Ford already lias spent a lot of
time and money and asked its teams
to help in· gathering research during
the middle of the season so that we
could present hard data to NASCAR
on what it took the equalize competition. Let's face it, facts are facts."
Jarrett said Chevrolet was
allowed'to modify the rear end of the
Monte Carlo more than five inches
to match the Thunderbird's aerodynamics.
" All Ford asked W!IS to b!: able to
modify the Thunderbird roof a fraction of lhatto be like the Monte Carlo,'' he said. "It's that simple ."
Jack Roush, owner of tlic Fords
driven by Mark Martin, Ted Musgrave and Jeff Burton, said' he 's still
not satisfied.
"I don't think we've gqt the
prospects of getting even from this
change, and as anxious as we are to
get a measure of relief, this isn't
-enough!" Roush said.
Making exceptions for the road
courses at Watkins Glen and Sears
Poini displeased Roush.
"If the Thunderbird is disadvantaged to this modified Monte Carlo,
and it is - it's quantifiable and the
results in the tunnel and on lhe race
track show that - then the changes
!hat are made need to be made everywhere. not just some pla~es based on
the su-engths and weaknesses of the

CHICAGO '(AP) - An Indiana examined following the incident.
Asked whether Tyson had been
woman's allegations that bo.er Mike
Tyson fondled her and took other lib- interviewed, Jenkins saad the boxer
erties during a nightclub vis.it have had given a written statelllent to
been found baseless by Chicago pohce.
Jenkins said the investigation was
poioce.
Police spokesman· Paul Jenkons closed Friday afternoon.
A man answering.the telephone at
on Fnday said no charges would be
fired against Tyson in the alleged Tyson 's Southington, Ohio, home
April 7 incident at a club on Chica- would not say if the boxer was there.
August, a 25-year-old beautician,
go's South Side.
declined
to .speak woth reporters
But an attorney ~ LaDonna
August of Gary, Ind. says a c1vil after emerging from the Gary office
lawsUit will be filed a ainst Tyson. of her attorn ey after pohce
The police decision ' is not going announced their decision.
to change what we are going to do,"
\yson was convicted in 1992 of
said attorney Jerry Lee Peteet. "We raping Desiree Washington , a beaubelieve her story to be credible. She ty pageant contestant in Indianapolis. He was released from prison in
passed a lie detector test."
Jenkins said no evidence supports March 1995 but must serve four
~N
......:&lt;:.:C=on::l::;in=ue::d:...:f:..:ro;:.;m.:..B::.-..:2!....)---,--....:...
August's claim of a se.ual assault by years probation.
:J1enect ninth for his fifth save.
runs and nine hits in 6 1/3 innings.
Tyson was on an approved trip to
Tyson.
: Hampton (2-2) went 2-for-2,
Pirates PO, Mets 6
Chicago
on Easter weekend when he
"We
did
an
exhaustive
investiga.stored Houston 's first run and drove
Jeff King, Orlando Merced and
went
to
a bar and reportedly met
,in the second.
Charlie Hayes homered and Pitts- tion here,'' Jenkins said. "We knew
':
Martins 3, Giants 0
burgh overc'ame the loss of starter there was a finite number of people August.
Charles Graddick, another attor· : Gary Sheffield hit his lith home Zane Smith, who straoned hos right to interview and we think we got to
ney
for August, saod she was getting
everyone
of
them."
.~n,tying the recon!lormost homers hamstring \\'hole scoring on AI Marher
coat
to leave The Clique when
Jenkins wa' asked if there was no
' fp.Apr~l. and KevioUlrown (2-3 ) led
tin's two-run double in the second.
'\llSiting Florida with a seven-hitter,
The game at l'ittsburgh had just evtdence or onsufficient •evidence she was acco':J"d by Tyson .
August was in a ~ri vate, upstairs
~ eighth career shutout.
resumed after a 59-minute rain delay against Tyson. "The former. " he
room, when she ran into Tyson,
said.
: Sheffield, leading the majors in when Smith was hurt, and there was
The spokesman refused to discuss Graddick said. Someone introduced
hemers, drove a 2-1 pitch from no ommediate report on the severity
details of the investigation, saying the two, then that person left, he said.
06valdo Fernandez into the left-field of his injury.
"There was a confrontation
&amp;eachers in the first inning. Quilvio
Jason Christiansen (2-2) relieved that might mterfere with.tJ civil lawsuit
that
may
be
fil
ed
against
Tyson.
my client and Mr. Tyson
between
~res drew a leadoff walk before Smtih and pitched three onnings for
He did say police do not ask for lie whereupon, according to her, some
l!J!effield connected to Jtelp hand the win. Jason Isri n ghause ~ (1-2) _ detector testJ; in such cases, but that
inappropriate comments and state~rnandez (3-1) his first loss.
gave up eight runs - six earnedrecords
were
subpoenaed
from
a
ments
were made, followed imme~~
Braves 6, Cardinals 1
in four innings.
hospital
where
the
woman
was
diately
by inappropriate to uching
;:.steve Avery (2-1) allowed five
• Dodgers 1, Cubs 0

a:

Nalional Baskttball Assocladon
WAS HINGTON BULLETS S1gned
G Ttm L...r:gler

National Football Leagur
Clt1CINNATJ BENGALS Rc-s1gned
DH Leonnrd Wheeler and G Scoll Brwn·
field to one-year cootracls. S1gnetl G Joel

WAlKER

1

Basebali
American L.eaaur
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Purchased
the contract of RHP Keith Shepherd from
Rocheste r of the lntermli iOnol League _
Op tr oned RHP Orran Sackmsky 10
Rochester
DETRO IT TIGERS Acqutred RHP
Gregg Olson from the Cmc rnnatt Reds for
INF Yura Sanchez Des1gnated RHP Bnan
Maxcy for assignmer11
TORONTO BL UE JAY S Tnmsferred RHP Woody WiliJam:; from the 15day d!subled hst 10 the 60-day d1 S11ble U

By BEN

AP Baeeball Writer

By MIKE HARRIS

National Hockey League
BOSTON BRUINS Reass1gned G
Blame Lxher from Cleveland of the IHL
10 Provrdence of the AHL
NEW 'r'ORK RANGERS · Rea sM
sagncd G Ka~ Whrtmart' from L...os Angell'S of the IHL to 81nghamf0 n of IIJt: AHL.

,, ••P8gell3

Despite NASCAR's efforts, aerodynamics con·t roversy continues

runners m sconng posttlf1n.

'.

•,
•

"That was not Vince Coleman 's ,;

fault," Knoght saod. "It's the thord
base coach's responsibility."
It shoul\ln't have beewthat close .
of a gal)'le. The Phillies got three hits::
and seven walks oltDave Burba (0-·
2) in seven innings,
but stranded
six'' r
.
.

' ed TE
MIAMI DOLPH INS S1gn
Crwg Ke11h. Wm ved OL Elbert BellS
MINNESOTA VIKI NGS · Stgncd
WR Tony Uland , G Orlando Hobo. CB
Jarrut Coleman, DT Brynton Goyne5, WR
Ollben Grantltn, LB Ben Hanks. DE
Mnrk l..ee CD Markco Maddo"· TE Mark
Reem . C B Ma chael R ob tn ~o n and FB
Chm Rynn
NEW YORK GIANTS Stgned OT
Stacey Otll;ud 10 a two-year co ntra ~ !
S1gned FB Geoff Grenter, DT Be rnard
Hol!ey , G Ch rr~ K~n nedy , S M•~ D h
Phillips , WR Ke nyau .. Spurks . C Jason
Stimo n, P Jo hn Stoneho1ue nn d DT
Grndy Sltetz.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES· Signed
FB Chru Buckhaller, P Alex Cilmpbell .
LB Joe Cummings. LB M11xwell Fcanny,
CB l'rederick Ford , TE Rennldo Graham.
FS Vere ne McKinley. C Bubba Maller.
CD Tn~tan Moss, WR Kendnck Nord , G
Cbru Oltma nn s, G Mall PurJy , LB
Robert Reed, DT M1chael Samson, T Erh.:
S1monson, WR Greg Smtth, DT Hollt s
Thomas. C Morns Unutoa and WR Cednc
Zachery
.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS S1gncd
TE Jillioo Banlen, OL Phallip Bemon.- LD
Jeff Br oc kert . LB Milrk Bro ok , G Mall
Brown , TE T1m Camp. G Brandon Evans,
DE Jounes Gillyard, QEI Robben Htggms.
DE P::tt l vey, DE Tyrone Malo ne, WR
Dw1ght
Mc Km ue , CB
Ro bert
McWilliams, DE Mnu Parker; CB Tyrone

Wednesday's game
CLEVELAND nt New York. 7 p rn ,
[fBS)

Delivery Will Be: Tuesday, April 30
Pomeroy - R &amp;G Feed &amp;Supply Company
12:15- 1:15 P.M., Phone (614) 992·2164'
Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, May 1
Vinton • Isaac's Feed
2:00- 3:00P.M., Phone (614) 388-8880
Minimum order of 25 fish
WE FURNISH YOUR HAULING CONTAINERS
To Place An Order Call The Store Above or Call: 1·800-247-2615
(orders do not have to be placed In advance)

\

Monday' s pmr
Vam:ouver ;~t Co lorado, 9 p m ,
necessary

L A Lakers m Hous10n. 9 p m (TBS)

Phlladelpht3 :u

Fish For Pond Stocking

'

.

Colorado n : Vam:ouver
Thty played Saturday
Co lorado or Vaocouver. JO :\0 p .m

'¥~ . T.ampa Day
They played Sa turday

Cltnland n. New 'V ork
They played Saturday

696
545
'i42
41 7

Tunday's camt

W1nnape1 at De troit. 7 JO p m . tf

l'hi laddphia

J. &amp;1.

7
10
II

Today's game

De tr\,11 ot Wmmpeg. l p m

Dl! cCSSil/'~

· Monday's game
lndinnn at Atlanta, H p m (TNT)

Eaalem Division
Montre31 . .. ...
Phaladelphm . .. 12
A.llanta
. 11
florida . ...
.. 10
New York ...... 8

Detroit \'8, Winnipq
Friday's sc:orr
W1nn1peg l , De1r01t I . Deuoit leads
senes J-2

.

Eastern Conference

Kansas Caly (Appier 1-J) at Boston
(S.I&lt;I -I), l05 p.m
•
CLEVELANU (Nagy J-0) at Toronlo
(Qulllllrill ().1). l 05 p m.
Oakland (Reyes 2 :\) o.t Detrou (Ura 12). l oiS p.m
r
Minnesota (Rooerts on 0-4) at New
York (Gooden 0-1), I . J~ p.m
Texas {Wan 2-1) m Balumore &lt;Erkk.son 1-1), J · J~ p m
Seanle (Hu chcock l -0) at Milwaukee
(Sone• l -3 ), 2:05p.m.
Caltfornto. (Abbon 0 3) at Chacugo
(Fernandez 1-1 ), 1 05 p·m

»:
16

Western Conrerence

Monday's gamt
Utalr m Pm tl.md, 10 lO p rn (TNT)

They played Saturday

Ium

"''Y

Ul~h n Portland
The)' played Saturda)'
Port land ::11 Utah. 10.10p m (TNT)

Today's games
New York (Iones 0- 1) .1t Pit tsbu rgh
(Wagnet ) -I ), I J~ p m.
f! htl adelph tu (M WaiiH1m s 0- 1l at
CINCINNATl (J ,Itvt s 0-0). 2 I "i p m
. Mo ntre nl (Ru ~t er 1- 1) at Co l or :~ d o
(Rekar 1- 1), 1 0~ p rn
Chtcogo (C:l&amp;UI Io 0-2) at Los Angeles
(Park 2-Ql. 4 0~ p m
Hou ston (KII r:: 2-2 ) at 1':;a n Ot eg o
{U crgm.1n 2- 1), 4 05 p m
Flond.1 (Ha mmond 1-lJ at San Fran
cisco (VanLandingham 0 4 ). 4,05 p rn
At la nta (Ghmne 1- l) l! t Sa L o u r ~
{Stott Iemyre I· I). !4. O'i p m

Tuesday's game
Boston at Flondn, 7 30 p m, af neces-

, ...... ,

Ti.g ers blast Athletics; Brewers and Orioles among ·defeated ·

"I had my back to the play,'"
Coleman saod. "I was pockillg._up the
third base coach (Marc mlmbard) ·
and his hand motions were for me togo home. I thought the ball was
thro ugh the guy's legs.
"! turned around and I saw the ·
guy holding the ball. I was surprised
that he would send me when the ball"'
didn't leave the mfield. We talked.•
ahout n. He acknowledged the fact
that he was a little excited over there'"
at third base. It carne at a crucial time ·
in the ball game. "
'"

Meigs records 10-5
over Ravenswood
. win
.

"It's just not corning as natura?ly

8s it has," said Hershiser. "But I just

body out in front

l n 0 ther AL SCtIOn,

..

sa

~ames.

have to keep working. If it doesn't
come around, you get traded."
Hershiser's sense ofhumor hun't
lost any zip, and apparently, neither
. has his fastball.
·
"Earlier this season he was rushing a· bit," Indians lfanager Mike
Hargrove said. " He was gerting his

eighth.
Branson followed with anothe~
si ngle, and the Reds then ran them 0
selves out of their only threat. Lenny
Harris hit a slow grounder to firsr
baseman·Kevin Jordan that went for_
an infield smgle, but Coleman continued running around third and was
easily out at the plate.

who broke up Grace's perfect game starts.
in \he sixth and had two of Cincin"This guy's been through the
nati 's three hitJ;. "If we want to.win, wars, if you want to kn ow the
we've got to put it alllogether."
truth," manager Jim Fregos1 said.
Grace kept them a disjointed "He's come back from two or three
team by striking out six, walkipg one arm surgeries. He had a little arm
and allowing three singles. Ricky .soreness last year. He spent the winBottalico pitched the ninth to com- ter at our rehab center in Flbrida and
plete the Phillies' first shutout of the worked out every·day."
season and get his seventh save.
·Grace, 25, had four operations on
It was as well as Grace has his pitching elbow from 1991 -93,
thrown in his seven major-league anot 's
o'der was tenderlast season after his call-up to the majors. He
has gone more than seven mnongs in
three of his five starts this season.
His first career appearance
Roush and Chad Burton a double
against
the Reds provided his most
each, and George, Ca"::t:s leland,
memorable moments. He retired the
Qualls and Au It all add
si ngle.
Chris Easthome was e starter first 16 batters and was aware of the
and"-r for the Red Devils pitch- perfect game in progress when Braning the first five innings. Ben Queen son hit a one-hop comebacker that
went the final two innings. The pair deflected off the pitcher 's glove for
,
combined to strike out five walk an infield single.
"The
ball
came
up·
real
quock
off
three and give up II hits. Queen led
Ravenswood at the plate with a pair the turf," Grace said. "It's a ball you
of songles. Easthome added a double really should gel if you field your
and a si ngle and Romeo added his posotion well. l dodn't. I followed
through a little too much. It just went
home run.
ofr
my glove: one of those. things."
Innine l2tilb
He
got over the disappomtment
Mcigs ................ 300-00 I-6= 10-11 -2
Ravenswood .......020- 100-1=5- II -3 quickly and got tmck to getting outs.
No one JOise reached until Vmcc
WP - George
walked with two outs on the
Coleman
LP - .Easthome

,

Pomeroy • Middleport • o.lllpolls, OH • Point Plutant, WY ·

•'

'TORONTO (AP) - Ore I Her:
shiser· IiguRs he's still not quite
; throwing lhe way he'~ capable. He's
getting closer, however.
Hershiser scattered eiJht hits in
' Jeven innings Friday night and the
. Clevelan-(; Indians beat the Toronto
·,Blue Jays 6-3 for their 12lh win in 14

Hampton's wild pitch in the sixth u
San Diego won its sixth straight and
improved to 16-7. iiS best stan ever.
At Jack Murphy Sradiurn, Tirq
Worrell (2-0) relieved Fernand9
Valenzuela after five innings and
allowed one hit and one walk in two
innings. Trevor Hoffman pitched a
(See NL on B-3)
;

Coon Field.
In other garnes, San Diego beat
Houston 3-2, Florida beat San Francisco 3-0, Atlanta beat St. Louis 6l, Pittsburgh ,beat New York 10-6
and Los Angeles beat Chicago 1-0.
Padres J, Astros 2
Ken Caminiti went 3-for-3 and
scored the winning run on Mike

( ~.~128, 1998

liershiser's pitching helps Indians hand Blue Jays 6-3 IQss

•

Grace's pitching helps Phils notch 2-0 victory over Reds
By JOE KAY

•

•

•bod

,

Over 140 Styles
To Choose From

~ ~--------------~--------~~~----.
I'
I

Auto racing
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) ;
Ernie lrvan won .his first pole since
a serious crash over 20 months ago,
taking the top spot for today's Winston Select ·soo.
·
Irvan's fast lap of 192.85.5 mph
was just good enough to relegate
Robert Yates Rac mg teammate Dale
Jarrett to the outside of the front row
woth a lap of 192.560 at the 2.66mile Talladega Superspeedway.
Meanwhile, the latest uttcmpt by
NASCAR to gain some education '
about what its teams are doipg with :
their equipment proved sotething of l
1
an embarrassment.
After qualifyong,
ASCAR
impounded the Ford of Irvan and the ,
Chevrolet of fourth-place Sterling l,
Marlin for the stated purpose of get- 1
ting some horsepower readings.
1
In testing lrvan's caf, Gary Nelson - the Winston Cup director for
NASCAR - slipped the ' clutch,
bringing a puff of black smoke and
sparks from the car's tailpipe. The
clutch broke and the engine· may
have been damaged, said Robert
Yates, lrvan's car owner.
Nelson actually went througJttt-oe
gears twice before the computer
that was registering and analyzing
the results suddenly went b!ank:

l

�•

In the NBA playoffs,

:funct.v. ~128, 119&amp;

Su~y. April 28, 11fi

'
Pomeroy • Mldd~ • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt,
WV

•

.-..

DIVISION CHAMPION - Bidwell won the
foUrth-grade boys' division crown In the Bidwell
Summer Baseball Association's Rinky·Dink Tour·
nament. Kneeling l,n front are (L-RJ Brandon Coe,

Webster Swain, Adam Schultz and
Standin!l are coach Darrell Shaw, Jarod
Chris Brown, Donnie Johnson, coach Ed Swisher and Roger Burke, the team's trophy sponsor.

In the NHL Pfayoffs,

Penguins beat Capitals 4-1;
Jets an·d· Ranger_
s also w·n
By The Associated Press
In Saturday's games, it was
A loss by Detroit and vil:tories by Boston at Florida, Philadelphia at
Pittsburgh and the New York Tampa Bay, Toronto at St. Louis, and
Rangers put all three ieams in the Colorado at Vancouver. Philadelphia,
_same position going into Game 6 of St. Louis and Colomdo lead their
their opening-round NHL playoff first-round series 3-2, while Florida
series: leading 3-2 with the next leads 3-1.
game on the road.
Chicago has already advanced to
On Friday night, the Red Wings the second round with a 4-0 sweep
lost to Winnipeg 3·1, the Rangers over Calgary. .
.
defeated Monireal3-2, and the Pen·
Shannon, Dave M~
·on and
guins downed Washington 4-1 .
Alexei Zhamnov scored f he Jets,
Detroit_,Pittsburgh and New York who are moving to Phoenix f~r
had their chances to advance-to the t~eir .sea~on ends. D_ino Ciccarelli
second round with road victories Sat- scored for the Red Wings, who are
urday, but a loss at that point would seeking their first Stanley Cup since
force them to play a deciding Game
1955.
7 at home next Tuesday.
"No one ever said this was going
Nikolai Khabibulin made 51
to· be easy," Detroit goalie Chris
saves as Winnipeg avoided elimina- Osgood said. "We're not upset, ,
tion at Detroit.
.
because we played a great game . .
"Our goal tonight was to get to Give them all the credit."
Game 6, and we did that. thanks to
At Pillsburgh, Mario Lemieux
alittlebit of luck and a lot ofNiki," scored his first goal of the series and
Jets forward Keith Tkachuk said. "I Washington coach Jim Schoenfeld
don't know how he did it tonight. was escorted from the ice for his own
That was amazing."
safety.
The Red Wings outshot the Jets _ Ken Wregget 'stopped 39 of 40
12-3 in the first period, 20-4 in the . shots as the Penguins, who lost the
second and 52-19 for the game. But first two games, became 1he first
Khabibulin refused to let Winnipeg team in the series to win on home
lose.
icc.
"I guarantee that's one of the best
" Ken Wregget was the best playgames you'll ever see a goaltender er on the icc- by far. " said S~hoen­
play, " Jets forward Darrin Shannon feld, who was pelted with trash as he
said. "You hear a lot of talk about left the ice with I :05 remaining after
great games by goalies, but this was gelling into an altercation with Penabove any of that. Niki was unbe- guins assistant coach Bryan Trottier.
lievable."
Schoenfeld accused Pillsburgh

coach Ed Johnsto'n ,f semjing out
Alek Stojanov to fig ilM3rk Tinordi. Johnston was ang that Capitals'
enforcer Craig Ber e played a
power-play shift with Washington
down 4-1.
"He said we sent somebody out
there (to fight) ... I've never -done
that in 40 years," Johnston said.
" But at the same time, you've got to
back up your boys."
Lemieux, ejected 1n the second
period of the Penguins' (our-overlime victory in Game 4, got Pittsburgh started in Game 5 with a goal
at 8:36 of the first period . .
" It's obvious the Caps are a team
in desperation," Lemieux said. "It
got ugly at the end. I think they're
frustrated. They know we ' re going
down there (today) with the idea of
ending it."
The Rangers, who had lost their
·last four playoff games at home,
snapped the. streak with a strong
showing at Madison Square Garden.
Brian Leetch and Alexei Kovalev
Scored in the first four minutes of the
third period to give New York a 3-0
lead. The Canadiens scored twice in
the last 14 minutes and stormed the
net in the final seconds, but couldn 'I
get 'the tying goal.
"Leetch's goal . was huge,"
Rangers .defense man Jeff Beukeboom said. "Getting a goal early in
the third period gave us a chance to
gain momentum."

Will Camby stay atUMass or
seekpotential millions in NBA?

By TERESA M. WALKER
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Marianne Morris took advantage of
early calm winds to shoot a 4under-par 68 Friday and take a onestroke lead after. the opening round
of the $600,000 Sara Lee Classic.
Starting onthe back nine, Morris
grabbed three of her four birdies
before making the turn, after which
gusty winds prevented her, and just
about everybody else, from getting
any more.
"The wind was just howling in
our faces," Morris said. "It's hard
because ttie wind keeps switching
directions. I'd be setting up over the
ball, and I mean I probably switched
clubs four or five times then because
the wind either died or blowed harder."
Catrin Nilsmark-Wickberg, Shelley Hamlin and Robin Walton all
shot 69 and were a stroke ahead of
Michelle Redman, Amy Benz ,
Martha Nause, Helen Alfredsson
and Meg Mallon.
'
Mallon and Alfredsson were the
only aftetnoon starters to finish
among the leaders. ·
With windy conditions expected
through the weekend at · the Hermitage Golf Course, Morris didn ' t
plan to spend much time practicing
before Saturday.
·
"I won't hit a lot of balls. In this
wind, it's hard to keep your balance, ·•.
and it's real easy to lose your tim-

•

utes before fouling out and e~changing insults with Scottie Pippen.
•
"We did a good job of containint
him, but he took himself out of tiMI1
game with fouls and found l)imsel(,
on the bench. We're very foltumit~
that they lost their cool before
lost ours," Chicago coach Phil Jack: .
son said.
•
' Sonics 97, Kines 115
,
Seallle scored the first · eight
points of,the game, led by I~ with
2:13 left in the first quarter and lcept
the Kings out of it the l:""t of the way.
The SuperSonics, trying to, over-·
come the biller disappointment of
first-round failures the past two sea'"
sons, won their fifth straight playoff·:-opener. Game 2 in this series - as • '
it is with every series that o~
F~iday - will be today.
•; '
"I thought we played very, verY'' •

we•

TWO-TlME CHAMPS- The Repton, a fourthgrade glrla' bllsketball18am taking playera from
Waahlngton and GI'MI'l Elementarles, posted a 51 regular·season. record to win Ita division
before winning Ita division title In the Gallipolis
Rloky-DI.nk Basketball Tournament From left to

(See PLAYOFFS on B-5)'~
'

~

FARLEY'S FISH FARM
CASH,
72421

~

HOf'ICe Grant had IS points and 13 .
rebounds and Anfemee Hardaway
had 18 points. Shaquille O'Neal had
21 points and shot just 3-for-10 from
the foul line.
.
"I don't think point differential
has anything to do with these games.
Every game is diff~rent," coach Brian Hill said, mindful of his team's
47-point victory over the Celtics last
year in the playoff opener before
they lost the second game at home.
"We know what happened against
Boston, and we don 't want to experience that again."
Grant Hill led Detroit with 21
points and II rebounds. Allan Houston had 19 and Joe Dumars 14.
"I mean it's not like this is some
devastation that we lost to the Orlando Magic," Detroit coach Doug
Collins said. "We just lost a game.
My guys want to win, but we're the
seventh seed and they're the second.
They coasted to 60 (victories) and
we scratched to 46. I mean, is anybody surprised?"
Spurs 120, Su115'98

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San Antonio began pulling away
in the second quaner, opening the
period with an 18-10 run. Del
Negro's layup at the l)alftimc buzzer
gave the Spurs a 58-44lead. and they
led by at least 20 through most of the
second hal f.
. "To win championships, you
have to play good team ball," said
David Robinson, who had 28 points
and six rebounds. "Everyone helped
and contributed. This .was just a stepping stone. Our biggest test will be
Sunday because Phoenix is not going
to lie down."
A frustrated Charles Barkley led
the Suns with 26 points on 7-for-•17
shooting. Kevin Johnson added 14
points. but the Suns shotjust42 per·'
cent to the Spurs' 62 percent.
"I'm glad this game is ove(,"
Barkley said. "I wish I'd had a towel on the bench to throw in."

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Jlts"bru a;-....~ u .I • Page 85

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wen," said Nate McMillin -of the
Softies. "I thought we got • linle
winded in .the second half, but we
withstood every run they took at us."
Mitch Richmond led Sec;ramcnto
Vfith 18 points but shot just 4-for- 1'3
ft-om the field and was hel&lt;l sooreless
in the pivotal opening quarter. During the regular season, he averaged
19 _points - 4.1 below his average
- m Sacramento's 0-4 effon against
the Sonics.
"lltey play me as well as anybody in the league," Richmond said.
"11'~ not always the first guy to you.
Sometimes it's their help defense.
But I still like our chanc~. "
Payton, the NBA's steals leader,
had four of Seattle's 10 steals. 1lte
Kings committed 23 turnovers and
30 fouls.
Magic 11%, Pistons 92
right are Brlanne Wlllla, Mallory Rodgers, Elisha
Orlando squandered an early 13E1111ns, Felicia Baird, Marlen Dey, NlkkL McKin- ' pomt lead, then scored 65 points in
nl.., Holly Vanco, Klllly Abraml and Whhney the second half to pull away from a
.
Williams. Behind them Is coach Mike Dey. Play- halftime-tie.
er Karl Adklnli dldn'1 make the photo session.
Dennis Scott made six threepointers and finished with 23 points,

Fish -For Pond Stocking

Morris leads
Sara Lee
Classic

Northampton all quoted a source as was eager to see ·what his friend ,
saying Camby would skip his senior Allen, would do.
season.
UMass, ranked first in the nation
he doesn' t know.
Two of Camby's teammates, for most of the season, lost to evenThe college basketball player of
the ye~r said Friday he hasn 't decid- junior guards Edgar Padilla and tual champion Kentucky 81-74 in the
ed whether to enter the NBA draft Carmcler.Travieso, said they thought NCAA semifinals. Camby had 25
and skip his senior season with the Camby would _enter the draft.
points, eigh~ rebounds and six blocks
"We know he's been hounded a in that game . During the season,
Massachusetts team he led to the
NCAA tournament Final Four this lot, so we don't bring it up unless he Camby averaged 20.5 points. 8.2
wants to talk, and then we tell him rebounds and 3.9 blocks.
year.
Camby is expected to announce what we think," Travieso told the
The Minutemen were eliminated
hrs plans at a campus news confer- Union-News of Springfield on Fri- in the NCAA quarterfinals a year
ence Monday in Amherst. Published day.
earlier.
reports Friday said he had decided to
"As a senior (next season), I'd
enter the draft.
love him to stay. It would he super --Sports briefs-..;. ing, " she said.
·
"I haven 't made up my mind," to play with him." Padilla told the
With the seven-year veteran still
Hockey
.
Camby said Friday in an interview Union-News, "but it's his decision.
looking
for her first victory, Morris
VIENNA, Austria (AP)- Valeri
with New England Cable News in If he wants to leave, I wish him
doesn
't
want to mess with what's
Karpov; who plays for the Anaheim
his hometown of Hanford, Conn. well. ...
workirig.
She's still trying to get used
UMass officials denied knowl- · Mighty Ducks, scored the tiebreak- to t~e idea of leading a tournament
"It's a
hard decision.':
ing goal with 2 112 minutes to play
The 6-foot-11 center can buy edge of Camby's plans.
and Russia beat Canada 6-4, putting at the end of the day.
Assistant coach James " Bruiser "
t_ime by saying Monday he'll enter
''This is the second time this year
the draft,) hen rescind that decision. Flint said he and Camby had dis- .the Canadians on the verge of elim-· I've led ... ," Morris said of her early
in at ion from the World Ice Hockey
To be eligible for the draft, he must cussed the pros and cons of e91ering
finish. She was tied for the lead twice
Championships.
·
·
declare that intention by May 12. But the draft.
at
the Standard ~egisler Ping in
1lte victory guaranteed the Rus"He said some mornings he gets
if he doesn't hire an agent, he ca"
Phoenix
before settling for a share of
sians first place in Pool A and makes
change his mind any time before the up and he wants to go, and some
20th.
them the clear favorites to win a
June 26 draft.
mornings he gets up and he wants to
Morris started off with a pair of
record
23rd world title.
"l&gt;robably the most aggravating stay," Flint said.
pars before birdieing the par-4 No.
part is people asking, 'What are you
Athletic director Bob Marcum
12 and Nos. 15 and 18.
going to do?'" Camby told New said he spoke with Camby early in
England Cable News. "And you the week and with Cali pari on Thursdon't have an answer at this point." day night.
. if he enters the draft, he'd probCamby ''is probably like a lot of
ably be one of the top thre,e picks. young people. He would like to stay
He'd also have to play many more and, at the same time, he would like
than the 37 games UMa" played last to go," Marcum said, "but you're
season.
YOVB CIIO.C:B
talking about a lot or potential
''I don't know if I'm ready to live resources.''
1996 14x70
the NBA lifestyle. I don't know if
Camby could make $9.1 million
I'm ready to compete in an 82-game over three years under the NBA's
schedule;" Camby told the television rookie salaty cap if he is the top pick
station. "There's no question in my this year.
Built by Ame-ico ~ # 1 Homebuilder/ ·
mind that I can play at .the nextl evOther possible top picks include
&amp; offered by ''The ...eoder in Affordabl4t Hawing!"
'el. 1 just have to feel comfortable Ray Allen, Connecticut's junior
.
~
. '
with it.
·
guard who declared his eligibility for
Open M-F 8:3().8:00-/Sat. til 6:00. Closed Sunday
"II's a very hard sched11ie," he the draft on Monday, and Tim Dunadded. "The travel definitely takes can, the Wake Forest junior center
.L~ at US 33 &amp; SR
its wear and tear on a player."
who hasn't said if he'll enter the
595 South of Logan
The. Boston Globe, Boston Herald draft.
"10% dn .. 2-40 moo. at 10.50% opr wlapp. cradll
and Daily Hampshire Gazelle o(
Camby said last Sunday night he
BOSTON (AP)- Will he stay or

will he go? Marcus Camby says even

depriving the Heat of their only
effective first-half offensive weapon,
and the Bulls pulled away in the third
period.
Michael Jordan finished with 35
points and Harper scored eight points
in the third period as the Bulls
outscored the Heat 25-13 to take a
79-67 lead.
The gafiiC deteriorated in the
fourth quarter as the Heat kept committing turnovers - they finished
with 28- and Mourning, Riley and
Chris Gatling all were ejected.
"We anticipated a war," Jordan
said. "Pat Riley's team is always
intimidating, or trying to be, anyway.
You can't let the lillie things get your
head out of the game, and we kept
our heads a lillie longer than they
did."
Miami center Alonzo Mourning ·
was never a factor, getting only 10
points and two rebounds in 21 min-

wv.

· NBA playoffs•.. ..:.:&lt;eo.:.::."t:::.::inued::::.:..:rro=.m.:.B-4.:.:..)_· - - - - - - - - -

. I

_Bulls, Sonics, Magic and
Sp~rs win first-round games ~
By CHRIS SHERIDAJ(
AP Baablball Writer
' 1lte first round of the NBA playoffs is sup] to have a mismatch
or two. On
second night of the
postseason, i loo~ed more like four.
All four f Friday night's games
ended wit · lopsided scores, and
there wasn't even a closely contested fourth quarter in the bunch.
The Chicago BuUs followed up
their 72-win regular season with a
·102-85 victory over Miami in a testy
• game featuring eight te.chnical fouls,
three ejections and a few choice
words afterward from Pat Riley
"This whole thing should be
~bo~t equality, even though it's not,"
Riley said. "They won 72 games, we
won 42. But it's still two teams who
want it just as badly. That's the
absurdity of it.
"One team gets (36) free throws,
the other team gets (15). It's going to
be. hard to win. 'fhllt's not a complaint, it's reality."
On a night when the home· team
won by an average of almost . 18
points, the closest final score was at
Seattle - even though the Sonics
opened an 11 -poi nt lead in the first
quarter and led by at least seven the
rest of the way in a 97-85 victory
over the Sacramento Kings.
Gary Payton scored 29 points in
45 ~inutes and Detlef Schrempf
added 22 as Seattle got by without
the suspended Shawn Kemp.
·
Orlando got its first annual dose
of the Hack-a-Shaq defense, but it
didn't really matter as the Magic
outscored Detroit 33-17 in the third
quarter and cruised past the outclassed Pistons I I 2-92.
The San Antonio Spurs got 29
poir ;rom Vinny Del Negro and 12
poin t. and 18 assists from . Avery
Johnson as its backcoun dominated
Phoenix's in a 120-98 victory over
the Suns.
Bulls 102, Heat 85
Miami actually kept this one
close into the third quarter, but Ron.
Harper shut down Tim Hardaway,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pluunt,

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1

GAHS b_
o ys get fourth
in Fairland
track
meet
'
Wood wins tWo
events and sets
new meet
record in discus

Junior Eddie Nehus finished the
800-meter run' in 2:04.6 to get his'
victory. "Ille 4 x 800-meter relay
tell{ll (Bo Davison, Aaron Salisbury.
Kevin Walker and Nehus) won with
an 8:48.7 finish .
Second place belonged to the 4·x
PROCTORVILLE Gallia
Academy's boys' track team finished I()().meter relay team (Mike Fisco,
third in the Fairland Boys' Invita- Jeff Mjtchell, Bert Craig and Adam
tional. Friday at Fairland High .Clark finiShed in 46.8 seconds).
Taking third was Salisbury in the
School.
I
,600-meter
run (5:06).
· The host Dragons outpaced
Finishing'fourth were Mitchell in
Chesapeake 133-92. The Blue Devils, who finished with 71 112 points, the 200-meter dash (:24.6) and Allen
··
were followed by Coal Grove (64), · Enyan in the shot put (41-8 .5).
Fifth-place
finishes
were
recordPiketon (51), Ironton (43 112) and
ed by the 4 x 400-meter relay team
Franklin Furnace Green (34).
Of the Academy's four winning (Fisco, Dan Magnussen, Walker and
performances, Burt Wood had two of N.ehus .finished in 3:53.5), Bob Magnussen in th'e 3,200-meter run
them.
(
11 :50.9), Clark in the 100-meter
In the discus, the 6-foot-1, 230pound senior turned in a 167-foot, dash (: 11.9) and Davison in the 800six-inch effort to · break the meet meter run (2: 12.7).
Coming in sixth were Clark in the
record (163-2) he set on May 3,
200-meter
dash (:24.9) and Craig in
1995. He turned in a 56-fooi, fourthe
100-meterdash
(:12.1).
inch effo£! in the shot put.

Pillsbury donates
$3,500 to URG track
fund-raising effort

'

For all the criticism Cooper must take, he also deserves credit when it is
I .
-RIO GRANDE -The Pillsbury- -. walkway.
due. The draft was an impressive showing o(Cooper's football team. This is
Contributing Gallia County resipartrcularly true when you consider his Heisman Trophy-winning tailback Company Foundation recently contributed
$3,500
toward
the
Univerdents
include Herbert L. Bush, the
Eddi e George was taken after two other Buckeye players. Three of the fir.st
sity
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
ComHolzer
Clinic Foundation, James
14 players chosen were wearing scarlet and grey last year.
munity
College
track.
fund-raising
and
April
Magnussen, and the Rio
I wonde r how many high school stan will now look towa.rd Columbus
effort, bringing total contributions to Grande Elementary PTO. Contribusimply because of the exposure Ohio State receives from the draft.
.
tors who have not given pcnnission
Now if he can just beat Michigan, win the Rose Bowl, and win a nallon- $139,881.
"Pillsbury
has
a
long
history
.of
to publish their names are not listed.
al championship, all will be right with the world in Ohio.
community
involvement
toward
Eighty,eight ·bricks have been
Sam Wilson, Ph.D. Is an aoaoclate proleoaor of hlatory at tha Unlvartlty of
Rio Grande. An avid fan ol all sports- and a near maniacal follower ol baekat- youth," said.Tim Dill, manager of the sold outside of the five-county distlaiL- he is a nativa.ol Gary, Ind., and a graduate ol tndi1111 Unlvortlty- which Wellston-based plant. "Giving kids a trict to alumni and others, 28 wall
should tell readers somathhig about where hie head (and Hoo1Ior heart) Is.
· · ' Iovin' lift' is our message in giving . panels have been dedicated to corfoundation money in our communi- porate gifts such as the Pillsbury
ties."
contribution, and 36 contributors
.With one week to go in the "Hit have given donations.
' the Bricks" challenge to residents, 83
For more infonnation about cor: .
By BEN WALKER
have
been
sold
in
porate
giving or the "Hit the Bricks"
engraved
bricks
NEW YORK (AP) - Mill Gas·
"I must 've. been better than I
the following counties: Jackson, 14; campaign, call Bob Haner, director
ton. who had the most' Hall of Fame . thought I was," he said in January.
Vinton, I; Gallia, 63; Meigs, 0; and offoundaliM relations, at245-7222.
About 40 family members and
wmnmatcs and managers in baseball
Mason,
five.
Brick-giving envelopes can be
friends were with Gaston'at a !OOth
history, d icd Friday, three months
Over
the
P"!!l
week,
Jackson
respicked
up in the reception areas of
after becoming only the eighth major birthday party, during which he got
ident
Sarah
P.
Mutzig
purchased
an
the
Jackson
-Vinton Journal Herald
leaguer to turn I00 years old.
up and sung, "Take Me. Out to the
engraved brick for the proposed and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
Gaston. who pitched from 1924- Ballgame." Yankees owner George
34. died in his sleep at a rehabilitaSteinbrenner and longtime Red Sox
Sports briefs
ti on ce nter in Hyannis, Mass., near e&lt;ecutive Lou Gonnan,were among
his Cape Cod home. in Marstons those who regularly sent cards.
Baseball
against him .
Mills, nephew Don Lyons said.
Of the 14,0Q0-plus players to
MILWAUKEE
(AP)
-A
heckAndy Johannsen, 26, of Milwau" He just decided it was time. appear in the majors, just ·eight
ling fan who was poked and slapped kee, is seeking unspecified damages
After he hit his IOOth, he said l)e was made it to 100. Gaston was the only
tired," Lyons said. "He'd taken a lit- one, however, to play Ipyears in the by California Angels designated hit- in excess of $5,000, plus legal costs
ter Chili Davis at County Stadium in the civil suit filed in Milwaukee
tle spill rece ntly, .and was in recov- big leagues.
last summer has filed a lawsuit . County Circuit Court this week.
ery.
" He was watching the Red Sox
gam e last Sunday, and I wid him
when he got better, he could come
home," Lyons said . " He said to me,
'I don ' t want to come home, I want
to go home."
) '
Funeral arrangcmCl)ls arc pending. Se rvices will be held in Bradento n. Fla.·. where he lived before moiLing to Massachusetts a few years
ago, and he wi ll be buried next to his

Gaston dies at 100

wi fe in Tampa.

Bengals re-sign
two players and
get West Pointer
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Ci ncinnati Bengals re-signed two
players and signed another college
free agent, their 18th, on Friday.
Defensi ve back Leonard Wheeler and guard Scoll Brumfield each
signed for one year. Tenns were not
· disclosed.
,
Wheeler, a fifth-year player, had
2 1 solo tackles last season. He was
an unrestricted free agent.
Brumfield, a fourth-year player,
started a career-high II game last
year, He wa.s a restr_icted free agent.
Both have spent 'their ~ntire NFL
careers with Cincinnati.
The Bengals also signed Joel
.Davis, a 6-foot-5, 310-pound guard
from Army, who will not be available for the 1996 season.
" He certain ly would have been
taken last week in the NFL draft if
not for his military obligation," said
Bengals scout Jim Lippi~coct. ." '!Ve
li~e' his patential, and we ~ wllhng
to wait uritil he 's fully avatlable to
us."

• FREE Activation.
•

• One Cent
Bag Phone
...

• Installed Car
Phone $39.95

•

RIO GRANDE ·- Rio Grande's softball team split a Mid-Ohio
Conference doubleheader with visiting Findlay,. winning 10-2 before
• ~ losing 4-3.
·
·
:: In the first game, Brenda Brady tossed a two-hitter, struck out four
· and walked one. Also fueling the Redwomen's victory were Lori
, • .PhilpoCs. 3-for-3 hitting, which helped her score three runo.
•
o:\ddtttonal first,garne offense was' provided by Shellie Weinter, who
::! hit two triples and had tWfl RBis. Shelly Rhienfrqnk had two RBis,
; • while Melisa Sisson and Philpot each had one RBI.
. ,•
In the second game, Philpot took the loss, as she gave up eight hits,
•, walked three and struck out one.
,,! Sisson's 2-for-3 hilling yielded a triple and a single. Brady and Bil&gt; li McGhee each had an RBI.
.
The Redwomen (13-11 overall &amp; 7-9 in the MOC) hosted Tiffin
., ·. Saturday in their last home game of the year.

:!

••

. It

.. : · . Any player at least 50 years old is eligible to play in this tourna. ment, which will feature a four-player scramble fonnat. The entry fee
, , fo.r a Cliffside menberis $25. Non-members must pay $35.
·• ·
~purpose of the event to raise money for sun covers for the golf
carts. The CLGA, which donated nearly $1 ,000 for these covers in
.1995, plans to donate $550 this year.
,
For more information, call Sue Burnett at 446-1349 orAvalee
Swisher at 446-1085 or 675-4831.

.,: ;Meigs football team

to hold
;;:golf tournament on May 11

ATHENS

. 385-11954

..Cage camp set for mid-June
GALLIPOLIS - "Ille Gallipolis Area Ba.iketball Camp, a camp ·
1: 14! now open to boys entering grades 4-12 in the fall, will run from June
tO'June 20 and be .heJd at Gallia Academy High School.
GOSt is $60 if registration materials are turned in on or before
· ~!.lJ~trtJ:'S Those registering after June 5 must pay $65.
11 takes $15 of the total amount to pre-register. The remainder w.ill
1~ ~ : · oe due on the camp's first day.
·
·
\()$~~;:.,~~~~· which will be run by Blue Devil varsity head coach Jim
r
his staff, will offer instruction in shooting, ballhandling
dribbling, offensive and defensive fundamentals, prizes for com·
:::pretlltion winners, a camp T-shirt, refreshments, drawings for priies and
. guest speakers.
From July I to July 3, the "Baby Blue" camp will be open to all
entering grades 1-3 in the fall.

:+

yQUnger," said Tes verde, tile top
quarterback on the depth chart. " I
came in here yesterday for the ftrst
time, and everywhere I loOked the
suys were laughing, joking around,
~miling.

"This facility isn'l as good as the
one we had, yet we're still walking
~with smil~s. We're enjoying
11," Testaverde satd.
The 10-ye~ veteran craftily
deflected questions about last year,
insisting that the emphasis is on a
fresh beginning and tbat looking
back at the team's tortured extradition from Cleveland would only ~
a digression.
"Last year was something that
was tough for us, but that's behind
us," he said. "We're here with a new
attitude, it's a new year and we're
gomg to !earn new .stuff for a new
·Season. I m not gotng to d'\'ell on
last year because we want to go forward."
The mini camp will run through
May 10, but the rookies- includ-

ing top pick Jonathan Ogden- will ·
be excused after three days.
'
"We just want to give the playera
the basics. We're using a new system
on offense and a new system on
defense," said COifh Ted"Marchibroda, who replaced Bill Belichick
durin.g the offseason. "This is mostly .an educ~tiona_l thing be~ause
we re operattng wtthout pads.
Marchibroda formerly coached
the Balhmore Colts, so he knows too
well that pro football is very important to the city and that the Ravens
will be responsible for rekindling a
tqulition that ended when the Colts
left for Indianapolis in !984.
"We'll be sure to let the players
know that this is a new beginning,
and it's what we do with that beginning .t~at makes the differency!"
Marchtbroda.satd. "This town has a
wtnmng tradition and we expect to
win."
.The player most delighted to
have escaped from Cleveland is .
wide receiver Andre Rison, who

turned off Browns fans with some of
the comments he llllde after it wu
detennined that the franchise wu
moving 10 Baltimore.
"As soon as the clock in the final
game last year read 0:00, it was over
for me and Cleveland forever,"
Rison said. "I'm more than excited:
I feel revived, like 1 want to play
agam and win again."
The process began Friday at2:SI
p.m., when free agent kicker Orris
Macinnis became the first phiyer to.
walk onto a football field as a member of the Baltimore Ravens. lfis
teammates followed, and the ftrst
team workout soon got underway.
"It's needed. Minicamp will
bring us back togethe'r as a group and
help make us a family," Rison said.
"You can't. ask for more than that."
He could, however, insist upon.
better looktng uniforms.
"It will not be like this for long,
I can guarantee that," he said. "If 1
have to, I' II get a crayon· or something to put some color on it." .

I

I

FINA reduces Volkers' suspension to one year
"Mr. Volkers is pleased that
FINA has decided to accept the arguments and calls for leniency in his
appeal from the original decision,"
Volkers' laywers said in a statement
'in Sydney, Australia.
Volkers admitted his guilt when
the
lest was

LONDON (AP) - Australian
swim coach Scott Volkers's two-year
suspension was reduced to one year
by the sports' governing body on Friday. ·
Volkers was banned by FINA for
giving world champion Samantha
Riley a headache tablet containing a
prohibited substance at the world
short-course championships in Brazil
last December.
He appealed on grounds that the
punishment was excessive.
Riley received only a warning.
Volkers cannot coach Riley, the
fanner world I()(l.meter. breaststroke
record holder, at this year's Olympic
Games in Atlanta.
He can attend the Olympics as a
private citizen, but must stay in the
stands and cannot talk with Riley
anywhere near the pool or nearby

revealed in February.
fie said he did noc know the tablet
He said Riley, 23, had been suf- had a banned chemical in it although
fering a bad headache for several FINA ruled the substance was not
days in Rio de Janiero, where she set performance-enhancing .
world short·course records in the
Riley received a stern warning
I00-meter and 200-meter breast- from FIN A but no otber penalty so
stroke, and that he had given her a . she is clear to swim for Australia in
· killer.

1

FINA secretary Gunnar Werner
said Friday that the federation's
executive bureau, in a mail ballot,
voted to cut the ban in haif.
"My guess wouldbe that the .dif- '
ference between the Samantha Riley
sanction and two years was a little
too big for many of the bureau mem·
bers,"·he said by telephone from his
office in Sweden. "That might be the
main reason. Another could be that
Scott Volkers was sanctioned by
..Australian Swimming."
· Under the tenns of the suspen·
sion, Volkers is allowed to coach in
Australia but not internationally.
· The ban on coaching at any international competition will now be in
force until February.
·
Werner said Volkers has the
option to appeal and take the case to
arbitration.
Joe "Iron Man'' McGinnity on
five occasions pitched two games in
one day.

1996 NISSAN SENTRA GXE

Air, .AM!FM cassatt~. power windows, locks, tilt,
cruise, much, much more.
MSRP $15,128.95 sule
Dlacount 2, 133;95

Expresso Pkg., 5-spd., air,dual air bags, AMJFM
cass., sport bucket seats, rear
sport wheel
·
covers.
MSRP $13,364.95 Su\e
Dl~count 1,000.00 Alter

1996 NISSAN 200 SX SE
Air, tiH, truise. PW, PL. AM/FM cassette. sport
wheels, rear spoiler, much, much more.
MSRP $15,679.95 sule
Dlac:ount 1,684.95

MSRP $16,723.95 sul.e
Discount 1,000.00

•

1996 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE

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Automatic, air, AM/FM cassette, power windows,
locks, lilt, cruise, much, much more.
MSRP $19,782.95
Discount 3,787.95

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.... I·- -,

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1990 FORD AEROSTAR VAN 15752, 7 pill., AJC, AfT, tilt,
crulae. epon whHII ..............................................:............. $8995
1994 NISSAN HARDrODY 15693, AJC, A/T, Clls., rear llldir,

.

enes - .,
•

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NOW IN STOCK

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Auto., air, AM/FM CD player, power windows.
locks, tilt, cruise, much, much more.
\
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eC""
M$RP $20,956.95 Psule
Dlacount 5,000.00
yr\1'

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23,000 miles, bal. of fact warr., sport wheela ... :............ $10,816
. .1995 TOYOTA TACOMA #5846 4iC4, 14,00Q mr., balance of ,
factory warranty bedHner, mr alldtr,
AM/FM, air bag .................................................................. $13,9Q6
1994 DODGE CARAVAN SE, 7 pltttngtr, V6, AfT, A/C, tilt,
cruise, Cllaettl, P.W, PL, CUitom wllttls ...................... $13,450
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER $E 15849,7 pill., VI, AfT, A/C,
tilt, crulu, c111., PW, PL. P. mirrors, custom whttlt ... Sta~
1994 DODGE CA~VAN 15851,7 !)Ill., vt, AT, A/C, tilt,
cruiH, C•isett•. cuatom whHie .....................................$10,721

99~7070

;C--.J !lw ••Pege87

1

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) Vinny Testaverde noticed the change
u soon as he walked into the Ballimore Rave111 trainina complex.
Veterans utually ~the idea of
minicarnp, which is relllly no more
tlwt repetitive drills that drutically
cu_t into ti~ on the golf coune. But
thtngs are different thts y-forTestaverde and his t~mates, who
began a new era Fnday afternoon
when they walked onto the field for
the firs.t time.
.
"Ille Ravens, who played last
year in Cleveland as the B~wns,
don't have a logo or team colon yet.
So they wore drab unifonns consisting of white helmets and black and
white jerseys.
. Virtually every~ing associate~
wtth the Browns, tncludtng thetr
brown and orange colors and ll)OSt
importandy last year's 5-11 record,
has been purged.
""Ille new environment, the new
atmosphc!re "!akes · you feel

rooms .

·
POMEROY:.... The third .annual Meigs Football GolfTournament
:' will be held on Saturday, May II at the Meigs County Golf Course.
1
~ Tee off is 9,a.m.
.
The ~ost is $45 per person and you bring your own team. The learn
~·:.! must have a handicap of 40+ and only one team member can have a
: • handicap of under I0. The price includes lunch and beverages.
'
For more infonnation, caU Meigs football coach Mike Chancey at
992-73.0 I or 992-2158.
'

spprt whetla.........................................................................SS995

1·800·44-CELL-1

GALLIPOLIS- The Cliffside Ladies Golf Association will hold
tournament at Cliffside Golf Course on Thursday, May 9 at

. ~ • a seni,ors
. ~· noon.

:~~~A~797;·R;~;·;;;;·~~-iM;~~

110 E. State Sl

•

:·•• CLGA linkfest set for May 9

;=

.

Hall and Hili among winners
in KVD's season opener

•-.

t

.

By DAVID GIHIItURG

Redwomen split softball twinbill

1994 HYUNDAI EXCEL 15828, 2 Dr., blue, 26,000 mUea,
balance ollact. warranty, AM/FM ca11 ........:..................... $6520
1993 FORD TEMPO GL 15824, AJC, AJT, AM/FM, reer del., '
dual mlrrora .......................................................................~ .... $7400
1992.CHEVY LUMINA M5780, Wl!He, V-6 eng., tilt, cruiH,
AMJFM CII8 .......................................................................... $69SI6
1993 FORD TEMPO GL 15825, AJC, AJT, AM/FM, rtar del., dual
mlrrors ...........................................................................;...... $7550
1989 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LE 157., aDr., AJC, AfT, AM/FM
call., tilt, crulae, P. windowa...............:..............................$5995
1~3 CHEVY CORSICA LT 15821, While, A/C,A/T, AMJFM,&gt;
duel mirrors, aport whHia.............................- .................. $7900
1989 NISSAN PULSAR NX 15779, T·top, rtar del., ciCJt!:llnl,
AMJFM cass ..........................................................:............... $5995
1993 FORD i'EMPO.GL 15826, AJC, AfT, AM/FM, rear del., · .
dual mlrrors ........ ,............................................... .'................. $7950
199a MERCURY COUGAR 15721, A/C, A/T,AMIFM caas., tlh,
cruise, P. seats &amp; locks ................................................... $10,976
1993 FORb ESCORT GT·I5739, Red, AJC, aport wheels,
cruise, rear del., AM/FIIi cass .......................................... $10,475
1995 FORD ASPIRE SE 15741, a Dr., AM/FM caas., rear
spoiler, 7,000 miles, bal. ot lict. warrenty ...................... $10,225
1994 FORD TAURUS GL #5810, A/C, AlT. AM/FM caas., tlh,
cruise, P. windows &amp; locka, air bag·................................ $10,725
1991 HONDA CIVIC LX #5724, AfT, AM/FM call., P. windows,
locks &amp; mlrrors ...........'......................................................... S8995
1990 MITSUBISHI ECUPSE 15729, Red, AJC, AMIFM Clll.,
sport wheels, cloth lnt... :................. :................................... $6900
1995 HYUNDAI ACCENT 15811,4 Dr., A/C, A/f, AM/FM,
rear defroster ....................................................................... $9825
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIXSE 15795, WhHe, AJC, AfT,
AM/FM cass., tlh, cruise, power windows,
power locks ........................................:........................;.".... $10,049
1993 OLDS 88 ROYALE 15814, White, V-6 eng., PW, PL, AJC,
A/T, tilt, cruise, spt. whls .................................................. $10,415
1992 CHEVY CAMARO #5803, Red, RS, A/C, cruise, tilt,
AM/FM caae., custom whHis, dual mlrrors .... :............,.... $9120
1994 OLDS 88 ROYALE 1151106, AJC, AfT, AM/FM casa., tiH,
crulae, P. windows &amp; seatl ........................:..................... $12,650
1994 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 15762, V·6 eng., AJC, AfT, AM/FIIi
caas., tilt, cruise, P. windows &amp; locka ............................ $12,575
1994 CHEVY LUMINA EURO #5753, Red, 24,000 miles,
balance ollact. warr., Y.6, AJC, A/T, tilt, cruise, PW,
.
custom wheela ..................................................................$12,700
1993 DODGE INTREPID 15813, V-6 eng., AJC, A/f, ,t.M/FM
caas., tilt, cruise, PW, PL, rear def., air bag....................$12,475
1995 HYUNDAI ACCENT #5833, Green, AM/FM can., rear
del., balance ollactory,warranty:.......................................$9325
1988 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE 15830, Blue, A/T,
cloth Interior, AM/FM ........................................................... $2995
1989 MAZDA 626 #5838, AJC, ce11., tilt, cruise,
rear defroster ................._....................................................... $4995
1991 NISSAN 240 SK 15836, White, A/C, tilt, cassette,
rear defroster ..........:. .......................................................... $8995
1993 DODGE INTREPID 15841, White, V-6·eng, AJC. AfT, caaa.,
custom whHis ..................................................................... $9270
1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME SL 15842, AJC, A/T, cloth
Int., cualom wheela ..............;...............................................$9800
t994 NISSAN SENTRA 15744, 23,000 mi., balance of fact.
warr., A/T, AJC, tilt, cruise, cass., rear del..................., ... $10,875
1990 FORD ESCORT LX #5845, 4 speed, CIIHHt,
cloth lnrerlor.......................................................................... $3995
1994 BUICK CENTURY #5848, V-6, AfT, A!C, tilt, cruise, ABS,
cassette, P. windows &amp; locks,.custom wheels .............. $10,725
1994 FORD PROBE 15850, A/T, A/C, tilt, ABS, caasette, air
bag, custom wheels ..........................................................$11,175
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 15852, V-6, AfT, AJC, tilt,
cruise, ABS, cassette; PW, PL, custom wheels ............. $10;625
1992 CHEVYS-10 #5809, Black, cass., running boa;da,
.
custom strlpea ..................................................................... $8700
1992 GMC SONOMA N57BS, SLE Pkg, AJC, t!H, cruise, rear .
slider, custom wheels, tonneau cover, PW, PL................ $8750
1994 CHEVY LUMINA APV 15793, 7 pass., A!C, A/T, tilt; cruise,
Power windows &amp; locks ..,................................................ $13,110
t991 PONTIAC TRANSPORT 15784, 7 pall., A/T, AJC, till,
cruise, P. windows II seats .............................................. $10,625
1993 CHEVY LUMINA AF'V 15768, 1(-6 eng., A/C, A/T, CISL, P.
windows &amp; locks, tin, cruise ...........................................$12,300
1993 CHEVY LUMINA APV 15757, Red, V-6 eng, 24,000 miles,
bal. ollact: warr., A/T, A/C, 7 pass, tilt, cruise, cass...... $11 ,705
1991 FORD RANGER 15790, Whlte .........................:.......... ssm
1994 GEO TRACKER 41(4 15839, AJC, AfT, llbergl11s top,
caaaette,....... ·.·.......................................,.....:.....................~$11,300
1989 NISSAN HARDBODY #5714, Blue, AJC, ella., btd lner,
1port wheala .................... .'.....................................................$5915
1991 F()RD RANGER 15819, Red, Xi.T, cess., rear tllder, '*f
liner, aport wheels ...........................:......:............................ $6895
1992 FORD RANGER 15843, Long btd,·XLT, Clllltte,
.

.Jw

Ravens sh0W delight with new environment

Ractne -re lffiOIIg the winning driven in Kanawha Valley Draiway's
first full racing weekend of the 1996 season on April 21 .
In the Modif.&amp;:l Division, Hall took first in his 1968· Otunaro.
Among the semifinalists were Trent Harrison of Gallipolis and Kevin
Venoy.of Long Bottom.
I~ the .Pro Division, Hill won with his 1969 Cannaro. Among the
semtfilljlhSts .were Jane Cf!lley of Gallipolis.
. In !lie Jumor Dragster Division, Ciji Casto of Masoil, W.Va. took
thtrd 1n a race won by Jonathan Clay of West Hamlin, W.Va:
I ;fn other action, Street Division racing saw Don Ashbaugh of Waverly will with his 1993 Mustang. Ed Wasserbeck of Prospect won the
118-milc drag race in 4.861 seconds at 126.72 mph.

1992 CHEVY 5·10 15800, V-6 eng., A/C; tilt, cua., bed liner, ,
7995

594-4800

.

~OUTHSIDE, W.Va. - J.S0n Hall of Pomeroy and Max Hill of

CUllOm WhHI .............................................. ~ ........................ t7995

• Two Year'Agreement
Required.

POmeroy • Middleport • GalllpOala, OH • Point.Pleasant, WV

Area sports bri

WE WILL GIVE YOU THE
SHIRT OFF OUR BACK!

·

By SAM WILSON
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
Not only has the Super Bowl become an unofficial American holiday, but draft day, thanks to
ESPN's exceptional coverage, is now a must event
for all football junkies needing a quick fix in the
long months before preseason begins in July.
Even a primetime sports event like a baseball game or hockey playoffs
must take a back seat to the intense analysis, hype and second-guessing by
loot ball experts and fans on draft·day.
•
. .,.. , . , . .
Say what you will about John
Even a prlmetlme appHs' Cooper: but the man knows ~1. __ ._~,. "' :. . . ·. ent. Tius was the second year m
. event like a ba-.. (l!¥tftl. qr a row that Ohio State had three
· hockey p/ayofflf mutt . ~ 'II · first-round picks. Cooper may
back seat to thtfll'llfi~l .,..... not have figured out a way to
sis, hype and ~· beat Michigan, get to the Rose
ing by f~tba/1 .~· (ijid, Bowl, or win a national champi..,ay..
. ·:}ott
•' ·.. ·.·"·. .. .•···. . "'·•·\····
' "· "''.·.; onshtp• .but he does know how
f.anson d'Ttlft. ...
' . · to recrmt some of the best foot1 · •• 'i e
.
ball talent in the nation.
Look at the score of Ohio State players in the professional ranks. He even
convmccd Rickey Dudley, a mediocre basketball player, to pursue a football
career. The eno result: Dudley was chosen ninth overall by the Oakland
Raiders.
If Dudley had stayed with basketball, he would have had trouble nialdng
the CBA. He would not have been good enough to make any of the Big Ten
Conference all-star teams. (Please remember this was a down seaso.n for Big
Ten basketball.) Cooper helped to make Dudley one of the top professional
foothall prospects in the country.
·
I' rr a Notre Dame fan. In fact, my parents have had Irish season tickets
ror over 30 years. I even have tickets to the Irish-Buckeye game this year in
South Bend . But there was no Irish player taken in the first round . I can't
recall how many were taken in last year's draft; ·h6wever, I am fully aware
of Ohi o State's success in the draft. Wasn't Big Daddy chosen number one

Gaston played alongside Babe
Ruth. Lou Gehrig and George Sisler
·- 17 futurc Hall of Famers in all-.
wh ile with the New York Yankees,
si. Louis Browns, Washington Senators. Boston Red Sox and .Chicago'
White Sox.
"That Babe was something. V~ry
good player. ·But he was a hell-raisCf off the fie ld. I couldn't keep up
wi th him ." Gaston recalled .a day
he fore his IOOth )Jirthday·on Jan. 27.
Gaston 's li fetime record was 97164, and hiS .372 winning percentage put him ncar the bouom on the
career list. Though he twice led the
AL in :losscs. he made it into the
record books with a couple of unusual accomplishments.
daston shares the major league
mark for allowing the most hits (14)
whi le pitchi ng a shutout, and also
took pari in the most double plays
{four) by a pitcher in a game.

.a...-y, Aprtl21, 1988

Dftplte victories In tour events,

Draft day

1\Vo years ago?

Sundlty, Aprll28, 1116

·

A must event:

Wv

·

t

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PageB&amp;•Jt

1996 NISSAN QUEST XE

••

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V-6, auto., air, 7 passe~ger seating, tilt, cruise, all
power equipment.

.••.,' ·'
,

A1W CODB POR ALL omCES IS (61&lt;i)

',

I .'

MSRP $24,030.!15
Discount 4,031 .95

s,~:
•~

·1996 PLYMOUTH BREEZE
Automatic, air, AM/FM stereo, tilt, cruise,
dalrost, dual air bags .
MSRP $15,894.95 sute.
Discount 1,000.00 ~:._

Galllpolis Middleport Pomeroy Rutland
446-090.2 992-6(161 992-2133 742-2888

992·2825
lngelea Electronics
MIDDLEPORT

342·9909
119 .N, Main
89 S. Market St. 204 W. Secolld St.
LOGAN
POMEROY
NEW LEXINGTON 7634525
592·2585
Superior Elecli'Onlcs
Bllckbunla Appliance

'

Richland AYI.
.,

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1

ale

•

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"

,,
••

•

(

•

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Ohio fishing report

March ~tocking
boosts rainbow
trout numbers
in southeast lakes

Outdoors

Along the River

Sunday, April 21,1918

•

WILLY PIKE'S OmOOI LD'E

Section C

Sundly,~l28,1988

pilgrimage
to
.
.

KNOX LAKE - The lake 1 is
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hele is the weekly fishing repOrt dominated by a very strong populaprovided by the Division of Wildlife tion of largemouth bass protected by
of the Ohio Department of Natural an 18-inch minimum length limit.
This was the top B.A.S.S. tournaResources :
Soutbeast
ment lake in Ohi o during 1994.
ROSE LAKE .,..- Ne'!l'IY I ,300 Night fishing for channel catfish is
rainbow trout were stocked March very productive as well .
By JOHN WISSE .
20 to improve fishing opportunities.
Northwest
of Wildlife
The outlook for trout aQglers is ratMAUMEE &amp; SANDUSKY Division
GALLIPOLIS, Ohi.o (AP) - The
ed excellent this year. Fishing for RIVERS -River conditions may be cool spring has meant good sauger
bluegills, largemouth bass and chan- unsafe due to recent rain storms. fishing along the Ohio, Muskingum
nel catfish will also-be good to excel- Walleye fishing remains good with and Kanawha rivers in southeast
·lent. This lake is located in scenic male fish in the 14-to 22-inch range Ohio and West Virginia.
· Hocking Hills State Park.
dominating the catch. Top areas
The sauger is a river fish that
TURKEY CREEK LAKE -A include Port Meigs . to the 1-475 enjoys cool water temperatures and
release of 2,500 rainbow trout occurs bridge, Buttonwood and Side Cut a mild flowing current. It has a long .
. April 27 to coincide with the local P"rk in the Maumee; dowqtown . and .slender body with a light olive
spring trout derby. Fishing opportu- Fremont at the State Street Bridge or silver color along the sides aod a
nities again are expected to be excel- and Roger Young Park in the San- milky white color on its underside.
lent. Largemouth bass under 15 dusky. ·White bass fishing is also But it also has teeth, so it must . be
inches must be released. Excellent. improving.
handled with care.
·fishing is forecast for blue gills and
LAKE LECOMTE - The fish· Some of the best ·sauger fishing
channel catfish.
ing ·outlook is good for channel catoccurs in ltpril and ag~in in late fall
Southwest
fish, largemouth bass, bullheads and
C.J. BROWN RESERVOIR crappies. Use . minnows fished
Walleyes are numerous and present ' beneath a bobber in areas with subexcellent fishing opportunities. Most merged structure to take crappies.
fish range in size from 13 to 20 inch- Bass average 10 to 20 inc.hes in .
es with a few fish measuring up to length. Walleye_ numbers are fair
30 inches. Try the area tmmedJately with fish measuring 16to 22 inches.
below and above the dam for best
Northeast
results. The artificial reef structu~es
ATWOOD LAKE - Crappies
are good places to fish for crapptes are numerous and range in size from
now through midsummer.
·eight to I0 inches. Oood numbers of
RUSH RUN LAKE - · Boate~s largemouth bass are also present
may not use more than elect~Jc with sizes ranging from 12 to 23
motors. Use worms and larval bans inches. Some saugeyes may be takalong the edges of submerg~d plants en in spring with sizes ranging from
to catch bluegills. Many bass are pre- 14 to 28 inches.
PYMATUNING LAKE - Crapsent, but are small in size. Bass are
also protected by a J 2-to 15-inch slot pies averaging I0 inches are the rule
length limit.
here on the Ohio-Pennsylvania bor- '
Ohio River
der in late April through May. Use
The Lowell Pool and Beverly tail-· minnows with or without a bobber at
·water in Washington County is a depths of four to 12 feet for best
DOWNS 2D-POUNDER- KeJ.
good place to fish for sponed bass, results. Bluegills are numerous and
th. Veith ol Gallipolis displays
crappies, saugers, walleyes and offer good shoreline fishing. Walleye
thts 20-pound gobbler he
· saugeyes. Use cra~k baits. fished in fishing prospects are good this spring
downed on Wednesday. The bird
slack water or twJster tails m the with many fish exceeding 15 inches.
had a 10.5-inch bllard and one·areas witli current to take saugeyes
·
Inch spurs.
and walleyes. Use twister tails and
minnows in the tail water when seekOutdoor shorts
Lake Erie
ing sauger.;. Heavy woQIIed cover in
Reloaders
Walleye fishing action has
NEWTOWN, Ct. (AP) - More
. the pool holds good numbers of improved over the past 10 days with
black crappies measuring 10 to 12 nearly all action occurring in the . than 6 million shooters now are
reloading their own ammunition ,
inches.
western basin reefs. The best method
according to the National Shooting
Central
-10 use is vertical jigging with lead
Spons Foundation.
INDINN LAKE - Use small head jigs and minnows along the reef
More than one-third of hunters
minnows and jlgs around shoreline bottom during the early morning.
reload, according to a recent NSSF
cover to take crappies. The South Anglers are also vertical jigging
survey.
Bank area is a good night location · with blade baits. Some daily limit
The main reason for reloading
for anglers seeking white bass. The catches have been reported. Most of
was to save money. Shooters can
channels·and vegetated areas are best the fish appear to be male walleyes
save about 50 percent of the cost of
this time of year "!hen seeking large- weighing two to five pounds, though
their ammunition by reloading used
mouth bass. Use plastic worms or
fish up to 30 inches and
·small crank baits.
pounds are being caught.

FATIMA
PORTUGAL
•

.

Cool spring means top-notch sauger.Jishing in Oflio River
when the fish prepare for their annual spawn when water temperatures
approach 50 degrees.
Some of the region's best sauger
fishing is found in t11e Appalachian
foothills along the Ohio, the Muskingum and the Kanawha.
· The best setup for sauger fishing
is to use small lead-headed jigs fitted with a chartreuse or bright orange
twister. Many anglers use minnows

to attract larger fish. Saugers range
from 10 to 16 inches with a weight
of I to 2 pounds. Only a few fish
weigh up to 4 pounds. .
Ohio's state recorq sauger was
taken in l981 about 2)0 miles from
here in the Maumee River and
weighed In at 7 pounds. 5 ounces
with a length of 24 1/2 inches.
The best places to fish for saugers
are below dams, in warm water di sc)large areas and in stream conflu ences. On the Ohio, sauger fishing is '
best in the Gallipolis. Racine and
Belleville pools.

Ohio DOW
says first-day
turkey harvest
sets record

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PARISHONERS ON PILGRIMAGE - Twenty-eight Sacred Heart parishiOners joined by 14 others from Phlladelphlll, Boston and New
York have returned from a pilgrimage to Fatima. The group Is pictured In the courtyard of the Basilica. located to the right ol the amall
chapel which marks the slt11 of thll celestial apparition of the Blessed Moth!" In 1917. Local members making the trip, listed In no particular order, were Dr. Roger Averlon, Jane Beegl11, Sister Fldalls Bell, Anna Blackwood, Sheila Cozart, Ida Diehl, Esther Frecker, Alice and
Richard FrHman. Phyllis Hackett, Rev. Father Walter Heinz, Marie Johnson, Mr. end Mrs. Mike Lawson and children. Michael and Lar111ne,
Dr. Wilm11 Mansfield and daughter, Sarli, Patty Manzey, WlnHred Marcinko, Roxie Marcinko and childrlll), Shawn.11nd Mary, Pat Moore. Barbara Mullen, Josefln11 Myers, Elsie Sutherl11nd and Mar!JII Peco.
port for Lisbon where they boarded
a bus for the 90-mile ride north to
Fatima.
Hackett said that having Father
Heinz with them made the trip eve11
more inspirational.
"We had Mass every day in the
most unusual and spiritual places.
There were beautiful liturgies. It was
just a . really wonderful spiritual
experience -- something we'll
always remember," commented
Hackett.
She described the pilgrimage as a
"real blessing, beyond anything I
might have imagined, and felt by all

dren making the trip, of their traveling compatibility. and of their consensus of being overwhelmed by the
experience of bCing in a such a spiritual place.
Highlights of ·the trip included
celebrating Mass in the Capellhina,
the exact spot of the appearance and
another at the chapel of the Consolata Fathers, visiting the parish church
where the visionaries who saw .the
apparitions were baptized, the cemetery where their families are buried,
and going to Valinhios, the location
where the Blessed Lady appeared.
The itinerary included a trip up
of uS'~ "
·
the mountain, Loca do Cabezo,
She spoke of the five local chi I- where the angel had given commu-

nion to the three children, and a visit
to the ancient Dominican monastery,
now a museum.
Another high point for the group
was joining in' a Rosary and candlelight procession in which six gentlemen arrayed in capes carried the
miraculous statue of Our· Lady of
Fatima around the fountain of healing water located in the center of the
huge esplanade where millions of
pilgrims gather on anniversaries,
especially the days of the apparitions, May B and October 13.
There was an aU-day trip to Lisbon where the parishioners visited
the 12th century cathedral. Father
Heinz celebrated Mass at the mag-

nificent church which marks the
birth place . of Saint Anthony, and
again at Coimbra, the Carmelite
Cloister. where the only living
visionary, Sister Lucia, has resided
since becoming a nun.
The final stop before returnin~
home was at Santarem where the
Miracle of the Bleeding Host is
commemorated. A last ,iturgy was
·held there before the flight home.
As a reminder of their metnoratile
pilgrimage, the parishioners pur:
chased a statue of Our Lady of Fatima to be placed in Sacred Heart
Church.

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Along the lower Muskingum ltiver, sauger fishing is rated fair in thl:
Marietta, Devola, Lowell and Beverly pools. And in West Virginia, the
Kanawha River from Henderson t;, ·
Charleston also ·is home to good .
sauger fi shing. ·
Ohio and West Virginia share a
fishing license agreement. Anglers of
either state using their resident fishing license may fish all of the Ohio
River bordering both states, it~
embankments on either shoreline.
and up to the first riffle ur dam iri it~·
· tributaries without a non-resident
I license.

COLUMBUS ~ A rec~rd total of
2.556 wild turkeys were taken the
first day of Ohio's 31st spring wild
turkey hunting season which began
· Monday in 46 counties, the Ohio
Division -of Wildlife reported.
Meigs and Galli a counties placed
third and fourth, respectively, in the
number of wild turkeys killed on
opening day. Meigs hunters bagged
112 birds while 105 were killed in ·
Gallia County.
Last year. Meigs and Gallia
hunters took 49 and 94 turkeys the
first day of the season, respectively.
Ashtabula and Vinton counties
were first and second with 124 and
114 turkeys harves:~d. respectively.
Other comities with high numbers of
turkeys officially checked and
tagged on Monday were: Ouemsey,
98; Hocking, 91; Adams, 91; Athens,
90, and Tuscarawas, 89.
.
Seasonably warm ·weather greeted hunters early Monday as the sea- ·
son opened for a three-week period.
· The total of 2,556 turkeys represents an increase of 866 birds (51
percent) from last year's opening day
figure of I ,690.
An estimated 52,000 hunter-s are
expected to hunt wild turkeys this
year. Last year's total season harvest
of 10,892 was the I 8th consecutive
yeai of a record turkey harvest in
Ohio. The first modern day turkey
hunting season in Ohio was held in
May, 1966.

'

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sbe also toJd the prayer group of
"flmea·Sentlnel Staff
the tremendous spiritual uplifting
: POMEROY -- Two years ago a she had experienced as a result of
P.ilgrimage to. Fatima in Portugal -- her visit. After listening to her story,
:that place where three small children members became so inspired that
ia 1917 had visions of the Blessed they asked Hackett if sbe would lead
:Wolber -- was the dream· of a small them on such a pilgrimage. .
· ~osary group at Pomeroy's Sacred
Fatima is tbe small village near
Heart Church.
the BI!Silica where a mysterious figLast month that dream became ure fir.,t appeared to three shepherd
. reality for 28 of the parishioners.
children as they watched their
. · The travelers ranged in ages from flocks.
It is reported that they were ordi-·
II to 76 years, and included five
::children. Rev. Father Walter· Heinz, .nary children who could neither read
Sacred Heart pastor and the local nor write. and that they were fir.;t
surprised in 1917 by three appearancl:s of a shadowy figure who is
.• : "A real blessing, beyond referred to as the GuariJian Angel of
.: {lnyth/ng we could have/mag- Portugal. The angel's role was to
~ /ned, something that most
prepare the children for a vision of
• certainly affected our lives, • the Blessed Mother on May· 13.
: said Phyllis Hackett who 1917.
.:organized the pllgrlmsge tor
Church history records that the
, the t;ms/1 prayer group end Blessed Mother called ' for prayer
: ,Sew II expend Into something' and penance, and ·instructed the
of church-wide Interest.
shepherds to return to the Cova da
Iria for the next five months after
which time a miracle would be per.
formed as proof of her authenticity. ·
nun, Sister Pidelis BelL
. ·: For many making the pilgrimage, This was called the "Miracle of the
: it: was a trip financed through sacri- Sun" seen by 70,000 who gathered
at the site to watch as the sun danced
: ft.ce.
: · : For all the pilgrimage proved a with brilliant colors and seel)led to
,
· profound spiritual experience wor- fall toward the earth.
: !hy of whatever sacrifice had been . When the mysterious Lady first
appeared to the three children, the
'filade.
• . "A real blessing, beyond anything whole area was a barren valley of
· :we could have imagined, something fields. Afterwards a small , almost
: ~hat most certainly affected our insignific;mt, chapel was built on the .
: ~ives," said Phyllis Hackett who exact sp~lt of the apparitions. It was
: q,..ganized the ·pilgrimage for the bombed in t922 by an anti-religious
· :Small prayer group and saw it organization but was rebuilt and ' is
. :citpand into something of church- now situated in a larger open-air
- wide interest.
structure where the faithful can gath· The idea for going to Fatima er.
The story of Fatima so inspired
origi'nated during a study of spiritual
the local Rosary group that all but
places a couple of years ago.
Having been there several years two made the pilgrimage.
ago, Hackeu ·brought in some of the . .Others of the church were invited
material ~ w~ich 'told about the sig- and on March 22, the 28 members of
nificance of the apparitions .at Fati- Sacred Heart, joined by 14 ·Others
ma and ·of its subsequent develop- · from Philadelphia. -Boston and New ·
ment into a famous religious shrine . York left from the Newark. N.J. air-

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,.

READY FOR THE POT- Frank Caldwell of BidWell (right). shown
with neighbor 11nd turkey caller J.J. Miller, revoked tha FAA llcanse
of.tbla 23-pouncl tom Saturday morning In Gallla County's Springfield Townahlp ne~~r Kemper Hollow. Road. The bird, brought down
with a 12-gauge ahotgun, had a 9.5-tnch beard. (Times-Sentinel photo)
The deadline 'for photos and relatSports deadlines
ed anicles for football and other fall
Tile Gallipolis Daily Tribune. The sports is the Saturday before the
Daily Sentinel and the Sunday 7ime•·- Super Bowl.
Senlinel value the contributions their
readers make to the sports sections of
Outdoor shorts
these papers, and they will continue
Sailing a&lt;&lt;ess
to be published.
However, certain deadlines for
CHICAGO (AP) - The Community Sailing Council's second
submissions will be observed.
. The deadline for photos and relat- annual national directory of public
ed articles for basketball (summer ~K:CeSS sailing programs lists 850 that ·
basketball tuid
_t:ml~ -~II!"~ fall offer sailing instruction to the genunder the Tummer sportS deadline'j eral public, including non-profit,
. and other winter sports is the last day commercial, stale, county. high
of the NBA finals.
··
.
· school, college, military and ScoutThe! deadline for submissions of . ing progtams. ·
The 60-page booklet includes
local baseball- and soflbaii-R:Iated
photos and relalcd articles. from T- ISO new programs,
For a free copy, wrtie Lee Parks,
ball to the majon, as wet~ IS ?fher
U.S.
Sailing, P.O. Box 209, Newport,
spring and summer sports, IS tbC ~ay
. of the last game of the World Series. R.I. 02840.

'

MASS CELEBRATED - Daily Masses - e held for his perishloners by Father Waller Heinz, pastqr of Pomeroy'a Sacred Heart
Church, during tl.e.!_r WHk·long visit in Portugal.

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MEMORIAL OF PILGRIMAGE -As a remembrance
of their pilgrimage to Portugal parishioners purchased a st11tue of Our Lady of F11tima to be placed In
. s,cred HHrt Church.
•

READING THE WORD - Phyllis Hackett, who organized the
pilgrimage for Sacred Heart, participated In a b~rvice at th11
Church of the Holy Miracle of Sanblrem.

,

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·•••-·

THE ~NOINTING - Mallft at.the cflurt:hea vlalted during the pilgrimage to Portugal lOOk on apeclaii'Minlng tO the participants. Patty Maxey, left, Margie Lawaon, Mllce latnOn and Elata Southern
are enotnted by Deacon Mathieu and Rtv: Father Walter Heinz at one·of the aarvlces.

l . SPIR!TUAL EXPERIENCE -

The dilly llturglel enhanCed the lftMnlng Ot the pilgrimage to Fatima.
PIC1UNCI are Barbare Mullin, Alice and Rlchald FrMm~n, left to right, during tfie saying of •our
iatt~er• at .the church of the Holy
Miracle of Santal'llfll.
. .
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:f&amp;Jnday;
·;~~·~A~~~I;I28,~~1~11~96~~~========P~OI~m:•~oy~·~lll~d~-dl~lp~-Cl=.rt~•~G~I~III~p-~oi:II~,~OH;•;:P:ol:nt~P:Ir:•:••:nt,~W=~'V~~!:!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!,~~1~l~;=--..,~~,::l:lwi~•~P~~~ge~~C3~­

•
,

,

Pomeroy •

I

llld11rpait • Gr.pnlle, OH • Point PI runt, WV

• Sund8y, April 21, 1111

Love has been found in stranger places
I retuned.to my "~home"

Ann

ao4 wet~~ dim:tly to • linle bar

whm: they pvc

Landers

By ANN l.&amp;NDEhi
Dear Ann I .ancien: If you can
stand one more happy story on
"How I Met My Spouse," I have iL
DurinJ the late 'SOs, after a
divorce in which I lost evelydung, I
began to lose my vision llld was
unable to work. I b«ame homcles$
' and had to live in my llld Pontiac
stalion ~~~on . I did odd jobs, scrubbins out saloons and doing .anything
elsc;f could find.
In 1961, J became totally blind,
and a person I barely knew got me
into I veterans hospit.al in San fran.
cisco. I was 'there for four months,
recei~ed wonderful care and luckily
regained sight in ooe eye.

me a job. A nice-

lootinJ ~cane in for a cola and
J8l some dis!lrwe away. I turned my
one good.eye toward her and said,
"Hi! I haven' t seen a Cal for IWo
yean. You look preny 1ood to me! "
That's the way our conversation
started, and we liked each ocher right
off the bat. I loved her easy style,
and she must have liked something
about me because we saw a lot of
each other from then on.
Three months later, we had
enough money for bus.fares to Reno,
iUid Harrah's Casino refunded $5 on
each ticket. The ~10 paid for our
marriage license.
' We now have our own home Oil I
112 acres of land in God's country
and have been very happy for ~be
last33.years. Tomorrow, I will be 81
years old. - N.R. McK.
. Dear McK.: What a story! Lucky
you!! Sounds to me as if that woman
was your four-lear clover. Thanks

•

•

iL The c,P.ain ~ Je( me have it_
His bilk tumed' 0!11 ~ be a lot
worst tbu his bite. r.ow-. That
captain and I were m.med 10
months lalet', 011 Butille Day, Last
year we cele~ our SOth weddins anniveuaty. P.S. My mother, a
nwse, met my father, also a capcain,
on a dance floor in France during
World War I. They, too, were married over 50 years. -- Janet in Fort
Worth, Texas
Dear Janet: Your wonderful story
is enough to make a woman.want to
enlist. Thank you for it.
Confidential to Cry1ng My Eyes
OuJ in The Dalles, Ore.: What's
done is dpne. Dotit look back. And
P.S.: I read all 22 pages of your letter. If, in the (uture, you insist on
crying over spilled milk, please con·
dense it.

for a delightful letter. Keep n:adlng
for anolbcr one.
Dear Ann IMMters: You asked for
!etten oo how readers bad met their
spouses. I hope you wiD print this

one.
I met my husband in a .ladies'
ba&amp;hroom. in England durin! World
War U. l bad just arrived at the headquarters of the 81h Air Force as
assistant Red Cross recreation dim:tor at the. Aero Club. I was given the
morning oft' to unpack and get settied. The women were assigned to
one of the dOI'J'tiS at the famous
Wycomb Abbey Scbool.
I was wearing the red liner of my
raincoat as abathrobe and brush~ng
my teeth in the large bathroom when
I heard men's voices. •{ panicked
when I realiz00 they were coming
up the stairs. Inti) the bathroom
marched an American captain and a
British officer. They were checking
out the · electrical appliances since
we women were overloading the circuits and they were not happy about

Missionaries to Japan to speak at lbcal chu·r, . . . .

•

'

GALLIPOLIS · United Methodist lege, Neva, hu
i11vited to cbnduct witness missions
missionaries · to Japan, Neva and · been assigned wilh
in United Methodist ChurChes i•
Javan Corl, will speak on !he her husband to
Ohio, Michigan and southern Wales,
"Gospel Seed in Volcanic Ash," 8:30 Minami
District
U.K.
and 10:45 a.m., May 5 at Grace churches in soulhAn ordained clergyman in the
United Methodist Oturch.
em Tokyo by the
United Methodist Church, Javan, is
The Corls have served as United United Church. She
a lf*)uace of Heidelberg College
Methodist missionaries in J~ for · has served as
and United Theological Seminary.
40 years, workiny in the United teacher in churchHe lias also pursued graduate studies
Ch\lfCh of Christ in Japlll. (the Kyo- operated, weekday
Corl
in Butler University and the Univerdan). They are on tenninal Home kindergartens, has been. active in sity • of Michigan. He served for
Assignment in the United States ful- teaching various women's groups nearly si~ years as parish pastor in
filling an itin~ration and speaking and servee as church organisL Alpng northwestern Ohio before going to
schedule. Retirement will follow in with her husband, Neva has served J~ in 1955.
Sep~mber, 1996.
~
as interpreter for several itinerating ,
In Jap8n he has been engaged in
A graduate of North Central Col- teams of J.apanesc missionairies clwrch extension projects and pas-

.

·-

•

,.VIlli

• I

•'

Developmental center volunteers honored at
By ODIE O'DONNELL·

SANDRA WHITELEY AND GREG NEUMANN

· Whiteley-Naumann
• 9ALI.JPOLIS - Dr. and Mrs. motor learning at Teachers College,
: :oaniel H. Whiteley of Gallipolis Columbia University and is
: ~ nounce the engagement of their employed aS a physical therapist.
· "daughter, Sandra. to Greg Neumann, _ Neumann is a graduate of Leonia
: ;5on of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Neumann High School and the State Universi&gt; elf Leonia, N.J.
ty of New York. College at Oneonta.
Whiteley is a graduate of Gallia He teeeived a master's degree in
Academy High School, Ohio Uni- · environmen(al science from Ohio
versity flonors Tutorial College University and is employed by the
Department of Zoological and Bio- New Jersey Department of Environmedical Sciences and Ohio Univer- mental Protection.
si ty School of Physical Therapy. She
A September wedding is p!anned.
is completing a master's degree in

Its.

Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Dorothy Woodard,
Langsville ..
WEDNESDAY
PdMEROY -- Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM , regular meeting
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Middleport
Masonic Temple. Members to vote
on the request of Racine Lodge 461
to merge with Pomeroy and amendment to by-laws on proposed meeting place change. ·
·

ALDO AND BETTY JEFFE~IS

;:50th

•••

•

•••
GALLIPOLIS - Loaves and Fishes community meal from 2 to 4 p.m.
St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
'

...

CROWN CITY - The Sincere
Quartet singing and Victor Landon
speaking 6:30 p.m. Big Four
Church.

•••
Monday, April 29
•••

Office specil!l meeting 2:30 p.m. at
Veterans Service Office.

..

•••

GALLIPOLIS - MOMS Club,
organization for stay-home mothers,.
meeting 10 a.m. Nazarene Church
with Linda Carney speaking on
short road uips for families. Information 256-6011 or 446-4923.

through May I.

annivers~ry

, GAHANNA - Aldo K. and Beity · Sue Saunders-Jeffers of Gahanna,
., ·celebrated their golden wedding
·anniversary with a family dinner at
the New Albany Country Club,
March 17. At the dinner they were
_presented with an album of photographic and written memories compiled with the help of more than I00
family members and friends ..

Gallia ·community calendar---The Community Calendar, is
published u a free sen-ke 1o nonprofit JII'OIIps wishing to IIDDOOllCe
meelinp and special events. The
tlllendar is not desiped to promote sales or lund-nisen of any
type., lllms are printed as space
penaits and cannot be guannteed
to run a specillc number of days.
Sul)day, Aprillll

***

celebrated

The couple was married at the
Gallipolis Church of Christ, Garfield
Avenue, March 17, 1946. TheY. have
three sons, Duane Kenton of Ghicago, Ill; Kevin (Kim) of New Albany;
and Kyle (Sheila) of Sunbury. They
have five grandchildren .
Aldo retired from Rockwell
International.

GALLIPOLIS - Spring revival :'1
·p.m., April 25 through 28 with Rev.
David Smith speaking, Faithful Foilowers singing Friday and pooo
News Trio singing Saturday Gallipolis Church of Christ in Christian
Union.

•••
Revivals
•••

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'

RlO GRANDE - Revival 7 p.ll\.,
April 26 through 28 at Simpson
Chapel United Methodist Church
with Ron Fierce and special singing
nightly.
:

GALLIPOLIS ·. Pony Pull at Gallia Counly Coon Hunters Club ,12
CHESHIRE - Taking Off Pounds
GALLI-POLIS - Revival with
p.m. sp6nsored by Buckeye Shoe Sensibly 10 to II a.m. Cheshire evangelist Willard Wilcox speaking
and Benders Pulling Alisociation in . United Methodist .Church.
· 6 p.m. April 28 and 7 p.m. April 29
Gallipolis County.
•••
Thesday, April 30
GALLIPOLiS - Gene Abels,
•••
. MD, to speak 2 p.m. Cardiac SupGALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
pon Group Holzer Medical Center Anonymous ~ p.m. St. Peter's EpisFrench 500 Room.
copal Church.

•••

EDGEWOOD MANOR

•••

CHESHIRE - Rev. Joe Gwinn
speaking
and Sargent Family
singing I p.m. Old Kyger Free Will
Baptist Church. · No evening worship. ·
··

•••

GALLIPOLIS • Kenneth Bledsoe
preaching 7 p.m. White Road
Church of God.
'

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
• RACINE
Suzanne Wolfe · of tant for On Call Medical Associates, Meigs and Mason counties as nilw,s ·
·theine, and Mr., aod Mrs. Carl Dr. Eric Hasemeier, Athens. ·
and is happy to publish wedding sto:\Volfe, J~. of Galli(iolis, announce
• Baer is a graduaie of Southern ries and photographs without
l~e engagement and approaching High School and Ohio University. charge.
:tnaniage of their daughter, Megan He is employed at AEP's Philip .
However, wedding news must
iilizabeth, to Christopher William · Sporn Plant, New Haven; W.Va., as meet general standards of timeli::Uaer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Greg Bai- an electrical engineer.
ness. The newspaper prefers to pubThe open church wedding will be lish accounts of weddings as soon as
ley of Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs.
:Bill Baer of Racine.
I :30 p.m., Saturday, May II at the possible after the event.
-: Wolfe is a graduate of Southern Racine United Methodist Church. A
To be published in the Sunday
fJigh School and Hocking College reception will follow at the Royal edition, the wedding ·must have
~d is employed as a medical assisOak Resort Club.
!aken place witbin 60 days prior to
· ihe publication, and may be up td ·
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received by .
the editorial department by Thurs. day, 4 p.m. prior to the date of publication.
&lt; LONG BOTTOM -- Henry and
Those not making the 60-day
Jkverly Hensley of Long Bottom
deadline will be published during
abnounce the engagement and .
the daily paper as space allows.
a~proaching marriage of their
Photographs of either the bride or
!laughter, Melissa L. Hensley, to
the bride and groom may be pubfroy M. Scyoc, son o{ Charles
lished with wedding stories if
~cyoc of CooJville.
·
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality .
• ; The weddin11 will be 2:30 p.m.,
color, billfold sit.e or larger.
May i9 at the Bellville Dam at ·
Poor quality photographs will not

.

~edsville.

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PLANNED PARENTJI()OD •
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

.

:: CHESHiRE - The Cheshire High
Sl:hool Alumni Association met 7
p;m., Tuesday April 23 in the
Clleshite Village Hall to plan !he
alumni banquet and re•nion.
:: The reunion will be 6 p.m., May
25 in the old Cheshire High School
!'Uilding. Registration will begin at
s : p.m. Each alumnus may bring a
j~est.
·
:. All class pictures were moved
~ack, to the building since tbe .clositlg of Kyger Creek etgh S~hool but .
i'everal ·are missing. Class pictures
,,
19
Oeeded '·are: ' 19~3 through
38,
1945, I ?46, 1949 and 1950. Anyone
;.,.o ·has a co;nposite of, sen.iors In .
any of these classes, whtch can be
'
coipied and liung in !henan should
·notify Arthur Ru~.· president, at
~46-0769.
.
.
:: The next meeting will be 7 p.m. ,
.,Uesday, May 7 in the Cheshire VII!fl8c Hall. . .
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GALLIPOLIS - Veterans Service

eRespite C.•

.Jf:J'
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~.~~-.--"
""~
_1.19l• ~
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atm

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446-0166

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384-5611

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406 N. PARK AVE. • WELLSTON, OHIO
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Create Your Own

MOTH.ER'S RING
•

For Her Spec~l Day- May 12

,,,,,AI .,,

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Choose fi'om
· 25 Styles.·
• 1 to 7 Stones

:

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. - Save 50%.to:
70%
From Mall.. Prlc~• ' ·
,
.
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CORNER 2ND AND GRAPE $T.
GALUPOUS

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&lt;'':·~.~~~k,r
eJ~·~
·-~
~ ~~~
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Profeeslona~-=~ R.,alr SerVICe
In Galllpoll.e Store

Makers, a"barbershop quarret founded under two years ago. Their concluding number was a rendition of
"God Bless America."
Mrs. Cremeans thanked those in

91 MILL ST. ,
MIDDLEPORT

By DONALD J. MITCHELL .
groups.
.
More !han 200 Indians, · mostly
Associated Press·Wrlter
DENVER (AP) - Asking for- . women and ' children, were slaughgiveness for a forebear, leaders of tered in the Sand Creek Massacre. ·
the United Methodist Church apolo- . Chivingtlin had advocated the
gized to Cheyenne and Arapaho killing of all Indian~.
tribes ~Qr the 1864 slaughter of hunThe mass~re began at daybreak
dreds of Indians in a massacre led by on Nov. 29, 1864, wben Chivinga lay preacher.
ton 's 1st Colorado Cavalry charged
The tiibes said they would ask a · Cheyenne and Arapaho viUage .
the nation's second largest Protes- Many of the Indians were .asleep:
tant denomination to assist in their many of their corpses were mutilatefforts to lqbby Congress for cash ed.
reparations to descendants of the
Although Chivington was convi~tims.
demned by a congressional commitThe church's General Conference ·~ee for having "deliberately plamied
. passed the "Sand Creek Apology" and executed a foul and dastardly
with little opposition this week, 132 massacre," the "Fighting Parson"
years after Col. John M. Chivington , was honored at his death in 1894 as
led his cavalry unit into the eastern a hero by both Coloradans and
Colorado encampment to kill.
Meth~ists.
The resolution, passed at the governing body's quadrennial meeting,
extends "to all Cheyennes and Arapahos a hand of reconciliation,"
asks forgiveness for the deaths and
seeks a healing service involving the

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dances when my youngest uncle was playing games. While grandma and I
: Somewhere in heaven are a lot of only five ; he played th~ drums. The picked berries, my children would
people I love. family dressed in the "then" stylish play in the cceek or old barn nearby.
Some of them roaring twenties attire; the boys in She · would fix the same lunch I
departed
this ·ties and jackets, and the ladies in enjoyed as.a child. Grandma kept an
world years ago. beautiful short dresses with bobbed abundant supply of Hershey's Candy
others
more hair on both girls. Grandma's hair Kisses and Kraft Caramels for all
recently. My two was long and up on her head in curls children. My children would have
brothers and par- or braids. Grandma was the pianist, their cheeks bulging with candy, and
ents are missed my mother (the eld~st) was the their poc_kets full, as we left to drive
greatly. I still find trombonist, Uncle Ray played trum- . home. Grandma saw to that. Those
myself thinking of · pet ,' Aunt Marge played saxophone were happy occasions.
,
things ! want to and orchestra hells and, of course,
Grandma's house was an old two, ~ell my mother and then I remember little Uncle Don on the 'drums. On a. story, and I think only held together
~ ~he is , gone; her death is the most very good night, the collection plate by layers of wall paper. It was a
~ £ecent of my im,mediate family grossed them $20; the usual was wonderful house to a grandchild,
·members.
about $5. Sometimes trans(l9rtation though, and it always smelled good.
;; lh Oregon, my paternal gran&lt;!fa- costS took most of the $5 as the ti-ain Thanksgiving for the entire family
;)l)er lived on our property, in ' his bad to be used for aistantlocations. was always at grandma's. She would
:own little house; and my maternal
When school was in session, I set the table with her finest dishes,
·grandmother lived a few miles away. took music lessons from my grand- even for the grandchildren. The
:f'ty grandfather died when I was mother on Saturday mornings. Some · table would be resplendently elegant
tonly six, so his memory is .not too . Fridays, I would spend the night with' a centerpiece, beautiful glass' clear, although I remember a fe.w with her. I loved to stay with grand- ware, and candles. Grandma kept a
~ ~\'ents with my "Gramp" which will rna but I hated the music lessons . It can or two of olives bac~until dinwasn't Jhat I disliked music or even ner time. She knew the ones she had
i.plways remain fond memories.
;.. My grandmother. lived until my· taking music lessons, except from placed on the table would have been
~children were school age. If possi- grandma. She was a perfectionist, an promptly eaten by grandchildren.
~ J&gt;Ie, she spoiled her great-grandchilexcellent pianist, and hoped her She even laughed when we would
,~reo even more than she did her
grandchildren would be exceptional place the pitted olives on our fin. ;grandchildren. She spoiled with musicians. After years of forced · gers; parents didn't laugh at lliat,
:tove, though, v;hich is much differ- practice herself, my mother never.. they scolded.
•~nl than spoiling with material pos- made me practice. I would show up
,sessions or absolving children of at lesson time with no progress to
Recently while going through
:iheir responsibilities.
dazzle my grandmother. I would be some of my mother's and grand: G~andma was a secon&lt;!-genera- so relieved when the hour was final - · mother's old music, I found a piece
~ion Irish lady with flaming red hair;
ly over and we would play Chinese of sheet music grandma had once
'.~orgeous smooth, white, freckle- ~heckers , or' some other. game. arranged for me, I had forgotten
lree skin, and an iron will. A widow Lunch wa( usually the same at about the song, "The Angels are
~tli four children, she insisted. upon grandma's, and always deli.cious. I' Lighting God's Little Candles." I
'tier children each learning !wo musi- learned to love wheat bread and she . smiled at all the unearthed memories
,eal instruments: piano and one of 'mixed up the very best tuna fish when l.saw the words agaiit.lt made
&lt;Oteir choice. A hard-worker, grand- sprea4. With the bndwich, we me feel closer to the loved ones fd
'&amp;ta worked several jobs simultane- would have her own mixture of hot 'lost as I read lyrics about angels
:nusly; and raising chickens and chocolate or sometimes hot jello.'
lighting the stars•at nigltt. .After all,
iome farming helped supplement
· After my marriage and own 'fam- as the words say, "They're our
&amp;cr steady incoi!IC. For additional ily, . frequently, my children and (I . friends in the sky."
:extra money," she used her ingenu- would drive to my grandmother's to
Dorotl\y . . , . _ lW"'
ity 1111d combined music with a pub! take her to the store, to, another town
_
. . "'
. ,11e11e
. . . ...
__
CoointJ,
- _·- 1111 I'
~c need: The five-piece family hand to visit my mother, or just to spend tonoto~r
. _ - . . ... Olllo lUll . . .
rgan playing for Satll{ilay night the~~ay pic,king blackberries ' and .sva-.

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attendance by stating, "God Biess
America and may•God bless all of
you for your fantastic achievements
in making our communi1y and this
facility a better place to live." ::
•

The faith's belated turnabout ·
came at the urging of \he Rev. Alvin
Deer, an American Indian pastor of
El Reno and Kingfisher United
Methodist churches in Oklahoma,
where Cheyennes and Arapahos are
members of the congregations.
. · "The United Methodist Church
delegation has recognized this was a
tragedy in U.S. history that needed
10 be addressed," Deer said. "With
the General Conference meeting in
Denver, it was the most appropriate·
time to deal with the tragedy."
Lawt;ence Hart, an Arapalto chief
and a descendant of American Indians at Sand Creek, said discussions
. of cash reparations put the apology
" in a more favorable position for the
tribes to accept."
· "Even if it stood alone, I think

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.. - . . . .

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• UVA - lcmg wavelengths
UVA light is continuous through·
out the day and penetrates the
outer layer of skin. These rays are
responsible for tanning and the
main qmse of photoaging and basal cell carcinoma.
• UV8 • medium wavelengths UVB rays penetrate the epidermis
and are responsible for the .~~edness and burning. They are most intense
between 10:00 AM and 3:00 PM, depending on' we;tther conditions.
•

• UVC • short wavelengths UVC rays are
8ldn callCer II considered the most carcinogenic but are
•••r'ly prevent~;~ble normally absorbed by the ozone layer. Wit~ the
and curable. destruction of ozone, skin cancer could increase.
•

Skin cancer is usually preventable and
curable. Early detection is the key and Holzer Clinic can help. During
May, skin cancer screenings and information about sunscreens are .
availabl!!. Call today for .details. Let the sun shine in ... the right way,
the safe way.

Holzer Clinic
Here for Your Heal tit.. .·
Here for Your Lifetime.

'

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The American Cancer &amp;x:iety reports that
of the more than 1,000,000 cases of skin
cancer diagnosed this year in Ihe U.S .•
almost 'all are sun·related. Yet, recent
research indicates that with the proper
use of correct sunscreens, the risk of skin
. cancer is reduced by over 33%.
The real culprit. .. UV radiation.
There are three different bands of
uv light.

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Call (614) 446-5513 or (614) 286-6417

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they (the tribes) would have g~e .
for it," Hart said (rom his home :in
Clinton, Okla.
'
Deer, who is chief financial officer for the tribes, said he was sati*fied with the apology and ready for
healing to begin, as were otl)ers. • .
"This (San(! Creek)_ is a d~p
wound, even today," he said. "lt.is
something th~t is .very predomin,u;t
among the people... closure, spiri!,lially and otherwise, is necessary.".:
And he said he .Sked the bishoP.s
council to petition Congress (pr
restitution.
·
•:
. ':This had already been approv~
by ... Congress (after the massacri).
The government had already cd)ldemned 1he attack and had coridemned Chivington. " he said. Bqt
"restitution has never been paid.'': .

Shedding Light on Skin Cancer

t

' ~-82$0

bahquei

·.church apologizes to tribes for 1864 massacre

'

~y DOROTHY SAYRE .

Next to City Pll'k

Bring the children's birth months and order
by May.6th. Choose from I OK or 14K gold'.
- With synthetic or ge~e. stoneS'-

Apache Junction, Ariz.; Gleri of
Harrisonville; Susan Noll of Columbus; Randal Kennedy of Medford,
Wise. and Daniel Kennedy of
Racine. They also have eight grandchildren, Edward and Katelyn
Kennedy; Kristina, Courtney .and
Clinton Kennedy ; Jill Stephens;
Lindsay Noll ; and Amber Kennedy.

.

The 240 who attended !he banquet also heard a brief address by
Carol Cremeans, wife of Gallipolis
Congressman Frank Cremeans, a
tribute to . the Gallipolis Garden
Club, the Foster Grandparents Club,
Senior Companion Prognim, and
Adopt A Cottage Program.
· Dozens of individuals representing area churches, local banks, community garden,clubs and all levels of
state,' courity and city government
were also applauded for their continued·efforts to improve the quality of
life for clients at GDC and MiddleIon Estates.
The banquet culminated a year of
programs and activities, including
the reading of a proclamation of
"Volunteers' Week" from Governor
George Voinovich presented by Dr.
Michael Dey, superintendent of the
GDC.

¥\ngels are lighting God's little candles

\

5fcquisitions !JitiiJeW'efrg

We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
'

Jlarents of five children. Carl, Jr. of

WE CARE FOR OUR ELDERS IN THE OLD FASHIONED
fAMILY WAY WITH.WITH RESPECT, DIGNITY, .
AND TE.NDER LOVING CARE.

,

Sliding Fee Scale ·
GALLIPOLIS

f' 1~~';;.,r'~~~~e~hn~~~re;~~he

1OK and 14K Gold Chains

STD Screening
,.
Pregnancy Tests
. " B. irth Cnntrol Methods including·:
'
v
• DeJ)C?; Piovera
'•Diaphragin'i
•lU,D. ·
• Birth Control Pill
• Condom/Spennicide
.
,,
Ano11ymous HIV tests and counseling

..

24 HOUR NURSING

Ruee Savines on..;

anmng
and Related Services .
Pap Tests

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414 SECOND STREET

ll0111t

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AReal FIIIIIIt Awllf Fr•

....., &amp;..... Stnic.S
ellospke Care

KENNEDY

anniversary celebrated

; RUTLAND -- Carl and Jean
J&gt;dwards Kennedy of Rutland are
~elebrating their 40th wedding
anniversary today.
: They were married April 28,
1956 a" Danville. Rev. William V.

_.,..,.,.tic Diets

...v........,

CARL AND

-~ 40th

-o.tai/Optkal/f'oclal• 1Senim
•'llttnJpeltk Adivity Progt.
.y..............

-Physical Tlterapy
. eOrmpatlalal .......y
eSpeedllllenpy ,

be accepted. Generally, snapshots or
instant-developing ·photos are not of
acceptable quality.
All .material submitted for publication is subject to editing.
Questions may be directed to the
eaitorial department from I to 5.
p.m. Monday through Friday at4462342.

•

&lt;lacait Senke

~/111-•llatiCare

. Sf*lal ,,{,.,

Confidential SerVI·ce f&lt;or Women and Men
· F 'I'll\ PI
·

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eMeclkart/Me41ciid Cerllfled

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Reducing the
risk of cancer program 7 to 8:30
p.m. Paint Creek Baptist Church.

Hensley$cyoc

CHS
reunion set
.

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A STEP ABOVE
EXCELLENCE

GALLIPOLIS - Choose to Lose
Diet class 9 a.m. Grace United
Methodist Church.
'

---Wedding policy. --

Wolfe-Baer

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OF WELLSTON, INC.

•••

Sheryl Slone. director of volunteer services, served as mistress of
ceremonies and introduced key indi- ·
viduals who support the clients. '
Included in this large group ·were
Lucy Earwood, coordinator of volunteers, and Eunice Niehm, coordinator of the Gallipolis Garden Club,
that has-provided beautification projects at the.local facility for over 35
· years. 'Th!;ir projects pioved so suecessful that several years ago their
services were expanded to the
Athens Developmental Center.
Other award recipients included
Eric Young, GDC program director;
Ja111es Middleton of lrontotr. .Pat
Caldwell, foster grandparent program, Columbus; and Trish McCuiIough, senior companion program,
Marietta.
Dr. Dey, in his Volunteer of !he
Year presentation to Jake Koebel,
noted the hours' of service he·· contributed as a member of the board of
directors, as chairman o( the River
View Committee and to work-related programs for clients at the Rehabilitaticin.Center on Jackson Pike.'
KOJ!bel, a retired manager for
Columbia Gas, has volunteered for
many organizations in the communi· ty.
Musical entertainment was provided by 'the· French City. Treble

GALLIPOLIS - Around 120 peopic who contribute to the Gallijlolis
• Developmental Center's volunteer
organization were cited for tbeir
conuibutions during Thursday's Volunteer's Recognition Banquet held in
the Multi-Purpose facility, capped
with the Outstanding Service Award
!&gt;resented to Jake Koebel of Gallip&lt;r

Send questioliS lo AnD La~~den,
Cruton Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles.
Calif. 90045

p.'m. each evening. Rev. Mike Fore- ship, Sunday, 7 p.m.
man, New Life Chun:li, Charleston,
W.Va. Nursery provided:
•.'
' MONDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs Co~nty
RACINE -- Family night, Racine Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
Branch 11f Reorganized Church of p.m. Monckiy, Veterans Service
Jesus Christ, Latter Day Saints, 4 Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
p.m Sunday, Dailey family IQ present gospel music. Potluck dinner to
PORTLAND -- Lebanon Town· follow.
ship trustees, Monday; ? p.m.: at the
township building.
MIDDLEPORT -- Sexton Trio to
sing at the Hobson &lt;;hristian FellowRUTLAND -- \Rutland Garden

.

nn..-sentlnet corr.spondent

---Meigs com.muntiy calendar-~
, -The (Ammuaity. Caleadar is
published as a free tervke lo DODproftt groups·willlillc to liDIIOVllCe
meeting 111111 specilll eveats. The
tlllendar is not deslped to prom.!Jie sales ()I' fund raiten of ilay
type. Ice- 11re priated u space
permiU 111111 caDDOt be auanuteed
·to run a specitlc nnmber or days.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPOKf -- ·Reviv31 services, ~joicing Life Church, Middleport, Sunday through Tuesday, 7.

toral work. Besides ,__ _
having preached in
more than 50
churches in Japan's
capital,
Tokyo,
Je,van has preached
in churches in 12 of
Japan's prefectures
as well as in
churches in Taiwan
,
and South Korea. He is the ~of
three books in Japanese.
•
The Corls have four children Cod
two grandchildren; Grace Uniled
Methodist Church has supponCd the
Corl's ministry in Japan.
•

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PllsJeC4•.- tat·

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Pomeio,.llldcllport•GaiHpolia,OH•PolntPiu••nt.WV ·

Sunday,Aprtl28,1118

·More than a pretty picture: Cable expands into-computer, pho!'le hookups
By JE.tJNIE ~VEAIA

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going to CM')' it to (our) pave!"
~er the ne~t fiv~ years "the challenge WI~I be to stay ~ or the comTelephone compuies, not immUDe to servic:e proble"__S themselves, 5!-Y
pel1110n ... DOtJUSl woth prognmnung. promo!Jon and servoce, but to get into they plan 10 exploit dull pen:opcion u they c:ompete agaonst cable for bOth
the phone business and the computer boolcup bluiness," said Ted Turner, • phone 11111 cable cus10men.
·
•
chairman ofThmer B~asting. Srstem Inc. and incoming c:hainnan or the
Meanwhile, some cable compaliies llso are connec:ting customen' home
National Cable TeleviSion Assoctallon board.
. COIIIJ!Uiers via cable modems and c:oaxill cable lines. ·
·
"The wi~,"Tumer says, " will be the ones that do the best job."
At its infancy now, this ponion of the business should grow to S1.6liilAs, the asS&lt;K:~auon prepares to .convene Sunday through Wednesday in lion by 2000, the cable industry says.
Los~ge.les for liS an~ull conv~ntoon, ~ tec~nical and financial challenges
Tune Warner, working with Hewlen-Pickatd Co., Motorola Inc:, ~standmg on the way woll be a pnme topoc of dtscussion.
•
can Online·and Excalibur, is providing 200 customers in Elmira,' N.Y.. with
. Chief among the womes: Will people trust their cable company to pro- connections to online services, including to the local government so people
vode local phone and other _new services?
.
~an check city council ))eatings or weigh in on school board issues.
The cable ·~dustry -. sull haunted by years-old hOrror stories abo11t poor
customer servoce despote vastomprovements - says it has learned valuable
After a $30 installation fee. customers are charged $24.95 a month for
lessons and gained public llllst.
. service, which includes Internet access, local e-mail, an electronic version'of
. "~~ · re seei~g the meter moving o~r toward cable's having great ser- the Joc:al newspaper and the modem re·ntal fee, said spokesman Mike Luftvoce, Turner wd. But he lamented the old customer service stories: "We're man.

•

Ad,ney School's
founding family made:
their own history
By JAMES SANDS

Special Co,_pondent
In
Huntington
Township there was
an Adney School
from the Civil War
era to 1934, excluding the years 19181923.
According to the
.
book "Gallia County
One · Room Schools: the Cradle
Years," the Adney school was located at the intersection of the Selmer
Andrews and · Adney Road. The
school
originally on propeny
belonging to John Adney and later
Jonathan Adney.
' The Adneys were early settlers in
Gallia County. John Adney first settled in the county about 1812. John's
father Thomas Adney was an educated engineer in London, England
who was kidnapped when he was 19
and taken to South Carolina.
· . There Thomas became a teacher
and surveyor. In due time he.moved
to Nonh Carolina before finally
residing in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia (franklin County)
where the rest of his children by his ·
wife, Elizabeth Dunn, were born.
The oldest child was John who
was born March 28, 1774 in .North
Carolina. John married · Barbara
Lesena at Adney's Gap, Va. and in
1806 moved to Kentucky. John later
moved to near present day Piqua, ·
where he became a·friend of Chief
L(ule Tunle and the Miami ln~ns.
In fact when Little Tunle and cilfler

was

Miami Indians were at Jbhn's cabin,
lhe white children and the Indian
children played together as if they
were cousins.
But w))en the War of I 812 broke
out Linle Tunle warned John Adney
that it might not be safe for him to
live in that pan of Ohio. Jobn landed
up his wagons and headed back
·toward Virginia.
On reaching the Raccoon Creek
(near present day Vinton) John and
" his family contracted the plague.
While his family was being helped
to recover by senlers there, Adney
was impressed with the potential for
a mill on the Raccoon.
Adney was a millwright by profession and decided to remain in
"Ohio. In 18 I 5 he purchastd land to
begin a mill.
According to his great-gnllldson
Edwin Tappan Adney:' "The first
dam and mill were built of round
logs with a punclieon floor, · the
neighbors all turning out to help
erect the same." It was Adney's dam
later created at Vinton thai came to
be called the "Old Bayou."
In 1834 John Adney and. his son
Jonathan sold the mill property to
James McGee, and presumably
IJloved to the farm where Adney
School was located.
· Adney's success helped him
acquire a great deal of land to establish his numerous family members
on good fanns . Adney also helped
establish in the township a number ·
of other families as well.
At the beginning of the Civil War

, ~r'!ciCOLE WINFIELD
was a woman waiting at the Univerlated Preaa Writer
sity of Miami's Jackson Memorial
, _ M.IAMI (:'J'l - For the past 10 Hospit'l for a new liver.
·
years, Rondie Ann Harris suffered
" They took my liver, and they
.~,tomach aches so excruciating she gave it to someone else," a pigtailed
couldn't get out of bed. Unable to Rondie, clutching a fluffy pink rabeat for half that time, Rondie, 17, bit, said Friday from her hospital
.was the perfect candidate for an room. "That was neat A special
:\ntestinal transplant
thing."
What doctors didn 't realize until
The procedure, which has been
surgery last week, though, was that perfmmed at least twice in Portugal,
~ondie also was the perfect candi- could have imPortant io:nplicalions
.~ate to be a liver donor.
. on the future of organ donation. It
In the fin;t "domino" liver trans- could reduce the number of organs
plant in the United States, Rondie wasted in multi-organ transplants,
received a liver and a large and experts say.
~11 intes~ile from a young donor,
"This addresses concerns that we
tben gave her own perfectly healthy and others have that by doing the
liver to a thi!l' patient. The recipient more complicated transplants, the

Pig noises lanq

man in pokey
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - A
man who oinked at his ex-wjfe and
played "Old MacDonald Had a
Farm" when · he saw her walking
past his house was serving a 30-day. ·
prison sentence Friday for harass-.
ment.
.
Rachel Nickle, who lives several
· houses away from her .ex, Rober(
Barzyk, said he made pig and ele~
phant noises for nine years, eacn
time she walked by his h011se IO a
school bus stop.
.
Dauphin County Common Pleas
Judge Lawrence F. Clark Jr. orderd
Batzyk to begin serving his sentence:
on Wednesday. But on Friday, his
lawyer gor a higher court to agre&amp;
that Barzyk should be granted:
S1.000 bail during his appeals.
;
"He'll be out Monday morning, "•
said his attorney, Gary Lysaght.
:
In
September,
Barzyk
began
sup-:
EARLY ADNEY'- Thlr 1929 picture of the Adney Schoolrhowr teacher Ruth Warren Qulcle rnd her
studenll. These boya and girlr could have learned a Jot of hlrtory juri by rtudylng the Adney family plementing the animal sounds by;
playing "Old MacDonald" on a cas~
attar whom the school near Ewington was named. .
·
·
. ·
sette player, Deputy District Attor~
Jonathan Adney's son William H.G. including, South Mountain, Anti- field, Edward McClane ,.!.killed at ney·Diana Woodside said.
:
Adney recruited a whole company etam, Chickamauga, Chattanooga, Antietam) and Silas McMillen
Lysaght didn 't deny the behavior;
of men around Vinton and Ewington Missionary Ridge, (the 36th Ohio (killed at Chickamauga).
but said his client was playing thC:
for the U.S. Anny. On Aug. 14, 1861 lost 83 me.n in that battle). Cloyd's
At the Battle of Antietam the 36th tapes for his two daughters.
·
Adney was made captain of Compa- Mountain ~nd Cedar Creek. Compa- Ohio was a pan of Burnside's left
'
ny B of the 36th Ohio Volunteer ny B lost eight men to death from force. When they ·advanced over'
Infantry. William was 27 at the typhus fever and pneumonia before open ground, they rece.ived heavy
.
'
beginning of the war. '
·
they even got into battle.
artillery fire which killed the then
'
In an effort to provide our reader-'
Also in Company B was Henry
The entire 36th Ohio lost to dis- d~mmanding officer Col. Clarke. A
ship
with current news, the Gallipo-:
H. Adney, age 20, and Robert CJ. ease more than 50 in December I0 pound she&lt;II e.ploded right beside
lis Oaily Tribune and The Daily Sen-:
Adney, 18.
1861 and January, i 862. One 44 him.
By the end of the war William year old man in Company B died
There is an impressive monu- tine) will not accept weddings after ~
had risen 10 the rank of Colonel, two. weeks after he enlisted from ment in Marietta given by his fellow ·60 days from the date of the event ·
All club meetings and other news:
Henry to First Lieutenant and heart failure after marching maneu- officers including Col. Adney, that
articles in the society section must:
Robert made Sergt. The 36th Ohio vers in the hot sun.
remembers Clarke.
be submitted within 30 days of'
eventually came under the leaderAmong those lost from Company
occurrence.
All bitthdays must. be
ship of George crook, ·who later B, who were from the VintonJames Sanda Ia a apeelrl cor·
gained much fame as an Indian Ewington area were: Gabery Hol- rerpondent of the Sunday submitted within 42 days of the :
'
fighter.
comb , Joseph Ewing, Thomas Times-Sentinel. His llddreaa Ia: occurrence.
All material submilled for publi- ·
The 36th Ohio participated in Ewing (killed in the Baule of Cedar 65 Willow Dr., Springboro, Ohio
cation
is subject to editing.
several key battles of the Civil War Creek). Milton Kent, Daniel Shons- 45066.
' '

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POME~OY

Cuuing out the scenes also isn ' I
option. Federal law prohibits
changing a manusc·ript without the
copyright holder's written permission, and violations can resuh in litigation.
The smoking scenes- about one
minute in the two-hour show - are
vital to the ambiance , said Haley.

said. ''I'm here to entertain people,
not to make people mad:"
The musical debuted Feb. 29, and
Haley said no one has asked for a
refund yet. He also said he doesn't
plan any script changes before the
musical completes its run at the 300seat Boulder Dinner Theater in June.

'

'If someone really is affected by
it and wants to leave, I would be
happy to return their money," he

Allen f!ussung, of Samuel
f'rench Inc. of New York City: which
owns' the rights to "Grand Hotel,"

Black men .most likely to die of can~er, study says
WASHINGTON (AP) - Cancer time the cancer statistics among ethrates are up slightly for black men, nic groups other than black and
still the Americans most likely to get white, adding II new categories.
and die of cancer, according to a
The new study finds that white
National Cancer Institute study.
non-Hispanic males are second to
The study, released Thursday, black males in incidence of disease.
found that black men had a general Cancer struck this group at the rate
capcer rate of 560 cases per 100,000 of 481 cases per 100,000 people. For
people and a cancer death rate of cancer deaths, Hawaiian males were
3 i9 per I00,000, the highest for any second to 6Jack males, with a morof. the measured groups. Statistics tality rate of i30 per I00,000.
released last year showed a cancer
Among women, white non-Hisra!l! of ~57 per 100,000 and a cancer panics had ·the highest ·rates of all
· death rate of 316 per I00,000 for cancers, with 354 cases per I 00,000.
black males.
Alaskan native women were second,
· ·The Naoional Cancer Institute at 348 per I00,000. For cancer
deaths, Alaskan native women had
in~ludes the data in an annual repon
dolled the Surveillance, Epidemiolo- the highest rates at 179 per 100,000.
g)l and End Results program. It cov- Black and Hawaiian women were
ers statistic for a five-year period, second, both with cancer death rates ,
1988 to 1992.
of 168 per 100,000.
For types of disease, the study
The repon includes for the first

found breast cancer was the most
frequently diagnosed cancer among
all · women, except VietnameseAmericans, who had more cervical
cancer. Breast cancer rates ranged
from 28.5 per 100,000 for KoreanAmerican woinen to 115.7 per
100.000 among non-Hispanic white
women.
,
Lung cancer was the most fre.
quent cause of cancer death among
American women, while breast cancer ·is the second most frequent
cause of cancer death in all groups
except Alaska native women, who
die more often of colon or rectum

too.ooo.

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IQIIVI'IIf~

CANCER

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I I om enlllrlng Caty) ___ Fruit Plea

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THIS AREA KMART HAS APERMANENT STUDIO MRY DAY
MHday • Sal•lfay, 10 AM·7 PM
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2nd Prbe...........$15.00 $15.00
3rd Prbe """'""-· $5.00 $5.00 '
Qualllled Pie Judgll
Judging Beglni et ~:oo p.m.

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992-4055
10-511on. thru Sal .
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• Stanley Doon
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 161n. On Center
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Hanging Baskets

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ofems -Geraniums •Impatiens
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Over 4,000 to choose frC' n
.Over 80 varieties of Herbs
•28 Varieties of Tomatoes

variety~~

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AFew Of Our Home Standard Features

Largeat

.

House Budget Chairman John, .
Kasich, R-Ohio. quickly stooped to:
pick it up, noticed it was head-sidedown and said; "Wait a minute~ it's·
the wrong side. You have to put it i~
your shoe."
,
"We've already made 36 cents ,: ·~
said Dole with a big smile.
Dole kept the penny, but someone
put the quarter and dime on the podi-:
urn.

&amp;.,.... . .• Andersen 1111 WindoiNS

.MIDDLE_PORT, OHIO

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Majority Leader Bob Dole was heading to a
crowded news conference on the
Capitol grounds when he notiCed
some coins in the grass.
The Kansas Republican, House
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and
congressional commiuee chairmen
were celebrating a $160 billion budget agreement for 1996 that was
about $23 bilfion Jess than the year
·
before.
But there's nqohing like. finding
money you can actually touch . .
"Is that a dime? And a quarter?
Wait a minute, a penny. Give me that
penny. I don't want the rest, just the
lUcky penny," said ·Dole before the
news conference .Thursday.

DOOR PRIZES DAILY

.

NURSERY WIU BE PBOYIDED

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I FluriPiiiMAcl I

NEW LIFE CHURCH

•

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Cll"'"'lum Plcollnoto
MOHEYBACICGUAIIANTE£

FROM

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All Nlllllfll C.H. 2001

REV... MIKE FOREMAN ·

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the contestant r - - with the highest
beauty score in
the
entire
pageant newborn lo 21 . In
addition to her
state size crown,
trophies, banner, toys and
gift, .Payne won
hotel accommo.dations paid in Kayla Payne '
Hollywood and a 35 mm Koda~
· camera.
,. ,
"All of the top agents will be ip.
attendance at the pageant in Holly•
wood," Robin said. "It is very likely
Kayla .will be discovered by one or
more of the top agents."
.
:
Although her hotel accommoda,·
lions and her Beauty fee for the.
National Pageant are paid, Payne.
will acquire additional expenseG
including her airline travel, food and
pageant fees other than Beauty. She,
is seeking donations to offset tbe ,
costs. They can be sent to P.O. Box
·215, Bidwell, Ohio 45614 or made·
by calling (614)388-9994.

May4&amp;5·

1v

GUEST SPEAKER: ·

I
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Grwn Ellfnll,i tll, SchOOl
113 Caollll.. , Cllonll ROild
Gllltlpolle, 011 41131
•
IIIII on ot boilarallandar, April
2ltiL Dt ap alf dullllne l'rlday,
lrd to ar.n ......... ,.

1

LOSE !! I 0 LIS. I ·..
IN 3 DAYS

APRIL 21 · .APRIL' 31

t.'

~-loMS1.00pwple.....,
and JIII!IIIIO:

I

7 P~M.

I,

.•

'•PIIgee$

pinches a found pen~y' ·.

AsS&lt;K:iation of Retired Persons.
62 and older.
.:_ Discounts on many air fares,
- Special lifetime admission
rental cars and hotel acCO!llmoda- pass availl1,ble for $10 to anyone
tions. Always inquire about lowest over 62 for use in all federal govern,
.rates available.
men! parks, forests, refuges, monu- Reduced annual fee for Amer- ments and recreation areas thai
ican Express credit card. Call I charge entrance fees . Write National
(800) ~23-8300.
Park Service, P. 0. Box 37127,
- Half-price 'fare on the Alaska . Washington, D.C. 20013.
Marine ' Highway during fall and
winter. Ages 65 and older. Call I
(800) 642-0066.
- Fifteen percent discount on
lowest Amtrat:_coach fare for ages

SUNDAY, MONDAY'&amp; TUESDAY

[

L----:.------~-····--·-··•;;;;0.::: -;;;;;;;~.,1
Ribbon• &amp; Caah Awarda

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I I am wiRing to clcinalll mr pie iD o-n $Choollor the Social
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quite a·few of them

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.REJOICING LIFE CHURCH

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Caty)_ Cream Pia

....

according to author Heilman. ·
They're more fit, healthy' and energetic than those in thei~ age group a •
generation or two ago - and com·• - ·•

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~ONE~-----------------------~------i

TREE PLANTING -'- Sixth gradera at Pomeroy Elementary School plented 1 ~Ood tree Iii
front of the school Friday afternoon. The planting, which coincided with National Arbor Day, waa
dona In remembrance of the 168 men, women snd children killed In the blast of the Alfred Murrah
·
Federal BUilding lri Oklahoma City on Aprll19, 1995.
Arbor Day was the brainchild of More than one million trees were founder and president of the
J. Sterling Morton, editor of planted in Nebraska that day. By National Arbor Day Foundation.
_Nebraska's first newspaper, who · 1890, Arbor Day was celebrated in
. "Arbor Day may be the first
moved to Nebraska ·City ·from every state, making it one of the
opportunity
a child has to experiMichigan in the mid-1800s', oldest formalized conservation
ence the magic of planting a tree
according to the National Arbor · observances in the world.
"Arbor Day is such an iinponant and caring for it This can instill, at
Day Foundation.
In 1872, Nebraska became the even I because · it usually involves a very early age, a desire to make a
first state ·to proclaim Arbor Day. children," noted John Rosenow, . positive contribution to the world."

i..UVIVAL SERVICES

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NAME----------~--------------------1

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Hay Rides,
Face Painting, Balloons, •j
l
· . Old Fashioned
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Picture Taking
•
UING lAWN C:RAIWII
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Bladt men
. are 1111 t11e Ameljcall~ most likely to g8t · r="·-.., E:ancer cases
-c-dtltha
;lnd die of cancer. Rates)l8110nwide (1988-1992):
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isn'lall bad. Having surVived two or
·three decades of ~~!ling ignored by
. not&gt;only th'eir own teen-agers but
also by marketing eKpens as a
whl;lle, people entering the "golden
years" are once again the prime targeis of special perks.

Baseball
&amp; Softball Throw
Croquet
Horseshoes

/

writes Joan Rattner Heilman in he(
bo6k, "Unbelievably Good Deals
an4 GrellJ. ,Adventures That You
Abso!~it1y Can't Get Unless You're
Over SO" (Contemporary Books,
8 95
.~he·' suggests thai ·"maturing"

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:~1~~a~~~:~;ni~:::~~~cioy~~:, ~~~ n;go~~~c~~~cr~~o~~? s~~~~;s~

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Payne t9 represent Ohio in
Little Miss America pageant :·
BIDWELL - Kayla Dawn Payne,
has hit the big time. She will be u-avcling to Hollywood, Calif. in July to
compete with top beauty contestants
from throughout the United States.
Payne, 5, of Bidwell earned her
trip by competing for the Ohio title
of Lillie Miss of America Beauty
Pageant April 12 through 14 at the
Harley Hotel in Columbus. She was·
crowned Beauty winner in the 5 to 6
years age division which gavr her
the title of Ohio Liule Miss of Ametica. The title gives her the opponunily to travel to Hollywood to represeni Ohio in the Little Miss Division
o( the Little Miss of America
National Pagean1 July 31 through
August 3.
"This is an opportunity of a lifetime for such a little person," her
mother, Robin Payne said, "however she is very aware of her involvement and is very excited about it."
She was also crowned Over-all
Most Beautiful, Prettiest Eres, Prettiest Hair, Best Dressed, Photogenic,
·Ponfolio and Over-all Portfolio.
Additionally, she was crowned as

By JANE SCHORER MEISNER
"This is something that's de vel- petition for their spendable dollars is
The Dea Moines Reglater
oped informally over time: going tough.
Laugh if .you want at their gray- backtowhen)he stereotype of elder"We are increasingly presented
. in~ temple.s, expanding waistlines Jy was that people were Jow-i.ncome with some real breaks and good
an emergmg v5ncose veons. Buy and infirm, " says Ted · Il.obrow. · deals," Heilman summarizes. "Conbl ck balloons and "Over The Hill" 'media relations manager for the trary to what a younger person might
st amers for their .40th and SOth · American Association of Retired think, people in the mature generabiiptdays.
Persons (AARP). "To make up for tion aren 't content with watching the
vhen notice that .in today's that son of frail state, the tradition action. Instead, we like to get right
in~asingly targeted consumer mar- staned to encourage senior citizen into the middle of it"
keiJllace, getting old actually can be discounts."
Here is a sampling ·of discounts and
kiJf!i of groovy.
. Today. though, the counesy may special opportunities for people ages
iMore than a quaner of the United involve stronger·marketing motives. 50 and older:
.
Stafes population today is over SO, Now people over 50. control half of
• - . ~embership in Am~ri~~n __

'

Free Admission
Free Entertainment
Pie Judging·Contest

I

"Make a world

there are some perks 'to getting older

WANT ADS GEl

"-..,' .I •

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sajd the company often conced.es tp
requests for manuscript changes that
come from high schools· or comm~r
nity theater groups intent on elimi.- .
nating profanity or controversia)
materiaL
•
"We get them all the time." Hussung said Friday. "It's so funny. lg:
these censorious times, everyont
goes home and sils around the dinnerlable and talks about how greai iJ .
is to live in a free country... .
' ~·.

S.aturday, May 4
2:00-6:00.p.m.

Either prostate or lung cancer are
the most common cancers and the
most common causes . of cancer
deaths among all of the. male groups
studied. Black males had the highest
rate of prostate cancer. at 180.6 per
I00,000, while lung cancer was the ·
most frequent cause ·of cancer death
among black men, ~t 105.6 per

-

of difference."
That was the challenge handed
· ' d.own. to Pomeroy Elementary
' School students at a . brief Arbor
: Day ceremony Friday afternoon by
· Meigs County Liner Control and·
Recycling Director Kenneth Wig·• gms.
Wiggins briefly addressed envi' ronmental concerns including the
destruction or tropical rain forests ,
spiraling population growth and
• pollution .
"There is hope here - your gen.eration," he told the children.
"We .haven't done a very good
•job taking care of your world," he
added.
..
Wiggins pointed out the T-shin
·he was wearing was made largely
of recycled two-liter boules with
•some recycled couon fabric.
"II proves we . can something
new out of something old."
He recalled a story of a man
.observed picking starfish off a
beach, throwing them back into the
ocean.
. "There are millions of starfish,
,another man pointed out. What dif.ference can it make?"
"'It makes a world of difference
.to this one," said Wiggins. Pretending to flip yet another stranded
· ,siarfish into the waves.
·
To help students make a difference, Wiggins said each would be
given two pine saplings to .plant.
, A(terwards, under direction of
PrinciPal .\)eborah Haptonstall, students retired ouodoors where sixth
graders planted a dogwood tree in
memory of the 168 people killed in
1 the bombing of the Alfred Murrah
"ederal Building in Oklahoma City
• :a year ago April 19. . ,
: " Friday marked the I24th cele-bration of National Arbor Day, a
day of tree planiing by school chil'dren, neighborhoods and community groups.

·. City smoking ban coUides with performance of .award-winning musical
an

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.patients who are awaiting solitary national database for organ dooors ' from pseudo obstruction, a rue dis- sent it to a lab for study.
,
grafts will be deprived," said Dr. and recipients.
Rondie's liver wu a perfect f,il
ease in whicb inl!;stines do not physAndreas G. Tzakis, chief of the liver
Tukis perfonned lhe operations ically obslrUcl food but stiU cannot and type for a woman who wu waitand gastrointestinal transplant divi- April II, but the hospital did not diaest it. For the past4112 years she ing for her second donated liver
sion of Jackson Memorial.
announce the transplants· until Fri- was fed intravenously through a after the first one failed . The W01JU111
" II moves the fitld of transplan- day morning. Both patients were in tube in her ne&lt;;k.
·
who received Rondie 's liver asUd
tation forward and they are to be critical -buo stable condition Friday
In addition to her pains and diffi.- that her name not be releued to the
congratulated for this," s~i d Dr. and all of their orgaus were func - culties eating, Rondie was at risk for news media.
Alan Langnas, acting director of tioning normally.
•
infection and liver failure.
transplantation at the University pf
Livers are often transplanted with
Liver transplant recipients oo
Doctors hope that the operation
Nebraska. "It's the responsible thing will enable Rondie to return home to intestines in cases like hers because average have an 8S percent survival
to do."
Reading, Pa. and spend he~ time like it's considered safer and might help rate for the first year.
Several "domino" operations any other teen-ager. For the rest \)f protect against intestines rejection .
Rondie 's mother, LuAnn Harri3,
involving the heart and lungs have her life, however, she will hllve to The multi-organ transpla,nt is per- said there was never any doubt th~t
been performed around the world in take anti-rejection medication. formed fewer than 200 times a year her daughter would donate her liver
recent years, but the Miami opem- which can suppress the ilnmune sys- worldwide.
.
if someone could use it
tion was the first involving a liver, tem and make her more vulnerabJe .
In the past, doctors have simply
"We' reJ·ust so thankful that sbe's
according to the United Network for to illness.
discarded lhe healthy livew.of an here with. us and that someone else 'os
Organ Sharing, which serves as the
Since age 7, Rondie has suffered intestine-liver transplant recipient or .here because of it," she said.

:Students 'Make a world of difference'

-News policy-:

By AARON J. LOPEZ
- · "I'm surprised Boulder has done the end of March that the actors
Aeroclated Prera Writer
what they've done, and how they're would have to find a way to create
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - · When doing it," Haley said Friilay. '.'It's the illusion 6f smoking . .
the lights dim at the Boulder Dinner been a miserable, degrading experi- .
One option might be lobacco-less
Theater, the cast of "Grand Hotel " ence. I never thought I would be cigarettes that ·emil . · non-loxic
lights up, puning artistic freedom at treated like I have over this."
.
smoke, but Haley said they tried that
odds ·with Boulder's S-month-old
Boulder environmental enforce- in the past. :·and it smells like mariordimince banning smoking in pub- ment offich .Terry Steinborn said juana." ·
lie buildings.
several theatergoers had complained
;·we actually had the Boulder
Theater owner R.oss Haley has about the smoking scenes in "Grand Police Department out here. because
been told to comply with the ban Hotel," which is set in decadent one of the patrons in the show got up
or faee up to 90 days in a county jail 1928 Berlin.
and called the police. They were
and $1 ,000 in fines.
Steinborn said Haley was told at ready to raid us, " Haley said.

· Pomeroy •Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point F'tuunt, WV

·E&gt;eperts say 'Domino' liver transplant first fn nation

said spokesnian Jim Carlsl,m.

Area cl ... d Po I I Wtlls:
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The c:.ble that brings a pn:ny picture into your
home can - and soon will in many places - hook your computer to the
Internet and carry your local telephone calls, too.
· Unleashed by a oew telec:ommunic:ations Jaw, cable comp.nies, like teJe.
-phone companies. are laking steps to offer their customers a panoply of services - from local and long-distance to cable and computer connections.
Already going for a piec:e of the $100 billion-a-year local phone business,
Ttme Wa"I!Cr Cable is providing residential local service to cable customers
in Rochester, N.Y.
Cablevision Systems Corp. is doing the same for customers on Long
Island, N.Y. Harron Communications is offering businesses phone services
in Utica, N.Y.
'
And in Alexandria, Va., Jones Intercable is providing local phone service
fo 101 people living in apartments and condos. Installation is free. The com~any charges $37.32 a month for I! package of cable and local phone service,

•

· .,SUnday, April28, 1996

St Rt. 124

Foniterly Hmiii.Frrma
St. Rt. 124 Poa1IIIICI, Oh.

AICine, 011

11U4N211
Hra.: Mon.-lal M, .
luli.1H ·

' 114-1112-21112
Hra.~ Mon.4:rt. N,•SIL 1-41
Sun', 1-4 .

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1: 1:11 Uti ASSl.RD.

Delta Pautets
Master T-lodt Vinyl Sldlna With Ufetime Wamu!IY
2S Year Wlll'llllty Asphalt Sbingles
10 Year SIJUC\IIral W~JY&amp;ntY On The Home

Our Prices
'
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FAMILY HOMES INC.
MOdel Home ~ted at
..Jnteniectlon ofRts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home Vlewina HouJS I:00-5:00 p.m.
'1\te. - ~ or by appoln-.

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PageC&amp;·~

;=~Home

Pomeroy •.Middleport • Glllllpoll't, OH • Point Plellant, Wv

exercise works

By GLENN MILLER
Fort Myer1 Newt-PIMa
Ray Stockard, 79, a ~tired mechanical engineerinc professor, finds the
time for exercise nearly every morning while Wlltching "Good Mbmlng
America."
Jean Correa, 72, a substitute teacher, has been reconling all her workouts
in a log since 1986.
Denise Kosinski, 47, never misses a day of working out at her Fon
Myers, Aa., home.
Home workouts, like workouts at any location, can succeed providing
one condition is met; You discipline yourself to do the exercises.
"That's the key to everything," said exercise physiologist Michael Lindsay, president of The Fitness Advantage. "You've g!K to stay wilh it."
Stoc kard, Correa and Kosinski all say they have no intention of getting
•

Sunday,April21,t996

•

if you discipline yourself

away from it. The benefiu of their home-exercise regimens are too ilnpor·
tant for them to !Ipse into sloth.
.
· "It's simply a matter of personal selfishness," said Stockard, of Estero,
fla., "I want to keep going."
Stockard plays tennis twice a week. He says stretching, aerqbics and
training with aS-pound weight while watching "Good Morning America"
helps keep"him healthy and strong enough to play tennis.
Correa offered solutionA for people who have trouble staying motivated
to work out 'at home.
" Do something that you really enjoy doing and do it consisteptly and
write it down in a log," said Correa, who runs, cycles, walks, swims and
runs on a treadmill. "That log is the most imponantthing. If there's nothing
in there you feel guilty."
Kosinski works out three times a day, seven·days a week. Each workout
.

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'

No time to eat?. Producers Rating
·:tout their high-pr~tein . liquid =:::.-w
-drinks as the answer

BIDWELL - Tawana Keels ·
::---, Simons,
of
Springdale,
a
. suburb of Cincinnati, has been
w~
elected national
vice p~sident of
the · National
School
Board
Association's
(NSBA) National
Caucus of Young
School
Board ·
Triwana
Members, a caucus of school
Simons
. 'board members under the age of 40.
· She was selected at the NSBA
Annual Conference held A}lril 13
through 16 in Orlando, Fla. . ·
· . Simons, graduated as a member
of National Honor Society from
. Princeton High School in Cincinnati
'ion 1978. She was recognized at lndi·an? University's Founders Day for
·1\igh scholastic achievement by the
'dean of the school. She graduated
with honors from Indiana University

-.1··
;&gt;'&lt;·"

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in 1982 with a bachelor of science
de~.

She accepted a marketing posilion with the International Business
Machines Corporation in Indianapolis, Ind. She excelled as a sales executive in Technical Systems Engineering and received promotions
that moved her to offices in Chicago, .Ill., Washington, D.C. and
Bethesda, Md.
Simons received local and
national awards including. 100 Per·cent Clubs Marketing Achievement, ·
Systems Engineering Symposium's
Outstanding Engineering, Regional
Maqagers' Awards. Branch Managefs' Awards, Area Managers'
Awards, IBM Suggestion · Awards
and Quality Leader Recognition.
She is employed as r,nformation
technology consultant for Tech Soft
Inc., in Cincinnati. She is the daughter of James Dewey Keels of Bidwell, and the granddaughter of the
late G. Dewey Keels of Bidwell .

· ·., · '·'·,

•
' '"•'

104 units donated at
local bloodmobile
GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-State
'Red Cross Bloodinqbile collected
I 04 units during its Thursday stop at
St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
Local Red Cross officials said
109 people presented themselves to
give blood. including eight first-time
donors. Five were deferred.
&gt; Mrs. Richard James .was chairman of the event, and the volunteer
.staff consisted of Janet Hughes,
Raymah Hawk, Virginia Wright,
Mary Clendenin, Mrs. Merrill John.son, Mrs. Eula Adkins, Mrs. Mike
.Pasquale, Mrs. Lewis Schmidt, Mrs.
Evalena Williams, Mrs. Margaret
.Iibman, Mrs. 'Keith Brandeberry,
Mrs. Janet Wetherholt, Mrs. Wilma
_Webster and Mrs. Bruce McDonald.
; Presenting themselves were:
Lee E Burcham, Raymond C.
Weiher Jr., Keith E. Snyder, Mary A.
:Williams, Frances Loomis, _Barbara
C. Fulks, Mary K. Bays, Mary A.
Roush, Roben H. Craft, John H.
~oush, C~by Meadows IJI, Lesa J.
Caldwell , Barbara A. Wallen,
Hobert F. Tackett, John 1. . Jones,
Dorothy s. Esque, Randy A. Mastcrs, Joshua G. Mims, Andrew J.
Blank, Tamira L. Scarberry, ·Bruce
A. Scarberry, Phillip 0. Howell,
pare nee A. Blucus, Charles G.
Kingery, lzail V. Drummond,
~illiam s. Medley, Harold E. Whitt; .
: Adam D. Sellers, Ralph L. Ben~ett, TWyllia Y. Connelley,. Beverly
Rife. Robert L Lucas, Joan E.
Schmidt. Robin L. Pasquale, Janet
. S. Williams, Travis . B. Hfltchins,

Carolyn Plymale, Patty Dyer, Tara
Chevalier, Lisa G. Johns, Henry .E.
Dillon, Michael Pasquale, Lelia V.
Browning, Ruth A. Greenlee, Joseph
P. Greenlee, Keaneth R. Farmer,
Randy G. Syrus, Eileen H. MinJ&lt;,
Walter J. Pope, Charles R. Landon,
Gregory L. Kratzer, Kevin R.
Nance, Barbara A. Mills, Farrell A.
Houck;
Lawrence v. Phillips, Phillip H.
Weatherholt, Dorothy L. Me.eks,
James c. Saunders, · David H.
McQuaid, Earl L. Woi\R, Belinda L.
Broyles, . Kelly ~tkinson, Becky P.
''Atkinson, Susan A. Turner, Amanda
F. Darst, Clare.nce B. Stout, Natasha
Lee Hammack, Debra L. O'Dell,
Mary L. H~nnesy, Robert T. Hennesy, Glenn H. Ward, Gloria J .
McQuaid, Karen F. Wonn, Wanda J.
Connelley, Frances A. Montgomery,
Kennison M. Saunders, Marvin L.
Baird, Christopher -A. Gill, Frank E.
Naskey, Richard L. Neal, Daryl L.
Martin;
Paul S. Koch, Charles W. Sibley,
Carolyn S. Petrie, Donald G. Spurlock, Darlene S. Milam, Henry K.
Milam, Katherine A. Elliott, Albert
I. Earley III, Paul W. Morgan· Jr.,
Sandra K. Carroll, Barbara C.
Epling, Jennifer E. Fleming, Lance
L. Hughes, Diane Love, David Carman, Mary L. Bailes,· Carlos E.
Swisher. James C. Fife, Dwayne B.
. Beard, David E. Clary, Ronald R.
Plantz, V~mon W. Bumheimer, Gary
·L. Lyons, Winston C. Saunders,
John W. Barcus, James A. Johnson,
Ricky A. Swain, Thomas R.
Hutchins. ~

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Church edifice will be celebrated 7
Times-Sentinel 1t11ff
p.m. Friday.
POMERO:Y -- The !25th
Rev. Masud Syedullah, associanniversary of the consecration of ate .for liturgy .and education of
Pomeroy's
Grace Episcopal Trinity Parish in New York City,

many mundane household items
went for ten, 20, 30 times their
value. There was incredulous laughter and applause when a stool that
Caroline Kennedy once used to
climb onto the window seat of her
in Manhattan, was at once pre- mother's White, ~ouse bedroom
dictable and revealing.
(estimated value $100-$150) went
· It was predictable because no for $29,000. A silver-cased tape
matter how discreet - some would measure wjth .the initials JBK ($500~
say disingenuous ·- Sotheby 's was $700) sold for 42,500. And the walin setting the estimates, you just nut humidor that Milton Berle gave
knew that many ordinary . objects President l(imnedy ($2,000-$2,500)
would go for big, big bucks and that . went for $520,000. That's a lot of
the little guy would be shut out. It smoke.
was revealing because apan from
The simulated three-strand pearl
providing us with a glimpse into necklace . that was a signature of
Onassis' heretofore-shielded world, Onassis' White House years ($S00the auction offered perhaps unex- $700) sold for $190,000. But even
pected insights into our attitudes the b_ig-ticket items, which were
toward celebrity and death.
expected to sell closer to their esti- .
• The tone for the auction, which· mates, , did remarhbly well. The
took in $34.5 ·million, · was estab- 40.42-carat
' diamond
ring
lished at Tuesday's opening when ($500,000-$600,000), an engage-

"Drink to your health with ties.
'
, .i'lie Clnclnnlltl Enquirer ,
Ensure, to help you stay healthy,
"It's a depressing scenario. PeoBat, drink and be merry has been energetic and active."
-pie skip breakfast. Because so many
JOOdified for the '90s:
· 1he marketing strategy is wiork- companies arc downsizing, they
' Drink, drink and lie healthy.
ing. No longer just for the ,over- even feel. guilty if they take a lunch
At least that 's the idea behind the weight or infirm, -.ucking your break. Before dinner, they might
..,growing popularity of the high-pro- meals from a can or drink box is the have the kids at soccer, ·ballet
tein Jiquld meals that erowd store latest trend on the quick-fi~ road to lessons, car pools, or just running
ihelves:
Ensure, Sustacal, Nutra better healt)l.
errands. They might get one mega
4
Stan, Resource and the latest, Boost.
According
to
Information meal a day - a late dinner. People
• The~ are even generic knock-offs, Resource Inc., a Chicago-based are looking for real-world solu1! such as Walgreen's Nutritional Sup- marketing research firm, for the year lions."
plement.
'
ending Dec. ·
The nutrition energy drinks liave
t
These shake·
· "It IMY tooli like • milk lhllke, 3, .1995, sales I been positioned as a more healthful
! like concoctions but your &amp;ody will think lt'l rock; of Ensure alternative to not eating or grabbing
to et fuel" bnlg• Boost.
shot up. 52.1 the ever-convenient junk food
0 (Si[Dilar
• weight-loss
percent. For snack.
drinks like Ultra
the
same
"They're just another option,"
).Slim Fast and Sweet Success), are time period the sales were also up Horbiak says. "We' re not saying
•·touted as complete and balanced for Sustacal (25 percent) and Susta- this is better than food. If you have
! nutritiOn and the answer for every- cal Plus (51.4 )lercent). Boost was time to eat ·good whole food, by all
: one from 'harried young profession- introduced in October, but had means do that. "
For seniors, Horbiak says the
; als too busy to chew to retirees who · al~ady racked up $5.2 million in
• want to put.more pep in their step.
sa:es by early December.
·
drinks can fortify and add ¥&amp;riety to
: To wit: In the first national comThe trade journal Supermarket their diets,
"As some people get older, they
: mercial for Sustacal, an older couple News, repons that dollar sales also
;.cruises along in their practical sedan rocketed 80 percent in the year end- tend to get into the tea and toast syn• sipping Ensure, while a more vibrant ing Aug. 31, placing annual sales pf drome, where they eat the same
: older couple swilling Sustacal zips these drinks at $200 million.
foods over and over. The drinks can
; by in a red convenible.
Registered ·dietitian Joan Hor- provide ·another way to get daily
: The voice .over declares: "No, biak, consultant to Mead Johnson nutrients.''
•.Sustacal can't add years to your life, Nutritionlils, .the company that gave
What's in these eli~irs?
: but it might add life to your years." us Boost and Sustacal, specialize's in
While the formulations vary from
: There also are proliferating print creating nutrition programs for peo- drink to drink, the basic ingredients
• ads:
pie oh the. go.
are typically water, oils, sugar, minHorbiak says of the frend : "The erals and vitamins, milk or soy pro: "It may look like a milk snake.
: but your body will think it's rocket public is moving faster and time 'is tein and ~ificial flavors. Calories
: fuel" brags Boost.
one of our most precious commodi- range from 200 to 250 per serving (8
I
.

j
1

Sca11ning tbe ·true meaning behind·bar codes
9y Ar~t.;e-s. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Some
years ago a magazine article gave an
explanation of the bar code lines that
you see on products in grocery
stores. Foolishly, I did not save the
article. Now my curiosity is getting
to me. I'd very much like to be able
tii decipher the codes. -- MIRIAM V.
ALDERFER, Hatboro, Pa.
DEAR MIRIAM: The bar code
l}n products is called the Universal
f!roduct Code (U.P.C.) and is a sys(~m for identifying the many supplilo&lt;s and millions of items t~e
..Varehoused, sold and deliv red. It
~)!me into e~istence to serve the
'ery industry and now has en
Implemented by most everyone in
tbe industrial, commercial and spe~!ality sectors of the economy.

We had a nice chat with a woman
, at Uniform Code Council, Inc., in
. Dayton, Ohio. This nonprofit company assigns the first six digits of the ·
U .P.C.: The sinallnumber to the left
and the next five digits are a registered manufacturer number. This is.
the label owner's code.
The next five digits are an item·
number that is assigned by the
owner of the label. He has available
to him I00,000 combinations of
numbers, and he doesn't have to register this information.
The small number to.tbe right is
called a check digit and is calculated
mathematically. Its purpose is to
assure that ~ bar code has been
scanned correctly.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN': Do
you know anything about old Avon
·perfume bottles? I understand they

are a collector's item. Please let me · many of the CPC collectibles are
know how io find out about them. -- now worth hundreds of dollars.
REGINA STANKOVIC, W_est Cov- NAAC also offers a monthly.
ina, Calif.
newsletter for $19 a year. Send your
DEAR REGINA: We don't know check to: Avon Times, P.O. Box
beans about Avon bottles, but we 9868. Kansas City, MO 64134.
can teU you where to get the inforIf you have an inquiry about a
mation. Connie Clark, president of s~cific Avon or CPC · collectible, .
the National Association of Avon please enclose a self-addressed,
Collectors Inc., wrote to tell us that stamped envelope and $1 with your
the only book on Avon collectibles inquiry and send to NAAC, P.O.
still in print is "Bud liaskin's 13th Box 7006, Kansas, City, MO 64113.
Edition · Avon and CPC ·ColSTUMPED:
REPAINTING
lectibles." It can be ordered from GOLD l1UM ON CHINA -- Kathy
NAAC (National Association of Singleton of Greensburg, La., has
Avon Collectors), P.O. Box 7006, some World War II vi.ntage Haviland
Kansas City,M064113. The price is china. The gold llim has worn off,
$19.95, plus $3.50 postage and han- and she \VOUld like to have it
dling.
restored. We've searched and can't
By the way, CPC, or California find anyone who does this.
Perfume Company, was the name of
Write to "Ask Anne &amp;: Nan" at
Avon Products from 1886-1929; P.O: Box 240, Hanland, VT 05048.

'

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!hat her handwriting was recen~y
Judged the best at her grade levelm
Texas.
The sixth-_grader at Mary lmmaculate Cathohc School m suburban
Farmers _Branch is now _competing
m a nauonal penmanship contest,
co-sponsored by _Parker pens and
Zllner-Bloser, publishers of handwriting textbooks.
ijer handwriting sample has been

forw~ed to ~ national judge, lll!,d
the wmners WID be announced next
month.
!udgi~g is based on shape of the
scnpt, s1ze, slant, smoothness and
spadng, said Rich~ Northup, vice
pres1dent of markeung for ZanerBlaser, based in Columbus, Ohio.
The national winner receives a
$500 savings bOnd, a plaque, a pen
set and T-shins for all Qf his or her

1 POMEROY - The Middleport' Pomeroy area has recieved a new.
lmissionary for the Church of Jesus
i Christ of Latter-Day Saint in April. .
: 1:ister Walton, t2, joined ~ister
; Buhl, 22, who has already been
!serving in Middlepon for approxi- ·
:mately 'three months. The ' two
'women will spend approximately 70
:hou~ per week helping people learn
•imore about the gospel of Jesus.
: "I am lookin8 forward to working
:here," Sister Walton~~~. "The peo:Pi~ 9f Middlewn are very nice and
,friendly."
·
·
·
; Like all missionaries fqr the LOS
;Church, Sister Walton receives no
pay fo~ her labors. She is instead

rita;mG~~~III1
'

t

·'

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Associated Pns11 Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) ...:. The
·
,--- - - - -- - , - - -- - .

Theft p1•CkS -

Whether she's five or fifty, we
have the perfect l'r«ious
Momrnts gik to spread birthday
cheer. See us today!
·

· L..ndCNiaer-Toyota
Montaro-Mitaublahl
S.CI••• Mercedel •
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3001 canverllble-:BMW
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s"'*suc:ena
SOurce: Reon Carter,
Cincinnati ~rar

R _..

e-

rat

ca.rt..

49

40g
33g
40g

8g

2.5g
8.8g
3g
3g
9g
9g

33.8g

42g
38g

. 34u
34g

Protei~

'
10g

150
lOg
9.3p
tOg
12g
9g
9g

SOdi-

to II ounces). Protein, carbohydrate
and fat contents also differ slightly.
Aavors are usually the standard
strawberry, chocolate and vanilla.
Cost $1 to $1.50 per can .
' . Activity level, weight, age and
personal taste should be considered
wheh deciding which drink will best
suit .your nutritional ·needs, Horbiak
says. However, some nutrition
.expens believe that those in the pink
(like the ones depicted toasting with
these drinks in the advertisements)
.should not use them routinely.
Bonnie Liebman, director of
nutrition at the Center for Science in
the Public Interest, a Washington,
D.C.-based consumer group, and
Lauren Niemes, executive director
of the Cincinnati Nutrition Council,
say while the drinks can't hurt, the
implication that the)l' re just as good
as real food or that drinking them is
an integral part of a healthy diet is
.false.
Botqq:nsure .and Sust..,al have
been around ailJ?ut 2Q years and
. were originally targeted to hospitals

and nursing homes for people, who

had difficulty eating food and keeping their weight up because of illness. (Hence, the popular ad claim
that Ensure is recommended No. I
by doctors.)
Liebman believes these are still
the people who will benefit the .nwst
from these products.
Niemes says: "What disturbs me
is I find some of the ads to be misleading. It's implied that there's
somethi11g magical in those cans
that's makes people full of energy."
· Liebtltan adds: "As for giving
you that extra burst of energy,
. there's no\hing extta special-in tltefe.
When you feed your body nutrientric.h calories, you're supplying it
with energy. You can call a banana
Boost, too. ~,
Liebman points out thaL some of
the ~ompanies pushing these liquid
meals for adults are also the largest
manufacturers of baby: formula and
these cans are often positioned on
store shelves near Similac.
"To expand their marltet, it

.... ..
.......• ...
.....

'lllat.a

130mg
220mg
370mg

$1.00

1101

St.OO
St.OO
$t.09
S1.29

1101

suo

200mg
2:10mg
240mg
210mg
200mg
.

11oz
1001l '
lor

$1.50

icR .

suo

D. Gi-. G i n n l t l - -

.

would make them very happy if we
all were drinklog fonnula from the
time we 're born until the day we
die," Liebman says.
Liebman and Niemes say l)le
h~althiest habit for busy people}s:to
stock up on "grab-and-co" rOods,
such as low-fat breakfast ban,. bn:ad
sticks, bagels, fruit (fresh or driejl),
ybgurt, low- or no-fal cbceses and
chopped raw vegetables.
;

..
•

"There are some thin11s in ~
food such as phytochemicals, CO'Rl·
pounds in plant foods thai research
has shown provide$ protect.ion
against diseases such as cancer,"
Niemes says. " These compounds
are only found lrt real foods. 1hey)e
not in these beverages.
"I think people have become too
caught up in this !-never-have-timeto-eat perception," she says. "Food
is one of life's pleasures. If it's
something that's really imponant .to
you·- as it should be - iJ can be
squeezed into the busiest schedule·."

makes .good sense

supponed entirely by savings previously accumulated and "monay
donated by her family. She will
serve a total of 18 months on the
mission. Transfers to different cities
are made every few months by mission he~dquarters · in Charleston,
W.Va.
.
.
Sister Walton 'is ori ginally from
Salt Lake City, Utah where her family S\ill resideJI She attended Salt
Lake '. City College an&lt;! was
employed by Wendys before volunleering to become a missionary.
When the te.rm of service is ovet, she
plans to return to. Salt Lake City apd
continue her education.
·

ical ans school passed the state proficieqc'y exam, said principal
. CAMDEN, N.J. {AP) - Khalil Stephanie A. Reynolds. Truancy is,
Murrell knows.he wants to become a not a problem and there bave been
doctor. At 15, lie's already pursuing no fights sin&lt;;e the school opened,
his goal. lie's a sophomore at a high she said.
"They're here because they want
school in Camden . where studenu
to be here," Reynolds said. "The
I t about health care professions.
The Medical Ans High S~hool, commitment on . all levels, . is
I ted ' at ·our Lady of Lourdes extremely high."
Reynolds, 40, a former business
edical Center, is believed to be the
ly one of its kind in the area and teacher, strolls purposefully do\Vn
e of only a handful in the, country. the narrow hallway as students
Hundreds of students from change ·classes. She greets stud~nts
und. the city applied for the first by name or calls out, "Hi, baby. how
·
·c s, but only 60 were chosen based are you today?"
push
them,
prnd
them,
"We
o' an essay, attendance, grades and
encourage
them
and
hug
them,"
to;acber ..recommendations. Classes
Reynolds, the mother of two sons,
~gan in September 1994.
.
•' "I want to do my best," says said during a recent interview at die
Murrell.' "I definitely want to be a school.
Attendance averages about 9o
dOc:tor."
: The school is a rare success story percent daily, according to
in• Camden, a district with about . Reynolds. Only two students have
20,000 students that has struggled to dropped out.
Discipline is strict at the medical
in!prove test scores and avoid a stale
takeover. About 500 youngsters are arts high school. Students wear union the waiting list for the medical fonris every day except Friday,
which is casual day. They wear lab
ans school.
"I think it's a good opponunity · coats when going on field trips.
The girls are barred from wearing
for me," said sophomore Johnelle
dark
nail, polish or large earrings or
Johnson, 16. "I really like it."
Last year; all students at the med- dyeing their hair outrageous colors.

~

FRUTHPHARMACY

Ullrtl SUm Fat

Shawn Sheets Is soothed after receiving an immunization at
the Immunization Fair Friday at the Gallla County Falrgr.ounds.
'Ole fair was coordinated by the Gallia County Health Department as part of National Infant Immunization Week April 21
through 27. Around 20 children attended the fair. As well as
Immunizations booths were set up by the River Valley High
School Child Development Class, Early Intervention, Holzer
Medical Center and Holzer Clinic.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GO'IT: I'm a senior
· female · with· chronic diveniculosis
and irritable bowel sy!ldJome. I
e¥perience periods of cramps an.d
abdbminal pain that may last for up
to 10 days. What is your opinim/ on
food or drink', specifically a high.
fiber diei and moderate alcohol
intake?
·
DEAR READER: Diver.ticular
disease and irritable bowel syndrome are e~ceedingl¥ common,
especially in older adulu. Diveniculosis, the presence of small outpouchings in the intestinal lining,
ordinarily cause no symptoms. ·
Irritable bowel syndrome, the
cause of which is unknown, often
produces gas, bloating and constipation or diarrhea. These symptoms
tend to occur in cycles and are often
related to stress and 1ension.
There is no consistently useful
diet for either affliction. However,
with respect to IBS. many authorities recommend a high-fiber intake
and the use of bulking agents (Metamucil, Fibercon and others). Also,
any foods that aggravate symptoms
should prol)ably be avoided . Moderc
ate alcohol consumption should not
affect either diveniculosis or IBS.
To give you more information on
these conditions, I am~ending you
copies of my Health Reports
"Diverticular Disease" and i ' Irritable Bowel Syndrome." Other readers who would like copies should
send $2 for each repon plus a long,
self-addressed, stamped envelope to
P.O. Bo~ 2017, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
mention the title(s).
DEAR DR. GO'IT: About si~
years ag·o I was told by a urologist
that the swelling in my left testicle
was a hydrocele. lie said I could let
it go until it bothered me, or I could
have surgery if I preferred. When I
suggested draining it with a needle,
he dismissed it as risky, mentioning
tlje high probability of infection.
When I sought a 5econd opinion, tbC"
urologist said I co~ld have it 1
drained. What's your opinion?
DEAR READER: A hydrocele is

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She'l) remember her special day, .
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250

Booeil
SWUcll

By,MELANIE BURNEY
A11oclated PRill Wrher

-.

A\me B. Adams and Nancy NashCummings are ce-authors· of "Ask
Anne &amp;: Nan" (Whetstone) and
"Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam). To order, call 1800-888-1220. .
. Copyrliht1996 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

. . . Good

C:&amp;'l.odu

Students·get hand.s-on
medical experience

0 '

Questions of general interest will
ar in the column. Due to the
lume of mail, personal replies
nnot be provided.

:-:J':

lin Middleport-Pomeroy .

•'

"Anolher feor And More Gre7 Hore1 ••
128686

«

iNew ·missionary serving .--Immunization tair- Hi.gh~fiber diet

''

classma_tes, N~rthup said.
,
·
ond da .,.
·.
Jennie, a ~ght-hande~... saad that I!
Y
•
when she wntes compettuvely, she
keeps her eyes on her hands rather
than on the text.
She c~its luck ~ attitude, for
her success, along wtth technique
All Natural T-ute"'
and practice.
With
ChiOIIII"I have good days and . bad
days," she said. "I guess when I
took _the contest, I was having a '

'.

0

ASK ANNE • NAN

Sixth-grader write,s~ her name in -lights for penmanship contes~

:: DALLAS (A~) - What the
!';Amen Comer"" to golfers at the
Masters, capital Q is to 12-year-old
,
.
lennie Anderson. .
•' But this champron has a gnp on
btr nemesis.
. ·
·, "The easiest letter IS C, but Q's
~e by far the most difficult," she
said. "You have to concentrate. It·
bas all sons of loops and stuff."
: . Jennie has so maste~ the loops

l

.

~

• Poor
"Fair ·

• By AEON CARTER ·

o•

. 4

•

'Ow chc E '
VMiiol1 MCII
cupe. Nun Slalt, h motll
hid undllllh'ed b10Wnn.dc8

•

die that they lives on in the hearts cf
those who love them. While that's
true, it is equally certain that the
final nail in tlie coffin, so to speak, iS
that moll)ent when a person's pos-·
sessions are dispensed of.

ment gift from Aristotle Onassis,
sold for $2.4 million.
In comparison, some of the anwork performed disappointingly.
Two John Singer Sargent watercolors "Head of An Arab" ($100,000$125,000) and "Venetian Girl"
sold
for'
($80,000-S 120,000)
$200,000 and 140,000 respectively.
But then, an transcends its circumstances. What makes these watercolors worthy is the artist and their
loveliness, not the owner. ·
The auction's panicipants, however, weren 'I looking for transcendence. :They . were looking for a
piece of a celebrity, one whom we
presumed could never be touched the sad-eyed lady in the black veil
who stood with her two small children at the gravesite. The Sotheby's
auction ripped away that veil.
And it tore off our illusiOns about
death. There's a sense when people

-

the

,..,. coa.

'

By GEORGETfE GOUVEIA
Gannett Suburban Newspaper•
NEW YORK - The estate sale
of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis,
which played out as an international
!Redia event this week at Sotheby's

I

. 8oth atladled,
an~ on tha

will he the
member of the group, Samuel Wyl·
speaker,
and
lis Pomeroy. The parish was named ·
Right Rev. Her"Grace Church" and the first rector
bert Thompson, ·
was called in 1844.
The congregation worshiped in
Jr... bish~p of
Southern Ohio
a frame building until I865 wherv
will he the celethey decided to build an enduring ·
brant. Right Rev.
stone church. William Tinsley, ·a'
Kenneth Price,
noted Irish architect living In
Suffragan. BishCincinnati, designed the new'
op · of Southern
church that became known among:
Ohio, is also Rev. MIIBUCI
architects as "a little gothic gem." ·
scheduled to par- Syldullah .
The design of Grace Church
ticipate in the serfollows Tinsley's formula of the·
vice.
early English Gothic parish church.
Born in St. Louis Mo., Fr. It is rectangular rather than cruci-·
Syedullah received· his masters of form, with lancet windows and a·
divinity ·at Seabury Western Theo- C6l'fl8! tower.· ·
. logical Seminary in Evanston, Ill.
ltwas constructed with native ·
and hll$,. also served parishes in sandstone cootributed along with '
Oklahoma and Ohio, notably as the much labor by V.B. Honan. Money,
associate n;ctor of Christ Church material and labor were also donat-'
(Cathedral), Cincinnati.
ed by other members of the con-•·
Having a speaker from New gregation. The spire was given by
York .is in keeping with the original · Samuel Wyllis Pomeroy, Jr. as a.
consecration services when the memorial to his son.l Henry, who
speaker was Dr. Benjamin Haight, was killed in the Civil War. Caro- l
D.O. of New York. He was a long- line Pomeroy gave the bell. Herl
time senior associate of Trinity name and date are cast in the bell .
Parish in Manhattan and sometime
The leaded stained glass winvicar of the St. Paul Chapel.
dow in the sanctuary was imported
This week's celebration will from England by the 10 grandchiloccur exactly 125 years from the . dren of Mr. and Mrs. Valentine B._
date of the original consecration. Honon and given in their me.mory. ·
May 3, I 0.71.
Through the years the church
The consecration sermon ·given interior has seen changed. Someby Dt. Haight \Vas described in the time after 1890 a central aisle was 1
Meigs County Telegraph, May 10, installed, the sanctuary was made 1
1871, as "an able and masterly smaller, and a straight altar rail was l
exposition of the spiritual cllaracte• put in place.
.
1;Jle pipe organ, m31le by the •
of the Public Worship of the
Church as· prescribed in the Book . Barchoff Organ Factory in ·
of Common Prayer."
Pomeroy was given by Mrs. G.M. '
The chu~ch's history goes back Plantz in 1905. The hand-carved ·.
to March 21, 1842, when ten pio- font was given by the Charles R."
neers from Massa~husetts and Ver- Pomeroy family from whom the :
mont met in the little settlement land on which to build the church
they had founded on the banks of was purchased, and the carrara '
Lhe.Ohio River to forman "Episco- marble bowl in the fonl was .
pal Society."
brought from Italy by S. Dana Hor- ·
·That "settlement" was later ton.
named Pomeroy, in honor of one
'.

Onassis auction offers big prices, insight ori death

-' .
.a

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla-, OH • Point Plnaant, WV

•

..

lasu about IS minutes. Sbe lifts weiahu. runs on a treadmlll or rides 8 bike.
That regimen, plus a sensible diet, keeps her weight at 123- the same as
high school.
Her advice for working out at home is simple.
"They can do it because all you have to do is have that drive that you
wtpt to look better," Kosinski said.
tindsay, who provides physical training for his clients at their homes,
knows it is not always that easy.
. ,
"It's easy to be distracted," he said. "You.want to get a ~I an of acuon.
That plan could include Writing down the ume of day you II "'ork out, the
length of the workout, and what you plan to do during the workout. Then
make every cffon to keep that time open on your - schedul~.
.
And then you might also enjoy the benefiU of exerc1se that ~Iockard ,
Correa and Ko5inski have already seen : Vitality. Strength. fle~1b1hty.

Bidwell native elected Grace Chqrch celebrates,125 years in .edifice
.to NSBA board
·

.i•-..suncs.y. April 21, 1911

3q0ZX tuaaan

•

.. 3001~

'

growing popularity of spon utility es to insurance companies have
vehicles apparently •~tends to increased, Hazelbaker said.
· That is be.causc there .has been a
crooks.
in joyriders, usually teen,agers
drop
The two 1993-95 mndel vehicles
with the highest theft losses are 'the who take a· car to drive around
Toyota Land Cruiser and the Mit· briefly, sometimes doing a little
subishi Montero, .the Highway Loss damage or taking the stereo before
abandoning it.
Data !ftStitute repor!f:d Friday.
lt's the second year sports .utility
vehicles· have led the ' list, · taking .
Now the trend is toward vehicles
over from high-priced spons cars··, being taken in their entirely, Hazelthat had previously been most _popu- ·baker said, " and in fact being
]llf with thieves, said Institute V(ce
exp9rted, uhfonooately."
,
President Kim Hazelbaker.
Sport utiljty vehicles "are very
1he loss ratings are a combina- popular ve)licles to export to destttion of frequency of a vehicle being nations in Latin America, South
stolen and the cost to insurance America, all over the globe," he
compani.es to .pay the cl':\ms, Hazel- said.
bailer explained, with the average
rating 100.
·
After the Land Cruiser and Mon·
1be Toyota Land Cruiser rated tero, the top I0 vehicles for lbeft
2 340 and the Montero I ,894.
loss were Mercedes S-Class, I ,5l3;
' 1he Chevrolet Lumina had tbe Acuta Legend 2-door, 1,347;. BMW
, lowest theftlosses rating, II. · , ' 300i conveni~le, I ,05 I; Mercedes
The frequency of thefts ·~ SL conveflible, 912; Aeura Legend
declined over the years, but the losS'\ · 4-door, 665; Lexus ~S · 300,. 620;

,,

Nissan 300ZX, 597, and BMW 300i
2-door, 555.
The 10 cars with the lowest loss
rate were the Lumina, the Saab 900 .
4-door, 15; Buick Skylark 4-door,
15; Buick Park Avenue 4:door, 17;
Saturn SW station wagon, 19; Buick
LeSabre 4-door, 19; Subaru lmpreza
4-door, 19; Buick Regal 4-door; 20;
Ford Aeros•ar, 21 ; ford E-1~0 Club [
Wagon, 22.

OR.GOTT
PETER
GOTr, M.D. .

a harmless collection of clear Huid
beneath the covering of the ~ticle.
11 does not require treatment unless
it enlarges (to cause discomfon or to
get in the way). The fluid can certainly be removed with a needle, but
the condition commonly recurs. :
Also, as your first doctor melltioned: infection is always a possibility -- although I believe that such
risk is low, providing the drainage
procedure is carried out under sterile
conditions.

t
,.

Friends.
Co-workers.

Divorce
SotrUiotlli Yo,u Kttowls Hurting.
Tell thtin about Dlvorteeare, a
special weekly seminar and suppon·
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Call 992-2914 ror mo~ lnt'....ttooo.
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Realolra-ls required.

[JfVO~CE I

~

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
.

FAMILY PUCTICE

PAIN CONTROL
CliNIC
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WEIGHT CONTROL
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THOSE WORKING PEOPlE,
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(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

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(304) 675·1675

..

•

�•

·I

2

Entertainment

ApriiZI, 1. .

---.----::.-----People in the news---__;,_ _ _ _ __
-

All.ANTA (AP) - Atlanta Braves outf~lder David Justice filed for said Friday. "Maybe (vot~rs) will watch NN on a re~Uiar basis:O•
divorce from aclress Halle Berry, saying the couple's marriage was " irreFerraro, who ran for vtce president in 1984 and lost a 1992 primary bid
trievably broken."
" i~ for.'!"f U.S. ~nate, ~d she won't be ol:tjective in her ,new job.
Justice's divorce petition in Fulton CoUnty~­
I m ~ot a JOumahst, so I can participate," Ferraro silid. . .
rior Court was fi!ed Friday, two weeks after Berry
She SAJd ~he would use her position to do what she could to help re-elect
submitted nearly tdenucal papers in Los Angeles.
Pres1dent Chnton and to see more women running for office.
Justtce, 30, asked to receive his sepbte assets
and an equitable division of the couple's joint propWAHOO, Ncb. (AP) - The folks in Wahoo dangled some live bait in
erty.
front of David Letterman, but he didn't bite.
"We hope we can settle this in an amicable . In hopes of becoming '!'" fictitious home office for Letterman's Top 10
way," said Justice's attorney Wilbur Warner-Jr.
bst, the central Nebraska ctty of 3,700 residents has sent T-shirts, enchiladas
Justice and Ben'y, 27, married Jan. I, 199t They ... and two teen-age brothers, 16-ycar-old Josh and 14-year-old Jeff Price to
have been separated for several months. They have the talk show star.
'
maintained homes in Atlanta and Los Angeles.
"It's just junk," Leue_rrnan_said Thursday as he hcnled the ~ys into a
Berry starred in the films "The Flintstones," clear ~lasuc tank filled wnh bnbes from Wahoo. Lettennan said the winning
"The Last Boy Scout" and "Losing Isaiah" and cny w1ll be named at "some undetermined date." ·
Geraldine Ferraro plays a flight attendant in the current action thriller
"Let's_put 'em in the grafteroo box," he said.
''Executive DecisiOn.··
The _boys are the first living things used as .bait by either Wahoo or its
compeiiUon, mcumbent Grand Rapids. Mich ., in the race for bragging rights
NEW YORK (AP) - For now, Geraldine Ferraro is choosing to be a on the CBS "Late Show."
commentator, not a candidate. . .
Does this mean Wahoo will win the war?
1
Ferraro srans Monday as liberal co-host of CNN's "Crossfire," opposite
"Who knows? B_asically, it's just another contribution," show spokesconservative John Sununu. There has been speculation she might run against woman Kim lzzo saJd.
.
Mayor Rudolph Gtuham, and a recent poll found her the Democrats'
strongest prospect in next year's New York City election.
AUSTIN, Texas (J.~P) - As president, George Bush had trouble match"Politicians are never so popular as when they aren't running," Ferraro · ing the popularity of his wife, Barbara.

Like father, like son.
Gov. George W. Bush, son of the former president, says his wife, Laura, was a "shy librarian"
whom he promised would never have to give a
speech.
'
"So much for political promises, because now
she gives more s]leeches during the weelc than I do,
and frankly is a lot better speaker and is becoming s0
beloved that the same thing that happened to my dad
is happening to me," Bush said at a speeeh attended
by his wife.
With a glance in her dilcction, he said, "Quit giving so many speeches, will ya?"

·1nsects to

•

-

PARIS (AP) - Quincy Jones arrived in Paris on
a train from Switzerland in 1953, a struggling hom Quincy Jonea ·
player looking for a place to thrive.
"I couldn't sleep that night. The smell, the sunrise, I wanted to live it with
all five senses, and I've been in love with it ever since," the 26-time Grammy winner said Saturday as he rcccivecJ an award from his adopted country.
France decorated Jones, 63, as O(ficer of Arts and Letters for his lifetime
work as composer, producer and musician.
"I humbly accept the honor not only for myself but for all the great jazz
musicians which France has embraced with open arms over all the decades, 'I
he said during the ceremony attended by U.S. Ambassador .Pamela Harri·
man.
.
.

grass. he has also composed original
music for public service films produced by the Ohio Depanment of
Natural Resources as well as numerous televison and radio ads.
Celia perforrned with her sisters
from the mid '60s until 1989 everywher~ from Cleveland to New York
City's cabaret club stages. She has
appeared in numerous concerts as a
harpist, vocalist and mphi-instrumentalist all across the nation.
Jennings and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
are working together on a production of Baby, a musical comedy
scheduled for release by the Athenian Players Theatre in May. The
Lewises operate the Whistle Stop
Music Shop in Athens.
·
Musical pieces on the agenda for
Tuesday 's concert include Haydn :s

••

"Sonata in C. Major" and Brahm's
''Three Intermezzi, Opus 17," The
trillawill also perfOJ'111 several hits
a~ged&gt; by George Gershwin,
including "I Got Rhtym, "Liza" and
"Fascinating Rhythm."
'
Several traditional Irish folk
songs will be included in the performance as will Andrew Lloyd Web.:
ber's· "Alii Ask of You" from Phantom Of the Opera. The audience will
also be invited to sing along with th~
performers.
·

Hootie and the Blowfish
hoping for 'Fairweather'
By KIRA L. BILUK
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Bassist
Dean Felber of the phenomenally
successful band Hootie and the
Blowfish walked into a New York
hotel rodm carrying a bottle of juice
and a copy of The New York limes.
As he poured his drink over ice, a
\radio tuned to a local rock station
began to play the band's latest hit,
''Time.·.·
Felber nearly knocked over his
glass in his haste to switch ·it otT.
It's a telling gesture about how
ready the band is lo move past its
multiplatinum debut, "Cracked Rear
View." and that's why th~ir second
album, "Fairweather Johnson,'' is
coming out so closely on the heels of
the first.
During a break in their exhauslive • two-year tour supporling
"Cracked Rear View, " they rested

on Bermuda and wrote 30 songs, 14·
gf which made iron the new album.
' ·Hollfie's debut is . still firmly
ensconced in the top 20 .of Billhoard's album charts, and "Time" is
still all over radio and MTV. With
" Fairweather" just released, the
band, which won the best new artist
Grammy this year, could find itself
in competition with itself. But
booming singer Darius Rucker's not
worried.
" We just wanted to put another
record out because we had music,"
he said. "We just didn't really feel
the need to wait."
· The new album is an altogether
darker affair; it begins with the
mournful "'e the One," which
Rucker has Hubbed his favorite.
Songs such as "Fool" and the lovely . cello- and mandolin-laced
"Tootie'~ reinforce the quiet, introspective vibe.

~than two and one-half feet tall to

.

'

..
I

THE BIRD CAGE
A
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

•

•'

'

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

"Sad Caper," which pairs an
upbeat melody with downbeat
lyrics, remembers a failed relation- ·
ship.
·
"I said before this record I was
going to write a song about a relationship that worked and I guess I'm
never in one, so I couldn't do it,"
Rucker said with a chuckle.
"When I'm Lonely" may be selfexJllanatory, but Rucker says it's not
necessarily accurate.
"I guess I like being lonely," he
said. "I've discovered being alone
really helps me be creative .. J .love
my alone time - I think I like it
even more now because I don't get
much of it."
Rucker, in olive green corduroys,
navy pullover, and USC Gamecocks
baseball cap, twiddled a corkscrew
as he spoke. He 's always ready with
a laugh,. a contr~t to the more laidback, deliberate Felber.

FRI., SAT~ SUN.
JOHN TA·AVOLTA,
CHRISTIAN $LATER IN

MIS. WINTEIIDIIN£

7:oe,t=,, aw.r • • •,_,,.. ll1o tPiilll
J~MII

BROKEN AfiROW A

IND 1Hl

&amp;I~NT

PUCH

7:15 t:• DULY ..,.,.,.,_ , 1115, l:OO (JIGI

AND

CO.I.C 100111 "ftlt C1lArr" -

-

HALKNE!N
POMEROY · Termites, ticks, and
:eastern tent caterpillars are on the
· wowl. Over the past two weeks
. -ilozens of local residents have been
calling and bringing in samples or
, ~ites to be identified. Yes, you do
. !lave termites has been an all to com. !!'on response.
. Termite swarms have been emergmg from underground nests as
-~warmer weather appears. Within minutes hundreds of winged adults
~appear. TcJ'Illite adults have rectan. gular shaped bodies with rounded
:s~ts of wings that arc ]QIIger than the
·.termite's body. Control is best
. ~hieved using reliahle, Ohio Depart_ment of Agriculture licensed pest
.,l:ontrol operators. Remember to get
. quotes from more than one firm.
Extension Fact Sheets are available
O'n "How to Select A Reliable Termite
Exterminator" and "Termites".
· Dr. William Lyons, Ohio State
University Extension's State Ento.mologist reports that tick season has
.. returned to Obio. The normal season
runs from late April to July. licks
· ~~ed exclusively on the blood ofani-

.:~~~b~~:~~~-~e~~~x:~~~~~~~~~~

•

FRIDAY THAU THUAS
ROBIN WILUAMS,
GENE HACKMAN
IN

:!watch·for
.~· his spring

·•.and
riials.Theirbodiesarcoval,llattened
appear leathery. Adult ticks have
eight legs and the larvae or "seed"

The concert begins at 7:30 p.m.
and will be held in the Rio GrandeFine ~nd Performing Arts Center. .
For more information call 2457364.
.

COLONY THEATRE
NEW R!SLEASE - The rock group Hootle and the Blowfish, posing for a group portrait far a group
portrait in early 1996, has released Its second album on the Atlantic label, "FalrwHther Johnson,"
cion on the heels of Its multi-platinum debut disc, "Crackad Raar VI-."
.
·

"11tt CIKAT WIUTI HJPI• I

llllAilOIII B1"'0U .In •TIIB LASt' DAIICI"
Gl" Clll'l'lf'ICA'I'D AYAli.AII'--1

'' I

:))Vail a host animal. They prefer to
, live in woods, ian grass, weeds, brush
;and other · dense cover. Generl)l
·~Jean up and mowing around the
· !Jouse and nearby woods can greatly
--r~uce pop,ulations.
When licks are discovered, a lreat·
ment with an insecticide can be help.. ful. Insecticides . such as carbaryl
(Sevin),' chloropyrifos (Dursbad),
. lliazinon as wen as synthetic
pyrethroids. ·
Three simple rules to follow
would be to·:
, ,. Wear long pants and long
slee•ed shins.
... ,. Treat clothing with an approved
tick repellent acconling (o .directibns.,AI:Ib®ls COJUaining perrnithrin
. Jitovide excellent protection for this
purpose . Repellents containing
djethyl to1uamide (DEET) are helpful but less effective.
. -~ Check' periodically and remove
. any ticks you find on your body
promptly.
:. Easterntentcaterpillarseggshave
~tched .. Have you noticed the cater. P.illar masses in the trees, they look
like little white tents? The tents
pand in size as the caterpillars
· .ature. The caterpillars can quickly
foliate (strip) all the leaves off their
'st.· plant. The easiest control method
i lo take down the tent-like structures
~ dusk or dawn when all the catern Iars· are in the enclosure and then
"
d ..stroy. the caterpillars within it.
· emJCal applications of Sevin,
rsban, Tempo. and Talstar can be
u with care.
·
. ··Rose growers, have you pruned
a d fertilized. your roses this year?
P(uning should have been done in
Jo.t&amp;rch and early April. Its better late
t~n never. Pruning improVeNhe
pearance of the plant by il'te
r · oval of dead or diseased wood,
sQortening the height, and thus
improving the quality and quantity of
btPom. The exception to spring pruni~ roses are old fashioned (heirlopm) types and some climbers that
p~uce bloom from last year's wood.
Soveral homeowners have commentcJ that the new rose shoots· are
s!lrouti!lg from below the graft
(~larged stem area). These shoots
1 ~t;io most likely understock plant
glowth that will not development into
tile hybrid tea, granditlora and llori-

e

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POR DDAILS TODAYI

36t~it aai~2,29i
·
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· I may have celebrated too much. I'm feeling sick! '
The HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE
has .a registered nurse on duty from
8 a.m. to II :30 pJn. seven days a week
to answer your health questions.
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Please check with your physician about medications
I

~~:~::E~!~~~~;!::!:s~

~

A11aciated Prell Writer
Gasoline futures surged Friday
after a spate of refinery outages in
Texas raised concerns producers will
not be able to meet demand as Americans hit the roads for an expected
record-breaking summer driving season .
On other markets, wheat and com
futures rose once more to unprecedented highs in panicked buying tied
to low supplies. The Commodity
Research Bureau 's index of 17 commodities fell 0.36 cent to 261.45 amid
a general retreat in oiher commodity
prices.

A....-ul'llnl, SunriH C.fa, openad Jar Tha phone number 18 441·1550. "Our peaktlrna
buaineu ~ Second Avenua twa - k t
11 u1ually between 11:30 a.m. and 2:30p.m.,"
• ago, Located acroaa tha strattt from Union 78, • HaMty !IBid. She addad, "We pride ourselves
two doors above the poat oHice, the reataurant
on good old·faahlonad home cooking, and we
Ia owned and operated by Patricia Swift and
feel our prlcea are reaaonable." Behind the
Elllna tt.rwy, Fot marly the Whlta PI'-, It hu
counter on left Is waitresa Liane Sutton. On
.saven tablea for patrona, Harvey nkl. "We also right is Swift during a break. Harvey Is shown
In lha Inset on left.
taka delivery orders," she addad. The reatau·
rent Ia open from 6:30 a.m. until.4 p,m, dally.

D'uer
say.s
.T .

r~arm
4 I I

bl"ll'I sho .......,'S r.eneiued
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commitment ·to agriculture community

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~&gt;

Unleaded gas()line futures for
May delivery on the New York Mercantile .Exchange settled 1.20 cents
higher at 76.81 cents a gallon a:Cter
rising to a new five-year high.of 77
cents a gallon during trading. The
gasoline rally bOosted June light,
sweet crude futures 12 cents to
$22.32 .a barrel; while May heating
oil rose .51 cent to 59.27 cents a gal- .
Ion.
A market that had been under
pressure earlier in the day turned
around after Citgo Pelroleum, Koch
Refining and Coastal oil companies
announced they were shutting down
units in Corpus Christi, Texas, for

routine maintenance, 'Said Gerald
Samuels, an analyst at ARB Oil Inc.
''When it raif) s it pours," Samuels
said. "The net effect of all of this is
gasoline is incredibly strong."
Citgo's refinery produces 130,0(10
barrels a day, while Koch's produces
65,000 barrels a day. Coastal's unit
produces 130,000 blirrcls a day.
The news reinforced worries
about demand outpacing supply amid
predictions of reconl demand this
summer. The refinery shutdowns · '
come with gasoline stockpiles nin·
ning 7.3 million' barrels, or 3.S. percent, below a year ago, according to
the American Petroleum Institute.
. · "With the nature of how tight the
supply and demand balance is, whenever you get reports.of any snlifus,.it
really tightens up the market even
further," said Andrew Dickson, director of trading, wit~ GSC Energy in
Atlanta.
Wheat futures for May delivery
finished the week 18 percent higher
on the Chicago Board of Ttade,
gaining amid worries about tight
supplies to be delivered during that
month and on poor growing .conditions and strong foreign and domes.
tic demand.
The May contract continued its
Continued on 0·8

they have been in effec~ for at least extended through 2002 with an
five years and if the land meets oth- enrollment cap of975,000 acres. The
er early release require1.11ents Mead- WRP focuses on restoring and proows said.
tecting wetlands to enhance water
The environmental quality incen- quality and improve wildlife benefits.
tives program combines the functions After October. 't996,. the program
o~theAgricultural Conservation l'rowill start enrolling one-third of total
gram, water quality incentives pro- . program acre.s in perrnanent easegram, the Great Plains conservation me~ts one-third in 30-year easeprogram and the Colorado River ments. and one-third in ·restoration
Basin salinity control program. is to only cost-share agreements.
he funded at $130 million in fiscal
. The 1996 Farm Bill alfo estab- ·
year 1996 and $200 million annual- lishes the National Natural Resources
. ...
ly after that until 2002. Cooservation Conservation Foundation. It will be
practices related to livestock will a non-profit corporation which funds
· receive half df program funding.
research and educational activities
Under EOIP fiv~ to I0-year con- relating to conservation on private
tracts will be established with lands.
landowners to · provide cost-snare
A new Conservation on Private
and incentiv~ payments for us to 75 Grazing Land initiative is designed to
percent of the cost of conservation provide technical,. educational and
.practices. Total cost-share and incen- related assistance to landowners on
tive payments to any person arc lim- the Naiion's 642 million acres.of priYEARS OF SERVICE • Rodney Mates, pQst onlce manger from
ited to $1 0;000 annually and $50,900 vate grazing lands. According to the Columbus, presents Ron Keenan an award for 35 years of serfor the life of the contract.
latest'National Resources Inventory .vice at the Gallipolis Post Office. The award was presented FriThe Wetlands Reserve Program is
day at breakfast for a superior production year.
Continued on D-8

By PAn:Y OVER

GALLIPOLIS • The conservation
provisions of the 1996 Farm Bill
establish cost-efficient programs that
will direct conservation gains into the
next century, according to local conservationists .
"The conservation provisions
demonstrate a renewed commitment
be the agricultural community and
the public to environmental protection" said Patty Dyer. Oistrict Conservationist, with the USDA Natural
.resources Conservation Service in
Gallia and Lawrence· Counties.
The bill reauthorizes a number of
popular programs and creates new
programs that will help local
landowners. The Conservation
ReSCI";;e, We.dllids Reserve. Resou~
Conservation and Development. and
the forestry Incentives programs will
continue.
The bill also creates a new program called the llnvironmcntal Qual·-ity lnceiuives Program that combines
the functions of four existing costsharingprogramsintoonethatfocuses federal funding into conservation
priority areas. said Dyer. In additions By BRYGE SMITH
·Planning concerns
the 1996 · creates a wildlife habitat
GALLIPOLIS • Regardless of -Building income
incentive program, a non-profit nat- your current financial circum- . Purchasing a home
ural resources conservation £ounda- stances, providing for a financially • Stan1·ng a 'a
•· · mt'ly
tion, a grazing lands initiative, and a secure retirement should be of prime . Saving money even though your
farmland protection program.
.
concern ·
earning power is prob~bly not at its
Lisa Meadows. with ,the USDA
How peak.
Farm Service Agency, said the new
you achieve that Strategy
farm bill's focus is on providinb" volob,;ectt've
wt'll - Use all •available employer-sponJ
untary incentives to landowners to .·
depe
d
o
a sored retirement plans
·
n
protect and improve natural
variety of fac
resources. "There has been some
tors. For mos; • Panicipate in a 401 (k) or incentive
tremendous progress made in the·past
people, · the savings plan as soon as possible
10 years in resource protection, and
uncertain · out- ·Open an IRAifyou don't have one,
we intend to use this farm bill to build
of social se~urity benefits and add to one if you do have an account
on thatprogress," Meadows said.
employer-sponsored · retirement (Remember: benefits of tax-deferred
The Conservation ' Reserve Pro- plans points to the need for planning compounding apply whether your·
gram (CRP) will extend througH ahead and investing wisely. I:Jow contributions are taxable or not)
2002, the program encounrges you invest will depend mainly on · Invest for growth
·
landowners to leave highly erodible your ·ago, your current ·income and If you are·in your 40s
and environmental sensi.tive lands in level of savings.
·
Pranning concerns
grass trees. or other conservationcovThe guidelines ·below are some of . In'crease your income
er.
the points to consider as you and . Begin saving and invcstin'g for
The 1996 Farm Bill provides that your Advest Investment Executive . retirement other than through
up 10 36.4 million acres . may be or tax adviser develop a strategy to employer-sponsored plans
enrolled in the program at any one help ensure a comfortable retire- Strategy
time and allows new enrollments to ment. Remembers when creating an . Continue participation _in employreplace · expired or terminated con- investment strategy, it's imponant er-sponsored retirement plans. Contracts to maintain the total authorized ·'that it is flexible so you can shift tinue 401 (k) contributions • Take
level.
, assets as your needs or market con- advantage' of a deferred compensaContracts in existence before Jan- ditions change.
·
· tion program, if available Continue
uary, I 1995 may be terminated after · U you're in your 30s
IRA contributions - Establish a high

...•"'

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Creating a strategy to provl"de comfortable
retl"rement
•

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return, low-tax savings plan for · Calculate how much income your
financing cducatiod expenses; con- personal investments will provide
sider a custodial account finder Uni- . Decide if you will sell your home
form GiR to -Minors Act· Invest for an d move to a sma 11er condo or
growth
apanment
If you ' rem
· your-earIY SOs
· Consider whether you will continPlanning concerns
. Growth assets may require profes- ue to woik after retirement
· Provide for any uni,que situation
· 1 management.
s1ona
such as a disabled family member
·
·Career change a possibility
• Determine if you should manage
· Paying for college costs.
·
your own portfolio
'
• Care of aging parents
· Saving Nor retirement of para- Strategy
· Determ inc your sources of
mount imparlance
income,
expenses and tax situation
Strategy
· Take full advantage of company- at retirement (Remember: you must
begin to take annual minimum dissponsored retirement plans
· Contribute as much as possible to tributions from · your retirement
plaris and IRA by April I of the year
your IRA
after
you re.ach age 70 .1/2) . Shift
· Begin to shift investment emphasis
from growth to conservation of prin- investment emphasis from growth to
safety and income · Build protection
cipal
·Consider p!)ssibility of an individ- against inflation through diversification · Seek professional investment
ually managed account.
guidance
from your Advest InvestIf you're in late SOs -or early 60s
ment Executive ir' you find it diffi. Planning concerns
cult
to make investment decisions
. Decide when you intend to begin
. Bryce Smith is an associate vice
taking social security payments
- Determine i r your retirement plan president ror investments for ·
assets will be paid in installments or Advest, Inc. in its Gallipolis office.
in a lump sum

Cattle prices ·drop, but retail
bee.f. paymen
- t S rem a·In
• · h.I•gh

USi neSS briefS.

" ' .I)
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By HILLARY CHURA

Roses are heavy feeders, so a rotiil e rertillzaiion program will
i' prove plant health and vigor. Rose' grow. best in soils with a pH range
.
C! ·15.5-7.0. If you haven't taken a soil '
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP) te4t of your garden you should! In Don't count on a drop in retail beef
gepcral, roses do well with an appli- prices just because cattle farmers are
Continued ~n b-8 · ·
getting the lowest prices since' 1978.
.
"We're not going to see any real
~.
cheap J:'eef." said ~~n Gill, an ani'
mal sctence speo~ahst wJth the Un•·
·~ 20KYO (AP) - A group of versity of Tennessee Agricultural .
"t'-'S-infccted Japanese hemophili- . Extension Service. Retail prices are
ae!! sued the government and five affected by processing and packagJ?~armaceutical companies, llCCking ing, and those costs are not dropping.
c~pensation similar to what an earGill said beef prices may drop
· .er group or plaintiffs won.
somewhat if prices paid to farmers
!The 87 plaintiffs in Friday's law- stay low for a long time. "But we
s11ft are cithei' infected with HN, sure hope that doesn't happen," h!e
Wl)ich develops into AIDS, or repre- said.
sel't relatives of those who died of
With feed prices rising and 'beef ·
AIDS lifter being infected in the ear- demand weak, farmers are ex~ting
~to mid-19~'?' from tainted blood · to lose money, .In Tennessee, for
products.
.
· example, farmers arc looking at a 30
:-Victims say the government and percent decline in income from the
&amp;iig companies failed to remove state's $4&lt;10-million-a-year cattle
unheated blood produ~ts from the industry.
ro~k'Mluoite kno~they ran the
Emmit Rawls, a livestock marrisk of I!'IR1tnitting~
· , · keting s~ialist at the University of
.jl 1

•

Record-breaking
gas prices ca.u se
concern il1 U.S.

peon the ·

Pian is~ to perform at URG :
RIO GRANDE • Accomplished
pianist and retired professor of piano
Eugen Jennings will be in concen at
the University of Rio Grande and
Rio Gradne Community College
April 30.
.
Jennings taught piano at Ohio
University in Athens for 45 years
prior to his retirement in 1995. He
earned bachelor's· and master's
degrees from the University of.
Kansas in Lawrence, Jennings also ·
holcts a Ph.D. in music which he
earned at Florida State University in
Tallahassee:
Joining Jennings for the Tuesday
night concen are Charlie and Celia
Lewis. Charlie has appeared with
the new Vinton County Frogwhompers Marching, Singing, strumming
and plucking ~ociety and a Touch of

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Tennessee Agricultural Extension
Service, said steers that brought
about $72 per 100 pounds last year
have been selling for $50.
"It's pathetic what these cows are
bringing," said Jerry Smith, a farmer
in Telfonl, Tenn.
James Neel, a University of Tennessee animal science beef specialist,
said the supply is simply exceeding
the demand. De111and is down
because of a ~ool spring -delaying
the outdoor cooking season- and
rears arising from the mad cow discase that has hit herds in Britain.

New trouble

·
HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP)
Southern winds are blowing in new
trouble for Kansas wheat farmers.
The wheat crop, already in trouble
because of lack of rain, now is
threatened by an invasion of green
aphids from Oldahoma and Texas.
~

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"We are seeing a greater infestation of greenbugs than we have in a
...v.
long, long time," said Mary Copenhaver of Copenhaver Aerial Spraying
"
near Anthony, Kan. "They (farmers)
··-··.,!OiOO.'!';J
have a real tough choice: It is so dry,
yet the greenbugs are so thick. Even
if they kill the green bugs, they have
a slim chance of making a crop."
The aphids suck the life out of
small plants, and limit the growth of
more mature plants.
M'" l"l'll. gol·ng·· u~n
ft
I"
COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP)- Look .
for the price of milk to rise .
Bill Thomas of the University of
Georgia College of Agricultural and.
Environmental Sciences expects a
gallon to cost I 5 to 20 cents more by
·WEBER'S DRIVING
• Norman Weber, co-proprietor of
· June.
Weblr's Driving R•nga, atands along ttl. goH raniJI whlcl! '• '
The price that milk processors,
located on.State Routa? nHr Tuppers Plains. Tha range, in . ,
such as grocery stores and tlairies,
BICOnd
of oplf8tlan, Ia owned by ~ebar, Dannla Haw. pay for milk has increased an averland, lind Charlie Weber, and IB open dilly. For i!lformatlon,
~ge 17 cents a gallon
.
... call 887~074.

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:Ho·· e of the .week

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jfortable home has· amenities

Through-the-w._n air conditioners take
up less space, and are easy to install

A. NA.'JJIAH
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- Willi U&amp;. _,. teet .. ......
: ...... Plotl f-19_)r H
SIJJw
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By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Speclll Fellturea
U you are among ihose people
who find that a window-mounted air
conditioner fills your cooling needs,
you should consider installing a
through-the-wall air conditioner.
These appliances provide· the same
amount of cooling as a windowmounted appliance without talcing up ·
valuable window space, and they are
not difficult to install.
Don 't install a window-mounted
aj_r conditioner through the wall,
though. There will not be enough air
flow around the appliance, and you
could have funher problems with
condensation leaking from it into the
. wall cavi ty.
J\ through-the-wall air conditioner has a sleeve that supports it and
ensures sufficient air flow. The s!eeve
also direcrs condensation to the)outside.
·
Install the air conditioner on a wall
. that allows the cooled air to flow
freely into the house. It's best to
install the air condition~r on a ~all
that already has elec~cal serv1ce.
Howev~r, ma!or _r~wmng .may be
needed Jf the c1rcun 1s'alread~ crowd- \
ed or 1f your apphance reqUires 220
volts.
. Unless you .are going to plug the
mr cond1t10ner mtoa ~earby wall out- 1
let, h11e an electnc1an to do the
wiring. This is especially important
when the air conditioner needs 220
volts, or when the service panel is old
and crowded.
Highlights of what is involved
starts with drawing the outline of the
air conditioner opening on the wall
using a level.
·
·
Locate a stud on each side of the
opening, and draw a plumb line in the

.

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__ kick
•_....,...
..,.,Ill.. ...
quol..._
_
4.-r. ker-

- A_.,._,.-y!Ndo
- .. tile tiled "'"'· Oa lbe loll Ia

: .............. dlalatr-

- 1'lle formol ..... Ia Ideal
. ...
11 ... .... -r.t
famlly room orol~ouited lor
CIIUal oclio!Un. A -thtoqb
. . . . . -...by buiii.Ja book-

1,

. . . -.~ load poiol

l&gt;rbodl..-.

rrencb dooro Ia the family
room open to a cowered porcb

....

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wMher ft'

tim IDd blrbec;:u-

In ~ ldl&lt;hOD, I handy ioland
: -'t ..d I olep.Jn pmlJy

· like adv111lqe of tbio unique
...... The --nook .....teo
... ilr .....t flmily mealo.
The M&lt;luded muter oulte 011
tbe mlia loot hu two enonnoua

,...-Ia c1ooeto and a kloh privai!O

both with I Jilarble tub, I IOPI'
rate ahower and two vanitiu.
Tllla ~~ prooldeo ample orlor toro lit 1&lt;1 ready mr the dlt
~ It the lllllt lime.
1'lle ldtdten and the nook hawo
Jfoot and 11-b&gt;t ceilinp, u..IJ. AD other main-Goor roomo

D

eolgn F-99 bas an
entry, living room,
family room, dining

room, kitch~n . breakfaot ·
nook, udUty room, loft, tliree
&lt;•
bedrooms, bonus room, two
full baths and one half-bath,
totaling 2,225 oquare fe et of
hawol~ft.coilirws.
.
lMne
.....,e. The plan Is avai~
Oa the upper floor. two bed·
_ . . ohale • unlque oplit bath. able with 2x4 exterior wall
The .....tile bonuo room can be fnunlng and a craw!Jpace or
. l!lapled to meet Iubin need• and . slab foundation . A two-car
garage and storaee area probudaet
. vide 519 oquare feet of IIJlOCe.
!FIW o ..,.

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I

I&lt;GlH ploJI
tl(tl.il ....... iodll4i.. pida to
utiltillilf6 eo11t oU /itctlrtci.,,
u•t It to Houe ~1 ''' W11AI,
P.O. 1Jc 1562,
Y.... !1. Y.
lOJf6-l562. B• ,.,. "' iotlo/14

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IUpj.Joa-.1

center of it, to the floor. Remove the top of each rivet head.
drywall by cutting along the lines
, Return to the inside of the house
with a utility knife.
and pack insulation loosely between
You will need to build a rough the sleeve and the frame. .
'
frame to support your air conditionCut a piece of drywall to fit
et.lt consisrs of two vertical studs, a around the sleeve and nail it in pi~CC~.
horizontal piece at the bottom of.the Spackle and tape the drywall.
••
frame called the sill, a horizontal
Fit the cover over the sleeve
piece at the top of the frame called the hefore measuring for the trim that
header afVI short pieces of studs surrounds it. Miter the trim to fit
above and below the opening called around the ·air ·conditioner cover.
cripples. The rough frame is slightl y There should be a slight gap betweep
larger than the sleeve that supports the trim and the cover to allow the
the air conditi oner by about 1 inch in cover to be slid on and off the sleeve.
width and height. This space allows
:
for shims to be slid between the
briefs~
sleeve and the frame.
,
Slide the sleeve into the opening .
N;W YORK ~AP)- I?es~ite th~
and shim it so it tips forward about 1 ,appeal of btg nauonal stones hke tho
inch from level to drain condensation. O.J. Simpson trial and the
On the inside, the sleeve projects Unabomher, a su(Vey of newspapei
about
three -quarters-of-an-inch publishers and editors ranks local
beyond the frame (check your instal- news as most important to readers . .
lation manual for specific clearThe survey by Presstime magi;
ances). This positions the sleeve's zinc, released Friday, showed that
edge•three-eighths-of-an-inch beyond I 00 percent of the 3 18 p~blishers and
the drywall .
editors who responded ranked loca~
. Cut. a piece of aluminum flashing news as having "high or very hi gh'~
shghtly longer than the width of the appeal to their readers.
·
sleeve. Bend it at irs center, along its
Next came obituaries at 93 pe~~ ·
length, so it forms a right angle. Use cent, followed by classified advertis~
this piece as flashin g at the top of tlje ing at 85 .percent. Rounding out the
sleeve. Slide one side.of the flashing top five were di'.play advertising anH
under the sidi ng to seal the JOint sports.
·'
where it meets the sleeve.
Once the sleeve is fastened to the
BALTIMORE (AP) ·- A federal·
frame , move to the outside of the jury has rejected a claim that asbestos:
house. Drill through the flashi.ng and used in Kent cigarette 'filters in the:
into th~ to of the sleeve and spread 1950s caused the rare form of cancer:
a bead o exterior caulk under the that killed a Baltimore man.
.,
lias
. Rivet the fl ashing to the top
Jurors in .thc civil case d~ liberat' ;
o{ the sleeve with three-sixteenth-· · cd for about I 0 hours in federal court·
i h rivets. Smooth the caulk that Thursday hefore rejecting the wrong::
squirts from under the flashing and ful death suit filed against the Lori!~;
spread another bead of caulk between lard Tobacco Co. on behalf of Stan::
the fl ashing and the siding. Caulk the ley Les.nick by. his widow, Beverly. ::

=

11IE nLED FOYER openo 10 "'' dlnlnfl room. Slnliht ahead, lhe

room ....,mmod.oles fomW IIOthertnp, while the adjoeent
room ...,.tdeo a CIJIIdonable oealllll 1M .-ydoy ....,.,_ A
....lhmlqjb ftrepla&lt;e n.ink&lt;d by bulk-In '-kohelveo ..,...;, both

L

SUNDAY PUZZLER

•"-'lldt&lt;hen rea...... an loland ...........

ACROSS

DOWN

7 Percussionist

8 - Quixote
9 Stage direction
10 Varnish ingredient
1t More immature
12 Smoked salmon
13 Kimono sash
14 Auctionee(s CI'J
15 Precipitous
16 Come after
17 Mimic
18 Four. prefix
19 The Ram
20 Settles alter tlighf
· 30 That girt
32 A bone
34 Liberal - ·
37 Academic dog.
38 Do nothing
40 Redding or Skinner
. 41 Highlander
42 Young cod
46 Not wide
48 A Great Lake
50 Olvlslon
51 Kind of beer
S2 Flavoring plant
53 Bird dwellings
55 Rule
56 Dundee native
58 At no time
60 Dress In finety
61 Stop
62 Canvas shelters
65 Help
67 Before long
71 Support
. 73 Asian servant
75 Pace
77 Pitcher
80 Hatred •
81 Rudimentary: abbr.
83 BuRien

DUTCH MILLER
CHEVROLET

WASHINGTON (AP) - Repetitious work. poor job design and violence have become the most significant safety and health problems in the ·
American . wor~place, a union study
says.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Aviation Administration canceled a $475 million contract' with
Wilcox Electric Inc. of Kansas City,
Mo., for development of a new airline navigation system.
.
"Th · is clearly somethmg we
would efer not to do, but we are
dissatiSiie&lt;l with the performance of
the contractor," FAA Administrator
David R. Hinson said .Friday.

.

••

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1 Something valuable
2 Trip the light
fantastic
3 Narcotic drug
4 Tear
5 Publishing people:
abbr.
6 Hurt

BANKRUPT?
BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?

wAsHINGTON (AP) - A Pennsylvania-company has been accused
of luring desperate AIDS patients into
buying its stock with the promise of ·
·free, unproven " o~o ne-ox y ge n "
treatments (or life.
A federal court fro ze the accounts
~f Lazare Industries Inc. and tht
Securities and Exchange Commission said it has charged the Marshal s
Creek, Pa .• company and ·it chief
executive with securities fraud in the
sale of$1.4 million of stock to at least
72 investors.

85 Postal Hem
88 'Star-"
90 Long poem
94 Love god
96 Yak
98 Taj Mahal city
100 Postal matter
101 Monastery head
102 Plant IHe of a region
103 Radio receiver
105 Substantives
107 Journey
1D9 Protective
headgear
Ill English poet
112 Bar legally .
113 Cooks slowly In
water
115 A Ford
116 Under, poetically
118 Brad
120 Com spike
123 Jack who ate no fat
125 Spring
130 Rescue .
132 Lab burner
134 Edible fish
137 Church section
138 Egg yolks
140 Pet rodent ·
142 Plus
· 144 Wtiter
146 Understand
148 Feed for horses
149 Facilttates
150 Frighten
151 Fine violin, lor short
153 Wall hanging
155 Pesky bugs
156 Scoundrel
158 Urge on
159-Rica
160 Woolen fabric
163 Grade
166 Not as much
169 Had a meal
171 Three: prefix
172 Charged particle
174 Lawyers' org.
175 -Vegas
176 Macaw genus

$499.00

FLAIR FURNITURE
675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, VN

Channel Marker
Condo
N. Myrtle Beach, SC
Vacancies available in:
May, June, July August,
September, October

We do club$, wedding
receptions, school dances, class
reunions, family reunions. Can
Karaoke &amp; D.J . Your party.
Have all types of music.
Callt -6t4-367-71n
Ask for Debbie or Pete ·

Call 446·2206.or
·445:2734 after 5
1-800·455-2206

"BREATHE EASY"

Ham &amp;Turkey Dinner
Sunday, May 5th
at Southern High School
from 11 :00 am • 2:00 pm

An edueatlonal support
nmll tn for adults with chronic
.lung diseaSe will meet
. May 1, 2 p.m.
H"lzer Medical Center
French 500 Room
Speaker: Jan Welsh of
Rhone-Poulenc Rorer
TOPIC: Asthma Triggers
flor more info call

Take out orders available
Sponsored by Southern Jr..High
Adu~s • $4.75
Children • $3.50
Menu: Ham, Turkey, Noodles,
Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans,
Slaw, Rolls, Dessert, Tea, Coffee

Holzer Health
Hotline

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Special for month of May at
Mlcheal &amp;Friends
··Acrylic Nails -Full set $35.00
Reg. $45
1056 Jackson Pike
446-0698

1-800-462-5255
Gallia County's

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Experienced Baby Sitter
needed for.S·month old
twins in our home.
446-1810 after 5.

"FINESr'
Hair and Tanning S!\lon
446·8922
Attention II
Don't forget Mom on
. .Mother's Day, May 12th.

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NEAL'S GREENHOUSE .
NOW OPEN

Bring her to Finest Styling For a
Shampoo and sat at regular price
and gel
hair cut 1/2 Price I ·
Offer good lhru 5111196 ·

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3 miles off St. AI. 775 at Mudsock
- Watch lor signs

643-2497

Mary Kay Independent
Beauty Consultant
LORI BOCHARD

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Mason .Bowllng Center
31d &amp; Pomeroy St 304-n3-5300

Summer Leagues 4130 Tues 7 pm No Tap
• lellg!!O, 5/i

Gelllpalle, OH • Potnt Plea•nt, WV

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256-6741

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Chester Fire House
~ponsored by:
Chester Vol. Fire Dep(.
$1 0 per 6 tr. table contact:
Leonard KQenig at

&amp; you wi II give your

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. furniture a new look!!
We offer a large selection of
Fabrics,
foam &amp;
BXpBrt craftsmanship
(e14) 446-3438 22os
Graham School Rd. ·
Gallipolis

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Roger Smith at

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EXTERMITAL
Termite and Pest Control
Lowest prices, best guarantee,
quickest service for termttes &amp; ants

LOAVES AND FISHES

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992·2502

446-2801

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. 985-4179

new

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CANADAY
MEMORIAL
SHOOTING .MATCH
KANAUGA SPORTSMAN CLUB
(On Brick School Road)
SUf\IOAY, APRIL 28, 1!!96
l2:00 NOON TIL?
Hams, Loins, 50150 Door Prize
Food and Refreshments Available
All porceedi; donated to the
Tony 'Canaday Memorial
Scholarship Fund

You . are invited to attend our
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first e\ler community meal.
Local churches havf) come
together as a ministry to serve
area residents w~h a hot
meal. There is no charge for
this meal. Our fellowship with
one ·another is our sole
purpose and intent.

WHEN: Sunday April 28th
WHERE: St. Peter's
Episcopal Church
541 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio
TIME: 2 pm to 4 pm

...• •

25%oFF
All Hydraulic Lines
and Fittings

your furniture tired?

Wake' it up
Call
GRAHAM'S
.UPHOLSTERY

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·4·.

Wed 7 pm Men's league. 519

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment
· SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance
All Ages, All ~isks

We -try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-611.1

Gallipolis
FOR ;:,P,L.r:
Gallia Academy High
SchOol Alumni FlagSe
In time to show support for
· new graduates, class
reunic~ms and alumni &lt;&gt;v•~nt"
To order call 446-628.0 or
May Special Unlimited
Tanning for '$30 per person
at Ussa's Riv,er Vie.w
Salon of Beauty
480 St.
7 N 446-4660
Johnnie Jackson
AmVets Post #23
Kanauga, Ohio
BINGO
Wed &amp; Thur Nights
May 1st &amp; 2nd
7:00pm
17-$75 game~
$500 coverall includes:
$50 top line, $50 Bottom line
X-$100-Picture Frl!me · $100
Coverall $200
Cost- 2 packets $30 pe,r PBfSOn
Add't packets $5.00 each
Southeast Athletic association will
be selling instant tickets 4:30 pm
·
·
til6:45 pm

Kyger Creek Attendance Area
· Citizens:
you want to be part of the
'lpl.anntiir
19 of our students' future?
SPRING CRAFT.
you want our voices heard?
SHOW
IPIE!aSE! .pllm 10 attend the Apfil ·
Sat. May 4th 9 a.m. • 5 p.m.
meetir1o of the Board of

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I~~~~~~:~~: Become part of your
1;
future.
Parents in the Kyger
Creek Area.

86 Olds 442 Hops Grey
Silvar LikB new -One owner
20,200 miles full power,
garage kept and covered.
Call 446-01 09
REMODELING- PAINTING OR
GENERAL FIX· UP
Can design and draw new id8il5 for
room addttlons, room expansions,
etc, all to meet your satisfaction
304-675-2359 Evenings.

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·POINT- PLEASANT COOPERATIVE

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crossword Puzzle Answer ()n Page 8-3
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Frtt Puppltt: Part Lab, 6 Weeka

Old, 614-3117-7:58.

(4) 21, 28; (5) 5, 12;. 4TC

Male black &amp; brown Alllta puppy.

304-675-1 09&gt;1.

Public Notice

t.'ll'lpropert,.
,Ut acree, more or loll,
LEGAL NOTICE
Arbuckle Dletrlot, llaeon
Seeled bldl will be
County,
Weet · VIrginia, r-Ived and opened by the
approximately elx · mllll Tupper• Plaine-Chatter
eauth of Point Pltaaant, Water Dletrlct at their
~VIrginia, wtth froniiCII Dletrlct ofllce located at
on two oidia of U.S. Routt 39561 Bar 30 Road, Juot ofl
3ti, Southelde, Welt Slate Route 7, and whose
VIrginia. lmprovementl mailing addrall II 39561
Include bamt, lhedo, blnt, Bar 30 Road, Reedevllle,
elloa, fencing, po~a end · Ohio 45772, al t:QO P.M. on
home, .known locelly •• the Wed,..dav, May 8, 1996,
McCulloch Farm. ·
covering t~ painting of
In order to be conoldered, bath the ~nterlor' and
ell oealed .bldo ohall be exterior for one 150,000·
recelwtd lft!fha office of the 1g1tllc1.n water storage tank
ltnlt of llelllgh, Trull which 11 located ofl SR 7
Dlvlolon, lf\ltlntlon: Sealed nur Ffve Pointe.
lid, P.O. Box D, Iockiey,
Additional· Information
Wilt VIrginia 25102, on or and opeclflcllllono may be
belore 12:00 noon Mly 24, obtained at the ofllce of the
1""
0\atrlct at 39561 Ba( 30
Additional Information Road, Reedavllte , Ohio
may be obtelnod by 45772; phone (614) 985contectlng the . Benk of 3315.
Rololgh Truet Dlvlolon 11
Each bid must
PG41ZU.7215.
enctoaed In an approProperty Ia offered prlatlily marked and aaaled
eubltcl to any aut· envelope and must contain
conveyenc11, r~~ervetlono, ·the full nama of avery
Nltrlctlone, convenenta or . peroon, firm and/or Sid
conditione, except tho11 Bond In the fult amount of
reletlng to race, creed or each propooat to the
Color, or ••••monte of oatlofactlon ·of the District
rocord or apperent on the Board aa a guarenty that H
ground. ·
the .bid Ia accapltd, a
A five percent (5%1 good· contract will be entered Into
follh depoalt and r .oaf of and Ita performance
flnonclal ability
I be aecured. On blda that are
roqulred of eucce11ful rejected, the gueranllt wilt
bidder after notice of be promptly returned to the
tceoplllnce. .
.
blddero. On the bid that Ia
Tlie Benk of Raleigh, accepted, ouch Bid Bond
Truetoe, reoerwa thl right will ba returned ·• to the
1o
aucceoaful
bidder
,upon
all ICCipt
bide. or roltct any and execution
of the
Contract.
BANK OF RALEIGH,
Tho Tup11ara Plains·
TRUSTEE Cheater Water Dlotrlcl
BY: P. K. Eltlean reoervea tha right to· waive
VICI Prealdltll and Senior lnformalltlea, to reject any
Truet Offtcer

Aprll14, 17, 21, 24, 28, 1tltcl
llly1,5, .. 12, 15, 11,22, 1tltcl

Beag le Temer Pupa,
Wormed , Short Haired, 9 Weeks

Mi•ed

Old, 614-245-5116 Alter 4 ~M.

Small miud Terr1er. 1yr old ,

hpuiOyet only, 304-875-4302.

Trees cut for lumber or wood.

304-675-ZJ.te.

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70

Yard S'ale

G Ill

11
a PO S
&amp; VICinity
t939 Chatham Street. 51t, 512,

' ''· Microwave.
ALL Yard S81es Musl Be Paid In
Advan ce . DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day befo re the ad is to run .
S~nday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m. Sat·

urday.
April 29 th , Thru May 3rd, 1.2
MileS Out Route 218.
Giant 156B2 State Route 160, Fri,
Sa\ May :lrd, 4!11, 11-4. Lots Of ln-

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Moving Sale: 114 Milo Out 218 On
Left, May 3rd, 4th, Most Item s

.SOc.
Moving Sale : When : April 25 28th, 9·8, At Cheshire, 3 Milet
Out 554, Eyerything Must Got
Perry's Green House Now Open ,
Monday Through Saturday 10 Till
6 . Flats, Baske ts , large Ferns,
Vegtable Plants, 1 Mile West 01
ROdney. Next To Jontons Gas.

~-;-:;-::-~~Po~m~e~rosy,~'"""-:-

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Anw Type Of furnitu r'e. Applillnces, Anlique's, Etc. Alao Apptaital

Availablel614·319-2720.

51

3, Furniture. What-Nots, Dishes,
Cassene Tapes. Cusette Play-

terestii"!Q Items.

Wanted to Buy
Complete Household Or Estattl)

90

&amp;

All Yard Sale a
i
Advance. Deadline: 1:oopm tho

day before the ad is to run, Sun-

and all bids or to accept day edition- 1:OOpm Friday, uon-

Clean late Madel Carl Or
Trucl!.s, 1ggo Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontlac, 1900 East·
ern Averoe, Gallipolis.
'
J &amp; D's Auto ·Parts. Buying aalvage vehicleS. Selling parts . 30A·

773-50(13.

.

Non -Working Washers, Oryert,
Ranges, Refrigerators, Freezers.
Air Conditioners, Color T. v:s,
VCR'.s, Also Junk Cars, 81•·251·

·

1238.

Wanted To Buy : Older Log Cabin
In Good Shape. Will Reioca'ra.
Reasonablr Priced, 814· 4•tt914. Aher 5 Or Leave Massage.
lop Prtces Pa1d· Old U.S. Coins,
S1iver. GOld , 01amonds, All Old
Co llectibles. Paperw e ig h~a., Etc.
M. T.S. Co1n Shop. 151 &amp;econd
Avenue, GallipOlis, 614·41146-2842.
Used furniture - 8ntiq~es, one
piece or complete estares, also
do appraisals, Osby Marlin, 814~
992·7441 .
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U!.ed Men s levis. lee &amp; Wran gler Jeans &amp; Denim Jackets. Niki
Shoes, 614-446 -2468.
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.wanted To Buy Used M'obil•

Homes.Call 614·446.0175

Want'ecl To Buy ; Junk Autos With'
Or Wi tho ut Motor s. Can larry:

Liveli. 614-388-9303..

Wanted To Bu)r: Linle Tlkel Toyl,,
61~·245-5887

such bid that will beat serve day edilion 10:00a.m. Saiurctay.
the .Dietrlct.
Garage Sate, 5 family sale, lots of
TUPPERS PLAINS.
EMPLOYM ENT
nice ite ms, May 3, May 4, hour s
Public Notice
CHESTER WATER DISTRICT 9·5, Address: 1381 Duskey Al!w,
SERVIC ES
Byt Harold H. fltaekalon,
Sw racuse. need d1 rec!1 on s call
Preeitltnt of the
614-992-7769.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Board of Dlrectort
Staled propoula will be
Help Wanted
Gijrage sale- May 1-2. Arbaugh 110
531C
.-lvld Ill the:
Addition, Tuppers Pla ins. Second
S·WANTEO.S
Otftct Cflltle Cterlc,ll'r.-urer
house from ballfield. Clothes, mi crowave and cart, furniture, awn- 10 people who need 10 lose
. Metge County Public
weight &amp; -make mOney, to try new ·
ing, misc. 9am-5pm.
Ubrety, lllddlepot1 Brench,
patented weighl-loss product.
178 S. Third Ave.,
'
Huge garage sale, May 2-3, Rain· :Kl4-773-5083 24hrSiday.
lllddltpot1, OH 45780
er residence , Tacker~tille Rd ..
unlll .12:00 noon; Mondey,
Rac ine. 'off SR. 124, tools , an. $1,000 Weekly Processing Uall
Free In~. send Salf-Acldressed
tiques, furniture, misc.
lily 20, 111M for fumlehlng
Stamped Envelope : Express·
the mllttrlll 1nd·performing
Uay 1·3, A t 12-4 . Syracuse. next Dept.131, 100 East Whitestone
lhllebor for conetructlon of
to river beside new Naza rene Bl11d., Suite 148·345, Cedar Parll
the RICin• Brtnch •.llelga · _.....;:..__ _ _ _ __
TX 78613.
I
Church, call 614-992-3860·.
Counl)l Public · Library. 005 · Personals
Wedn esday &amp; Thu rsday, 9am - Able Avon Aep resefua ti ves
Propoaitle will be opened
Victor Reed WM 35, likes music, 4pm. End ol Bar 30 Ad., tra ii~H: on needed. Earn money lor Chris tand publicly rtad. et the moviea,
mas b1lls at hometat work . ·t -800lemonade and be1ng right, girls Sll9S infantlhru 4{
lltlge County Public at home.pink
l}92·635e or 30 4·882-2645, Ind.
~ing WF, same inter·
Ubrery • Main Brtneh, 218 ests, write to PO Box 8tM, Galli·
l=lep.
pt, Pleasant
W. Main St.; Pomeroy, OH pqlis Fer'J, W\1 25515.
&amp; VIcinity
AREA SUPERVISOR
45788 II 1:00 p.m.,
Tllureday, May 23, 111M. All 30 Announcements
241124 Garage an d 4family yard Christmas Around the World!
sale, ainiques, fu rniture, dishes, H_ouse of Lloyd now hiring Superpropo1111 will be fn
Plea&amp;IJ Beware : Do To The ln - tools, lawn mowers, parts, D-4 1 VISOrs In area . Free sample kir
occordance wHh the plane crea
In Crime We Offer The
and epeclflcatlona prtplrecl Very seBest
~N~o~in~v~es~lmfe~n~l,~n:o
In Unique Pepper Martin guirar, computers. Indian ~~lre~e~t~ra~in~ir~g.
no
i . For. de-.
by Burg111 A Nlple, Ltd., Spray Items As Well As Many artifacts, and more . 4574 Ashton • collecting,
tails, call
1
Upland
rd
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Hpi.
olf
Rr.
2
May
1St·
5085 RHd Rotd, ColumbUI, Other Safety Products. Do No t
7th. Follow signs. Xl4 -576-2265.
Gamble With Your Safety Or The
• POSTAL JOBS ·
·oH.
Ones
You
love
.
Call
Now
For
80
Public Sale·
Starting $12.68 +/Hr. • BonefOis
Bide will be received lor Free Deli very To Your.J)oorl 1For Exa m And App lication Into
the Single Prime Lump Sum 800·830·2599. 213-65&lt;-7320. No
;;;;;;;;;;;;a;;n:-;d-;A:;;u;;-;c;;t;lo n~;c;·l ca
n 1-334-470·7227, E•t. 39 5. ti
Contract. Coat eatlmllte lor Permit Needed As .OI 1996.
A.M. ·9 P.M. 7 Days.
Wedemeye r's Au cuon
tho contr1ct Ia $300,000.00..
··POSTAL JOBS •:
Plal)t end opeclflcatlono Reward $500 . For information Gallipolis, OhiO 6 14 · 379~2720.
for~
the
propo11d leading 10 the arrest or conviction R1ck Pearson Auct1on Company, S\2.68 /Hr To Start. Plus BeneJ1ts
ol person who done damage to
Carhe~s. Sorters, Clerks, Comput:
conatructlon work elong car
at Zuspans tra il er park on full ti me auctiOneer. compl ete er Tramees . For An Application
with eny further Information . Thursday April18, 1996. 304-773- au ction serv1c e. Lice nsed
And Exam Infor mation. Call 1·
doolrod ere on fllo In the 5326 .
1166,0hio &amp; West Virginia , 304600.819·5916.
En P6432, 9 A.M.
773·5785
o,
304·
773·5&lt;47.
Ofllcoe of the Architect,
To 9 PM. 7 Days.
Burg••• &amp; Nlpte, Ltd., 5085 40
Giveaway
Reod Roed, Columbuo,. OH ....,-=...,.,..,.....,,.,.....:..,_~
43220, and 4424 Emereon ' Year Old Mate Hi'matayan Cat,
Public Sale
Ave. ·. Parkeraburg, - WV Very Good With. Children, Neu 21104. Plana mey be lered, Doclawed. 614-367- 7561.
ii. Auction

ii

5

a

'oblllned

from · either

locetlon upon dopoolt of

$31.00

per

11t.

Upo.n

2 t&lt;iilens, Litter Trained. To Good
Homes, 614;446.0819.
. old spayed female Au sl,allan

Two Absolute

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AUCTIONS

Tuesday, April 30
.#1 • JJ:OOa.m.
#2- 3:00p.m.

(2) IGA Supermarkets.

I

Jackson, Ohio

!~§~~;;;;;.1

(101
working ayewithin
following
White ~ 112 Month Old STORE II 269 CHILLICOTHE ST. 11 :00
gaod
ten
th1 .bid opening will
riCIIVll
Friendly, Mosll y Hus~y,
REFRIGERATION: 5 dr &amp; 15 dr. Tyler reach· in freezer·
a full refund for ltlt omount
ft.
Tyler dairy case; 24 fl. Hussmann triple deck rr'taaltl
of tho depollt. Each bid
case;
12 ft. Hussmann packaged meat case; 8 ft.
mull bl eccompenlld by a
BID GUARANTY meeting
Hussmann rear service meat case; 24 ft. Hussmann
tho roqulremtnll of Slcllon acuse ~~:t stalion, can
/ produce case; 12. ft. Hussm9nn dairy case.
153.54 of the Ohio Revloed 992·2l55.
Bally walk-in coOler wlfloor-foam; Bally walk-in onniAr 1
Cadi.
:---:--::-:-----1
,
wltloor;
Walk·i n cooler. COMPRESSORS: (1 O) air coofled
Blddera ehall note that
· compressors. MEAT EQUIPMENT: Nice Hobart meat 1
the provelllna Woge rllteo
publlehed · by · the
saw; Hobart meat gtinder; (3) 4 tt. Butcher block
Dlpat1ment of tnduatrlel
tables;
8ft. s.s. cutting table lrame.OTHER HIC~HLtmrr&lt;&gt;:· l
clark brown Pygmy
Relatione are to be 3Loll·
months old,. Landaker
Hobart digital scales w/18VP printer; triple rolf He.at-~)eaH
complied with throughout ty, 614·992 ·5764 or 614
Table;
(2) Crown paffet jacks; (3) NCR #01 01 Class
,the proJect.
5024 .
cash registers w/drop-in' scanners; (3) Hussmann
' . Blddera ehell ateo note
that the Rulee and
belt ohecklanes; Johnson single door sale: (81 alum. ,
, Roguletlone on Equal
dunnage racks; t2 h. alum. step ladder; 224ft. Gon~c•l&lt;~l
·,Employment Opportunity
steel
store shelving; approx. 30 bascarts.
' lhlll be ~.... pert of thle
STORE #2 19 SOUTH ST. 11 :00 A.M.: (15) HuSsmann
contract. No bidder may
glass door reach-in freezers; 28 ft. Hussmann triple
wlthdr•w hla bid within
alxly (10) daya after the
meat case; 12 ft. Hussmann trozen food case;· 12 ft. '
Hussmann smoked meat case ; 48 ft. Hussmanmnlc~~~;
th• opening
case; 36 h. Hussmann produce case. WALK-INS: ~
Bidder• ehall aloo note
walk-In cooler; McCray walk-In treezer; out-side watlk·ill 1
cooler.• OTHER HIGHLIGHTS.: Sweda digital
w/prlnter; TEC digital scale WITEG pilnter; Heat Seal
Guerenty · meeting the
station; like-new 5 ft. s.s. poly top table; Toledo 200
roqulremenl• of llctlan
153.14 of the Ohio RoviHd
scale; (21 8 ft. $&amp;ellons steel pallet racking; (2) Almore
Cadi..
check lanes; Latham lime cl&lt;X:k; 4 drawer lfle cabinet'
· H, In the opinion of the
drop-ln safe. CQMPRESSORS: (12i air cooled
Ownere, the -pllnce of
::.~""7:.:::~; '":!fin ~'\1
the Owner
REWARD, dead or II~
1 ;;a;;,j,';d or- ··-matlon or the return of 2 f"""lltiJI'
prapoeal
Beag lea .. Lost· near Ledn . An·
or rtl~ct all 1wort
Mati&lt;EUIQn · ~
to Lady &amp; lacy. 304-458·
•nil
for . 1S1~ or 304-458-'1727.

1

Call446-2342
or 992-2156
.
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By LARRY BLASKO
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Al.ocl.tecl •••
m•
Taking your kid camping is' one of
the rites of American fatherhobd.
Now there's a way to do il without
chigger bites and body ac~s from
sleeping on ground that's noticeably
harder than when you were a kid.
Just Me and My Dad, under $40
from GT Interactive
for multimedia·
.
.

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'Little Critter'.~torylit:~e includes fishing,
•
A
f"
d h
•
k
.coo. 1ng, camp t·r e• an g ost stor1es

. .,,

Othlrbkia.

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Your Qaullfty s••,._ and Plants

IHVITATIOH FOR liDS
,.... ·~It of llaltlgh, a•
'll'uattl, lnvllll Milici blda
for the . . . of the following

~ondltlon

•

aam·2 pm

t

Public Notice

0 m~t0~,:un:
nqueat,
will chorgee
be ••nl :;;:~N~e~ed~s~,0~
on
to
bidder,plana
ehlpplng
colloct. Etch blddor wh.o
aubmltl 1 properly
1 Pup, Apjnox. 7 ·8 Weeks
executed bid, upon
Good Homo. 614·379returnlng-the lllued ·111 In
II No Answe' Leave Mes-

FOR MORE INFORMATION

- NewHours -

,

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING &amp; REPAIR
I"Puonoa Ate My Blai'*t"Ouality
Tuning &amp; Service Since 1977.
BOB GRUBB (614) 446-4525
13 H!Mop Drive, GaHipolls, OH.

Thur 7 pm Mixad League, 5119 Sun 8 pm
Aduft·KidS League. IA! gue m""'i&gt;ers get
speoial discounts on bowling &amp; Pro·shop
orders Join today. Don'tlorget 'Starlight
Bowlin · eve Saturda 9 .m.
·

Call for Mother·~ Day Gill Ideas

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4 pc. Bedroom
SuMe

All American Sound
Systems

~

. 20 lb. Cylinders

Point Pleasant

LANE MOTION SETS

Summers Coming;
Don~ walt, Book your party
early with •

11.1 ''

Propane Tanks For only $,. 99

1519 Kanawha

La-Z-Boy Aeetlners

Reclinera

Mon. thru Sat 9-5 p.m. 446-o322
3 mllas out Bulaville Pike ·

....
.......

Filled

675-2780

4 o r - Chast

SOFA &amp; ~ECLINER
$1195

&amp;;...
..J .,

Spring Speeials!

Mon.·Frl. 8.am-&amp; pm; Sat.

SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $995 '

$59.00
$19.95
$99.00
$49.95
$299.00

LIVING ROOM SUITES-

"'" I

S.• Us For All

's .rta'Mattreea
Bad Frames

"

Homes: Questions... .and'answers·

·Business briefs-

SHOP AND $AVE NOWI

LARGE SELECTION

--=================:_,_j"
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93 Bakery hem
don .,.. a ""'P-In dooeL For fomlly meala, die breoldaol nook If
95 Flavoring plant
Ideal. In the . . . . - ..Ute, the prlvote beth lndudee a IIO'den tub,
97
Insect stage
1
Uke
a
whole
lot
- vonldeo and ..., Wilk-In doaet&gt;. Upetalro, a epllt beth ......
99
Mate sheep
6
Viper
two more bedrooma. A Vft'UtUe bonus room can be uNCI u your
......... and needo dleta...
101 Astern
11 Luster
16 Causing death
104 CoHee-filled vessel
106 Dissolve
21 Pleasant to the taste
22 Hag
I 08 Sorrowful sound
23 Automaton
110 Creates
1t4 Once fn a - 24 Musical drema
By POPULAR MECHANICS
buying a larger home or extensive rescence.
(lnfrequenty)
25 Cuts
Usi ng a bricklayer's hamrrier and
For AP Special Features
remodeling. We're considering con1t7 AI on 'Home
26 Goes after game
Q: We get some rough winters in , verting our basement for this purpose. a co ld chi sel. chip the spa! led joints
lmprovemenr
27 Banishment
28
Admit:
2
wds.
1
t
9
Most
scary
New England, and we have a prob- What ~ re the biggest drawbacks to clean and chisel the edges in a dove29
Old
French
coin
.
1
21
.
Covenant
tai l shape (underc ut on.the inside) at
!em with water leaking down through thi s?
,
30 Skirt bolder ·
t 22 Takes legal action
our ceiling when the snow starts to
A: A fini shed baseme nt can least three-quarter inches wide and .
124
Prejudice
31
Hibernia
melt. We' ve had to ,retape and repaint ·- increa ~e a home's living space by as three-q uarte r inches deep. Patch the
33 Distribute cards
'
128-carte
our ceiling every spring because of much as 50 percent. You ' ll have to joint with a compo und such as Water127 Tardy
35 ScMet
this. Interestingly enough, our roo( coniend with masses of wires, pipes plug, then apply two coats of Thoro128 Minerals·
36 Synagogue
doesn't leak at all when it rains. Is and ducts running through thi s area, seal waterproofin g coating to prevent
39 Early parts of days
129 Siestas
there a way we can correct thi s situ- but mosi can be rerouted to fall any further moi sture problems.
43 Paid athlete
131 -dreams
44 Donkey
133 Feminine title
ation? ·
betWeen joists and then.covered with
45 Stinging Insect
13.5 Drag
A: Sounds to us like your water a su'spended ceiling.
To submit a· question, write to
47 Shore
136 Weight allowance
leakage problem is caused by an ice
Often you' 11 have io co ntend with Popular Mechanics, Reader Ser· .
49 "Tea for-·
137 Off the tight path
dam - a common situation in the moisture problems. These must be vice Bureau, 224 W. 57th St., New
· 139 Tume(s machine
51
Bfack-and-whtte
Northeast. Ice dams begin when a . resolved before go ing ahead with the York, N.Y. 10019. The most interanimal
141 Hinge&lt;tfastenings
layer of snow next to the roof melts. 'job. This cou ld involve installi ng a esting questions will be answered in
143 Circuit
54 Seed coverings
When this water freezes, a darn is ere- curtain dram around the house foun- a future column.
57 Already-seen TV
145 Privileged ones
ated which causes further melted dation , or · using sump pumps and
shows
147 Patriot- Hale
•
snow to accumulate in a pool. Roofs baseboard drain s. Sealing and water59 Treaty
149 Curved ietter
are designed to shed water, not to pre&gt;- proofing the fo undation may also be
63 United
152 Neighbor of Cali.
64 Distant
,., 154 Wire
teet against standing water which necesSIIIry.
s6 Pouch-like parts
v 157 User
eventually works its way do wn
Q: The concrete walls of our old
68
Body
of
knowledge
161 Behave
through the· roof and your ceiling.
home were origi nally poured in small
69
Word
wrth
shoe
or
162
School petiod
Removing the snow from the roof batches. Now the walls arc spal ling
At Dutch Miller we Care abou t
lf!mlly
·
164
Jay
ot late night TV
is the best ·solution. The next best (chipping and breaking up) at these
yo ur future .
70 Speech Imperfection
165 Cun~ing
alternative is maintaining a "cold, joints, and a white, powdery su bnot your pas t.
72 Writer Levin
167 Cutdown
roof." The way to do this is by stance forms during the decomposiWe have ne w and
74 Courts
168 Actress Bernhardt
overinsulating t~e ceilings and hav- tion process. A prev ious owner
76
Peace
symbol
170 Mathematical
pre- owned veh ic les in
ing abundant ventilation iit the attic . • mortared over these areas. but that's
78
Persia,
nowadays
pro119rtion
s tock for this s pec ial finan cing
This will keep the heat .in your home breaking off, too. I'd like to chip out
79
Where
the
Oilers
173
Marble .
program.
play
175
Slight
error
from warming the roof, and will keep the bad spots, remortar and app ly a
82
Oz-book
dog
177
Poetic
Muse
Call
David
Chinn
the roof-deck temperatures lowered sealer. Should I seal or mortar firs t,
84
Certain
radio
show
178
Direction
indicator
to the point where snow won't melt. and what kind of sealer is best?
86 Put down a lawn
179
Hoses
Heating tapes along eaves and valleys
A: Your condition is a moisture
again
180 Mountain ridge
can also help, but ice dams may form problem occurring at the non bonded
87 Mr. Disney
181 Passover meal
· farther up the roof giving you the joints (cold jo.ints) between the pours.
89 Hawaiian goose
182 Pelts
same problem.
Moisture had let wa ter-soluble salts,
1·304·529·230 1
91 Soak, as flax
183 Scorches
Q: We are in dire need of more liv- a concrete chem ical reaction byprod92 Indeed!
184 Plate of greens
1·800·866·3713
ing space, but tight 'inances preclude uct, leach out. This is known as effl oroomo. The uniquely

LAYNE.FURNITURE

"

F-99

.....

'·

-BusineSS

•

Middleport •

BULLETIN BOARD.

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•

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~Pol"'m"'lei'.,O"'Y •

. ~. Aprll28, 1198

PCs and Macs, is a witty and enter- duction, aecording to GT Interactive.
taining interactive story
' book about
Looking tit the art and the storyLittle ~ritter taking his dad camping. lined, it•s eas y to udnbederslll"cd wedhy !tiThe
' ds
Lithe Critter, for those living age 3.to 7 wou1
capttvat ·
without benefit of children, is a storyline is an expedition into the !
· relentlessly cute c~ature resemblif!.B woods for an ~vemighl that includes I
an anthropomorphic wo:xJchuck;,ltts. fishing, cook.i~ over a c~pfue,
~on M~er Mayers book, Just telhng shost stones and spending the
Me 1\fld My ,Dad," which has sold 2 - night in a tent, but it's all from Little
million copies since its 1977 intra- Critlel:'s point of view. .
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- POSTAL·JOBS ...

Slarl "2.01/Hr Plus IJeMfi1J

110

HllpWaslid

On Duly.. swimming pool. no liner
,, Acdnly S-.!t To Recruil t:IS.OO 304-e75-1414
CNAI Who Aro
ng To Work
Lang Term Home Cara Clltl Item for nle CannDn camera
fill.._, DePt lUI, Bor 43at, Whore You Llvo·ln And S1oy outfit 351m&gt;AEI 304-e75-3423
CIYOfl'gho In Enher 24 Hour 48
-Cowina,CAI17SI

...,l Compony paid oralnlng proVIded lot aN poa1nont. Benefiltlo
Include .paid •eeklr. pa1d vac:a
1101'\S • Insurance benefits Man

agement lraln~ng available or the
r1ql"lt pertons For mtervlew call
Fnday or Saturday' 9am 10 Spm
Monday 9 noon onlr 814 992

4472

8

AVON Sl $15 !Hr No Mtntmum
Order No Door To Door Na In
venrory
736 0158 tndltlll

rep

,_,00

AVON S8 SIS /Hr No Door To
Door, No ._.•ntmum Ordlf Bonus
Drivers nhdtd, rttlretl wal
come DMV report clau D rl·
tenM 304-67!)..5113

Public Sisle
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1996
9:00A.M.
From Gallipolis, take Rte 160 N to Porter, and
turn nght onto Ate 554 E' Go 6 miles, lurn left
onto Morgan Center Road and walch lor s1gns
lead1ng1b..u;15 Upcreek Road
The bwld1ngs and dwelling of thts lovely
country homestead are lull of items collected lor
more than fifty years by the late Kenneth Ward
Mr Ward a well -known Iarmer, was Widely
known lor hiS talent w1th the dulc1mer

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Kotchen clock w/walnut case and Lady Liberty
desogn, Ansoma mantel clock, w1cker rocker, oak
secretary bookcase, gateleg table, three
v1ctonan dressers w/marble mlay and glove
boxes, flax wheel, curved 1 front ch1na cabmet,
pressed back rockers (/ther anlique rockers,
cane-bottom chaors, chest of drawers, pump
organ, drop-leaf table, kneehole wnllng desk,
Depression vamty and chest of drawers, cedar
chest, RCA Voctor phonograph, oak ltreplace
screen, several small tables and stands, fa1nt1ng
sola, small chma cupboard, very large collectoon
of cut, pattern, and Depression glassware,
several boxes of old books and magazmes,
Aladdin gas lamp w/milk glass shade, pnm1t1ve
metal toy tractor, pictures and frames, old
chalkwara, stone Jars, JUgs d1nnerbells platform
scales, gramteware, several ant1que and larrn·
related tools, buttermold w/acorn , boxes of old
dishes, old bottles, large ~ron kettle m1sc box
lots, countless quality ant1que smalls and
collectibles

HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISCELLANEOUS
RCA color TV, oak cha1rs, end tables, storage
cabinels, maple bed, mce p1ne cupboard, dinette
set w/4 chairs, Hot Pomt washer/dryer, pots and
pans, Apple desk-top pnnter, many, many more
quality household 1tems

I
•

SELLING AT 12:00 NOON, WITH
SECOND AUCTION RING
I FARM MACHINERY, HORSE-DRAWN,
&amp;FARM TOOLS
John Deere 14T baler, Alhs Chalmers 6 It
mower, hay rake, hay elevator, 250 gal oil tank,
horse-drawn plows, shovel plows culttvators,
hay tedder, metal lathe, JTletal fenceposls,
barbwire, several lots of lumber and scrap metal,
large selection of hand lools, pull·type d1sc, (5
outbwld1ngs and 2 barns are lull of 1tems too
numerous to hst)

AUCTIONEER:
LESLIE LEMLEY
(614) 446-6241
L1censed and bonded 1n favor of lhe State of
OhiO

.

OWNER: MARTHA WARD
~

Plenty of f1eld park1ng Food by Morgan Center
Lad1es
Terms ol Sale Cash or check w/proper ID
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property
Note Plan to attend th1s l1ne country auct1on
Bnng lawn chairs and spend the day

PUBUC AUCTION
SATUROAY, MAY 4, 1996
10:00 A.M-. AT BASHA'N, OHIO
As Mrs Songer has sold her home &amp; woll be movmg
onto an apartment she woll offer the followong otems no
longer needed
,
Dorectoons from Pomeroy, Ohoo~ Take S R 124 East
Through Racone, Ohoo to Co Ad #28 Left on Co 28
to Bashan House os next to Fore House S1gns woll be
posted

H~USEHOLD

Kitchen Aod 17 5 cf Refngerator (less than 1 yr old)
Whirlpool Clean Top Gas Range poke new), Lane
Rocker Recliner, Zenoth Console Color TV Coffee
table, small desk w/chaor, room dovoder, 0 S Rocker,
Molded Mantel, Wrought Iron &amp; other plant stands, love
plants, Gobson Relngerator, Gobson Chest Freezer
metal wardrobe, end tables &amp; scands, Power. Spa
Whirlpool, Eureka Upnght Sweeper, lamps Pressure
canner, water bath canners, cannong Jars (some blue),
Kerosene lamps, Mangle Iron, Kero Heater
MISCELLANEOUS
5 gal &amp; 3 gal stone jars Dyna Mow 22" Mower pocnoc
table, Eve &amp; Down spoutong boat anchor, lawn chair
webbing, several lawn chairs, tree trommer, mise lawn
tools, Chnstmas decoratoons &amp; tree, spool table
w/ltools, rolling garden seat, wheelbarrow, small amt
of mise lumber, lots of other smalls &amp; mtsc
Auctioneer's Note Thos woll be a small sale woth
some very high quality Items Sale starts promptly at
10 00 a m Large 1tems woll be moxed with smalls
Refreshments by Bashan F1re Dept
OWNER : Mra. NeVI Singer
AUCTIONEER: Col. W. Keith Molden
Ohio Uc. 14311

18 Moura A Day, But An Over
night Sllr .. Roc!uired • ""••
ed Ploo• Col U. ~-AI
I -eoo-QN.IlVTY 2.

Potlal &amp; Gov t Jobt ~~, /Hr •
llenofill, i'lo Exp Will Troln, For
Appl And""" 1.-oo-538 3040

180 Wanttd To Do
Don 1 Lawn Care Reuonable

Raonl W1ll Do Churchoa,
metlfltl, 614-379

&amp; Co·

2847

E1leen 1 Pftraonal Cart SPKiaJIZ
1ng m Alzhe imer 1 cart givtng
Call )II We can help 30•· 712

Expenenced Carpentofl E•perl
onced In AM Phoaao Of R.tli&lt;lon· Red Hoi Fat Lou p-.,~ llyNual Romodel•nt Must H... Own INC llarkoong Pion, Lo• Weight 2544
&amp; llako lloneyl 614·..8·12U
Truck And Tools 5 Yean Exp
Minimum Carp1nter Helpers
Needed Also Chntttan's Con·
ltrUCtiOn, OH 446-4514

.. I 800-a27 4640 lnd/SII/Rep.

Hou,... Or 72 Hour Shifta. It Pays

814•.W1.01e7

Screen Prinllr Experience Nee
&amp;nary Ser1ou• lnqu.r•ea Only,

Experienced Roofaro Exp In All 61 4 446 2388
Phi.Ms Of Residennal Roofing 5

r:::s~lmmum

EJpet'l&amp;nCI t!n4

I

,l,sk For ClriL

Soctal Wott~;ers Now Hlnng $2"J 1
Hr • Benefits On The Job y,.,n

::-=.....::......::._______ 1'"11 To ~ply In Your Araa 1·800General automouve
wanted Send resume
Mason ~ 25260

e~epcmence
to So• 437

Someone 10 mow
Conley area

Htgh Quality Carpet Installers
Needed Fullt1me And By The
Job Must Hav«ti"penence Ap
ply At Tope Furmture 151 Sec
ond Avenue GallipoliS No Pl'lone
Calls~se
•
Home TyPists PC ul8rs naeded
$45,000 1ncome potenhal Call 1

BOO 513-4343 Ext B-l!a68

No Exper1ence Necessary! $500
To S900 Weeklv fPotenllal Pro
cesslng Mortgage Refund• Own

Hours, Call (909) 715-2300 Exo
1351 (24 Hours)

3(W

lawns

in Camp

875-8838

The Me1gs County PubliC Ltbrary
•a ac~:~eptrng applications for the
part 11me posntOn of Llbfary Clerk

a1 oho raoe ol $4 50 per hour The

----~~;=;::::;;;;:;;;::;;;:::0::;;;::;;;::;;.

PUBLIC-AUCTION

Saturday, May 4, 1996 1o:oo a.m.
Location: From R1o Grande, Oh1o follow State
Route 325 South to Garners - Ford Road
left and go to 3rd hduse on left
'

1971 Chevrolel Impala, 1975 Honda 750
Motorcycle, Oliver 770 Tractor w/loadqr, 1

Per10n11 Care

Not

'

AUCTION MUIJ::lt:
Antique or Collectible Sale
VInton, Ohio
Saturday, May 4, 1996, 7:00p.m.
DIRECTIONS Approx 95 mo SE of Cols, OH From
Cols Take 23S to Cholhcothe 35E to Roo Grande, turn
left on 325N to Vonton, Oh1o
The followong os only a bnef partoal lostmg of oCems we
have for thos sale Many otems woll be arrovong too late
be advertozed We normally have a love hour antoque
sale woth otems left over for the followong week
Deotz kero lanterns, wooden buck saw cog lighters
(Barbarossa• beer/Red Top ale &amp; USMC) , old pocket
knolies, ool can Blenko &amp; other glass, old tool$ grantt41
ware, Hull McCoy, wooden barrel churn (rough) ,
tobacco basket, punch bowl set, barrel taps,
typewroters NFL teams sheet, boxes of ball cards
1960 s &amp; 70s football cards 1965 Molwaukee Brave~
scor~ card 1959 Crosley Foeld Offocoal Score Card,
The Conconnato baseball club company, sogned Sgt
Preston pront coke wall clock, oak secretary sm chona
cab roiling pon kotchen utensols, C L Baker Milk
Bottles Mickey Mouse otems, reel mower Pnnce
Scove Co (C4) Green pore wood cook stove w/copper
water tank, 4 burners &amp; 2 warmong ovens (excellent
condotoon), old ledgers, plus much more
woll accept consognmenls for thos sale until 6 00
p m The day of the sale
AUCTIONEER FINIS '"IKE" ISAAC
Phone 614-388-9370 evenings or 388 8880 from
10:00 a.m.· s:oo p.m.
Locensed and Bonded Ohoo #3728
Terms Cash or approved Check
Not responsoble for aCcidents or lost otems
110

Card of Thanks
CALL NOW
SKILLED
UNSKIUED
NEEDEDIMMEDIATELY
22 People

• Corrf&gt;Bny Tra1nng
ProduCIIOO BonuSes
Permanent Pos1nons

' Promooons In90 Daya
For Immediate ln terv1ews Call

Monday
1976

Tuesday 614 441

Cru11e shiP' positloni Travel to

p!acas S20Q SlfOO -ly
Cltll7 days 407 875-2022 exL
0598018

OXOiiC

~

for Sisla

-

8

Sun Valley Nursery Scl"lool
Cl"llldcare M F Bam 5 30pm A99~
2 K, Young School Aga Dunng

2m
W111 Babysll And 10r Cl
House Dependable References
~~ 44p 4878 No Calls Aller 10
Will babystt your ch1ld county
cer11f1ed or pnvale pay have ret
erences
reasonable
rate
Chester 614 985-3406 Sandie

FINANCIAL

'!'"'

New Bank Repos Only 4 left Sl[ll

E ataltl at Ofv1ne Prualpt ls ulltng

a three bedroom ranch type
houH a frame-housa and 82 ,9
acres more or lela, at 37282 and
37284 HolleV Rd Snowv1Ue &amp;1
pta Townsl"l1p, Meigs County,
Oh•o des~ ubed In Volume 2Q9
Page 107 Me1gs County Deed
recordo Call 814 992 5132 10 ar
range appointment to see proper
ty Bids musl be m wnung and at
!easl $70,000 00 Paymenl due
when deed 11 delivered Sealed
btds must be received bV the of
lice of Carson Crow ,0 West

Second St P.O Box 668, Pomer

oy Oh1a 45769 on o" before
twelve noon May 20th 1996 Sa1d
btds wt ll be opened lherealter
The eSiate reserves the r1ght 10
reJect any and all b1ds Satd real
estateiOid as 1s

LEON Very nice wml malnuuned
3 bedroom, 12x12 storage barn,
3f4acre call V1rg1nia Lee Lewis
304 580 1400 Old Colony Com

pany

Marwatl Ave 3bedroom LR DR
large fam1ly room double garage
8y rs aid $101'000 304 67S

4048

N1ce hOme m Rac1ne large buildtng w1ll house small bus1ness
also a one car garage fenc ed
yard out of flood area askmg
$47000614 949 2804

Stx roam house and bath uttlny
room big red barn 2 112 acres on
New l~rna Rd Ru t!a.nd 614 742

2757

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING to•

Stately 2story tw1c~ 1n established
neighborhood
3bedrooms
2baths lam1ly room 21treplaces
c:overed patiO 1car tnteg ral ga
rage Call 304 675-3262 for appt
leave massage

recom mends rllat yo v do bus1
ness wnh people you know and
NOT to send money throu~ the
mall until yo u have tnvesllgated
the ollenng

Three bedroom home m country
Wh11es H1• Rd Rutland one balt1
urgound pool 614 992 5067

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Commerctal bu•ldmg for rent 1n
center
Middleport
2500 sqofk downtown
614 992 2459

aoo

35 r.,~~~~~.'!bl=~....
Earn up To 11 500 w'"'
1
ooo-e96-4980
REAL ESTATE

Thanks to
everyone of the
Crown City
area for all
you've done
for us.
The Ronnie
Delaney family
The famoly of Dortha
woshes to
I eJ(pness s1ncere thanks
the kmdness and
expressoons
of
sympathy from friends,
neighbors and relatives
dur~ng the loss of theor
loved one
Specoal thanks tQ Mr
AI Hartson, the Church
of Chnst for food,
nurses and staff at
Hospital
Extaded Care Unit,
ency
room
personnel, Dr Hunter,
Pitllbearers, F1sher
Fulleral Home and to
others who helped on
way
Curtis Jenkinson
Kay Williams
Mary Jane Jenkonson

350 Lots &amp; Acreage .:;::
3.9 acras tar sale wlthtn Pomeroy
Mumctpal llm tll lo~:~ated In new
subdiviSion ready to build ~811blul V18W on hd! lOP 117 500 "\JSf
sea to apprectate 614-992 78St -

5 Acre s located Sailor Road

Sou(h 01Vinto n $10 500
388 8521
BRUNER LAND

6~

614 775-9173

"'"
GALUA COUNTY 30 Monutes

North Of Hunungton

Acre lots To Choose From OtW
W1th Pond
S 1'4,000 Yo Ur
HO(SQS Will lave Thl!l 8 Acre•
S11 900 Nte'e'
Wtlh Stream
BUilding 5 Acres $12 000 Or
Ar.res 111 900 In Galltpol s Gn
Ne•gl"lborl"laod Rd
22 Acres

$26000

1968 Rtchardson mab1le home
12x60 S3 500 p11ce neg 304
4SS.1546

1973 L•beny 1 Bedroom Good
Condl!lon 614 44&amp;6846
1974 12x70, 3 bedroom need
some lioof St 900 12x50 2 bed
room fum1shed rea dy to mo11e

1979 Baron 14x70 W1th 7xH Ex
pando 3 Bedrooms 1 Batl"l Total
Elect11c W1th Backup Gas Heat
AC &amp; 2 Porcl"les On 3 112 Acre
Wooded Lot Close To GallipoliS
{W1II Sell Separate) 614 446

9543
,982 mab1le home 14x52 Wf'ldow
atr 10xt2 deck 304-576 2411
1986 Clayton two bedroom 1 112
bath kitchen, Bvtng room laundry
room new carpet deck 1ncluded

l

,,."'.;

.

614 992 6114

~

·-

1

Parcels avatlable for new l"lomr, •
construct on on Rayburn Road 3~ :
parcels rangtng from 1 84ae tO:J 1
5 32ac Paved road county wati'llf'' •
reasonable restncbons Map Bf'lRJ •
tnfo available on request~ No &amp;lf\ooo •,
gle w1de tnq u~r tes please 30141.j,... :
67S.5253
I
:t""' t
•
Scen1c Valley Apple Grove, •
beautiful 2ac Iota pu bhc ware.r.~ :

Jf

~4
OIU

576~~
~
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..;;,;,;o_;r,

•

....................

LOG HOMES
Comfort, cotovcnicooce,
efficiency
I dtlrl~&gt;illt) aad Ocli1bility IJ'"
dcoip are • few of
reooono why 2.000
fomllieo wall build a
homothiayeor'

Appolaeh1on

Lo 1

.
'

hoo been a
'
'
'lcodcr 1n the IOf! home.&amp;:;~ f
indullry for over
yean Choooe from ovc"l..
70 otalldard •odelo or

198' 14r70 2bedroom
heat 12x28 porc;h toca ted on
M1le Creek :1&gt;4 453-2244
1991 Brookwood 14x76
BR 2 Bath on 112 Acre lot

DUCED $30 000 W1ll Sell MH

1

Call for Owner' F1nanc1ng ln!M-o 1
ma11o n + Maps 10% OFf= CaJ'Ii :

VGC SI 0 000 Roger Abbotl

Apnl28 1995
Sadly mossed by her
sosters and brothers also
daughter and grandson
Sherry &amp; Juston Sayre

SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1996
9:00A.M.

-

MEIGS COUNTY Mmutes 1Q. '
Athens Pure Country lois Prtt...
tine Streams Pmes 11 + AcrW~ 1
SB 500 5 Acres $7 500 Or 5 .;'j"l ~

$2 700 614 949-2526

WILMA (BURNS)
SAYRE

1

5Acres Sto9000r{d

Ar.res $12 000

Purchases

In Memory

t

fi

Wi th $1 000 Down

14X70 Schultz 2 bedroom 1 bath
on approx 1 acre 1n Galhpohs
Ferry area $17 500 304 575
1617

In Lovmg Memory of
NANCY
PATTERSON
on her birthday
Apnl27
May 2, 1984
We are chmkmg about
you on your b1rthday
and everyday
We
love and m1ss you
very much
Love and Sadly
m1ssed, Husband,
;
' Cho ldren, and
Grandchildren

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Oft TaeQJ

Run • Chambars Roads, Ma"'' 10

$6 500 All Can Be Purchas"f. :

14x70 New Yorker wJ2111 eltpan
do $10000 314-875-5091

Local Vend1ng Route $2 500 A 1
Wk. Patenttal Must Sell 1

-

Pnc:e Buster 1996 3bedroq,_~
$825 down $1
Free deliv·
OakwOOd
ery &amp;
Homes 1
•

210

840 3826

FARM EQUIPMENT AUCTiON
Thuraday, Evening May 2, 1M 6:00 p.m.
Located from St Rt 7 Take St Rt 124 thru Rutland,
to St Rt. 325 Ftrst farm on left Watch for signs
say's thts 1s h
"FARM EQUIPMENT"
Hlr&gt;r~A drawn co-op manure spreader (good shape) 3
horse drawn dose, 3 pi slop scraper, 3 pt one row
I CLoltiv,ator, PTO belt pulley, 3 pt buzz saw, Gelhl
Iarlnd!er m1xer, 3 pt tedder (like new) , grain drill
•••'""'· co-op, rake on rubber and tedder, 3 pt cement
I mixer w/gas engine converted to 3 pt, 3x14 plows, 5'
I wciOds brush cutter
"SORGUM EQUIPMENT"
Sorgum Mill complete &amp; cane unloader
every year•
"HOUSEHOLD"
2 pc hvong room suote, mosc eleclrical appliance
OWNER· Carl Gorby
Dan Smith· Ohio 11344 W.Va. 1515
Keith Molden Auctioneer~
Billy Goble ·Apprentice Ohio 16769
C11h
P,osltlwiD
Small auction be on time.

a

75~7191

So-

p8f8tely Extras 614 256 6391

we•JI e•stom
for you.

dcaip

1992 14l70 Oakwood 2 Bedroom

2 Full Bath's Greal Starter Home!
Located Rt 2 WV 8, 4 256 6980
1992 Norr1s 16x80 3 Bedroom 2
Baths Cen1ral A•r LP Gas Fur
nace And Stove Underp111n1ng &amp;
Many Exuasl Very Spac1ous
Pr1ced To Sell! Easy F1nanclng
Avatlabiel 614 247 2032 Altat

Ruth B. Waugh
Died 10 years ago
Apnl 27, 1986

1993 lnd1ea 1411:80 Mabile Home
Plus 2 Acres Loca1ed On Kemper Hollow Raad Pnce Reduced
Grear Buy Call 614 441 0233

families

Strueturee,

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-458-9990

etecU'tC S15 000 304 67S-5379
1995 Cla)'lon 14•70 2 Bedrooms
2 Balhs Garden Tub 8110 Bu11d·
1ng Cai1Afler400614-441 0179

Log
lac.

Dept. GDT,
P.O. Box 614

1995 Breezewood 3b9drOom all

110

2 Bedrooms, Far Sale Or Rent

Cheshire Araa, 814-337-1612

~

''

4 Bedrooms 14x70 W11h ~~~pan

.~do::1:2~,·1~14 APf"ox.
Added On
19802
314Room
01 Acre,
Galha

wa

3 Bedroom Mob1le Home Must

Sel11304 736-7295

1981 Model Sel Up

Ort Lot.

bourMie WV 304 736-7295

Bar

In hfe we loved you
In dealh we
sto II, In each one
hearts you have a
lsrJeciiai place that no one
can foil
It broke our hearts to
you Bul you dod not

We would like to thank tlfose who
alone For pare of us
wenl With you the day
and food, Wrllrs Funer:ljll Home,
,called ypu ,home
Rev. James Lusher, Be.th Bearden and
all · of you who s1111
Duncan, the pallbearers, and everyone II IIC'ihP'';oh your
M other
her Wtth care
who spoke a kmd word or thought of us
wtll never know the
onrJr,•o the loss of our loved one. You
1111 you fmd
I ni''VPr be forgotten. Thank You!
tsn 'ethere
Sadly m1ssed and loved
The family of Mrytle
by children and the1r

Appalaehiaa

e

P.M 0. Leave Meaaage

Loved and sadly
m1ssed by W1fe and
children
Helen Cheesebrew
Karen Lambert &amp;
fam1ly
James Cheesebrew &amp;
fam1ly

In loving memory
of
'

Coli or write for more

After 5PM

In Memory of
CLARENCE (BUD)
CHEESEBREW
Nov 3, 1907 Apni28, 1993

DRIVERS
Only 2 mo. exp. needed!
26; • 3St 1111 to start! Top
bentQts includlogliealth,
o
•lire, den tab &amp; vision Ins. ; , II
and 401K. Drive late
model, lop or the lint
'!
conventional equip.
,
$200 Orientation bOnus.
Your choice ofna1Jon1al •ir t &gt;
regional Deets.

I

Call lOa ·lp Sun, or
9a-SpM·F.
II·IIUU~II76-8754 ul. JL

•"

•
r--~~==:-!~~..
.
:
ORIVERS NEW
•

Birthday
]AYME!
We Love You

Mom, Dad&amp;
Hannah

PROG~MI
3 mo + OTA exp can
stan you at 28¢·32¢ mil
$38,0001y• ave! All late
modal, top.of·llne
conventlonalsl Top benetlls
&amp; 401K Training for achool
gradl avaN 23 w/ COL 'N
~ Bro!hara

Traneponatlon.

• '

•

,
'

"

j
1

I

1
'
1
1

--1-IIOQ...-;.;54,;;3--892;.;....~_
.. . ; _}
ext AA·S4
_

..

RfrJTAI 5

410 HoUNitorRint

Aoomt for rtnl WHit or month
~droom houM In Rulland, S•tlnt
II $ 120/mo Gail10 Hotool
dtpooir l re1to111001 roquorod. no 604 4461580
23

,..... ... .,..742·211B1

CALL LON TODAY- 675·6325 =-r;.':":o:.:~.i~
,.,. I3SOmo. 304-e75-5904

1
1

Located from Circleville, Ohio, take Rt. 22· 7
mllaa aaat to Rt. 874, go north 8 mlltl to Duvil
Road, turn west 1/2 mile to Auction Site bealde
Slate Run Park. Watch for signal
Mr and Mrs Stover have been collectors for over
30 years and will be selling the following
F-URNITURE· FAncy oak soda board, large curved
glass ch1na cabinet w1th claw feet, fancy hi
with
claw feet and m1rror, flatwall cupboard, oak ou~ret, 1
oak· wash stand, burl and cherry v1ct hall tree,
brass beds, marble top table, teakwood table, oak
school desk, oak sewing machone, oak sewtng
rocker, YICt platform rocker, gun cabonet, stereo,
and more
GLASSWARE • Amencan Fostona. cake sland,
candle holders, vases pitchers. bowls, salt &amp;
p"'per shakers, cups, glasses, plus ott"tars, large
Cambndge bowls, Ao Blue platter, carmval pitcher,
several salt sellers, Green DepreS$oon, 6 Nippon
saucers, large sal Meoto chona, carmvli.l glass,
several poeces Ice Blue glass, Cobalt swan, early
butter cup, salt &amp; pepper shakers, old pitcher and
bowl, glass baskets, Ins &amp; Hernngbone bowl, ruby
glass, glass frwt, German beer stems, Hetsey
humodor, spooners, glass elephants, glass shoas,
large carnoval vase, fancy cup and saucers, two
glass churns, porcalatn lady nbpktn holder, and
more
WAGON AND BUGGY START SELLING AT 1 :00
P.M.
Early doctor's buggy, one horse wagon, boxed
wagon sold by Marton Hardware Co. Lancaster,
Oh1o, w1th ong1nal stenc1hng, horse drawn sle1gh,
few
ol horse drawn eqwpment ndong
, small horse drawn disc, and others,
Waterloo small hot and m1ss eng1ne
COLLECTIBLES Old Gtlbert clock, Seth Thomas
mantle clock, shop clock, matchong paor Roman Key
ool lamps, Aladdon Beehove Green oil lamp, Model D
Aladdin Green lamp, Elgtn 17 jewel pocket watch,
Ham11ton 211ewel pocket watch woth 10K gold case,
donner bell , large coder press lard press, two early
coffee gnnders, two tron kettles corn sheller, old
wooden churn, cow bells reverse paontong Trtanoc",
bae smoker, old flatware, whole porcl4;1a1n coffee pot,
old dolls, doll stroller, dnftwood horse, two old
swords, copper kettle, copper boiler, old bokes, old
pumps, large church ~ell, stone 1ars, Wood County
Da1ry man's molk bottle, lanterns, lamps, Charlie
Weaver bartender, oron tea kettle, old planes, gas
orons and others, two stone p1pes, Blacksmith Iorge,
anvil, horse collars, gnndstone, McCormock Deenng
husker and shred&lt;.er, bndles, buck rake, two sets of
pony pulling hamr 1ses, halters, hanes, old laundry
stove coal stove, and more
TOOLS Buffalo brand metal band saw, Uncoln 180
amp welder, 10 HP gas eng1ne, 7 1/2 B &amp; D band
saw, Cummons Mack 3/4" droll press, Wayne shallow
well pump, 10" Craftsman table saw, scroll saw,
drtlls, belt sander Craftsman, Foley cham saw
sharpener, lawn mower blade sharpener, rolot1llar
for 300 J D Tractor, new Ford truck oumper and
more
FIREARMS START SEWNG AT 1:00 P.M.
Hamilton modal 23·22 nile, Stevens 410·22 over
and under, Rabbot Ear double barrel, Mossberg
model 75 B 20 gauge bolt action, Wmcheater
shotgun 12 gauge, 1898 U S Spnnglield nfle,
Spnngfield 12 gauge double barrei,· Young 2 shot
pump !jUn # 1264 pat 1901 · 1902 rare, 2 handmade
22 pistols made by Vern Huff, Groveport, OhiO
AUTOMOBILE WILL BE SOLD AT 1:00 P.M. WITH
RESERVE.
1984 Pontoac BonneVIlle with 96,165 aclual mole$.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE Thos woll be a large all day
auct1on· 1mpossobte to lost everythtng. Brong a chair
and spend the day w~h us Don't misll this onel

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RJCK PEARSON AUaiON CO
1NV #66 • Ohio lt3030
MASON, WV
Residence (304) 773·5785 or Auction Center
(304) 773·5447
OWNERS: CHARLES AND MAE STOVER
Wnch by: Roaming Range Catenng
Terms Cash or Chtick wHh ID~
Not responsible for accidents or lose of property,

,r

Sleep'"' rooms wlll'l ccA;'king
Also trader spae:e on rtver All
hook ups Call after 2 00 p m ,
304·773- 5e~1 Meoon\W

2bodroom on Hortlord s2somo
No poll Call oflllr 4pm 304""2 460 Space for Rent
2016
Trailer lot on SCout camp Rood a1

Hou,.: M-T-W.f 8 am-5:311 pm; Sat 8 1111-4 pm

PubiiCSIIe
&amp;Auction

month free delivery &amp; selwt)
Only at Oakwood Homes Nltr

1nwarranty 3)4

250 KOIOUikl 3 10heolor 1700
A&lt; cond 11000 BTU $250 28
.,.. --$50 304-516 2753.

"See Neal for the Deal!"

Umued Olltrl 1998 dOublewu!ft'

lor your lolred one (ald41flyl wt&gt;llt

POOR BOY .('(]

(Ofd Poor Boy Tlrw Loc:allon)
Rt 35 (3111ocb from llcDonald'l)
HENDERSON, WV

POOR BOYS TIRI;S Henderson, WV

320 Moblla Homes :'"

Providtl" Will care

Card of Thanks

Crown C1ty, Ohoo
Phone 256·6740
For Accodents or Loss of

310 Hosnn tor sate

Real atata
Wanttd

CUstOM EIHIUST &amp; BUIES
\ Wednesday, May 1

675-3331 or 675-6325

Mobtle home lot 1D83 14-.10
Sl"lultz wllh 7 1f2x22 roll aut, ' "
electnc, additional room 8d2
n1ce river VMtW call 814-247 28o\_t&gt;
belore 9am or after 7pm

berglass boat, JD 3- 16 plows, large 310 Homes for Sale
Blacksmith anvil, hay wagon, hammer mill, HD
grat~ dnll, HD plows, 2 water tanks, 4" waterl
pump, 2" water pump, •rngatoon p1pe, solar 320
bulk m1lk tank w/compressor, stock
racks for 8' p1ck-~p truck, ant1que corn sheller,
m1lk cans, rope, Bunea V1sta saddle, couch,
cha1r, love seat, 2 Treadle se~1ng machines,
ant1que rad1o, canmng jars, heating stove, •ron 2 Acres Off 180 At Porter Ntce 1
Bedroom 24x32 101110 Shed
kettle and many miscellaneous 1tems
20x22 Garage Lays Good AU In
Grass
$36 500 941 543 76 ,2
Terms Cash
,
614 388 9411
O.M. Burchett, Owner

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER'

-

r.c.-..,..,.I!On.

(,

CALL LON AT

Gtve r 1ano lessons tn my nome
to al age groups also teach
chording I transposing •f Inter
eallld,cal8,4-902·5ol03.

_____ 1 For
We Wi ll Haul Saw Dust, Stone
Dnvewayt &amp; Send 614 379

r---------..!.1~---------I

Brtus tagged
Longaberger• Btuket&amp;

wv 304-755-5885

Summer 3 Days per Week Mon1
""m 614-&lt;1&lt;16 3657

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
Houaehold and Collectibles
Sunday May 5 aS 11 00 am
Take US 50 &amp; 32 west of Albany and exot onto 50
west towards McArthur Sogns posted
Noce 8 pc dlnong room. suote, two bedroom suites,
dressers and ' chest of drawers depression stands,
depressoon tables, 3·oak stack bookcases and other
bookcases, oak table and four chaors, aor condotooner,
mocrowave, 2-table saws, depressoon cupboard,
refrigerators wringer washe~~ kotchen stoves, carnoval
glass, fenton, depressoon and other glass, several
nice poctures and frames, odd chaors, antoques and
collectobles and soze 11 shoes new Items are clean
and well cared for Broef hstong thos os a large auctoon
Terms Cash or check w/postove ID Food available
Auctooneer Mark Hutchonson 614·698 6706
Licensed and Bonded In Ohio
Partner Frank Hutchlnaon 614-592·4349

t o - "IllY Pl.,.,.,.,
Jlmitation or*' tr•etbt
blood on ,_, COlor, rwllglon
•• lomlltl-.o or nallonol
origin, or IllY irMrllon 1o
mo1&lt;e ony """"pre~e,.,.,.,
llrnllollon or

,_ Fldlrll Folr .......... Ac1
ol1!1e8- mal&lt;oe k llegol

360

~D 0PENtft1"

IIPIIIIICID IIIIUn I
lUll TICIIKIAII
EINIIIICID IUJI,_SSIOI
RCIIICIAN

304-e75-1957

Profe111DnBI Tree S.rv~ Stump
Removal Free Estimates ! In
surance B1dwe11 01"11o 614 388
9648 614 367 7010

&amp; Auction

Holiday Inn Gallipolia, Ohio
Approx. 200'retired, collector•,

Georges Panabla SawmiJI Cion t
haul your logs 10 the rnl JUst call

WILDliFE !CONSERVATION

JOBS

SaturJ/ay, Moy 4tla 10:00 to 3:00
Alftlll ........... ..
V.ts A*le~"

Help 'iVIisled

HELP WfiHTED

Craft•

3bo, 2bath $1700 down S275!

you work day 111ft. WIN work down
town Po1nt Pleasant area and
close lo Pleasant Valley Hospnal
area Call anyttme 304-675-8613
I shall return your calls

Game Wardens 5ecuruy Ma1n
tenance Etc No Exp Necessary
Now H nng For Into Call (2t9}
794 0010 Ert 8710, gAM To 11
P.M 7 Days

~.., '

Commarocal Resldenual Stove
8143884429

hours wtll 1ncluGe some even 1ngs
ana weekends Appl 1cat1ons tan
be picked up at lhe Metgs County
Public library 216 w Main
Stree~ Pomeroy OH

PubliC Sisle

8

r

339 8t50

Generst Maintenance, Patntino,
Yard Work Windows Wuhed
Gutters Cleened Li ght Haulmg,

110

-BASKET SALE

EARN .1.000 W..00. Slullng Eft.
..lopeo AI Home. Storl No
bporltnce frM Supplieo, lnlo
No Obligation S- SASE To

$35,000 IYR. IIICOME -~~~~~
-..g Booko Toll Freo (IIIOO-

For Exam And Appl1nuon Info
Cell 211--10 Ell. OH200 1 IN.f77SEJCI.R-2tl4 ForOotoilo.
Ul. To II P.lol.. 7 Doys.
MEA SUPERVISOR
AVOPi I All Aroao I Shtrloy Chrlatm11
Around The World t
~ 304-e75-1&lt;129
Eotn 110001 _ , lhlftlnt.,.
Hauu Of lloyd Now Hlnn; St.~
per•raort In ArH Fr. . Sample •lllopeo 11 home a. your boat.
AJOB~ITY
Kil Fr.. Trainong. No inftllmoro Stan now No ••per~ Fr"
Local dlttnburor lor a Chu:ago No CoHoc•ng No 01111-•nt For aupplleo, lnlo. No obliaollarL SOnd
Call Collect e H 1511: ~
S A.S E ., P-"oo Onltll, P.O
bolod manufacwrer now hiring lor Detail&amp;
6875.
'
~
Box 195600 Wlnrar Sjlllngo, Fl
MYertf potlhDnt Out to txpan
327111
..an apptlcaDOnt wHI be aaktn or
IWO loCIIiOnl Must bt IV11Iablt
or 1mmtd1111 full lime e"'plow

•

170 Mfacellaneous

•

""I"!Uy, Aprll28, 11M

Sunctey, April 21, 1M

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

CheSler mcludes fr" g11 1901

1

mo. 814-1165-311711
_ _ _..;C~Iol~ed=Tisu;::1'14;dln:;'I:I:S:IIS::Idts=y--~-J 1450/llo
3 BedroomPluo
Home
In Coni.,.,,
Securily
Dopo•~
11.-..UI! M'8
MERCHANDISE
8
PublcSale
Houoolor- 304-e7W72D
In lllddloport, ooolloble lily 11~ 510
Household ·
3

-.o

2 bolh

booomon~

,.

Goods

., - · S400 por monlto ~uo ual1101. 6,..992-7136 llrarl!fltn

12

Two bedroom houae, carpeted
n1c:e and ctean. deposn required
no 1n1ide pets three bedroom

houao dopoool requwed, no Inside
pors 614-992 3090
Two bedroom remodeled new
carpet. located nur Masan Park
ttasl"l tncl uded construction work
era welcome no pau 304 773
5764

Partoal

L1v1ng Room Sultas 2 P1ece

Not $498 Each, Only $275 Each
Call 614 888 8373 Rt 7 Above
ProctOf'VIIIe Ohio BesM:te GIOVan
ma Pizza
Appliances
Recondll•oned
Waahera DryerJ Ranges Rain
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cuy May rag 6 u 448

77115
Counlfy Furrnture 304 875 6820

420 Mobile Homes
Rt 2 N 6m11es PI Pleasant. WV
Tu01-Soll-&lt;!, Sun 11 5
or Rent
USED APPLIANC ES
I 2x85 Wilh
ondo 2 Bed· GOOD
Washers dryers refn9trators

PUBLIC AUCTION
May 4, 19118 10:00 a.m.
Que to movong out of state, owners of CONNIE S
OHIO RIVER HERBS will be selling the followong from
their shop and theor house at a public auctoon Watch I
for sogns.
LOCATION Go east on 124 through Aacone,
nght onto 338 west, go 1 8 miles From Aa11em;wo•od I
Bndge go west on 124, turn on 338 west Located
straoght across from Ravenswood Aluminum on the
Ohoo soda
SHOP SUPPUES: 20' x 32 green house, gas furnace,
hot water tanks, herb supplies, books, baskets, wood
barrels wood spools and more
RESTAURANT/EQUIPMENT hot dog rot!ssene, deep
fryer
LAWN AND GARDEN EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS:
Black and Decker and Skol bush trommers , lawn
spreaders, fertoltzer and 11me spreaders, Sears 10"
band saw, utility traoier 3 pi Mch carry sll 8 It carnper I
1 gate tool chest, tool benclt, saws, grease
guns, crouble light, 11nd more
COLLECTIBLES AND ANTIQUES: Beautoful fuU soze
cherry bedroom suote, bakers cabonet w/o top, ve,neerl
hutch, Futura songer sewong machone w/cabonet, white I
chma (Old Chdlsea by Francoscan made in
Staffordshnne England) old 33" records, quoltong ring,
dulcomer
HOUSEHOLD: Benchcratt couch and chatr, handmade
gun c'abonet (holds 6), Coal Chelf wood and coal
burner, May Tag dryer, Whorlpool washer, Sanyo
microwave w/stand, small Holoday deep freezer, table
and chairs, extra beds Celevosion, ~nd JIOrlable
televiSIOn, ladder back chairs, end stand, bar stools
and mpre
"
M!Se'EUANEOUS: 2,4' x 4' above ground pool
wnoner, ladder, hayward pump, Iasco telescope,
and arrows, weoght bench w/weoght, oce cream freoezeo·, 1
dehum1dHer, out door table umbrellas, and more
Auctooneer Note The above merchandose listed
been well taken care ol, clean and like new condotoon
of Saie Cash or check woth proper 10,
refreshments wdl be served
Owners Larry and Connoe Holl
AUCTIONEER
Rhett Milhoan 57·946457
Ucenltd and bonded In the atate of Ohio
(614) 992-4079

o;

rooms, 2 BIUha,
EC Prlvare
Lo~ In ChoiN,re 814- 7-7671
2 Bedroom $300/Mo

+ Uulmes

Deposit Addioon Pike Rood 814

$250rMo $250 DepOIII 614·
3S8-Qa66

8251

2 Qedrooms, Kemper Hollow
Road S2751Mo + Deposit. 614

7321

2bedroom !n Uiddleport, OH Ref
'trences &amp; depostl reQutred 304
Beautiful R1ver V1ew 2 Bedrooms
ln Kanauga No Pets. Refertneea,
Deposn Fosler s Mobile Homea
614 441..0181

Two and three bedroom mablle
homes stafltmg at $240·$300,
sewar water and trash tnduded

614 992 2167

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unfurmshed se cunty
depos11 required no pets 6,4

992 2218

t Bedroom New Exira Ntcel
Range Retngerator FurniShed

Gaa Heat S266/llo • Pius UbiiiiOI,
Deposol Requored, 614-446-21157

304-675-1450
Refngarator Microwave Color
TV Washer Dryer VCR 811'

••

Rocker recliner $40 small couch
and onoman $60 IWO maple end
1Bble&amp; $20 wa.lrtH twin bad com
plete $100 614-985-3&amp;95
~ave B1g On Carpet &amp; Vtnyt In
Stack $6 oo Cash /Catry Mallo
han C ar pers RI7N 614 .. 46·

7444

VI RA FURNITURE
614-446 3158
Quahty Household furmture And

Apploancos Grall Deals On 1
Cash And Corry! RENT2 OWN
And layaway Also Available
Free Delivery Wi~n 25 M•les

Washer Heavy Duty $95 3 To
Choose From Dryer G E Harvesl
Gold $95 Elecrnc Range Ken
more HarveSI Gold $150 G E
ltke Now 1 Year
Warran ty, 1 Comprenor $350
Reff1Qetator Frost Ftee Kel1v1na

lor While SI 50 Skaggo Ap

phancea 76 V•ne S1ree1 Galllpo

Ill I 800 499 3499 614 446
7398

S,. ;rtlng

520

2 Bedroom Apartment1 614 446·

530

no pal~ 614-992 5858

8221

2 Bedroom Upslatrs Apartment
300 Fourth Avenue Gallipolis

2bdrm apts , total electric, appliances furnished laundry room
faethllet, close 10 achool m town
Applications available at Village
Green Aplt 149 or call 614 992·

3711 EOH

1 Bedroom 13 Room Apartment,

NO PETS On 554

Pa~d

Near Por tet 614- 388-, , 00

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
lrom $244 1052$315
Walk 10Drloe
shop
ESTATES
Westwood

Real Estate General

Buy or sell R1v ertne Antiques
1124 E Matn Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T w 1o 00
am to 8 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Used Coleman Down Flow Gas
000 BTU s Complete
J250 1 Used Johnson Gas Fur
na c,:t 160 000 BTU a Upflow
1250 3 Used Etectnc Furnaces
ISKW 20KW 25KW 1 Used 3
Ton Rhoert~ Heat Pump t 600
287 6308 614 446 6308 1 BOO

HOUSE FOR SALE
Flatwoods Rd., Pomeroy
Three bedroom, central atr, ?tttached
garage, 28x24 building, on half acre,
Mtd $50's

Furna~:~e 70

291.0098

2568

••

4) 446-3644

Antiques

No Pets Relorence 1
Deposo~ 614-446-3437
600pm6t49922526
Paid,

HIDDEN NEW LISTING· The Pertect Combo
Pnvacy &amp; Convemencel Located at the edge of
town overtookong ,the beautiful rover valley thos
home IS one you'll never want to leave Bo~st1ng
over 3,000 sq ft of liv11\g space offerong 4 BAs, 3
1/2 baths, study, large FA woth fireplace, cozy eat·
tn kitchen w1th fireplace, formal I,.R and DR woth
fireplace, beamed ceoling and a wall full ol
Windows allOWing you a voew to apprecoate all year
long Large screened 1n porch, 2 car garage,
sotuated on a large wooded lot Truly a home to
capture your heart and your famoly's needs Call
Carolyn for your provate v1ew1ng 1613

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

Goods

2 bed(oom apartment m Pomeroy,

&amp; mov1es Call 614 _. ..

\&gt;

PICKENS FURNITURE

Turkey Arcl"lery Guns Ammo
Reloadmg &amp; Ftsh1ng Supplies
L•ve Bail &amp; llcense Crawlord s
Henderson WV

e
:===================~
PUBUC AUCTION
EQual Houaong Opporounlly
Slturday, May 4, 11H 10:00 a.m.
' Thos os the personal property ol the late Ralph
McKenzoe Elm St ' Racone Ohoo Watch for auction
sogns
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Sewong &amp; other rockers, Break front dresser, Phtlco
radoo, camel back trunk, high chaor, porcelaon top
table, 20 gal copper kettle w/stand, N Y C lantern,
lamp$, procelam ISland 1ce box, scooter, changler
wnnger, rr\osc chatrs carpenter chest, Humpty
Dumpty 4 dog egg crate, stone jar w/hd &amp; patl, chtlds
p1ano, parts for buggy &amp; horse harness, oron kettle &amp;
stand, model T or A steenng wheel, Aunt Jemoma sah
&amp; pepper green, ponk depressoon , cut glass doshes,
pottery potcher, Fonton butter bowl, Dazy churn,
straoght ragers, post cards· several from Racone,
Carnoval double candle holders, Golden Rhapsody
servoce for 8 doshes Sessoon clock, donong table &amp; 6
chaors, salt cells, mosc costume jewelery, buffet Daosy
Sanders pocture on canvas, chona cabonet, Elgm &amp;
llhnoos pocket watches McGuffey 3 &amp; 4 grade books,
floor lamps, Ingram clock, tear drop tamps, quoits,
flower gatden &amp; box toe, 3/4 oron bed old mosc,
Stevenson s.ngle barrel, 1911 &amp; 1912 pictures of
McKenzoe Rodge School, Ruth E Henderson teacher,
poceures of Morrosan Fariuly, kraut kutter, bottle capper,
apple peeler, 5¢ square glass 'jar, Donohue &amp;
Greenbro stone tars carpet beater, Mac Morroson
drinking cup, old calender w/weather onto, war ratoon
books, pocture of Racone Hostory &amp; pictures of Racone
Lock 1124 and lots l~f Items
"GARDEN TRACTOR &amp; TOOLS"
•
Sears rod1ng mower, grss catcher, trailer, small wood
laythe, Sears 2 H P aor compresser, ladders, Lawn
&amp; Tora mowers, Craftsman Jointer, carpenter box,
hand tools, fodder box, strawberry plow, s1ngle &amp; 5
shovel cuhovators, VIce, Blacksmoth tools, forage, anvil,
sand blaster, Platform scales, and lots morel
"HOUSEHOLD"
G E &amp; Gibson refrigerator, cable &amp; chairs, mise pots,
pans, dishes, &amp;. electrical appliance, rocker, coffee &amp;
end tables, pr. lamps, TV &amp; stand, gossip bench,
dresser !lase, doubl!l bed, vanity dressers, file
cabinet, scanner, ml&amp;c lot of hnens. Hot Potnt washer,
Speed Queen dryer, breakfast set, Unlco chest deep
freeze, Shop Vac &amp; more Note Th1s os a very large
aution Ma~y tools &amp; antiques nol listed Come
prepailld to spend the dayl
OWNER • AddaiQIIV IAwla
DAN SMITH ·AUCTIONEER, OHIO 11344
BILLY GOBLE APPRENTICE 1116769
- C&amp;lh Poeltlve ID ~-

REAL ESTATE

HI00..99-3499

882 3267

Trash

LOT • SPRING SUBDIVISION
One large lot approx I 01 x 171 C1ty water, city sewer,
natural gas, eloctnc all are avaolable at thos lot Prepare
NOW to build your dream home on lh1s pleasant quoet,
and nice subdMsoon jUSt a she~ dostance out ol Gallopolos
LotM17 Realtor owned
PHONE OFFICE 44f-7Qt
KENNETH AMSBARY, PH. 2-l$-5855
WILUS LEAOINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 44&amp;-11538

256-1238

2 Bedrooms 8 M1iaa Ool SR' 218
S210fMo Plus Deposit, Refer
ances 814 U8 8,12 814 258

Uolones

With today IQW inte,resl
Convenlnet localton SEE

Now fUsed

2 Bedroom Near N G H S. Sl0'18
Relngeratar Water Trash Patd

440

lise~

ranges Skagoe Appliances 76
V1ne Street Call &amp;14 446 7398

387nso

4&lt;e

Basement
HOME IN CITY
rates ol w~l pay for
ONE NOW nil&amp;

614-992-6575, 614-992-2418
or
614-985-9829

l

Real Estate General

Elf1C1ency Apartment 510 Th"d
A•enue Galhpohs S205111o In
eludes All Ulihlles 814 3881708
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment

Across From Park AC No PelS
Referencaa Deposit, $3501Mo

614 446-8235 814-448-osn

Furntshed 3 Roams &amp; 8alh Up
slatrs Unlllles Furn•shed Clean,
No Pels Reference Deposit Re
qutred 614 &lt;448-1519
Furnished EU1etency 2 Rooms,
Share Batl"l $195JMo Ut1lti11B
Pbtd 607 Second Avenue Galli
piOits 614-446 4416 After 7 PM
furniShed 1 bedroom all utthtlls
pa1d $300 per month 614 949

2526
Garage Apartment 29 Rear Neal
Avenue, Gallipolis Furn1shed
$275/Ma Uttli!lea Patd 61"' 446

3844, After 7 P.M

Gractous hvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V•llage Manor and
R•verstde Apartments 1n Middle

pori

From $232 $355 Call

61 4

992 5064 Equal Hous1ng Oppor
turnes.
N 3rd Avt Middleport 1bed
room furntahed Oepos1t &amp; refer

ences 30..882 2566

NEW LIST .. Q. Alfordable Living!
You re not gomg to believe how
much hOuse you can buy for anly
S-49 9001 t Th•s home oMers 4
bedrooms 1 bath living room
fam 1iy room, large kitchen w1th
dining area sttl!a!ed on an
G~t'litlell 101 Comfortable family
living at an affordable price hurry

before Its loa lalel

Hidden Potential., What extra
room do you need m your next
home? A bedroom? FA7 Otf1c;a?
All of these? Then adc:l them 1n the
full unfinished basement m thiS
mce 3 bedroom 1 bath ranch with
large LA and n~ce eat m kitchen 1
car garage Locatea 1n a des~rable
neighborhood close to town ror

lowne".S

llt23

only S59 900

N1ce 1 Bec:troom In Country Sea
uno Washer IOryar Stove Re
lngerator No Pets No Smokers
Available 5I tl96 , $300 Oeposn

·.,milvl-

•

•
''

'•

"''6

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

$350/Mo Appllcaloons At 1743

Cantenarv Rpad Gallipolis Bt4

446 2205
Ntee 2 ar 3 bedroom apartment 1n
Middleport. no pets 614 992

•

5858.
Gr..t In Town Location!
Located at 154 Second
prc&gt;vldel Avenue thos 2 3 SA home
offers the conventence of lovong
~ttr·act;ivelln the coty Eal on kitchen
firepla~e on LA OR, bath and
-~- ..._ 01 utolity room Proce of $42,500 Is
Delu"' I •S;•Y on the pockelb00kl1204

Now ac~:~epttng applications lor
lVdia Apartment located on An
derson Street 1n Mason WV 2
bedrooms total eleCtric apphanc
es furnished II 1ntetested contact
Resident Manager D•x•e Bowles

at (304)773 5520 Equal Oppor
IUnlfY HOUSing

Small apar tment near Pomeror
no pelt non smoker utlltll&amp;l tn
eluded 1450 plua depo11 1 e 14

1149 3403

Twtn R1vera Tower, now accepnng
apphcattons to, 1br HUO subsld
1zad apt tor elderly and hand1

o:appod

EOH 304 675-6679
Somaone To Share 2

Aportmonl

&amp;

Expanaoo

Your Part , Close To

lllntorooled Wrlghl
Box 558. ~!err Oli

1St

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI
- 446-9555
I
I
LO-R

Lol'l!til McDade • 446-7729

Carolyn W•sch • 441·1007

:
•
•
:
•
•
:

I•
'
i•
I

~
i
I

.l'

I

Sonny Games • 446-~707

•

'

'\

�'

•

;

I

•

Page 06•

......

540 Mlscellaneous
Merchandise
ro foot Black MHh S.telbta Orah
Plus ReceiY8r And Y'ldeoc1pher U
$950, 614·"1 -1721 ~'* 7p.m.

1o FC Mesh Saletl11e Dish, 2 Aec.
$150 , Ao1o1ill or 175. 614,388·
,601.
1995 lawnmower H1gh Wh"l
L1~e New 4 Horse. ~ Cut. UMd

Onl,- 4 1/2 Hrs 1 Ytlt L•ll On
Warranty $ 100 F1rm ,' 6H··H6 ·

8786

•

27 F! Round x4 Ft H1gh Sw1m·
m1nQ Pool. S 1 200 V G C 614·
;?dS-5876

Boots By Redwtng , Chi ppewa,
Tonv Lama Guaranteed lowest
Pr1ces At Shoe Cafe. Galhpohs

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

Knpl

550

-roc-.

------~~~u~pp~~~~~~-----1 Capper naae Be•ote pupt., flllt

BSR " ' -· 2 Mota! Rooting And SldJi.g Gal·
u..n _...._ 8U.eez.7207.
Pcrtablf

sew1ng

machine

dretNf wiltl tntrror, malehng

S25;61H92-3079

"""""D'-

Ton S1.295: 3 Ton 11 ,395; 3 112
Ton $1 ,595,4 Ton St.«S95: Prices
Above Include Normal lnstalla·
t1on Full 5 Vear Warranty, Free
Esrlmat&amp;s, 1·800·291 ·0098; 814·

:JO.I..67s.ee311.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

AKC Lab pupa, block &amp; brown, Buy. Sell &amp; Trade. All Brt~l.
ready May 10, 1it6. 304·Be5· Paymenta We lcome, e14-318 ·
3929
~29 .

Upnghl, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jackson. Oh!&gt;, 1·000·537-9528

CDmmetc~ai!Home Unts From

Cof"'(rete &amp; Ptast1c Sept iC Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron

$199.00
Low Month~ Payments FREE
Color Ca ..log CaJJ TODAY
1 -IJ00.8&lt;42· '305.

Drver $tOO t982 Suzuk• t25RM
Water Cooled B1ke, Completely
Gone Through, $8SO, 080, 614 ·
446-8605, Alter 4 PM

Eleqnc
Whe&amp;lcha~ts .

Sc:o oters
And
New /Used, Van 1

Car lrlt Installed Starrghdes, llh
Char rs, Call Fo r Brochur e, 614 .
446 -7283

F•rewood. already cu t, vou haul,
$25 pe r load, Laurel Chit area ,
614·949-2503
G&amp; W P!as t1cs and Supplyo, SR 7,
Tuppers Plains. Ohio 45783·
Spec •al ~pnl 29· May 4· 100' 4"
Flex p1pe- $19 00, 250" 4" Flex
pipe· $47 so , 614·985·3813 ot
614·667 6484

AKC m1m P1n1c:herl, two malel,
two tama les. ready June 15, IC·

cepttng deposita, 1300 each,

814·9&lt;19·3028.

Swing oet. 1100. 304-675.a787.
Tw in mattress &amp; box spr~ngs w/
WIC.ktr headboard. Uakea king

Rabbit Boogie

F~l

bN. Gehl grinder

nn·

Salk 8 Monll1s

Old, 3 Ran Terrlera, 814·255-

1902.

English Saddle &amp; Br1dle, Also
Othef Horae Re lated Items, 614·

288-2496.

AKC Regtstered Black Lati pupa, Mon Lop $5.00 To $20.00 8U·
champ•on bloodline, ltCOnd 388-8577
shots and wormed , 814 ·8a8·

Fair Pigo For Saio: Born Early F•

2482

5872 Allor 4.00 On Wookdayo

Musical
Instruments

570

Wanted to buyo· good, used poo l
pu~t~p, preferablyo sand filter, rea·

sonalie, 614·992·5053 aher 5pm.

Building
Supplies

And Low Birth Weigh1s Sl'llt Run
Farms 6 1• ·286~5395 Jac~son
Reg1st~red

Polled l 1mouam Bull

Born 9t27t94 $700 Call 1·614·

W L ! ! !1 ! ! ! i ! ? 1 H ' M I ! C ·
LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

2457

'

Ad 304-ll9S-3874

TRANSPORTATION

PI Hook-Up, $12,000 For All , 710 Autos for Sale

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

814·446·4559 Senous Calls Only.
Used In Garden &amp; Weeds Only

REALTORS:
Allen C. Wood, Reaijor/Broker-446·45.23
Ken Morgan. Realtor/Broker-446·0971
Jeanette Moore, Reaijor· 256·1745
Watson, Reallor-446·2027
Patricia Ross, Rea~or

IN CITY • Brand
New Ranch home with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
level lawn, 2 decks Tax
abatement, Realtor owned .
#109

Ca rg111 seed corn 8527 A No t 1n
produc!lon &amp; dry down Mason Co
1995 MOM trials Ft5. &amp; A23 S82
BO,OOO count bag. Kf!:ef~r's Serv •c:e Cen1er, Pt Pleasant &amp; R1ptey

1900 Ford Tractor, D1ese1 Front
End loader, Dnw;; Plow (21 130 Hr
Excellent Condillon, L1ke New 3

446-1066

.

Hay &amp; 'Grain

. 640

1 Row1'obacco Senor, Exc:ettenl
CondtliOn. 614-245-0610

good. $1.500,614-247 4292

Cuhpacker, tong ue needs mmor
rapa1r 1100 304-675-5253

1965 Bu1ck Skyls rk Convertab!e,
Ver'l Restorable . Askmg S800

Aller 5P M 6 14 -367 7038 '

edl $13,200. 614-4&lt;1·0738.

Gehl Round Baler~t, Mower Con &lt;UIIoners, DISC Mow.ers, DISC
Mower. Cond111oners, Forage
Equ1pment Sales And Serv1ce
Alt1zer Farm Supply, 614· 2 45 ·

.5193

1976 Cutlass Need s Work $250
080, 6 14·446·21 19
1979 Chevy Prck Up 4.x4, Au
tomat1c, 1991 Dodge Dakota
Pick-Up, 40 ,000 Miles; 1987 Ply·
mou th Sundance, 2 Doors, 614 ·

256-1262.

.,.......

1885 Dodge Ariea K, run1 good,
needs lillie work. $400.00
304·
1985

L~nco l n

Olcls

Cutlass

Auto loans. Dealer Will arrdf108 ~ ­

nanc:ing even 1f you have been
turned down elsewhere Up 10f1
Equ•Pment Us8d Car&amp;. 30-'1 ·458·
1069
1995 Melalhc Blue Pontrac Sun·
hre, 5 Speed, 4 Cyhr'\Oef, AC, Air
bags, AMIFM Cassene. 6U·
4-46-1056

1893 Ford Ranger XLT AMIFM
Caueue. AC , New T ir es, Price\

se.soo. 614-388-0406, Allor .5
PM ; Or Dayt· 304-578-4513. '

.'

of extrls. ver~ good cond $2,200.
1986 Ford Escort. looks and runs
good. s1000, call 614,9112-4555.

Real Estate General

CHERLY'S LISnNGS ARE SELLING .
FAST, GIVE HER A CALL AND PUT YOU~
HOME ON THE M~qKET TODAY!

MEIGS CvUNTY

Pri•.

1987 Pontrac Gran
priced on
mspect1on Also 3 &amp;li tre V6 . 304 ·

67S.51S6.
1968 Mercuty Cougar XL, lOaded,
PS , PB, AC , PW, 302, new t~r es.
aulo mallc, S3500 , 614 ·949· 2045
or 614·949·2879
1988 Subaru Stat•on Wagon , M
On
OemandM 4 WO, AC, Rad10, Cas·
sene Player, PS. PB . PW Fold
Down Rear Sea t, Econom1cat, De·
pendable Call 6 14 446 -2055 At·
ter 6 P.M
1989 blu e Ponuac Sunblrd. 6 14·

BIG 'BEND REALTY, INC, ;
(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101 ..
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Ltmley.............. 742-3171

01

c

Gr::

-LENDER

992·6319

~l.SQO.

814-742-2303

730 vans &amp; 4-WDs"
'82 FOtd 250, &lt;14, 302, now jreo.
batrtry and brake&amp;, lots ot new
111r11 in tho lronJ ond. $3800, 614-

387-o:J23.
1~78

Bronco XLT, 351 M auto, a·
rae1ng

lift, 315• 11res on Amencan

wtyela, moon visor, nerf bala, too

extraa
773-JiOie.

many

10 list $3,000 304·

t,.O S• full11ze van w/heavt Juty
wheel chair lift, 61•·8-43·53,. or

.

81 4-985-3956.

~.~&amp;/,; 111,~4:-a~~·

Tool Box ,

1-988 Uark Ill C20 Chevy Van ,
Navy /While, Navv Interior, Very
{( lean, Sharp! Low M•! eage,
Ready For Vaca11on1 Excellent
Buy, Won 't Lastl S7,SOO , 614 ·

-(4!&gt;--7928.

•

Ufa7 Chevy Astro van, 4 3 hter.
¥Crtax v..e, auto, 4 c:apta1n chairs
vttbench, fully loaded , charcoal
Qta~. excellent shape, $4495,

614-085-4176 or 614-985-4389

l889 Ford Aerostar U1n1 Conver-

ston Van , fully Loaded. 77.000
~ites .
Excellent
Condlll(tn,

sjJ,soo, 614-3117-7755
1,1190 Code• Ram Van B-250,
112,000 Miles, $6,000, Can Be
~· At Gallipolis Doll~ Trobune,

19 89 Dodge Om n1 AutomatiC,
W1th A1r Excellent Cond111on,
82,000 M11es, $1 .600 . 6 14· 379 ...

~.}!'5 Third- Avenue, Gallipolis

27Zl

Ohio..

1989 Eagle Premier, needs repa.rr,

$1 ,000 080 304-67S-6554

1990 Gtand Prr x SE. Exlltl Clean,
69.000 Mdes . loaded ! Excel!enl
Cond1!1on, $7,500, 614·44fH5365

1991 Chevy Blazer 4x4 48,000ml
304·882·2647
1991 Da•hatsu Charade, 4cyl.
auto pb, am-tm cass exc cond

. 448 3636

a
•

mobrle
Must call
for an appolntmentl •

1558:
FENCED IN FRONT LAWN JUST PERFECT FOil
CHILDREN to play rn . Lovely 2 ~room home snuated on
I basement, 2 baths, large laundry room, llvrng room, ~~:~~~
1room. 2.7 acres more or tess lot. Situated at 25075 F
Road. Real nice, let us show II to you!

11185 HOnda XR100 is-Ing
11500. 304-t75- IIIS&lt;I.

790

LAND
LOTS OF
LANDI
OVER 300
ACRES .. PASTURE, TILLABLE ACREAGE AND
WOODLAND . 3 BARNS ... PRODUCTIVE FARM .. IF
YOU ARE SERIOUS ABOUT A FARM... SEE THIS
ONE.
COMERCIAL SITE ON EASTERN AVENUE,
CORNEA LOT PLUS 2 ADJOINING LOTS. 2
DWELLINGS, PRESENTLY RENTED .. GREAT
LOCATION FOR BUSINESS.
HERE'S WHAT EV.ERVONE'S LOOKING FOR!
APPi'IOX . 1 ACRE MOSTLY LEVEL LOT WITH
WOODS ON BACK. RURAL WATER AVAILABLE,
UNRESTRICTED, ON PAVED ROAD. IT WON'T
lAST LONG!
THIS FARMLAND HAS EVERYTHING YOU WANT.
APPROX. 80 ACRES OF LEVEL, TILLABLE LAND
WITH CORN ROWS SO LONG YOU CAN'T SEE
THE OTHER ENOl LOTS OF FRONTAGE ON
RACCOON CREEK WITH SHELTER HOUSE.
PLUS APPROX. 100 ACRES OF WOODS, WITH
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITES ON BOTH .
APPROX. 200 ACRES IN ALL. NEW ON THE
MARKET.

1887 Shaa!a camper, 10', rolrlteratcr, stove, link, porta -potty.

makes two beds, new tlraa, good
condition, asktng $800, 814 742-

'88 ll&lt;lyl'- and traiief, IT, ..,..
inboardloulboard, 121 hp,

1971 Dodge Glasstron Sam. As

an

814·1182-3132.

Now 58,000 Act Mi . 22 Ft.
Sleepo • • 014·379·2122.

12' Soo Eagle Inflatable motor
-~ ESKA. 2.0 lip., gaaotine out·
board molllf. floor board pump &amp;
..... $500, 614-11112-8035.

1973 Winnebago L•k• New
40,000 Mile~ , s Naw 8 Ptv. nres
New Brakes &amp; Wheels , Cylinder

M~rada

18'

S~i

Boal. 3.0

1gg, lnnobrool&lt;. fuNr · loto
of extras, 1Ift. S.rlaus inquiries

Gen1rator, 2 Water Tanks, 2

Holding

Tank&amp;, Air, Fully
Equippodl18, 700, 814-448-3485.
Stove IRetrigerator, Furnace,

Very Good Condition, Aher 4 PM.
614·448·' 573.

BASEMENT
WATERI'ROOFNG
Uneonchtlonal l1fet1ma guar.ntH.

cmy. 30H75-8G03.
M1nda1 Motor HOme 21 FL Good Local referenc:,. fur nished. Call
CondiJ•on, Fully Equipped, 114- (614J 448·0870 Or (114) 237·
0418 Roger• Waterpr~flng. Eo·
245-147-4
llblilhed 1875.
SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

Appliance Parts And SerYtel . All
Name Branda Over 25 Years Ex·
pertence AI! Work Guaranteed,
French Cny Ma~rag , 814· 446 ·

77115.

.

Ron't TV Serv.ca, spec:1ahz.ng 1n
Ztnirh also MNicing most other
brandL Houae cells, 1·800·717·

0015, wv 304-5J'8.23111.

Roofing a guftorl complel&amp; 110ma

remodelmg decks I 11ding, 35
y..,. e•perienc:e, 8 &amp; B Roofing
al'ld Construction, 01-4 ·D82·2314
or 1.aoo-889-31143.
W1lltama Carpen1ry II Vou Need

C&amp;C General Home M11n·
renenc:•· Painting, vinyl aiding,

IJu!ll, Replaced Or Repa.,ec. Call

mobile home repa1r and mora FOf'
free es~mate call Chet, 014-992·
6323

820

1981 Coleman Pop.Up, Sleeps 6, carpentry, doors. wtndowa. beltla,

Johnson Ball Hawk II .,,, 50 hp
Mercurw mo tor. Black Max II

15000. :11«75-11125.

2&lt;15-ISN.

4

3142.

te.500. 614-441111330.

.

Clmpert &amp;
Motor Homes

750 Boats • MotOI'I
for Sail

1994

Pauo Decks, Carpor11, SldtnJ.
FrH Esumates, Call Steve, 81•·

..__,..IOrw.llciiJI'ma-. et: .

D &amp; A Auco, Rl~. wv 304-372·
3833 or 1·t00--:zn.t3.28.

Liter Inboard Engine W1th Tra•l.,

EIGHTY BEAUTIFUL ACRES. CROP LAND ,
PASTURE SOME WOODED ACREAGE. HOME
HAS 3 BEDROOMS ON MAIN LEVEL. LARGE
KITCHEN AND DINING ROOM. SPACE FOR
ADDITIONAL BEDROOMS OR FAMILY ROOM ON
LOWER LEVEL. BARNS, CORN CRIB AND
OTHER OUJBUILDINGS . VERY
NICE
OUTBUILDING
WITH
VINYL
SIDING .
CONVENIENT LOCATION ... PRIVATE SETIING.

67,000 M•los, Well Mainto1nod, AU

1989 Camaro RS, V-8 automatic.

1990 Jeep Commache Runs
Good, looks' Great! $3 500: ,988
Chev~ C amara Runs , looks
Good, $2,500, 6 ,4-446-9575 A sk
For Dave

Audrey F.
Bnlkll
Mary P. Floyd, 448-3313 .

...,

0,

(614)311 ttas

31110.

13,100, "4-112..,,

87 Ja~tp Camacha, 4 clv.• Sia n·
dard, new tuea, runa great,

.I1

Selilr ....

NltW Oil tanka, one ton truck

·111113 Suzuki KaNOnO, 100 CC,

Leave Meuage.

......
•. " .

'•PaglrR

I

1986 F·150 4•4 XLT, Shortbod,

naw

good cond•flan , askrng

'

f51•4-.t48- 30SO, Afte r 5 P.M Or

1889 Full Size X ~T 4x4 Bronco,
8'8,000 Miles, Mint Condition .

t~res ,

v.n-. 110 f

I 11114 Honda XR 110 on/ell reed
bike. 23001111. 14,000. 304·875·

s.7.ooo. 614-446-2300

$4000, 614-742-31'\2

lioml
lmpoYiflllnll
~~~

Offor.I1 .....1-073L

SEIZED CARS From tt75:

2594 aher 8pm.

810

' ........~ d

.,...7&lt;42-an

C...
cllor\ ~ ....... 12.200 Or -

condilioto, alol-992·2351anyt&gt;nw~

Town Car, runs

304-&amp;7S-2008.

111111

Brougham, 2 door, V·l . o•col,_,l

1092 tsuzu piCkUp, 4 C:'tl . 5
speed, nice, 70,000 m1M11. S5f;OO-\
may consider partial trade tOr-a
414 or pon(oon boat, eu-9-nt

c... .,.,. •

..

111111 Hantlo 200XR V.G.C.
lt,100, 11+2111011.

Supreme

Por1c:h11, Clcltllac:a , Chftpl,
BMW's, COMIUOI. Alto Joepo. &lt;
WD 'I, YOjJf Area Toll Free 1'
aoo-aea-,771 E11. A·2t 14 'l'al
Curr«~t Ustingl

~

Motor Homes

'eas Hantlo Shadow, " ' ' row

,

720 ll'ucks.for 5ale &gt;• ,•

f l( ...,

corn. 304-882-2862.

VACANT
PROPERTY·
Approx. 2.5 acres that is
mosUy wooded, wrlh public
utll~les available. localed on
Little Bull Skin Rd *2006

1957 Ford. 4 door. V e. auto.
70,000 attual mite s, looks 1J, run s

477 N.H Hayb1no, 6,4-682·3956

For ren t 30acres ground lor

Bo""""le· $3,000, 614·9411-2528.

t988 CavaJ1er RS 4c:yl. -auto, lots

REGISTERED ANGUS
And Chi;Angua Bulla, And Hell·
ers $700 Up Excellent Btoodhnes

610 Farm Equipment

,aas BuicK, S1 ,800; 1988 Pontiac

9112-2:1)4

5121

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOC K

8051 L.... A M..INig&amp;.

May 3rd, 1998 7:30pm Jackaon

Ing +25, m•lk •12, yearling +40.

Real Estate General

1984 Plymouth Reliant New T~res
And Strull, Runs Good, 614 -448·

Co Fatrgrounds, 7mi we:st ol R1p.
ley. 401ota. cows wl.:alves. hatt304·895-3514

1992l•ncoln Continental LLoad·

30HJ'5.4850.

QOod, ilt condi tioner recendy ren·
ovated, dfiYer power, hll, call 6 1-t·

304-875-8248.

Steel Roof: $8,444 Erected: Iron

••t

11180 Plymouth, 1978 Buick , 1973 1992 Ford Ronger
cab. v.a. 5
B&lt;tick, 614-256-&lt;1075.
spd , sports Hill , ps, new t•res
$8,500 304-875-2254.

Jac:kaon Co. Polled Hereford As soc 23rd Annual sale, F"day

ows, lintels, etc Claude Wtnters,
R•o Grande, OH Call 614 · 2-tS -

Painted St&amp;el Siding, Galvalume

.;.700:::2·:...______________

67S-t575.

Pertorm•nce Tested, black An gus ~earling bulls. Birth · 1, wean-

PolellldQ Spl: 30'1145'119', 1 -15'18'
Slldmg boor, 1 ·3' Man Door,

18500. 614-7&lt;2·2554

bruaty An(J Earty t.tarch 614·245-

ers. bulla, 11eers

Block, bnck, sewer p1pes, w1nd·

Coupe, automaJic, a~r, all power, 1002 Chevy Z·34, Red 3.4 Litle,
moonroof, loaded , red wilh tan Loaded, Garage t&lt;epr, Excellent
leatl'lar mterlor, 68,000 m1111, ConditiOn, Low M1leage, 81-4·441·

1984 F1ero, exc cond .. $2,600

Livestock

11

'80 Ponuac Grltlld .Pnx SE Spou

Sgat S.der'l Eq~.npmem 304-67S.
7421 or 1·800·277·3917

630

~

8H-441.0111.

790

-·..,... •

tt85 Ford Escort LX AuiOmtllc;
AC, 4 DOor. 11.000 llllea: 1111~
Fonf Rongor XLT 55,000 MIIOI,' 5
Speeci, CUMIIO, AC, Aftlr 4 ~\11

TraciQ.r hydraU lic llu1d $16 99/

For Pasture, 614.446-2158.

740

111113 F&lt;&gt;ro TIIIIIIO Sllv•. Loadifcl: .
3e,tl00 1Ti., 18,100. 61 .. 245-5311 •

1984 Chevy Mon te Carlo ps
1tock. S3300. cal 304-675-8289.•

Wanted To Rent: 30 -80 Acres

730 V1n1 • 4-WDI

1

.

er Ford 532 square bater All
giiOG cond 304-273-&lt;21S

Rabbit&amp; M1n Rex Full Blooded

SIZ8 bed, $155 3a4· 675-3275.

550

~·1

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

.;..71.:.:0--Aut_;.;.os.:.,_lor_SI_II__ no Autoa for Sill- •

J 0 12Ft. Oiac:, J.D. I fL Grain
Dnll, EICollint Condfiion l 114·

NH T hay

Puppy Palaeo Konnol&amp;, Boarding,
SbJd Se"'Jce Puppie&amp;, Grooming,

AKC Malo Golden Retri&amp;Yora Pure White German Shtpl'\erd
R•ady 5131g8, $150 Each , Will Pupo, AKC, 814 ·288·8753, 8H·
Hold W1!11 ~!I~ 814·31J8.9243.
523-8G85.

B&lt;ty DIRECT and SAVE l

PM

710 Autos for Sill

John DMrt 1280 t-row convenuonal corn planr.r, plate 1111.

AKC German Shephard pups

446-4308.

Tan At Home

610 F1m1 Equipment

Hel!l? Alk JO NORTH PROOUCE
114·&lt;48-1833 AbOut The HAPPY $2.000. 304-t7S.182S.
G"""" Shop ~~ Groon'i'lg. foo. JACK 3·X FLEA COLLAR. Killo Ntw Idea 708 Dille! Unisyttem
h..trtng Hydro Bath. Juti4 w.bb. Wale I Female Adult FIHI . For Wllt1 Combne &amp; Gtaln T -. New
CaUl 4 441 02!11.
~&amp;C.tol
ld.. 2 Row Corn P icker. Jo~n
Deere 4 Row Corn Pfant8t. Fet"b!Omo . ..male ~agle , ready to Pooolo pupp!H. IOYitMCupa. also
Spreldtr, 3 Pt Hitch. 300
t!arL ISO. 304-&amp;75·3125 Allor miniature S&lt;:hnauztra, AKC, IZer
Ga . Sprayer With Booms, 1!1 14·
6:00
champion bloodline, shott 1
2&lt;S-5515.
-mod.l1oHI7-3404..

Conditrol'l6fa 2 Ton $1 , 185; 2 fl2

WHh T1lt Bed . t 5 lnc:h Wheels .
$65.0, 61!1 -44&amp;-7252, Call After 4

Omette Set W1th 6 Chaus $100;

-mad.
~. 114-11!12·
'

Ma"'thly Flea Program Need

560 .,... for Sill

bed.

SPRING SPECIAL: Cenual Air

WOLFF TANN lNG BEDS

1 800 53 7 9528

lhQto and

..niZod. Galwaluma And ~ 3517.
114-245-51.
.

$25,000, &lt;XInibitiaoon,,,.,oo, 110:

Bra nd New 5xt0 Utl l!ly Tra 11 er

Evans Enterpr1ses, Jackson, OH

Building

t:

•

614-~111.

81-4·256·1811 .

WANTED:
NEW LISTINGS!
(GALLIA &amp; MEIGS COUNTIES)

NOW IS A GREAT TIME TO PUT YOUR
PROPERTY ON THE MARKET.
GIVE USA CALL!

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
ASES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps. A1r ConchiiOnmg, II
Vou Don't Call Us We Both Lose•
Ftee Est1ma1es. 1·800·291 -!a098,

814·446-6308, wv 002945.

Res1donua1 or commerc1al w1rrng,
new ser~ce or repa1rs Mastet L•·
censed electrlctan R1denour
Eteclncal, WV000308 , 30•·675·

1786.

llen:henctiN

Hamilton
Water Sporta

Total
Clearance
Sale
New94&amp;95
Jet Skis

94 650 TS ~.849
94 750 sx $4,281
95 750'STS $5,260
95 650 TS $4,049
95 750 ZXI $5,377
95 900 ZXI $5,958

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

General

R1111l Estate General •

540 llllcllllneOuS

All new w/one
year warranty
Hurry! They
Wop't L.&amp;stl
Prices good
until Aprll30

,Proctorville,
Ohio
614 886-7979

Real Estate General

OFFICE 992-2886

Russell 'D. Wood, Broker

446-7101 or 1-800-585-7101 (GALLIA) '
(614) 742-3171 (MEIGS)

~~

Real Estate General

Estate Ganeral

I

. .;•~·_ _ _..:.R.:.:ea::::,;lEi="ta:;:t:=e..::G::e::.:ne::.r:.:a:.:.l_ _ _ _ _ l·Real Estate General

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, .OH

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..992-2259

$2,800 304-675-1236

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357
PRICE REOUCED On this
Exceptional Ranch! It oilers
3 BR formal dining, tg.
family room, fireplace,
garage, pool, 2.7 acres m~ .
REDUCED INPRICEI Mini H120
Farm- Modular Wllh 3 Br, 2
Baths, Oeck, Satellite Dish,
Barn wittl Altached Shed, 1a
X 40 Block Bldg. Pond, City
Schools, 11 Acres MA. Low
SO's N3001

SPACIO~A_t.f!DULAR ·
Three b~~Atolllr.ltalk in
closet Plll~'llrll' baths.
garage, pool, priced In the
upper 40's. DON'T MISS,
THIS ONE! N12t

NEW LISTING! Make lhi
lovely, weU maintained Bnck
Home Yours! Nicely located,
three bedrooms. 2 full baths,
famtly room, 2 car garage,
all thiS Situated on a 120 x
264
#123
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER

540 Miscellaneous

Real

l iAerchandlse

G&amp; W P!asllcs and Supply, SR 7
Tuppers P! ams, Oh1o 457~3 ·
Culvert a~ lhru ~· .
Graveless leach p1pe, S&amp; O pr pe,
Sc h 40 p rpe, 6 14 ·985-3813 or
614· 9667 6484
PlaS tiC

Office,. .....••.......,•.,... ,.. 992-2259
Lend • Lots ol Landll!
1.5 to 10 acres, +I·, suit·
able burlding lots. Some
nat, rolling to woodland.
Call for details.
Four Cfty Lots • Excellent
for building a new home
or business Water &amp;
sewage available . 15
years deferred property
taxes Save a bundle.
NEW LISTING • Jackson
Plke area Prrme building
site, mostly flat with a
great vrew. Restricted!

. ·"·~

'

.,

. -.

Land Contract ; 10%
Down Payment. Large
room w/restropm,

Fdur

514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008

AERATION MOTORS

..

Longaberger bas kets wt alt ac cessorieS, magaz1no $120 Ro
ured large hamper $300 . Wt lea
basket $35 Wt large peg $50 8
muflrn $ 40 H sma ll purse $60 .
3:14-675-1077
Match•ng•Jenny U nd babt bed ,
mauress , chang•n g !able &amp;
dresser, used !ltUe. exc cond
$300 New lillie Tyokes race car
bed $115 New Brother sew1ng
machme wJcase $1 10. Str ol ler

$40 304 675 1077.
Morr1 S Garage Door Co Is Ha v

rng a Dent &amp; Scratch Sale! Over
Stocke d On Var1ous S1zes Ga
rage Doors, Call And Savel 614·
446-45 14

'

2941 .

I

Sam Somerville's Ar my camou·
llage by Sandyville Post Office.
Fn -Sun, noon -Spm (Turkey sea-

son Apr 22). 304-273-5655.

LO•CA1rED ON ST. RT. 110 VINTON, OHIO, This 11 room
house has many features of yesterdays. With 4 BAs, 2
baths. a 18 x 24 garage, a very pretty breakfast nook and .
much more to see. Located on a great eorner lot. $39,900
RACCOON CREEK FARM Located on State Route 1eo
In northern Gallla County. Approx. 1 mile of creek
frontage . 30 flat lots surve~ed. Water and electric
available $88,000
RACCOON CREEK 33 acres $16,500

·
I

acres m/11hat comes with thiS
home. Just few minutes dnve

out of town

a

'

acre lawn that allows
Asking
only

1820

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-461 8
Judy Do Writ... ............... .
441-0262
J. Merrill Carter. ... . ..
. 379-2184
Rulh Barr........................ .
446-7101

RUTLAND· Main Street· a one story home with 3
bedrooms, dining room , one bath, big hving room, on an
average size lol.
$32,500

..•

~

Tamm1e De:Witt ................................ 245-0022
Martha Smilh ................................... 379-2651
Ctndy Drongowskt .......................... .441 -0736
Cheryl Lemly .... :.............................. 742-3171

JUDY
"OWNER MUST
SELL, AND IS READY TO
DEAL" on thjs 3 bedroom
ranch hom!!, large living room,
kitchen. full divided basement, l~:~i~rne•"!
1 car garage, ntce shaded front
lawn that makes sitting on this
porch relaxing on those hot
days!

Owner

relocated , wants an offer! City
schools.
lf764
FISHERMAN'S PARADISE· The Ohio Rrver lot
located In Addison offers a mobile homa with wraparound deck facing the River. Count) water and
electric available. Price at $23,900 Make this your get
away spot today.

NEW LISTING· Vacant Land, 43 Ac MIL Sec. 21,
MO&lt;gan Twp. $21,500
GI!EAT HUNTING LAND: 20 acres $19,000 .
NEW LISnNO OF VACANT LANT· 43.36 acres M.L
with water and electriC available, In River Valley
school distriCt. Level and rolling land. $39,900
COMMERCIAL usnNG· Rio Grande area 1.6 acres

mil located on the NE come. of US· 4 lane 35 and SA

325, Lots of potential $49,000

sid1ng, one car garage. mce lot. and 2 outbuildings

$38,000

WAGNER LANE- A 4 year old ranch w1th 2 bedrooms and
2 baths. Has a heat pump, carport, and a mce front porch
Also has a mobile home hook-up and Is s•nlng on approx
one acre.
$55,oc:io

w•~it;~hs~~~ ~l

CHESTER· A one story stucco home w1th 2 bedrooms full

Frame Home
.•
bsdrooms, one bath, alec
C.A. , carpet and vinyl floonng

33&amp;- A-Frame wrth kitchen, living room.
room, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpet,
hat pump/C A. Beautrful W.B. !•replace. sttting on a nice lot.
Garage in basement. Cement driveway. Rrver NEW LISTING- BENTZ ROAD· 1.9+ acreIron! lot, trurt trees 8 miles from Ravenswood One floor frame home with 3 bedrooms ,
1lrldge MAKE APPOINTMENT TO SEE THIS llvong kitchen, one bath and utility room .
PNEI
F.A.N.I3 heat, 2 car garage. TPC water an(_
c &amp; s eiec.
~lning

l
summer

LEADING CREEK RD· Wanting that home not far from
town at an affordable price? A 3 bedroom ranch with vinyl

,

Take a peep with
1795

on over 7 acres of woods

......11111111111111111111111-

.

PoiSSE

IMMEDIATE
s$i0Ni
$25,000 writ let you move !n
fast! 3 bedrooms 14'x7o:
mobrle home w1th room.
addHron. Appt'ox. 1 acre lawn,
paved county_ road'
lf785

with approx.
ft. of .creek frontage. Some of the
many features are 4 BAs, 2 baths, t6x21 kitchen with
range, refrig. disp. &amp; OW, 1Sx1 5 d~ntng room, t6x21
living room with french doors, 2 large treated decks,
vinyl sidrng and an unattached 2 car garage, It you
don't want to look at your neighbors, YOU .MUST'SEE
THIS
~lng $115,000

NEW LISTING· Vacant Land, 2 Ac .. Mil Sec. 21,
Morgan Twp. $5,000.
·

Prom Dress, New S1ze 4 Match·
mg Shoes 6 112. $150. 614 -446 ·

R1d1ng mower, 36~ cut, 12 hp , e•·
ceue nt condit ion, call 614· 992-

almost

y

ney Use an ~tl me $300 value. sell
$100 304 353-3578

Refngera to rs, Stoves , Washers ·
And Dryers, All Re cond1110ned
And Ga uranteed ! $100 And Up,
Will Deliver 6 t 4 669-6 441 .

I

RANCH HOME LOCATED AT tl083 ST. RT. 110 in
Vinton Ohio This home has 2 BAs, 1 bath, large FR, LR
as weil as DR. This home Is carpeted. New siding and
tnsutatron adds to this home. Th!lfe Is a carport and a
large deck on the back of the home and bsmt. $49,000

Orlando 4 ho tal mghts near D IS-

2350.

'
SOO RELAXING TO COME
HOME TO THIS LIKE . NEW
THAT YOUR
BI·LEVEL
H0 ME ,
3
OUT by not letting
show you this affordable
bedrooms , 2 baths, full~
equrpped kr1chen, 3 car
bedroom
home
attached garage. Take a long ~~~~:~~:."~~~~~ Jocated to
quret walk on the wooded 45
&amp; shopping

6.67+ Acres of ground no1rtlallv
fenced, nice garden area and a grea1
l'lome has 3 bedrooms, nice large
room, bath, utility room, kitchen and
room Close to town yet all the extra
Country living. If you'llke a little privacy come
see this one

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

Repa1red, New &amp; Rebwlt In Stock
Call Ron Evan s. 1 BOO 537 9528

614 386 8835

Or.i'Eii:OV.

!B
NEW USnNG· 22 Acre Get Away Retreat. This Addison
Twp. Hunting Retreat will help you relax and get away
from the hustle of city living. Situated at the end of a nice
quiet lane is this rustic lodge. It is surrounded by
hardwood trees Price at $34,900 1ts a dream for any
hunter

'

183t

usl

.lET

Load lOCkS Fa• 8oK Sem1 $80 .
TV. Stand Wrt h Gla ss Doors, 35
MM Camera, GM Side P1pes. New
Law nmo wers $175 , Plus Mo re l

mostly fm1shed basem ent There is 2 bedrooms, dining

room , and a large bath. Has a beautiful burl! in corner
hutch and other recessed shelves Also has a front Silting
porch.
$25,000

100 numerous 10

Joe Moore, Associate 441·1111

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

N. FOUII'I'H AVE.- Mtddleport- A one story home wrth

mention in th1s ad, please
tor more detaris' You wrll

kitchen &amp; bath. Garage.
deck across the
2 miles from
drnNnt•owr . Call for more

BLACKBURN REALTY

•

GREAT FOR HOURSESf 47
PRICE
Acres m/1 &amp; thrs spacious I RIEDIUCTI()NI 140 PLUS
FARM wrth almost
colonial style home with 3'
bedrooms , 2 full baths,
new home &amp; lots or
oversrzed ilvrng room. plus
all in good
morel Detached 2 car garage,
Home ~as epPfOX.
2 stall horse barn plus
sq. ft You will be able
addrtronal barn. Large stocked
cool th1s summer 1n
pond, lots ottencong
1839,
sw1mmrng

office area.
exam rooms, staff

Real Estate General

General

GS.W Plasucs and Supply, SA 7.
Tuppers P!arns, Ohro 45783· Watef p1pe 31 4 ~ &amp; , ~ 200 p s.1 (100'
rolls thru 1,000 rolls) all f1!1 1ngs,
Sch 35 pipe, gas p pe jl ~ thru 2")
RegUlators, 614-985-3613 or 614·
667 6484

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

POMEROY· 2 Story Older Ho111e with ornate

!~r~~t:~. k~chen,
some staioed
gtass dining
windows.
living room,
room,3
H.W gas heat. Carpet and
flooring Small outbuilding, front
porcb. River v-. A liftte TLC This
a real beauty.

BUCKTOWN ROAD· Very Nice Level Site
Beautiful Remodeled Home· that contarns three lots. Paved road, TPC
home has "NEW EVERYTHING" New water available. N1ce building or Mobile
-idlng, roof. paint &amp; carpeting, new windows, home sHe wnh a river view.
faucets, front entrance door, new bath off the
mQter bedroom with a huge garden tub and o 'HtO RIVER· VACATIONER PARADISE~ouble shower stall, now covered t2' x 16' Located on SR t24- Beautiful 4 yr old 1 1/2
ileck This home is like new constructionll
frame home. F.A.N.G heat, carpet-vinyl
fto!11e rnctudes 3 bedrooms, family room, an lnoorin~ • perma-payne windows, dish-washer,
bundance of closet/storage space, also 8
range, disposal, central vaccum
ne car garage with alec. &amp; phone hoo~·UP system, c .A., cable and phone jacl&lt;s in each
iae tot in a very nice location of Lee Ctrcle room. 2 bedrooms, 2·3 baths. Circular
IS A ~~ST SEE HOME.
.
cement driveway, attached garage, treated
~ LtBnNG· Located just off SR sB1 on deck to view your own piece of Ohio River
N"'"
•Thl
Properly contains approx. t acre.
u~ker Road In the community of .,.,ad, • Loke
a Life Time Vacation Home.
973 . t2'x56' Nashua Mobile Mobile· Home MAKE
APPOINTMENT TO SEE THIS
eas had excellent care. There Is a 24' x 10' BEAUTIFUL HOM Ell
living room addiUon plus a 1o· s 20' utility
,am. Covered cement patio. Front wood NEW LISTING· Ball Run Road B.G heal. Also a wooclbumer hook·UJ&gt;. Approximately .993 aae with a 1973 Mobile
TPC water, appliances~ 2 unit air Home. Etec. heat. plus king wood &amp; coat
9JndHioners. Baaulitul locatlonwith 2 acres of burner. Built In oven, ameN shed, drilled well
d
tie su
ground. Thl• would be perfect ~you plan to
l)ulld In the future. Uve In Mobile Home and an sep • •500
~ulld on the other acre· Really Pretty Site.
~rs relocating. COME SEE AND MAKE
&lt;4N OFFER.
/ WE NEED LISTINGSIIIF YOUR LOOKING FOR A HOME SHOP AT CLELAND
'
REALTY AND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO SALE.

basement , ftreplace , built in bookshelves gara~e w1th

attached workshop, and a deep lot w1th garden area
$35,000
~

11011 NEWLY REMODELED
Horne plus 6 ac. mil 3 bedrms,
bath, lg LR. modern kitchen,
basement, front pore:~. 2 car
garage. New Wtndows, sld•na.

fumac:e &amp; H.W. Tank. VLS
11012 ROOIIV HOME locaied in

a quiet location w/privacv 4

Bodrms. 2 112 baths, 2160 sq. ft

PEARL ST· A one story home wrth 2 bedrooms . enclosed
Iron! porch . pari basemen!. Has v1nyl s1d1ng , equrpped
k•tchen, and hardwood floors.
$29,900

•

MIDDLEPORT ELM ST· If you want roolal propeny thrs IS
it. A large lot w•th 3 trailers setting on rt. You could live 1n
one and rent the other. You've got to look at this
.
ASKING $29,900
RUTLAND-New Lrma Ad • A 1 112 story hqme with 3
bedroom, enclosed back porch, full basement, also a tog
home that is nol finished. A large lot.
WAS $30,000 NOW $24,000

t

LOT· being approx. 5 acre
more or les!; County water is
abailable. Situated at "paved
road. Call today
ft19

.JHIS
T

Well mainta1ned 30,000' Sq Ft
approx. ~uildlng situated on t
acre more• or less in City of
Gallipolis. Lots of parking area,
office space, loading docks,
central air &amp; heat Call for
complete details.
1790

48dt.

101 ACRES· will sell on land
contract, idea~ hunting land.
Lots of road frontage. Call Such a preny view of
today. Affordable.
Ohio River from this 29
tract of land. Acreage being
sold •• development land,
•
propetty has been surveyed.

17M

,,
1.--------------------~------------~----.J................~--~.~:

•

I

l

l

�•
Pomet oy • Middleport • G8111polla,

PageDI• .. t , ..

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Sunday, April28, 1 --

oH • Point Plelunt, WV

OFFERS NEW SERVICE - Lance Brown end Don Holcomb ere
offering e new service to the region. Located In Vinton, the high
pressure eteem cleaning firm ie celled, "Grime Bueters." Pictured
above Ia Brown.

New high pressure steam
cleaning service availa~le
VINTON - Lance Brown and
Don Holcomb are offering a new service to the region. 'The service, located in Vinton, is high pressure steam
cleaning.
·
The firm will be offering exterior
cleaning, specializing in: Mobile
homes. houses, par!Ong lots, heavy
equipment, !mi-tractor trailers, farm
equipment, decks and sidewalks
. around pools. For restaurant and fast
food owners, grill and range hood
vent filters will be removed; steamed
cleaned and re-installed. The firm
will respond to emergency clean-up
needs at any time.
·
Services will be concentrated in
Gallia and all surrounding counties.
The l!usiness is called Grime Busters.
The unit has hot, as well as, cold
water capabilities and delivers nozzle
pressure at 4,000 pounds per square
inch. This washer is the premier pressure washer on the market today and
will meet the needs of Grime Busters
target market.

Brown brings a year of pressure
cleaning experience to the business.
while Holcomb has three years expe·
rience and a bachelor's degree in
business management. Brown will be
responsible for all aspects of customer satisfaction and job bids. Holcomb will see to the bookkeeping.
insurance and ail other state. federal,
and local requirements.
Brown said, "Grime Busters will
offer quality cleaning and customer
satisfaction at reasonable prices.
Because the pressure washer utilizes
hot water. little. or no chemicals are
required. Any application where
· chemicals are needed, only environmentally safe ones are used ."
Operating 24 hours a day, seven
days a week, Grime Bust.ers will offer
frequent specials. As an opening
special offer from now through May
31, senior citizens will receive a 10
percent discount on all their power
washing needs.
·
lodividuals may call 388-0413 for
an appointment and free estimates.

- . Business
briefs·,
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
growing popularity of sport utility
vehicles apparently extends to
crooks.
The two 1993-95 model vehicles
with' the highest theft losses are the
Toyota Land Cruiser and the Mitsubishi Montero, the Highway Loss
Data Institute reponed Friday.
It's the second year sports utility
vehicles have led the list. taking over
from high-priced sports cars that had
previously been most popular with
thieves, sai.d Institute Vice President
Kim Hazelbaker. ·
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NEW YORK (AP) - A lawsuit
filed against the Food and Drug
Administration could delay introduction of a new drug for multiple

sclerosis.

Berlex Laboratories Inc., maker of
the MS drug Betaseron, said Friday
it sued the FDA to stop ii (rom
approving·acompeting drug, Avonex,
by IJiogen Inc. ·
The FDA is close to giving final
approval of Avonex. The suit said
such approval would v.iolate FDA's
own procedures and a federal law that
gives Beriex: the right to sell its drug
- without competition.

Dyer says farm bi/1..
about 64 petcent ofthe nation s grazing lands would benefit from conserllltion treatment.
There is also a new incentive program in the 1996 Fann Bill designed
to help states with farmland conservation programs purchase conservation easements. The Farmland Protection Program provides up to $35 .
million to help farmers preserve their
land in agriculture:
Another new proviSion the ·
' Wildlife Habitat incentives Program
provides $50 million over the life of
the fann Bill for Wtldhfe hab1tat
improvement on private lands.
Dyer said that the 1996 Fann Bill
makes several policy changes to the
Swamp buster and wetland conser'
vat ion provisions. "The changes will

-Record-breaking...
Continued from D·l
unprecedented trek above $7 a
bushel, while other contract months
retreated amid profit-taking and forecasts for some weekend rains that
• might relieve parched crops in winter growing areas.
"These guys made a bundle of
money. They're taking.some to enjoy
the weekend," said Jack Scoville of
The Price Group in Chicago.
Physical supplies in exchange .
warehouses have dwondled on recen1
weeks amid strong exports, and analysts said traders were bidding up
prices in the May contract as they
rushed to cover their positions ahead
of next week's first notice day, when
investors have to signal whether they
intend to actually deliver the product.
Many traders said supplies are insufficient, forcing them desperately to
seek sellers.
Agri~ulture Secretary Dan Glickman, meanwhile, toured parched
wheal fields in Texas and said the
drought situation is the second-worst
· this century. He expressed concern
about volatility in grain futures markets, but be reiteraled he would not
embargo exports.
Prices fell in other contract
months after be said spring plantings
appear to be going at a good pace.
Corn futures rose amid wonies ·
about the tightest 'supply situation in
22 years.
May wheat gained 20 cents to
$7.16 112 per bushel, while July ·
. wheat fell II 112 cents to $6.17 per .
bushel. May co~ just below :

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Busi- concluded.
Nevettheless, total farm debl at the
ness-related farm debt this year is
likely to hit a tO-year record but end of 1996 still is expected to be 20
remain far under the peak set in 1984. percent below the 1984 record. In
Debt is expected to reach $154.(1 percentage terms, USDA added. debt
billion by yearend, according to the increases in the 1990s remain well
Agriculture Department. That would under levels of the 1970s, when debt
be the sixth increase in seven years grew by more than 10 percent each
.
following five straight years in which year.
Little
growth
is
expected
in borpayoffs exceeded new loans.
rowing
for
real
estate
this
year;
the
"Continued economic growth,
increase
will
be
caused
by
new
loans
high grain prices, e•panded acreage
for some crops and stable farm • for equipment and purposes other
incomes ar~ behind much of this than real estate. Even so, more and
year's expected expansion," USDA more of the demand for credit for

USDA updates 1996 farm bill
By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - Risk managemeBeginning with spring-planted 1996
crops (tobacco. corn. soybeans). a
prod ucer may choose. not to obtain
catastrophic risk protection insurance
coverage and still remain eligible for
price support on burley tobacco and
other program payments. In order to
obtain benefits without obtaining
crop insurance coverage, a producer
must agree in writing to waive eligibility for emergency crop disaster
· assistance. This waiver does not preelude a producer from obtaining an
emergency loan or a payment under
the Non, Insured Assistance Program.
These waivers should be filed by July
15. 1996.
,
Production Oexibility contracts
- Some program facts that may inter·est prollucers with crop bases on their
farm: Signup- May 20 through Juiy
12. This is a one time signup for a
seven year contract · producers may
withdraw at any time but this is the
9nly time during the seven years for
signup.
There is no set-aside or ground to
be idled in this program.

a new all-time high of$5Jl9 a bushel
at $5.07 112 per bushel, while July
corn was unchanged at $4.82 a
bushel ; July oats rose I cent to $2.83
a bushel: July soybeans fell 4 112
cents to $8.26 3/4 a bushel.

There is no planting restrictions
any crop, including hay, may be
planted on contract acreage; except
for fruits and vegetables where no
planting . history exists. (Contract
acreage equals the amount of crop
. bases on a fann.) ,There are no planting restrictions on non-contract
acreage; ie. Com, soybeans or any
other crop may be planted on noncontract acreage and/or contract
acreage. This is a big change from
prior years.
1be' Fann Service Agency currently h&lt;tS the capability of running
estimated panicipation worksheets
for persons interested in the Production Flexibility Program. USDA
anticipates 90-100 percent participation due to the nature of the program.
Contact the Gallia-Lawrence
Farm Service Agency for additioQai
information. Phone 446-8686 or 1888-211·1626.
Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell
are county executive cJirectors of
the Gallla·Lawrence Farm Servire
· Agency.

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Corn crops up
WASHING1UN (AP) - Acreage
planted in com should increase this
year by 12 percent, to 79.9 million
acres. the Agriculture Department
says.
The higher acreage is forecast in
response to unusually high corn
prices as well a5 the newly signed
fa[m law, which ·eliminated the
acreage reduction program. That
would be the highest corn acreage
since 1985.
Producers tell USDA they expect
to increase sorghum acreage by 12
percent and barley acreage by H per-

2·aaollone,11 l'llgee

Easy Pay Auto
Insurance
Any Car
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
&lt; Di scoun t s &gt;
Computer Quolcs
(614 ) 992-7040
Pomeroy

tnke you- and all your ~earanywhere. Jus~
point it in lhe right directfnn.

ju~l ~bout

Take one out for-a
test ride tO&lt;Iay.

• Llquld-Coolod, 4-Sir- 311cc Engine

748 E. Main, Pomeroy
614-992.·2114

• Full-Time.__ Drive

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c,,.._....._.Co.,_u.sA .._.._.T'h••+»• .....
riotr!Ytoon

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tee)'OIIf . . .. or ClllltAlV S.W, b!Ne II t-a»&gt;81·2117

)'NISol ,.. or tllllt

WNWfHG ATVIcall lllllatlldous 1D Qlllfllllr

fG 111011

.u...,..-•~eyto prulldul ft~cdlrt - ,._,c.rr•
~- NMt noa iDIItl fit lf'llufiW ol ~ or llcdlol. ,..,.!iii ... ~
A-.ood IIICflWI__., .,.j Jlu'llcn_, lllllllltaCIIefuiM ~ll!ni\. .

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of economic hardship . .
There are a number of other
details in the new Farm Bill and any·
one with questions is encouraged to
visit the USDA Service Center district office in Gallipolis.
· Patty Dyer Is district
coniervatlonist, USDA.

Insects...
Continued from D·l
cation of one pound ol actual nilro·
gen (i.e. 10 pounds of 10-10-10)
every six to seven weeks per 1,000
square feet. i:&gt;o not apply fertilizer
past the end of August in order to
reduce winter damage to the plant. If
you are interested in more detailed
information on growing and preparing new rose beds, Jane Martin Ohio
State University Extension Franklin
County Agent has just written two
new fact sheets. Stop by our office to
pick up a copy.
Harold H. Kneen is the Meigs
County Agricultural Agent, Ohio
State University Extension.

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EVERYDAY'$-A WEEKEND•••

Why Suffer? Find out if CHIROPRACTIC care is for yo~. ;.

Meigs Co~tnty Common Pleas
Coun Judge Fred W. Crow 01 has
been commended by Ohio Supreme
Court Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer for his work in the trial of one of
tiie Lucasville riot cases. ·
• Crow was assigned by Moyer to
preside in the trial of Keith Lamar,
wlio was charged in the deaths of five
fellow inmates during the Easter
Sunday riot at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in I 993.
Lamar was not charged in the
death of prison guard Roben Val-

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(Offer expires May 3, 1996)

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A private.cons~ltation with the doctor
...J Thorough spinal examination fncluding orthopedic and
neurological tests
..J A confidential report of our findings
..,J An explanatio11; of our treatment procedure if we determirie
chiropractic can help you.
..,J A referral to the proper specialist if we determine chiropractic
can't help you
...J X-rays if necessary
...J

Ready for summ~o ·charge for air conditioning, super
discounts, plus faifory rebates.

FreedonOs Yours 7 Days a Weeki
STARTING
AT

$18,900

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trlicif=J::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;:::----1 MEIGS COUNTY CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC·
.

963 General Hartinger Parkw-.y

Middleport, Ohiq 45760

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par,:

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Iandingham, which also occurred
during the riot.
Lamar's trial, and other trials
which resulted from the riot, were not
held in Scioto County because of the
prison's location in the county and the
resulting publicity from the disturbance.
The month-long Lamar trial, held
last summer in Lawrence County,
resulted in Lamar being found guilty
on all counts and being sentenced to
death by Judg~ Crow.
"On behalf of the Supreme Court

.

and judiciary of Ohio, I express our
appreciation ·to Judge Crow for his
· diligc:nt efforts at demonstrating
exemplary case management activity;" Moyer said in the commendation
letter.
"It was important for the criminal
justice system and for public perception that the Lucasville cases be managed in a manner that would be complemented by ali parties: Ju~ge Crow
did that, and for that we arc grateful,"
he added.

also have reported slowdowns due to
Combined AP Reports
· , Gasoline prices jumped nearly 5 · repairs and renovations.
. cents per galion in the past two weeks
Nationwide at self-serve pumps
but could be leveling after a wave of -where more than 95 percent of ali
hiies caused by· rising demand and gas is sold ~ the average per-gallon
crude oil costs•.an analyst said.
price was I 30.23 cents for regular
· , "There are signs of a possible unleaded, 139.79 for mid-grade and
price peaking," Trilby Lundberg said 148.23 for premium.
$)1nday.
At fuil~service pumps, the average
'. ."In 8ome MidweStern cities prices per-gallon price was I 59.34 for retlarc unchanged or already falling," uiarunleaded, 168.10 for mid-glr,lde
. she said, adding that the region often and 175.02 for premium.
lea&lt;ls the nation in price trends.
Meanwhile, exports of Alaska's
The average price of ·gasoline North Slope oil should lead to addinationwide; including all grades arid tiooai production and could begin in
taxes, was 136.34 cents a gallon as of May, a British Petroleum officiat
fpday, according to the Lundberg said.
~urvey of 10,000 gasoline stali!lns.
President Clinton gave clearance
that compares 10 I 3 1.39 cents on Sunday for exporting the oil, Cl)ding
Apnlt2andwas 14ccntshigherthan · a 23-year ban. The president also .
year earlier, Lundberg said.
imposed additional safety require·
California has been the hardest-hit ments·on tankers hauling the oil.
region, with self-serve gas prices
Alaska oil e•pons are permitted
increasing by 18 cents per gallon over under a law Congress passed last
th~ past two weeks, she said.
November, but the crude oil could not
By contrast, the average price for be sent abroad until the president
self-serve rose I cent in the Midwest, approved.
,
3.5 cents in the Southeast, 8 cents in
'The export authority is expected to
Ro,;:ky Mountain states and 4 cents on . boost a sagging oil industry ~y
the East Coast. ,
increasing demand.
ladustry officials have blamed
The Chinese Petroleum Authority
the sharper California increase on a ·has agreed to purchase 10,000 barrels·
varjety of flctors, including the inii'O- of crude oil a day from BP. The lint
duetion of cleaner-burning but more sut:h cargo is 'el!pccted in May. said
expensive gasoline required by s~ ·· Richard · Oliver, BP Exploration
~gulations. West Coast refinencs
deputy chief executive.

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t=t:STiVAL COURT- Kelly Swisher, daughter of Michael and Cynthia Swisher of Syracuse
wes named queM~ at the 1996 Racine Flower Festival held Saturday et Star Mill Park. The tea:
tivel court included, from left, Miss Congeniality Jennifer Cummins, daughter of Todd end Peggy Cummine of Letart Felli; Swisher, shown being crowned by last year's queen, Courtney
Manuel of Recine .
Roush; end runnerup Jonne Manuel, daughter of John and

Large

turnout
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attends
Flower-Eestiv.aJ~. ~
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By JIM FR.EEMAN
Sentinel New• Stall
Food, fun ... and, of course,
·plenty of flowers was the recipe for
a successful third annual Racine .
Area Community Organization
Flower Festival Saturday. ·
EX.MiliNijiG ;~~~~:~.~-~·FI~owera -re the primary ettrecMore than 500 people were on
tion at the Recine Flower Festival Saturday and there _,e
hand throughout the day-long
plenty of them on hind. Here, 3-yeer-old Kolten Ritchie, son
event in Racine's Star Mill Park. A
· of Chuck en.d Kriaty Ritchie of Recine, examines some of the
brisk breeze cooled thitfgs off earofferings.
ly in the.day, but things warmed up
as the afternoon progressed. •
. Congeniality.
said.
The event officially kicked off
Other contestants were Jyl
Han commended Tonja Hunter
the 1996 festival season in Meigs and Dr. Mel Weese for their conMathews, daughter of Charlie and
County.
tributions and Sherry O'Brien for . Rita Mathe"'s of Racine, and
RACO President Kathryn Hart
Sammi Sisso~, daughter of Joyce
assisting in the queen contest.
estimated the largest crowd was in
and Ernie Sisson of Syracuse .
Named 1996 Flower Festival
attendance around 4:30-5 p.m.
Allendants were: freshman Jody
queen was Kelly Swisher, daugh"We had a big turnout," said
Hupp,
daughter of Steven Hupp of
ter of Michael and Cynthia SwishHan.
and Laura Hupp of
Cheshire,
er of Syracuse.
About a half-dozen local flower
Runnerup was Jomia Manuel, Racine; sophomore Jayme Miller,
farmers were there with their proddaughter of John and Megan daughter of James and Denise
uct and food and other vendors did
Manuel of Racine, while Jennifer Miller of Portland; and junior Keri
well with their sales, Hart said.
Cummins, daughter of Todd and Caldwell, daughter of H1&gt;wie Cald"Overall, it went pretty good.
Peggy Cummins, was named Miss well and Christy Lavender of Syra11tere were no problems," Han
cuse.

Youth unit
employee
assaulted
~by inmate

CARRIER COLLECTION - Pomeroy letter
cerrter. will be cerrylng ltNvler •tdlele IIIIey
11 .. pert or the NetlonerAaoctetron or LAllier
Cerrl8re ennuel food ilrM. Lest year, " - o y
letter cerrl.,. collected IIICJR then 1,700
~ndl o1 food which wee donllted
1M
Melg8 County Cooperative P8rl1h Food Blnk.
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Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan signed · if
proctemetlon recognizing the food drive. From
left ere letter carrier Carl Cermichul Sr., Post~
muter Ch8rlte Grim, Vaughan end letter i:errler Jim P!llllnl. People wanting to perticlpelll
ahould _ . non-perieheble bma- no gteu
.P..... ,..-next to their meilboxu on ~y 11.

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992-2168

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A Gannett Co. Nc

Analyst points to leveling
off for u.s. gasoline prices

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YOUR INITIAL VISIT WD.J. INCWDE:

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State Supreme Court hai.l s Craw
for presiding .over riot trial in '95

$45. QO Regular $128 Program

1996 CHEROKEE SE

• POIIT ARI'HUR, Australia (AP) had not yet moved the bodies for fear restaurant and ·turned his rille .on
-A gunman who pulled a rille from of disturbing evidence.
tourists near a bus outside, killing
a tennis bag and slaughtered at least
"Some of the deceased were sit- four more people, including the· bus
, 34 people at a colonial prison was . ling there as if they were enjoying driver.
' arrested today as he fled burning their meals," police Superintendent
He picked off others as 1\ley
' from an inn that he set ablaze.
Jack JoHnston said. "Their meals arrived in cars and shotat people run·.. The man had barricaded himself were still on the table. Blood was ning from the scene.
He shot a mother and the 3-year· inside II!!: inn with three hostages, everywhere.
"Whatl saw inside the restaurant old daughter in her arms. The
· · and two bodies were found in the
- burned-oUt rubble on the island of · was exactly like the product of war. woman 's.6ryear-old daughter tried to
h1de behind a tree, bu! the gunman .
Thsmania. Police said the third It was·honifying."
About I :30 p.m. on Sunday, the . kiiled'her, too.
: hostage also likely perished, which
· Would raise the death toll to 35.
gunman drove up to the prison in a
He kidnapped an Australian man
Armed with a semiautomadc rille, mustard-colored Volvo hatchback at a gas station and stole a car to dri- .
· the 29-year-'Oid man methodically with a surfboard strapped on tpp and ve three miles to a bed-and-brelikfast
; 3,unned· down tourists Sunday after- talked casually with some of the 500 cottage owned by David and Sally·
Martin, a couple ill their 60s.
. noon at the Port Arthur historic site people outside, pOlice said.
1~fore barricading himself inside the
"He said, ''There's a lot of WASPs
By early today, more· than 200
'bed and breakfast, ~hich was owned around today, there's not many Japs local and special police units had surhere, are there?' and then started mut· rounded the inn.
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l!y.friends of his late father's.
After a I 2-hour standoff, the gun- tering to bimself," a survivor, who
· Police tried 19 negotiiie by phone
. man set fire to the inn and was dri- was not identified, -told Australian with the gunman, who fired two
·ven out by the Dames. He threw his Broadcasting Corp.-radio.
heavy caliber ·military-type rifles at
rille aside.
The man then walked into the cafe them and at helicopters airlifting out
~ "His clothing was on fire, and he
and methodically started shooting.
the dead and wounded. He demandstarted taking his clothing off," police
"He wasn't going bang-bang· ed a helicopter for himself.
Superintendent Bob Fielding said. · bang-bang- it was 'bang' and then
When he set the cottage on ftre,
. , Police said the gunman was a local he'd piCk someone else out and line flames finally drove~· from the
· man with a history of psychological thein up and shoot them," witness building. He threw his · e aside.
problems. He is to be charged in coun Phillip Milburn told Australian
. "His clothing was fire, and he
&amp;fter he is treated for bums, but doc- Broadcasting Corp. radio.
started taking his clothi off,"_police ·
tors have not said when that will be.
Relatives of Jason Winter, a 29- Superintendent Bob Fi lding said.
He ~ill not be identified until the year-old New Zealand winemaker,
Exploding ammunition in the
charges arc made, and under Aus- said he threw himself in front of fam- burning house prevented officers
tralia's strict trial laws, the media may ily members at the cafe to shield them from immediately searching for the
not rcpon about his background until and c!ied instantly.
hostages.
the trial is under way. ·
"~re ~ere ~pie just sitti~g
Police said 25 of the people killed
Witnesses said lbe gunman had there m lhetr chwrs where they d in the shooting lspree were Ausmuuered ta¢iaJiy tinged remarks bee~ .ea~ng ::- ~." said a Mel- · traliiiiiS._Tw.p, l!blaysiaos and
-bC~aliing-~lnf..the-~Broed&lt;&gt; boume'Wonfan'who sun'ived by hidr ' Indiliii'llfo' diecJ: ..,. '• · •·
Arrow Cafe, where he pulled a high- ing under a table. ·
Not ali bodies had been accountpowered rille from a tennis bag and ~- ~ ','After it was over there was a 'ed for because many victims were not
beganhooting. •: · '
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weird sOrt of calm, as if no one could carrying identification.
Today the bodies of 20 victims believe what they were seoing," she
One American and two Canadians
remained in thC cafe, some sitting in said.
were wounded along with at least 16
front of half-eaien lunches. Police
The killer than walked .out of the others ..

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The only exception to our offer involves personal injury cases,
workers' compensation and auto accidents. in which case there is
no charge billed directly to the patient for the first visit.

lOa. Tuesday, br..zy,
highs In 1M 801.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 29, 1996

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We a;e often asked, "What's
the best way of finding out
whether or not a doctor of
chiropractic can help my
problem?"
We believe the answer can
be found iri a complete
chiropractic consultation and
examination, including x-rays.
And, to help you find out
for sure, we do a complete.
chiropractic examination,
including X-rays (procedures
that normally cost $128 or
more) for $45, ·

We will make .this special program available until May 3, 1996.

l h - • and thunder·
ltOnM tonlghl. low In ...

"'Down under' rampage
· leaves at least 34 dead

All Ohio

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With full-lime four-wheel drive ami
a 242 -lb. payload capacity. the
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SPORTS CENTER

0 4 4 1-1-0
Pick 3:
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Plck4:
2-G-8-2

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cent, although plantings of both will
be below levels of the early I 990s.
Durum wheal acreage should rise by
S percent and other wheat by 3 per:
cent.
In other times, the high prices
being paid for soybeans woold be luring wheat and com growers to switcli
some of their land to soybeans.
·

· • - -TypoAirCJunOr

Klck8r:

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Field Specialist.

UWASAKI MOTOR

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1-3-5-18-31-40

&amp;porta on Page 5

hit 10-year high

equipment and machinery is being
met by dealers through a combination
or leasing and trade credit.
Most commercial farm -credit
lenders are expected to be strong.
financially this year, USDA said.

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SUper Lotto:

Heat defeat
in N~A play

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WEUNESS for AU GENERATIONS.

-c=-on-ttn-ued-rro_m_D_-t_ _ _ _ __

provide us with the flexibility to work
with farmers for common sense solutions that still protect natural
resources," she said.
"We expect that over time these
changes will make this program more
successful with productive farmland
made more productive anile achieving a new gain in the functions and ·
values of these valuable ,resources."
Regarding Conservation Compii·
.ance, the 1996 Farm Bill was also
changed to allow USDA employees
who arc providing on\site technical
assistance to notify landowners if
they observe potential compliance
problems, landowners will have up to
one year to take corrective action. In
addition County Committees are
authorized to provide relief in cases

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ing recording devices in huge shipping containers to track the gas mix·
ture and temperature over time .
Inspectors at tbe receiving port could
determine the treatment's integrity.
The specifiC mixtures of oxygen,
nitrogen and carbon dioxide are confidential information of lk project's
industry partner, TransFresh Corp. of
Salinas, Calif.
Methyl bromide has many uses,
including to protecrcrops from soil·
borne disease and to protect stored,
harvested crops from"i~sects.

Farm debt expected

Ohio Lottery

Bulls hand

one thai is new lD the Bluegrass SIJ*t
Walt Rybka is using tii8Sh left .U'«f
from the distillation of Kcntuekr
bourbon to feed freshwater shrimp il
well."'
a
small pond on his' woodland Jli'OI&gt;
The unlikely combination is being
crty
in Rowan County.
viewed as an alternadve to methyl
Although
he has experienced
bromide, a widely used fumigant and
some
problems
with his pond, Ryli.
pesticide whose safety is being chalka encouraged other flllllll'rs to putlenged.
sue
shrimp farming. "It can be a
Even if the new approach suc.
potential
alternative to tobacco or J~
ceeds, it would be only one of many
'
something
else to do," he said.
kinds of methyl bromide alternatives
•
'The
prime
growing season is from
needed. "We would expect this
Jurie I to Sept. 30. Rybka said t~
. approach to be applicable only to a
I
conditions
for growing freshwater
specific use," Mangan said. "That is,
shrimp
are
better
in Kentucky than in
as a treatment against Mexican fruit
New
use
for
by-product
Mississippi
and
Delaware, where
fly in citrus that takes more than 10
MOREHEAD. Ky. (AP) - A other such projects e•ist.
days to be transported to market."
byproduct of a well-established KenThe approach would include piac- tucky industry could open the door to
nations appear very ~ffective at
killing Mexican fruit flies. Plus, the
grapefru\t quality holds up very

•

•

· Mix of _gases could_control fruit
WASHINGTON (AP) - A mix of
oxygen, nitrogen and carbon dio~de
under controlled temperalurcs could
become the newest nontraditional
insecticide in growers' arsenals.
Scientists at the Agriculture
Department's Agricultural Research
Service station in Weslaco, Texas, arc
testing whether such a mixture will
keep citrus free of Mexican fruit flies.
Although the tests have concentrated
on Texas grapefruit, the aim is intransit treatments against the threat
the fruit fly poses for any citrus crop
grown in California or Texas .
" We are testing lots.of combina·
tions of the gases," said Robert Mangan of the research team .. "Results
are not conclusive, but some combi-

•

•
•
•

.

PEDRO (AP)- Local authorities : ;
and an agency that operates.a center : • .
for emo~ionally troubled youths are · •
try.ing to determine what caused an ·
. attack against an employee at the cen- ·
ter.
An Ohio Center for Youth
employee was hit with a fist in Saturday night's attack by several
youths. He was treated at a local hos- •·
pital· and released, said Liz Rider, a
spokeswoman for Youth Development Corp. of America. The company operates the center, about 19
miles northwest of Huntin&amp;!on, W.Va.
Rider would not identify the
employee or the hospital where the
· worker was treated.
The employee was esconi'l_g a
·youth back to her cabin from a recre- •
arion center around 9 p.m. when the
youth assauJted the worker. About ;
, five to s~ven other youths soon •
joined in, Rider said.
Workers quickly controlled the situation :and notified tbe Lawrence
Count)' Sheriff's Department.
Rider said coun ~gs will be
held in the next few days. Those
involved in the assa1111 will · be
Iremoved from the center.
•

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