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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Auguit16, 1998

&gt;

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-N. e~ blood test may determine
whether you've had a·heart attack
By PATRI~K HOWINGTON

B~t

those days Iqely may be
The Ldutevllle Courler.Joumal over, thanks to a simple new blood
A sharp pain in your chest could fest to detemine with certainty
mean you're having a heart attack. wbether a heart auack has occurred.
. "Thc"""n"'a='g=am=·..,'=it=c=ou=l=d·..,be...,.c,.:a,nsed,;,;,.,;b,;,y,.,.....;The~,;;te;;;;s,;.tc;;,;ou9=jld save Uves by giv11
ing doctors faster
and more accurate evidence of a
heart attack. Statistics show some
I.S million Americans have heart
aitacks this year,
and at least
2SO,OOO will die
within an hour.
"The
sooner you make
th,e diagnosis, the
more aggressively you can treat
(and) the .more
likely you are to
prevent
complica• Uncomfortable pressure, fullness,
tions
and
more
squeezing or pain In center of the chest
heart damage,"
lasting two minutes or mora.
said Dr. Robert
• Pain spreading to the shoulders, neck,
Fitzgerald, medjaw, arms or back.
ical director of
• Llghthaadadnass, fainting, sweating,
the emergency
nausea and/or shortneaa of breath.
department
at
Audubon Regional Medical Center, in Louisville,
Ky., which uses
the test.
The test
L.
was approved by
the Food and
acid indigestion or a strained mus- Drug Administration !list summer. It
cle.
detects troponin-1, a protein released
Because of that uncertainty, and into the bloodstream when the heart
because diagnostic tests have not muscle is damaged.
been foolproof, doctors for years
Most people probably picture a
have hospitalized patients for a cou- heart attack as a sudden, traumatic
ple of days just to rule out a heart event - a middle-aged man clutchattack.
ing his chest and collapsing on the

----------------.J

. S~MM_ER HOSING· Most ho~es found In hardware stores are flve-elghth"lnch or three-quartart~ch tn dtameter. Both have the ssrna threads and will fit any standard couplings. For most Jndl·
v1dual use, the five-eighth-Inch will work best.
"

Guide to buying lawn hoses
By JOHN WOODS
pin holes for spraying. They're great for gardens and
The Rockford Register Star
spots where you don't want a heavy concentration of
Although many parts of the nation have been able water.
·
t &lt;~ rely on nature to water lawns this summer, sooner .
SIZE
or later homeowners will be turning on the hose to
Most hoses found in hardw!lfC stores aie fivekeep thetr grass green. .
eighth-inch or three-quarter- inch in diameter. Both
,. But wnh the ~tzzymg array of hoses available, ha.ve the same threads and will fit any standard cou' hoch o~e IS best. .
.
. . .
plmgs. For most individual use, the five-eighth-inch
Here are some ups to buymg and mamtammg your will work best.
ho;c.
·
For larger jobs, such as park districts and schools a
. - Rubber hoses are generally more expensive than l-inch hose is sometimes used.
'
vtnyI hoses but Will last longer if taken care of properThere are also three common lengths _ 25 feet, 50
IY·
feet and 75 feet.
- Many rubber garden hoses contain a high percentage of rubber from recycled tires, a nice planetMAINTENANCE
friend ly practice.
'
-Use a hose collar. It's a plastic fitting that keeps
- Vinyl hoses are not good for hot water but hold the hose from straining and kinking at the faucet.
up bcltcr in the sun than rubber.
' - Take a minute to roll up your hose and store it in
- A high-quality rubber hose .will weigh notice- the shade after use. That way no one will trip over it,
ably more than a less expensive hose of c-omparable and the hose won't be exposed to the sun's deterioratlength and d131Ucter because better hoses are rein- mg rays.
forced wi th three or four layers of synthetic mesh.
- The nozzle of the hose should be left open after
. - A watering hose for lawn and garden use is dif- use to allow it to drain and to release pressure.
krc nt I rom a regular hose. A sprinkler hose has three
- J?uring winter, the hose should be rolled up and
tubes runnmg all the way through the hose and little stored tn the house or garage so it won't freeze.

Meigs fair displays

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• Fntured on p11ge Ct

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.,' A Gannett Co. Newspaper

make stars of legends like Eddie
Cantor and W.C. Fields. ·
Some Ziegfeld Girls, too, moved
on to fame and fortune. But many
moved on to other things. And for
Winston and Zinman, moving on
was a matter of choice:
After the "Follies" of '24, Zinman enrolled in the Katherine Gibbs
business school. In 1929 she married M. Boyd Zinman, ~ businessman. They had two sons and a
daughter. At 40, she became an interior decorator. M. Boyd Zinman
died in 1971.
Zinman also became a member of
the Ziegfeld Club, which was founded in 1936 by the Ziegfeld Girls.
go home!"'
The charitable group now provides
In any case, the boss knew what assistance to members of the theater
he was doing.
world - Ziegfeld or not - who are
Ziegfeld produced 83 shows in need.
including "Show Boat." He helped
Winston worked with the likes of
'·
. George Gershwin and Gertrude

Lawrence. She also modeled; stte
was a Liberty magazine cover girl.
In 1928, the year of " Rosalie," she
married Elliott Zemer, an illustrator.
A few years later, she quit the business. Zemer died last year.
Both women have glittering
memories of the theat~L But neither
has regrets about leaving it. After
all, they say, it was mostly hard
work. And after all, they add, !hey
found something better.

~DHS

Vi nton.

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1939 to 1959 6500 pounds, Blair
Wi ndon, first; Royce Newell
Reedsville: Larry Hollon, third; Bili
Burbridge, fourth . and Russell Douglas, Albany. fifth .
DRAFT HORSE
Winners in the Meigs County
Fair Draft Horse Fun Show Wednesday were as foll ows. in order by contest:
Log puH -- Larry Addington,
Chuck Wh1ttongton, Mariesia Boivin,.
Lester Parker and Gary Brown;
F~ed run -- Gary Brown, Larry
Addtngton, Doug Carr, Dustin ·Hoy
and Rod Thule:
Wagon obstacle course -- Doug
Carr, Rod Tuttle, Glen Tuttle, Larry
Addington and Lester Parker.
JUNIOR GOAT
Danielle Grueser and Brian Hupp
won grapd and reserve champion
honors, rtspectively, in showmanship
competition Wednesday morning at
the Meigs County Junior Fair Goat
Show.

Winners in individual showmanship divisions were: Senior •• Alban
Salser; Junior -· Danielle Grueser;
Intermediate •• Erin Bush; Beginner
-- Brian Hupp.
In the breed classes, Ben Crane
won overall grand champion with a
Lamancha doc while Patty Nally won
overall reserve champion with an
Angora nanny.
·
Other overall winners were, by I
breed: Alpine, Lamancha, Nubian,
Oberhasli and Cart Goat -- Ben
Crane; Saanen -- Danielle Grueser;
Pygmy •• Alban Salser; Angora ••
Patty Nally.
Attending the show were 1996
Junior Fair Queen and King Amy
Smith and Larry Willis, and Goat
Princess and Prince Danielle Grucser
and Alban Salser. The event was
judged
Mary A. Morrow of

Amesville.
OPEN DAIRY
The results of Thursday's open
class dairy show at the Meigs Coonty Fair were as follows, in order by
class:
Holsteins
Spring heifer calf •• Roy Holter,
Pomeroy; Winter heifer calf -· Roy
Holler, Roy Holter; Fall heifer - Roy
Holter, Kristi Warner. of Pom~roy;
Summer yearling heifer •• Alyssa
Holter, Pomeroy; Spring yearling
heifer·· Roy Holter; Winter yearling
he1fer -- Roy Holter; Senior yearling
heifer -- Roy Holter; Junior two-yearold •• Roy Holter, Adam Chevalier of
Pomeroy; Junior three-year-old cow
-- Roy Holter; Aged cow •. Roy
Holter; IOO,OOO..pound exhibitor -Holter; Best tlucc females ••

.- SOLID VINYL
~EPLACEMENT WNDOWS

s

Holter; Herd -- Roy Holter; Junior
best of three females -- Roy Holter.
Jerseys
Fall heifer calf -- Rolling Acres
. Farm, Racine; Junior two-year-old .
• Cluis Parker, Pomeroy; Senior twoyear-old
Margaret Parker,
Pomeroy ; Junior three-year-old cow
•• Rachel Chapman; Four-year-old
cow ·- Margaret Parker; Five-yearold cow •• Rolling Acres Fum; Ased
cow -- Leland Parker, Pomeroy; Dry
cow -- Rolling Acres Farm; Aged dry
cow -· Leland Parker; Best three
females -- Rolling Acres F~,
Leland Parker, Leland Parker: Dam
and daughter -- Rolling Acres Farm,
Leland Parker; Produce of dam -,Rolling Acres Farm, Margaret Park;er, Leland Parker.
Ayrshircs
Aged cow -- Chris Parker.

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STRAWBERRIES

FAIR WEEK SPECIAL

fiiSI

GREEN CABBAGE

00

26c

INSTAWD

• Up to'101 Uaited indies

* In Wood Do1ble Huag Op-.g
• nit In • {hennopana
• Double Hug

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14 Sections · 14Pages

'229
Columns

QUART

lEW WHilE OR RED

Jack Andenon
8obHoeDkb
Jim Sands
DorothY Sayre
SamWibon

POTATOES

$197

Ill.

mncou,

· OH• Good Fair wllk Oily
Optfou avaWie at
dNqe

IIUSCORUD

PICTURES
1110111

Ut.$2.11

•

Ginny McVey, director of the Washington County Child
Support Enforcement Agency.
The biggest hurdle to be crossed in reform$ for
Southeast Ohio, according to officials, is the development of a healthy economy for the reaion.
"Our success is clearly tied to the economic ~
Continued on ~ A2
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ATHENS (AP) - A lawyer
representing a fo"'!~r state represe ntative indicted on charges of
election fraud said Friday he will
seek to have the charges dismi ssed.
An Athens County grand jury
on Thursday indicted Claire M.
Ball, 54, on 51 counts. He was
charged with 25 co.unts of com·
plicity to tamper with ballots, 24.
counts of compliciiy to falsely
register, and one count each of
ballot tampering and interfering
with the conduct of an election.
County Prosecutor Bill Biddlestone announced the indictments
Friday.
Ball, also a former Athens
County prosecutor. is accused of
trying to gain control of the county Republican Party 's central
committee during the March 19
primary by tampering with more
than 35 absentee ballots.

GALLIPOLIS - Retired U.S. Army
Maj. Gen. George E. Bush will be
adding another honor to his list of mili·
tary service recognitions this fall .
Bush, 91, who has resided in Gallipolis since his retirement in August
1964, will be inducted into the Ohio
Veterans Hall of Fame on Nov. 6 in an
II a.m. ceremony at the auditorium of
Vetcnns Memorial, Columbus.
Bush was notified of his induction in
a letter from Gov. George Voinovich •
who in formed Bush that he was one of
30 "very.distinguished Ohioans selected·
this· ye_ar by a nominating committee of
veteran leaders:·
Becoming pan of the hall of fame is
not based solely on military accomplishments, but also on community service,
Retired U.S. Army
Voinovich said. Bush was nominated for
M•J•
G4lorge E. Bush,
the honor by American Electric Power's
Gallipolis District manager. Ron McDade.
During his 35-year military career, f3ush received the Distingui~hed Service Medal , the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit, two Bronze Star medals, the
Combat Infantry Badge and the paratrooper badge.
The 1929 West Point graduate served at posts in Indiana-, Kentucky and
Michigan before being a~s igned to Hawaii's Schofield Bllfl'acks in the years
prior to America 's entry into the Second World War.
Bush wa~ serving his second tour of duty at Schofield when the Japanese
attacked on Dec. 7, 1941. At the tit:ne. he was commanding the Third Bat·
talion, 27th Infantry Regiment. His wife, Helen McDade Bush, and daughter Jane were present at the barracks during the attack.
Bush sent his family to Gallipolis after war erupted and for the next three
years and four months, he commanded infantry durina the invasions of
Guadalcanal, New Georgia, New Guinea and Luzon in the Philippines.
After the war, he served in various positions both at horne and oversellS,
from the Pentagon to commanding troops in Korea. Prior to his retirement,
he was the chief of the U.S. Milit'ar}' Aid Group based in Athens, Greece.
Since coming to Gallipolis, Bush has served in numerous 'ommunity scr. vice activities, including chairing the city's 17Sth anniversary celebration in
1965 and the local Metropolitan Housing Authority for ciJhl years. In addition, he_led three school levy campaigns and a local library drive.
The state Veterans Hall of Fame was established in I992 at Voinovich 's
ditection by the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. · · · · -~ ~ ··- ·

OW·

Ex-state representative
Indicted on 51 counts
of election fraud

:. GAl LIPOLIS - Regional unemployment rate~ I
:4lroppcd sharply in July, the Ohio Bureau of Employ:fttent Services reported Friday. ln both Gallia and Me1gs
~unties, jobless rates fell by more than I percent from
~nc fisurcs .
~ Gallia County unemployment rate was 1.S percent
;.;. down 1.2 percent from the June posting of 8.7 per~nt. Accordins to the OBES, 1,100 members of the ,
PlUnty's 14,300-member work force were jobless m
~ly.
.
lleigs County's July rate was 9.5 percent - a 1.1 per~nt decline from the June figure of 10.6 percent. The
DBES said 900 of the county's 9,200.membcr labor
ferce were unemployed durins the month.
~r regional July unemployment rates (June ntes in
~nthesis ) were: Athens, S.3 (S.6) perce.nt; Jackson, .
6;5 (7 .6) percent; Lawrence, S.J (6.8) percent; Scioto,
8J l,(9.9) percent; and: Vinton, 8.0 (10.3) percent.
f

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•

FUN AT THE FAIR - SoiiMI youngatera participating In the Melga
County Junior Fair 1111 ehow dtcorate their pete, and some occaelonal·
ly decoreta themHiv..,ls 11·ye~~r-old Meghan Hlynea of Coolville did
on Friday. The 133rd edition of .Meigs' .lair ended Its six daya of celebrating the county'• youth and agricultural accompllshmenta Saturday
with 1 hoat of .ectlvltlee, Including the ctamolltlon derby, a perennial
crowd· plnHr.

Clinton's train·tour may stop in ChiUicothe
·Visit would boost campaign of candidate Stricklana
Glnnett N - Servk:41

WASHINGTON - President
Clinton 's three-day train tour to the
Democratic National Convention in
Chicago later this month is expected
to include a stop in Chillicothe. Ohio
Democratic strategisis who asked
not to be identified said Friday.
Other Ohio cities scheduled on
the whistle stop tour include Columbus, and Toldedo.
- Kenton and Bowl ins- Green also

"When a president visits a local
community, its a pretty neat thing.
"'But I'm looking forward to di scussing ~o rne substanti ve things
with the president like how impor·
tant the Pi keton uranium enrichment
plant is to the reg ion.
"It's our economic linchpin,"
said Strickland.
The Pi keton plant has 2.600 .
employees including about I ,000
who li ve in Ross and Pike Counties.

are expected to be included in the .
trip.
A Chillicothe stop would boost
the campaign of former Democratic
Rep. Ted Strickland who is in a tight
race to regain his congressional selt
from the GOP's Frank Cremeans in
the 6th Congressional District.
" I can tell you we' ve asked the
Clinton-Gore campaign to include
Chillicothe, but nothing is defin ite ,"
said Strickland .

The
whistle
stop train tour,
which begins in
Huntington, W.Va ..
on Aug. 26, also
includes stops in
Ashland, Kty. and
East
Lansing,
Mich. and will end
on August 28 in Michigan City, Ind.
President Clinton last visilcd
Chillicothe in 1993.

BES reports sharp decline in region's Ju.ly unemployment

TRI VIA

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Otlio Valley Publishlfll Co.

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Today'a Caa..-.Sa4bcel

Brill"\
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BIDWELL- it works kind·of 1ke a magic lamp. ~ut th re th'a few
exceptions - there is no rubbing
required, there arc no genies that appear
all!hhc wishes, they're only granted to
children with life threatening illne1scs.
A Special Wish Foundation is the
lamp, and it literall~' makes dreams
come true for hutidredilof children every
year. ASW is the only major wish-granting foundation in the United States
which grants wishes 'to qualifying
infants/childrelll'adolescents from birth
throush and including the age of 1'9
years with lif~ thrca!ening illnesses.
In April Ben Pope, t&gt;f Bidwell, wa5
grailli:d a wish from the foundation. He
and his family auende'd the Master's
Open Golf Tournament, pictured above, in Aususta, Ga. for six days all
expe.nses paid • Story on page CS

$169

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Foun.,•~ot'! ~q~~f ·~tnd of like a ~~glc l~.mp' ..

FREESTONE PEACHES PLIIS ot NECTARINES

·

.,

'.

Gallia's retired Gen. Bush
will enter Obio's
veterans 'Hall of Fame'

JACKSON (AP) - Two brothers each chai:ged with more than I ,000
.counts of rape pleaded innocent Friday in Jackson County Com'!'on Pleas
Court.
Kenny Yates, 37, and Lonnie Yates, 31 , were being held on $50,000
.bond. Each faces I ,065 charges.
The two arc accused of assaulting two children from 1983 to 1986
when the alleged victims were between 5 and 8.
• . No other hearing dates were scheduled.
·
· Slierltt Ore•g Kiefer said inveatiglltoll took evidence of the crimeS to
the county,prosecutOr last month after learning that the brothers, who had

Ulll

RED RIPE

wanted

vices.
"As pan of this reform process, we need a specific
plan of action on highway development for this region.
Without highways, we are hampered in our efforts to
attract economi~ development and jobs. We also cannot
guarantee access to adequate health care in a region historically medically underserved," said Swisher.
Health care, economic development. education. and
human services are the specific target areas the directors
group plans to address their reform proposals, accordmg
to Swisher.
On the health care front. a key issue receiving atten·
tion from the group is the need for medical coverage for
those familie s considered the working poor.
"We continue to encourage people to leave the wei ·
fare rolls and find employment. which usually makes
them ineligible for Medicaid, ADC, and food stamps.
Many employers do not provide health insurance." said

_Brothers plead innocent to rape charges

11

2V!II.usm
111,11(8

ly depressed. Our problems are not more significant than
those of other areas of the state. We simply face different issues" said Randy Cochrane, director of the Muskingum County Department of Human Services.
Among the counties included in the directors group is
Morgan County, which reponed the state's highest jobless rate for July at 12.3 percent, according to unemployment figures released Friday by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
·
The July figure was an improvement for the county,
which saw unemployment figures soar to 13.2 percent in
June. County jobless figures are unadjusted and do not
take into account seasonal adjustments in e!llployment.
The jobless situation in Morgan County and other
counties throughout the region can be attributed in part
to the lack of a good highway system to attract and sus·
tain economic development, according to Mike Swisher,
director of the Meigs County Department of Human Ser-

SUNDAY Notebook

1,,

'2''

Jobs

directors say reform success tied to economic growth

Good Morning

III,IICII

Vol. 31 , No. 28

.

CHECI THE CWJifiEDS fOR All YOUR NEEDS! ·

3¥1 II.IISIIT

tmts

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • August 18, 1996

·By TOM HUNTER
· .:rJIIMII-Senlinel Staff
POMEROY - With some of the highest jobless rates
and poorest counties in Ohio, Southeast Ohio human
.~ervices officials are encountering the challenges of
.;administering a welfare system in dyer need of reform.
~ Many of these officials are now answering those calls
f or system reform. in a collaborative effort to formulate
:proposals for creation of welfare programs which better
-.serve the needs of the region.
, The Appalachian Directors, a group of Human Ser,vice agency directors from 29 Soutbeast Ohio counties,
_are meeting monthly to develop reforms and new programs designed to bring more ·people into the work force
~and off of assisied roles .
· "In the midst of the rhetoric about reducing welfill'e
:coles, increasing self-sufficiency, and redesigning the
~ system, we are still left in a region severely economical-

.. , was married to a wonderful
person," Zinman says. "We bad a
long and beautiful marriage."
"He wasn't an ordinary man "
Winston says of her 67-year co~­
panion. "He was a man who could
walk among the most beautiful
women in the world - the Ziegfeld
_women - and still come home to
me.

Yl...

Details on
pageA2

llaltly clllr, 11111111
Sunday, Cllm wlndl

•

·Regional approach to welfare:

Miscellaneous fair judging results released
ANTIQUE TRACTORPULL
Winners in the antique tractor pull
Singed Wednesday night at the Meigs
Cour11y Fair were announced today.
Placing in their respective cate~ories were 1929 to 1959, 3500
pcunJs . Glen Kennedy, first, and
Blai r Windon, Pomeroy, second;
IY18 under 3500, Raymond Cottrill,
Albany, first; 1938 under 4500, Edi"'" Holl on. Rac ine, first; 1939 and
I Y:W. 4'\00 pound, Edison Hollon,
Racine. first: Gary Sayre, Letart, second, Rus,c ll Douglas, Albany, third:
and Blair Windon, Pomeroy, fourth.
I Y39 and 1959, 3800 pounds, Bill .
Burhridgc. Albany. fi rst; 1939 to
IY59, 5500 pounds. Steve Cottrill
first; Dan Smi th , Racine, second:
Todd Bryant , Bidwell. third ; Edison
Holl on, fourth; and' Ryan Alderman

HI: 801
Low: 801

Major league baseball .Page s1

uttba

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Ziegfeld girls.·------~
Continued from page 7
a special collection of photos. "And
they were all perfect gentlemen."
"When we came out of the New
~sterdam Theatre," Zinman says,
there were about 40 guys standing
two-by-two in the hall we had to
pass through to get out."
As · anyone in show business
knows, though, it wasn't all admiration.
"Sometimes, we had to plliCtice
10 hours a day," Winston says. "But
one time, Zicgfeld came in at S in
the morning, and I went up to him
and said, 'We're very tired, and I
don 't think we can march another
step.' And he yelled ou~ 'Everybody

Meigs livestock sale .Page 01

']lowers
&amp;food:

tennis court. In that kind of cue, the
heart muscle may suffer heavy and
immediate. damage.
But in· many cases, heart-muscle
damage occurs gradually and subtly.
A palient may have a sudden shortneSs of brellh, or an urn may go
numb. Then the symptoms go away.
Those &lt;:an be signs that blocked
arteries arc damaging the heart. But
if a patient waits hours or days to
seck treatment, it may be hard for
doctors to tell what's going on. The
damage, especially if minor, may
not be detected by an elcctrocardiogram-EKG.
In such cases, emergency room
doctors rnay keep a patient
overnight for observation, w'bich
may prove unnecessary; or worse,
send home a patient who had a mild
heart attack and faces another.
That's why doctors say that a test
like the one for troponin-1, which
confirms a heart attack in about a
half-hour, is so valuable.
For years doctors have relied on
similar blood tests to detect chemical "markers" that a heart attack
may have occurred. But troponin-1is
better for several reasons.
It is found only in the heart muscle. Doctors have used other prot~ins as markers for heart damage,
but , those are also released when
skeletal muscles arc injured, making
false positive readings possible.
Troponin-1 is released more
quickly than other marker proteins
- about two hours after the heart is
d~aged -:- making an earlier diag~osts posstble. And troponin-IIevels
m the blood remain high for much
longer, up to nine days after an
attack- enabling a late diagnosis.
"It makes my job a lot easier"
Fitzgerald said.
.
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The state's unemployment rate dropped a notch in July
to 4.8 percent. The June rate was 4.9 percent.
The number of Ohioans with jobs was 5.4 million, up
I ,000 from Ju,{c. The number of workers unemployed in
July was 272,000, down from 283,000.
The U.S·. unemployme."' rate for July was 5.4 percent, up from 5.3 percent m June.
.
.
. , Over the year, the number ~f Ohtoans worktng
1ncreased by 132,000 from 5.3 m1lhon. The number of
unemplo~ed inc~ by 1,000 from 271 ,000.
In Ohto counues. l~t month, the rates ranged from a
low of 2.7 percent 1n Gcauaa County to a h1gh of 12.3
percent in Morgan County. Overall, rates decreased in
more than half of the counties.
Six counties bad unemployment rates below 3.~ percent. Six counties had rates above 9.0 percent.
TJ_tc county rates are unadj~stcd, mca_nina they do not
take mto IICCount seasonal adJUStments tn employment.

ratel

Regional jobless rates: July/June '96

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Sunday, Auc. 18
AccuWeather"' forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

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. ~unday, August 18, 1996.

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Fair and warm conditions
will continue until mid-week

coal reserves, said David Todd, the
company 's vice president of public
affairs.
Ashland Coal has aboul 480 million Ions of low -su lfur coal in
reserves. The company mines about
20 mtllton Ions a year, Todd said.
The report also said that most of
the known low:sulfur coal reserves
arc in lhc Wesl. The coal-bearing
areas of Ihe Mrdwcsl and Gulf Coasl
have mosl of the high-sulfur coal.
Scotl Sitzer, an economist with the
energy adminis1ra1ion. said the rcpon
was meant tu point out where new
mines will have to be opened . .
Todd said he does not think
inyestors will be worried by the
report.
"We're a publicl y lradcd company and our investors and analysts
have seen our engineering studies.
They know where 1hc company
stands.'" Todd said. "We have sub-

Tri-C_Qunty Briefs:
Ares man pleads innocent to charge
GALLIPOLIS -A Crown City man has been indicted" by the Gallia
County grand jury on a charge of theft, according to Common Pleas Coun
records.
Sh~ne Stewart pleaded not guilty at his &amp;rraignment and Judge Joseph
L. Q111n set bond at $1,500. A pre-trial date has been set for Sept. 24,
according to court records.

Info ·sought on class members
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GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia Academy High School Class of 1986 will
have tts IOth year reunion Saturday, Aug. 31 at 4 p.m. at the Gallipolis
Elks Lodge.
Reunion organizers are having difficulty locating the following members of that class: John B. Strait, Barbara J. Henry, Paul 0. Hoffman, Kathy
A. Taylor, Sherry L. Thompson, Rebecca L. Silverthorn, Helen M. Shear
and Scott Easley.
Anyone with information on their whereabouts can contact Lisa at 4466941 or Kim al 379-2962.

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State launches safety belt campaign

•·~-~

, GALLIPOLIS - The State Highway Patrol and the Ohio DCpartment
of Public Safety are joining forces to save lives this summer with a
statewide safety belt campaign called "Buckle Up! And Beat the Odds."
Law enforcement has been encouraging motorists to become full-time
safety belts users, said Lt. Wayne McGlone, commander of the patrol's
Gallia-Meigs Post.
"Even though Ohio's safely belt law passed 10-years ago, many peo. pie still refuse to wear them," McGlone said. "People think they are at
greatest risk when !raveling long distances or in bad weather, but the reality is that 75 percent of all crashes occur within 25 miles of home, or on
roads, where the posted speed limit is 45 mph or less."
Research shows that part-time safety belt users ignore most messages
about safety belts because they wear them nearly all the time.
"What they don't realize is that the times they neglect to wear them
are also the times they are most vulnerable to crashes," McOione said.
'That's why this awareness campaign emphasizes the importance ofbuekling up on every trip, every time."
Full-time safety hell usage will greatly reduce motor vehicle injuries
and deaths during peak travel months and in the future, safety officials
said.
Last year, of the 303 occupants of vehicles ejected in fatal crashes, 65
percent were killed.

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stantial reserve~."

Wyom ing's Powder River Basin is
in the h"t position 10 lake advantage
of a growing demand for low -sulfur
coal over 1hc nex1 20 year~. the repon
said.
Wyoming's ac1ive low-sulfur coal
mines can 111mnla1n current production leve ls untrl2015 . !he report said.
Low -sulfur coal was estimated to
make up 37 percenl. or 101 · billion
short Ions, of 1he nation's coal
reserves.

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IN MEMORY- Frank Carmon stood behind his wife Linda as
she placed roses In memory of her son, Ryan Aldridge, and 5rh8J..
bi and Mistl Cron during a memorial service Friday In Rome. The
monument and service are in memory of the nine victims of the
Ohio River Fireworks fire In Scottown on July 3. (AP)

Can '15%' bolster Dole's chances at the polls?

Crop circle report draws
so-called 'experts' to Ohio

going to get it as simple as possible,''
sa id presidential scholar Stephen
Hess, who watched lhe convenliQn on
TV al home in Washington. D.C.
" It 's going to be 15. 15, 15, 15.
That's all you have to knpw."
"It's all going to be them versus
us on !axes, whrch is what we want, •·
Dole strategist Mike Murphy said
frum lhc convention Ooor.
But Dolc"s strategy is born from
weakness, nol strcr.gth.
President Clinton in recent months
has moved deliberately to co-opt
Republicans on the social issues that
have been working 10 !heir advantage
for a quartcr-ccnlury: Welfare dcJll'n·
dcncy, juvenile crime, TV violence,
teen pregnancy, family values. Those
themes, shouted from the covcntion
podium in Houston four years ago.
were more muted here.
Dole even decided against mentioning in hi s acceptance speech
Thursday night Clinton 's co ntroversial decision 10 veto a ban on late-

term abortions.

And neither Dole nor Kemp is
prepared lo tackle directly the socalled character issues that have
dogged Clinton. In his acceptance
speech Thursday night. Dole questioned 1he consistency and trustworthiness of lhe Clinton administration,
and independent anti-Clinton groups
are sure to he more explicit and
scathing in their anacks.
Bu1 Dole's strategists reluctantly
have concluded the issue won ' I win
the cleclion and carries the risks of
backfiring.
"The campaign would make a
mistake 10 try 10 lake lhat on frontally." said sent or Dole adviser Vin
Weber. Mosl voters have already
decided \\lhcthcr Clinton's character
mallets 10 them, so a campaign buill
around lhat issue wouldn't win any
new votes.

Besides, he sard. Dole "doesn't
like it as a strategy ·· and Kemp ts
"constitutionally incapable·· of play-

Buckeye Hills classes start Aug. 27

ing the traditional running mate's role
of auack dog . (One example: Asked
this week about Clinton and Vice
President AI Gore, Kemp told The
Associated Press , "They arc really
good guys.")
·
When other speakers were deputizcd to attack Clinton at the convention Tuesday - il wa~ dubbed
"bash Clinton night"" - a nightly
tracking poll sponsored hy the computerizcd political ncwsleucr "Hotline " showed Clinton actually gaining 5 points in the head-to-head
match-up.
"We tried that m '92, when we ran an
almost entirely character-based campaign," said Roger Stone, another
adviser to the Dole campaign. "It
didn"t work."
Since Ronald Reagan ousted Presidcnt Carter in 1980, the GOP has
used the promise of culling or atlcru;t
holding the line on taxes a~ a reliable
lucky charm.

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Carey slates open door sessions
PROCfORVILLE- An open session will be held by State Rep. John
A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, at the Eastern Branch Briggs-Lawrence County Public Library in Proctorville from II a.m. until noon Monday.
Carey will have another open door session at the Chester Fire Department in Mejgs County on Thursday, Aug. 22 from noon until I p.m.
Anyone with quesliOJls or concerns about state *ovemment is·encour·aged to attend the sessions.

-Issue II meeting scheduled Tuesday

Free immunizations scheduled
GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will be offered by the Gallia
County Health Department on Tuesday from 4-6 p.m. in the courthouse
lobby.
.
Children in need of immunizations must be accompamed by a parent
and bring a current immunization record with them.

. Township road closing planned
CENTENARY - Graham School Road in Green Township will be
closed Monday at the intersection with Centenary Road for the replacement of culverts, Trustee Mark Mooney said.
The road will be closed from 6,a.m. until 2 p.m. , he said.

PULLING ACTION - Jeff Newell of Cheater
cruised down the track In his 1958 Chevrolet
"War Wagon" during action at Friday's annual

truck pulls at the Meigs County Fair. The pulls
attracted a large crowd to the fairgrounds for
the final night of pulling competition.

A. J. Rush, M.D.
.,....,,...

Family Medicine

Glenn readying visit to Russia
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
John Glenn, D-Ohio, is preparing for
a one-week trip to St. Petersburg,
R!Jssia, where he and other lawmakwill discuss policy issues. with
Rilssian and Ukratman academtcs.
-I· The trip for Glenn and hts wtfe,
. -·. .

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Annie, is being sponsored by The
Aspen Institute's congressional program.

AUGUST

f

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Acc~pting Appointments

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SUNDAY ONLY

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~ISCRtPTION ItATitS

By ~rrin' or Motor Route

I

SINGLE COPY PRICE

... Sunday 11mes-Sndnel will""' be ....,..
~ (Of advonce P1)'1DI:IIII Mlde 10 Clftien.

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Dolly-·- ,

MAIL SIJISCIImON!i

Common Pleas
GALLIPOLIS - The following
actions were recently filed in the Gallia County Common Pleas Court:
Dissolution filed - Raymond
Wheeler and Rachel Wheeler, both of
520 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis; Frank
H. Murray and Imogene Murray, both
of Vinton.
·
Dissolution granted - Mary Lou
Beckert and Beady Deal Beckert,
both of 3222 Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis; Bertha E. Stover and Harold
A Stover, no addresses available.
Divorce filed - Marjorie K. Kelly, 73 Quail Creek Drive, Gallipolis,
from George R. Kelly, 22 t6 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis.
Divorce granted - Sarah L.
McPherson from Roger D. McPherson, no addresses given.
Municipal
GALLIPOLIS - The following
actions were recently resolved in the
Gallipolis Municipal Court:
James H. McDerment, 20, · lOS
Cedar St., Gallipoli s, charged with
petty theft, was fined $200, one year
probation and 160 hours community
service.
Kyle Oxyer, 26, Bidwell, charged
with obstructing official business,
was fined SI00 and one year probation.
Ray Pearson, 41, 122-112 Vine St.,
Gallipolis, charged with disorderly
conduct, was fined ,$1 00.
Lewi s Sayre, 23, Henderson,
W.Va., charged with driving under the
influence, was fined $600, four days
jail, one year probation and 180 day
license suspension.
Steve A. Bonecutter, 24, 88 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis, charged wilh
reckless operation, was fined $200.
Howard R. Wells Jr.. 25, Crown
City,'.charged with reckless operation,
was fined $450.

SALE!

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SUI&lt;-

prtces stun a1 jllst 119.46
br/Mbl broiiZtl Sb(J(/) .

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flOid and nc."w porcdaini z in~ .

Sak endt Aup~t 31 ... bring •hoes in today!

t.-~c-,

Werts ............ -................................... S27.lll
Werts ..........................,..............-.--..553.12
Werts........................ -........ _........... $105..!6
•
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9 a.m:- 5 p.m.

Gallia court news

your hahy·s shol.~ in ~nd
sck." fn&gt;m a v.ui&lt;.1yd'"Yb:uld
indU&lt;linJ! t&gt;riJ!)lt hnlllle.
an1tquc.· hron1x. ~ pc.:wtt.'T~, ~I\1\.'T,

,"

Office Hours
Monday through Friday

FRANKFORT (AP)- Ten-yearold Bryan Crosier got a hero's welcome when he returned to this Ross
County villag~ nine weeks after he
was severely burned when his fami ly's house exploded.
Half of the village's I,065 residents lined Main Street to cheer his
homecoming.
Bryan had been hospitalized in the
Shriners Bum Institute in Cincinnati
since the June 12 explosion. His 13year-old sister, Jessica, died in the
fire.
Bryan and his father, Mark,
returned home in a helicopter. His
mother, terry; sister, Heather, 15; and

Orin~

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N9 subtcriptions by mail pmntned in areu
fhert motor Clf'rier service is available.

5:•: : : : : : : : :::::::::::::::: :::: : :~15:~

TAWNEY'S JEWELERS
424 SICOID IYI.

program in a state with higher-than-avemge poverty levels and unemployment
But her boss, Gov. Gaston Caperton, chainnan of the Democratic Governors' Association, suprorts the legislation.
In a letter to Clinton, Caperton said the legislation ''represents a real step
forward" and "is strong on work" and "provides adequate protections for
children."
Lewis said she is worried about the bill's impact but has accepted it
because it's a "done deal."
She said she is optimistic Congress will modify the bill in the future, if
necessary.
"If the states get into trouble and people back home are starving, it doesn't matter whether they are Republicans or DemocraiS," Lewis said.
,•
In West Virginia, 19.7 percent ofthe state's population is below the poverty level, compared with 10. I percent nationwide, according to U.S. Census
Bureau data.
In Cabell County, 19. I percent of the population lives in poverty. In nearby Wayne County, that figure climbs to nearly 22 percent. So the Huntington area's poverty level is twice as high as the national figure .
The Urban Institute estimates 2.6 millio~ people will be impoverished
under the legislation, including 1.1 million children. In West Virginia, the
Children's Defense Fund estimates nearly 8,000 more children will be poverty-stricken as a result of tile legislation.
Supporters like Byrd laud the legislation, saying it may be the hallmark
of the 104th Congress.

Ross County village
opens heart to youth
burned in·explosion

(llmOlllllf:'d

$-nday .................... - ................................ $1 .00

l

WASHINGTON- Depending on who you talk to from West Virginia,
welfare overhaul legislation will create "inhumane hardships on children"
or "represents a marked improvement over 'welfare as we know it."'
The former opinion is that of Rep. Nick Rahal(, the latter from veteran
Sen. Robert Byrd, quoting President Clinton.
Both are Democrats, but J(ahall voted against the bill, as did Rep. Alan
Mollohan, also a Democrat. Byrd voted for it, along with fellow Democrats
Rep. Bob Wise and Sen. Jay Rockefeller.
It is estimated the legislation will save the federal government $63 billion over six years, but predictions on how it will affect state budgets are
sketchy.
The centerpiece of the welfare overhaul bill ir. its emphasis on work, an
idea that is popular with the public. It sets a lifetime limit of five years of
welfare per family and requires an able-bodied adult to work after two years .
The legislation also abolishes the federal entitlement for poor families,
Aid to Families with Dependent Children, and turns responsibility over to
state officials in a block grant. States get fewer federal dollars but have more
flexibility to set their own rules.
Gretchen Lewis, secretary of West Virginia's Department of Heahh and
Human Resources, doesn't know how much money the state will lose under
the program or how the state will meet its work requirements.
"We don't know the answers to those questions. It is not my opinion that
this will he helpful for West Virginia," said Lewis, who oversees a welfare

Hby , _ ,
.onr poptdllr tiM• ftJft"f Yuur
h-Jht... :-;hoc;:-; can he rkhly
rm~· rvl.'d 10 .'iOiiLI mc:lal Wilh
t•wry aet"l'. ~uff and wrinkle
retained .

t• -::t ::::;.:::.·::.·.::..-:::::.::.·: :::: :::.·~·~

(614) 441-0757

By PAMELA BROGAN

G1nnett News Service

-H

~- Associllion.

'~PigiAI _

Mountain State views on welfare reform differ

(USPS 525-MI)

•
M,.ber: The A110&lt;illl&lt;d Pms.lnd ihe Ollio

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$ ',.._., :7

brother Steve, 9; were already in
Frankfort.
A zany Shriners parade car fashioned from an old Volkswagen carried Bryan and his dad into town
from their impromptu landing beside
the home of neighbor Laura Smith.
who had pulled Steve from the
wreckage.
, Since the accident, family, friends
and neighbors have pitched in to help
the Crosiers. ·
They took care of Mrs. Crosier's
Frankfort Hardware and Gifts store
and Crosier's Able Construction Co.
They also cared for the family 's farm
animals and pets.
"We haven't worried or fretted
about anything since it happened,"
Crosier said.
"We've been shown more love-in
the past nine weeks than we've ever
known, " Mrs. Crosier added.
Doctors at Shriners Bums Institute
said Bryan had healed faster than any
previous patients with such severe
bums.
"We attribute it to believing in and
having a lot of faith in God," Crosier
said.
,
Heather said neighbors had prepared an evening meal in the home a
friend had loaned them just outside
town . "This will be the first time
we 've all been together outside the
hospital," she said.
"Bryan's a fighter," she said of
her brother. "When Bryan gets a
notion in his head, he doesn'tlet anything stop him getting something
done . He had a lot of help from
prayer, though. A lot of help."

Lottery numbers
By The A11oclated Prell
The following numbers were
selected i~ Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3:9-7-2
Pick 4: 3-9-2-6
Buckeye 5: 2-10-14-18-28
Sales for the Buckeye 5 game
totaled $407,329.
The Ohio Lottery will pay
$882,824to winners in Friday's Pick
3 Numbers daily game. Sales for the
game totaled S1,482,468.50. In the
other daily game, Pick 4 Numbers
players wagered $356,443.50 and
will share $187,000.
The jackpot fot Saturday's Super
Lotto drawing was $4 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 0-5-2
Daily 4: 7-9-7-3
Cash 25:6-7-11-12-17-24

IILUPOUS

NEW GRADALL -The Gallla
County Highway Department
recently took delivery of a nGradall excavator bought
through the State Purchasing
Cooperative Agreement "It a
major cost savings to the county," County Engineer Joaeph L.
Leach said. The equipment has
already been used In repairing
extensive flood damage to roeds
and bridges, Leach added.

The Saint Louis

FREE 2nd SET
OF

4" PRINTS
Kodak
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PREMIUM
PROCESSING

Catholic Church
welcomes all of our
friends and neighbors
to our annual festival
featuring our
Spaghetti "a Ia
Marchi" dinner and
our special
international deserts.
Date: Ausust 24, 1996
Time: 4:00-7:00 p.m.
Place: St. Louis Church
at 85 State Street

Price: Adults S6.00,
Children 8 &amp; under
$3.00, Children under 2 free.
Cat'8 Meow Pieces, OneMan Band, Silent Auction,
Chlldren's Gamea

J'An' SDVICBf

Tawney's Studio
424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

OUR UTINGS ~SOUTHEASTERN BUSIN·ESS COLLEGE
ooooooooooooooooooooooooo
The one-to-four
star ratings are

tublish&lt;d eoch Sunday, 8H Thlnl Ave.,
llallipoli~ OIJio, by ihe Ohio Valley l'llblishi.
CompanyiOanftelt Co .. Seamd clan poRIIe
ta'd 11 Ollllpoll' O!llo 45631. Elllmd u
jecofld clau mlilin&amp; rnaau:r 11 Pomeroy. Ohio,
tOll Office.

530.Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

o
0
0

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Rating:****

based on qoolit~ of o Southeastern Business College
Education, Qul!ity 0
QuaHty of Eclucation at Soutlltastem.Blsiless Colege
of Service from
~ a is a superior business tclucatioa.
Faculty and Staff, 0
• Quality of Service at S.theastn Busiltss Colege Is
Job Placement
·0
an exceptional, one 01·011 slAke wftha pei'SOIIIII
0
Rates and .OveraU 0
touch.
Marketability of
0 e
Plactm~~t Is ntttl ~ tilt higllest In the state
0
De111ree.
at Sauthtasttn ...... tottep.
c·
.0

Ju

Poor
Fair
Good

*
**

o · e The Value af l•vtslwt Rlflnlls 11111swetl II ...
0

*** ~
·Excellent **** o
.

Reg. 190-05-1274 B

increastcl..tet- a stlldentiCI'Is will! a~
dtgrH cir dlplama fra. S.tbta£tera Btsiless Colep.

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Fall QIUJI'ter Bepu September 30
Call446-4361 or 1-800.214-6452

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GALLIPOLIS- County Road 90 (Shoestring Ridge) in Clay Township will be closed Monday through Friday of this week from 7:30a.m.
until 2:30p.m. for the repair of a slip, County Engineer Joseph L. Leach
said.
The county Highway Departmenl will be driving piling at the slip site,
a half-mile north of the intersection with Raccoon Road.
Local traffic will need to usc other county and township roads 115
detours.

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RIO GRANDE- Buckeye Hills Career Center will open the 199697 school year on 1\tesday, Aug. 27. The school day starts at 8:30a.m.
and ends at 2:32 p.m.
Upon arrival at the center, new students will report to the cafeteria for
an orientation session. Returning students will report 10 their labs. Students are to bring pencil and paper.
Lunch will be available in the cafeteria for $1.50, or students may bring
their own lunch. The center has a closed lunch period.
Openings are still available in the following proarams: agricultural,
recreational and diesel mechanics, computerized accounting, computerized word processing, diversified health occupations, industrial electronics controls, industrial maintenance, marketing education, occupational
work experience, pre-engineering graphics (drafting), security services/law enforcement and welding.
For more information or enrollment, students are to contact their home
school or the Student Services office at the center, 245-5334.

Shoestring Ridge Road to close

re,

For All Your
Villeo Nee•f
81'0 h, .. S2jd e'Clllhr.l~
ghway sy&amp;JIIfll. usinf. walcr
Weddings, Insurance,
and · wage SYIIQm. a lclc~ommu­
Special Events.
nic. ions ~P!!Niftcls . nd ttr,provcmen s are nl:ccaa4r&gt;' til cnsurtng that
Let us put this on
the~· Is are In pi_~O for crvclopme ~ Cochrall lf.tl!&lt;l.
video tape.
" ~I of the• 10 haNND·hand
wil~· improvecj lllfucation ¥lfi1Jealth
446·6939 or
cale to inJ.Urll ~~~ fhe f1llll~11ary
ina •dicfiiS~f;1~ grow~ nf •
446·1370

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GALLIPOLIS -An Issue H Round II meeting for alltown~hip and
village officials, the Gallipolis city manager and the county engineer has
been set for 7 p,m. 1\tesday in the second floor meeting room of the Gallia County Courthouse.
The meeting is open l!l the public.

Newsweek poll
has Dole tying
with president

Family Night Ia
Back... Only Better!
EVERY TUESDAY.

•.•

Regional

•
Auguat 18, 11196

Mining group disputes
report claiming W.Va.
will deplete clean coal

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) We s1 Virginia' s low -.sulfur coal
reserves will las! long beyond a fed Mansfield le3a
eral report 's predicted five-year lim. it, offtcrals satd Friday.
IND.
A report released Thursday by the
Energy lnfom1a1ion Administration
of the U.S. Department of Energy
860
said ~.:urren l mining operations could
Columbus ler
he exhausted in aboul five years.
Bu1 olhcr reserves ;,ill be mined
when those run oul. and West Virgi nia has enough low-sulfur coal
reserves lo last many years, said Bill
Raney. president of Ihe West Virginia
Coal
Association.
W. VA.
"Based solely on active mines and
!herr rale of producti6n, five years
migh1 be an accurate limit. But don ' t
think other reserves won 't be permined for mining." Raney said.
Electric utrlilies have been seeking
low -sulfur coal since cha nges lo the
Ice
S&lt;Jnny Pl. Clo::dy Clo::dy
Clean Air Act in .)990. High-sulfur
coa l is more expensive for companies
10 burn because il produces more
emiss ions.
State geological surveys show
aboul 24 billion tons of low -sulfur
coa l in Wesl Virginia. Raney said.
Chri s Hamilton. lhc associations
By The A11oclated Press
.
vice president. said mrnrng compaIt will continue to be fair and warm in Ohto.
Little rain is expected into early next week . A smallthreal of a shower or nies are investing millions in longwall mining system s Ihal are expectthunderstonn is possible over the extreme western part of the slate.
Temperatures will rise over the next few days. Highs wrll clrmb back well ed 10 laS! aboul 25 years
Ashland Coal Inc. alone has more
into the 80s with some lower 90s over rhe f~ r southern part of the state by
!han
five years worlh of low-sulfur
Monday and Tuesday.
·
Weather foruast:
Sunday... A mix of clouds and sun south wilh a chance of afternoon thunderstorms southwest. Partly cloudy elsewhere. Highs from ncar 80 northcasl
to the mid 80s central and south.
Sunday night and Monday ... Partly cloudy. Lows from lhe upper 50s to
mid 60s. Highs in the mid and upper 80s.
By SUSAN PAGE
Extended fo~cast :
USA Today
Tucsday ... Partly cloudy. Low s in the 60s and highs in lhc mid and upper
SAN DIEGO - By the end of Ihe
80s.
· h. Republican Natrona) Conventi on, the
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. A chance of thunderslonns wcsl. Lows tn l c favored blue-and-while huuun on
mid 60s . Highs in the mid 80s.
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.
1hc lapels of delegates didn '1even usc
Thursday ... Scallercd thunderstorms. Lows tn the mrd 60s. Highs in the the names of nominees Bob Dole and
low 10 mid 60s.
Jack Kemp.
They simply said: 15 percent.
Less than a month af1cr he was
expressing a defic it hawk 's skcptrcism about a big across-lhe-board lax
cui, Dole has bel the farm and slaked
hi s presidential campaign on a 15
By MITCH WEISS
arrowo and stars : olhcrs had sy m- percenl. supply-side lax cut he says
Assoclated Press Writer
metrical noraI pauerns in the center. will fuel growth, raise wages and case
PAULDING - They 1rack crop
TI1cy became a magnet for New the nation 's economic anxiety.
circles like Wile E. Coyote hunts the Age types. who hroughl along crys In the space of JUSI 12 days, Dole
Road Runner. Last month, their chase tals and pendulums and clarmed the has nol only embraced that econoljlJed them to Paulding County.
ci rcles possessed healin g powers. ic plan but also ·chosen a running
Things haven 't been the same for By the late 1980s. they were the rage male who argues the case for it bet1his farming village of about 2,600 in England, and circle sightings soon ter than he docs. And the four-day
residents since a local pilot Oying spread 10 other counlnes, mcluding conventi on lhal nom inated him
over a wheat field July 4 spotted the Ihe Untted States. .
.
pounded Ihe Iheme .
mashed circle measuring 93 feel iR - _ AI ftrst, some be lrcved Ihe cJrcles
"The whole purpose of a camdiameter.
usualfy found in fields were formed paign is lo simplify. and the y arc
The discovery - one of many by the wmd . A few oprncd 1hcy were
reported around the world since the formed by UFOs. Others sard they
laic 1970s _ auracted circle were c reated by bncf. mlcnse bursls
researchers and fans of the paranor- of mrcrowavc radtalron from outer
mal from all over the country. Some space.
helicve lhe circles are messages from
Bul in Ihe early 1990s, Doug
oulcr space: others think they're the Bower and Dave Chorley admitted
WASHINGTON iAPJ - GOP
work of misc hievous Earthlings.
lhal lhey created 1hc firs! ci rcles in
presidential
nominee Bob Dole rs staR~ searchers took grain and soil England as a joke.
tistically
tied
with Presiden t Clinton
samples and interviewed residents
They admiued lhcy would sneak
in
a
Newsweek
poll conduc1cd as Ihe
aboul whether they saw anything i.nto field s at night wrlh narrow, tee Republican
National
Con ven ti on
unusual in 1he days before 1he circle tangular hoards. and walk around in
came
to
a
close.
was di scovered. They also ques- a circle, usi ng lhe boar? 10 mash the
Dole trails Clinton by on ly 2 peruoncd reporters and JuSt about every- gram .
centage
points - wil hrn the margin
Many circle en thusiasts refused to
one else within earshot
of
error
for
lhe poll.
"I like 10 read about UFOs and believe them .
If
the
election
were held today,
sluff like thai. That's why I came. Bu1
Nancy Talboll . 57 . who ltvcs ncar
Clinton
would
lead
wil h 44 percent
1 Wili shucked 10 sec so m·uch inlcr- Boslon, used In prod uce country
of
lhc
vote.
Dole
would
receive 42
esl io a crop circle. " said Jim Gillen, music shows . Nnw she is spokcspercent
and
the
candrdatc
nominated
42. c,f Toledo, one of the thousands woman for BLf Research. which
hy
Ross
Perot
's
Reform
Party
would
of people who visited the field to 1a~.c researches circles. She gal invol ved
receive
3
percent,
according
to
poll
a pctk all he ci rcle .
in circle research after reading an artrresuhs
.
1
Sn was Juc Nickell , an investiga- clc about Ihem nearly 10 years ago.
A
poll
Newsweek
conducted
lhc
tor wilh The Skeptical Inquirer. a
She Iraveled IOPaulding IOinvesprevious
week
had
Dole
trailing
non~..-ofil group (hat investigates
tig:lle the circle. Thi s. she declared,
parattormal claims, such as UFOs. ·· is no hoax ." llu1 she wouldn't clab- Cl.i nton by 20 percentage points.
Newsweek said 933 registered
haumcd houses and crop circles.
orale.
voters
were interviewed by Princeton
His group investigated circles for
Her organi 1.ati on has several
Survey
Research A"ociatcs for the
1wo years in the early 1990s and !cams of volunteers 1hat inves1iga1c
latest
poll
- 465 of lhem on Thurscamt: In one conclusion: "They're all circles in Ihe United Stales, Canada.
day
night,
lhc day Dole gave hi;
hoa~es- 100 percent or them."'
England and several European
speech
accepting
the GOP prcsidcnHe is ama21d thai some people nali ons. BLT Rcscarch"s mai n
li
al
nomination.
The
remaining 468
beliove othorwjsc.
researcher rs Wrlliam Levengood. a
were
interviewed
Friday
night. The
'"lllcy llCICI! fO get informed. They fonncr University of Michigan physioverall
margin
or
error
was
plus or
necd 10 gel a life." he said.
crsl who owns hi s ow n seed consllhminus 4 percentage points.
Circlcs l)cg~n appearing in Eng- 1ng company.
land in the laJp 1970s. The simple
Levengood said he has conducted
roun~s soon boJPil s~owrng up in
extensive studies on plants and seeds
mo"1 clahoi-atc 4c5igns. Sometimes found in and ncar the ci rcles. He
ther•· were thrco Qr fo~r circles with claims some plants show gross ahnormalilics. possibly caused by
mi&lt;;rowavc radiation .
Those ahnormalilies. he contends.
either
cause 1he plants 10 stop grow Contll)uetl ~ pega A1
ing
or
grow
five limes fasler than norof P!lr commuriinrs. 11 is absolu1cly
maL
esse(ltial for 1hP imJovemcnl of
. .
qual!fy of life llf fh
hv1pg here
that
as dii'CIIfj!rk. s pport lcgrslatiop I and ~~~ t imprpve our
infr tructure 111 fosJer ~cpnomtc

~- ·~ .

'·

·Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, W'!

OHIO Weather

..

•
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�-· ------ - ---~--~--~---..,__~~I!!JIIIIIII.........- .......- - -....~-----

Commentary
~mmav ~imes, ientitttl
'Esttl6fisfid in 1966
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
614-446-2342 • Fax: 446·3008
111' Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
Hobart Wilson Jr.
Executive Editor

Margaret Lehew
Controller

Lerters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than 300 words.
All/etters are subject to editing and must be signed and Include addreu
and telephone num~r. No unsigned letter• will be published. Letters
should be in good raate,- oddreoelng loouea, not personalities.

Strike could make
return to classroom
brief for
Cleveland
-

Jennifer Smith: The average American
By Jack Anderton
end Jan Moller
WASHINGTON-- A top strategist
for the House Republican leadership
recently conducted an exhaustive
quest to fmd the average American
man -- and it turned out to be a
Her name is Jennifer Smith. She
is 32.7 years old and is of "European
ancestry." She is married to John
Smith, a man fitting the description
of Joe six-pack. John routinely drives
through yellow lights, and polishes
off considenble amounts of beer and
pizza every week.
In the pn:face of his closely guarded campaign strategy document for
congressional candidates, pollster
Frank Luntz painted a composite
sketch to help his fellow Republicans
identify with and relate to the "average American." The picture that
emerges, however, holds little resemblance to the "big tent" ideals that
Republicans espoused last week at
their San Diego convention.
Luntz refused to comment.
Neither Democrats nor Republi-

cans appear to have the inside track thoughts. about moving into somewith Jennifer Smith. In fact, then: are thing larger. "Jennifer is a happily married
indications she might be saying, "A
pox on both your political houses." mother who watches about four hours
of TV a day between work and raising a family," according to the study,
which is dnwn from survey data.
"She U5 a high school diploma. but
she does hope someday to get that
college degn:e. She works in a service job, but has higher aspirations.
Like her husband John, Jennifer has
But adherents of Ross Perot and her own car and drives to work each
his Reform Pany are sure to revel in . day. Unlike her husband, she obeys
some of Luntz's findings: Smith is ,the speed limits and slows down at
skeptical whether the two-pany sys- .yellow lights."
tem is "salvageable" -- or even if it
Jobn Smith stands 5 feet 9 inches
deserves to be saved. She also "hates and his weight nuctuates between
panisan politics," and is alarmed over 165 and 170 pounds "depending on
the federal deficit.
the time' of the year." It may also
Luntz, who won fame for his 1994 relate to the fact he drinks II beers
role advising conservatives on the and watches about 28 hours of TV
GOP's "Contract With America." per week. "Most importantly, he
describes his fictitious Jennifer Smith loves pizza," Luntz's report reads.
Jennifer is a regular churchgoer
as being "on the forward edge of the
MlV generation," living in a moll- who pnys quietly to herself daily.
gaged three-bedroom suburban home She worries that the American Dream
heated by natural gas, and owning a is only "somewhat alive," and 'that
pet. She enjoys her home. but has the country is in "serious trouble, and

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

ment. "

The district's chief negotiator, lawyer Martin Wymer, said the two sides
plan to meet throughout the next two weeks, including weekends.
"We're working hard, and they're working hard.~ he said. "But it's a
long road ahead of us and the prospects for a settlement are possible, but
very dim ."

Today in history

..l

By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, August 18, the 231st day of 1996. There are 135 days
left in the year.
Today 's HighlightinHistory :

",I
I

.I

On August 18. 1587, Virginia Dare became the first child of English parents to be born on American soil, on what is now Roanoke Island, N.C.
On this date:
In 1227. the Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan died.
In 1846, U.S. forces led by General Stephen W. Kearney captured Santa Fe, N.M.
.
In 1894, Congress established the Bureau of Immigration.
In 191 4. !'resident Wilson issued his "Proclamation of Neutrality," aimed
at keeping the United States out of World War I.
In 1920. Tennessee became the 36th state to ratify the 19th Amendment
to the Constitution, which guaranteed the right of all American women to
vote .

Berry's World
I

l

'

By Morton Kondracki
SAN DIEGO -- Bob Dole's economic plan may stir the blood of
Republican delegates here, but it's
unlikely to impress other innuential
Republicans, namely Fedenl Reserve
Board Chairman Alan Greenspan
and the Wall Street gnomes who
decide whether markets rise or fall .
Unveiling his plan in Chicago.
Dole accused President Clinton of
purposely holding econom-ic growth
down to an "anemic," "sputtering,"
"incredibly lackluster" 2.3 percent a
year and promised that lie would
spike it to 3.5 petcent, producing
"soaring prosperity."
But the fact is that the Fed's antiinflation interest rate policy is the primary reason that growth isn't moving
faster, and Dole's big tax cuts -- if
they ever were enacted -- would likely cause the Fed to tighten its
squeeze.
far from wishing for slow growth,
Clinton practically leapt into the
Rose Garderi to cheer when the
growth rate registered 4.2 percent for
the third quaner of this year. Clearly. he'd like to claim credit for an ceonomic boom. In fact, he's doing so
even though he hasn't produced one.
But practically every time the govcrnment reports good economic
news, the markets get skittish out of
fear that the Fed will incn:ase interest rates to prevent inOationary overheating, of which there is no sign
whatsoever.
A $548 billion tax cut such as
Dole proposes over six years. along
with the difficulties inherent in balancing the budget without touching

entitlements or defense, is likely to
scare the Fed but good, and money
markets will react negatively in anticipation. Higher rates will stine

Morton Kondracke
J!;rowth.
Dole is right to say that by postwar standards. the cunent necovery is
fairly weak, although it is not the
" weakest of the century, a~;,cording to
an analysis by the Brookings lnstitution.
Judging recoveries the honest way
--from the peak of one business cycle
to the next -- Brookings figures that
growth between mid-1990 and the
present has averaged I .8 percent a
year, while between early 1980 and
late 1981, it came to just 1.2 percent.
The legendary Reagan-era recovery, running from late 1981 to mid1990, produced average annual
growth of 3 percent, but that was still
weaker than the boom years from
1969to 1973, when growth averaged
3.8 percent. and 1960 to 1969. when
it averaged 4.2 percent.
Though Republicans rarely admit
it, the Reagan boom was largely a
Keynesian phenomenon, not a supply-side one, fueled by a combination
of massive tax cuts and big spending
that quadrupled the federal debt.
Personal debt soared, as well. '
The gains of the period weren't
shared equally, either. According to
the 1994 House Ways and Means
Committee "Green Book," the bible
on such matters. incomes for the richest fifth of the U.S. population gn:w
by I~ percent during. the 1980s,

while incomes fell by nearly 2 percent for the lowest 40 percent of
households.
It's true, as Dole asserted in his
Chicago speech, that under Clinton
"the rich are getting richer while the
middle class gets left behind," but
this has been going on for a long
time, and Republicans have usually
made it worse. ·
According to a new Census
Bureau study, the richest 20 percent
of the population took in 41 percent
of the nation's total income for most
of the period from 1947 to 1981. By
1988, its share was up to 44 percent.
In 1993, it w• .46 percent and in
1994, 47 percel)lMeantime, the share of the middle
fifth of U.S. households (those with
incomes around $40,000 a year) has
dropped from its traditional 18 percent down to 16 percent, and the
share of the poorest fifth has dropped
from S pe=nt to 4 percent.
While the riqo are doing very well
under Clinton, they'd be doing even
better if congressional Republicans
had succeeded in blocking his 1993
tax increases, which fell almost
entirely on those making mon: than
$100,000 per year.
Moreover, ,Republicans in the current Congress have been doing their
darnedest to shift funds up the ec~
nomic ladder by trying to repeal the
Earned Income Tax Credit increase
Clinton put into effect for the working poor and by reducing welfare
benefits while cutting capital gains
taxes.
Dole's economic plan docs featun:
tax cuts for everybody, but the bene-

•

By PAT MILTON
Aleoclatecl Preaa Writer
SMITH'roWN, N.Y. -Stymied
in their efforts to learn what caused
TWA Flight 800 to explode, investigaton said Friday they were questioning passengers on the earlier
Athens-to-New York leg.
:·we are interviewing all the passengers," said Assistant FBI Director
James Kallstrom. "We know who
they are, we have the manifest. I
think I'll leave it at that."
Three more bodies were reported
recovered Friday, leaving 26 of the
230 victims still missing. ·
Robert Fnncis, vice chairman of
the National Transportation and Safe-

that some country other than Amen!
ca will be the leading economt\fr
power in 20 years."
She apparently does not subscribe
to the Reaganesque "shining city on
a hill" metaphor that evoked so
much emotion at times during last
week's Republican convention.
"Emotionally, Jennifer is frustrated and anxious, panicularly abo11&amp;1
crime and the economy, but she is
less concerned than her husband," the"
report continues. "She believes the.
fedenl deficit is spinning out of control and that her elected official(
waste 48 cents of every dollar. Jen-:.
nifer votes only once evel"' fotP,!!
.years, hates partisan politics, and h~
:little confidence in the federal gov~
'emment. She does not trust politl;;
lcians ... and is skeptical of the media.:
lawyer.; and the legal system (thouglr
she did follow the OJ. Simpson trial almost daily)."
.,
Jennifer Smith is inuch sunniiir
about the futun: of her local commtinity, and is also mon: optimistic a~
the prospects for her own persona
situation.
The Smiths are neither heartle:;,
nor are they bleeding-hearts. They ·
charitable people who desire to hel
those in need, but are appalled th3
their hard-earned tax dollars may
spent on welfare programs that jus ·
don't work.
"Fortunately, the Smiths are
patient people. but their patience 1s'l
running out," the report warni.!
"They are tired of the prescriptions
from the elite that are too often''
expressed in complex. wonkisflt:
:terms .... The Smiths, like the angry' ~
voters we now hear so much abouti ·
feel that they and their neighborS';,
know what is best for themselves -and they want Washington out of~
their lives."
·
· •·
Mrs. Smith supports the bedrocU~
of American society: democracy an(f"
capitalism. Her problems lie with its '·
institutions, including the presidency,
Congress and the couns. She feart;·
that society could "bring her down."'"
Luntz wrote in conclusion:
~'
"She doesn't believe the (Ameri-'"
can) .Dream is dead (only 15 percent'''
· of Americans do) but she thinks it's '~
sick. Jennifer Smith is America." ·::'!
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Featuri r
S)'ndicate, Inc.
·' ,.,

f."

Dole economics won't please Greenspan

HAIL MARY PASS?
.

By TONY SNOW
Creatora Syndlcllte
SAN DIEGO -· Bob Dole and
Jack Kemp have begun prowling San
Diego like young smitten lovers.
They talk breathlessly about each
other's virtues. then giggle.
Dole bounded into his party's
convention a chanaed man. His
smile, previously crooked and
reserved, now glows like an
unbanked blaze. His maimed reserve
has melted away, almost u if somebody had dispelled the hardship that
made Dole a hero but also inflicted
an emotional autism that led him to
treat everybody, includin11 his wife
and daughter, with almost comic
formality.
Americans want Dole to demonstrate Bill aiaton's empathy and
warmth, and now they're ~eein1

something n:sembling a heart. Most
observers in San Diego attribute the
transformation to Kemp. But real
credit goes to Dole himself.
Republicans love Jack Kemp.
: They bave for years. Chirpy right. wingers began handing out Kemp for
President bumper stickers in 1984, at
Ronald Reagan's second coronation,
and vendors have struck it rich by
e~alting the old football star in every
GOP confab since.
This week, as he and Bob Dole
prepared fQr the bi1gcst speeches of
their lives, pilots circled San Diego,
trailing brilliant red, white arid blue
banners proclaiming: JKk for Presi·dent.
In previous yars Kemp ·W&lt;lllltl
have reveled in the attention, but not
now. For once in bis life, the man
who describes himself u the conser-

vative Happy Warrior has subsumed
his volcanic ambitions and devottid
himself wholly to a man he once held
in high scorn.
Every journalist in San Diego has
tried to lure Kemp into betraying his
new love with a candor bomb capa·
ble of unleUhinJ intemecine blood. lettin&amp; 81)d.givin1 journalists the nre
pleasure of totins·up the carnage. But
he won't do iL
Indeed, he has aiven over his old
pusions for-the sake of his new mate.
Although he cherishes llfmnllive
action. he has backed the California
Civil Rights Initillive, which would
put an end io.prcfmnces and quotas.
More lllrprisinaly, he talks of
Dole no ltllljer u the political panel·
1011 of Herbert Hoover but u the
riJhtful hOir to Abnblm Uncoln and
~ Reaaan. Practiced polilicll

ty Board, g~U~e some insight into the
frustrations of the probe when discussing a new piece of wreckage that
could be key to solving the riddle.
The 8-foot-long piece appeared to
have come from above the plane's
second. doors. where investigators
believe the jumbo jet was blown apan
at 13,700 feet. But it was not found
in the field of wreckage closest to the
airport, where divers found most of
the material from the forward half of
the plane.
"It continues to be extraordinary," Francis said. "You think things
are staning to look like they ' ve got a
pattern, and all of a sudden there's

unable to fulfill his promise to bring
By BARRY RENFREW
peace to Chechnya and using the
Aaaocllted Preu Writer
GROZNY, Russia - Sporadic attack on Kulikov to avoid being
gunfire resonated Saturday in the blamed for failure.
" For Yeltsin to dismiss Kulikov is
Chechen capital, where separatist
to
lose face, and if Yeltsin cannot
fighters held sway and surround
reson
to the resignation of the interidemoralized Russian troops.
or
minister,
Alexander lvanovich
The rebel assault on the city Aug.
(Lebed)
will
horoically wash his
6 tattered the already shaky confihands"
of
Chechnya,
wrote Alexandence of Russian forces in the sepader
Budberg,
deputy
head of the
ratist n:public and set off a Ouny of
political
department.
blame-casting in the Kremlin.
At least 247 Russian soldiers have
In Moscow, the man in charge of
died
and I ,000 have been wounded
the Chechen crisis. Security Council
since
the rebels ovenan Grozny,
chief Alexander Lebed, accused Inte.
according
to Lebed. The soldiers arc
rior Minister Anatoly Kulikov of
B,y SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Gore debate," Dole chuckled.
dying
for
nothing,
he said. and it is
Aaaocllted Preu Writer
The nominees also made a pitch incompetence and demanded his res, DENVER- Stepping beyond the for GOP congn:ssional candidates ignation Friday for prolonging the
s"ge lights of the Republican presi- and invited local Republicans to join war.
Both men appealed to President .
dentiaj nominating convention, Bob them on stage.
,
Dole and Jack Kemp are working to
Meanwhile, campaign aides said Boris Yeltsin to decide which one
bu,ld public support for their tax cut Republican polling showed Dole had stays. Kulikov submitted his resigPl:.oposal against Democratic attacks. narrowed the Democratic incum- nation but Yeltsin told him to stay on,
. "Fifteen, 15, IS percent tax cut! bent's lead to nine or 10 percentage the lnterfax news agency repbrted
Saturday, citing Kremlin sources.
Keep that in mind,' ' Dole boomed to points.
Member New Yortl Sloc;k Exchaf"98
At Lebed's insistence, top comThey . voiced confidence that
a send-.off nlly crowd Friday in San _
Member SIPC
Diego before embarking with Kemp, Dole's shaky standing in traditional manders from the two sides met this
hili vice presidential running mate, on GOP strongholds would solidify over week and agreed on an informal parOFFERING:
the next few weeks because of the tial truce. now in its fourth day.
a quick cross-country tour.
•Stocks
. Venturing into states won by Pres- convention and the selection of Kemp Another round of talks was slated
between Gen. Konstantin Pulikovsky.
•Corporate Bonds
ident Clinton in 1992, the GOP tick- for the ticket.
ct'was due at the lllinois State Fair in
"I'm now leaving full of e~cite­ the Russian commander, and Asian
•U .S. Treasury Securities
Springfield Saturday befon: heading ment and full of enthusiasm and full Maskhadov, the Chechen chief of
•Mutual Funds
to Buffalo, N.Y., where Kemp was a of confidence," Dole said in ·san staff.
•Insured Tax-Free
Maskhadov told Associated Press
pro football hero and later a con- Diego. And what next? "I try to win
Television that Lebed is the only
Municipal Bonds
g~ssman. The trip ends Sunday in
the election."
Pennsylvania.
Nominees traditionally get a Russian official he trusts.
•Insured Money Market
"I trust Lebed because he isn 't
. "Is there anybody hen: who does- polling "bounce" from their conAccounts
n't want a tax cut?" Dole called out ventions, but these can prove difficult tainted. He hasn't got blood on his
•IRA's
Friday at the nominees' first stop: to sustain once the media spotlight hands." said Maskhadov, who has
shifts. In Dole's case, keeping met twice this week with Lebed in
Contact:
Denver's Dominion Plaza. ·
"No!" the solidly Republican momentum could prove tougher search of a way to end the 20-month
Jay Caldwell
crowd of abOut 800 shouted in uni- because Clinton gets a convention · war that has killed more than 30,000
John Miller
son.
spotlight of his own in nine days.
people.
Account Executivts
"We're not &amp;oing t~ apologize for
Even with his convention boost,
Yeltsin gave Lebed sweeping
putting more money in your pay- Dole trailed Clinton by double-digit power.; this past week to oversee the
441 Second Avenue
check," Dole added.
. ·- margins in most polls, though those military in Chechnya and to end the
Gallipolis, 0 H. 45631
·Clinton Satunday ended the silence surveys were conducted before deeply unpopular war. Lebed said
on. Dole and GOP policies he had Dole's Thtl'rsday night speech.
Friday he had a "radical" plan for
(614) 446-2125
maintained during the convention,
The oomination brought the Dole- ending the bloodshed, but refused to
using his weekly radio address to lash Kemp campaign $62 million in fed- disclose it.
1·800-487·2129
oll_t at the $S48 billion tax cut pro- eral campaign funds, and it plans to
Lebed's attack on Kulikov could
posal as "indiscriminate," irrespon- spend some quickly. A major adver- be seen in the context of his efforts
sible and a threatto the nation's eton- tising effon will begin soon, proba-• to increase his powers by purging the
omy.
bly Tuesday, to promote the tax cut Kremlin of hawkish liard-liners.
· He reiterated and expanded on plan and take issue with Clinton
A front-page cqmmentary SatyrDemocratic charges that a tax cut of administration assertions that the day in the popular newspaper
thiu magnitude would require slash- economy is in its best shape in 30 Moskovsky Komsomolets accused
es in Social Security, Medicare and years.
Lebed of realizing that he would be
other social programs. '
· In its stead. the president said the
~maHer package bf tax cuts he seeks
is targeted to help families and workers pay for education and training,
btry a home and help pay for child

Clinton
derides
.GOP
I
I tax cut plan as Dole
hits campaign stump

.:;(1

l ' .

.,.,..,

something that comes .. . from left
field ."
Three truckloads of plane debris
were hauled up Friday, including a
35-foot section offuselage with all its
windows intact ~one of the largest
single pieces of airplane found yet.
About half the plane has been
recoven:d, but small pieces of wreckage remain scattered over a 5-mile
area ,120 feet deep in the Atlantic
Ocean~
The plane was on the tarmac at
Kennedy Airpon for at least three
hours before it took off July 17 for
Paris and exploded off the Long
Island coast.

Kallstrom refused to comment on
a WNBC-1V report Thursday night
that said a TWA employee encountered a stranger on the plane before
passengers boarded, and escorted
him off the jet when the man could
not produce identification.
Investigators continued to theotize
that the plane was destroyed by a
bomb, a missile or a mechanical malfunction. If it was a b\&gt;mb.likely hiding places would be in carry-on luggage or a food cart in a galley.
Kallstrom said he is confident the
mystery would be solved.
''I n:ally still firmly believe, and
am optimistic, that we will find the
cause of this disaster," he said.

. I

time to negotiate a peace agreement.
Two Russian soldiers were
wounded Saturday morning. one
when rebels fired on a federal checkpoint and the other when a mine
exploded, federal forces said.
Rebels also attacked Russian
troops Friday evening near their
main base at Khankala, east of
Grozny, killing two soldier.;, the mil-

Russian troops are sum&gt;unded at
three spots in Grozny. The rest of the
city is controlled by separatist fighters.
Federal forces appealed to rebels
to allow deliveries of badly needed
medical supplies, water and food to
blockaded Russian troops. a military
official in tlte Moscow-backed
Chechen
Maj. Gen. ·~-

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cai'e.

observers wink knowingly at the"•"
·talk, as if Kemp suddenly had
acquired Bill Clinton's gil\ for serial•'c;
"ideological monogamy.
:• ';
But Kemp isn't faking. He wor-•::"
ships Dole "'ith the ardor of a malt "·
spared an early death, which is what
he is_, Although the former quarter·}")
back commands dec~nt fees and&gt;_
.,,,;
large audiences on the lecture circuit,
he hat lived on the periphery of ,,,;
American polilics since 1992.
.,.,;:
Politics devours iu votaries. Si&amp;.1 ll~
tins together, Dole and Kemp dis41 :; ";
covered a kinship of qony and!• ?
humiliation. leavened by bottomless ·
ambition. These bonds let them entCI"....,
the campaign as collll'lllles rllher than l
a couple of star-crossed dweebs '
hurled together out of desPeration l
and expediency.
lI
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Infighting shadows efforts to end civil conflict

fits accrue disproportionately to thj;1.;
wealthy. The liberal group Citizens
for Tax Justice figures that the aver•., ,
age cut for a family .making $50,00Q.,,
a year would be $1,800, or 8.7 perr,"
cent, while for those makins,..,
·.stOO,OOO, it would be $25,000, or 28;,1
percent.
•..
Fairness aside, the biggest nnw i~;;,
Dole's plan is that it isn't likely to
produce the growth it promises, priu ,
marily because it will be so difficul~;,
to impose the spending cuts neces-,_.,
sary to offset $548 billion in tax cuts;,.
and dose aS I trillion budget deftcit.
Without saying sp, Dole admi~: .:
how tough it will be by failing iq ,.
specify where the cuts will be~~
imposed and by projecting $100 bilrr"
lion deficits for the next four y~·,
and positing a sudden plunge to zero
in 2002. But as unlikely as those; ~
numbers seem, Clinton's balan«dJ·;
budget proposal does the same. ,''l
At the moment, Greenspan and ther•
money markets don't believe thlllm
either party will actually deliver on i(lil.;
deficit promises. which is why interest rates are high. But at least Cli..,.:n
ton -- tailoring his economic polic~:·:
to Greenspan's specifications -- has
cut the deficit in half during his term.'''
Dole used to be a dedicatcdu•
. deficit-cutter, too, but now he Us had" I
. a soul transplant and is a member of,!l
the supply-side religion.
, ,~,
· That may uplift Republican dele: gates. But the polls don't tell us yet
: whether voters are buying Dr. Dole:$, '!
:new medicine. I bet they wc;m't. .;.,.
(Morton Koadi'IICke is ueca. •.
live editor of Roll C.U, the ne-.. •
paper of Capitol HUL)

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More bodies recovered in TWA blast probe

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Dole, Kemp: Call them, 'The Happy Boys' ::

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Nation/World

~18,1816

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Sunday,August18, 199i

By JACQUI PODZIUS COOK
Associated Preas Wrher
CLEVELAND - Cleveland public schools students don't know .
whether Aug. 28 will be the first day of school - or one of the last before
the district's teachers hit the picket line.
The 5,000 teacher.; in the state's largest school district have authorized
the Cleveland Teachers Union to suike at midnight Sept. 3 if a contract agree. ment isn't reached. The current pact exRires at midnight Aug. 31.
Progress has been slow.
"I don 't see us getting any closer," said Meryl Johnson, chairwoman of
the union's community relations committee. "You have to be positive and
hope that the closer we get to the strike date, the closer we' ll get to an agn:e-

_The last Cleveland teach11rs suike, in 1988, lasted four days. A 1979-80 1
stroke last II weeks.
.
Union officials have said a suike this year could last as long as four ,
months, although they are quick to say it is a last reson. In case it comes to
that. the union already is trying to rally suppon by running radio advertisements promoting the teacher.;' position.
The three 60-second spots, which arc read by a teacher, a student and a
Cleveland schools graduate, began running this week on local stations.
"Students are hurting," high school senior Jamar Doyle says in his ad.
"Many feel that we are forgotten in the fight to balance the budget. We understand that financial stability is important, but not more important than our
education."
His ad hots on the one thing neither side disputes: The problems come
down to money. The district. which has been under state control since March
1995, is $151 million in debt.
School officials say all employees, including teachers, must make sacrifices. But the union believes teachers have given up enough.
The district sent layoff notices to-4il teachers in late April as a way to
save $20 million. Some, but not all , are expected to be called back.
The district also wants all employees, including teachers, to ·take a 10
percent pay cut this year, with no raises in the second year. That could save
as muci1 as $40 million a year, but the union says it will walk out before
accepting such a cut.
"The concessions are still on the table." Johnson said. "As long as they
arc on the table, there is going to be a strike.'·'
While the negotiations continue, Laura Frick, an elementary school an
teacher. is wondering what the new school year will bring. She doesn't know
.how she will support her 5 1/2-year-old son if she must strike.
"1. as a single paycheck home, couldn't survive," she said. ''I'm really
angry with the state as to thl;ir thinking as to how they're solving any problems. They're not considerin$ the students, their needs and us.''

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woman .

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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· In his appearances in San Diego
and Denver, (,)ole denied the Demo-.
cr'atic ·charges, saying: "I would not
propose a tax cut ... had I not been
cettain you could do it without huning Social Security. 'without hulling
Medicare."
·He said his plan would cut by
more than half the taxes of a family
making $35,000 a year.
.for his part, Kemp promised that
the proposed IS percent cut in
income taxes would be just a "do'!'n
p8¥Jilent" on a wholesale ovemaul of
tht tax code by a Dole-Kemp administntion.
.
-It was a crowd-pleasing pledge.
. "Those tax cuts would be exciting
to IDe;" said Joanne Lynes in Denver,
who also t;redited the GOP's highly
stylized California convention with
"energizins everybody" in the party.
Whether the ticket, introduced in
San Diego as the Republican "On:am
Team," could keep voters fired up
was an unresolved question. But
many in the Denver crowd didn't
think excitement was so crucial.
"It's more that I don't want Clinton," said Patricia Ferry, 39, of Littleton, Colo. Echoed Mike McLendon, 46. a Denver defense contrtiCtor,
" Anybody btl! Clinton."
A hand-painted, hand-held sign
bobbing near the stage read: "pull is
better than dangerous.''
The gregarious Kemp also was a
hit with the panisan crowd. Dole
brought a roar ~ and a tremor from
hundreds of red, white and blue
pompo_na - when he asked if he'd
chosen the right runnin8 mate.
''I ean hlrdly wait for the Kemp-

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·Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, wv

Sunday,Auguat18, 1996

Local Briefs:
Commission to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
City Commission will meet in special
session at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Gallipolis Municipal counroom.
WEST LIBER1Y: Ky.- Minnie Nell Gullett Adkins, 67,4845 Highway
The commission will have a work
172, West Ltbeny, died Wednesday, Aug. 7, 1996 at her residence.
session at 6 p.m.
Born Aprill3, 1929 in Morgan County, Ky., daughter of the late Proctor
Copies of the agenda are available
and Nannie Hopkins Gullett, she was a member of the Elkfork Primitive Bilp. at the City Building, 518 Second
tist Church, Rockhouse, Ky.
·
Ave., or the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Surviving a_re her husband •. Lenville Adkins; two sons, Garry (Kathy) Memorial Library, 7 Spruce St.
Adkins ofGalhpohs, and Ro~rue (Leah) Adkins of West Chester; five grandThefts reported ·
chtldren and a great-grandchild; and four sisters, Eliza Jane Patton of New
GALLIPOLIS - Two theft
Haven, Mich., Mabel F. Colley of Lebanon, and Nettie Marie McKenzie and repons were filed with local law
Lucille Nonnan Bullock, both of Hamilton.
enforcement Friday, according to
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Oliver Junior Gullett.
repons.
Services were held Saturday, Aug. 10, 1996 in the Herald &amp; Stewan &amp;
Employees of Go Man, I 875
Halsey Funeral Home, West Libeny. Burial was in the Kerrard Cemetery, Eastem Ave., Gallipolis, informed
Rockhouse.
city police that a male subject
attempted to pay fo• $5 worth of gas
wnh a check. The man did not have
identification when the employees
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- James W. Herdman, 26, New Haven, died Fri- requested it in verifying the check,
officers said.
day, Aug. 16, 1996 in the Charleston Area Medical Center.
SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS - Theae dairy
row, are Adam Chevalier, eighth place; Ro11
Born July 28, 1970 in Point Pleasant, W.Va., he was a son of Millerd Ray
When the employees told him
club member~ were recognized as Dairy
Holter,
fifth place; Caraon· Yoat, second place;
Herdman Sr. of New Haven, and Margie Lyons Manin of Gallipolis.
they would have to use the license
Sweepatlkea wlnnera just before the Melg1
Holter, sixth place; and Raymond CaldAlyaM
Surviving in addition to his parents are two brothers, Millerd R. (Janet) number on his car for verification, the
County Junior Fair Livestock Show Friday.
well,
ninth
place. From left, back row, are Mike
Herdman Jr. of Point Pleasant, and Addison A. (Cathy) Herdman of New suspect then said he might have
They are placed on the basis of still cleanliParker, advlaor; Chrle Parker, third place; Ben
Haven ; two sisters, Rose Ann Barcus of Gallipolis, and Connie (Ronnie) some cash in the car. He left the store
ness, judging Interviews end ott\er related perHolter, fourth place; Tricla Davis, flr1t place;
Estep of Mason, W.Va.; a paternal grandfather, Charles W. Herdman of Broad only to speed away from the scene i~
foriTIInces. The sweepatlkea ia aponaored by
Krlstl Warner, seventh place; and Ed Holter,
Run, W.Va.; and nieces and nephews.
the car, according to the repon.
the Better Livestock 4-H Club. From left, front
advisor.
A later check by officers discovGraveside services will be I p.m. Monday in the Bethel Cemetery, with
Bub Herdman officiating.
ered the check was one of many
There will be no visitation. Arrangements are under the direction of stolen in Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason.
that the thefts are under investigation
by the Mason County Sheriff's
Department.
An investigation is continuing,
officers said.
Julie Pace, 1794 Flagsprings
SAN DIEGO (AP) - San Diego
Road, Patriot, informed the Gallia
State
University is struggling to cope
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
County Sheriff's Depanment that a
with
the killings of three popular
AP Bualneaa Writer
riding mower, trailer and television
engineering
professors, gunned down
It's almost post time at the Fed. Ralcorp Chex out. And the airlines give were taken from her propeny over a
as
they
prepared
to review a gradua little and take a little.
month's time.
ate student's thesis.
A look at what happened in business this past week:
Pace had been in North Carolina
"I have no answers or explana·
when the thefts occurred, deputies
They're off! Well, almost
lions for this loss of human life and
Any savvy- and honest- investor will tell you that buying stocks, bonds said. The incident is under investigapotential," university President
or any other kind of security is a form of gambling. Only instead of consid- tion. '
Stephen
Weber told about 1,000 peoArea man jailed
~ring the lineage and previous won-loss record of a thoroughbred, these handple
gathered
for an impromptu
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City
Icappers are looking at inflation, productivity and other economic statistics.
memorial
Friday
afternoon.
The big race is Thesday, when the Federal Reserve policy writers hold a Police booked Charles P. Lewis III,
Police
said
Frederick Martin
re!!ularly-scheduled meeting. The touts - economists and analvsts, if you 29; Rodney Road, Bidwell, into the
Davidson
fired
atleast23
bullets into
. wtll- seemed confident by week's end that the Fed wouldn't raise rates Gallia County Jail atl0:40 p.m. Fri.
the
professors
as
they
were
preparing
because the latest figures pointed to a moderately growing economy and sta- day on a charge of domestic violence, to review his thesis Thursday, the
ble inflation.
according to jail records.
Officers also cited Jamie Bowers, final hurdle before a master's degree
. The Fed itself reponed that industrial production rose a slight 0.1 percent
can be awarded.
m July. There was no sign of inflation surging in that report, or in the Labor 861 Second Ave., Gallipolis, on Fri"He was upset that his thesis had
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY RECOGNIZED- Stlti·Audltor Jim
Depanment's announcement that consumer prices rose a little more than day on a Municipal Court summons
been
turned down previously and
for disorderly conduct.
expected last month.
Petro haa recognized the Meigs County Agricultural Society lor '
its work In adl(anclng local youth and the agricultural movement
Cited by police early Saturday thought the professors were out to get
So gamblers and touts, or investors and economists, expect the Fed's skein
were Thomas G. Denny, 44; 655 him," police Lt. Jim Collins said.
Pete Couladls, center, Petro's regional director ol public affairs,
of no increases to remain more intact than Cigar's winning streak.
Before the meeting Thursday,
presented the award Friday to President Dan Smith and SecreEvans Road, Patriot, driving under
Ralcorp backs out
Davidson sneaked into the classroom
tary Debbie Wataon.
The cereal price wars claimed a victim this past week, as Ralcorp said it the influence. expired operator's
and
hid
a
semiautomatic
9
mm
pistol
was selling its Chex and other national-brand lines to General Mills, the license and stop sign violation; and
and five spare I5-round magazines in
nation 's second-biggest cereal maker. No. 5 Ralcorp, which keeps its private Jerry Gibson, 34, 1519 State Route
a
first-aid kit, police said. Just before
label cereal business, came under pressure when the big manufacturers began 218, Gallipolis, open container.
he
was introduced, he pulled out the
Portland man held
lowering their prices during the spring. Meanwhile, General Mills, whose
weapon
and staned firing, police said.
ROCK SPRINGS- A 31-yearproducts include Wheaties and Cheerios, picks up a few points of market share
Davidson,
36, was booked for
as it battles with No. I Kelloggs.
old Penland man was arrested late
investigation
of'
murder and was
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Joe
Friday after an altercation at the
Airlines shell out
being
held
at
the
San
Diego
County
McGinniss
had a front-row seat at the
Airline passengers are getting some brand-new planes to fly on, but ifthey Meigs County Fair, according to Jail. ·
O.J.
Simpson
trial and a big $1 milSheriff James M. Soulsby.
try to use frequent flier miles to get their tickets, it'll cost them.
The
campus
was
mourning
the
lion
advance.
But, in the end, the
According to reports, David SigUAL Corp. is buying $2.5 billion io wide-body planes from the Boeing Co.
death
of
Chen
Liang,
Davidson's
prihave
a book in him.
author
didn't
to replace aging United Airlines jets. The company is also planning to buy man was arrested and jailed on mary adviser, and professors ConThe
best-selling
author
said Friday
a batch of smaller planes.
charges of disorderly conduct, menstantinos
Lyrintzis
and
D.
Preston
he
has
abandoned
his
book
project on
But redeeming the miles passengers racked up from frequent travel and acing threats, assaulting an officer Lowrey III.
the
Simpson
trial,
citing
a lack of
credit card bonuses is getting more difficult and coming at a price. Airlines and resisting arrest following an inci"These
are
three
of
the
best
pronew
to
say
about
the
sensaanything
are adding new fees and restrictions to their frequent flier programs. Amer- dent at the truck pulls in the infield
fessors
we
have
in
engineering,"
said
tional
trial
that
has
spawned
a
library
ican Airlines said it would follow an indusJry trend, and, staning Sept. I, will of the track at the fairgrounds.
Sigman was transported to the Ed Handley, who just earned a bach- of titles.
raise the fee charged customers who cancel frequent-flier trips and want the
, In so doing, McGinniss loses his
miles back.
Athens County Jail where he will be elor's degree in mechanical engineering.
"All
of
them
were
the
most
entire
two-book deal with Crown
Airlines have other charges as well. They may be feeling that their fre - held pending a court appearance
Books
and must forfeit a total
difficult, but they were the most popquent flter programs are too successful - there are 2 trillion miles out- Monday.
advance
of SI. 75 million. But he said
ular,
too.''
The altercation represented a posstanding, and some passengers have been able to get tickets without ever havhe
gains
a rrcsh outlook and a new
Liang, 32, was collaborating with
ing flown .
sible probation violation for Sigman,
•
career:
sportswriter.
· who is currently serving probation Davidson on research - funded by
Something to consider
•
plans
to
The
53-year-old
writer
The New York Stock Exchange may move out of its famed, Greek- from the Meigs County Coun of McDonnell Douglas Corp. - on
focus
on
his
true
passion,
European
columned Wall Street headquaners, a 93-year-old building that may be too Common Pleas for obstruction of jus- metal alloys that can be twisted and
soccer.
retain their shape until heated.
~
small to accommodate the exchange's future expansion plans. If this hap- tice, according to Soulsby.
"I reel wonderful. I feel 20 years
He
had
more
than
70
publications
Deputies
tile
charges
pens. Wall Street, the generic term for the stock market - which of course
younger," he said in a phone inter•·
POMEROY - A Pomeroy man on so-called "sman materials."
encompasses the electronically-traded Nasdaq and the American Stock
•
view
from
his
Williamstown,
Mass.,
"He had all the makings of a
Exchange, located on Church Street- will become as anachronistic as tick- faces multiple charges after a hit-skip
accident early Saturday at the inter- superstar," said Pieter Frick, engi- home. "The whole process of sitting
er tape.
out th&lt;:re was some sort of very
•
section of state routes 7 and 143, neering dean.
Winners, losers, in-between
expensive
therapy.
It
finally
enabled
The father of two young sons, the
WINNERS: People planning to buy those pizza-sized satellite dishes. RCA according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
•i
China
native had studied in Beijing me to see that all you have in life is
and Sony are lowering the prices on their satellite systems because of increaswhat
you
want
to
do."
According
to
reports,
Ronald
and
at
Virginia
Polytechnic
Institute
ing competition. ·
The "Fatal Vision" author was
LOSERS: Hewlett-Packard Co., whose third-quaner earnings dropped 26 Hawley, 26, was traveling on SR 143 and University.
granted
a coveted rront-row, pemnaLyrintzis, 36, was an associate
percent because of falling demand and the costs of dumping its unsuccess- when he lost control of his truck and
nent
seat
at the Simpson trial, chronwent off the right side of the roadway, professor of aerospace engineering
ful disk-drive business.
icling
the
CB$1! on a yellow legal pad.
IN BE1WEEN: Retailers, who overall had a good second quarter, but who striking a parked 1990 Plymouth and engineering mechanics at the uni· His concept was to play the "13th
are running into problems from overextended consumers who can't pay their owned by Delores King, Mason , versity 1987. He worked on a NASA juror" by avoiding the news conferPOMEROY
project while a research assistant at
bills. While Wai-Man Stores Inc. had an II percent profit gain. J.C. Penney W.Va.
ences
and.TV
coverage.
Near
Pometoy·MIIon
Bridge
Columbia
University
and
and
held
Hawley's vehicle was located by
Co. Inc . suffered a nearly 20 percent drop on a surge in bad debts.
Meigs County· sheriffs deputies a degrees from Columbia and the
992·2588
short time after the accident, at which National Technical University of
VINTON
time Hawley was charged with DUI, Athens.
Veterans Memorial
Gallla County Dlaplly Yard
Lyrintzis, of Greece, and his wire,
no opemtor's license and failure to
Friday admissions - William
15511alnSL
Deanna, married three years ago. In Chapman, Pomeroy.
control.
388-8803
Hawley is scheduled to appeilJ' in June, they took their 14-month-old
Friday ,discharges - none.
Sophia,
to
Grc:cce
daughter,
Meigs County Coun on the charges
Monday. Damage was listed as heav;•
.
to both vehicles. No injuries wqe
reponed.

Minnie N~ Adkins

James W. Herdman

Suspected
killer vented
fury on popular
staff members

Upcoming Fed meeting
spurs rate hike worries

'Fatal Vision' author gives ;
up on book about Simpson .

~

Let us create
a memorial
Just for vouf

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Hospi.tal news

Matilda C. 'Tillie' Janes.

,,

GALLIPOLIS-:- Matilda C. "Tillie" Janes, 73, Westerville, formerly of
Galhpohs, dted Fnday, August 16, 1996 in the Columbus Colony Westerville.
'
Born January 25, 1923 inGallia County, daughter of the Ia~ John T. Hall
and Cora Davts Hall, she rettred as an ophthalmologist assistant working in
GaUipolis and New_Orleans, and was a former member of the First Presbytenan Church. Galhpohs. She graduated from Gallia Academy High School
and attended Miami University.
She is a past president of the Gallipolis Emblem Club and the past president of the Washington Elementary PTA. She was also a member of the Gallipolis Golf Club, and an active volunteer with the Hean Fund and Cancer
Fund.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, William H. Janes, whom
she married on March 31, 1946; and by two sisters, two half-sisters and two
half-brochers.
Survivins n two sons, Colonel William H. Jines Jr., U.S. Army, Retired,
and his wife, Debbie (Leedy) Janes of Valrico, Florida, and Fl'lllk Thomas
Janes of Naperville, Dlinois; a daughter, Sandra Kelbley and husband Jeff
of Westerville; four lf8ndchildren, John and Lisa Janes, and Amy and Matt
Kelbley; a sister, Marjorie Plymale of Gallipolis; and a half-sister, Elta Folden of Gallipolis.
Servic:a will be II a.m. Monday, Augu.it 19, 1996 in the Fint Prabyterian Church, with the Rev. Alben Earley officiating. Burial will follow at
Mound .Hill Cemetery. Amri,ements are by the Waugh-Hallcy-W!J(ld FWICI'-

aiHome.

In lieu of nowen, donations
ety.
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Sports

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B

Utley
living
'fearless'
life after
football

in six ~ames, its l_ongest streak of the
season .
Cardinals 4, Marlins 3
At St. Louis, pinch-hitter Royce
Clayton drove in the go-ahead run
with a single off second baseman
Luis Castillo's glove in the eighth
inning Saturday, giving the St. Louis
Gardinals a 4-3 win over the Florida Marlins .
T.J. Mathews (2-4) pitched one
scoreless inning and Dennis Eckersley, pitched the ninth for his 20th
save. Jay Powell (3-1) took the loss.
The Marlins managed only two
hits in the first six innings against
Donovan Osbome. and only one runner reached second base. But Florida tied it with three runs in the seventh.
The Cardinals scored in the third
on a double by Luis Alicea and a single by Ozzie Smith.
Ron Gant's two-run homer, his
25th, gav.e the Cardinals a 3-0 lead
in the fifth .

By DEBORAH SHARP
USA Today
KEY LARGO, Fla. - Havins
just added scu.ba diving to his thrillseeking pursuits, Mike Utley professes no fear at parachuting out of
airplanes or hunling down snowy
slopes.
After all , he said with a grin, it's
not like he's afraid he's going to fall
and break his neck .
"Been there, done that," the former lineman for the Detroit Lions
said.
Indeed he has. On the first play of
the founhquaner in a Nov. 17, 1991,
game between the Lions and Los
Angeles Rams, he got tangled up
while pass blocking and landed on
his head, crushing his sixth and seventh venebrae. The injury has left
him paralyzed from the cheit down.
But he wants no pity in a life lived
WELL DONE! - Cleveland third base coach Jell NewiTIIn (left) at full throttle now five years after he
congratulates Jim Thome on the latter'sllfth-Innlng aolo homer dur· was carried off the field at the Ponlng Saturday's American League game against the vlaltlng Detroit tiac Silverdomc, flashing a thumbsTigers, who loat 6-3. (AP)
up.
"I still think I'm invincible," said
By.KEN BERGER
said John "Big Dawg" Thompson, · spring or summer of 1997.
Utley, who wentmask-to-jaws with
About I0 blocks across town is football in Cleveland by 1999. It's
: CLeVELAND (AP)- It's as if leader of the famous dog-masksix sharks upon earning his scuba
"Depressing" was how 27-year- Jacobs Field, where every Indians Futterer's job to talk about that team
all the memories are still trapped wearing Browns fans who populat- old Cris Nahra of Cleveland . baseball game has sold out since the and the future. He'd rather not get certification this summer.
inside Cleveland Stadium, in there ed the Dawg Pound. "The intensity described the town without the park opened two years ago.
During a more rela~cd dive in the
into a debate about Art Modell, the ·
with the red and yellow seats that will be totally drained out of it. It's Browns.
Florida
Keys recently, the scariest
And right next door is Gund Are- owner who moved the Browns to
S\1Cm to rise a mile high. Some are going to be strange." .
.
"Everyone won't have anything
na, home of the Cleveland Cavaliers Baltimore, or lament fall Sundays in sights to confront him were a bar1Vri.tten on its faded brick walls, like
racuda and a spiny lobster.
The very thought of one of the to do on Sunday afternoons," she and site of the 1997 NBA All-Star Cleveland without football.
' 'Shawn was here: Oct. 4, 1992," or NFL's most Joyal cities being with· said. "It was the only way we could Game.
Utley needs help getting himself
"!!think it's time for nil of us to
die note smeared on a dirty window out a team is strange indeed. The get the guys to take us out."
and his wheelchair on and of! the
It all symbolizes the revitalization look at the future," Futterer said . "I
6y some wise-guy Pittsburgh fan: Baltimore Ravens, who used to be
Nahra was having . lunch one of an American city, one that was simply have too many things to boat. But once in the water, he pro"Steelers rule."
the Browns, already are playing summer day at Cleveland's new tired of being a joke. But the empty address in the future that leave me no pels his body gracefully with his
It's all still there on the banks of exhibition games and open the reg- downtown mall called the Galleria, stadium and parking lots filled with time to deal with the past."
webbed gloves and weightlift"''s
Lake Erie, everything except tl)e ular season on Sept. I. There will be around the comer and up the street tourists' cars represenr the sad irony
arms
.
A lol of fans are following his
cheers. And, oh yes - the football no players in orange helmets, no from Cleveland Stadium.
"Mike
just does his own thing, no
in the story: The one thing that hod lead, finding ways to stay busy.
team.
problems,"
said Jason Schwenke, a
Dawg Pound in the bleachers on that
The mall is new and trendy, sleek always held Cleveland together/ is ' Thompson, the Big Dawg, is one of
• It's been obvious for quite a day.
diving
instructor
with Ocean Divers
and attractive, a stunning contrast to gone.
them.
"'
While there will be no pro football in
dive.
shop
in
Key
Largo. "In. ract,
A farewell celebration .,will be the steel and brick monstrosity
"It's still one of America's great
"The way I look at it, the sooner
Cleveland thi's fall. Now that the held Sept. 21 at Cleveland Stadium, known as "The Mistake By The cities," said Bill Fuuerer, president the new team comes. the better on he's better than some people who
NFL season is almost here, the hard which sits alone and empty and . Lake." ·
of the Cleveland Browns Trust, we'll be," said Thompson, who is have full use of their extremities."
reality is setting in.
Utley considers his diving and
abandoned on the Jake. The wreckWithin sight of the football stadi- which is in charge of bringing a team coaching a Lillie League team
• "Probably the stmngest thing is _ing ball is supposed to stan swing- um is tho new Rock 'n' Roll Hall of back to the city. "It has some of the instead of following the pre~ason snow-skiing -even the cooking he
going ld be wat~~ing a football came : ing in November, with construction Fame. There's a new museum called greatest sports fans in the world."
has taken up - as part of his conNFL. camps.
Wbel'e you dOn!lhave that-intensity," on the new stadiifm beginaing in the the Great Lakes Science Center.
tinuing
rehabilitation to use his funcThe NFL has promised to restore
tioning muscles and build his
strength.
In general, the higher an injury is
on the spinal column, the more
By HARRY ATKINS
couldn't even make it into the March Atlanta," Burton said. "I had tears in type race track, whether it be Char- We slowed down about four-tenths extensive the paralysis. Though he is
a quadraplcgic , his injury, in medical
BROOKL'YN, Mich. (AP)- Jeff race at Atlanta, edged Bobby my eyes because when you miss a lotte, Atlanta or Michigan. We were from practice."
going
to
prove
to
ourselves
and
Bunon felt vindicated Friday after Labonte and Mark Manin ror the · race, and you put your whole life into
Gordon set the Michigan track tenns, is categorized as "in,omeverybody else we knew what we record of 186.611 mph last year, in plete." That means some sensation
·earning the first pole of his
inside staning spot in today's OM it, it's pretty disappointing .
and function survived, mostly in his
NASCAR Winston Cup career.
Goodwrench 400.
"I told them we were going to sit were doing and that Atlanta was a qualifying for the June race.
fluke."
.lll1l1S.
Burton, in the same Ford which
"I pulled my team aside in on the pole somewhere at an Atlanta"I couldn't get back in the gas,"
Burton, 29, the rookie of the year . Gordon said. "I was having to wait
Despite overwhelming medical
in 1994, pushed his Ford around and wait on it, apd that really hun us. evidence to the contrary, he said he'll
Michigan International Speedway's I didn't know if! was pole material, walk again.
high-banked two-mile oval in a qual- but you never know."
In the meantime, Utley builds on
ifying lap of 185.395 mph.
Bunon and his brother, Ward, are what he has. In 2 1/2-hour gym ses·
Labonte, who won both Winston the only brothers to win poles this sions six days a week, he licnchCup races at Michigan last year, was season. If he can find a way to win presses 300-plus pounds. That's not
next with a lap at 185.228 mph in a today's race, Burton will collect a the 450 pounds he lifled in his playChevrolet. It was the best qualifying bonus of $60,000. The bonus, put up ing days, but he has rebuilt his amns,
effort this season for Labonte, who by Unocal, goes to drivers who are which were so weak afler his injury
also won the pole in this race a year first both in qualifying and in the that he couldn't lift a napkin t&lt;l his
ago. Manin's Ford averaged 185.219 race.
mouth.
mph.
It was Ford's fifth pole this seaUtley also undergoes biofeed"If you miss it by a little bit, you son. Chevrolet has 13, and Pontiac back therapy, using a computer
might as well miss it by a mile," has three.
screen to identify nerve impulses
Labonte said. "But everybody on the
Derrike Cope's Ford blew an sent from his brain to his body.
Hooked to electrodes and the comteam worked real hard on this car. engine during his qualifying run and
puter, he attempts to lind and usc
We picked up what we thought we was unable to finish.
nerve connections that weren't
could pick up, but we just didn't get
when he was injured.
destroyed
to
that
one
guy
today.
By NANCY ARMOUR
Here's lhe provisional lineup for
"Mike's really an incredible char"That was about as much as I today's GM Goodwrench 400
· SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) One year arter opening the doors to
wanted to run it. It was prelly maxcd NASCAR Winston Cup stock car acter," said Bernard Brucker, the
psychologist in charge of lhe
its new home, the College Football
out. That was about all we could get race at the two-mile Michigan InterBiofeedback Laboratory a1 the UniHull of Fame let in its lirsl class or
out of it."
national Speedway, with car number
versity
of Miami medical school.
small-college players.
Rusty Wallace, who won the June in parentheses, driver and home"He
was
someone who would not
· Fourteen former players and
race at Michigan, was 20th in qual- town, type car and qualifying speed
get
return
of
function, or that's what
coaches rron\ schools in NCAA
ifying for this race. His Ford was in miles per hour (Remainder of field
everybody
thought.
Which is why he
Division 1-AA. II . Ill and the NAJA
was determined Saturday):
clocked at 182.783 mph.
ended up with us."
I . (99) Jeff Bunon. South Boston, Va .. Ford.
were inducted Saturday, including
Burton, with 79 stans. has never 18~ . J9~ .
He said the 30-ycar-old fonncr
WaltcrPayton and Terry Bradshaw.
won a Winston Cup race . His previ2. (18) BObby l.ubonlc . Corpti• O~nui , Teau,
player's
improvement has not
Chevrolet.
18~ 218
· "Nothing is complete when you
ous best qualifying effort was third
.l (6) Mark Manin, Bo1esviUe. Ark . Ford.
that
Utley'• recent strides
peaked,
exclude someone by design or by
at Maninsville in 1994. However, he 181.219
include
standing
with assistance and
error," said Payton, who played at
4_
(90)
Dic:k
Trickle.
Wiscont.in
Rnpids
.
Wis
.
finished 36th in that race.
FOfd, 18~ I J8
seeing
computer-enhanced
evidence .
Jiickson State and went on to become
Bunon 's pole came in his sixth
~ (4 .1) Bnbby Harr11llon. NnahYille. Tenn . Ponaction
in
leg
muscles
.
of
nerve
ilie NFL's all-lime leading rusher.
start at Michigan. His best linish at uac . 184 407
PAYTON
HONOREDFormer
Jackson
State
and
Chicago
Beare
6_
(4)
Slt'rlinJ
Marbn.
Columbia,
Tenn
..
OM!vroRelentlessly
upbeat,
Utley
touts
· "I applaud the selection commitrunning beck Walter Payton scldreues the audience following his MIS came earlier this year when he lec. IIW ]9J
finding
a
cure
for
paralysis
in
tee, because now (the hall) is deli7 _(24) Jeff GorcSon. Pitubcwo. lnd . Chtvm~ .
Induction Into the College Fooball Hall of Fame In So_u th Bend, Ind. finished 17th in the Miller 400.
speeches
around
the
United
States,
IS&lt;
ll7.
n~~ly complete. It has the best from
His previous best stan this season
(AP)
8 ( 17) D:wrell Wallrip. Frnnklin. Tenn . ~VIO­
and at his charity golf toumamcnlll,
all walks oflife. Hopefully, they will
was seventh at Talladega. His best let. 18) 8!2.
such
as one in Detroit on Sept. 17
9 (9) U:kt Spetd. Jockson . Miu .. Fotd.
ball's greatest players, and it also hlvorites. Both got standing ova- finish this season was fourth at
keep those doors open."
181
811
and
another
in Williamsburg, Va., on
The other nine players inducted gave the impression that smaller tions, and fans began leaving after Loudon, N.H. in July. Burton cur10. (211 M•ch"l W~lrip. o...:..t&gt;cwo. Ky.. Ford.
Oct.
14.
were: Bradshaw, Louisiana Tech; the schools weren't as good as the big- the two finished their acceptance rently ranks 12th in the Winston Cup 181 7)1).
"What does reality say'!" he said.
II . &lt;88! Dale I"""'· c-.... N.C.. Fcwd.
late Buck Buchanan, Grambling ger universities. Not true, McGriff speeches.
points race.
181669
"That
I' II never walk again. But is
S(llte; Vern Den Herder, Central said.
By the time Jim Tressel spoke on
12. 1281 Emit IrVIn. Salinas. Calif. Forcl.
In his last stan, on the road
that
what
I choose to believe7111e
18l6ll
(:()liege; Billy "White Shoes"Johnbehalf of his father, only about half course at Watkins Glen, Burton stanAll I0 players inducted went on
I l (811 Kenny Wallace. S1 louis. Mo .. Fotct
answer
is
no."
·
sQn, Widensr: Neil Lomax, Portland to NFL careers, and several were Pro of the crowd was left.
ed 23rd and finished 21st.
183.397.
.
George
Dempsey,
president
of tho
1• . (77) Bobby Hillin. Midland. Tua. Ford .
State; Tyrone McGriff, Florida Bowlers. .Bradshaw, Buchanan, Den
Grambling coach Eddie RobinThe top thre~ drivers in the Win- 183.318.
Phoenix-based
Mike
Utley
FoundaA'&amp;M; Wilbert Montgomery, Abi- Herder, Payton and Reawns played son, who has more wins (402) than
ston Cup points race drive Chevys
ll. 117) John Andmu. lndlllllf'Oiil Fool.
tion, which raises money for
lene Christian; Gary Reawns, North- on championship Super Bowl teams. any other college coach, represented
and tlley will all stan well back in the ISJJI1
16.
IJ)
Dale
~lllwdl,
KaMopolit
N.C
.
research and rehabilitation, laid,
western State; and Jim Youngblood,
If anything, small-college players Buchanan at the ceremony.
pack today.
Cbcvrolet, 18).241.
"Mike Utley has never displayed to
"The organization's decision (to
were better prepared for the future
Tennessee Tech.
Terry Labonte, who leads with
17. (87) Joe Ne.-k. Laktlaod. FIL, Chrnome
one ounce of negativism. He's
lei,
IIJ.I78.
The coaches were the late Harold than players at the bigger schools, induct small-college players) crys2,967 points, will stan 22nd after a
II.
(25) Ken Sc-. "-· Mo., Cllevn&gt;lel,
never
asked, 'Why has !his happened
fallizes one of the highest peaks in
B,llrry, Westminster College; Edgar McGriff said.
qualifying lap of 182.732 mph. Dale 182.911 .
to
meT"
"I think we go with a different my career," Robinson said. "It's
19. (JO) loliooy Beo100. Grind Ropdl. Mid ..
Sherman, Muskingum College; the
Barnhard~ who trails Labonte by 76
.
His high profile, like actor
late Gilbert Stein'l!e, Texas A&amp;!; and expectation," he said. "We didn't go going to mean so much to so many
points, will ~ 16th in the lineup after -.111101
20. (2) Rutly Wallace, S.. LouiJ. Mo., Ford,
Ouistopher
Reeve, raises aw~reMa;
tlie late Lee Tressel , Baldwin Wal- to college with the expectation of guys who thought football had
a lap of 183.48 mph. NASCAR 112.71!.
21
.
(94)
Bill
Ellioa,
llowtoovlle,
0&amp;,
f«&lt;,
accordina
to
JoAnn Tompkin~ of the
making the NFL. We went there as passed them by."
lace.
poster boy Jeff Gordon, the defend- IUTII.
National
Spinal
Cord Injury AasociMontaomery also praised the
For its first eight years, players a. vehKit~ for an education."
ing Winston Cup champion, canned
22. (l) 1my ~. C«pooJ OwiJII. TUM,
ation.
"What
they
sivc, .. she laid,
· from any school were eligible for the
The fans didn't seem to ~ move.
·the No. 7 spot on the starting grid Ollwn&gt;lel, 111732.
ll.
001
llicly
II*.
a
t
1
v...
Ford.
"is
•
message
!hat
life
goes on."
"You don't have to be ashamed of
hall. But in 19S8, the selection com- where the inductees went, givjpg
with a lap of 184.157 mph.
' ,lll.62t.
2A. (2l)Winl _ _ _ v._ __
Utley
d&lt;lesn
't
dwell
on
tho day he
llJJ!ICC decided candidates.~ to be each player a rousins cheer .. he was w~re you play your college and
"That was a pretty good lap,"
was
injured,
never
obsesses
on how
allt.Americans from a "maJor team. introduced. But Bradshaw and Pay- high schoOl ball," he said~ "If you're
Labonte said. "It just wasn't a fast doc. 112J70.
2S. (15) Waly ~-~Cillo Fn.
(See U11..EY 011 8-4)
That left wl some Qf college foot- · · ton were the obvious crowd good enough, they will find you." :lap and I'm not sure what happened. tl2.42.

Football's departure remains
bitter memory for Cleveland

.

.

Burton c·laims GM Goodwrench 400 pole position

Payton
joins 14
in latest
College
Football
HOF class

•
•

'

Sundly, Augwt 11, .1 .

Jndians defeat Tigers 6-3;
Cards outlast Ma~lins 4-3
3. Pena has 21 RB!s this season.
Hershiser ( 13-7) improved to 9-3
in his last 14 starts. He gave up seven hits and two runs in 61/3 innings.
Hershiser left wjth the bases
loaded in the seventh, but Eric Plunk
retired Travis Fryman on a fly ball to
Belle against the left-field wall.
Jose Mesa got one out for his 3_()th
save.
Cleveland took a 1-0 lead in the
first. Kenny Lofton beat out a
grounder to shon for a leadoff single and scored two outs later on a
double by Belle. Thome homered in
the fifth for a 2-0 lead.
Bobby Higginson hit a two-out,
two-run double in the sixth for
Detroit. Cunis Pride hit an RBI sin·
gle in the ninth.
Notes: Thome has a team-leading
105 strikeouts, but is hitting .433
( 120-for-277) when he puts the ball
in play .... The Indians are 124-56 at
home since Jacobs Field opened in
1994 .... Detroit has not hit a homer

'

Section

(

Jn major league baseball,

::-. CLEVELAND (AP) - Jim
Thome hit his 25th homer, doubled
and drove in two runs as the Cleve-land Indians beat the Detroit Tigers
6.- 3- it was the 13th straight time
.at Jacobs.Field- Saturday.
Orel H,ershiser ( 13-7) sent the
Tigers to their sixth loss in a row
overall. They are 1-17 at Jacobs
Field since the park opened in 1994.
A one-out error by shortstop
Damion Easley on a grounder by
Mark Carreon helped Cleveland
score four unearned runs in the sixth
inning and break a 2-2 tie.
Alben Belle followed with a double and Manny Ramirez was intentionally walked by Justin Thompson
(0-2) to load the bases. Jeff Kent had
a sacrifice fly, Thome doubled home
a run and Tony Pena hit a two-run
.
single.
The RBis were Pena's first at
home since a game-winning homer
in the 13th inning in Game I of the
AL playoffs against Boston last Oct.

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Page 82 •

.-=-u ata--.-mtbul

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gall~polla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, August 18, 199.l

Aided by Alomar's clutch homer,

CLEVELAND (AP)- The newlook Cleveland Indians showed their
old flair for late-inning dramatics.
Sandy Alomar ended a long
slump and a long game with a two"'" hoJTier in the 12th inning Friday
night as the In4ians beat die Detroit
3·1.
It was Cleveland's 14th final atbat victory - a feat the Indians
pulled off 27 times in winning the
American League pennant last sea-

nnrs

t

son.

I
I

I

The crowd cheered loudly for
Alben Belle to end the game in the
lith, but the slugger grounded to
second with runners at first and second. No one needed to win a game
like this more than Alomar, who was
in a 16-for-91 slump.
"Defimtely I was way overdue,"
Alomar said.

So were the Indians, who had finished a nine-game road trip by losing four of their last five games.
"Sandy and the ballclub needed
this ," Indians manager Mike Hargrove said. "This is the kind of game
we need to win. "
For a while, it looked as if the
~arne might last well into the morning. The teams used eight pitchers
and the game lasted nearly four
hours.
Alomar got hold of a l-and-O
pitch from Richie Lewis (3-6) and
pulled it down the line into an area
where fans stand and watch the game
behind the left field fence. Brian
Giles, who had singled, trotted home
ahead of Alomar, who has hit plenty of shots out there in batting practice but rarely in a game these days.
"I'm hitting the ball a lot harder,"

In other AL action,

Alomar said. ''I'm working on getting a shorter stroke and not trying to
hit hQme runs."
Paul ~senmacher (3-2) retired
the 1igers 1-2-3 in the 12th for the
victory.
The real pitching stars were the
star~ers .

Felipe Lim allowed only singles
by Jim Thome and Belle in eight
innings.
"What can you do?" Lira wondered. "I know each of our players
tries as hard as they can. That's just
how the game is."
Charles Nagy was brilliant for
nine innings but got another no-decision. Nagy, 1-3 with seven nCl-decisions and a 3.39 ea c .ed run average
since June 15, allowed five hits,
struck out seven and walked three.
"Charlie was absolutely out-

. ..

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI · (AP) - Vinny
Castilla made three nice defensive
plays in one inning, piled up four hits
and ~hed the 3(}-homer mark fClr
the second consecutive season.
"It's a great day," he said,' breaking il)to a smile.
The rest of the Colorado Rockies
felt the same way. They ended a
four-game losing Friday with an 84 victory over the Cincinnati Reds
that was a group effort by the
offense.
Ellis Burks singled with the bases
loaded to complete a three-run rally
in the sixth inning that put the Rockies ahead 7-4. Castilla and Larry
Wal!,er added homers and every
staner except Walt Weiss had a hit.
"We needed to bounce back,"
Burks .'laid. "We had 17 hits tonight.
I think that's bouncing back. It's
good motivation going into tomor-

standing," Hatgrove said. "It's a
shame we didn't score more runs for
him.'
Notes: The Indians play 25 of
their remaining 40 games at home.
Fifteen of those games are against
last-place teams Milwaukee, Detroit
and California. ... Hargrove said
first baseman Julio Franco's hamstring is 80 percent healed, but he
won't bring Franco back until the
player says he's ready.... Omar
Vizquel made two errors. It was his
second multi-error game this season
and the fifth of his career. ... The
1igers have gone five games without
a home run, their longest stretch of
the season .... Detroit is (}. 7 against
the Indians this season, (}.4 at Jacobs
Field .... Fryman fouled off a pitch in
the lith that ricocheted Clffthe backstClp and hit him in the helmet. He
was not hun.
1

row."
When they arrived at Riverfront
Stadium- where they 'd won Clnly
four of 18 games - the Rockies
, were facing a predicament. They
didn't want the losing streak to
stretch into today, with a doubleheader scheduled.
·
"It's not something that you like
to do·, look dClwn a double-barrel
shotgun where you 've got two

.

Orioles and Brewers get twin bill sweeps
By The Associated Preas
Rafael Palmeiro staned the night
0-for-3. After that, he could do little
wrong.
"Sometimes we all need just a
couple of at-bats to get going,"
Palmeiro said Friday night after driving in eight runs in the Baltimore
Orioles' 14-3, 5-4 sweep of the Oakland Athletics.
Palmeiro matched his career high
with six. RB!s in the opener, when

the Orioles scored all14oftheir runs! t ~Ciiiiilm Wth of:ik~ason in the
"Chief (Berroa) had a big day,
after the sixth inning. His RBI lloU-~ second game.
. and he's swinging great," Oakland
ble in the lOth scored the go-ahead
Baltimore is 14-4 since July 28 manager An Howe said, "but we've
run in the second game and gave him and has closed within S 112 games Clf got a find a wayto cool them (the
Ill RB!s, second in the majors to the first-place New York Yankees in Orioles) down."
Alben Belle's 112.
the AL East. The Orioles had trailed
Scott Erickson ('ir I0) scattered
"He just makes it look easy," Ori- by 12 before the hot streak.
seven hits in his sixth complete
oles manager Davey Johnson said. "I
Geronimo Berroa hClmered three game, tying him for the league lead,
think one of the reasons he dCiesn' t times in the doubleheader, giving and Randy Myers (2-3) won the secget a lot of notoriety is because he him eight in six games and 34 this ond game.
makes it look so easy."
season. Oakland has lost five straight
John Wasdin (7-6) blanked the
Eddie Murray hit his 498th career and 16 of 23.
(See AL on 1·3)
.

NICE SHOT, SANDY!- Cleveland's Albert Belle (left) greets teem- '
mate Sandy Alomar Jr. after Alomar'a IWCH'un homer In the 12th ·~
Inning of Friday night's game against the visiting·Detroit Tigers, who ;
lost 3-1. (AP)
,,

AL standings
Eastern Division

l:l' I. tsl.
50
.'i6
61

..~81
.517
.484

54 68

441

New York ......... 70
Oahimorc ..... .....M
Bos10n .......... 59

Toronto ..
Decroil

... 42

79

.\47

Baseball

!Ill

M•Jor Lr•aur llutblll
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Promoted P Nick Bierbnxll from Phoeni,. of
the Ari:tona league to Lethbridge of the
Pioneft League.

5h
12
17

28 ~

Central Division

CLEVELAND

... 7J
Olkago
........ 67
Minnes01a .
.. 6 1
K.ansas City .........n
Milw:lukt=e
... 57

49 .598
56
60
66
66

.S49
.504
46~

. 46~

American Ln1w

BALTIMORE ORIOLES , Ploc&lt;d OF

6~
II ~
1 6~

16'r:

Wtsttm Di¥islon
Tc,.a~

Sc:mlc
OaL.Jund
Ci1lifornia

.. 70 :U
.. 62 58
.....60 65

.517
.480

574

.~6

. 46~

65

Friday's scores
Cnliforniu 6 , Boslon J
CLEVfJ..AND ~ . Detroit I 1121
Seaulc 6, New York 5
Tuas .'i. Kansas C11y .1
Mmneroia ~- Toronto 4 (10)
DH · 8allimorr 14, Oak land 1; Bahi·
more IIi . Oakland4 (10)
DH : Milwaukee 9. Chicago 7: Mil·
wauktt ), Chicngo 2

They played Saturday
I

r

'

t

I
I•

Detroit (Thomrson 0- 1&gt; at CLEVE.
LAND (Hershiser 2-1). I : 0~ p.m.
Sea nl e (Moyer 8-2) nt New York
(Gooden 10-51, 4 :0~ p.m.
Bultimore (CoPJlinger 1·J) at Onkl:md
(Prieto J-3). 4:05p.m
California (finley II · II) ot Boston
(Ciemem 5· 11 ). 4 :0~ p.m.
ChiCAgo (Femandez 11 -7) al Milwau·
tee (McDonald 10.7). 8:05p.m.
Toron10 (Hiltlson 10. 14) 11.1 Minnesota
(Robenson 5-11 ), K:05 p.m.
K ;1nsa~ Cily (Belcher IJ .1) at Tc ~as
tHtll I J·6), 8J5 p.m.

Today's games
Detroit (Oiivcraa 7-81 at CLEVE·
LAND (Op 6-4), I :O.'i p.m.
Seattle (Mulhollo.nd H I tll New York
(H.ogen I().S). I :H p.m.
Ctiicago (9t:~ldwln Q. J) a1 Milwaukee
fAndujor 0.2), 2:0.5 p.m.
Toronto (Ht!ntsen 14-7) at Minnt!IOta
(Aguiler:r 6-4). 2:M p.m.
Baltimore (Wt!lls 9· 1OJ at Oakl:md
{Wen&amp;ert 5-R). 4:05p.m.
Cnlifor ni a (Bosk ie 11 ·6) a1 Boston

(GO&lt;don 9-6). g ,~ p.m
~nnsas

Ci1y (Appier 11 ·1 ) at Te,.as
(Oliver 10..5). 8 : 0~ p.m.

NL standings
Easltrn Division

W L &amp;:1.

Iwn

Ailani a

15
66
57
57

M o nl~al

46
54
65
66

620
~50

8'1:

.467
46)

18 ~

74 .J98

!7

Ctntnl [Mvidon
Houston
... 66 56 541
St. Louis .
. .. 65 '!17 JJJ
CINCINNATI .. .. ~9 59 _j()()
Ch~~:ago .
.59 61 .492
Pinsburch
... J2 69 4;\0

I
5

Aoncb
New York

Philadelphia .... 49

19

6
1J '1J

. ·- -

Jeffrey Hammonds on the I 5·d41y disabted
lisl. Purchased the c.:ontract of OF Elrent
Elowen from Rochester of the lmemation·
al League. Moved RHP Roger McDowell
ho m the I .IIi-day to the 60-do)' di sabled
hsl.
BOSTON RED SOX : Placed RHP
Anron Sele on the 15-day disabled list,
retrou~tivc to Aug . I~ - Recalled RHP
Kerry L..a.:y from Puwcucke1 uf che Inter·
nationalleasue.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX . Recalled
RHP Alan Levine from N11Shvil~ of the
Amen c11 n Anoctation . Optioned INF
Chris Snopek to Nashville
NE W YORK YANKEES : Pla ced
RHP John Wetteland on tBe 15-d.D.y dis·
abled lin. retroacli ve to Aug. l l Recnlled
RHP Dave Pavlas from Columbus of the
lmemati o n:~.llc ague .

OAKLAND ATHLEllCS ' Coiled up

66
.62

58
59

5J2
..'il2

2'~

San Fran.:1 s ~ o

~I

6K

.429

12',

ternationall..eugut!

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES ' Re-

ca l\~d

OF Wendell Mnget Jr. from Scran·
ton of the lmernational Le:ague. Optioned
OF Manny Martinez to S.::ranton
Fnmlitr LtiiJUe
KA LAMAZOO KODIAKS: Si~ned P
Pcltr Gallag her Released P Donov:rn
Todd

Friday 1s scores

C Mall Allen tJn lh ~ diuhlt!d li .1t Rt!·

leased RHP Je n Hrep1l"h .

""'" 1-9) ., CINCINNATI (Smoley 10.10
And Carrara 0.0). ~ :05p. m.
Su Ftan c uco (Watso n 7· 10) at
Philadelphia (Hunter 1·.1). 7.05 p.m.
~illsburJ~ (PIUris ()..J) n1 Atlanta (BI·
eletkD-2), 7.10 p.m.
New York (Clark 11-9) vs . SQI'I Die&amp;o
(Tlm Worrcfl 7·!1) at Monterrey . Muito.

8:05p.m.

Montreal (faucro 12·7) at l...os An1e·
Ia (R. Maninrz 9--61, 10:0~ p.m.

Today'scames
Pimburfh (Lieber 5·4) ai Atloan t:a

tModdwdl·

0~

I' IOp.m.
San Fnncilco (Oard ner 10-4) at

l'lliladdphiata-ht -1). );)~p . m.
Colondo (Rill IJ . I) ot CINCIN .
NA TI tl...to 5-~~ 2: U p.m.
Flori•tA. t..etoor 12-10)" So. looi•

(Soonlemyft lo..l). l;JS p.m.
Hou11011 (Dt•be• 6·1) al Chicaco
(Na"'""' tt -9~ 2,20 p.m.
New York (Wilson o4-8) n . .San
Oleao (HIIIIilloll 1()..7) 11 Moarerre y.
Meako. S:O! p.m.

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FORT WAYN E FURY : Re-signt.'d G
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OMA HA RA CERS: Stgnc:d F Erik

"'

M ;1nm

Football
National footbaiiiAIKut
AR IZONA CARDINALS . Signed
DE Sm1e0o Rn;:c Ill ;1 four·ycou cooir.ICI
C AROLINA PA NTHERS : Si~ ned
RB Tsh1manga BJakoab1.11uk.o co a seven·

.. ,

year cunlrt~~: l

Hockey
Nalional Hockey LuJut
CHICAGO Bl.ACKHAWKS' Tr.ldcd
C Jc!rem ) Roc: nick. io the Phoeni,. Coyot~•
for C Alexc1 Zhumnov, RW Craig Mills
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GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS '

Si&amp;ned 0 Don McSween. D Darcy Simon
and RW Bna11 Dobbin.

CoUeae

EASTERN COLLlGE ATHLETIC
CONFERENre Annouooocl .... oddilioo
o( VifJiniA Ted! and Cabrini CoUqe, er.
fecti •e Sqx . 1.

""

You'-re got questions.
We've got answers.•
_ ___,;___,;_ __.:::._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-1 ···

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Solo prias ......... I/25/IL Prici!IIJIIIIM JMI{iclpllilt Ratiollld llllm W ~ 1111111 nat Milllt MapaotidpMiog llOit can bt !jll(iii·Oidlotd (lojJj!a II Milbillylll the IIMo1i!ed prico.
Apaoticfatllg 1101t wifoftor a~. Wllotpouloall !GIIIIIL lillpeo... !adiolllaO dl*s W Joancliiftl II"J nat IJt paoticipMiog ot!-6 II 11lltd II sp«ial"'""' Mfl itlooo IIMotlsed.

83

on 13 hits in 5 213 innings. His
earned run average in the last fClur
games is 10.19.
After the game, Reds manager
Ray Knight and general manager Jim
Bowden met with Salkeld for a long
tim.e to discuss his failings.
"It dCiesn't matter how good your
slider is or how good a changeup you
have," Knight said. " If you don't
throw fastballs for strikes, you're
going to get into trouble. He's not
throwing his fastball for strikes.
We' ve talked and tal .. ~d and talked
about it. He has not done it."
"I don't know where I'm at right
now," Salkeld said. "I try to do this
and that to get out of it, but I keep
making the same mistakes over and
over again."
Annando Reynoso (7-8) got the
victory despite giving up 10 hits and
four runs in five innings. Reynoso
once again had contrCll problems,
walking three . He has walked 14 in
his last 21 innings , spann ing four
stans.
Castilla's 1wo-run homer, his
30th, helped the Rockies recover
from Reynoso's siClw start and provided a measure of vindication.
Castilla, who hit 32 homers last year,
felt a lot of people doubted he could
reach the 30-homer level again.
"It means a lot for me ," Castilla

said. "A lot of people thought I can't
do it again because the pitchers know
me better. I proved people wrong."
Hal Morris' single tied the game
4-.4 in the fifth, but the Rockies ended the back-and-fonh flow an inning
later.
Jeff Reed broke the tie with asacrifice fly. The Rockies loaded the
bases, and Burks wClrked reliever
Scott Service to a full count. hefore
singling up the middle for two more
runs.

"Find the hole. That 's the key, "
Burks said. "I worked it to a full
cound and just got the ball right back
up the middle."
Walker added his 15th homer in
the ninth off Hector Carrasco.
Notes: The Rockies have three
players with 30 or more homers:
Castilla, Burks (32) and Galarraga
(33) . Last year, they had four, led by
Dante Bicheu~·s 40 .. :.. The slump·
ing Bichette was out of the lineup
again . He 's 3-for-21 and hasn't
homered since July 28 .... The Reds
plan to 'send third baseman Chri s
Sabo to the minors today to open a
roster spot for Giovanni Carrara,
who will stan the second game of the
doubleheader. ... Slumping right
fielder Reggie Sanders {3-for-33)
was given the night off even though
he is 8-for-16 career with four
homers off Reynoso.

''

. ..

NAILS CASTILLA- Cincinnati catcher Joe Oliver (left) holda up
the ball after tagging out the Colorado Rockies' VInnie Castilla at
the plate In the aecond Inning of Friday night's game In Cincinnati,
where the Rockies beat the Reds 8·4. (AP)
.

(

By The Associated Press

mto that category_
John Smaltz took an early lead in
"I've been able to be consistent
the NL Cy Young award race, and and I've been able to maintain a high
now he is closing with a rush.
level and a high standard of pitching ·
. ·With six weeks remaining in the that I've hecn striving for- a MadrQular season, Smaltz became the · dux-type or Glavinc-type of consisrmljor1lcagues' first 20-game winner tency."
l;'nday night when the Atlanta Bmves
Shane Reynolds. with IS victClh;ld off a ninth-inning rally by the rics, has the next-highest win total in
PittsbUrgh Pirates fClr a 5-4 victory. the NL. Andy Pettine has 17 in the
: Smaltz (20-6) was cruising with AL.
a!our-hitter and 5-2 lead entering the
"Twenty is just a number. It's
nlltth, but needed help from Mark never bce'n a major goal, but it's a
~hlcirs, who got the final two outs
number I'm proud to have," Smaltz
for his. 30th save.
said.
: On 1a · team with three-time 20Smaltz has won 12 games or
gime winner Tom Glavine and two· more in all but one of his eight seati&amp;le 2(}-game winner Greg Maddux, sons in the majors, but never ·wCln
Stholtz said he never gave the mile- more than 15 before this year. He
sf1lne I!IUCh thought before this sea- allowed seven hilS, walked one and
s~.
struck out six Pirates, raising his
• 'Til be honest, I never considered major league-leading strikeout total
24 win~ a major goal or a jumping to 217.
peint ill my career," Smaltz said.
RookieAndruw Jones led Atlanta
·~iut l'~e always maintained that if
with a triple and his first major
t~~J ,~~k¢ ~~t, I was going to fall
league home run-as the Braves won

Otioles on one hit in the first six
Angels 6, Red Sox 3
inOings of the opener before Balti· 1i!D Salmon, Chili Davis and
more scored seven in the seventh. Garret AndersCln hit two- run homers
Mike Mohler (4-1) was the loser in at Fenway Park, scnding ·Boston to
the nightcap.
only its third loss in 13 gam,es.
, lnothergames,Milwaukeeswept
Troy O'Leary, Wil Cordero and
Chicago 9-7 and 3-2. Seattle beat
New York 6-5, Tex.as beat Kansas
City S-3, California beat Boston 6-3
a4d Minnesota beat Toronto 5•4 in
IQ innings.
Brewers 9, White Sox 7
Brewers 3, White Sox Z
: 1im VanEgmond (2·3) scattered
five hits Clver seven-plu~ innings as
Milwaukee completed its first dou·
bi)lheader sweep since beating California on Aug. 27, 1993. The Brew·~ snapped a nine-game losing
.streak in the opener.
: In the second game, Jose
valentin's 19th homer, a solo shot off
Kevin Tapani (II-7), gave Milwau·
k~ n 1-0 lead in the fifth at County
Stpdium.
:Mike Fetters got his 21st save.
With runners on first and third and
orie out in the ninth, Fetters struck
out Norbeno Manin and got Ozzic
G11illen on a groundout.
;chicago first baseman Frank
'Illomas misplayed a throw in the
OI*ncr, leading to a thrcc:"run eighth.
Dave Nilsson's third hit, off rookie
Al~n Levine (0-1), drove in the winning runs.
Angel Miranda (6-5) pitched
three scoreless innings. Ron Villone
gol out of a baiies-loaded jam in the
nil)th for his first save.

for the fifth time in six games. It was
the Pirates' six lh loss in seven
games.
Jones made his major-league
debut on Thursday in Philadelphia,
going 1-for-5 with an RBI.
Pirates starter Denny Neagle ( 126) allowed live runs and nine hits in
five innings. He hasn't won since
July 21.
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
Houston 8, Chicago 3; St. Louis 6,
FIClrida 2; San DiegCl 15, New York
I0; San Francisco 6, Philadelphia 4;
and Los Angeles 8. Montreal 2.
Padres 15, Mets 10
Fernando Valenzuela confinned
his status as a Mexican national hero
when San Diego won at Monterrey,
Mexico, in front of 23,699 in the first
regular-season game Clutside of the
United States and Canada.
The Padres provided the fireworks - literally - when they hit
four home runs. Every 'time a ball
cleared the fence atJ;stllllioMonter-

Tim Naehring homered for the Red
Sox off Dennis Springer (3 -1), who
allowed four hits in six-plus innmgs.
Troy Percival got three outs for his
30th save.
Tim Wakefield (10-11) gave up

rey, a shClrt burst of lireworks went
up.
Steve Finley hit a two-run homer
in the first, Ken Caminiti a three -run
homer and John Flaherty a soiCl shot
in the fifth. all off Robert Person (24). Greg Vaughn added a grand slam
in the si~th.
Valenzuela (I 0-7), who allowed
six hits and lhree runs in six-plus
innings, left the game with a 15-1
lead,.
Dodgers 8, Ewpos 2
Montreal catcher Tim Spehr misplayed a foul pop in the first inning,
and Eric Karras took advantage of
the reprieve two pitches later with a
three-run homer.
' .
' PedroAstacio (7-7)won his tliird
straight decisiCln, allowing two 1uns
on nine hits and no walks in seven
innings. The right-hander was aided
by f1ve double plays as he earned his
first victory at Dodger Stadium since
May 18 against Philadelphia.
Chad Cunis also had a thr~e - run

·Ken Griffey Jr. reached the 100RBI mark, scored the go-ahead run
in ·the eishth and threw out Cecil
Fielder atthe plate in the fifth at Yan·
kee Stadium.\
Doug Sttangc put Seattle ahead 64 with a two-out. two-run double in
the eighth off Jef( Nelson.
Coming off a 1·8 homestand that
was the worst in the team's Z(}.year
history, Seattle fell behind 3-0 when
Sterling Hitchcock ( 12-5) gave up
five straight singles staning the first.
, Dale Polley ( 1-1) was the loser.
Mike Jackson struck out Fielder
with a runner on first to get his fifth ·
save.
Rancen S, Royals 3
At Arlington, Texas matched a
season high with its seventh consecutive victory as Juan Gonzalez hit his
lOth homer in 14 games, and John
Burkett (2-0) won his second stan
sine~ he was acquired from Florida
on Aug. 8.
Gonzalez hit his 3Sth homer of
the season off Chris Haney (9-11 ).
Mike Henneman pitched the ninlh
for his 26th save.

10 hits in 7 2/3 innings.
Twins 5, Blue Jays 4 (10)
Dave Hollins doubled hClme the
winningrunoffPau1Quantrill(4- 12)
in the lOth at the Metrodome as Min·
nesota won for the lOth time in 12
games.

homer for the Dodgecs. and Raul
Mondesi added his I 8th homer.
Cardinals 6, Marlins 2 •
Andy Bene s struck out a season·
high 10 batters in eight innings and
doubled· in two runs to win his I Oth
straight dccisiCln as St. Louis beat
Florida at Busch Stadium. Benes
(1 3-8) also won 10 straight for San
Diego m I'1'14 -95.
Marlins starter Pat Rapp (6- 13)
allowed five runs in six innings.
falling to 0-4 career against the Cardinals .
Marlins rookie Edgar Rcn tcr'o:•

his hitting streak to 22
games with a single, breaking the
club record he shared with Gregg
Colbrunn.
Astros 8, Cubs 3
Craig Biggio had three hits and
drove in two runs and Mike Hamr·
ton won his fourth conseculi vc stan
as Houston won at Wrigley Field.
Hampton (I 0-7) allowed two runs
on nine hits in seven innings as the
Astros wCln for the ninth time in 13
games to maintain a one-game lead
in the NL Central.

e~tcnded

ONE HOT SUMMER NIGHT!
TWO GREAT BANDS!

.12 OUNCE CANS

BRAIN

noss

~ Gate Charge $5
August 20, 1996 7:15PM to Midnight
London Pool in Syracuse

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Mariners 6, Yankees 5

....._____________________________. . . . _..:. . . .,____. . . _____

~~~------------_

GlbaN-Jhidbal • Page

Braves defeat Pirates 5-4; Expos lose ·while Cards win

~;

I\OliOCed the reJignation or Tom Chestnul,
l.! kecuti vt vkt· j'lrcsidtnt.

They playtd Saturday
Flon d:t (Valdes (). I I at St Lou i• (0•·
bome 10.8). I Ol p.m.
Houston (Kik 10-6 ) :u Oucaao ITra·
chO&lt;l10.6). 4,~ ~.m
DH: Colorudo (Bailey 1· 2 and Free·

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P Cr:ug Za.ikov.
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Basketball

Hou.swn 8, Ch1cago J
A1lan1a ~ - Pnuborgh 4
Color;w;to 8. CINCINNI\TI 4
Si l.oui1 6. l-1onda 2
S:m D•eao 15. Ntw York 10
San Francisco 6. PtliladelptHa 4
l.m Ange:ks it. Montreal 2

•
•
•
•

ATLANTA BRAVES : Signed OF
luis Polonia.
MONTR EAL EXPOS : Activ.o.ted IB
David Seg ui from1he I ~ -day disabled list
Sent INF Rich S.chu io Ouawa of 1he ln-

INGS: S i~ned J8-DH Alex Ortiz.

Wnlern Di•islon
65 57 . 5~J

Los Angeles ..
San Dic:llo ..
Colorado

The Powerfui .IBM Aptiva® Multimedia System

NalionaiLtape

Prairie LeaJtlue
DAK OTA RA1TLERS : Announ~:ed
the retirement or SS Scou Swift . Waived
RHP Trt!) Drapcr l·or the purpose of gi" ·
mg h1m h1 s t~nwllllit1onal release. PlilCed
RHP John Arnold un the .&gt;~ u srendt!d hst.
S1[!.ned RHP Rnn RipfXl.
SAS KATOON S MOKIN" GUNS :
W;uvcd RHI' Jim Ptobrchc:• i fo1 the pur·
po.~c ol givlllf hun l1i s UOCl&gt;ndiiion:rl re·
leas..: S1~ncJ RHI' Josh lomm.:r.
RRANDON GREY OWLS: An ·
nounccd ihc r cll h: n ~ nt of 18 Marc AlbarmJo and C Jdl Tannehill . W:rived C
Kr vin Ward for the ('Urpose of g1ving him
his uncondiiU'UJal release

games that coul~ go ei!her way,"
manager Don Baylor said.
Adding to the problem: Thl: Reds
had won their last three games aild
were playing their best base~all of
the year.
.
They got another good off9nsive
game Friday, once again led by outfielder Thomas Howard. He had four
singles, giving him 10 hits in his last
three games, and stretched his streak
to seven consecutive hits at Cine
point.
The streak ended with a snap in
the ninth inning, He broke his
favorite bat on a foul ball, then
grounded out against Bruce Ruffin.
"I don't know how many hits I
got out of that bat," said Howard,
who carne up three hits shy of the
NL record for consecutive hits. "I
think it's like 22. I just felt comfonable with it. As soon as it was
cracked, I figured I would take it
home.
" I don 't know if I'll ever get on
lhat kind of streak with another bat
again .. "
Eric Davis added three hits and
extended his hitting streak ' to 10
games, the longest by a Reds player
this season. But Cincinnati couldn't
overcome another poor start by
Roger Salkeld.
Salkeld (6-4) gave up seven runs

~-L\_ games ... &lt;_co_n_tin_u_ed_f_ro_m_B_-2_&gt;- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

P Paul Flelcher from Edmonton of the Pacilk Coast L..cague. Optioned P Jay Witn·
SICk lo Edmon10n . Moved INf Brent
Oates from the 15-day tO the 60 ·day diS·
abled list.
SEATTLE MARINERS : Designmed
INF Luis Sojo for asstgnmcm.

,...u

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pol~t Pleasant, WV

In other NL games,

Montreal (M Leiter 6-10) at Los An·
geles {Cnndiotti 7-8), 8:05p .m.

Iwn

•

1996

Rockies tally 8-4 victory over Reds

Indians down Tigers 3-1 in 12 innings
By KEN BERGER

~nday,Auguat18,

I

·~

..

Includes tank installation and
200 Gallons of Gas!!

(

~---....,;_~-~-----------------.--.---....-o..-----~--- - --·-

.-

�"

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-

-

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-· ...

•
Page 84 • Jhacbav at-.~

'unday,Aug~t18,

. Sunday,August18, 1998

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

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

1996

-

Success of MLS
will affect soccer·
at local level

In the San Francisco 49ers' camp,
. .. v

'--:)

Mutual need brings Walsh to new role
By DENNIS GEORGATOS

Walsh felt he needed the 49en and
ROCKLIN,
Calif.
(AP)
From
that the 49ers believed they needed
By SAM WILSON
Day
I,
Bill
Walsh
hasn
'tliked
his
job
him.
Times-Sentinel Correepondent
title.
Somehow,
administrative
assisSo Walsh is back with the team in
Over a week ago, David Causey, Brian McBride
tant to the coaching staff just does- an unlikely--role, working und'er
and Adrian Paz scored second half goals to help the
n't measure up to his image -or his George Seifert, who has taken San
Columbus Crew overcome a 2-0 deficit and defeat f.
. ,, +'-•.
resume.
Francisco to two Super Bowl tides of
the Washington, D.C., United by a score of 3-2. It
Then again, just what in the his own in the seven years sincle sucwas only ~e Cn:w's fifth win, but it took place in front of 18,587 fans .
world is a Hall of Fame coach and ceeding Walsh.
Why bnng thts up? Wben I Wrote about professional soccer a few months
three-time Super Bowl winner doing
Walsh, 64, considers his job title
ago, I dismissed the Crew's taking a job as an assistant with the lowly - he would prefer to be called
. large attendance figures by San Francisco 49ers, the club be built a consultant - but he also regards it
· commenting, "I wonder how into the team of the 1980s?
as an annoyance he can put up with
many fans will be in attendance
To some degree, it's merely that in return for the satisfaction derived
,
. by game 12." Their victory over
:
... _ . , .. ·
,.... ·. the United was their 12th home
'
••
, 0 , . &lt;. . . ·... ,. ,·. ; game. To my surprise, the Crew
.
· ·' · :;, .'' ''• ·· ' • · ' • ,: has averaged over 16,000 fans a
..
.) . ?
/ ·.
contest.
· •· · ·· .·,•
. ·::
,
' &gt; :• • Support for the MLS has
··. · . .. , , .. "'' ·• . · .. "·• "•··.· ·"· ·• exceeded even the league's .
wildest expectations. It looks as if ML~ marketing strategies paid off with
the most successful inaugural year of any new professional sport in history.
It seems as if the MLS is here to stay.
This success will eventually affect soccer on a local leveL Americans
from grade schools to colleges will be forced to improve their caliber of
Cross country
play. Each MLS team can only have four foreigners on their roster. The
Dill:
Opponept
remaining spots must be filled by Americans. Consequently, increased
Aug.
H
...........
..................
.........
...
..
home
for
four-team
meet-10
a.m.
opportunity corresponds with an increase in the demand for soccer players.
Sept
7
..............................
...........................
at
Cabell
Midland-II
a.m.
Such demand, however, initially means a further increase of foreigners to
Sept IO ................................ Gallipolis Invitational at URG-4:30 p.m.
further assist us in this growing proces. Look no further than the University
Sept. 14 ............. ......................................... ........ .. ................. open date
Of Rio Grande, which recruits in the Caribbean and Europe. Scott Morrissey,
Sept 19 ...................................... ...... at Jackson Invitational-4:30p.m.
tiRO's soccer coach, fights a never-ending battle to increase the talent and
Sept 28 ....................................... at Lancaster lnvitational-12:30 p.m.
recognition of this program.
Oct
5 .................................. ............. at Rio Grande Invitational- I p.m.
Last year was the most successful in the program's history. A first round
Oct. 12 ............. SEOAL meet at Raccoon Creek CouQty Park-10 a.m.
~layoff loss ,to Walsh tainted an otherwise magnificent season. Morrissey
Oct 19 ........ .................................. .. .......... district meet at Rio Grande
has placed URG on the road to soccer respectability. He astutely understands
the need for greater recognition by playing a more difficult schedule. Last
Football
spring he played Ohio State. This year, he·has added both Division IIA and
Dill:
Q
Opponent
UIA teams to his schedule.
Aug.
30.................
..
.....
......................
.......
.....
.
.Lucasville
Valley
Morrissey's success, however, means he must contin.ue to rely on foreign
Sept
6
....
,.,
........
..............
.............
.......................................
at
Fairland
athletes in onder to compete at this leveL This is not necessarily a bad thing.
Sept 13 ........................... .. ....... .................... ..... Meigs (homecoming)
I enjoy watching Sian Chamberlain, 1-iadyn Jones, Ryan Wall and Rene
Sept. 20 .... .................·....... ... .......... ........................ .......... ....... at Athens
Gonzalas play. Unfortunately, with the exception of Josh Mauer, our local
Sept 27 .......... ............................ .............. :................. at Point Pleasant
schools have not produced the talent to compete on the college level.
Oct
4 ............................................... ........ ................... ....... ......Jackson
Consequently, as coaches like Morrissey fight to get greater support for
Oct. II ..... ............................ ...... .................... .............. ........ at Marietta
soccer, they,must continue to rely on foreigners to field their teams. 1be end
Oct. 18 .............................................................. .......... at Warren Local
result, however, will be an increase in the talent pool bere in America.
Qct. 25 ....................... ....... ... ..............., ... .............. ... .............. .....Logan
This process is now in full force with basketball. Just look at how far
Nov_ I ............ ,, .......... .. ..... .... .... ............................. ... Gallia Academy
European basketball has come in the last 30 years. Imagine what American
(All games begin at 7:30p.m.)
soccer will be like by the second decade of the next century? Who knows,
you may .even see the U.S. win a World Cup.
Golf
The Jesson to be learned is that soccer's success will be felt on a local
llak
OIIJIOIICAt
level with this increased popularity and competition. It is time to accept realAug. 15 ..........................................................SE Invitational at Logan
ity. A first step in this process will be achieved when Gallia County finally
Aug . 19 ................................................................................. at Athens
adds soccer to its spons curriculum. My advice would be to do it soon.
Aug . 21 ........ , ............. , ... ,.. .................................................... at Logan
Coach Morrissey needs tbe players.
Aug . 28 ... , .. ........... , ....... , ........... , .. , , ................ ... ............. at Jackson
Slim Wllaon, Ph.D. 11 an uaocllle profluor of hlatory 11 the Untvertlty of
Sept. 4 ........................................................................at Point Pleasant
Rio Grande. An IVIcllan of all 1porta - and 1 IWir manlacalfolloww of blakelSept. 9 .............................. , ................................ Gallipolis at Cliffside
11111 - hila 1 nlllve of Gary, Ind., and 1 graduate of Indiana Unlvertlty - which
Sept. II ............. ........................ .................... home vs. rest of SEOAL
lhoulcltell reader~ 10methlng about where hie hlld (and Hooeter heertl Ia.
Sept. 16 .............................. .................................. .......... ....... .... Athens
Sept. 18 ........ .. ............................... ... ..................... .-......... Warren Local
In NFL exhibition action,
Sept. 23 ...... ............. :... ............................ ,,,,,,,,,,, ...................Marietta
Sept. 28 ... .......... ................. at Riverside Golf Course (Mason. W.Va.)
(All home matches will be held at Cliffside Golf Course in
Gallipolis)

r~~~l\

··~: '~

DAVIS TAKES PITCHOUT - Gallipolis' Seth
Davis (46) takes a pltchout from QB Chris Lewis
(9) with Josh Bodimer (75) leading Interference
during Saturday's pre-season controlled scrim-

mage on Memorial Field. GAHS scored three
touchdowns and two extra points while Fairland scored two TDs and one extra point.

FAIRLAND SCORES • Fairland sophomore
fullback Brandon Keeney (151n front of official)
scored on a one-yard plunge on this play dur-

River Valley's
1995 varsity
fall schedules

lng Saturday morning's pre-season controlled .. :
scrimmage with visiting Fairland on Memorial
Field. GAHS had three TDa Jo Fairland's two.

Strong, weak points found in GAHS-Fairland scrimmage
By ODIE O'DONNELL,
T-5 Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - Despite the lack
of field bleachers at Memorial Field,
a crowd of die-hard football fan s
from Fairland and Gallia Academy
stood or sat in lawn chairs for Saturday's first pre-season scrimmage,
and watched the Blue Devils outscore
the Dragons 3-2.
In the controlled scrimmage, team
coaches are permitted on the field for
all plays, no punting is permitted, and

no kick , offs all owed . However,
everything else is as close to actual
game conditions as possible, including officials. Each team is given the
ball on it's own 30 yard line and must
score within 20 plays, or give it to the
o'pposing team on it's 30.
·
On Fairland's first series of plays,
they gained about 18 yards on five
running plays and one pass , until
senior Greg Lloyd intercepted apass,
to give GAHS possession.
The Blue Devils marched 70 yards

10 running plays and two completed
passes, capped by Junior Josl! Bodimer's one yard smash into the end
zone. Senior TC. Beaver kicked the

yards on the next series, using 16
plays until Senior Quarterback Isaac
Saunders connected with Senior
Aaron Stout on a 14 yard pass for a
e~tra .point .
TD. Beaver booted the point after.
Fairland tied the score about 15
The Dragons passed the ball well
minutes later, traveling 70 yards to on their next series, but scored on
send Sophomore Brandon Keeney in ground when Jay Shepherd blasted
from tbe 'one yard line. Sophomore into the end zone from the three. The
Jason Kalbfleish tied the score with extra point kick was wide left.
his placement kick.
Both head coaches, Brent SaunThe Blue Devils mixed hard run- ders and Jack Harris, then turned it
ning and good passing to cover the 70 over to their substitutes, and the Blue

Devils' Paul Siders, a junior, rammed
into the end zone on a fourth and one
on the last play of the scrimmage. No
extra point was attempted.
GAHS Coach . Saunders commented after the scrimmage, " it was
a good effort by our team, but we did
look very bad at times. We are going
to work with the offensive line and
correct some mi stakes before next
week."
Dragon Coach Harris expressed
his pleasure about his team by stat-

ing, " I am just tickled to death wid),
our team. All three of our quanerbacks did a good job, our backs ran
hard, and with tbe exception of a few
breakdowns, our line looked pretty,
good". He continued, " we are using
three sophomores as starters, and our
team is pretty young, so I am happy
with their perfonnance today."
The Vinton County Vikings will
. '
be at Memorial Field ne~t Saturday
for a 10 a.m. controlled scrimmagb,
marking the final pre-season tune 11)1
for both teams.
'

Bengals mu_
d dle Redskins' QB dilemma and tally 28-7 win
By JOSEPH WHITE
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Cincinnati Bengals proved it's not
the quarterback who wins the

I
. ,'" !

,

I

I

lI

game, it's the men in front of him.
Both the Bengals and tbe Washington Redskins went into Friday
night's game with injury-riddled

OFFER HOLE-IN-PRIZES- Several Gallipolis
merchanta are offering prizes for holes-In-one at
the Boy Scout goH tournament scheduled for
Au• 29 at Cliffside GoH Course. In the upper
phQto from left to right are Gane Johnson of
Gette Johnson Chevrolet. Mike Northup of Norrl.,..orthup Dodge, Steve McGhee of Turnpike
FO!fl, Bratt Eplin~ _of SmJt!l_Buick-Pontiac and

offensive lines, but the Cincinnati
subs were up to the challenge in a
28-7 victory that spoiled the final act
in the Redskins' quarterback centro-

Cliffside pro Mike Haynes. Tha automobile dealera formed a coalition in which goHers who get
a hole-in-one can win the car of their choice from
one of them. In the lower photo from taft to right
are tournament chairmen Randy Finney, Skip
Meadows of Empire Furniture and Cliffside pro
Mike Haynes. Empire Furniture Ia offering a
$10,000 shopping spree for a hole-in-one.

•

versy.
Jeff Blake threw three touchdown .
passes and the Bengals forced five
turnovers, making life miserable for
both Heath Shuler and Gus Frerotte.
Coach Norv Turner will choose one
or the other as his No. I quarterback
either today or Monday, but their
combined numbers of 11-for-29 for
113 yards, one interception, one
fumble and no touchdowns won' t
make his task" easy.,
"It's going to be crazy," Frerotte
said of the wait fqrTumer's decision.
"It's not your life in somebody's
hands, but it's your job in somebody's hands. It think it's going to be
a hard decision. I wouldn't want to
be in his shoes, that's for sure."
Shuler, who was 7-of-13 for 65
yards, was intercepted once and
should have been picked off a second time before leaving to chants of
"We want Gus" midway through the
second quarter.
Frerotte, 4-for-16 for 48 yards,
was hurt by a couple of dropped
' passes and was under heavy pressure
after third-string guard Ron Lewis
replaced injured Joe Patton for a few
series at right tackle. The Redskins
( 1-2) were already missing offensive
linemen John Gesek, Brian Thure
and Bob Dahl.
·
But Frerotte also had his share of
chances and failed to make the big
play that would have given him a
clear lead in the duel. For the first
time, he heard the boos usually
reserved for Shuler.
"When you're not doing things
well, it's hard to throw the ball
down field," Frerotte said. "Nothing ·
was working. You get somebody
wide open, and you get hit. .,
Tonight it felt like we were just getting beat up."
· Turner, who had played down hi§
team 's injury woes during training
camp, finally began to show frustration over his inability to field a regular lineup.
"Sonny Jurgensen couldn't have
played well in his prime with that
group," Turner said of the Fonner
Redskins great. "Neither one of .
them had time to throw. It was disappointing to me that we couldn't
have found a better situation to
evaluate them.
"They can play better, but we can
play a lot better around them."
The Bengals (2-1) had no sym pathy for the Redskins' plight. They
made do without Kevin Sargent who's out for tbe year - Darrick .
Britz and Scott •Brumfield on the
front line.

JAYMAR IIC.
SLAt. 7, Cheshire, Ohio

.IQMPMENT RENTAL
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35. 50 TON LOW·BOY SERVICE
WILL DO .qOMMERCIAL
DIRT WORK
61C.992•6637 or

I.

,j,.

I

II
II

61C.t46•9716

See puzzle on page 03.

Jerry Hill

•

·,

But their replacements - Rich batted the ball high with right hand,'
Braham, seventh-round draft pick then chased it down for a sliding.
Rod Jones and third-round choice catch at the back of the end zone. .
Ken Blackman - came through,
"I'd like to have had a couple
especially on a 13-play, 85-yard dri- plays back~" Shul~ r ,,.: ~"J!le ·
e~change w1th Terry&gt;\\
·JiJ(e
ve in the third quarter. The drive culto have held on to it and not tried Jo-·
minated with Blake's 16-yard pass to
get it to him."
Carl Pickens.
"They settled down and got after
it," coach Dave Shula said of his
offensive line. "We were able to nun
(Continued from B- ll
..
the ball effectively, and we got some
things might have been different if.
third-down runs."
Blake, I0-for-14 for 162 yands he had been two inches to tltt; left or·
and one interception, found Pickens three to the right when bloc~ing toofor 'two touchdowns and Darnay Rams' David Rocker. While crowdsScott for another. Corey Sawyer stili gasp when the videotape is,
returned a fumble 51 yards for the replayed at his speeches, he doesn't:
final touchdown, and also intercept- wince.
This time of year brings the onJyl
ed third-stringer Trent Green late in
sadness he allows. A former coileg_~
the game.
all-American who started ' playin
"Mostly, I didn' t get touched all
football at age seven, he never wantnight," Blake said in tribute to the
ed to do anything else. Seeing his .
patched-up line.
football buddies suit·UP. for' thc pre) '
Shuler's night included a couple
season hurts.
' .
of nice third-down conversions and
"There's a difference between ·
four completions to tight end Jamie
Asher. One of the thind-down con- being sad and being bitter-l'm n,nl •
bitter," he said. "I knew the conseJ·'
versions, a 17-yard strike to Bill
quences
of playing football ."
Brooks, kept the drive alive that TerUtley's
competitive force didn'!
ry Allen capped with a 50-yard
disappear
when
he was carried off
touchdown run to tie the score 7-7
tbe
field
.
''
late in the first quarter.
But the play that will make Shuler
shudder most when he sees it in the
film room was a thind-and-one at the
Redskins 28 on his second series.
Shuler tripped over center Cory
Raymer's foot as he took the snap,
then tried to fling the ball to Allen .
while falling down .
Allen wasn' t looking as the ball
hit his leg, and· Dan Wilkinson
recovered to set up Cincinnati's
opening score. It came on a juggling
five-yand reception by Pickens, who

11

of

Utley~ ..

&lt;

,.

from rejoining the 49ers.
"It's exhilarating, really, from the
standpoint of watching the athletes
and tbe coachmg that's going on,
watching the team being put together and then adding whatever counsel

'

..'

·~

..

By DAVE GOLDBERG
GREEN BAY, Wi s. (AP)
These should be the glory days for
Brett Favre. Instead, he is surrounded by questions.
Unfair? Maybe. After all , how
m~ny quarterbacks have to make
comebacks coming off an MYP season that ended one game short of the
Super Bowl?
The questions don't concern
Favre's arm strength, physical health
or age. At 26, he should do nothing
but get better.
But 46, not 26, is the key number
in Favre's life as he begins the 1996
season; 46 days is how long he spent
attbe Menninger Clinic for an addiction to the painkiller Vicodin, the
apparent cause of a seizure after
ankle surgery last February. Favre
says the seizure wasn't life-threatening, but it showed he bad a serious
problem.

Dill:

So after considerable urging from
Packers coach Mike Holmgren and
team doctors, he beaded for rehab on
May 14.
Once inside, Favre's troubles didn't go away. During his stay, a close
friend was killed in an auto accident
in a car driven by Favre's older
brother.
"It's been a wild offseason ,"
Favre said. "It's taken a toll, but
these are the things that make you
grow. "
Now Favre is back , 14 pounds
lighter and, he says, clean. Known as
an enthusiastic parlier in the past,
Favre told his buddies Mark Chmura and Frank Winters they'd have to
start drinking cokes with him instead
of beer.
Favre also married Deanna Tynes,
his girlfriend of 10 years and mother of his 7-year-old daughter, BritISee FAVRE on 8-6)

PMIIU,.RI,.ION
DOD DIP DAY
*DIP OWN DOG
* BRING ATOWEL
* DOG ON LEASH

SATURDAY, AUGUST 24
TIME: 11 AM·2 PM
• No Puppies Less Than 4 Months

" No Pregnant or Nursing Dogs
• No Dog with Open Wounds
or Skin Problems

'

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
thriller stood as the Lions (2-1) made
HOUSTON (AP)- The Detroit a big fourth-quarter mlly for the secLions got that fourth quarter feeling ond straight week ..The Lions scored
acain and the Houston Oilers got 17 fourth-quarter points to rally past
burned.
• - Washington 34-2 5 last week.
Glyn Milburn's 80-yard punt
"On the kickoff there JNas just a
return and Antonio London's 33- gaping hole," Milburn said. "The
yard fumble return highlighted a 28- guys did a great job of blocking and
point fourth quarter, rallying the I knew I had a chance to break one
Qetroit Lions to a 34-23 exhibition later."
*torj over the Houston Oilers FriMilburn dropped Reggie Roby's
~y night
punt, then scooped it up and ran up
; "I dOii't w·ant to take all the cred- the center of the field, cut to his left
i(" Mil~um said. "There was a muff and benefited from a block by Cory
~ the 'play and it kind of disrupted
Schlesinger on the way to the touch~ir coverage and there were some down with 7: 18 left in the ·game.
g)-eat blocks. I want to see the film
Despite the outcome, Detroit
t~ see those blocks.
coach Wayne Fonles wasn'tpleased.
• " All I did was pick up the ball
"As far as our team, we couldn't
a~d 'in no time I saw the kicker. I like beat anybody tonight. not as bad as.
t6ose odds."
we played," Fontes said. "We're not
f Milburn .had a 96-yard kickoff as far a'long as we were last year;
rttum nullified by a penalty in the particularly our linebackers are
second quarter but his fourth quarter struggling. We 've got a ways to go."

I can add or offer to tbe coaches and
occasionally the players," Walsh
said. "It 's good to be part of a great
organization again, not that I' ve
ever really been separated From it.
(See WALSH on 8-6)

Favre seeks return
to old days minus
painkiller addiction

Lions top Oilers 34-23

.

Old You Know•..

Volleyb~ll

•The acceleration rate In a flea jump is 140 G's or almost
50 times the acceleration of a space shuttle after liftoff.
•A flea can jump up 50 times its body length - 1,000 feet
fora man.
•A flea lives off his host 80 percent of the time. That should
convince pet owners that they want to get rid of them.
Do your pets a favor for this summer and buy them PMI
Pet flea collars, sprays, dips and powders.

Opponept
Aug ..26 .................... tri-match at Meigs H.S .-6:30 p.m. (varsity only)
Aug. 27........................ ........................ ...... ........................ ........ Athens
Aug . 29 ........................... ... ....... .......... , ............ Fairland (varsity only)
Sept. 3 ......... ........................... ...... , ... .. ,, ,.......... ......................at Logan
Sept. 5 ... ....... ................... .......... .............,............. ........... ...... Gallipolis
Sept. I 0 ....... .............................. .............................. .... at Warren Local
Sept II ........................ ............. ................. ...............................Eastern
Sept 12 ... .............................. ...... .......... .. ........... .............. at Marietta
Sept 17 .................. , ,................... ....... , ., ., ............. ............ at Jackson
Sept. 19 .... .......... ., ........................ ...... ,..,....... .,............... ,,.,... at Athens
Sept. 26.... ........................ ............. .,............... .......... .................. .Logan
Oct. I ... ................. ....................... .....................................at Gallipolis
Oct. 3 ........................... ....... ........................... ............. at Warren Local
Oct. 7 ................. ........ tri-match vs. Fairland &amp; Ohio Valley Christian
Oct 8.... .......... ............ .. ....................... .............. ....... ...............Marietta
Oct I0 ......... ,........ ., .............. .,....,....... ,..... .,...... ,........ .............Jackson
Oct 15 .............................................. .................................. ....Southern
Oct 17 ................................ .................................................. at Ea~tern
(Unless otherwise noted, all reserve-varsity doubleheaders
begin with 5:30p.m. reserve matches.)

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Jhacbav at-...Jt ..dbwl• Page 85

I

I
'

�PageB6• ........ 11r

Area sports briefs
Southwestern junior high
football practice continues

GALLWOLIS -The Gallia Academy High School 200 Booster
Club announced that members who haven't paid their annual dues need
'to do so before the football Blue Devils' season opener with Meigs
on Friday, Aug. 30.
For questions and/or more infonnation, call Bev Dunkle at 4460076 or Tom Meadows at 446-7570.

MHS booster meeting ·Tuesday
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meig&lt; Athletic boosters will meet on
Tuesday at 7 p.l)l. at Meigs High School.

WELLSTON - The Wellston Ohillco Festival will hold a fouron: four basketball tournament for all ages on Wellston's downtown
streets on Saturday, Sept. 7.
The tournament, sponsored by Domino's of Wellston, will allow
five players per team. Prizes will be awarded in the various divisions .
There will also be three-point and free throw shooting contests.
For more information, call John Derrow at 384-5069 after 5 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Departmenl
and the Southeastern Aquatic Stingrays (SEAS) will hold an open
swim meet on Saturday at the Gallipolis Municipal Pool.
Registration will begin at 8 a.m. Wannups will stan at 8:30a.m.
The races will begin at 9 a.m.
For more information, call the P&amp;R office at 441-6022.

OOMPD to sponsor
adult volleyball leagues

Boy Scout golf tournament
slated for August 29

GALLIPOLIS - The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District will sponsor
men's and women's volleyball leagues this fall.
The men's league will play its games on Tuesday evenings. These
games will feature four-on-four play with a maximum of seven players per roster.
The women's league will play its games on Thursdsay evenings..
These games will feature six-on-six play with a maximum of 10 players per roster.
In both cases, the games will be played at the Gallipolis Devel·
opmental Center's gymnasium.
For information on fees or other information, call446-4612, extension 256.

GALLIPOLIS - The Boy Scouts of America's Tri·State Area
Council will hold a golf tournament on Thursday, Aug. 29 at 12:30
p.m. at Cliffside Golf Course.
Proceds from the tournament will go to troops in the Mason-Gallia-Meigs County area.
There will be prizes for the top five teams in additional to other
prizes connected with hole-in-ones on various holes.
For more information, call 446-GOLF or Randy Finney at 441 -6203
(work) or 441-6203 (home).

1

I •

"'(I/!;IJ..•&lt;_C_on-ti_nu_e_d_rr_om__B_-5_)~--~----------------------------------------------------But now it's more official."
Over the last few months, Walsh
has worked extensiyely with Steve
YoUilg and the other quarterbacks pn
their techniques. During training
·'

camp,'Walsh was out on the field daily, observing practice, scribbling his
thoughts in a tiny notebook, then
sharing them with 1he coaches.
Walsh says he won't be calling

the shots or the plays like he did in
his 10 years as 49ers coach, but al
this stage in his life he wouldn't want
it any olher way.
"I don't have any agenda of look·

ing for more responsibility and pow·
er," Walsh said. "I don't have that. I
don't want that. So it's up to me to
do the best I can to help."
(WALSH ends on 8-7)

Favre ... &lt;Continued from B-5&gt;

,.

tany Nicole.
"Has he changed'/ I'd say he 's
changed a little," Holmgren said.
"~e gets along better with me."
Named the league's MVP last
season, Favre is coming off a season
in which he completed 63 percent of
his passes for 4,413 yards with 38
touchdowns 'and just 13 intercep-.
tions.
" Brett has always been Brett,"
said Reggie White, Green Bay's
defensive leader. "I didn't know he
had .the problem, but it didn ' t sur·

prise me, either. He's someone who's
always been 'up' - on and off the

field."

Favre and the NFL's smallest city
(FAVRE ends on 8-7)

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the week of Aug. 18·25
at the University of Rio Grande's
Lyne Center.
Fitneos center, gymnasium .
and racquetball courts
Today- 1-6 p.m.
Monday- 7 a.m.·9 p.m.
The&gt;day- 7 a.m.·9 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday - 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 2S - 1-6 p.m.
Pool
Today- 1-3 p.m.
Monday - 6-9 p.m.
The&gt;day - 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday - 6-9 p.m.
Friday- 6·9 p.m.
Saturday- 1·3 p.m.
S'!nday, Aug. 2S - 1-3 p.m.

Free-weight room
Through Sunday, Aug. 2S closed
r

I.

Notes: A Lyne Center membership is required to usc the facilities.
Faculty. slaff, students and adminislrators arc admitted with their 1D
cards.
• Racquciball court reservations
can now he made one day in advance
by calling 245-7495 locally or tollfree at I-M00-2M2-720 I, extension
7495.
• All guests arc tu be accompanied
by a Lyne Cenler membership holder and a $2 fcc.

Sports deadlines
The GallipoliJ Daily Tribune.
The Daily Sentinel and the Sunday
Times-Sentinel value the contribu-

I

I

j

·I

lions their readers make 10 the sports
sections of these papers, and they
will continue to be published.
However, cenain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball -related
photos and related anicles, from T·
ball to the majors. as well as other
spring and summer sports, is the day
of the last game of lhe World Series.
The deooline for photos and related anicles for football and other fall
spons is the Saturday hefore the
Super Bowl.
The deadline for pholos and relat·
ed articles for basketball (summer
basketball and related camps fall
under the summer spons deadljne)
and- winter sports is the last day
of the NBA finals.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
need to acquire tlleir photos from the
photography studio/developer of
choice and to give the staffs the
chance to publish these items in the
appropriate 1e11011 (or those sports.

8

1996 NISSAN 412
Driver side air bag, 5-speed, full
bench seat, 1400 lb. payload, all
- season radials, 3 year 36,000
bumper to bumper, plus 5 year
60,000 power train warranty.
MSRP ........... 11,668.95
Discount... ...... 2,673.95

~

1996 NISSAN8 412
IE KING CAB8
With optional Value Truck Page Sport
wheels, tilt, cruise, AMJFM cassette, rear
fQid-down seats, power steering, rear
sliding glass window, sport stripes,
delay wipers and a whole lot more!

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low miles.
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1990 HONDA
CIVIC
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AMIFM
cassette;:;..
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1993 CHEVY
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1996 DODGE
NEON
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factory wa!~~~-

:• ROCK SPRINGS -There were
I~ rac~s highlighting the final aftern~n of River Valley Colt Circuit

sl;!lctioped harness racing on the historic half-mile Rock Springs oval at
the 1996 Meigs County Fair Friday.
·~ In the two-year old colts and geldings~. Drachens Mist, owned by
Diana Malone of Waterford. and
Rachel's Reuben. owned by Wilma
S(\ler of Waterford, swept their heat
rates with victories.
: In the two-year old colts and
g~dings trots, All Bay and Chester
E; both driven by Ty Van Rhooden
oi'Mt. Vernon, took victories in both
hfiat rac.cs.
· : In ihe three-year old fillies trot,

Credit
Applications
Are Now Being
Accepted for
Proceulng. -

1990 FORD ESCORT 16114, AM/FM, air,
cloth Interior ....,..........................................................$1995
1992 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM 16109, A/T, A/C, AIIJFM
caas., cloth Interior, rear delroller............................$5495
1993 CHEV. BERffiA 16107, Dark pewter, A/T, AJC,
AM/FM, air bag, cloth Inferior .................................... $7965
1992 MERCURYTOPAZI6106, White, A/T,A/C, AM.fM
cess., rear defroster, clolh lnterlor............................$8915
1992 PONTIAC SUNBlRD LE 16104, Whltt,A/T, AJC,
AM/FM, rear defroster, cloth Interior .........................$7970
1991 BUICK CENTURY 16100, A/T, A/C&lt; tilt, CNIII,
power windows, cloth lnttrlor ................................... $5495
1991 FORD ESCORT LX 2 DR. I6087, Red, A/C, A/T,
cruln, 41,000 miles, cloth lnttrlor ............................ $5495
1991 ISUZU STYLUS XS 16028, Blue, aport wheels,
AM/FM ca11., air, rear dalroller, cloth lnterlor.........$5795
1992 GEO METRO CONVERTIBLE 16046, LSI Pkg., AJC,
A/T, dual mlrrora, sporlstrlpes..................................$7600
1994 FORD ASPIRE 16092, Gresn, 2 Dr., dual
air
bag, cloth Interior·.....,................... .,............ .,..... .,............... :t~~DOU
1993 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE 16076, 2 Dr., AII/FM,
30,000 miles, cloth lnterlor.............................................S:7586
1994 FORD ESCORT WAGON
ceas., air bag, rear del., luggage rack ..........,......,........$~111ti
1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 15975, Red, 2 Dr., A/C,
AM/FM, 27,000 miles, bal. of fact. wan·anty·: ......,, ...... ~~&amp;m
1994.CHEV. CORSICA 16110, Dark pewter, AIT, A/C, tilt,
cruise, P.locks, air bag, AMIFM ca11s .......................~~w:~
1993 EAGLE TALON ES 16103, White, A/T, '"" .,.,••
casa., tilt, CNise, PW, PL, aport wheels, au~lroGU'I0,495
1994 BUICK SKYLARK 16083, Red, AJC, A/T, AM/FM
cass., V-6 eng., tilt, CNIH, PW, PL ..............................$1gi,H:i
1994 NISSAN SENTRA 16053, White, 2 Dr., AJC, AIIJFM caas., tilt, rear defrostar, clolh lnlerior ...................... $SZ14:
1994 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE Him, Green, V-6
AJC, A/T, AM/FII cass., tilt, CNiae, PL, PW ............ $;10,9¥7
1994 GEO PRIZII16055, 29,000 miles, red, AJC,
olfactory warranty
.
.
1993 CHEV. LUMINA EURO 16105, Red, 4 Dr.,
AMIFII caas., tilt, CNiae, sport
1993 DODGE INTREPID 16101, Pewter, AJC, A/T,
case., tilt, cNise, power windows &amp;IOCita ................ 1511111r5
1994 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 16094; White, A/C, A/T,
AMIFII caq., tilt, CNise, PW, PL ............................$10,472
1994 DODGE INTREPID 15989, Dove gray, V-6 eng., A/T,
·A/C, AM/FM
II~. cruise, PW, PL...................$12,300
1995 DODGE
18056, Blue, A/T, A/C, 28,000
balance of
1993 PONTIAC
SE . 1 , Green, A/C,
AM!FM casa., Ill~ CNiae, PW, PL, Power 11111, aport
whnla, cloth lnterlor...............................................$12,385
1995 CHEV. LUMINA 1&amp;0911, Blue, 4 Dr., A/C, A/T, AMIFM
cass., tilt, cNise, cloth lnterlor ................................:Jl
I 995 CH~ BERETTA 16089, White, cruise, A/T, A/C,
AM/FM CISS., cloth lnterlor ........................................ ll
1990 UNCOLN CONTINENTAL 16113,
"Loaded"
,
,
.
1994 CHRYSLER LEBARON CONV. GTC 16112, A/T, A/C,
AM/FII CD, PW, PL, P. sell, 1111, ~lae, ltatllti
18,000 miles, balance of factory wa~ranl],............... $13,840
1995 FORD ESCORT LX 16118, Green,
bal. of factory warr., rear del., clolh lnt,alr IIIIJ: ...... P!MJU
1994 FORD TAURUS GL 16108,
AJT, AJC,
CIIS., tilt, CNISt, PW, PL, cloth lntelilor .......... .'....... $1

~Trestman went so far as offering

to )'esign, but Policy convinced him
. to.,tay, assuring him he would retain
game-plan and play-calling authority.~Ait/lough Walsh will sit in the
press box with Trestman during
gatftcs, it will be in an advisory
c~ityonly.

,"Initially it was a very difficult

'

F,l(lvre •..

1991 NISSAN
4X4
5-spee&lt;l, air, cassette,
1-owner, locallrade.
sport whee~l·-'-~

1992 MAZDA
4X4

1993MAZDA
MX-3
5-epee&lt;l, V·6, air, all-power,

~2600.

!;-speed,
AMIFM C8118tte,
badRner, 1•:=~"-

.......

\

was ruled a dead heat.
In the other three-year old fillies
paces, Rockin Pearl claimed heat
victories in tlle first and fiflh races.
Finishing second 4n both races was
Pant-0-Mine, driven by Charlie
Schoonover.
Shannon's Meanlady made a trip
to the winners circle after claiming
the seventh fli,Ce. Finishing second
was Kindest Alice.
In the final race of the afternoon,
a one-mile free-for-all-pace, local
driver Brooks Sayre led Noble
Choice 10 the winners circle for the
victory. Finishing second .was Cam
Driver, owned by Jack Allen of Cir·
deville.

Seifert acknowledges that the
situation for me because of when it
happened, the timing of it and every- notion Walsh was brought back to fix
thing," Trestman said. "Once I a listing team creates a certain
thoughl through it, I talked to Car- amount of pressure. But if the move
men, talked to George about it, and helps the 49ers win. so he it.
"We just have to do what we think
I realized it was a tremendous opportunity personally to spend a year with is going to help us," he said. "I mean,
him, get his feedback and have him there 's fingers pointed at me, too.
as a resource."
That's just part of the deal. That's
As much as Walsh's return holds just part of the business. And it can
the poiential for reward, Trestman . he a motivating thing. !t's not all that
conceded there is some risk the bad. Sometimes you don't like i~ but
whole thing could fall apan.
it gets your attention, I guarantee it."

,
(Continued from B-6)
a,. made for each other.
~aised in Kiln, Miss., population
I ,Soo, he already has a street named
GALLIPOLIS- Michael Corbin sank a double eagle on the 18th
aftlr him there. There's little ~ues­ hole at Cliffside Golf Course Friday.
tiJi that if F'vre helps the P~ers
Corbin's shot on the 479-yard, par-S hole earned him a score of 2.
wi)i the Virree· Lombardi 'JTophy, .
Listed as witnesses to the shot were Gary Harrison, John Sheets
thCVC will IJe a Favre Boulevard and Cuffy York.
somewhere near Lombardi Ave., the
''The 18th at Cliffside is one of the most challenging holes in southstreet abutting Lambeau Field and east Ohio," Cliffside pro Mike Haynes said of the location of the shot,
thQ Packer Hall of Fame.
which is as rare as a hole in one.
't'Wc fit," said Favre, who spent
hiS' rookie year in Atlanta hefore
being traded to the Packers in a steal
ofll deal for Green Bay. "You're a
litqe bit in a fishbowl here because
ev9ryone knows you, but the people
al'l!'relaxed about it."
·
trhe folks in Green Bay may be
rel.xed, but Favre seldom is.
t'e was so excited for the NFC
title game that 11\: may have cost the
~kcrs their shot at the Super Bowl.
HelthteW blanks in the first quarter
in ,Pallas, sending passes into the
grqUild and over ~eivers' heads
before finding Robert Brooks for a
73{yard touchdown late in the quar-

Corbin sinks double eagle

•

i-

....

)

'· . .,t'· - ·~·1•\\111&gt;11\·~'¥~~

' -

SAYRE GETS~-;,-~~::~::=:::::,:!~::

noon hame.. racing· action at the 1996 Melga
County Fair, Noble Choice, owned by Wilms Styer of Waterford end driven by Brooks Sayre of

afternoon rac:lng card. Sayre led Noble Cholc:e to
the wire, beating out Cern Driver and J L lnquleltor. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel photo)

Meigs golfers beat Athens and Jackson
MASON, W.Va. - The Meigs
golf team defeated Athens and Jack·
son in a tri-match held Wednesday at
Riverside Golf Course.
Meigs took .top honors with a
team score of 329. Athens finished in
second with a 335, and Jackson had
a 450. Athens' Jack Cunningham
took match medalist honors with a
78 score.
For Meigs, Clay Crow led the

way with a 79. Teammates Sean
O'Brien and Mick Barr added 83s.
David Anderson and Steve McCullough added 84s, while Joe Hill had
a9L
For Athens, Todd Reed had an 82.
Also scoring were Ryan Kroner
(86). Dan Blue (89).Jake Wentworth
(90) and Bryan Cornn (97).
Jackson's scores included Bran-

don Carrol (94 ), Keegan Chamher·
lain ( 103). Mike Adams (124), Tom
Goodwin ( 129) and Aaron Berrjdge
(133).
'
JV scores for Meigs includc·Qq,,
Acree (83), Jared Woods (87) 'and
Josh Price and Zac Meadows (88
each).
For Athens, David Medley had an
89 and Derek Buckley had a 91.

'tt\-COUnty
f/imt

1996 CLOSE·OUT

461 SOUTH THIRD

.

PHONE 992·2196

ilflOOLEPORl o\'\ .
j

EAGLE TALON

ter"'

.\

'~
' . ~~ lost 38-27, their

six h'sitaightllefeat in Dallas.
a\tre :acknowledges he was
"Jlilmped" for the biggest game of
hillife. But was he "pumped" OA
so elbing more than adrenalin1
'I don't think so," Holmgren
sai . "Even someone hke Brett's
goiJ!g to be nervous when he gets
int~ a game like that. He settled
down and played very well after he
goll' Ioose. "
Favre insists he was simply keyed
upfor·the same. .
''I've started games like that
be~re and I'll S!lirt like that again,"
he )aid. "Oil.ce. I hit Rohert, 'I was

IDIIL.~••~....................................... S1-6,233.00

WHAITOll 1 96 CLOSE·OUt DISCOUIIT..... I1000.00
LESS FACTORY REBATE .....~··-··-.._1.000.00
0
CLOSE-GUT PRICE ...................

$14,233°

Polo Gneen exterior, 2.0 l~er DOHC 16 valve, 140 hp 6 cyl. eng.,
5-speed manual trans., rear window defroster, AMIFM/cassette,
dual air bags, center console, air conditioning.

302 V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air
cond., AM/FM stereo cass., PW, PL.
tilt and cr11ise, 8 foot bed, chrome rear
step bumper, trailer towing pkg., all
terrain tires, ca.st aluminum wheels.

3 NOW IN
INVENTORY
32'/•

FEET. Sleeps six. Has refrigerator, stove, oven and freezer,
stereo system and TV antenna,
roof air conditioning. Has roll -up
awning, has microwave, $hower.

nne."

1992 SUZUKI SIDEKICK 4X416091, Convertible, A/C,
AM/FM casa., sport wht181a ......................................... $111964
1993 GEO TRACKER 4X4
cass., splirt wheels, cloth lntericir ......................'............ $!1885
1991 GEO TRACKER 4X4 H050, Custom atrlpea, AIIJFM
CISI., sport W~telli .................................................. ,..~.. $117711
1993 NISSAN 4X416057, Red; AJC, AIM cau., rear
slider, aport wh11l1, cullom atrtjpes .......................$12,7li5
1995 CHEV. BLAZER 4X4 H080,
4 Dr., LS. Pkg.,
AIT, aport whetla, ~/FM em, tiH, CNIJI, power
windows·&amp;
·

It's essential for things to be fine
if tile P~~!:kers are to take that nc~t
stcf, in!Q the Super Bowl. Last year,
thef upset the 4?ers in San Francisco perore falling in Dallas, and this
year they're prin\ed to take the next
stef.
/
'ut llle¥ can't do it without
Fa .;
e.6r the questions dogging him
is. ali be stay clean and sober and
stil (l:tain his old edge'/
ugene RobiAson, who spent'his
firs II NFL seasons in Seattle, dcfinit · y ihinks so. After one of his lirst
pr tices as a Packer, Robinson
wal ed over to Holmgren and said,
"l'te never ~n anyone 1hrown the
bal liin practice like Brett did today.
He~llde me look terrible. If this is
ac
back, I'd like to know whal
he
ld llo before this."

1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER 160119, V-6 eng. , Al~rM,

AJC, A/T, t(H, cNIIt, green, air bag, cloth lnt.............. ~llll
1994 DODGE CARAVAN HO&amp;O, AJT, AJC, AM.fll
tlh, cNise, air bag, rear deflvstttr...'.............................t9855
1994 DODGE CARAVAN 16068, 7 pesa., V-6 eng.,":.__ _
A/T, AM/FM Clll.; air bag, CNIH, tilt, rea:~~;;..v!~!!~S
1994 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 18062,
A/C, A/T, 7 pen., air~. dua! l!llrrorl, rear dei.... S1l1.940
1995 CHEV. LU~INA~V 8078, Whitt, V-6
0111 .. A/C, A/T, AII/FII·ca11., tilt, crulae, PW,
.

Powerhouse Cindy, owned by Jimmie A. Moss, Jr. of Croton, claimed
victories in both heat races. Finish·
ing second was Special Valentine in
both races.
Snow Fun, driven by Don
Spencer of Vincent, claimed back to
back heat race victories in the three·
year-old fillies trots. Finishing sec·
ond to Spencer was Hopeful Gigi in
the eighth race, and Precious Video
in the .twelfth race.
In the three-year old fillies paces,
Shannon's Meanlady and Scrabble
provided an exciting finish to the
lith race as both horses hit the finish line neck and neck. After race
judges reviewed lhe photo the race

~(i/!riJ...c_co_n_tin_u_ed_rr_o_m_B_-6_&gt;__~------------------~----------

.....

19941iORD RANGER,xt.T 15940, Blue, 27,000 mllta, bal.
of !let.
reerallder, AMJFM cau., apor1 whllla,
~-rtires ............:~ .......................:...:.................
1993'FORD RANGER XLT 15899, Blue, AMJFM
aport whtala, rear llkler, cloth '"::.ri~'jjn;;;·~=~
1992 CHEV. S-10 16045, AIIJFM Cltl., bed liner,
llriP", aport Wlltt~a .....................................................ml85
1993 FORD RANGER SPlASH 18065, Blue, All,fll
.
~wheels, cloth Interior, V-6 eng.,

vcn though Favre voluntarily
ad ·ned to his drug problem and
sou ht help, he is subject to random
dru testinB under the NFL' s sub·
sta c abuse policy. However, he ·
w011ld not be suspended even if he
test4 positive this season, because he
would be treated as a first-time
offehder.
When diliCussing his problem
wit~ painkillers, Favre sounds like
he' sltalpn1 about a game with the
Beals or CowbOys. He also learned
at Men~in4er the correct words to
use jribilri.talking about addiction.
"Otle' thing I've learned is that I
hav~ tin. llddictive personality," he
said, "If you have an addictive personality, you have to find ~ alternative addiction -like winAing.
"You know. I'm 1oing to beat this
thine. There's a lot of things I'm
goinJ to do. And all I c.QJI tell peoo
pie if they don't believe me is, jllll
bet asajnst me. Because eve~ntually,
they'll lose."
Even with IUCh ~fldencc, Favre ,
doesn't C!xpect iHo ~easy. Oft the
road; hdxpects f•'to wave - ·or
throw - . empty whifkey and pill
botti#AVJjeii'W's hurt. he'll ~¥e It!
take IIOII:~ic:tjve dNp
"

M•
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1995 CHEVY S-10
4X4
V·6, air, AM/FM cess., lilt,
cruise, 1 owner. local trace.
low miles.

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaRIpolls, OH. • Point Pleaaan~, WV

'1.Meigs County Fair harness races, ·
I!Jrachens Mist and Noble
Choice stand among victors

414'1

Paynw&lt;ligu""' will 995.00 cash" load&amp; piiS lsi month's poymerlo &amp; serurlly
deposit. 12,000 miles per year. Throug&gt; N.M.A.C. for elmllod IiTie only.

1993 CHEVY
VAN
Conversion, captain chairs, V·B,
automatic, atl·power. like new.

synctay, August 18, 1996

1~~ ·

That's Tht Soand Of Oar
Competitor's Pencil When Trying
To Match Oar Low Priml .

Ohillco Festival to hold
basketball tournament

Open swim meet Saturday

j

·.'SNAP! CRACklE!'POP!

Booster club declares August
30 dues payment deadline

PATRIOT- South~tein'sjunior high football learn, which staned practice last week, is still accepting players.
For more information, call Jason Peck at 379-2431.

•

Sunday, AuguiH 18,

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

'

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--

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8

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;
•
;
•
~.

�..

•

'.
P9BI•,t ' , . _ ..

Outdoors

ttaol

A/on the River
iFair nower judging

Augi.llt 18, 1118

Ohio fishing report

Gallipolis-pool's channel catfish prefer gizzard shad ba-it
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) H= is the weekly fishing report provided by the Division of Wildlife of
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:

Oblo River

In the Gallipolis Pool, use gizzard
shad, cut baits and night crawlers to
take channel catfish. Use larger baits
such as chubs, suckers and small

Bald eagle among
species experiencing
population growth
By DONALD

It
I

Il

find suspended fish . Largemouth
bass can weigh up to six pounds. Use
surface plugs and small spinners in
the upper half of the lake.
· Southwest
ACfON LAKE - Bluegill fishing is good this time of year. Use larval baits and small worms beneath a
bobber around woody cover in the
lower pan of the lake f!Jr best results.
Night fishing for channel catfish is
productive in August. Largemouth
bass fishing opportunities are rated
good.
Central
GRIGGS RESERVOIR - Excellent fishing action for channel catfish
can be enjoyed in late s·ummer,
especially when fishing at night. Use
night crawlers, chicken livers or
soft craws fished along the bottom

species, but it once flourished in the
Ohio River and tributary streams
.ODNR Director
until modern-day dams blocked
COLUMBUS - There may be migration patterns.
no better measure of Ohio's enviIncluded on Ohio's first list of
ronmental well"being and the health endangered species, its numbers
of its natural resources than the have been slowly increasing since
diversity of our state's wildlife. One the Division of Wildlife began reloexcellent benchmark is the success cation effons and worked to leann
of programs designed to reverse more about paddlefish movements
population declines of wildlife and habitat use.
species and to restore the fragile
Peregrine fal con (Falco peregrihabitats in which those species nus): Once only a migratory visitor
thrive.
to Oh1o, the peregrine falcon is now
Here's a quick status report on established as a nesting species in the
some of our most encouraging state.
Beginning in 1989, the Division
effons. a top 10 list of success stories that demonstrate the improving of Wi ldlife successfully introduced
quality of Ohio's natural world:
breeding populations of falcons in
Bald eagle (Haliaeetus leuco- Ohio's major cities, where the acrocephalus): America's enduring sym- batic birds have become popular
bol and one of nature's most majes- urban heros.
tic creatures, the bald eagle had virBluebird (Sialia sialis): Not
tually disappeared from Ohio in the known in Ohio until the early 1800s,
1950s and '60s.
the bluebird thrived as the state was
Today, thanks to the improving settled and as forest cover became
health of Lake Erie and to scientific farmland.
management by ODNR's Division of
Abundant throughout Ohio farm
Wildlife, there are 33 active eagle country by the 1930s, bluebird popnests in the state - a modern-day ulations had been in decline for the
record .
past three decades. Community nest
Walleye (Stizostedion vitreum): box programs and other efforts to
Governor George Voinovich, an avid encourage bluebird nesting have
fisherman and lifelong Lake Erie once again made .this an ab~qdant
enthusiast, points to the walleye as species across the Ohio countryside.
our greatest natural barometer of the
Trumpeter swan (0/or buccinalake's returning health.
tor): A new and particularly chalAfler years in decline. increasing lenging reintroduction program is
walleye populations have once again bringing the majestic trumpeter swan
made this much-admired catch a back to Ohio.
mainstay of Ohio's $250 million
In the nextiO years, the Division
Lake Erie sportfishing industry.
of Wildlife and its partner organizaRiver otter(Lutra canadensis): A tions plan to release about ISO !rumrich abundance of otters and other peter swans in selected Ohio wetfur-bearers attracted the first Euro- lands, once again making North
pean adventurers to Ohio, but by the America's largest waterfowl a naturearly 1800s the river otter was little al part of wild Ohio.
known in Ohio waters.
Whitetail deer (Odocoi/eus virNow, through ODNR's reintro- ginianus): Once-abundant whitetail
duction efforts, new ouer populll;- _ (leer had vinually disappeared from
lions are slowly spreading through- the slate by the early 1900s due to
out several Ohio watersheds.
unregulated hunting and the loss of
Wild turkey (Meleagris gallopa- forest habitat. In recent decades, the
vo): Once found in every Ohio coun- return of suitable deer habitat, along
ty, the wild turkey was virtually with scientific wildlife management
eliminated from the state by 1904, and rigorous law enforcement produe to loss of forest cover and grams have helped to stabilize and
unregulated hunting.
·enlarge Ohio's deer population. The
DIDN'T GET AWAY - Brian Gibbs of Middleport caught thla 36Thanks to conlinuong reforesta- challenge now for our wildlife manpound, 37.5-lnch-long catfish In tha Ohio River at Pomeroy on Aug.
lion in much of Ohio, particularly in agers is to keep this population from
10 on an elght·pound-teat line. the fish now resideS In a local farm
. pond.
southeastern regions, and to growong out of controL
trap/transfer programs by the DiviThese I0 success stories provide
- sion of Wildlife, wild turkeys are encouraging signs of improving land
No Credit, Slow
now an abundant and challenging and water resources that allow us to
Bad Credit, Btmkruptey?
game bird in many parts of the state. rebuild or reintroduce wildlife popOsprey (Pandion ha/iaetus): ulations in Ohio. They also show
Ospreys hadn't been known to nest how much more we're learning about
At Dutch Mlller Chenolet,
in Ohio since 191 3 when the last scientific wildlife management and
breeding pair lived near Grand Lake about complex relationships between
WECANHEI,p
St. Marys.
modern society and our natural
UY011 Due At Leai tl,SOO
Earlier this summer, ODNR bioi- world .
a IIUJIIIh Income
ogists brought in 36 young out-ofstate ospreys for relocation at state Bowhunters
1304) 529-2301
wildlife areas not far from Xenia,
Toledo, Akron, Columbus and Cam- to hold
bridge. Within a few years, we open house
Champion Leather
SAVE THOUSANDS
e~peclthese birds will return to their
Black,
Whlte-lnfull, Kids, Women
CHESTER .:.... The Chester
Doll:l ,., 1ltoM High Kanlllalty
first Ohio nesting places to breed,
and Ohio ht-.et Rllell
once again establishing this great Bowhunters Club will hold an open
Th•
lillnr Vllllclll Are AWIIllbla With
species of "sea hawks" in our state. house Saturday, Sept. 7 from noon to
NO MONEY DOWNI
Paddlefish (Po/yodon spa/hula): 5 p.m. at the group's clubhouse on
Lafayette Mall • Galllpoll1
CALL 24 HOURS A DAY·
Few Ohioans might recogni ze the Pomeroy Pike near Chester.
All bowhunters and others interuniquely shaped paddlcfish - it is
esled
in bowhunting or archery are
one of two surviving species of a
invited
to allend and bring their
group that nourished more than 300
,
bows.
Targets,
including 3-D targets,
million years ago - as a native
will be available for practice.

C. ANDERSON

I

sunfish when seelcirig flathead catfish. Spinners, jig and pork combinations, crank baits, and small spinners can be used successfully to take
largemouth bass and spotted bass.
Crappies ranging in size from 12 to
15 inches can be taken on wax
worms and minnows.
Southeast
LAKE LOGAN - The small
impoundment along the western
edge of the lake is a good spot to fish
for channel catfish in addition to the
lakewide shoreline. Bluegill and
bass numbers provide fair to good
fishing opportunities. Saugfeye and
carp are also present.
SENECA LAKE - Walleyes up
to 30 inches are found in the lake.
Troll a deep-diving crank bait or drift
a worm harness at various depths to

keds

•

t

SHOE CAFE

[iii]--

.

t

. for best results. Try the upper end of
the reservoir north of the small
island when bass fishing .
INDIAN LAKE - This is a good
channel catfish lake. Use traditional
baits fished at night from shoreline

_

~y CHARLENE HOEFUCH
:;,T imes-Sentinel Staff
: .. POMEROY -- Creativity m
:&amp;sign of artistic arrangements
~:flectina "Meigs County -- Going

Meigs County Fair.
Dean, Pome!'Qy; Melanie Stethem,
The dozens of floral arrange- Pomeroy, and Evelyn Hollon,
ments displayed depicted historical Racine.
locations around the county, and told
"Senior Citize~s Center" -- Betty
the story of industry, education and Dean, Peggy Crane, Middleport; and
recreation through cre- Judy Bunger, Pomeroy.
' WMPO Radio Station" -- Judy
ative use of flowers ll(ith
Bunger, Shclia Curtis, Pomeroy,
accessories.
More than a thou- Melanie Stethem.
·~Rock Springs Fairgrounds" -sand elthibits
were
included in the two Shelia Taylor, Melanie Stethem,
shows, making this year's Evelyn Hollon.
"Meigs Memory Gardens" -fair shows the biggest in
Melanie Stethem, Judy Bunger,
recent years.
Most of the credit Alice Thomson, Pomeroy.
"Racine Locks and Dam" -- Betty
for the quantity and quality of exhibits in the two Deari, Peggy Crane, Shelia Curtis.
"Meigs County Churches" -shows go to garden club
members who work year Betty Dean. Evelyn Hollon, and
round to improve their Melanie Stethem.
"River Bottom Truck Fanns" -growing and arranging
Shelia Taylor, Patricia Holter, and
techniques.
The shows are Peggy Crane.
"County and Township Roads" -annually staged by the
(Junior
class) Lisa Stethem, Rebecca
Meigs County Garden
Taylor,
Niki Lewis, Pomeroy.
Clubs Association in
,.
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·
cooperation with the
"Little League Ball Parks" -·'· A GOOD WEEK- Junior exhibitor Becky Meigs County Fair Board (Junior class). Lisa Stethem, Rebec;1aylor hla had a good weak, In flo- which awards ribbons ca Taylor.
11rrangamant competition at tha Meigs
.·
.
:·county Fair. Both days aha took the and premiums to the wmHorticulture
iftarve wst of ahow award. Har Thursday ners.
.
..
Specimen winners , listed first
1tllnner claplctlng "County and Township
Ta~ng rosettes m
'floada" f~tatured 8 toy grader as an accea- Thursdays show were through third respectively, were as
aory to her arrangement of roadelda male- Betty Dean of Pomeroy. follows:
Roses : Pal Harris, white hybrid
best of show, and Sheba
rials. .
Taylor, Pomeroy, reserve tea; Pat Harris, Elizabeth Bearhs,
..---~ best of .show in artistic . second and third, red tea; Pat Harris,
Peggy Elizabeth Bearhs, pink tea; P:at Hararrangements.
Crane, Middleport won ris, first and third, Alice Thompson,
the creativity award, and second, yellow hybrid tea; P:at HarPat Harris of Pomeroy ri!, Melva Tracy, Alice Thompson,
took the horticulture other hybrid tea; Pat Harris, pink
sweepstakes award for floribunda, red, and first and second
her many specimen in yellow floribunda; Alice Thompson, other rose; Pat Harris, Elizabeth
exhibits.
In the junior divi- Bearhs, Alice Thompson, pink gransion (exhibits by those diflora; Alice Thompson and Pat
under 18) Lisa Stethem, Harris, 'yeilow grandiflora; Alice
Po~t~'emy, won both best Thomps6n. Pat Harris, other grandiof show for her artistic florli; Melva Tracy, ·Lisa Stethem,
design, and also took the second and third, miniature single
horticulture sweepstakes bloom; Lisa Stethem, all three
for specimen display, places, rose miniature spray.
Alice Thompson. Robert Bailey,.
while Rebecca Taylor,
Chester, took the reserve and PaUline Atkins, large gladioli;
RESERVE BEST OF SHOW - Shalla Tay· best of show, and Briar Alice Thompson, dahlia; Dale HotTlor of Chaster a member of the Shade Val- Dill received honorable man, pompom dahlia; Pauline
'-V Club, won r...rva bast of show with hat' mention.
. Atkin$, Shelia Curtis, . Melanic
!Roell ·B=• . Fairground•~ m.odtm _Artistic Arran1ements Stethem, da'hlia flowered zinnia;
!f:Hign. II . - red rocks, glads 1nd calacll· t First through third Robert Bailey, Melanie Stethem,
"Um with twlaled gutter guard pelnled gold places in the artistic second and third, cactus flowered
to depict thl oval race track.
arrangements classes, zinnia; Robert Bailey, all three
•
'
listed respectively, were places, small collection of zinnias.
Dale Hoffman. Pauline Atkins,
Places" struck a new high in flower -- as follows:
s'how accomplishments at the 133rd
"Meigs Litter Control" -- Betty second and third, marigold; Dale

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program sponsored by Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Meigs County fairgoers were
given tips on how to make and b~ke
quick breads by Becky Baer, Me1gs
County E~tensoon Agent, who
demonstrated two basic
techniques -- the biscuit
and muffin methods.
The
agent
described quick breads
as that which "enhances
a favorite meal providing the perfect comple men I to other foods orto
eat alone as a nutritious
snack," and talked about
flavor
variations
B~=hievcd by adding
spices and herbs, nuts ·
and fruits , or jellies and
jams. befo·re or after
baking.
Tips and tech ;;;;;u:;a:Y 'ijtiN'NE!RS - In a quick bread niques on changing the
contllt ltavad by Vat1r1n1 Memorial Hoapl- flavor, texture, and color
..1Gina Tillis of Rutland, left, captured the of the traditional recipe
top prize with har zucchlnl-plneappla bread, by altering ingredient~
.arid Acldalou Lewis Wll aec:ond with an were given by the ex tenC#.lnga poljltO bread. Third place winner Wll sion agent who later
ISalhrYI.' Windon with In Amish frlandllllp offered samples for tastbnad.

'tlmea•Sentlnel staff
; POMEROY .. The hill stage at
the Meigs County Fair was turned
ihto a kitchen Thursday afternoon
f)lr the annual nutrition and coolcing

350 va engine,

•

: By

The 133rd unual Meigs County
Fair has wrapped up IOd I hope you
wen: able to work in at least one
visit to the faii'JI'Ounds. Overall, the
weather cooperated very well and
there have been yean when it has
been disaster time.
The fair does provide a time for
people to get together and many
admit that they see some friends
only once a year and that's at the fair.
It's coincidental that Wallace
Bradford, for many years an active
fair board member and a past president of tbe board. will be enterina
Doctor's Hospital North in Columbus on Monday. Wallace is Slihcduled for heart sll!llery at that hospital-- a valve replacement job. I know
a lot of you wish him well as well
having good thoughts for his lovely
wife, Muriel, who served as fair
board secretary for many years.
Nadine Roush Euler of the
Charleston, W.Va.. area was in
Meigs for a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush of
Racine, •nd of course, took in the
fair. Nadine recalled her perforJUDGING THE SPECIMIINS - Since this Is the yaar of the IUn· mances in the annual musicals of the
flower, numeroua 1peclmana were Included In the horticulture dla- Big Bend Minstrel Association feaplay. Mary Ellen Millar, Sclotovllla, front, judged the entrlea and Ia tured as the fair's grandstand attracehown with Janet Thalli, an avid gardener.
tion years ago. She remembers that
one year she was ill and vomited
Hoffman, Melanie Steth· several times before the rorst show
em, second and third,
and couldn't perform but she was
large orange marigolds;
okay for the second show.
Melanie Stethem, first
Margie Harris Blake of Middleand second, Pauline
pan was one of the sorority memAtkins, Sunrise sunbers working at the fair gates this
flower;
year. Margie also remembers and
Lisa Stethem, Pauline
affectionately, she says, when she
Atkins, Melanie Stethwas a part of the 'minstrel associa·
em, Sunset sunflower;
tion's musicals at the fair. However.
Peggy Crane, Lisa StethMargie says !llot of years·have gone
em; Shelia Cunis, small
by and she cu now settle for the less
sunflowers;
Melanie
glamorous role of being a ticket sell·
Stethem, Betty Dean,
er at a gate.
·
second and third, caladiAnd Linda Ru.ssell, a narse with
um ; Betty Dean, Alice
the home health department of VetThompson, and Melanie
erans Memorial Hospital, had an
Stethem. hosta.
interesting experience du&amp;ng fair
Junior division, Lisa
week.
Stethem, first and third,
Linda was traveling in conj~ftc­
Briar Dill, second; Lisa
CREATIVITY AWARD - Peggy Crane, tion with her work at Cannel Road
Stethem, Niki Lewis, longtime member of Pomeroy's Winding and at one stop placed her nurse's
Briar Dill, marigold; Trail Garden Club, took the craaUvlty award bag, which, of couno, contain&amp; all of
Briar Dill, Lisa Stethem, for hlf Thuraday show arrangement In tha the good stuff she needs in making
second and third , sun- 'Racine Locka and Dam• cla11. Driftwood round, on the trunk of her car.
flower ; and Rebecca wa1 used with glads and bamboo rallactacl
She left that first home without
Taylor, Lisa Stethem, In I mirror.
putting the bag back in the car. In her
second and third. roadtravels to the next stop the bag fell
side materials.
off the vehicle, unknown at the time
· to Linda. She was really upset and
after a search of her travels contacted the office of Sheriff James Soulsing.
.
.
,. by to repon the loss. Ooi the same
Baer saod th~t addang grated
day, Beverly Hensley contacted the
cheese, herbs, Italian and other sea' sheriffs department to repon finding
sonangs to br~ads complement the
the bag, which, by the way, contaste of foods an a '!leal and enhance
. tained no identification inside. The
1ts enJoyment. Vartety an breads 1s
sheriff only had to put two und two
imponant, she said, because of the
together and Linda now has 1hc bag
quantity needed fo~ proper nutrition.
back. Everything was there and no
Everyone needs six to II servings of
breakage or loss of any kind.
breads, cereals, grains, rice or pasta
The incident enforced Linda's
daily, she advised.
.
,
1faith in mankind--she's really. apprcFor the muffin method, dry angre' ciative that !here arc still honest peodients are sifted together in one
; pic around .
bowl and the liquid ingredients are
Susan Oliver, director of the
blended together in another bowl.
Meigs County Senior Citit.cns ProThen. said Boer, a "well" is made in
gram , took in the Meigs Fair to4cnd
SAMPLING THE GOODIES - Falrgoare were Invited to tilts I
the dry ingredients by pushing the
a
hand at the pro•um's booth and to
sides of the m1xture away from the variety of mufflna and biscuits, 10101 plain, 1ome flavored with
meet
the public. She really wouldn't
center. The liquid is then poured into apical, following 1 demonstration on quick braada. Waneta
have
had to do that since the booth
Pierce of McArthur and Gina Tillis of Rutland, front, ware among
the "well."
wa.~
well
staffed. However, she likes
The secret to a tender muffin:. the those who ..mpled the quick breada.
to
know
her
public. 1hc program is
home economist noted, Js to sur round top with golden brown pebbly about "overdoing ~." noting that it's so extensive these days and Susan
just until moistened, 15 to 30 surface and be very light with a "over-kneaded dough that makes docs a good job with it.
strokes," which mea~s ~hat the batter coarse but even texture," she tough biscuits."
And just think with l_he fair over,
The demonstration was followed
will be lumpy when .M.IS put mto the explained.
it'll
he no time until school starts
· As for biscuits, the fat is "cut" by the quock breads contest woth
muffin pans. Over mixing, she said,
again
. Students arc probably going
makes muflins which are "peaked into the dry ingrcdiehts by using two cash prizes going to the wanncrs... to have a little problem with that but
Taking farsl w11h her zucchona instead of round and have tunnels knives or a pastry blender. and
rcsemblcs
coarse
c,ornmcal
before
pineapple
bread was Oana Tillos of some of the parents might just lind
running throughout, an: soggy and
that reopening will help them keep
the liquid is added , Baer said. In
tough."
smiling.
Continued on pega C·3
"The perfect muffin will have a kneading the pastry, she cautioned

.Fairgoers get quick lesso~ on Quick Breads

YOUR CHOICE OF THE FOLLOWING PANELS:

•

16i6 Ea~temA.,e.
Gallipolis
(614 446"'13672

..,

....~Exhibitors get creative with arrangements

Public Library. Pre-registration is
required.
. To pre-register call Jim Freeman
at The Daily Sentinel at 992-2155.

ulow

$ 39~X8'SHEET

C

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for best results. The ri~ap areas are
good places to fish for Iaraemouth
bass. Use small spinners, crank ba'its
and plastic worms during early
morning and evening.

Hunter education class slated
POMEROY - A Free Ohio
hunter education course wnl be held
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
from 6 to 9 p.m. and Aug. 24 from
9 a.m. to noon at the Meigs County

Section

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I
I

w. Lane ferry boat provided 155 straight years of service on river

,.
By JAMES SANDS
Spacial Correspondent ·
. Gallipolis' last regular ferry boat
was the John W. Lane. The boat was
named for the man wlio owned the
ferry franchise from,
Gallipolis to GalIipolis Ferry, W.Va
from 1919 to 1944.
The John W. Lane
boat was built in
1925 using some of
the equipment from
the ferry boat Francis. The Francis was the ferry boat at
Q,allipolis from 1910 to 1919 under
Miles H. Brown, Gordon Greene,
and John w. Lane.
.
· In 1941 Lane estimated that he
made about 30 round trips a day
with the ferry. The distance across
the n'ver and back was about 6,000
feet. Hence in one year's time the
fc.rry covered about 12,000 miles or
i~ its lifetime of service to Gallipolis
from 1925 to, 1947 about 300,000
miles.
'
.: Iri the.the earlier~ of Opera·

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tion the principle traffic was horsedrawn wagons and buggies, but by
the late 1920s most vehicles crossing there were motor driven . Lane
once remarked: " A considerable
majority of Mason County, W.Va.
residents visit Gallipolis as a trading
center, and local business places
deliver many commodities in that
section, all of which make business
for the ferryboat. "
Lane also received business when
in the 1930s and 40s Gallipolis
began to be somewhat of a tourist
attraction . People would come from
miles away to view the Ohio River
from ihe Old French City. They
would take the ferry just for the novelty of crossing on a ferry and for the
opportunity 10 say that they set foot
on West Virginia soil.
.
Captain "Lane. was
born
an
1861 Aft Parkhool
ersburg, W. •{I· an
· er sc
he worked in machine shops an Parkersburg and Martin's Ferry. About
1915 Lane took over the Valley
Belle sleamboet and ran ber from
Char~ton, W.Va. to Montgomery.

.

urged on by cowboys or at least
fanners on horseback. When the Tribunt got wind that thi s drive wa.•
going to take place, the paper
warned people 10 watch their plate
glass windows. "but don't miss this
spectacle." In all 150,000 pounds of
beef on the hoof made Gallipolis a
real "cow town" for that one day. Of
course the final de'stination for the
cattle was the stockyards on Pine
Street.
In an article written by the Ga/IUI
Times in 1928 about Lane they
wrote that Captain Lane always
went to bed at 9 p.m. He would
155 YEARS OF SERVICE· Tl1a John W. Lana farrybolt Oparlled wake up every morning at 3 a.m. He
belwaan Gallipolis and Galllpolll Fll'fY, W.VI. from 11125 to 1147. would get up, review the events of
Tha boat was named attar the owner of the ferry who II one tlma the day, plan ahead and then cafrilp
wll raputld to be the rlchalt man In tha area.
until S a.m. when he got up for good.
The Valley Belle traveled the rivers lipolis Ferry and got into the cattle He had only a common sc~l edufor 60 years ~cfore !i king at business. From th~t dale to 1944 cation with a few courses an oom·
Kanauga Jn
· 1913 . Lan n1Yran her Lane was constantly moving cattle mercia! bookkeeping and arithmetic
until 1919 w
k over the by fei'J'Y. In ract on one day in 1939. at a business scbool . But in the
ferry service at · llfiilolis. Lane llso Lane,. moved Ill head of cattle by 1930s he was believed to be the rich·
ran tile Helen Lane boat during the ferry !Tom his farril to Glllipolis. It est man in the area. When Lane lived
late I910s.
took six trips to get them all over. in Glllipolis he owned an electric
It was about 1930 that Lane pur· But the cattle were IIClually driven baby grand piano that was estimated
chased the Amnaron farm at 011- through the streets of Gallipolis

•-

to be wonh $2,400. In that em most
people's annual ancomc was SI .~00
or below.
.
.
.
When the Silver Bndgc was blnlt
in 1928, the owncts offered Lane
$50,000 to buy out h1s ferry hcense.
He refused _and continued to ~nate'
an compeutoon w1th the bndae,
which was a toll bridge ror itsfint
quarter of a century. The ferry from
Gallipolis to Olllipolis Ferry (orisi·
nally called Steenberacn's Landlns)
was begun in 1m. Capt. Lane died
in 1944. The John W. Lane ferry wu
then opera~Cd by John E. ~v1ns Jr.
The boat was shortened 1n 1944
while at the Plrkersburt docks. The
Jut operator o( the ferry wu C.C.
Thornton. It was Jan. 22, 1947 that
the ferryboat John w. Lane burned
while ~ked II Clallipoli• ~ny.
thus bringma to a close 155 straiJitt
years Cl
of ferry
from GlllipoI' ICI'Vice
oea- W
lis to lllpolia.-.,. .VL
J-Sinda Ia a
respondent of the ......,
Tlmaa &amp;antlnel. tla aJdu 11 11:.

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U Willow Dr., lprlngiiiii'O,
4501111•

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Sunday, August 18, 199( ·

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

Page C2 • JIJWbe11ltme.-Jiactlnel

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The Community Calendar is
published u a free servlee lo nouproftt poups wllblng to aJIIIOuace
meetinp and special events. The
calendar is not dalpaed lo promote lilies or fund-raisers ~ any
type. Items are printed u space
permit&amp; and cannot be guaranteed
lo run a speeif'JC number ol days.
Sunday, Aug. 18

•••

CENTENRAY · Kuhn-Coon
family reunion 12 p.m. at the late
Charles N. Kuhn's Farm.

•••

VINTON - Knights of Columbus
Falllily Day picnic 4 p.m. Vinton
Community Park . Bring covered
dish.

Meigs community calendar ~I
The Community Calendar II
publilhed u a free Hrvlce 1o DOll·
proftt aroups within&amp; to lllllOWICe
meetlna aad special event&amp;. The
calend11r is not dalped lo prolllote lilies or fund raben of any
type. ltend .are printed u apace
permit&amp; and eanaot be Jlllar&amp;nteed
lo MID a specific number ol days.
SUNDAY
RUTI.AND -- Rutland Youth
League pool pany, Sunday al the
Syracuse pool. All playefs, coaches
· a~d families inviled.

CROWN CITY - Homecomins •
10 a.m. Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist :;
Church with special singers and : ·
speakers.
'

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CENTENARY · Engle-Brucker : ;
family reunion Raccoon Creek ; ;
County Park sheller house 113.
·

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Monday, Aug. 19

•••

MERCERVll..LE • South Gallia ·
High School Boosters meeting 7:30 .
p.m. at the school.

' · POINT PLEASANT-- /.&amp;ron Fry
descendants, annual reunion, Sunday, Krodel Park, Point Pleasant,
club house 2. Basket dinner at I p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Community
Cancer Support Group 2 p.m. New
- Jack Parson . Life Lutheran Church.
preaching and Juanita Varner
•••
singing in morning and Carl Black
GALLIPOLIS - BPW meeting
preaching and Windsor Quarlel 6:30 p.m. Haskins Park. Bring covsinging Liberty Chapel Church.
ered dish and $5 gift.

• •••
CROWN CITY -

•••

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GALLIPOLIS - Witness II to per·
form II a.m. French City Baptist
Church.

•••

GALLIPOLIS -. Douus to sing
10:30 a.m. Christ United Methodist
Church.

•••

KARYN OUTLAND AND JOHN WOODS

Outland-Woods
AMY BENNETT AND CHARLES MILLER

Bennett-Miller
RIO GRANDE - Becky Bennett
of Rio Grande and Kenneth and
June Bennett of Crown City
announce the engagement and
upcoming marriage of their daughter, Amy Lynn Benne!!, to Charles
Dare Miller lV, son of Charles and
Missy Miller JlJ of Phoenixville,
Penn.
Dennen is a 1989 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and a
1996 graduate of the University of

Rio Grande. She IS employed by the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Miller is a 1991 graduate
of Phoenixville High School and is
employed by Bob Evans Restaurants
as a manager.
The open church wedding will be
5:30p.m., Sept. 7 at Calvary Baptist
Church in Rio Grande. A reception
will immediately follow at the
James A. Rhodes Student Center.

LEBANON · Mr. and Mrs._pan
Outland of Lebanon and · Mr. and
Mrs. Jan Walls of Mason announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Karyn Marie Outland to John Ernest
Woods Jr., formerly of Mercerville,
the son of John E. Woods Sr. of
Mason an\! Joyce A. Woods of
Lebanon .
Outland is a 1995 graduate of

Miami University in Oxford. She
holds a degree in elementary education :

Woods is a 1991 graduate of
Hannan Trace High School in
Crown City. He is employed a1
lnlernalional Paper Company in
Mason.
The wedding will be Nov. 28.
1997 in Lebanon.

CROWN CITY · Homecoming
10 a.m. lo 3 p.m. Crown City
Methodist Church with Jim Brumfield speaking in morning and Rev.
Charles Cremeans speaking evening
and speci.al singing.

•••

CROWN CITY · Ralph Workman speaking II a.m. Good Hope
Baptist Church.
,

•••

SCOTTOWN - Ralph Workman
speaking 7:30p.m. Gibson Chapel.

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CHESHIRE · Gallia County .;
Board of MRIDD meeting 7 p.m. al :'
Guiding Hands School.
·:

DON AND EVELYN LANNING

Lannings observe 50th .

•••
•••

1\aesday, Aug. 20
IRONTON : Lower Ohio River · :
Valley Basin Chapter No. 8 arch~- ::
ology meeting 6:30 10 8:30 p.m. ·
Briggs Library with Steve McGinnis.
speaking on Swedish archaeolo~ .
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**• . . ,' ,·..

TOM AND MICKEY SMITH

Smiths mark 30th ·

. ~~'fli"W';
&gt;d •

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - '
Christian Women 's Club meeting
Low Inn with theme Luncheon · ·
Country Store. For reservations call '
446-4186.
'

Methodist Church. They are the parents of four children, Mark, Mau,
Nancy and Jay. They also have four
grandchildren,
Tanya,
Jared,
Mauhew and Austin.

; GALLIPOLIS · Tom and Mickey
·Smith will celebrate their 30th wedding anniversary Aug. 18.
They were married Aug. 18, 1966
by Rev. Hughey Jones at Grace

•••

GALLIPOLIS
American.
Legion Auxiliary Lafayene Unit 27 :•
meeting 7:30 p.m. post hbmc, z:
McCormick Road.
•;

•

.••..

CENT.ENARY . Henry and Zelda
Beaver family reunion 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Raccoon Creek County Park al
Ruf{ed Grouse #2.
'

HARTFORD -- Homecoming,
Father's House, Hanford, worship
10 a.m . followed by Sunday School.
dinner a1 12:30 p:m., gospel sing al 2
p.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.

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lAST GRASS OF THE YEAR!

'

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INDOOR/OUTDOOR GUSS CARPET

SAVE!
ANGEL THIVENER AND RONNIE BLAZER

Thivener-Biazer
GALLIPOLIS . Debbie Thivener
of Gallipolis and Gary Thivener of
Crown City and Mike and Marlene
Blazer of Gallipolis announce the
engagement of their children, Angel
Dawn Thivencr and Ronnie Michael
Blazer II.
Thivener is a 1993 graduate of
Gallia Acadc'my High School
(GAHS) and is employed al Wee
Care Day Care Center in Gallipolis.
Blazer is a 1992 graduate of

SARA THOMAS AND PATRICK YOST

Academy High School. She is
employed in law enforcement. She
is the granddaughler of Dr. R.D.
Thomas and the late Harriet Thomas
and Marcella and the late Carl A.
Baker.
Yost is employed in lclccommunicalions.
The wedding will be Sept. 29 in
Gallipohs.

---....--.-society scrapbook--CARD SHOWER
. sqUTHPOINT · A card shower
Will \)C held for Raymond eremean;' 901h birthday, Aug . 24 _
Card~ may be scmto 20 Township
Rd. 1•139, South Pomt Ohio, 45680.

·'
••

·.

..••• Guthries celebrate 50th
•
WINNIE AND JOE GUTHRIE

•

•; LA

ALl CLOSEOUT
GRASS

BELLE, Fla. · Winnie and
Jee Guthrie
celebrated their
SDth wedding anniversary with a
r{i:eplion Aug. 17, al Grace Baptist_
Ohurch in La Belle, Fla.
: They were married Aug. 23, 1946
ilj Rio Grande. They are the parents

GAHS and will receive his bachelor
of sciens:c dc.grcc in cytolechnology
from Marshall University Aug. 16.
The open church weeding will be
2 p.m., Aug . 24 at lhe Gallipolis
Church of Chri sI In Christian Union ,
2173 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis.
The couple will reside in Lcxinglon, Ky. where Blazer will be
employed with Smith Kline
B~ccham Clini cal Laboratories.

of three children, Debby Hill of
Estero, Aa.; Konnie Cook of Grosse
lie, Mich.; and Joseph Jr. of Orange
Park, Aa.
Winnie and Joe are retired and
live al I00 Oak Knolls Circle,
Sebring, Aa. 33870.

DIABETIC SUPPORT GROUP
The Diabetic Suppon Group mel
Aug. II al Holzer Medical Center in
the French 500 Room with Dr. Sam
Lever. neurologist speaking. on
peripheral neuropathy. The nexl
meeting will be Sept 8.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards ihe weddings or Gallia.
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and publishes wedding stories and
ph01ographs without charge. .
However, wedding news musl
meet general standards or timeliness. The newspaper prefers 10 publish accounts of weddings as soon as
possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, lhc wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior 10
the publication, and may be up 10
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received by
the editorial depanment by Thursday, 4 p.m. prior 10 the dale of publication.

.J

• Lower·premiums
• Cash values build
sooner
• EUr8 retirement
inc.ome
• Protection tor
loved ones

II
MOTORIZED SCOOTERS

! J'Ci - 1JI

~1'l . . . IA,. I

-Easy to Operate Controls
•5 Models to Choose From
•Fits In your Car
•5 Year Warranty

I

EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local :
School District Board of Education :
meeting Monday, 7 p.m. in the hiah :
school cafeteria~
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPOIU ·- Orientation for
incoming seventh graders and new
eight graders, 6 to 7:30 p.m., junior. l
high school auditorium . Refresh·
menl to follow.
POMEROY -- Meigs High
School open house for all freshman
and new students Monday, 7 p.m. in
the high school cafeteria. Students
and their parents arc urged to auend.

Continued from page C-1

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·I •

POMEROY -- Howard and Phyllis Armstrong English of 120 Kerr
Street, Pomeroy. will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary Saturday.
Aug. 31.
They were married Sept. I, 1946
in Gallipolis. Howard retired from
the Kyger Creek Electric Co.
They have five sons, Butch, Bill

tsp. soda, I egg , 112 tsp. vanilla, 1/2
cup
chopped nuts, 213 cups riced
Rutland. Second wenl to Addalou of
cooked
potatoes.
Pomeroy for her orange potato
In
large
bowl sift together !lour,
bread, and third 10 Kathryn Windon
RACINE .. Racine Village Counsugar,
baking
powder, baking soda
for an Amish friendship bread.
cil,
recessed session , Monday, 7
and salt. In small bowl, beat egg, oil
THE WINNING RECIPES
, orange juice and vanilla. · Stir in
Zucchini-Pineapple Bread
potatoes.
Add orange mixture all al
2 beale,n eggs, 2 cups sugar, I cup
once
to
the
!lour mixture. Stir to mix
oil, I lsp. baking soda, 1/2 1sp. baking powder, 1 tsp. cinnamon, I tsp. well. Stir in nuts. Turn into greased
salt I lsp. vanilla, 2 cups finely gral· ' pan 9x5x3 and bake at 325 degrees
ed zucchini, I cup crushed pineap- for 60 minutes. Cool I 0 minutes
Two people
ple, drained, I apple, peeled and then remove from pan and finish
diced, 3 cups all purpose flour, and I cooling .
a full size Y-,:;:&gt;"''ii
cup chopped pecans.
Amish
Friendship
Bread
Preheat over to 350 degrees,
bed have only as
To a bread staner add I cup oil,
Grease and flour 10 loaf pans. Mix
all ingredients together in a large three eggs, 1/2 cup milk, and I tbs.
much width as In
bowl. Pour into pans, Bake for 50 10 vanilla. In a separate bowl mix 2
a baby crib!
· 60 minutes or until knife insened cups !lour, I cup sugar, 2 tsp. cinna·
mon,
I
1/2tsp.
baking
powder,
I
cup
into middle comes out clean.
Stretch o.ut on a
Glaze: In a small bowl, mix 3 chopped· nuts, 1/2 lsp. sail, 1/2 lsp.
tablespoons of melted margarine or baking soda, I large box instant
buller with ltsp. vanilla and approx- vanilla or bulterscolch pudding.
Add dry ingredients to wei ingreimately one cup confectioner's powdients
and mi• thoroughly. Pour inlo
dered sugar. Mix until creamy conNowYouCan
21arge
greased loaf pans. Mi• some
sistency; spread over cooled loaves.
extra cinnamon and sugar and shake
Buy a
in
bouom
and
sides
of
pans.
SprinOrange Polalo Bread
QUEEN SIZE
2 3/4 cups sifted all purpose kle extra cinnamon and sugar on lop.
SET Fer A
flour, 2 1/2 lsp. baking powder; 3/4 Bake al 325 degrees for one hour or
until
toothpick
comes
out
clean.
tsp. sail, I tbsp. salad oil, I 1/4 cup
SIZE PRICEI
fresh orange juice, I cup sugar, I

, ,q

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days
from lhe dale of the event.
All club meetings and other news anicles in the society section must be
submiued within 30 days of occurrence. All binhdays must be submiued
within 42 days of the occurrence.
All material submined for publication is subject to editing.

@!!..~!=

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WE SliP ANYWHERE

~

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5

229

95

EIIJ.OF·SUMMIR SALE
Living Room
Suites

Recliners
Aid

Rocker
Recliners

s"::"$499°
~~4 79
--------e
Dining Room

00

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---r-----~

Suites

FABRIC SHOP
POl lEROY

WESTIIAIH
Ill 12M

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(Becky), Kenny (Angie), A,ndy
(Brenda) and Jeff (Janie) English; II
grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren .
A reception hosled by their children will be held Aug. 31 from 2 10
5 p.m. at Mt. Moriah Baptist Church ·
in Middlepon.

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

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446-7283 • 1-800-458 8844

1l1l I

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WE HIVE
PIIIERII
SABLURS

GRUr GDT IDUI

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HOIIECARJ IIIDICAL CENTIR

IWIL nMI
lfiVIRS.

---News policy---

JOIN THE NAPKIN OF THE MONTH CLU B

••

BOWMAN'S

II

in a lwrry... T.RY

Englishes to mark 50th
.• .

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HOWARD AND PHYLUS ENGUSH .

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RUTI.AND -- Rutland Volunteer?,
Aood Committee, 10 present results~
or project development process ~
work for PEMA Hazurd Mitigation~
Grant Proaram application. Monday, :.•
Rutland Civic Center. FEMA rep to: !
be present
•1

Suites

IIOW PUT YOURSELF

71 110 , 91JI DA.IIof

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Meigs Junior
High School Volleyball meeting
Monday, 10 a.m. for students wanting 10 play volleyball. For more
information. call John Arnall at 9923058.

f.

LETART .. The Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday, 7 p.m.
at 1he office building.

Overbrook center, a 100 bed long term care
facility in Middleport, Ohio, is seeking a Director
of Social Services. The preferred candidate will
be a LSW and have some long term care
experience. The salary will be competitive as will
the benefit package. We have a strong clinical
and management team apd are looking for a
candidate who will help strengthen lhat team.
Send resumes to Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760. EOE

.

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Baking ...·_____

(614) 992-6472

---Wedding policy---

Thomas-Yost
COLUMBUS . Sara E. Thomas
of Columbus, daughter of Dr.
W111i~ B. Thomas of Gallipolis
and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Frances
PeiCf\On of Russell , Ky., and Patrick
G. 'll'ost of Columbus, son of
Lawr1•nce and Janice Yost of Mans·
field, announce their engagement
and_upcoming wedding.
lljomas is a graduate of Gallia

50%

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ried Aug. 17, 1946 al Rio Grande .
They have two daughters, Susan
(Jerry) Well of Pomeroy and Connie
(Mike) Marcum of Chester; and four
grandchildren, Ryan and Ross Well
and Jessica and Josh Marcum .

. c'

POMEitOY -· Meiss . Hip: School, open house, freshmen and
new students, 7 p.nl Monday in high
school cafeteria. Students and per- ~
enu inviled. .
.,•

QUEEN SIZE

I

CLOSEOUT

POMEROY -- Don and Evelyn
Lanning, Pomeroy, celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary Saturday
with a fa!Dily picnic al lhe home or
their daughter, Susan.
Mr. and Mrs. Lanning were mar-

ATHENS ·- Descendanlli of
Abraham and Margaret Force
Williams, reunion, Sunday, I p.m. ,
Buckley Run Road eight miles east
of Athens off Route 50.

:· !

p.m. Sw Mill Park.

• . er Bear Company
The Ohio RJV 204 N. Second Avertue
Middleport, OH 45760

1().5 Mon.-Sat

614/992·4055

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QU-LITY FURNITURE PLUS
I

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614-667•7311 Iy

Acrou Street from Fennen Benlc, Tuppen Plelnl. Oh.
42123 St. Rt. 7
1\lppen ........ Oh.

llon.•lbun.H

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. "!&gt;"'!.~r!!""!'•~~!"!•"'"!•!""!'•~.... !_""__--~~~~~~-1111! ------------·-~~~~~~~-~~~-·····-•·

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Sunday,Augult18,

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

.~unday, Augu1t 18, 1996

1~

[Making a dream come true
I

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BIDWELL • It the Master's Open Golf Tournament
works kind of like a in Augusta, Ga. for six days all
magic lamp. But there expenses paid.
are a few exceptions •
Ben's wish-making began shortly
there is no rubbing . afier his diagnosis with acute lym-required, there are no phosytic leukemia in May 1995. As
genies that appear and a patient at Children's Hospital in
the wishes, they're only Columbus, he was given informagranted 10 children tion on the foundation.
with life threatening
Feeling a twinge of guilt, Ben
illnesses.
was reluctant to ask for costly wish,
A Special Wish es, Candace, said. But after coaxing
Foundation is the by the nurse in charge of the appli lamp, and it literally cation, ,he asked for two trips to
• ..,... makes dreams come PGA tournaments and a set of golf
true for hundreds of clubs.
children every year.
Ben was a member of the golf
ASW is the only major team at Gallia Academy High
wish-granting founda- School and due to his illness had to
tion in the · United sit out that fall.
States which grants
Before Christmas Randy Roberts,
v;ishes to qualifying a board member on the regional
infants/children/adoboard of thC foundation , delivered
lescents from binh Ben a set of clubs, handmade imitathrough 19 with life tion Big Benhas and said the foun threatening illnesses.
dation was working on granting one
In April Ben Pope, of his other wishes.
of Bidwell, was grantBen was scheduled to conclude
ed a wi~ from the his chemotherapy in March. and his
foundation. He and his family was crossing tlieir fingers
family, father, George, that the Masters Open would happen
Paul Azlnger
mother, Candace and in April.
sister, Mindy, ' attended
Ben's doctors opted to keep him
on a one year regimen instead of lhe
- six-month planned at firs!. Deter·
mined to keep the dream on track the
doctors decided to give him a
A Special Wish Foundation is the largest wi~h-granting organization
delayed regimen for li\re weeks and
In Ohio and one of the first formed in the United States in 1982.
told him to "go have a good time."
The group grants hundreds of wishes each year. The Ponsmouth
After a year of coping with Ben's
:~h~~::;~~o;f the foundation has granted over 50 wishes since 1993.
illness, the vacation was better than
have varied from Disney World trips to.Jocal shopping sprees
the Pope's would have ever imagmeeting famous actors including, Chuck Norris.
. The average cost of a wish· is $2,682.
More than 75 percent of those chi I·
dren whose wishes are granted do not
live more than siK months beyond that
time.
Immediate families are includell in
the granting of wishes, whenever possible.
·
The first wish granted by A Special
Wish Foundation was in 1982 to sixyear-old Amber Johnson, a leukemia
victim, who was able to travel with her
family to Disney World to visit with
her favorite Disney characters, Mickey
Mouse and Donald Due~.
A Special Wish Foundation receives
its monetary suppon solely from donatiohs and fund raising.
All fund raising is done by volunteers, and 98 percent of the individ·
who work for ASW arc volunteers. Volunteers include accountants,
atto&gt;mcJIS, clergy. housewives, laborers. nurses. physicians, secretaries,
J..l,~acllters and truck drivers.
.
t¢ion;;it..~ii~~-.~- .percentage of financial support comes from indiv!dual

._===l

BRIAN AND MISCHELLE BEELER

Skidmore-Beeler

WILLIAM AND JULIE SHORT

Wamsley-Short
GREGG AND JEANNINE LANDIS

Webster-Landis
GALLIPOLIS
.Jeannine
Michelle Webster and Gregg David
Landis were united in mamage June
15 at Grace United Methodist
Church. Rev. Davie! Hogg performed the double-ring candlelight
ceremony.
Music was provided by organist
.and soloist. Ann Moody and piano
soloist, Renee Wilson.
Jeannine is the daughter of Joe
and Judi Webster of Gallipolis, and
Gregg is the son .o f John and
Dorothy Landis of Columbus and
Sandra Fountain of Glouster.
The church was decorated with
pew candles and altar arrangements
of daisies, white roses, stephonatis,
white button mums and ferns.
Given in marriage by her mother
and father. the bride wore a shonsleeved, Mori Lee gown of natural
silk shantung with a bodice . of
Venice lace. The gown featured a
banded empire waist and full
princess line skin with back bow
and streamers. She wore a two·
tiered headband and veil of pearls
and transparent crystal beads.
, She carried a nosegay of daisies,
white roses and stephonatis.
Bride's attendant was Lori
Richards of Columbus. She wore a
black crepe satin dress with short
sleeve. The gown featured an empire
waist with princess line skirt
adorned with satin roses and stream-

ers at the back. She carried a
nosegay similar to the bride's.
Rower girls were Karlene and
Kollie Bilger of Mifflinburger,
Penn. They wore white dresses with
black accent bows at the neck and
-. daisy halos.
Acolytes were Renee and Vanessa Wilson of Gallipolis.
Best man was Michael Fisher of
Coming, Jeff Landis of Lancaster,
Joey Webster of Calhoun, Ga. and
Jason Pompey of Coming.
The reception was held in the
church feiJowship hall following
wedding.
The five-tiered staggered wedding cake was decorated ·with Jive
daisies, white roses, stephonatis and
button mums.
Can'ie Waugh registered gues\SV
Carol Wiley and Shawna Roach
served cake and punch.
The couple traveled to Gatlinburg, Tenn. and Helen, Ga. for their
honeymoon.
,
They reside in Lancaster.
Jeannine received her bachelor of
§Cience degree in special education
from -the University of Rio Grande
(URG). She is a seventh grade
teacher in the Northern Local
School District in Perry County.
Gregg received his bachelor of
science degree in communications
from URG. He. is a spons reponer
for the Perry County Tnbune.

GALLIPOLIS • Julie Lynn
Wamsley of Cheshire and William
Scott Shon of Huntington, W.Va.
were married in a double-ring ceremony at Cheshire Baptist June 22.
The bride is the daughter of Carl
and Sharen Wamsley and Don and
Linda McDade all of Cheshire. The
groom is the son of Susan Thornhill
of South Point.
Rev. Richard Vinson perforrne4
the ceremony. Music was provided
by Judy and Bill Burdell.
Esconed to the altar by her father,
the bride wore a Mori Lee straight
fitted designer gown of white satin.
Fashioned with a sweetheart neckline, the bodice was adorned with
sequins and pearls. The long fitted
sheer sleeves were also embellished
with sequins and pearls. The scalloped-edged floor-length gown was
accented with a semi-cathedral train,
made' of sequined appliques. A twotiered satin bow attached the train to
the gown. Her crown sty Je head·
piece fell to the waist. Accenting the
piece were pearls and sequins.
The bride's bouquet consisted of
white roses accented with hunter
green flowers and a cascade of ivy.
Maid of honor was Lori Preston
of Gallipolis. Matron of honor was
Melissa Mays of Maripn. They wore
floor-length straight fitted gowns of
hunter green satin brocade. Both
carried ann length bouquets made of
white and hunter green roses accented with gold baby's breath.
Junior bride's maid was Erica
Short of Proctorville. She wore a
tea-length hunter green satin gown

and carried a small bouquet of white
roses and hunter green magnolias.
Rower girl was Olivia Wamsley
of Westerville. She wore a tea-length
white satin gown with an overlay of
lace and pearls at the neckline. The
white wicker basket contained
hunter green rose petals.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a white bow tie and vest.
Accenting the attire was a boutonniere of white roses.
Best man was James Shorr of
Huntington, W.Va. Groom's man
was Jerry Osborne of Huntington.
Brian Wamsley of Westerville and
Nathan Hansen of Gallipolis served
as ushers. Ring bearer was Austin
Pettry of Rorida. He carried a white
satin heart-shaped pillow. All ofthe
groom's attendants were attired in
black tuxedos complimented by a
black tie and vest.
Jodi Dailey-Jones registered the
guests. Cindy Saunders coordinated
the wedding ceremony.
Following the ceremony a reception was held in the church fellowship hall. The three-tiered wedding
cake was decorated with a fountain
and the wedding colors. Serving at
the reception were Angie Harden,
Rita Morrison and Missy Cox.
Bird seed bags were distributed
by Ashton Saunders and Amanda
Osborne.
Following a honey moon trip to
Cancun, Mexico.
The couple resides in Gallipolis.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PUCnCE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

TClACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WEARE OPEN 'nL 7 P.M. ON tuESDAYS

RACINE •• Mise helle Lea Skidmore and Brian Allen Beeler were
married Saturday, June IS, at Our
Lady Star of the 1 Sea Catholic
Church, Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Decon Manlhan performed the
afternoon ceremony following a
program of wedding music by
organist, Ray Morvant.
The bride is the daughter of
James Patrick Skidmore of Bidwell
and Frances Reiber of Racine. 1lte
groom is the son of Suzanne and
·Thomas Kibble of Eagle Ridge of
Long Bottom.
Esconed by her father, the bride
wore a white gown with a beaded
bodice, Queen Anne neckline and
puffed sleeves fitted from elbow to
the wrist. Simulated pearls and
sequins adorned the gown which
had a cathedral train.
1lte bride carried a bouquet of
coral and ivory roses with baby's
breath, and ivy with c~ading rib-bons and lau in coral and aqua
Maid of honor was Rochelle
Browning of Bidwell. Sho wore a
gown of coral fashioned with pouf
sleeves, a sweethean neckline and
open back. She carried a rosebud
bouquet of design similar to the

bride'S' flowers.
The groom and his best
Thomas Kibble, his stepfather,
tuxedos.
A reception honoring the
was held at Royal Oak Reson
29.
Guests were greeted and re~is·
tered by Lolita Morrow of Galh!Jd.
lis. Balloons decorated the hall, anjl
the bride's table featured a fo~
tiered fountain cake with bridges lJt
double tiered cakes. Coral roses. iv
and satin coral and aqua ribbons 'i
baby's breath decorated the c•
served by Thmi Halley of Fosi
W.Va. and Kari Warren of Galli
lis, both cousins of the bride.
refreshments, were served
Danielle Kibble of Long Bolito •
sister of the.groom.
The. bride is a 1988 gradua
North Gallia High School a
1992 graduate of Shawnee
where she specialized in deft l1
hygiene. She is employed in Pi et-!
ington.
The groom is a 1988 grad
~
Eastern High School and
employed by PCS Carpet Sys
of Columbus.
The couple resides in Blackli k:

Wish Foundation ·

t

I

Commutes get longer as jobs shi"
By RAE TYSON

ride-sharing and publie transit.
USA TODAY
Using 1990 Census and oth
A record shift in jobs from cities data, Pisarski's report, Commlifi
to suburbs means more people are in America II, also found:
·~
driving to work alone and laking
- For ~ first ti.me, subU
longer to get there, a new report have more JObs tltan etties: 41 ,
says.
cent of jobs and 50 percent of wort
Based upon the most comprehen- ers arc m the suburbs. .
. ~
sive study of commuting in almost
_ll)e shaft has put stram on lrii!
10 years, the . repon shows com- ways designed . to carry worl(e
muters are abandoning smog-cut- from suburb to ctly.
, ,
ting, energy-saving alternatives.
- The ~verage ~mmute tllfl
"In order to carpool, you have to from 21.7 mmutes tn 1980 to ~2}
have somebody where you live and 1990. New York and WashtnSton
going where you're going and going had the highest percentage of cordat the same time," says study author muters taking more than an
Alan Pisarski, a Virginia transporra- - get to work. Shortest co~nm1&lt;4el
·lion expert.
Buffalo, Providence, R.I.
Pisarski says a rise in two-income
- The percentage of
families means more workers are walking or biking to work dec:linc••:
combining commuting trips with the number of those working
personal business. That rules oui home rose slightly.
'

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I

Ninety-five percent of the money raised for the foundation is kept in
Southern Ohio Chapter of ASW including Gallia, Jackson.
J ~l,a•vrca1ce, Pike and Scioto.
The board for the chapter consists of 12 members all
a volunteer basis. The local n!prcscntattve on the _&amp;(lA( 1..
is Lcighannc Rees of Rio Grande. Anyone
j17.
·1fishing to
' V
~
" There arc several fundraiscrs helq each year in
·
to raise funds to gram wishes. The Ducky"&amp;
'J.J
. .
is held on Labor Day and accompanies the c;,
_~
' I " ID: .... Days Festival in Ponsmouth. Each year dur- ~l&gt;An~ e
the River Days Parade the foundation enters a float
·
the wish children and their families ride on the lloaL
, A Special Wish Foundation was founded hy Ramona Fickle, a
Columbus, Hospice volunteer because of her concern over a lack of scr,
vices available to Ohio's terminally-ill children .

'jff@.

r

Myrtle Burnette, hom
Sept. 2, 1901 will he
honored for her 95th - ~
birthday with an -~
Open tfouse given by her!:
family Saturday, Aug. 24 ·
:aollist Church, Rodney,
from 4:00 to 6:00.

'l
j

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THE CANDLE COMPANY
·"We Malee Scent•"
1591 S.R. 160, Gallipolis

GRAND OPENING

Frieads are Invited to eome and celebrate this special
blrtbday with her (&amp;lfts omitted). If you're unable to attend,
but would Uke to send a card, the address Is P.O. Boll 45,
'lbumu, Oh. 45685.

MONDAY, SEPT. 2
THRU WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 4

•••

9AM-6PM

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSOfl AYEIUE

DLES *ARTS* CRAFTS
•
COLLECTIBLES

POINT PLEASIIIT
(304) 675·1675

- ... ..
~

Newlun-Gra'vter
Susie Pierce at Letart Falls. Later in
the evening a cookout was held at .
the home of the newlyweds in Long
Bottom.
Ronald is employed at Gribble
Chevrolet in Athens. Mary works
with Buc~eye Home Health of ·
Meigs County.
...

,

.,

.... .. COf1'i your Old fwnlly
photot. Speclll Hxh for
$14.85. Rtg. .$19.15. SAVE
$5.00. Wt 111o do:pmport
photos, ldentiiiCIIIqn pliO&lt;
101 lliCI photo ftnllhlng.

GAU.I'OIJI .

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Pregnancy Tests
Binh Control Methods including:
·• Depo-Provenl
•Diapltragm
•I.U.D.
• Birth Control Pill
• Condom/Spermicide

Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
..

414 SECOND STREET
GALLIPOLIS
446-0166

~ 'I :

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Retired Longaberge..- Baskets
Shirley Arrowood Bean
Cherokee Sisters Ceramics
Country aassic Crafts
Paintings &amp; Wreaths by Linda Ratliff
D. Christopher Romeo Sculptures
Scroll Work by Hal Stockman
Wreaths by Melvin Biars

Pieturu?

..

Confidenti8J. Service for Women and Men
Family Planning
and Related Services
PapTes.ts

Anonymous mv tests and counseling

TAWNEY STUDIO
QtiECONIIIIIE,

k- ~

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

RONALD AND MARY GRAVIER

LONG BOTTOM -- Ronald
Gravier of Coolville and Mary
Newj,un of Long Bottom were married j'u g. 4 at the East Letan United
Met~ pd i st Church. Rev. Kenneth
Baklir performed the ceremony.
A receptlo~ was held after the
w~i~j' rag at thP home of Roy and

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THIS AREA UARr HAS APWWEIIT STUDIO EVERY DAY
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We're one mile past 160135 Intersection
going tOWII'CII Gallipolis

. '

'

.

ined .
"It was close to
life-saving
for
everybody," Candace said.
The
family
stayed in accommodations reserved
for Kroger and Kellogg VIPS . They
were shuttled to
and from the tour-·
nament and were
spectators to the
v
fine st golfers in the
world.
Among
Jack
Nicklaus, Arnold
Palmer and Greg
Norman Ben was
WISH GRANTING • Pictured are, left, local Special Wlah B01rd member,
most excited about Lelghanne Reea, George Pope, Kelly Pope, Ben Pope, Mindy Pope, Clndac:e Pope
seeing Paul Azinger and Randy Roberta, A Special Wlah Board member. Ben rac:elved a trip to the Ma•
play.
tar'a Open Golf Tournament from ASW. He and hl1 family, mlnua Kelly, traveled to
Azinger over- the tournament.
came lymphoma on
his right shoulder and wrote a book over the past year.
"It 's nice to see him do things he
un his struggle and comeback into
"We didn 't know how bad we didn 't do before," Roberts said . "I' m
the profe ssional golfing circuit.
needed it (vacation)" Candace said. not sure if we had anything 10 do
A number of people involved
Not just lhe vacation s, but all the with it but it sure didn't hurt."
with the the Pope 's stay had heard wishes from the foundation gives
Ben 's story and took every chance the kids and their famili es someCandace said the family is doing
possible to make their trip memo- thing to look forward to. she said. It a lot of things they didn't do before.
rable.
perks them up and gives them a pos"They bent over backwards for itive attitude. which is 90 percent of
"Our priorities have completely
us," Candace said.
lhc fight.
changed." she said. "We don 't sweat
After the Master's conCluded, the
In Ben's case this rings true
the small stuff a~ymore . And we've
Popes travelled to Hilton Head for
He is going into his junior year at lear~cd to go day by day."
several days and returned home.
GAHS and is looking forward to
The trip to the Master' s was more joining lhe golf team. He has been
Ben is !he grandson of Pearl Pope
than a vacation for the Popes it was practicing all summer at Cliffside of Gallipolis and Nelle and Cash
a chance to regroup and have respile Golf Course, where his grandp:tTcnts Bahr of Middleport.
from the daily stresses of their life purch ased him a cart pass.

YourHea t
ur Cotiltili
Your community hospital cares.
To truly understand a community 's
healthcare needs. you have to be a part of it.
For almost a century, Camden-Clark has ·
been a part of your community. A hospital that
provides our community with quality medi~al
core and ongoing
health education. A
hospital that makes the
~todvoncedtech ­

nology and treatments
available right here.
close to home.

u; -

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And today.
Camden-Clark is
much more. We're
the hospital where
decisions that affect
your healthcare are
made right here in
your community. A
non-profit hospital
whose mission is to

01--Q:Jl

'

meet the healthcare needs of our community
for a lifetime - and whose money stays here.
benefiting the community.
We're also a vital part of this community,
sponsoring events and activities that teach, ·
entertain and benefit us an - the Health Fair,
the Parkersburg Half-MarathQn, the Family
Fitness Center. SoleMa1es Walking Club.
Supporting the civic. charitable and culturol
organizations that enrich our lives.
We're your "community hospital". That
describes' what Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital cores about most. Your health.
And our hometown.

-

.'

Camden-Clark Memorial· Hospita~ )
.

For Your Ljfetime-

aoo Garfield Avenue. Parkersburg. WV 26'101 (304) 424-2111
'http://WWW.wvweb.COfri/WWW/CCmh

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PageC6•

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

Life is full of mysteries
By DOROTHY SAYRE
Of toursc there are numerous things in life that no
one ever understands. Some have plausible explanations, others just remain a mystery. We've all wondered,
"Why is it the ~ines we wait in at the bank or grocery
store, ~ the hnes that _never move?" That is beyond
exp_l~nauon . 1ben, ~re ·~the fact if we drop a piece of
jellied toast, II mvanably lands jelly-side down. I'm told
that is because the jelly side is he avier
and tauses the bread to flip. I don't
kno":'. I ll&amp;lVcr studied Physics but, in
that mstante, I'll defer to those who
have.
The mystery of just what happens to
the one disappearing sock in the laundry has always been intriguing. I
mean, I'm reasonably intelligent and 1
know that if I've placed two socks, or
an even number of pairs, in the washing machine, the same number should come out. Why
don~ they? Do washang machines QCcasionally grind up
socks? Usually, days or weeks later, the missing sock
turns up tucked into the recesses of a fitted bottom sheet,
or some other hidden place. However, sometimes the
lost sock is never located. I'd just like to know where
they hide. Does anyone ever really know?
Another puzzle to me is why do I always spill whatever l'in eating or drinking on clean clothes? Usually I'm
not a very messy daner, but the very day I'm wearing
something nice, or it has to be dry cleaned, that's the day
I eat lake a 12-month old baby. I can be in old clothes and
come in from working in the yard to grab a bite to eat
and my manners (regarding not spilling) could impress
the Queen of England. But, let me wear a silk blouse
and it will be covered with splashes. before the firs;
course as completed.
And, "just why" do the lines I wait in always move
the slowest? Nearly everyone goes to the shortest lines
~nd,_ yet, those lines appear to be the longest wait when
I m m them. If I ever venture through a· line where the
c~ecker does not have to stop checking groceries in the
maddle of a sale to send someone for a price check, I'll

Dorothy Sayre ond he&lt; huobend Gecqo, tonne~y o1 llelgo
County, movtd bock oboUI lhrM _ . oga ond now ruldo In •
houll toeing the Ohio RIYot Juotllllow SyrocuM.

No e~ceptions will be made.
All material submiued for publicaaion is subject to editing. Articles
will be published as soon as possible.

By VILMA PIKKOJA
He gave me a hearty hug with his "Good to see
you!" greeting, and then added what I'd call a "Grandrna Syndrome" remark: "You haven't changed a bit!"
I had known Eddie since he was a young boy -- my
secretary's baby brother, growing up in the house next
door to our office building, and I saw him grow into a
fine young man.
No, I don 't have any grandchildren of my own, but
my late friend explained to me all about the "Grandma
Syndrome." According to her, grandchildren have a
rare. ability_ to overlook their grandparent 's age and they
posallvely agnore any changes at all. Their grandmother as the s~e. when time and time again, she retrieves
the ball the baby has droppell and gives it to him,
. As a teenager, when he forgets , for a fortnight, to
bnng has costume for alteration, and then drops it at
Grandma's the night before the performance, he has no
doub~ that Grandma will have it ready for him by curtam llme.
And then there are those two o'clock in the morning telephone calls. Are they about a broken hean or a
shortage of funds? Who knows? Grandma won't tell.
And she is always there and she never changes; well,
JUst a hule bit, maybe. That,'s the "Grandma Syndrome," if you are'1ucky to have a
grandma.
I don't have children, bull have Ld'L{~l)
my garden! The flowers keep
bloomang for me - my friends .
claim that they blossom bigger. I • .·
think they do, too. Yes, my plants · ·
need care, but n011oo much.
I had a letter from Bea Woods and that brouglit in
another side of aging, or non-aging grandmothers.
Children, now about middle-aged themselves, have
a tendency to inventory Grandma's aches and pains
anstead of her usefulness and capability. So, I call that
"Grandma's Symptoms" and let you make up your
own mond.
GERIATTUDES
Gerlantlcs and Creative Aging

, GRAND CHAMPION POULTRY- Ridenour's
: Gal of Cheater purcheaed the 'lrand 9h1mpl' on market pan of chlckene from Kevin Butch! er for $295. Shown are, from left: Poultry Prince .

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·-------------------------:-------1
•

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pion lamb, which was purchased by
Ridenour Gas of Chester for $I I per
pound. Last year's · price for the
Reserve Champion lamb was $14.50
per pound.
Greg Burke'.s Grand Champion
hog went for $7 per pound, and was
purchased by Vaughan's I.G.A. of
Middleport. Burke's hog weighed
255 poul'ids.. Last year's top hog
brought a price of $8.50. The buyer of Aric Patterwn's 238-pound
Reserve Champion hog was Riverside Food Man. Patterson's hog
fetched $3.75 per pound, down
almost half from last year's $7.25 per
pound.
Ridenour Gas also bought the .
Grand Champion pen of chickens,
weighing 12.5 pounds, for 5295 .
Kevin Butcher was the owner of the
pen. Last year's champion poultry
exhibit brought a price of $900.
The only price increase from last
year's sale in these categories was in
the Reserve Champion poUltry sale.
where J.D.'s Auto Sales and Jeff
Warner Insurance paid $310 for
Edward Dill's chickens. Last year's
price was $300. The pen weighed in
at 11.9 pounds.
In addition to these animals,
Rachel Chapman sold her 440-pound
Dairy Market Feeder to County Engineer Robert Eason and the law firm
of Little, Sheets and Warner for
$1 .65. This event, sponsored by
Farmers Bank, was introduced last
year, when the feeder went for $1.25
per pound.
Farmers Bank also provided cash
bonuses for the top-placing Meigs
County Born animals in each division
of the sale.
Bill Green of Tri-Green Equipment announced at the end of the sale
that he would make up the difference
in all poultty sales between the selling price and SIOO in those cases
where the pens of chickens sold for
less than $100.
Listed are seller, price paid, and
buyer, in that order for the sale.

1).8 Correepondant
~ ROCK SPRINGS - Home National· Bank of Racine was the big
spender at the 1996Junior Fair LivesJock Sale held at the Meigs County
Fair Friday night.
; Home National Bank spent
$14,212.00 and purchased 20 animals. Fanners Bank and Savings
Company of Pomeroy, which had the
· . s~cond-highest bill following the
s~e. spent $13,520.55 on 28 animals.
In all but two instances, the prices
for the grand and reserve champions
Wc:re down considerably from last
year's prices, although the bidding
illroughout Friday's six-hour sale
.rU\ained spirited until the last animal
vias sold.
:· The ~ale was led by Senior Fair
·Jl»ard President and AuctionC!'r Dan
'Solith.
, · The evening's bidding got underway with Joe Brown's Grand Cham·pion steer, which tipped the scales at
f,.f90 pounds. The steer was pur·
chased by Home National Bank at $4
.per pound. Last year's first-place steer
brOught $10 per pound. The Reserve
Champion steer, weighing in at I,310
·pounds and owned by Jason Pullins,
was purchased by Big Bend Foodlllld of Pomeroy for $1 .75 per pound,
five cents less than Foodland paid for
last year's Reserve Champion Steer.
The pen of Grand Champion rabbits, raised and shown by John
~wstzyn, was purchased by Riverside Food Mart of Pomeroy for $67~ .
1))e pen weighed in at 13.15 pounds.
Last year's top rabbits brought a price
of: $950. The Reserve Champion
rilabits, which weiJhcd 11 .80 pounds,
OWned by Art Tobm, were purchased
by. Five Points Driving Range and
~ger Food lllld Pharmacy, both of
~roy, for $600, $7.51ess than last
year's reserve champion pen.
· :::Riverside Food Mart also pur·
cDsed the Grand Champion lamli,
l:iWncd by Rebecca &amp;ott. The limb
~ciJhed 117 pounds, and Riverside
STIWIS
~ Mart's top bid of $10 per
Plica OR Jjwoo u per pound.
· poiiOd WU COIIIidcnbly Jess than last
.kle BIOWII, G.C., $4, Hollie Nlliollll
y~s price of $23 per pound. Whit- Blllk: J1111011 Pllllilll. R.C.• SI.7S, Big Beod
~ 1&lt;111' shOwed the Reserve Cham- Foodlond: Jeromoe Calowoy, $1'.30, Sov-A·~·

----~---- - - -- - - · - --

Ridenour, Butcher, Fair Queen Amy
end
Fair King Larry Wlllla. (T·S Photo by Jim Freeman)

GRAND CHAMPION RABBITS - Rlveqldt
Food Mart of Pomeroy purchased the gref1d
champion rabbits from John Krawaczyn for
$875. Shown are, from left: Llae Mitchell, Bar·
bare John1011 and Kathy Hall repreaentlng

GRAND CHAMPION LAMB- Rlvar1ldt Food
Mart of POIIIII'oy purchaae,d the grand champion lamb from Rebecca Scott for $10 per
pound. Shown are: front, Little Mlater Dinlel
Buckley and Rebecca Scott; rear, from left.

Rlvaraldt Food Mart, Fair King Larry WIIIW,
Krawaczyn, Fair Queen Amy Smith, Rabbit
Prlnceal Michele Hupp and Little Mister Denial
Buckley, front. (T·S Photo by Jim Freeman)

Sheep Prlnceaa Krlltlna Kennedy, Fair Quaen
Amy Smith, Fair King Larry Willie, and Kathy
Hall, Barbara Johnaon Bl\d Lin Mitchell reprenntlng Riverside Food Mart. (T·S Photo by BrJ.
an J. Reed)

~ome Nationat Bank of Racine, .Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
:Company of Pomeroy top buyers at Meigs livestock sale

10 &amp; 12 S.E.E.R.
Efficiency Levels

Lafayette Mall • Gallipolis

Amy Smith, Beef Prince Joah Heger, Fair King
Larry Wllll1, Home National Bank President
Tom Wone, Brown and Little Mister Daniel
Buckley. (T·S Photo by Jim Freeman)

•

'

Energy Conserving

Installed! Call For
Details.

''

GRAND CHAMPION STEER- Home National Bank of Recine and SyracuH purchased the
grand ch1111plon ateer for $4 per poul)d from
: .·Joe Brown. Shown are, from , left: Fair Queen

White/Midnite Navy

'lhe Shoe

/

~ BRIAN J. REED"

Heat Pumps With

Air Ripped

D

Bntrlce (Honeybee) Wood•

"The Winning combination"

BETTER BY DESIGN

Section

26:3)

There is one way to forget some little aches and
pains, and to learn not to overdo. That is-to have your
own garden. You live in the city? So what! You have a
window sill ·- plant a box. (Only, have someone lift it
for you. They do it gladly, if you ask -- and don't be
too proud to.ask. Save your back for important things!)
Thts brongs me to the real topic today - how much a
garden can help with your well being and how to manage your exercises, instead of mindless aerobic jumping, which is good to bum young
unused energy, but doesn't help with
your aching feet. Tliat 's where th~
true brain power comes in. Plan your
gardening time in the cool period of
the day, earlier in the morning, when
the air is still fresh and cool and the
sun doesn't heat you up too much.
Have raised beds, if needed, high enough to have an
edge to sit on. Even without that edging, the raised
beds are easier to keep neat. What could you grow in
these raised·beds?
·
The sample of Marilyn King's garden shows you
the variety of beds she has in her garden. When the
early Frenchmen came to Gallipolis. they brought their
potager garden idea with them .
"And they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their . You learn to plan-- and learn to ask for help where
strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles. It counts.
· they shall run and no( b( weary; and thn shall walk
. I live in an apartment. A strip Of rubble bet.wecn the
and nor faint." (Isaiah 40:31)
·
sadewalk and the building. wide enou~h for a decent
Aging is a myth· growing old is as long as we live n~wcr bed, was there five years ago: Bare and poor
in a loving, caring attitude toward every living being. soal, hardly growmg weeds. but no lawn. Pieces of
To live with every thing there is, should be our goal. brick and what-not had to be cleaned off before having
One's true age is more a matter of attitude than of a decent lawn there ami then there wasn't enough of it
years.
to even tum thc _large mower twice. So I asked for perThe tendency is for people, even members of one's massaon to put herbs in that section, with the promise
own family, to treat older people as though they are to keep it weeded.
·
less competent, less logical, less of a person than they
And now, the garden is there with the "Grandma
really are. Why shouldn't the older person -· wiser, Syndrome". It doesn't ask what my age is and it gives
more understanding, far more experienced and with me the pleasure of believing in me . It doesn't ask me
better judgment, a greater capacity for joy and sorrow how I feel -- it makes me feel better. That is what a gar-- be respected on one's own merits rather than be dis- den gaves you. All you hove to do is to use caution,
criminated against?? Nothing in this world is perma- learn to save yourself, learn the ways to do things betnent except God's love. We need to communicate with ter and easier and learn to share my garden and disunders!anding and love.
tnbute the love that nature gives me.
Alertness - "To know wisdom and instruction; to
Vilma Plkkoja Is a long-tl111e gardener and a
puceivt lht words of tmdtrstanding;" (Proverbs I :2) loundlng member of the Gallla Area Herbal Society.

IM*1181M.

Livestock sales

Thou wilt luep him in perfect peace, whose mind is
staytd on Thee; because he tnuteth in Thee." (Isaiah

QJ~l?lliffi C80@C8 [3[;1[;10@0[3[;8@\7
.GJ@ffil] [;)(D[DJ[;) ~®[;}
[D]ffi[j](!J~ffi@1]f!J[E[3[!) GJ®(!J00G8@

Reunion policy

occurrence.

Garden'ing and the 'Grandma Syndrome'\

be very s~rprised. Oh, it isn't the checker's fault, it is just
because I m tn that hne! I could have been in any of the
lines and some item would not have been marked. I've
tried fooling the lines by deliberately going to the
longest line, but the line still doesn't move.
I should remember I'm not working outside of the
home and I have plenty of time. Well, that's what most
people who work outside of the home believe about
!l'tirees: Wait until ~Y. retire! I have never been so busy
m my hfe. Perhaps at as lack of organization because I
don't have a set sthedule, but I feel really'pampered
when I have time to sit down and read The SundayTimes Sentinel. Yes, that is another mystery, why most
~bred people are so busy. Maybe the old saying is true,
The older we become, the faster time goes."
The enigma that intrigues me the most, however, is
the tee-shirt mystery. I'm talking about a plain. crewneck, sh?rt-sleeved tee-shirt. Why does it always en~ up
wrong sade out m the wash? I don't believe one side is
heavier than the other. There is something irritating
about always having to turn the tee-shirts back to their
right side again. I've thought maybe the. wash cycle was
too vaolent and that caused it. I've tried a more gentle
cycle when the tee-shirts just needed a bit of freshening,
rather than a good scrub, and that made no difference.
They still tum inside out. I had a brilliant idea awhile
back and I turned them wrong side out before I washed
them. Yes, they stayed inside out.
It's best that I don't have any real mysteries to solve
such as how to end wars, because I have absolutely no
clue as to how to deal with the phenomenon of one missing sock or inside out tee-shirts. Maybe I'd better gof it.
Of course there are numerous things in life that no
one ever understands. Some have plausible explanations, others just remain a mystery. We've all wondered
check the washing machine again. If I tiptoe in very
stlently, I'm sure I'll catch it smirking while it is eating
socks or growang arms to tum the tee-shirt&amp;, wrong side
out.

. GOSPEL MUSIC ON THE FA~ II ·.The "Down on the Farm• goepal
sang will be held at Bob Evana Farm 6 p.m., Saturday Aug. 24. The
event, sponsored by Salem Beptl1t Church, Ia free to the public.
Concessions will be available. Attendants should bring 1 lawn chair.
Among those performing will be Carroll Roberaon right · of Ripley
Miss. and The Primitives, left, from Candler, N.C. '
'
'

With the family reunion season
quickly approaching many will be
submitting articles of family activities for publication.
To ensure prompt publicataon, the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The
Daily Sentinel requests that articles
be neatly typed and double spaced
for easy editing. Reunion items
should not exceed 300 words and
must be submitted within 30 days of

18, 1996

Sunday,

•

Kroaer Food ond P11ormocy; Mocyn Ervin.
$4.25, Yeauser Farm Supply; Alan Haley.
$3.SO, Hom; Notional Bank; Holley Will.i""".
$3.25, Forme" Bank: Rebecco Scot!. $4.2~.
Foceymyer Lumber: Melody Lawrence. $2.7~.
Home N01ional Bank: Heather Dailey. S~.
Hotw Oinic of Me irs Counl'l: Tyler Jolvosoo\,
)), Home N01ional Bank : Jon:olhwo Avis. $4.
Grea Kaylor .Home Medical: Jessica JIIIICy,
SJ.SO, Sweet G""'tinas ond Bob WilliAms
Lossins; ~~~ Boker. $2.75, Boum Lumber; Kristina Kennedy, $3.75, Peoples Bank of
Me;,s County: Erin Horrio, S3.SO, Anomey
Bemllld Fulu: lessico Ditton, USO, Summerfaetd's ReslaiUUDI: Meahwt Avit, $3.50.
-Peoples Bank of Meip County ; Joseph Rupe,
$3.50, HolurCtinic : Ashley Rupe. $3, Farm·
eis Bonk: Jamie Hupp. $4, Shelly Company;
H.,.her Dajley, $4, S101e Repmenoalive Can·
didOie Jeff Fowler; Mendy Guess, $3, Mutleni•'• Meat Pro&lt;essins; De!Tick Bolin, $3.25,
R&amp;.G Feed ond Supply; Bitlee Pooler, $S.2S.
f11ctmeyer Lumber. Megan Avis, $3.~. Form·
en Bank: Detrick Bolin, SJ.SO.IIIIIIFGallery;
Riki Borringer, $4, Notrit Northup Dodge:
Chelsea Monaaomery. $3. Peoples B1111k of
Meigs County: Pamel• Rupe, 52.75, Valley
Lumber; Krillina Kennedy, S2.7S, Peoples
Bonk of Point Pleasant; Bitlee Pooler, $3.7S,
Home Naoionol Bonk; Kl&lt;jr Ervin, $4, WhaRAIIIITS
ley'• Auto PIUU ; Riki Buriop, $2.75, FarmPrices ore given as per pen.
John Krawsczyn, G.C., $675, Riverside en Bank: Stephanie Wtlson, $4, Pn:saipoloo
Food Mllll; Al1 Tobon, R.C.. $600, Five Poin11 Oxyp: Theresa Bolter. 53, Bllllile Oil Com·
Driving Ranae ond Krop Food and Pfwmo. pany/Linle John's food Man in Tltppen
cy: Courtney Kennedy, $150, Forme" Bank; Plains: Jessica Hupp, $3, McDonold's; Ashley
Rebekah Karr, $2SO, Jeff Womer Insurance; Rupe, $3, Bil&lt;:hfield funcni.Home; Brook
Jenny Mayle, $12S, McDonald's; Jenny Oif· Bolin, $3.50, Alon Moono, $3.25, Mom's
ford. $260. Oiffo B.P.: Michele Hupp, $200, S"""l'asbord; Adam Johouon, $-4, Home
Tyrone Brinocer ond Sons F11111: Andrea N01ional Bonk; Kelty Dolton, $3.25, Melp
Neutzling, $200: Amy Smidt, $160, Farmers County Cieri&lt; of Couns Lony Spcsoccr; Mcady
Bank; Robby Smith, $160, Riverside Food Guess, $2.75, Crow'o Family R _ , .; Sea·
Mart; Gary Kouff. Sl60.11tcDonald's: Jimmie cy Wilson, $4, l'lescriplioo Oxyaen; .loleph
PUttruiR. S160, Ridenour GfS;lW!Iee Vaugh· Rupe, $2.75, Doo Tale Mot011; Boant Dillon,
nn, $!60, Rncine Mayor Jeii'Thomtoa; Carrie $3.25. Farmen Bonk: Miehelle O'Nail, $3.25,
Moyle,$ !45, Peopleo Banl(ot Point Pleuont; Fo"'ll Run Ready Mix : Detrick FKkler.
Jessica Pooler, St50, Home Nasioolll Bonk; Sl.25. Sw«t a-in•• and Bob Wiltioms
Ann Kauff, $155, R&amp;.G Feed and Supply; Cu· Loslinl; Brant Diaon, $3.75, City Ice llld
sidy Coffey, $155. Enin Farms and ·KSS F11&lt;l; Amonda Upton, S3.7S, Tri-G.- EqoipSpeed Stable: Sari Pulllllll. $160, RideiiOIIl meno; Derrick Fackler, S2.7S, l'rulh PhonnaGa': Susan Tobin, $1 SO, McDooold's: Aman· cy: Stephanie Wilson, $4.25, Pn:scriplion
da Tobin, Sl80.00.1.inle, Slleeu ond Warner; OlYaeft; Michele Biuel~ $2.75, Home NlliooKeny Allen. $165. Tri-State Wiler Systems; al B""k: Booott Bolin. S2.75, Meip Cauooty
Jenny Smallwood. $160, Birchfoeld Funeral Bor Association: Bnuodooo PICkler, $3. Bourn
Lu111ber: 5a(uh Yost, $2 .50. Bi&amp; 'A' AUio l'lrU;
Home.
Tyler Johnson. $4, ROUJh Punenl Home.
LAMBS
Hul'l''' Landstopin&amp; and A Cll Above; Mepa
Prices an: given as per .,..nd.
RebetcoScott, G.C., SIO, Riwerside Food ll•Y""'· SU~. Farmen Blllll:; J.- Couooll,
Man; Whitney Km, R.C., $11 , RidenourGu: $1, Kurlitc Oil ond Link Johoo's Food Muts;
MeJ(oaa Haynes, $4, Snouffer's Firelllld SAfe- A11nMt Yo&lt;t. $1, PleAIOIII Valley Hospilll; TJ.
ty; Shannon Enright, $4.SO, buyer not lilted by Moure, $2.7\__Boopoo WIIIICf luonoce; Jcs·
sole pmonnet: Shwonon Enright. Sl.SO, P..,. '"'"Janey. $2. 1~. City : andl'uel; Stocy Wil·
ptes Bonk of Point Pleosanl; Wbiaoey Korr, $4. - · S4. ~. 1'1escri(llioll O.yaeso; TJ. Moore.
McDonald's; Holley WilliatN, S3,7s, Peoples $!.25, Nonio-NOI1bup Doollo: Micloelle BioBonk or Mei11 County; Kelly Do11011, S3.75, odl, $3.25, Wooly Acla; Allll Holley, $3.25,
Doo Tole Moton; Mllt)'n Etvio, $3.2$, RAG Dr. Douliu H,.l&lt;r, M.D.; Midodlc O'NIIJ,
Feed and Supply; Jeuica Dilloa, $3.75, I .D. $3.75, Ptoplcs 8-* o( toldp C...,; lillie
AUIO Sales; Melody La-nce, $3.75, Meip hlllow, $3.25. eo.wlua, l!rk
Veterinwy Oinic;Cllrisly Dnke, $3.75, Home t.loftl&amp;oiDIIY, S3.SO, l'ltoplel . _ ol l'tlill
MemoN111ional Bank; Erin llanil, s-4.50, ~ ,__; P11tr Nally, Sl.SCI,
NasJe Heatins ond Coati.,: Punelo Rupc, rill Hoopilll; Iamie Hopp, S3.7S, lOIIIo
$3.75. Farmers Bonk; Ashley Hapr, . $3, l'loooenl Home; A11m Joboosan, $3.25, Hamo
Lui; Julie Brown, $1 , Formers Bank; Brandon

Buckley, $1 .05, AUoJllCy Bemllld Fukz, Lau·
ro Brown, $.90, Tri-County Ford: J01h H.,.,r,
$1, f,.,..,n Bonk: Chance Watson, $.85,
McDonald's: Josh Ervin, $1.05, McDonoold's:
Snr.oh Oifford, S I, Home Nalional Bank: Janet
Calnway, $.95, Faccrnyer Lumber; Jamie
Droke, $.90. Formen Bnnk; Andy Myers, $1,
Three 'R' Induslries; B.J. Ervin, $1.05, Home
Nationol Bank; Joey Dillon, SI.IS, McCollough ond Rime P11ormocy; Alisoo Rooc:.
$1.10, Rive,.ide Food Mllll; Slllll Ervin,
$1.1 0, Whaley's Aulo Plllts; Wesley Km,
St.OS, Riverside Food Mllll ; David Ronkin,
$.80. Slate Representative John C.,.y:
Mnnhew Evans. $.125. Shelly Company:
Dezro Wrikeman, $.95. Yaupon's I.G.A.;
Man:us Branon, $.105, Farmers Bank; Jeff
Rankin, $1 .05, Quality Fumil""' Plus; Roben
Hoffman, $.95, Home Nasioolll Bank: Shown
Dailey, $1 .40. FIIUmyer Fooat Products: Jcs.
sica Barringer. $.90, Fannon Bllllk; Jeremy
Hupp, $1.15. SugAr Run Mill: Jesse Eastman,
S1.2S Foodland Supenlllllbu: Brion Hotr1111111,
$1.05, WesomConstruction: Sununer Johnson.
$1, Veteran• Memorial Hospital/Hot"'' Meditol Center; Jared Hupp, $1.05 Fame" Blllll:;
Jeremy Johnson, $.95, Rutland FUillitwo 111d
'Bonte Gas .

N111ionnl BMk; Polly Nally. S2.SO. Holzer
Clinic; J:arnie PArtlow. $2 .~0. Farmen Bonk:
Snr.oh Yost. $1.2~ . City Icc ond Fuel; Cinda
Branon. $2 . ~0. McDon•ld's; Ashley H...,.
$2 . 2~. Ohio Valley Plumbing 011d He01in1;
AIIIOII Yo11. $2.71. Ridenour Gos; Bnondon
Fockler. $2.SO. farmeos Bank; Kocy Ervin.
$3.50. G&amp;M Oil : Cinda Branon. 52 . 7~. Dr.
Thomas Spencer. D.O.: Jessica Hupp. SUI.
Crow'• Fomily Restaunona; Amonda Upton.
$2 . ~0. McDonold's: Alan Moo,., S2.SO.
Sayre's Produt.:.:.

HOGS
can: giv.:n as per pound.
GreJ Burite, G.C.. $7, Vousan's t.G.A.;
Anc l'llllerson. $J.7S. City leo ond Fuel/River·
side Food MOll; Attyson l'llllerson, S !.71.
Banks Constnoction: Kw Lodwid. SI . ~O.
Royal Oat Pomily Resort: Amonda Wheeler.
St .80. Rutland I'WDilure ond Bottle Gos: Grea
Burl&lt;e. S1.60. Puoe Grove Form'Hudsoo Feed;
Leslie P:od&lt;er, $1 .95. Shelly Compony: Mary
PrifXS

Ro.nkin, $2, Home NalionAI Bank; Suw:ic Watson, $2, Scotl tnaurance; Elaine Putman, $1,

Pooler Tree Fanns: Aric Patterson.' $2, Farmen Bnnk; Rea Wynnt. S1.60, Clmic Auto
Glw; L.ori Horris. $2 .2~. SouoheAIIem Equip"""" Alyson POitmon, $1 .80, Rllland Furnitun: ond Bottle Gos; Rcco Wyant, $.160,
Koo.... Food ond Phannoicy: Sllleie WAIIOtl,
$2.!0. Wooson LoQinJ; T,..ll Lodwick,
St .n . Bibee Motor Company: Joey Richotd,
$.250. Irvin's Aulo Glus: J.,... McKay,
$2.05. Dr Mtlrlie Low1011, D.D.S.: lityua
Hoffman. $2. O'Dell True Value Lulllber; '
Lc11er P:od&lt;er, $2, Home Nllioolll Boook; Alicin Wolker. $1 .90. Collins Sprin&amp; Hill Forminc; Chris Borrinser. $2, Valley Lumber;
Chad Hubbord. SUS. Home Nalional 81111&lt;:
Roben Horris. S1.65, BRIIm Lumber, Jessica
Juslicc. S2.SO. City Icc ond Fuel/Riverside
Food M:on; .len:my Gillilan, $2.10. Fod!cd Rill
Sponsmnn's Oub; Kass Lodwick. S2. FArlllm
Bonk; Dustin HoninJ. $1 .6S; JolvoDihan H.,.
geny, U.IO. Joy Hall; Chris Jude, $2 . ~. Jay
Holt ; Dustin Hnnins. $1 .90, Dr. Melnnie

Continued on·D-8

v.r..

i {f

••

�'

.

•

Sunday,August18,

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

1~

S~nday,August18,

Cattlemen's
summer
"
I

Kennedy, Fair Queen Amy Smith, June Ridenour, Fair King Larry Willis and Karr, and Little
Mister Daniel Buckley, front. (T-S Photo by Brian J. Reed)

RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB - Ridenour
Gas of Chester purchaaed the reserve champion lamb for $11 per pound from Whitney Karr.
Shown are, from left: Sheep Princess Kristina .

. "
II

I

' ..'
l

'

i
&amp;..

Ii i'""

are, from left: Poultry Prince Odie"Kerr, Poultry Prlncasa Mendy Guess, Mike Walker, Dill,
J.D. Story, Fair King Larry Willis and Fair Queen
Amy Smith. (T-S Photo by Jim Freeman)

RESERVE CHAMPION POULTRY - J.D.
Motors and ·JeH Warner Insurance, both of
Pomeroy, purchased the reserve champion pen
of chickens from Edward Dill for ·$31 0. Shown

I)

Ohio provides
personal care
attendants for
the disabled

EXPANDS FACILmES - Mane Designers, 760 First Ave., Gallipolis, recently expanded its facilities and services according to
Cynthia Sexton. The new service, hair alternatives, will provide
a selection of wigs by Revlon, Dolly Parton and Adalf. The new
service will be available to meet the needs of women. Prlvatlll consultations are available by calling 446-2933 Monday through Saturday. Sexton displays two wigs In above photo.
.

Second
annual beef
producers
roundup
Aug. 27

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Rehabilitation Services Commission
(RSC) has developed a Personal
Care Assistance (PCA) program
which provides funds to eligible persons to hire necessary auendant care.
Any Ohioan with severe physical
disabilities who needs assistance with
activities of daily living to hold a job
and/or function independently may
call the RSC to request information
and an application.
Those persons found eligible will
be served on one of the following priorities:
I) People who are employed more
than 20 hours a week, and need PCA
to maintain their job. 2) Those individuals who are employed less than
20 hours a week, or who are ready
Nor employment
3) Trainees who are preparing for
employment and need PCA to continue that training.
.
4) People who need PCA to live
independently.
For infonnation, call the RSC at 1800-282-4536, extension 1270.

By HAL KNEEN
POMEROY - Cattlemen, clear
your calendar and plan to attend the
second annual Athens-Meigs Beef
Producers Summer Roundup on
August 27 at 6:30p.m .. A farm tour
of the Dave Bircher and Nancy
Smith Farm, 3253 Sargent Road, .
Guysville, (two miles west of Shade
post office) begins the night's events.
A cookout, courtesy of Athens Landmark and Chester Agri Service, will
he followed by two speakers. Jim
Barrett, Washington County Extension Agent will speak on marketing
feeder calves: "Value Based Marketing and Washington County Feeder
Calf Pool", immediately followed by
"Cowcalf Management Strategies"
presented by Jeff Fisher, Pike County EKtension Agent No reservations
are needed . This event is being sponsored by Chester Agri Service,
Athens Landmark and Ohio State
University Extension Athens and
Meigs Counties. ·

AC:ROSS

.,

1 Fabric

8 Weeps
10 Kitchen gadgel
10 Spaghetti,

- macaroni, etc.

20 Tumefs maChine

2% Whole

28 Auto fuel

CUSTOMER APPRECIAnON DAY - Wtgner Hardware recognized ita customers during Customer Appreciation Day JeCI!flt- "
ly at the Racine store. Eventl during the day Included prize giveaways and a best roast by the Racine VoluntHr Fire Dapertment,
with Terri Boling, Racine, selected as the winner of half a beef
gl111n away during the event Pictured are, from left: atore own- "
er Ron Wagner, Racine VFEI Chief Scott Hill, Trustworthy Hardware reprasentatlve Rusty Jarvia, and Crescent-Sprague representative Kevin Hudson.

RUTLAND T.V. WINNER - Daniel RhOdes, Jackson, (left) Wll
the winner of a 25" Zenith Stereo televlalon during 1 recent Joint
promotion by Rutland Furniture tnd R&amp;A Marketing, according
to Rutland Furniture manager Tim Tomlin. Presenting the television to Rhodes Ia Jim Snodgra11 of Rutland Furniture.

,,

pueed her IXIIIIInlllon by thl Ohio State MedIal! Bollrd. She ~ profeaalonel cholc:a
allebology 181"1
llld 11 now effll. . . with
Mine DM1gMr1, 710 Firat Alii., Gallipolis. The

•'

charge. Appolntntenta .,. avalllble Monday
through s.turdey. On the tllblt cltmor"..beUng
for thl1 nmH Sllllllnll photo Ia Cynthlll Sex·
ton, of . . _ O..lgllln.

•

129~

130 Forced out
131 Exlat
133 Dlsoover
136 Window part
137 Dressed
141 Initial: abbr.
144 Give a rating to
I 45 Estrangement
146 Wager
149 Circles of light
I 51 Mechanical man
153 Ireland, poetically
155 Sky blue
157 Enragas
158 Bear
I 59 Ill-mannered
160 "The Thinkel"
sculptor
161 Tantalize
162 Chile saltpeter
163 Cook In julcas
164 Quantities of
medicine

DOWN
1 Stop up
2 "Zhhvago• name
3 Redding or Skinner
4 An article

uHor

-

DISCUSSES PAnENT'S DIAGNOSIS- Dr. Vlshwanneth Shlnoy
Holzer Clinic gaatroenterologlat, discusses a patlent'a dlagno!
ais with technician Barb Sheeta. Dr. Sl\enoy joined the Holzer
atatf In early August.
·

New doctor joins
Holzer Clinic staff
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
announces the addition of Gastroenterologist Vishwanath Shenoy, M. D.,
to the internal medicine depanment
Dr. Shenoy practices as a general
internist at Oak Hill Medical Center
from 1992 until 1994.
He received a post graduate
degree in internal medicine from
Kasturba Medical College, Mangalore University in India in 1882. As
an internal medicine resident at Miami Valley Hospital, Wright State
University in Dayton, he served as
chief resident from 1991 until 1992.
He received the Outstanding Resident
teaching Award in 1990 and 1991.
Upon completion of his residency

RIO GRANDE - One of the most circulates through the tubing transefficient and comforting ways to ferring heat to the room. lnfloor heatheat a home is from the ground up.
ing eliminates uncomforuiblc temWith this in mind, Lennox Indus- perature fluctuations and annoy:ag
tries joined forces with lnfloor to pro- drafts that are common with some
vide homeowners with a combina- conventional systems. In addition to
tion-- floor heating, using the Com- in-floor conditioning homeowners
pleteHeat combination space and hot can enjoy vinually unlimited domestic hot waters air conditioning and
water heating system .
Infloor heating is a flexible tubing forced air heating in one compact
system that turns floors into efficient _system.
The CompleteHeat system actualheat !lldiators, providing a constant
source of even heat and room-by- ly consists of two modules-- G heat
room temperature control. Hot water module and an air handling module.
from Lennox' CompleteHeat system When heat is n~ed in a home, a

l

I

33 Actor O'Neal
35 Angers
36 Thailand, formariy
37 Extra tlraa
39 Enthusiast
41 Broken-arm suppon
'44 Milk portion
45 French cleric
48 ·-showers
bring ... •
53 Cousin to a Chimp
54 Earsplitting
55 High ragald
57 DutCh cheese
58 Airborne apack
59 Caution
60 In the Past
61 E~llght
63 Rudimentary: abbr.
64 Female sheep
85Walop
66 Small bottles
661ndigo
70 Sixth sensa: abbr.
71 Chess piece
72 Jury's decision
74 ReviSe a text
76 Newsstand item
79 Glveeolf
81 Gloomy
83 Away out
87 Traneparant
86 Eat
89Row
91 Kind olsense
92 Dread

5 POflton of lood
6 Capital of Oregon
7 Be compliant
8 Frankfurter roll
9 Bent
10 or an arctic region
11 Like a tumbler
12 A bone
13 Perpetually
14 Depend (on)
15 Sty
16 Opposing one
l7 Commotion
18 Shredded
19 Greek war god
23 Bill of fare
30 Deserter
32 Wages
34 Windflower
36-quanon
37 Avoid
38 Perched
40 The "lt"game
41 · - Uke
42 Ship part
43 Tardy
44 Toil
46 Implore
47 Mr. Lugosl
49 "Raven• poet
50 - the roost
51- of March
52 Lantem
54 Showed a
deficiency
55 Mild oath
56 Not hollow
59 Couri
60 Affected manners
62 - receiver
65 Woea
56 014 soldier
67 Disperse
69 Alleviate
71 Brings up
72 Climbing plants
73 Threesomes.
75 Food flah
76 or eaCh hundred:
abbr.
77 Pub drink
78 -diem
80 Badly: prefix
82 Rangeof

l .

training. Dr. Shenoy joined the stair
at Oak Hill Medical Center in Jackson County. In 1994. he returned to
Wright State where he completed his
gastroentcrlogy fellowship. Gastroentcrlogy is the study of the stomach, esophagus, intestines, liver, gall-_:_:_
bladder. pancreas, and diseases
involving these organs .
Dr. Shenoy is board certified in
internal medicine in India and the •.
United States. His wife, Dr. Vecna .. .
Shenoy, is a board ccrtifieti patholo-' :.''::
gist at the VA Hospital in Huntington,;~~
W.Va.
··The Shenoy 's and their three--:.;year-old daughter, Divya, resided in·"··
~ ••
Proc torvt·11 e.
, ..

..

~

Michelle, a Junior at Meigs High - . School.
She is the daughter of William and Jane Snouffer of Meigs County. With ~- ,
her wealth of experience and years o( . training, she will be a nursing liaison':;.:
between physicians and Medi Home·•• ...,
Health and Home Care.
'· : ·-

•••
,_ ,_

Lennox joins forces with lnfloor ~

new HrVica Ia the only approved method lor
permanent hair rwmoYII, lnd II IYIIIIIbll for
both men tnd women. For , _ Information,
Of 1ft appohrbnent, CIII446-11M11, or.1 888 4411800. lnltlll conaultlltlona arw performed at no

211 Victim
3T Iridescent gam

94 Antitoxins .
96 Make expiation
97 Radio receiver
98 Do the crawl
100 Wild men
102 Sharpen
104 Paved waya: abbr.
107 Edinburgh native
109 Lowest point
110 DriZzle
11 1 Prohibit
114 Neighbor of
Thailand
116 Black
118 - Paulo, Brazil
119 Abrupt
120 Polson
121 Mixture of metals
I 23 Snobbish
I25 Adhara firmly
126 New England state
127 Web-looted bhds
128 Watch over

\

Ramsburg named to nursing post

NEW SERVICE AVAILABLE- Elec'lrology ..,_

.

21 Border on
22 Arch wtth a point
23 Trusted guide
2i Bay window
26 Can1011's successor
21 Defame In print

Did Japanese beetles cause
browning out of your lawn this
POMEROY - Medi Home Health
spring? Now is the time to control
and Home Care recently announced
pan of next year's Japanese beetle
the addition of Melody Ramsburg as
infestations. Applications of biologadmission nurse. A graduate of Hockical and/or chemical insecticides
ing School of Nuf&gt;.ing, she obtained
should be applied now
.
a
RN degree in 1993.
. Harold Kneen is the Meigs
The new employee is the mother
Couuty Agricultural and Natural
of
two
children., Brandon, an eighth
Resoun:es Aaent, The Ohio State
grader
at Pomeroy Elementary and
University Extension.

vlcelarw now IVIII'-ble for arae rnklenta by 1
licensed Ill bolagia Sandnl McFarland, right,
recently comp1e1ec1 training through the Ohio
lnllltutl of Electrology lftd IUCCIIIfuUy

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

SUN·DAY PUZZLER

roundup
Thursday
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - It is time again
for the Gallia County Cattlemen's
Association Summer Roundup. The
association cordially invites you to
auend the annual meeting banquet on
August 22, at the Bob Evans Farms
Shelter House. Dinner will be at 7 p.
m., followed by a short speaker and
awards presentations. If you are not
already a member, this is an eKcellent
opponunity to meet the members and
learn more about the organization.
The Gallia County Cattlemen's
Association works to provide leadership and continuity to beef catdc production within the county. The association also works in conjunction
with the·Ohio State University Extension Service to provide input about
needed research and educational pr&lt;&gt;grarns. Through these educational
programs members are able to
explore new techniques in management, production, ~nd marketing, all
of which are developed and based on
reliable research and information.
Membership in the Cattlemen's Ass&lt;&gt;ciation can also provide experiences
in leadership through both general
membership and service on the executive board.
This is a wonderful opportunity to
get involved with the beef producers .
activities going on in your county.
Education, leadership, networking,
and access to the latest research in
beef cattle production are offered by
an association of friends who are all
working towards eKeellence in the
beef industry.
If you would like to attend the
Cattlemen's Banquet and membership drive on August 22, please call
the Ohio State University Extension
Service in Gallia county on August
19. If you are not already a member,
we welcome your membership and
input to the Galiia County Cattlemen'sAssociation, and look forward
to seeing you on Thursday at the Bob
Evans Farms Shelter House.
The costs of dinner and membership are: Dinner and membership $15;
dinner only (non-member) $12; chil·
dren $8, membership only $5.
The OSU extension office would
also like to announce that effective
September I, soil tests may be conducted through the offiCe for a cost of
$7.50 per sample.
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
County's extension agent, agriculture and natural resoun:es.

1996

pump in the air handler draws hot':':"
water from the heat module and cir-;,;,;::
culates it through the air handling ~~;
module. A blower and heat cxchang-- :
er in, the air handling module then . ..J
uansfers the heat from the water to ,.
the air, which heats the home.
the beat is extracted, the water retums..i,,.;
to the heat module to he reheated ·• - . When mate~ with radiant floo( '_~
1
heatrng a home's floors become.. ~ ; ~
super-efficient radiators, eliminating. : ::-:
erratic temperature tluctultions a."Jd. · ~~
allowing greater freedom in floor.J:;..l
plan design as well as furniture-;
placement

-·

once::-:,_

See answer on page 84

knowledge
84 Seaeagle
85 Opp. of NNW
86 Preaehefs talk:
abbr.
90 Prize of a kind
93 Paddy plant
95 Stop!, at sea
96 ExChange premium
99 Gang member
101 Callit-103 Strike
104 Dross
105 Stooy
I 06 Shoe part
108 Mualcal sound
110 unefs llnlest
111 Worm on a hook
'12 English q~den
113 Requlremenl
115 Distress callleners
117 - sequitur
119 Prlca
120 Hit hard
122 Affirmative vote
I 24 Unmatched
125 Supporters
126 Kind of plaster
129 Bog
130 Lummo•
132 Bet&amp;y or Diana
134 Wear away
135 Spud
136 Tendon
137 Conversation
138 Rural way
139 Marine plant
140 Performs
142 Persia, at present
I 4Hlesert In Asia
I 45 Travel on
146 Unopened flowers
147 Cleveland's lake
I 48 Wallet stullers
150 Before: poetic
152 Small piece
154 Furrow
156 Park of a kind

Public Notice
purpoaea over, and acroaa ·
and upon Hid pramiMe,lln
(JO) fHI wide, ae conveyed
by M. C. Hobert and Mayme
Hobart, hla wtfe, to Arthur J.
Strauaa, Chart" J. Strau11,
and Louie Reibel, by dHd
dated February 20, IIS3,
and recorded In Book 173,
at Page 423 of the Malge
County DHCI Recorda.
EXCEPTING the real
eatate which Ia deacrtbed ..
Parcel 2 In dHd ..-corded In
Volume 291, Page &amp;03, of
the Melga County D11d
Recorda.
ALSO
GRANTED
HEREWITH Ia all the right,
title ond lntereat In and to
an eaeamont recorded In
Volume 216, Paga 227, of
the Malgo County Daad
Recorda.
Riferonce Dead: Volume
180, Page 227, Malga
County Deed Recorda
AUDITOR'S PARCEL 1: 1801659.000
Porcel 2: An eooement
and right of woy for road
purpo111 over, acroaa end
upon the Wilt and of
property In Horton ond
Dobney'a Addition to the
Vllloge of Pomeroy, lhlgo
County, Ohio, deacrtbed In
and conveyed by dead from
M. c. Hobart and Mayme F.
Hobart, hie wl(e, to Arthur J.
Strou11, Charl" J. Strauu,
and louie Reibel, by deed
de ted Februory 20, 11153 ond
recorded In Book 173, at
Page 423 of the D11d
Recorde of Melga County,
Ohio, from the atreet and
Northerly tina of aald
property Southerly along
tho Wnt line of aold
pramlell end not laoa than
olx (6) feat Waat of the brick
building now located
thereon, aald right of way to
be ten (10) feet wide and
extends acroaa aald W11t
end of aald property ninety
alx (1111) faet, •• excepted
and reserved In aold dood
hereinbefore loat reforred
to.
Reference Dead: Volume
180, Page 227, Metge
County Deed Recorda
Porcel ;, Sub-Troct 1: The
following rool oatota
eitueted In the Villogo of
Pomeroy, County of Melga
and State of Ohio and mora
~articutarly bounded and
deacrlbod 11 followo: Being
In 100 Acre Lot No. 307,
Townohlp 2 ond Ronge 13 of
the Ohio Company'•
Purchua end baing 1
parcel of land abutting on
the Weatorly end of Lot No.
181 end Jho W11torty end of
o 20 foot otrlp which abuta
on tha North Sldo ol Lot No.
181. Said tract Ia 634 1111
wide ond ••tendo at the
width W11terly to tho
Eaeterly boundary line ol 1
right of way; oloo the
following . r"t aatata
altuatad In tha village or
Pomeroyr County of Malga
and Steto of Ohio and
bounded end dtocrlbod ••
followa: ISolng the rear part
of Lot No. 111 ol Horton and
Dabnay'a Addition .to the
Village of Pomeroy, which
lot Ia 43 feet wide end
extanda Wutarty at the
width • dlatonce 33 leal to
the rear end or aald Lot No.
111. The coal, oil. 011 and
aU othor mlnerela have been
reoerved by former grantoro
of thooe two tract; See Vol.
124, Page 123, Melgo
County Dtod Recorda for
11ld mineral ratorvatlona.
And being the uma
property convoyed by T. H.
Devla ond Mory J. Davie to
Eldon Wolburn by dood
dated May 1, 1847 and
recorded In Book 158 at
!'age 684 of the Deed
Recorda of Molga County,
Ohio.
EXCEPT the real "''''
described •• Parcel 2 In
deed recorded In Volume

----------:r----------,----------r----------1

302,
t, Melgo County
Deed Poge
Recorde.
Reference Deod: Volume
-180, Page 227, Melga
Public l)lotlce
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
County Daod Recorda
AUDITOR'S
PARCEL 1: 16118, 1981 International Bua ba caah or money order. In, and bid apeclflcation
NOTICE TO BIDOERS
01857.000
131,
1981
lnternltlonal
Bua
Said Board r1aervea the ahaeta may be oblllnael
Notice Ia hereby given
Sub-Tract No. 2: Tho
tllet the a-d of Education 133, 1980 International But right to waive lnformalltlea, from Traaaurer'a Offlct, 320
following
real "tate
134,
1980
tntarnltlonal
Bua
E.
Main
&amp;trill,
PoiiMirOYI
to accept ro reject anv and
of the Malp Local School
bounded ond d11crlbed 11
Dlatrlct, 320 Eaat Main 135, 1981 International But oil, or parte of any and oil Ohio 45761, (614) 992-5650.
Clnty J. Rhontmue, loltowa: Being o port of Lot
Street, Pomeroy, Oh lo 136, 1980 International But bide. Queatlona con be
Tre11urer Mllga Loc•ll Number 182 of the Horton
anawerad bV Mr. Paul
4576g, will offer for ute by 137, ·1ee1 Chevy Van G-10.
All aaaled anvelopn McElroy,
Board of Educlllon · 1111d Dobney oddltlon to tho
Trana~lon
eealed bid at 1:00 ~.m.,
P.O. Box 272, Vlllago of Pomeroy, Malga
Monday, September 9, 1996, containing bide ara to be Supervlaor at (614) 742·
Ohio,
and
marked
clearly
on
the
2990.
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45789 County,
the following vehlclal:
beginning at tho Northwoat
All bide mutt be received (8) 5, 11, 18, 25,4 to
1980 International Bue outaldl. Terma of aale will
corner of aald lot; thence
111, 19801nhWn.UonaiBua
South on tho Waat line of
- - - - - - - - - r - - . . . . ; - - - - - - - r - - - - - - - - - - r - - - - - - - - - - 1 " 1 d lot 80 fut; thence E11t
34 feet; thence North 10
1111; thence Waat 34 fHI to
Public
Notice
Public Notice
the place of beginning.
Public Notice
Public Notice
ogreaa to and from Willow Being 1 tract 34 feet by ~
real eitite altuattd In the referred to, thence South 8o
feet In oald Northwoat
NOTICE Of SALE
StrHt and Ia aatabllahed In corner ol uld Lot Number
30'
Will
on
the
Weotorty
Vlllllle
of
Pomeroy,
County
By virtue of an order or
Sale laaued out of the of Mtlga and Stell of Ohio nne of uld Brooke lot ·150 conjunction with the right of t 12. Tho coal, oil and g11
Common Pleat Court of and mora particularly lett, more or fell, to the wey through the "Switch and all other mlnarala hevo
Lot" for lngraaa and agreaa boen retorved by former
Melt• County, Ohio, In the bounded and dt~orlbld 11 place of beginning, to
Coal Strttt. • 30 root
cau of Tha F.,... Bank A followa: Being the a~rfaca containing 1.27 acrar.
• atreot running Wnt from grontoro of thlo ·tract. SH
By
the
tbovt
dtacrlptlon
only,
.
and
bl&amp;lnnlng
at
the
Savtnge company, Plaintiff,
Main Street. Tha atalrway Volume 124, Pogo 123,
agalnat Robert 111. Haley, 11 Bouthwttl corner of the only the aurfaca It aold, tho end platform 11 now erected Mel go County D11d
al., Dafandanta, upon Brookllol; tllenca South 45 coal, oil, gil and all othtr on aald 18 foot right of way Recorda lor 11id mlnerll
judgment tharlln rendered, laat to Lot 207; thence mlnarala were reaarvtd by ahall remain .. now located r11ervltlona. And being the
oamt pro.,.rty conveyed by
being Call No.I3CY-144 In North 14" Weat 17.5 ltot; former grantora. Sae d11d
.
10"
to lumlah lngrna and T. H. Devto and Mary J .
In
Vol.
124,
Page
recorded
thenct
Iouth
40
lett
to
the
eald C9llrl, I wtll offer for
agrell to the brick building · Davia to Elden Walbum by
1111, tt tlit.locatlon of the North tine of 100 Acre Lot t 23, Matga County Deed adjacent to aald right of daed dated May 1, 1147, and
No.
307;
thence
·waat
on
Recorda
lor
11ld
mlntrtl
,.,, aetatt and ptreonal
woy.
recorded In ahook I Sl, 11
property and Inventory Uld North line Of 100 ACII re~~n~aUona.
And bolng the umo Page 8657 of the D11d
A
right
of
way
1&amp;
ftet
Lot
307,
ee
feet
to
the
bell
whiOh It 17 Cole' Street,
property conveyed by W. G. Racordo of Molga County,
Pol•otror• Ohio, 417et, on of the cttft; tllance North wtda through aald property Davia,
to W. Q, Ohio. Together with all
lhl13111 day of leptamblr, 4.01' Eat~ the beM of 11 hereby eatabllahed for Davia, Tru1tee,
by d11d dated ........, 0 1 the
In and
the
u11
and
benefit
of
the
lhl
cllft
311.12
IHI
to
tht
1tl8, at 10:30 o'clock /11,. 111.
Stptember 27, 1141 and •..,._
grantore
' tha following Ianda and Iouth Nne of Tha Davia Ice abutting property ownera, recordtd In Book I 48, at to the 20 - 1001 alley
aad Product Company their hllre and aaalgna. tht
edjolnlng lot No. 111 on the
tenM*D, to-wit
Tflt followlntl real Hiatt pnlflltty; lhlnoa Iouth 040 etntar line of uld . te foot Page 122 of the D11d . North and running from
Recorda of Melga Counly, Main Sti'Ht or State Route
altutte In M•lt• County, 30' Eael 111 feel; lhtnca rltht of way bl9ina at a Ohio,
and thereafter No. 7 wen.
point
42
teet
Eaat
from
the
North
Sl/2"
Eatt
30
foal;
01110, bound and llltWibld
Conveyed by llory E. Davia
'"-ld s ~rra N01 1 a 2
louthwllt
corner
of
the
lhlnoe
South
Ill"
30'
Eaat
.. lollow'.llg.
to M. C. Hobart, by dtod
...
uuo ct
'
TRACT No: 1 Sltulllld In' 21 lilt tO thl NorthWIII "Switch Lot" and oxtendt dated July 12, 1tSO and baing the lima property
the County of llelp, In lhl oomar of lhl "Switch tot•, South So 30' Will I lett on recorded In Book tiS, at conveyed by Eldtn Walburn
and (garnet Walburn,
Stele of Ohio, and In the tlleiiCI Iouth r 30' WHI II aach aide of aald center
Vllllll of Pomeroy and feet; thence Iouth 14' Eaat JIM, to a point 25 ftet North Page eva of aald D11d Jluaband and wife, 1o M. c.
· Hobart, by daed dtttd
bound1411 tnd dtiOrlbtd .. eo...., tlleiiCI Iouth r 30' of lhl North llna of Lot 307. RaconiL
Ex6ept an ea11ment and September 21, 1148 and
Wlet 13 feet to the llald 11 !opt right of way II
lolfowl: .
Puotl 1: Tha following. Morthwltt comer of the ettabllahld for Jngrell tnd rlghl of way for road recorded tn Book 115, at
arookt lot flret 1bove
Page 113 of tha D11d
'I

J

•

Public Notice
Recordt of Melga County
Ohio.
Except therefrom tht
following dtacrlbad part
thereof, to-wit: The
following daacrlbtd rill
eatata, altuata In the VIllage
of Pomeroy, In the County
of Malga and Stott of Ohio,
and In Lot No. 111 In Horton
and Dabney'a Addition to
the Vltlagt of Pomeroy,
being a parcel of land
~ginning on the lint
betwaen Lot Noa. 1&amp;1 and
1i2 four (4) lett Eoat of the
South-! comer of lot No.
111, thence parallel with the
Waat end of 1.91 No. 111 for
a dlatenct of 43 fHt, more
or laaa, to the South line or
a 20·foot alley, thanco
along the South line of 11id
alley to the "Woat llna of the
Edward French lot; thence
S~uth 43 lilt tlong the
Waat lint of tht Edward
French lot to the South line
of Lot No. 181; thence
Weaterly olong the South
tine of Lot No. I 81 to the
place ol beginning,
contalnlngll30th of an acre,
more or 1111, together with
a right of way lor lngreaa
ond ogre11 lor truckt ond
automobllaa from tho freme
garage building to Coat
Street, tho W11t line of ttld
1/30th acre troct to be (4)
feet Weot of the from•
.garoge lor the purpoee of
optnlng the garage dooro,
conveyed by M. C. Hobart
end Mayme F. Hobart, hla
wile, to Howaod C. Coclt and
Kathleen o Cecil, by deed ·
datod Moy 3, 1954, and
recorded In Book 178, at
Page 388 or tht DIICI
Recorda of Malgo County,
Ohio.
Reference Deed: Volume
180, Page 227-- Melga
County Dtod Rocordo
AUDITOR'S PARCELS: 1602438.000
TRACT No 2: All the real
aatate dttcrlbod In deed
recorded In Volume 248,
Page I 15, Melga County
Deed Recorda, which
remain• following the out
conveyonce of the reol
eotato dtocrtbad ea Parcel I
In a d..d recorded In
Volume 281, Page 603,
Malga County Deed .
Recorda . The real eatate
conveyed hareby lo a 15
foot by 48 foot parcel which
lito w11t of tho tO loot by
46 foot parcel which Ia en
exception dllcrlbed In dead
recorded In Volumt 248;
Pog• 11 S. Melga County
Deed Record•.
bceptlng onel reaorvlng
an 1111ment and right of
way too road purpoaaa ovar,
acro11 and upon the woat
end ofthe property above
daacrlbed and hereby
conveyed from the atreat
and northerly tina of llld
property aoutharly along the
waat lint of 11id premlaea
ond not Ina than alx (6) feat
wilt of lht brick building
now located thereon, tald
right of way to be tan (1 0)
feet wldt and extend acro11
aold w111 end of aald
pro.,.rty nlnety·elx (II) feet,
and the aom1 to be
maintained by the Grantor;
and
Together with
on
eoaament and right of way
for road purpo111, over,

acrooo, ond upon property
of the former Grontor
conveyed to.him by Mary E.
Davia by dead dated July
12, 111SO, and recorded In
Book 185, It PIQI 61111 of tho
D11d Racooda of Melga
County, Ohio, containing
1.27 acroa, aald e111ment
ond olght of woy to bo tan (
10) feet wide ond od)otnlng
tho ooad obova excepted
and raatiVtd and oleo to be
maintained by tha forma•
Grantor, thereby making e
rood twenty (20) feet wide,
which ahell be uood )olnlly
by the partlao hereto, their
helra and 111igna.
Reference D11d: Votumo
241, Page 1t 5, Melga
County Doed Recorda.
AUDIToR'S PARCEL: 1601684.00
TRACT No. 3: Sltuolt In
the County or Melga In the
State of Ohio and In the
Village of Pomeroy, and
bounded and d11crlbed ••
loll owe:
Parcel No. 1: Baing In Lot
I 181 In Horton and Dabney
Addition to the Vlllege of
Pomaroy being a parcel of
land beginning on the Una
between Loto I 111 end I
112 lour (4) 1111 aaat Of the
aouthwnl corner of Lot
1181, tho nco parollot with
the weot end of lot I 181 lor
a dlatanco of 43 lui more oo
1111 to the oouth line of a
20 loot alley; thence along
the aouth lint of 11id alloy
to the weal line of the
Edward French lot; thonce
aouth 43 lett olong tho Will
line of Edward French lot to
the aoUth lint of Lot I 1 S1;
thence w..torly along the
aouth line of lot I 181 to th~
ploca of beginning,
containing 1130 of an acre
more or leu. Than
grantora hereby give and
grant to the granttoa, lhtlr
helra and aaalgne a right or
way lor tngra11 and egre11
for truck and automobile•
from tht frame garage
building to Coal SlrHL Thle
right of way 11 not an
exclualvo conveyance of
any land, but Ia given tor the
convenience of oalct
grant11a In going to and
from uld prage building to
Coal Street. It Ia not the
Intention of thla dud that
the travelwey be uaad for
parking purpo111 It II lht
purpo11 that the ""t lint
the property heraln

-,

Public Notice
daacrlbed aholl be four (4)
lett w11t of the frame
garage tor the purpoaa of
opening the garage doors.
Refertnca Deod: VoluiiMI
255, Page 581, Matga
County Deed Recorda
AUDITOR'S PARCEL 1: I 602587.000
Parcel No. 2: Being a atrlp
of land toeing Main Street
and beginning at tlla North
Eaat corner of Lot Number
one Hundred and Eighty one
(111 ), thence wilt on the
north lint of tald Lot
Numbor ono Hundred and
Eighty Ont (181), a dlataneo
of one Hundred (100) IHt,
thence north twenty (20)
ftot; thence Oil( flftaen (15)
feet; thence aouth four (4)
t..t; thence uat elghty-flve
(85) loet to Meln Street;
thence aouth olxteen (18)
teat to the place of
b~glnnlng, aub)eet however
to o right of woy too tht
purpou of lngre11 and
egro.. for the owno11 of
property obulllng on tho
above doaeolbtd promlall,
and to thtlr he Ira and
111lgna forever, but not
periling purpoa11.
Reference Dead. Volume
255, Page 581, Mtlga
County Deed Rtcordo
AUDITOR'S PARCEL I 18·
01658.000
Porcel No. 3 : Tho
following rul eotote
aituatld In the Village of
Pomaooy, County of Malge
and State of Ohio and In
100 acr11 Lot No. 307 and
mora partlculorly bounded
and d11crlbed •• followa:
Beginning at a point aouth
SO feat from tho aouth111t
corner of o 30 foot atreat,
thence aouth along tho weot
aide of Moln Stotot 46 feet;
·thonco weat 110 foot; thence
north 48 feet; thence 1111
110 fill to wet! aida of Main
Street, the place of
beginning, being a lot toeing
48 felt on Malri Street and
extending that width w.. t
110 leaL Tha right 11 given to
the grant111 herein their
htlra and " aaatgnt to
conatruct and maintain at
their axpan11, a aanltary
aewer to extend north from
the rear paot of the
realdtnce on aald lot and to
extend acro11 the SO taot
lot of the grontor herein to
connocl with the oewor
which exttndo •••t ond
along the aouth aide ol 11id
30 toot atr11t.
Reference Deed: Volume
2SS, Poge Stl1, Molgt
County Deed Recorda
AUDITOR'S PARCEL 1: 16-0
1663.000
TRACT No. 4:
Paocal No. 1: Tha
following rul eatate
altuated In the Villoge of
Pomeroy, County ol Melga,
and Stell of Ohio and In
Horton and Dtbney'a
Addition
and
mort
particularly bounded and
dotcrlbed ealollowe : Being
a troct ol land without 1
number and known 11 the
"Switch Lot" and lacing H
feat, more 01 loot, on Mtln
Stroot ond extending at thot
width weatorly o dlatonca of
17S lett, mora or It II, to
the w. G. Dovla 1.27 acre
troct, and which uld
property woo conveyed by
W. G. Dovlo, Truatto, to H.
M. MIUer, Truetee, by deod
dated September 27, 1841,
and racordtd In Book 148,
at Page 141 of the Daed
Recorda of Molga County,
Ohio, ••copt therefrom the
following part thereof, to·
wit:
Being In 100 acre lot no.
307 ond moro porllcularly
bounded ond deocrlbed 11
lollowe: Beginning at on
Iron pin oouth 50 teet from
tha Southall! corner of a
atreet known 11 Cole Straet;
thence lOUth olong the Will
aide of Main Street 46 feet;
thonco Will I 05 feet more
or ta11to a atoke •••t 41oat
from 1 corner of • brick well
of tht building known 11 the
Blackamlth Shop; thence
north 48 feel following 1 line
4 feat e11t of the woll of the
Blockemlth Shop to a atoka,
thence 1111 1 OS teat more
or laaa to tho place of
beginning.
Alao excepting and
ruervlng unto tho Grantore,
thtlr helra and 111igne, 1nd
for all peraona for the
benefit of tha Grantora, their
hol11 and 111igna, the right
to enter on the real utate
conveyed heroin to the

Public Notice
boundary line of the real
totate deacrlbed In P..-011
No. I and 18ya bttwWn aald
wtltem boundary Nne ollhl
parcel convoyed herein and
the cliff of rocka.
Th• aouthern ltoundary
line of thla real ettalt Ia tha
aouth boundary line of the
real 11tata conveyed herein
pro)acttd to tha cliff of
rockt.
Rtforance Dead: Volume
291, Page 803, Malga
County DHd Recorda.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL 1: 16Ot15S.OOO
TRACT No. 6: Situated In
the VIllage of Pomeroy,
county of Molga end btlng a
4' X SS' ltrlp Of reel Illata
which be adJacent to and on
the North tide of ll'xiS'
parcel of real aatote which le
more fully deocrlbed 11
Tract No. 3 Parcel No. 2
above and being bounded
on tht Eaat by Main Street.
on the South and E11t tha
above d11crlbed Tract No. 3
Porcol No. 2 and on the
North the above deacrlbld
Tract No.3 Parcel No.3.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL 1:
16-01680.00
All of the above dtecrfbld
real eototo lo aubjact to all
uaomonta, 111111, and
rlghte of way of record.
EXCEPTING from all of
the obove deocrlbad tract,
porcela, and aub·lracta, all
coal, oil, g11, and other
mineral• which have b11n
prevloualy conveyed or
reaarvad.
DEED
REFERI!NCE:
Volume 31 S. Page 413,
Molgo County Deed
Recorda.
And the following
peraonal property and
lnvtntory upon the above
pramltoa:
Plot• StHI Rack
oxygan/Acelylene outfit
Mig. Gun Weldor, Hobart
Modal
Rt-2Sfllerlal Hbrt 8177
Sltol Shitlv• on Shop Wall
Tool Box
Alrco Welder, Model S-A·
Dt)R224HPA·B·D
Ser.
IHBI31201
Water Cooler, Bernard
Worl&lt; Bench
Cablneta Uncllr Worll Bonch
Electric Fork un
25" Laythe, Shchumteher
and Boye 2etto2
Metol Roll
Everette Cut off Sow, Model
14- 16, S.r. I 784-1
5 Steel Racka
Small Prell
older Bolt Threader, Beaver
Aluminum Gum Welder,
Mitior Spool Gul)
Lg. Shear, Long and
AUalatton K6S
Steel Rack (4140)
Steal Rack (CRR)
2 Weatlnghoua Watdere, Sor.
IS-2&amp;02 l S-2St2
Large Vice Tabla
Miller Walder, Model RC·
2S&amp;, SeriBRT-8&amp;77
1- 10" Break
1-16" American Leythe
Rtd Tool Box
Wall Shelf
Bolt Machine, oater, Ber.
.SS2
Herford Mill, Serial 1410241
Metal Drill Ceblntta
Drill l Top Cupboard
Dayton DriU Preae, Model
32919
Enco Drill Potu, Modti·12&amp;223S, Sor. 139181
Refrigerator
Lg. grlndeo, Ser. I 0388,
Enco Modellt03S
Work Bench
Sander, Powermatlc Modal
33F112-4-8-2, Ser. 333S8
Work Tobia
Vort Mill Index Model 74S,
Sorlal15301
Cold Saw, Promoclt
Mtc350, Sari 11185
Bonk Sow
o•ygon/Acetytone Torch Sat
Brett Tool Box
Scott'• ToolBox and Stand
Small Grinder, cranamen,
S.r. I C35541
17 - 27" Leythe, Ce"lc 17
12" Lavtho, EncoiMoelet
1236, Sir. 110. 142
Special Grinder
16: Laythil, Guuman. ·
Sheldon, Model 11-1.
Ser. III-2S589
Bolt Ilene
30 Ton Prall
Welding Rod Racks
office Equipment
300TonPreu
I OIC)'gan/Acotylent outfit
1 • Uncotn Welder, lA 200
F·183" S.r A·1 000771
Equipment In oadlator thop
.Equipment In Gil Hou11
Time Clock
Front Room Overhead

Gr•nt11, and to conetruct, Crane
malnteln, lay, and relay a Drill Bit Tap • Reamer
aewer line extending from 2 VIlle
the excepted porcel herein 2 Crane Back Room
to, over. and ocroat the real Welding auppltaa
eateto conveyed herein. Nuta l Bolio
Slid IIWtr lint ahall ba In SIMI
approximate location aa tile Raldal Drill Enco/Mod. 21uma now Ia located.
4220 Bar. 11112•
E•capting and re11rvlng 1t7t Ford 137 Che11l1 Cab
unto the Grantore, their Touck, ler1F37SCEA41184
htlre and oealgna and all 1... Dodge Ceb a Cheeala,
ptraona lor thl btntllt Of Ser. 110MD34W3QII055414J
.\Ill Orantore. their helra and together with all Inventory,
aulgna, a 10 foot roadway equipment end account•
connecting the atreat and receivable located In and
leodtng In a aoutherly around the preml..._
dlraeuon to other real 111111 · S •ld roal ntate waa
owned by the Qrantora, appralllld at 171,733.00
their helra end tlllgne, and
S1ld pereonal propertv
Ia to be uaed In common .bY and
Inventory wart
the Grantae, hie halra and appreiHd It $23,763.00
a11lgna. Bald 10 loot
Ttnlll of Sale: Clah
roadway Ia to be maintained · The roal 11ta11 eennot be
by the Grantae, hie hetre eotd lor leu than_.,.,..,
and "-'one.
of the aporaiHd value. T1tl
Reference Deed: VoluiiMI peraonal property cannot be
2t1, Page 803, Melge aotd forle11 than !Mithlrdt
County DHd Recorda.
or the appraiHd value. Tha
AUDn'oR'S PARCEL 1. 11- Inventory end account•
02341.000
rtCIIvlbll Clnnot be IOid
Parcel No. 2: Further for ·Jell than two-thlrda of
granting and conveying to .l hl appnliaacl value.
lhl Grantee htnln, hla halre
" - M.loult'»•
and aaalgna, al rur ea\811
lhlrlff of
owned by lhl Qrantor herein
Molga COunty, Oltro
owtllch Ilea weal of the weal (I) 11, 14, 11, 21, 211; lTC

'• .

�,...... ... .. .... - ..

. .· · .

•
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV
_11_0_He.....:.lp_w_a_nt_ed
_ _ _11_D_H_•...:Ip:....W_an=ted:..:...._
1

1

lDomtno'a Pizza of PomerOy now
ltlring drMro. 614-992·212•.

ImmediAte poailion- aniatant
manager lor small restaurant,
food service experience 1 must,
ORIVER'S NEEDED: Good Driv- pay baaed on qualllicattons. Call
ing Record, Class "D" license. 614-087-8614 between 9:00am &amp;
304-8 75- 5113.
12:00 roan for ii"CerYiew.

0riv8fs • Van. Flats, Home Often. Immediate 1empor1:ry ware house

~P To 32 · 1t2e . Owner Opera·
!oro, Up To 78"'- 01 tOO"'- Groll
Rev_, 21 Yrs ., COL-A . HIUUng
Fre~ht Since '28. Oeadton, Inc.,
Bi&lt;rnngha!T\ AL 1-800-2SS-SS62.

posit ion in the Gallipolis area,
must be able ro wortl 8Y81'Mng1 &amp;
week·endt. SS.OOihr. a.tan Power
Temporary Services 304· 52g.
3031.

Earn Extra SSS In Your Home
While You En,oy Increased Energy &amp; Decreased Stress t! Can Today For FREE Audio Tape! t 800 -927 -2S27
Ex1.
•SS2.

Job Opening Notice
part· time opening tor instructor asliallnl • c.,.leton
School .. with the ptH&lt;:hool
fJ'O'l'"m throe (3) dayo a Uust have or bt wimng &amp; able 10
obtain an educalional aide permit
~om the Ohio Deportment of Erll·
cation. Application deadine,
Wednesday. AuSJ-111 21, 1006.
Send Resume 10 : Cark!IOn
School, 1310 Carleton Street. P.O.
Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio -i57N.
~ssible

CTAI!pllOIIMI .

Earn up 10 $1000's weeldy stuffing
erwelopes at horre. Start now, ro
experience. Free suppl~l. inb·
mation. No abligation. Send SASE
to : Bucks Dept. 77, 3208-C E. Colonial Dr., nl8. Orlando. Fl
32803.

Need lmmed~telyl

Experienced carpenteta and roof·
ero- experi81'Ced oriy need apply,
EOE. 614-992-2364.

DOG OBEDIENCE AWARD WINNERS- The
following youths received awards for their partlclpaUon In the annual Dog Obedience Show
Friday

It the

Fair King Larry Willis, John Krawsczyn, Amber
Perklna, Candace Fetty, Sara Mansfield, Sarah
Clifford, Fair Queen Amy. Smith and Little Mia·
ter Meigs County Daniel Buckley.

Meigs County Fair. From left are

Ser11ice Man For Vaccuum
Cleaner Company. Uusl Be Neat
In Appearance And Have Experl·
ence With Electric Motors. Will
T1am The Right Person. Call 614·
4•1 · 1975.

Experienced Carpenter· have
own toots, must be able to run
relidential buitdilig from ground
up, heating and cooling experl·
ence is an Bll&amp;t, pay negotiable,
6 1•·98S.3S 11 .

Needed lmmedialel'

Experienced Roofers · Truck 1 10 People To Begin Work At Lo Hand Toolll Referencea A Must. cal Business Due To Expansion.
Wages Bued On Experience. No Experience Ntceuary Due
To Factory Pa id Training Pro·
Applicalions Are Available At
[10111.
1403 Eaat8fn Ave., Monday . Fr;.

day, II-5.Call 814-~51• .

WeOffer c
• No Lay-Oifs
• Rapid Prorrotions
• Vacation lncentill8s
• 40 + Hours Per Week
• Permanen1 Full-nme Positions

HEL~ WANTED: Immediate
Opening For A Full Time CultO·
dian. Send Reaume To: CLA 391,
c/o Gallipoli1 Dally TrlbuM 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis.' OH
45631 .

No Experience Necessary !I

Work From Yout Home, Earn A
Large Income, 6U -441 ·0167, Toll
Free: 1·888·823-8522.

1996

Sunday,August18,

Call Monday For Appointment To
Interview:
614-2.. 5--9895

no

Earn What Vou Are Worth! Enjoy
large Income Working From
Home. Toll Free 1·B8B-200-75Dt,
814-446·12311.
Euy Work! Excellent Pay I AI·
semble Products at Home. Call
Toll Free 1-800-487-5588 EXT.
12170.

Pron:

Office Manoger: CM!puler
oltn~ PlyroM, Aocoun11 Plyable
Rllponolblllry. 4pply At: Tope
Furniture, 151 Second Avenue '
Ga•poN' No , _ Cda Please. ~

Plil't· Time HouaekHper We Will
Train. Apply AI Econo l..adge, 26Q·

Jad&lt;oon Pike, Gellipolia.

+ Per Hour, Free Product, Free·

Food &amp; Uorel Call Now 818· 758.
IIC»!!.
•
Part· time racepttoniat. for Phys1.'
cians office, affice &amp; computar e1-

perience a mutt.

Assistant nurae wl ••perience.'
needed . Send reaurnes 1o: P.O.
Bo• 220. Pt. Pleaaam. WV 25SSO.
Receptionlsl· for amaH home
health oltlco located In Fl&gt;mero,
Lighl typing, some filing. 1525
hour to atarl, excellent benefit
package inctudng 2 weeks vaca .
tion aher 1 year. lick pay, heal1h
1n1urance. Send resume wtth
cover letter to : New Concept s ot
Care, Inc. 1•00 Colgate Dnve.
Manetta, Ohio 45750

OAK HU COMMUNITY
IIEOIC.U CENTER

JOB POSTING
Temporary, Full· Time Bil~ng Clerk
Position Open In The Home
Health Department 41 Oak Hill
Community Medical Center. Re·
sponaibilitlea Include: Manages
Ollic;o, Monthly Billlno, And Socretllrial 0\nlea. Quali!K:atlons In·
elude: A High School Diploma Or
Equivalent."PrtYious OffiC9 Er·
perience Preferred, Kuowktdge Of
MedlciU Termlnnology, Computer
~kil/1 Required, And Experience
In Medtcaid And Medicare Billing
Are Preferred . Pleaae Apply In
Person Or Send Resume To Oak
Hill Community Medical Center,
Ann : Brenda ..,cKenzte. 350
Charlotte Avenue , O.llk Hill, OH
45858.

Someone To Grade Gra~el Drive~- 614-256.1399.
WILOLIFE .&lt;:ONSERVATION

JOBS
Game Wardens, Security, Main·
tenance, Ere. No Eap. Necessary
folow Hiring .. For lnlo Call (219i ·
794-1)010 Ext 8710, 9 A.M. To 11
~~~- 7 Dayo.

180

Wanted To

Do

Any Odd Jobs, patnrmg, carpentry, lawn care, etc ::.l-'-t175-7112
Child Care Provider Opening•
Soon In local A tea . 24 Hours A~
Day, 7 Days A
Competilivfit'"
Pricea. 814·256-6342.
·

w•.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call
30H7S.1 957.

Automotive

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING SERVICE
Parts repaired, replaced. rebuih .-

All Makes

lvorys replaced . Need your piano

Smijh Buick- Pontiac Gallipolis

tuned or restored? Call Bob Grubb

Meigs County Fair Pet Show Friday, taking
numerous prizes. Winners are, from left, Debbie and Elaine Putman, most talented 12 and
under, best miscellaneous; Judy Bunger, moat

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp;CHAIR

ACRYLIC NAILS

SOFA &amp; RECLINER

Reg. $40

$1195

Body Concepts

SR-22

Mon. thru Sat.

3 -miles out BuiBIIille Pike

Fruth Pharmacy

SHOP AND $AVE NOW!

Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance

1996 Market Hog.

Thank you Wiseman Insurance
Agency for purchasing my
market steer at the
1996 Gallia Co. Jr. Fair.

Gallipolis

lim Caldwell
River Valle

ANNOUNCEMENTS

30

Gallipolis

Announcements

&amp; Vicinity

Independent COnaut~nt for Jafra
Cosmeuca In your area, now
booking akin care clUte~ in your
home. Expertence aomething
~1-Ful ino of akin. body &amp;
na~ care tor men I women. Call

ALL Yare! Sales Must Be Pa id In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day befo re the ad is to run.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m. Friday
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m. Sat·
urday.

lo&lt; -~' Kim lJ4.675-51111 .

REWARD $SOO. tor inlorma!ion Au gull 20th, &amp; 21 11. 9:00 A.M.
leadmg to the arre11 and convic- 'To 5:00 P.M. 103 Lincoln Pike, 5
tion- concerning the rectnl bur· Families, Misc . Items. Clothes
gtarr aM vandalism of JT.. In· Size Infants To 6X &amp; Adults Nordustnes, tnc . at the New Haven, dlctrad&lt; &amp; Lots More!
w.VA . taciluy. Plene caii -JTM
lndustnes at 304· 882· 2115 ar
Pomeroy,
Yason County Shenrr at 304-e75Middleport
3810.
&amp; Vlclnhy
Would ltke to earn FR6E toyl,
Dookl or solrware?' Can now for All Yard Sales Must Be ,Patd In
detatlt!l tnoependent Educauonal Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm lhe
Consultam with Otscovery Toys. day betole lht ad il ~ run, Sun304·157$·57tl1 . Educa11ona1 Toys day &amp; Monday edition- t :OOpm
lo&lt; Cl1ildrlll 1li'tl1 10 teem.
Friday,

---------------1
40
80
Giveaway

PubliC

2 Black kttlent , wo rmed, lit er

S81e .

and Auct.lon

..- - -675-7233

Wedemeyer's, Auction Service,
3 Femal&amp; Kltt&amp;ns Found In ~ Gdpoil, Ohio 814-3711-2720.
doned Houso All llllet' Tra•ned &amp;
LOYeable Grve To A Good Home. Rick Pearson Al.lct1on Company,
151-'·441-0423.
lull ltme aucttont•r. complere
a~o~ction
servtce.
L1censed
S ln11de long Ha1red K11tens . 2 •68.0h1o I Wesl VirliJinll, 304·
Cahco &amp; 1 Grer &amp; Whne . 614 - 773-5 715 Or 304-773-544 7.
"*347V.

~90~_,w.,.anted..,....,.......,.,to'"'='B..,.uy....:,.,­

3 KH!eno To Gooo Home. L11reo
Tratned. et•· 4Ae·83QO.
tOO -150 Balel Of This Yean
Hay, Will Pay Delivery, 814· 258Drre'. Heater I. 81cycle1, T.V. 't 13911.
And Record PlayiiUI. 614 ·U6 ·
S8ljQ Belo&lt;t g:QO Pll
Complfte Hou"""'ld Or E~tatesl
Any Type 01 FurMure, Apphanc.
Fnendly KIIWII, l 1n.tr Tra1,...,d, To " ' AntiQUe's, Etc. Also Apptaisal
Good Homo CWy, 8 14-446-389 7
-talllel SU-37V-2720.

Ge&lt;mon Sllepnord ., gooo
'lNOI room 10

run. ~nne .

nome.
~

' C1Wn nctuclld, 814--892'·3125

Ablotut.e Top Ooltat · All u.s. SilAnd Gold Co1n1. ProofMtl,
Dw-.lt, Anuqua Jewetry. Gold
R•no•. Pro- tg30 U.S. Currency,

.. wer

11eayy BtHd Chlc*enl. e 14--«&lt;·
i210

Roc&gt;.

e u-48-21!42·
· __,_., 1

-... r...........

e75-2830.

-

4mc.toouo rnnded peoplelltOOO
weekJy potential. Many positions

lon9 Hau-.cl S.hler Wl qd Ooo.
V•'J r;,endly, 2 Lone Hau ed
R.at»o.ta, 1 Fem~il Tabby Ktuen, Large Amounls 50'1, eo·a 45
RPU Records. Aller eF'M. 513·
11. _ _ ,

available. Stan now, no explfi·
enca nectuory. Call 7 days,

DENTAl. HYOIENIST
Now accepting .apphcati ant for
the poa1110n ol Dental Hygi8mst,
ava1lable tmmed1a1e1y. Please
Mfld rnumn 10 Dental Hygl&amp;n~st
Route 2. Box 857A, Pt. Pleasant,
'M/ 25550.

433g JufNr Road. I,:40:7:-8:7:S-:2022=·:':":0:S88H=::33::.==.i.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

U9. - J a~-·---=--'.:.'
j
.:.OH_4•:..:31'i.:..:..·_ _ _
_,.. ,.., l04475-l05 1.
Clean Lalt Model Cars Or
SmaJt 4 IIXI'n
"ffiOOCI 1 Tr!lctl, 1110 Wodett Or Newer,
to tear down &amp; - •. l14·0t2- hill Buic:k Pon!W:, 11100 Eall·
31110
., - &lt;Wipollo,
:-T..
.::...c_o"c_o
________
Dt:-~:-.,.-m• . J ' 0'1 AuiO Plrll. Buyong Ul·

S.v• r._, you pJCII

Wamed - \ltn ta ge Barbie doll s,
clothes and accissones (1958·
1972), coJIIII4·890-0819.
·Applications are bemg accepted
for in-home careg1\lers. The successful candidates should have
EMPLOYMENT
home' health aide certification and
SERVICES
1· 2 years experience In providing
direct ser\lice care to older
adults. Mus! ha\1&amp; reliabfe transportation, telephone In the home
110
Help Wanted
and willing to work some wee AVON ! All Areas t Sh~rley kends. Applicati ons are a\lailable
at the U~s County Multipurpose
Spears. ~4-6 75-1429
54tntor Center, Mulberry He1ghts,
~meroy, OH. An EOE Employerl
84 LUMBER
Provider of Services.
MANAGER TRAINEES
The nations large~t prtvately
A\/On S8 -S15 fH1. No Minimum
owned b..uld1ng matertal retatler 1S
Order. No Door To Door, No lnseek.ng an energettc, career
1-800 -736-01 e8 lnd/slst
minded team ol players. Our entry \lenlory,
rep.
lwei management posuions otler
a combination of management,
BEST HOME BASED BUS.
sales, and physical activity. Ad · Investment · 15,950 · FT!PT
vancemen1 11 rapid as we are one FREE PKG. 1-800 -513·4282, 24
ol the nation 's fastest growing Hr&amp;
companies and we promote from
witl'lin. Opportunities are both IO· CLERK POSITION
cal and nationw1de. Opemngs m Cleri cal po sition available lhe
OH and 'MI
right candidate must pouen :
Starting compensatiOn row to m1d typ1ng 55 wpm, fHmo. telephone,
2o ·s. hospnahzauon"lt!e tn· record keeprng, and the ability to
surance· den tal • proht shar~ng' u1111ze LOTUS 123 and Uicroaolt
40 1K comprehens1ve tram ii'\Q Word 5.5 Pos tuon req u1tes self
pmgram.
starter. Ma1l wotk h1story to : P.O.
If you are a ~gn school graduate Box 209. New Ha\len. W Va .
(tome college preferred) and 2528S
have a pos~rNe an• tude
Compu1er Uurt Needed . Wo rk
SEE Jrm ~rr'()ld
Own Hours. 20K To $50K tVr. 1WO&lt;i. Aug 2 lSI
800-348-718e ~ 1173.
2-8prn
Apply at: 84 Lumber Co.
CONSERVATION JOBS: Wildlile
Route 1 Box &amp;4A
Posilions $115,000 ·135,000 tYr.
Gallip0~1 Ferry WV
Cleticat. Securi1r. Game Warden
An equal OPPOrluniiY employer lA/ Etc. No ExperienC4t. For tnb 219·
F 011 drug he eooronment.
76H301 Ext. WOHS6t, 9 A.M..
Able Avon Aepreten!arives i P.M. SUn ·Frt.
needed. Earn money for Christ·
mao bills 11 home!at -r&lt;. t -8001102-53S6 or 304 -882·2845, Ind.

Srorlina. Eoc. Aequroitions .-.ry
. MlS. Coon Shop, 151 Soccnd

Ambilieus Minded People! $1,000
Wkly Potential. Many Positions
A\la1lable. Stan Now, No Experience Necessary. Call 7 Days
4()7-875-2022 Ext OS26 H33.

I'

_J

Thank you Gallipolis Tobacco
&amp; Candy Co. for purchasing

my 1996 Market Hog at the

Beauty Shop equipment,

1996 Gallia Co. Jr. Fair.

Display Case, Large Oak

ALL LLOYD LAWN
FURNITURE ON SALE

$49.95
$299.00

4

pc. Bedroom Suite

..

FLAIR FURNITURE
675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry,

WV

Chairs, Hair Brushes,

Professional
Services

HARTS MASDNARY · Block,
brick &amp; stone work, 30 years ex·
perience, reasonable rates . 304·
89S.3591 alter 6:00pm, no rob to
sma ll or 10 BIG. WV-021206

BALLET, TAP, JAZZ,
BATON
Gallia Performing Arts

1-614-245-9880
1-614-367-7893

&amp; stool,

VENDING : LAZY PERSON'S
DREAM . Few Hours • Big $S.
Will Sell Cheap. t -800-820-43S3,
HI00-820-6782.

230

Roller Tray, Hair Dryers,
Manicure 'table

PEPSI/COKE ROUTE
39 Established Sitea S2,500
Weekly, Free Video, 1· 800· 51 1·
6342.

$499.00

22 Locust Street Gallipolis

Siding, wtndows, general building.
Bumgarner's Gen8ral Contracting
WV020229 . 304· 882-33•2 o•
304·882·2876.

Loads of junque,

&amp; much more
Sa.m . ·4 p.m .

Clothes

Aug. 22,

23 - Thur, Fri.
8 a.m.-1 p.m.

Aug. 24 Sat

FOR SALE
1992 Black Ford Ranger

All realootall adventslng In
thia n - r Ia subjec:l to
tne Federal Fair Housing Act
ol19118 wltiCh makes NIllegal
to a&lt;IY81Uaa •any preference,
11nt11arton or dllcnmmrton
baNd on rece. color, religion.
sex lamlllal atallll or national
origin, or any 1n1en1ton to
make any SUCI1 prelerenca,
llmillt!on or dt1Cr1mlnauon.•

XLT extended cab truck,
low mileage,
excellent condition.

322 Third Ave.

700 Third Ave .

1·800-664-5462

Faye Thompson

Gallipolis, Ohio

Thank You
SUBSTITUTES WANTED:

Teacham
Teacher Aides
Bus DrivelS

Shelly Co. for buying my

1996 Market

Hog

••

..••

~

Stacey Mills

This .-paper will ""'
tcno..1ingly accept
adventaemanlllorreal-11

wltiCh 1o In Ylotalton of the law.
Our readel8 aro hereby
lnlonned that au ~
tldvllrll88d In 1hll newspaper
1re available on an equal

Thank You Myers

Ol'f)Otltl1l1y -

LOSt lnCI FCUICI

•LOll -

et

~

310 Homes for

Thank You
Unity Savings
for buying my 1996
Market Lamb
Grace Cochran

House for Sale
4 Bedroom RAnch Red Brick
Newly remodeled

Wlm:

Kyger Creek ·Athletic
Boostem Association
Meeting
Tuesday. August 20th, 1996
7:00p.m.

What

Yibln:

Yilllcl:

Kyger

Creek

State Route 218
Mercervile. Ohio
614·446-0418

School

.

' ""'• - - Okl

-

w..au 7 von Wlltr
;:.....__;....:.:..:.______-1 ctoltir
lATo014-all1-7011.

....

W..-. -

w
-

..,.,.. To 8•y: Goof Used $o1
Of£ u9rudl't. 41 -'·~.

_,,.._

410 Houses lor Rent

2 Bedroom houae for sale or rent
1968 Oakwood ux72 3 Bed· :304::..:·6::,7:,5·:::27:;22:::-_ _ _ _ _ _
rooms, 1 112 Baths, large Front
Kitchen, Newer Carpet &amp; Wallpa- 2 Bedrooms, City Schools, Gar per, 8x20 Deck, 814-446-1125.
field Avenue, S300/Mo., 1 200 Oeposit, No Pets, 6 14 ·448 · .. 069 Be1991 Mobile Home Sale, 3 Bed- tore9~M.
rooms, New Elec1ric Furnace,
Pipe For Woodburner, S-4 ,800, 3 Bedroom, ac, utHitiet not includ814·319-2435.
· ed, 3SOJmo, references .&amp; aecurily
deposil required. 304-773·5698.
1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom_, sggs down.
St95Jmo. Free deti\lery &amp; sel·up. Fi\18 rOom house with bath in Po·
onlY a1 Oak Wood Homes. N1tro meroy, oflllreet parktng for one
wv. 304-755-5886.
car. clean. deposit and referenc es required . no pets. 61• ~ 992·
20x56 Mobile Home On 112 Acfe, 3090
[and ;Ofltract, $3,000 Down,
·
$299 . tO For 7 Yearo, 614-446 - House For Rant : Within Ciiy Lim·
6591 .
its. 3 Bedrooms. Basement, No
Pels, Reterenoao, $350/Mo.. 814·
55x10 2 Bedroom, SHOO. 814· 446-8423, 814-446· 7S50.
258-8228 or 614-256·1417
Will Have 3 Hou••• For Renr Or
Gallipolis Ferry, 1986 14•76 Hoi- Sale In 3 Weeks, Can Ba 3 Or 4
leypark, 3 bedroom1 2 baths, Bedrooms, Good Locations, Price
wooden porch, 2 storage bUild· Range $500 TO $1,000/Mo., Plua
rngo, 718 acre lot. S28,SOO . 304 · Utillries, No Pets, Write: CLA 393.
675·1213.
C/o Gallipolis Oa rly Trrbune, 825
Th1rd A\lenue . Gallipoli s, OH
Ltmited Ollerl 1997 doublewtde , 4563 1 For Appotntments.
3Dr, 2ba!n, S1799 down, $2791
month. Free dell\lery.. &amp; setup.
Only ar Oakwood Home ~. Nitro 420 Mobile Homes
WV. 304·755-S68S
lor Rent

J:::.:::::...::.________

Older Schultz home, owner occupied, 2 bedroom , excellent lor
young or retired couple, priced on
inspection. 304-675-S394
Sale : Big Savmgs On Singles And
Sectionals By Schult. Clayton
And Norris Must Make Room For
New Models Save Thousands
F1ee Oeli\lery And Set Up French
C1ty Homes. Gallipolis, OH 614·
448-934() Or 1-800-231·4467.
Secllonals : Big Schult Display
Salt Goi"9 On Now. Savo Thouaandt FrH Oelivery And Set Up
Included French City Homes.
Gallipolis. DH 814·448-9340 Or
1-800-231-4467 .

1 e.droom Mobile Home 1 Mile
From Downmwn Galllpolio. Range
&amp; Relrlgeratot Furnlllhed. Depo~~
Leaoe Required . No Pats, 814·

4411·2286.

2 'Bedroom Trailer, 8 Miles Route
218, 1220/Mo + Deposit, Refer ences, 614 -4.. 6-8172, 614 -256 6251
.
For Rent Or Salt: Land Contract
70114 Two BR All Electric. CA.
Excellent Condition, On Rented
lot, Between 2 To 8 P.U . 814·
446-2003,814-448-1408.
Mobllt Home For Rent,

1279.

e14·446·

sage

Slle

Farms for Sale

In

Homo For Sale By' Owner: 3 Bod-

SANDRA JEAN

rooms With Garage. New Deck
t8x2• 1 Acre MIL In Country,
814-245-5006.

ROBINSON

The Land of
Etemal Ufe

On Your Birthday,
August 17th.
In St. John 11 :25·26

Apartments

lor

Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur·
nilhtd and unlurni1hed, security
deposit required, no peta, s u VV2-2218.
1 bedroom furnished apartment in
Middleport, call 614-446·30!iU or
514-1192-2171or 614-1192-5304.

.

Call446-2342 or 992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

..
....
.........(.
~.-~~~

r ....,,...

Bappy401b
Mark

I
•

life;

Amanda Rose .
Fife
who p11~1d IWIY
50 yeer,s ago •
August

1 5, 1946

The one we love Is

never

gone.

She

within

our

hearts.
'

•••• ,.. . . . . t4NIIIi)1

Pst!llne &amp; A•

•

(

. Still missed

dlilghters u:;:~~~J

•

•.

He that

•

One bedroom apartment in Pl.
Plealln\ 61 4-1192-S6S6.
Twin Rivefl Tow8f', now ac:cepting
applications lor 1br. HUD subsid·
ized apt. for elderly and handi·
capped. EOH -875-6679.

450

Bedroom Suite Spanish Style
HuiCh Dreaaer, Highboy Cheat,
Nigh! Teb'e Wtrh Waterbed 1385,
61-'·3157·0638.
Country F urnHure. 304-675-6820.
Rt 2 N, 6m1les, Pt Pleasant, WV.
Tuet-Sat 9-8 , Sun 11·5.

Furnished
Rooms

C ~rcle

Motet. Gallipolt$, OH tl14·
446-2501 or C5 14·367·0612. Elle ·
ctency Rooms, Cable, Atr, Phone,
Ml crowa\le &amp; Retngerator , Taxi
Service 112 Price For Motel
Guest.

Uvinoroom IHaH Rugs: 17x5. 1319
Sculptured Green $50: Bedroom
Rug gx&amp;x10 Sculptured Blue SJO.
614 -446-4017.

460

3 Rooms. Bath, Washer / Dryer.
Air Conditioner. Dishwashtf. Utth·
lies Paid. Good Quiet Neighbor hood , No Pe1 s. Reference tOe·
posit. 614·4 .. 6-1370

Space lor Rent

Beault lul Hand1 cap Accen ible,
Prof&amp;sslonal Olhce Space For
Rent In Pomeroy Across From
Sahsbury School. Ideal Fof Ser\1 IC&amp; Org&amp;nlliitlons. Insurance. Etc.
614·446-8289.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Weotwood Drive
from $244 ro S3t 5. Walk to shop
&amp; movres. Call 814 -446 -2588.
Equal Housl"9 Opportunity.

Commercial Space Approx . 800
Square Feet locatecl Corner Of
State Street &amp; Third Avenue, Gal·
llpolls. The Former license Bu·
reau location. Cal 614·446-.. 639.

Don't lot This One Slip By. Large
2 Bedroom With lots OF Extras.
AIC, Washer, Dryer, Dishwasher,
Stove, Ralrlgerator lncludO&lt;i. 1400
Depo1it, $450/Mo., Centenary
Area, fl1 ..-448-2205.

Furnia hed Ellieciencr· Aparlmen~
Central Heat &amp; Air Conditioning,
All Utllitiea Paid, Private Parking,
614·446·2G02

Ir:========:;
110

Grat1ous living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apanmenta in Middle·
port From 1232-1355 . Cell 614992· 5064. Equal Houstn9 Oppor-

530

Antiques

110

Help Wanted

bedroom furnished apt Depoort &amp;
refefencea. 304-882-2586.

New Haven- 2 bedroom. furnished

apartment. depoait &amp; references .

~304:...:·882~-2~5118=·---,...--Newly Remodeled 2 Bedroom
Apartment. Crown City, 614·256·
649 5, 814 _258- 1249.
Newly remodeled upstain apt.,

,1

- ~8.:,:75-6::::,:1,:98::,-_ _ _ _ _ _ _
New!~ Remodled Furnished 3
Apartment At 851 Second

·

BOSTON

MARKET

Community lleleUona

COME STAR
GAZE.WITH USI

pnyslcal rehallllltallon aarvtcoo,
ia seeking an experienCed
mar1&lt;et1ng prn!OIIIonat tor our

We'll Give You the
Opportunity to
Shine!

adult lnpettenl 18118b program

Middleport, North 3rd Ave. S
Room unfurni shed apt, also, 2

Rell1auranl

Help Wanted

COOrdiMIDI'
RehabCara Group, ·1 relkx\11
leader In tne defiVery of

1\/rioea.

Contractors

Springfield M1A 1 Month Old,
Firecl 20 Rounds. Uany Acctl ·
aories. $1.200. 614-446-3945.

Household

510

Carpet &amp; Vinyl Sale On Room
Size &amp; Stock Mollohan Carpets.
81 -446-7444.

D&amp;R

Goods

MERCHANDISE

Goods

bie8 14· 446·7323.

Sporting

520

Tra1 ler lot lor Ren1 on Jencho
Road. 30&lt; ·895·3534.

Efficiency Apartment Across
From Univenity Of Rio Grande,
All U!llitles Paid, 1225/Mo., 614·
388-9946.

Allowed, Refer Judy Or Deb-

live again, and
whosoever liveth

and believeth in me
shall never die.
Sadly missed by
three children,

fi~

grandchildren, and
mom, and dad •

Extensive updates surround
brick &amp; ' vinyl 2 story home &lt;&gt;itti..,
amongst 20 acres of fenced
Features a 30x15 greenhouse
waterfall, wishing well in the first fln11.r1
family room and large
with Anderson windows. Also offers
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, first
laundry and more than 2 car garage
Call Leisa Lee @ 347-6209 or
Slate @ 423-7786 for your nArl'lnriA
showing today. Offered@ $150,000.

Whirlpool Wash er sgs; Holpoint
Dryer $95; Kehlinator Froll Free
White Refrigerator, $150; Whirlpool White Refrigerator, Uke New
1295; Whirlpo ol Washer Like
New 1205: Whtrlpoel Chesl Type
Freezer • Ft . $100 : Maytag
Wa1her &amp; Dryer Set S175 Each,
Skaggs Appliances. 76 Vine
Street, Gallipolis, 814·446-7398.

Now taking applications. Country
lane Mobile Home Park, GalliPD·
lis Ferry. 304·675-5-421

Duplex 556 Third A\lenue, Galh·
polls _ 2 Bedroom s, LA , OR ,
Fenced Yard, Ava ilable Now.
$315/Mo., l Month Security Oe·
posit, Apply At : Tope Furn. 151
Second Ave., Gallipolis, ,a A.M. ·
4 P.M. 1 Yr. lease.

ls.3siiil.ilo-N.:e;p'ri'uT0o$350
Bouard Library,
Deposit Re ·

OPBI BODIE 1,._If. Ia

VI'RA FURNITURE
CI14·446·315S
OuaMty Hou181'l01d Furmture And
Appliances. Great Deats On
Casn And Carry i RENT-2-0WN
And L•yaway Also Available.
Free Delivery Wiltun 25..Mites.

614...C~·9580 .

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Al so trailer apace on river . All
hook -ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5651, Uason WV.

Estate Genet11l

Maple Twin Beds. 614 -446·1728

Rooms for rent · week or month.
Starting at S120tmo. Gallia Hotel.

a1 Holzer Madlcal center.
A community Relallono
Coordinalor, you will be
responsible ror community
marketing and public relatlona;
organizing
census
development; oervlng as 1
liaison to 3rd party payor•.
physlclano.
and
case
managers; and handling
pallant
pre . admlulon
acreanl"9 JI'OC8ll. Marketing
experience
required :
professtonal nuralng, lherapy
or social won. degree with
clinical experience benollt:lal.
We oltB&lt; a highly compellllve
salary and benefit package
along with opportunllles for
career advancement. For
mora Information. please
"""/fax your resume to :
Ba1ara Snell. RthabCart
Group, 7733 Foroylh Blvd.,
Sullo 1700, Sr. Loull, MO
63105. 1-800-877 · 1238. ex!.
216. Fax 314-83&amp;-7751.

CHESHIRE ·

This home will fool youl It

has much more room than you would think.
Large Living Room, Large Dining Room,

AI Boelon Ma11«11 alt our
managera are stars and they
have helped make us the
moal succeulltt res1auran1
chain In the counlryl
lmmadlale opportunities exist
or manager~~ In Columbusl
Enjoy Star

Nice Size Kitchen, 3 Nice Size Bedrooms,

Bath, Full Basement, Porches on side and
back.

Outbuilding. · Quiet

neighborhood.

Only asking $38,9001

FAX: (412)854-2eaD
or call (800)854·1973

MONEY MAKER 6 FREE RENT
When you buy lhis DUPLEX and lWO MOBILE HOMES.
Uve In one and let the other 3 Rentals make your
payment Convenient localion close lo Gallipolis. Phone
lor info.
1754

• replacement

415 ACRES M or L

windows

ONE OF THE BEST FARMS IN GREEN TWP.• GALLfA
COUNTY, OR SOUTHEAST OHIO. 415 Aorea M or L.

• siding
• roofing
• room additions
• new construction
Free estimates
Call614-441-2251

The famUy of Sharon
E. M(MUIIon wilh to
thank our relatives,
friends and nelghbon
ror
all the c:ards,
Rowen and food they
sent. Abo thanks to the
Middleport Emeraency
Sqquad,
the
Emcracncy Room Staff
at Veteraru Memorial
Hospital and Holzer
Medical Center. Also
NancY Smith, Cbaplln
Art Lund and tbe staff
of the Intensive Care
Unite
at
Holzer.
1\ankl to Rev. Baker
and Rev. Hughes for
the funeral servl~.
·A special thank• to
Bruce and the (arinll
staff at Fisher Funeral
Home. Thank you to
everyone who helped
us with their prayers,
kiadneu
I!Dd
sympathy.
ManhaU, BUI and
Mellaa

FISCAL MANAGER
Bachelor's Degree In Accounting required; CPA, CMA,
or MBA preferred, plus live (5) years experience with
accounts, cost accounting. budgeting and finance. The
fiscal manager will act as controller for the Arney.
Must have working knowledge of manua and
automated
accounllng
systems.
Strong
admlnlstrativa/communlcation skills. Must have ability
to understand and complete various lederal and stat&amp;
fiscal reporting forms and have knowledge of
gDvemmental accounting requirements. Directs and
assists In the management ol financial alfalm ol tha
Area Agency on Aging, Including maintenance ofliscal
records, preparallon of financial reports, maintenance
of financial policies and procedures. maintaining
accounting practices, and supervision and control CN&amp;r
the fiscal departmenl. Position based. in the Rio
Grande Adminlstrallve office. E~cellent fringe benefits.
All Interested qualified persons should aubmil a
resume, college transcript, references and salary
requirements to Human Resources Office, Area
Agency on Aging District 7. Inc .• P.O . Box F-32, URG,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 no later than 4:30 p.m.
August 30, 1996.
·An Equal Opportunity

Public Sale

&amp;

Great lor Dairy Farm, raising beef cattle, or just farming, it
has 3 houses renled now. Barns, Tile Milk House, Lean l&lt;i
Shed. Plus olher bldgs. &amp; .fool sheds. 2 Tractors, 2 Plows,
2 Disc., 1 Hayblne. 1 Hay Baler, 1 Rake, 1 Cornpicker, 1
Corn Grinder, 1 Manure Spreader, 4 Milkers, 2 Bush
Hogs, 3 Hay Wagons, and a cattle loader. Many
farm equipment and tools too numerous 10 menllon here,
all goes. A complete Farm wilh all Equipment PhOne lor
appolnlmenl now.
1753

PHONE OffiCE 446·7699
KENNETH AMSaARY, PH. 24$-5155
WILLIS LEAOINGHAM, eAOKER, PH . .._t53t

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

Canaday 1i
. Realty
25

PUBLIC AUCTION
Sat. Aug. 24, 1996 10:00 a.m.
Ms.

LeUie Young at 93 Is no longer able to live

alone. So will offer the following ilems for auction .
Lccated at

1

r...tno•nl with:

.Comprehensive salary &amp;
benefll paokage
•Rapid advanoemenl
potenllal
•Thorough hands-on
training program
of'erformance bS8ed
Jl(omotiona
For consideration ~..
resume to:
Tom Dullllltan, P!L Foods,
Norman CBntre 1, 1740
Washington Road, PltlslltJrgh,
PA 15241

RoheiiCere

·Skylights

BOO High Sf. In Middleport. Ohio.

LOCUST ST. - GAWPOUS

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

446-3636

"HqOSEHOLD"

3 pc. bedroom su~~aytag

washer

&amp; dryer.

Gibson

relrigerator, eleotrrc range, chest of drawers. bed,
dresser, coffee table. single bed, stands. Whi~pool
wringer washer' like new, kitchen table w/4 chairs.
couch. chairs. misc. linen, pots. pans. dishes,

&amp;

electrical appliances.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS rTEMS"
Cherry china cabinet, cherry bullet, quilts, green, pink
depression dishes, cut glass. china dishes, oil lamps,
old music, water can. old hats. chairs. glass basket.

&amp;

ect.
"MISC"

Ad

dead yet shall he

brothers.

One bedroom aparlment. lur·
nished, in Pt Pleasant, no pels.
304-875-13M.

h8n on nest, drop leal table w/6 chahs, card table

though he were

.

7795.

2bdrm. apts., total electric, appliances furnished, laundry room
lacilitlea, don to st:hocl in town.
Applications a\lailable at Village
Green Apts. 148 or call 6, • -9923711 . EOH.

HannDnd organ, Kimball plano. misc. owl collection.

believeth In me
In Memory of

Nice two bedroom apartment in
F\:Jm&amp;ro'j. no pet1. 61•·992·5858.

West Apartments, 1295/Mo., P1ua
Depoait, For More Information
614·446-8S15. .

furnace &amp; stove. 304·

Real

Goods
Appliancet :
Reconditioned
Washert, Dryers, Ranges, Refri ·
urators, GO Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 614· 448·

2 Bedroom Brick Townhouaes, 35

new ca.rpet,

Household

510

Nice 2 Bedroom Furnished
Apartment. Gallipolis . laundry
Room . Au. No Pe11. S3651Uo ..
Plus Deposit. 814-446-2800.

2 Bedroom Apartment, All UtilitJts
Paid, S-42SIMo: 2 Room &amp; Batn All
Utilitie&amp; Paid $225/Mo., 513-574 2538.

I am the

MemorY

lives

•

Apartments
for Rent

1 Bedroom, Super Nice, $2881
Mo., Pluo Utilities, Usually
SOmething Available I Sun Valley
Aparlment~ 614-446·2957.

Card of Thanks

2 Bedroom Trailer tn ~rt8f Area ,
Deposit &amp; Relerencea, You Pay
AI U~itiea, 6t4·3fl8-g112.

Trailer &amp; land lor sate Applegrove
WV. 304·576-2S79 Leave mes -

In Memoriam of

_"J

.j

-~=-----:--~=-:-:::-:·1 bo .... boltlel, !Ulil
Loll f•me.itl Cat Whf• Wlltt Co.. m y AdYtrtJMmtftl , Otby
L0"9 Hau, P•t NoN, VicHOI,. ...... 514-Wl-7441

Loll Iaiiie Ctlo&lt;H C&lt;&gt;ihe. f
v..ro " "·
On
NoM Aln , Hem. Rvetr. e14

..

1

D'l lie· _..
gloM._ _&lt;hno, -__ · · gold.
·
_,........,.

.,._.... 1oot

3545.

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo
For Pennies On $1 Delinquent
Ta1, Repo'a , REO's. Your Artl .
Toll Froo (I) 800-IIU-8771 Ext.
H-281-' for CutT.,I llllinQL

In

5ftlinO .... II. :104·

Thlfd lw~e . tu........,. r,• ,

1981 14•65 Liberry 614 -448·

330

-

Middleport, country living, two
bedrooms, IWO large outbuildings,
extra hookup, secluded. well tak·
en care of. 814-992-5333.

'

Middle

Top oollar· anoqun, turn11ure.

,.,• . old -

Buildings

440

resurrection and the

.,dl14-ut-21Nertt&lt;~--.

01103

Business and

REAL E STATE

1996 Market Steer

1

60

340

Excavating for buying my

,_,..in

10,;,.
14...;114;_;,.i;;;-;;;;;;·- - - - - - l • t o e 7~

S130,000, prone 614-8e7-3336.

Looking For Very Nice Big 3 Or 4
1980 Skyline 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Bedroom House To Rent Or auy
Remodeled, New Pain/ On Exreri· On Land Contracl. Wanting To
or, New 2 Ten Furnace, Heal Start Own Bu!iness. 614 -441 Pump, In stalled 1995, 8112 Cov - 11143_
ered Deck, 4•8 Unco\lered, Ex ·
cetlenl Condllton. Struated On Pn·
RENTALS
vate Secluded Lor Or Move. 614·
256-1011.

NEW! Bank Repo's, only 3 lett,
still under warranty, free delivery
&amp; set-up. 304-7SS.7191 .

(614) 446-1 171 or

440

Mobile Homes

Two and three bedroom mobile
homos, starting at $240 -1300 ,
sewer. water and trash Included,
'514-1192·2187.

304-87~486 .

New 14x80 Only make 2 pay·
ments &amp; mo\le--in, no payment after .. years, free se1-up &amp; ~i very.
304·7SS.S685.

Makeup,

changes next season

Second Avenue, Gallipolis

4 Drawer Chest
la·Z·Boy Recliners

Antique Desk (Glass Top)

There will be a lot of

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture Company

$499.00

FFA

Giant Parking Lot Sale

Dustin Jontes 1

$19.95

I BaiSSErtl Sofa Sleepers

Amy Daines

PAY PHONE ROUTE
35 LOcal &amp; EstabllshO&lt;i Sites
Earn Up To lt,liOO Wkly.
Hl00-896-49111

$59.00

Frames

Phone (614)446-6111

Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos Wtth
Or Without Motors. Call larry
L~ely. 614-388-9303.

Mattress

Thank you for buying my

Insurance

9-5 p.m. 446..()322

304-675-5246

Tuppers Plains area. 28 acres on
blodr lOp road iull oil Route 7, 9
roomo, 2 batho, lowly !arm houM
w/lrea gas, 32144 Dtodl garage,
40x52 barn, 20x40 pole barn,
16x2• shop, reduced price

Prolessionat/Businen building tor
sublease. located at 509 S. Third
Svee~ MilldJepor\ Ohio. Eoultern
Mitzi's TLC, I'm Here So Your 3 . Bedrooms. 2 Baths, Large for physician office or real estate
Freel Adult Silting Experienced Kitchen /Dinin g, Garage, New space. Ample atraet p1rklng .
Approved, Flexible Hours, lets Roof tHeat Pump , Cily Schools, Avallable Immediately. Contact
.::T•::.Ik::.l6::.1_4...
_;_1_·1:..:84::.3:..:._ _ _ _ _ Close To G alii pol is, 614· 446 - R.L. Kunz, 514-W-3375 collect.
1 2472
Mothltr Of Two Children Will Ba·
·
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
by sit In Her Home, Green Ele· 4 Bedroom Ranch . Red Bnck.
mentary Area , Centenary, 814 · Newly Remodeled . State Route 1 Ac;re, Garage, Watet, Septic ,
44
.:..:1..:-o32.:..:..1_
. - - - - - - - I 218, Mercerville, Ohio. tl14-446- Footers, Addison Area, $16,000,
614-388-6978.
0418.
Professional Tree ~·· ••••·
3 acres of land lor sal&amp; in HenRemoval, Frat
Beauly In Bnck : Well Built Home
surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-3811 - l With 3 Or 4 Bedrooms. FamtlY derson 304 -675 -5956 or 304 9648, 614·367-7010.
Ream. large 01nmg Room, And 67S-244S.
K1 tchen . No Water Btlls WHh A
Sun Valley Nursery School. Very Good Well, County Waler 3 Acres Uore Or less On Green
Valley Road. 3 1/2 Miles From
Childcart U -F 6am-S:30pm Ages Available, 61 .. ·245·5486.
Hospi1al . Beautiful House Site,
2-K, Young School Age Dur ing
Summ&amp;f'. 3 Days per Week M1ni - By Owner : Green Townsh ip, Ci1y land Contract, $25,000 At 10%
mum 814...448-3657.
Schools, Sanders Drive, CA. Down, At 8'4 lnterell, $200JUo.,
Ranch, Vinyl &amp;ding, Reoentty Re- 614-388--9946, Jack Neal.
Will Clean Our Garar,s &amp; Base- modeled' L.R. ' 0. R. ,2 Batho.3Ek,
ments. Reaaonable ates. light Finilhed Basement, With F.R. 5 Acres For Sale On Csrgo Road.
112 Mile 011 Bladen Road , 4 114
Hauling Available, $32 Per Load, 169,000 614-446-11324.
Acr es Field . 314 Wooded.
614-4&lt;18-0384.
3bedroom, bath, living room wf $12,000. 614-388·1704.
Will Do Babysitting In My Home. hardwood floors, kitchen &amp; dinmg
BRUNER LAND
Bidwell &amp; Addaville Area , S area together, new root. garage,
614-775-9173
Minutes From Hospital, Certified. on At 2. 304 -675· 4139 or 304 ·
g Years . Have CPR Training . II 675-7326 after 5:30
Metgs County : Hunting Property
lnte&lt;esled Csll614-446-6373.
Threa bedroom home tn country, 12 Or 10 Acres Each 19,000 Or
Will Do Babysilling Any Age, Whites Hill Rd., Rudand, one bath. Together 517,500 . True Coun1ry
Uvtng On 5 Acre Building Site
Centtnary Area, Green School in-ground pool, 614-Qg2-5067.
S6.SOO Or 10 Acres $8.500 .
District, fl14·448-6741 .
Three bedroams. new carpet. Many Trees &amp; Streams
ki!Chen, bath. Middleport $29.000
FINANCIAL
negotiable, 614-992-3749 lloyd Gallia County : Halfway To Hunt·
ington. 3 .Miles Out Teens Run &amp;
- - - - - - - - - - 1 Grimm. No Sunday calls.
Chambers Ads. 11 Or 7 + Acres
210
Business
Union Avenue. llomeroy, two With Pond - Choice $11,900 Or
Opportunhy
bedrooms, 6 rooms, central heat 10 Acres $10.000. Gallipolis · 2
1and air, carpe!ed throughout, one Miles Out NeighborhOod Rd. 9
car garage, basement. Must see Acres $14,500, 10 Acres S17.QOO
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 10 appreciate, 614-992-5322.
Dr 22 Atres tMth Pond $26.000.
•ecommends that you do busi·
Owner Financing . 10%, 0ff Cash
ness with people you know, and 320 Mobile Homes
Purchasea. CaM For lA,Ps &amp; PayNOT to send money through the
lor Sale
ment lnlo.
mail until you have tnvetligated
12165 2 Bedroom Trailer, E•cel-1_:.__;__ _ _ _ _ ___
the oltering.
lent Condition, New Carpet, And Parcels on Bay burn Rd . Water,
paved road, reasonable restrW:Bu1iness building for lease in Pl. Deck61·.. ·441-1998.
tions. 304 -675-5253. (no singlePleaaant acrQII from the Fire
12x70 Gregory on rented lot. 2 wide inQ1.Jires pktaae)
Dept 814.742-2072.
bedroom. new gas furnace. in· 1.:....:..:.....:;;...:..:..:...:..:=---Buslna11peroon or Bulldar: Na· cludes skirting, 10J20 porch and Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac loll, public water,
tiona! Manufacturer seeking to awning. $5,500. 304-773--5738.
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-5711-2336.
quality DEALERS in some sele&lt;:t
open areas. Sleet buildings as 1974 Eagle 12x85, 2 bedroom, 1
Real Estate
low 81 S3.00 sq. loot. Call (303) 112 baths. de&lt;:ks. cent. HIA, must 360
move. S8.ooo. 304-675-6746 or
Wanted
7!i8-413S. EXT. 1503

CL4SSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Moll Elllcient
And l .owest Emissions Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market
Cenrral Boiler Ia Currently Look·
ing For A Quality Dealer In This
lmmediare Area . For Information
On Becoming A Daaler Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1·800-2484681 Dr 1-218-782-2575.

LANE MOTION SETS

Special $30

Haulng: UmeiiOno, Gravel, Sand. 2872 Th ird Slreet, Syracuse, 2
coal, Firewood. Topsoil , Con- loll 112 acre total, 4 BR. LR. FR.
struction Otbrlo And Morel 614· DR, ~_tchen, utiliiY. new bath. new
3B8-8879.
plumbing . overlookmo Ohio Ri\ler
available September 1st . $4S.ooo:
11 you would like Avon delivered 614-992·5006or614-992-7d9S.
10 yeu in the Syracuse area, call
614·992· 7768.
3 Bedroom completely femodeled.
1 car garage, fenced 1n back yard.
Lt~e To Do Babysinlng My Home, central aH, 2,500 sQ . ft. lyon's
Spnng Valley Area, C.P.R. Tratn · Addtl ion . Mason WV. Ask tng
tng Experience, Interest Call 614· 158,000 . 304 -773-9163 or 304 ·
4&lt;6·8340.
773-6171 .

Businessperson, small size Conuactar, National )Aanulacturer
awarding local DEALERSHIP lor
sreel buildi119s. Big Profit Potential
on iSles and conatruc1ion. (303)
7S9·3200, ext 2300.

PRICED $450 TO $995

talented; Amy See, beat dog; Kaltlln Dewhurst,
moat unusual; Fair King Larry Willis; Samantha Brown, most talented; Fair Queen Amy
Smith; and Little Mlater Meigs County Daniel
Buckley.

Dogs dominated the

LARGE SELECTION

614--446·4525 Gallipolis, OH

446·2282
WINNING DOGS -

LAYNE FURNITURE

Service and Repair

420

Sale

- ---';;;m:::c,-_;_;__

BULLETIN BOARD
AIR CONDITIONING

Farms for

for Rent

Nuded For Loaol Star... S10.2S

Nurse Aide Training Program·
RoclriJlfings RenabHitalion Cenror
will be offering training classes in
the month of September. Applications are now being accepted at
367S9 Rockaptinga Rd., Pomeroy.
Class s1ze I S hmited. Three (3)
reference papers are required
w• rh apphcat1on. Apply m person
between 1Oam &amp; 3pm J.4 -F. Studems that succeulully complete
the TCE class will be eligible for
employment. Absolu\e~ no phone
cals. EDE

wamecno Do

Help wanted

Pari-Time My stery Shoppers·

Needed Immediately:
Telemarketera Needed For lm·
med1ate Opening• At local Buti·
n.esa. Experience A Plus, But Not
Neceuary. For lnttNiow, Plasse
Call614·4.41 -1 975.

EOE

180

o

Help wanted

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

lawn chairs, canning jars, step stool, step ladder,

CONGRATULAnONS

garden plow, Redwood pk:nlc

table,

ladder, Kenmori

sweeper, typewriter table, sewing machine, lamps,
bench, lots of new Items, Ms. Young

ON 30 YEARS OF SERVIa WITH MA IELL
TO SOMEotl WHO KNEW HE. PERSONALlY

CHARLES L GATEWOOD

8/22/66 TO 8/22/96

was

a

school

teacher.

Jennifer L. Sheela • P.O.A.

Dan Smith - Auctioneer
Ohio 157-418-1344 W .Val515

Billy Goble • 1pprentlc:e Ohio H769
Caah
PoaltlveiD
Refreshments

"Not NlpCIIIIIbll tor ICCidlnta or loll or propetty"
••

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.
TWO STORY HOME WITH POOL. o.3 BEDROOMS.
1 3/4 BATHS .. SPAClOUS LAWN LOCATED IN THE
CITY... $39,000
BETTER
CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT SOON.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN THE CITY. THREE
BEDROOM
HOME HAS NEWLY
PAINTED
INTERIOR AND EXTERtOR .. CAA PORT... FENCED
BACK YARD. CENTRAL
AIR COND . GAS
HEAT..
FOR AN APPOINTMENT AND LET
US SHOW YOU THIS NEW USTING.

CALL

•

�'·

Pac1e 06 •
540

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, ON • Point Pleasant, WV
540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

560

AKC Rtgiatered Ballet Puppies

1 Year Old large Trampolene

Good Shape U50, Evonlnga,
e1H4e 11384. .

LtYino room sulla, like new, 81'·
DD24128.

8 WMka Old, Worm.d, CFA Blue
Point Siamese Ki tten. eu-3t!7 -

Niee used woodburnin g t'leater,

77:.:;,
05:· __ _ _ _ _ __
':'

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE :

1887 Grand Am S.l .750; Ameri reel rlce 65,000 BTU natu· AK C Rev•att! &lt;eG Cocker Spaniel
can Saddle Breed Gelding S225;
gas healer, 1488.50: 514-742· Pupptet. Stolt, Wormed, Aakii"'Q
$1 ,300; Eleclric Polo New
Amp rat
2511 .
$200. Bo1wean ~ Ut .g P.IA .
Braker Box, $80 ; 275 Galton Oil
81•·4&lt;8-327!1.
Tank , $50 ; 614·367·0219 , 61• ·
Queen size waterbed: 7' sofa : di· IA:;:;;;u;;~;;;;;;;-,~:dj~:;i;-;
387·nn

0 -T-C AI BROWNS TRUSTWORTHY HARDWARE 61•·•48·
882e &amp; J 0 NORTH PRODUCE I

350 Goldeo RockOI Molar S150 :
_ _;,_;_81_HSII · 1380.
3SO O lds Transmtu1on SSO : 2328 allor 800pm.
1
Oueen Size Waterbed S75 , 614 - Retriieraton, Stovet, Wuhera
l ·tank ,,·-,-u-p-,pee-:' -1a-IS. F-I-sh
4&lt;8-9575.
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
&amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
And Gauranteedl $tOO And Up
Ave _ Po int Pleasant , 304 -8754 Piece Bedroom Suite , King Size Wi\1 O&amp;liW!f. 814-869-6441 ,
' 2063.

each. 614-742·2050.

70

Shtp ~ trd Puppies ,
Goad Wr1 rkinu Stock Had

nene sat with 4 lwivef ehairt; imilalion electric fireplace; 614-949·

Waterbed, All Accessories In·

eluded, Mual Soli $800 OBO.
614-379-2900 Anylima.
• Autom~tive AC Recover y Recy cler Wnh leak Detector 4x8 Pic·
nic Table, 614 -388·8304 , 614 -

388-9961 .
Ba8a ol boy's clothes, size 5·8.
S1 each ; toddler car seat, 110 :
614· 84~5453 .

BAHAMA CRUISE! 5

(aecond box free) . AAA SIGNS,
1-8)0.533-34S3
·
Star Wars Items, Misc . Records.
Elvis A.nd Bealles Books. "ao
M
Wes1 Collector Doll , 614 -682-

Grooming 8:00am-8:00pm by ap.
pomlmenr. kennel care 7 days a
week, seed &amp; reed, At&lt;C regis·
tered dogs, AKC miniature male
Poodle, parakeets &amp; birds, and
h
Ol er misc . items. Store hours
10am -6pm, Uonday lhrcugh Saturday. 614-902-4514 , after hours,

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon 61&lt; -992-2617.
_ __;Tha=nli.:.:..!.::::.C::m:::·:::"!:.Y·_ _
1
Jad&lt;son..pno, 1·800·537-9528.

n1ghts, Underbooked! ~.lust Sell I
S2S9tCouple. Lim ited Tickets .
Somt Restrictions . 1·800· 935-

Brand New Walker Never Uaed
S50; Bedside Commode Wflh

CHRtSTY'S PETS
271 Nonh S.COnd Avenue,
Mlddlepor1,0H.

Jao...

do~•"

9999 ""' 85811.
BoalS By Rodwing, Chippewa,
Tony Lama. Guaranteed Lowell
Prioes AI Shoe Cole, Gan;pc&gt;lo.

SIGNS: portable changeable 181 _
1er sign wlleuers, S321a. Free de·
ltvery. Ptaatic lenera, $SS box,

Upright, Ron E'IBns En~erprises,

Bucktl And Lid S25 ; 614-3 79·
2728 Or 304·937·3363.

Leave message.

06311.

Dryer $75; Waterbed $125 : Piano

Wurlilzer Organ S300: Upright
Freezer $50: Alvarez Guitar

Etecrric

550

JET

560

Dept. GDT,
P.O. Box 614
Ri J WV 252 71
P ey,

Two Female AKC Rottweiler 4

1-800-458-9990

REALTORS:

Pets tor Sale

· lent dlsposltilm, vet ch~ed. first
shots and wormed, 614·949·2328
King wood and coal burner wilh after 800f)m.
Lenno• furnace , rating 20KW
also heal pump rated 3 112 1on,
61 4-949-3185.

AKC Cocker Spaniel Pups 304675-17112.
VERY

BRICK HQME In a good
neighborhood, 3 bedrooms. 2
full belha, faml"'
1123
., room • oar-.
• ...

APPEALINCll Three

bedroom Ranch in GREEN

ACRE SUBDIVISION $60's

= :a.
.'•, ,~-,J,1

1127
12005 · Aoorox 5 acres, mostly

ReaiE•tate

OPEN HOUSE
Sunday,August25, 1996
1:00 • 3:00 p.m.

wooded wl1h a largo bllildlng 00
properly $12,000.00

,.-~~

12008 - 9.7 acres mil with
public utmllos available, 4 acres
approx. of woodland. $50's

.,_~

~

A

Real Nk:e Mobile home localod
on Route 7 VInyl siding.

12008·2.5 Acres m/1 !hat Is
moslly flal wllh some wooded.
Utll available. Can~ go wrong al
this pricel $10,000.00.

thermopane windows, garage,
out bldgs. Call tor your
Appointmarl today! $50's 14000

Add up all the pluses on this home and you will find
you can't go wrong here. Nice neighborhood at the
edge of town, comfortable living room, eat-in k~chen,
3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1 car garage plus a full
unfinished basement that gives you options galore .
Stop by and let Carolyn show you this lovely
affordable home with a reduced price of $58,500.
'
Directions: StAt. 141. lett on Neighborhood Road,
f1rst dnve on nght - Sanders Drive - third house on
left.

Slder'o Equlpmonl Co. 30•-67S:
7421.

acreage that totals ov6r 1
acree. Plenty of pasture
tillable land. Several
bams, misc. buildings that
In excellent shape. Not
mention this almost new
story hOme that has ~~~~
3,800 sq. ft. with just er
bedrooms &amp; baths
family. Nice fenced
wilh an lnground pool. Th.&lt;..~•
Is to much to mention In
ed, can and let us allOw It
to you. You will be lmp1ressrad

,._,..,.. ,
"""'""""
SHA DED
SETTING! Almost
.
a brand
h
'hI
new ouse w~ arge sized
rooms. living room, 2 lull
' baths , fully eQuipped
~~chen, attached garage, full
basemen!. Pole. bar~
Included approx. 24 x 32 .
Around 3 acres more or less.
Pnvate, situated at a paveo
1835

FOR SUE: CONSOLE PIANO
Responalble Party Wanted To

Make Low Monthly Psymen!S On Miniature Horae For Sate, tl14·
Piano. See Locally. Call 1·800· 245-9227.
.
288-8218.
Regillorod polled harelord bull &amp;
Guitar lnsona Offered In Coun- thtl years caves, 81.C-04D--2257.
ur. Rock, CIU&amp;Ical, And Moral
614-387.()857.
Special FM&lt;Ior Call Salt: SaMday Augull 24th, 1 P.M. Cattle
New, never been used KX15 ampliliar, paid $135, wiU aall lor $100

614-1192-2785.

HOME PLUS SMALL
ACREAGE! Over 6 ~~!~J
comes with th&lt;s 3 BA
Which Includes LA,
INTO
42 k~chen . Barn and other
BEING Vinton Street. Neat one stmy Included $49,500 1849
ACRES brick home. Off street parl&lt;ing
COMES WITH THIS 3 shaded back lawn. living $128,800· IS THE
BEDROOM HOME! Living room kitchen 2 bedrooms, REDUCED PRICE FOR THIS
room, ·dining area, kitchen, large' laundry room, bath. SOUTHERN BEAUTY! Lots
bath, all this conveniently Affordable $35,000.00. Newer of room lncludlng large living
located al SA t60 close to windows!
1862 room. family room, fOrmal
grocery &amp; hospital, etc .
dining room, den, sun ""'~ ...
OWNER REDUCED PRICE R 0 AD
F R 0 N TAGE lull basement and so m"'oh'l
TO $34,000
1185 GALORE"omes with this mora. Including 2
25t acre tract of land, 2 attached garage &amp;
barns, tobacco allotment and acres. lnground swlmn1lri~
mO&lt;e . Owner would possibly pooll Call for the
t703
' spl~ up Into smaller tracts.

.:Z"';'·

t.tay Be Brought In After 4 P.M .

On Friday, 40 Heed 01 L&lt;mousin
• Canle Conalgned. All Consign-

Violin Le11ona, Also Beginning

580

able, Athena livestock Sales,

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

71 o

For aala- canning tomatoes and
green peppera, Wi1Uama Farm

4580.

Rod Roipbetrlta. Taylor's Berry
Prill. 8t4-24!HID47.
.
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIV ESTOCK

61;0 F,arm Equipment
300 gallon pl..tlc farm cheml·
cotlonk, on olod wtlh hose, $75,

61~.
1

F.l King Cutter HD Buoh Hog

Good Condition, S950, 090, 61•·
448-1032.

NEW PRICE $117,11001 Small
Farm w/47 acres more or
less. stocked pond , barn.
garage w/additional 2 stan ·
horse shed Aklng with
.
·
'.'
~hat comes this aHrac~ve 1
12 story home that ~as that
southern look with the big
'columns In front. Situated on
a paved road . Call foi ,
complete detallsl
1838 .

TRANSPORTATION

Canning tomo10aa, u-plcl! $3.00 a
buohol or~ked $4.50 a busl1al
Raymond
• 81•·247-4292. •

. Syracuae, Ohio, 614-g92-398S
daJI Of 61••2-5888 ...,..;ngs,

1980 Park Avenue, lull . power,

10 co
~~~lfter
. n.,&lt;ro1r..~ !i~s. !':tt.err
101 10 ~-v,, .::go~
-

3

'53

Autos tor Sale

Chevy Belair, $150, 814-992-

730

720 ll'ucks for Sate

Autos tor Sale

1994 Dodge Shadow ES, 2 Door,
4 Cylinder, S Speld, Air, AMtFM
CIIHIII, 51,000 Mllea, Aaklng ;

Calle14-1192-30,..
$UOO
OBOJI,.-25U340, 81 •..t985 •.Bi~
•· •• 12 0",, 811.000 "-"'lnal
~..
251.e.Bt.
MIIOI. Asking $2,000, 81•-••• 7812.
11194 Tempo GL, Red, 2 !loot, PS,
~:-::----~---l P8, Air, Au1omaoc, 3-1,000 Milto
1g66 Dodge 600, E•cellan1 Con- $5,500, 814-2•S-58n.
cl!lon, $1,000, 814-2•H904.

23591fret' 6pm.

u

Cassette, Bedlmer. New Tires .

~ ti•c-3k~!l,~50
. 0; Sola $12,500.
trLlJIXI

350 engine, loaded, WI towing
package, 1,eoo miles. 30o4 · fl75·

Auto Loan&amp;. Dealer WiM arrange ft.
ntlnclng even If you have been
turned down elsewhere. Upton

':'~~9-:0:284 .;""";,.:;,'·;·;,S:,:1..:550=.
. ---·I Equipment Uood Caro. 304-45119~ Dodge Day1ona, Rod Very 1069·
4

7

5332

wl-.

carpornrr. dooro.
befit.
mobile home repair and more. For
fru ea tima tt call Chel, lt4·H26323.
DRYWALL
Hang, finllh, rapaif.
Ceilfngo ltxlurtd, plaalll repair.
Call Tom 30H7S-4188. 20 yoero
experience.

730

vans

Ron's TV Ser~•ct, sPectaliZi"f kl
Zenith also aerv•cing moat olhet
brandt. HOUII Cllll, ~ 1·800· 187·

&amp; 4·WDs

197S Jeep Truck 360 • Spaod, 31
4 Ton 4x4, Good $nape, 814-448·

0015, WI 304-578-nge.

6384.

840

....e-3334.

Credit Problems? E· Z Bank Fi·
nanc ing. For U1ed Vehicles No
Turn Downs. Can Rulh 814· ••e·

1888 Sunbird, ps , pb, ac , lill,
cruise, Sony !11'1-lm cas..ne. ~on!

2657.

Noad A Cor, No Creclil. Bsd Crod-

1g87 Oodga Ookala •••· V·B. AI
C. excellent condition, Sfl. 200,
61&lt;-949-2217.

111,000 milts, 12,000 080. 304- REESTABLISH CREDIT! Mull
7n-9104.
Make St50 Weekly Take Homo,

t989 S-10 4 WD, New Tires, NM
Exhaust, $3,500, &amp;14-448.0744

Sharp , Auto loaditd, 112.000
Ui!ea, Runs Good, $2,900 . 614 ·

whtel drive. great in the snow.

1989 Buick leSabre, excellent

it, B~nkruprcy7 WE CAN HELP
15'% Down In Cash Or Trade To

0

tu

1990 Dodge Ram Van 8-250,
72,000 Miles, S•.ooo. 080 Can
Be Saen At Ganipolio Dally Trib-

running condition, v.6 • PB, PS,
AC , power windows , $3800 , 614 ·

uali., for This Bank Fii\Bncing.
814 .... 1.0607.

9-49-2045 or 614-9.9-2203..

SEIZED CARS From S175.

une. 825 Third Avenue. Gallipolis

Ohio.

1989 Ford Tempo Gl, New look·

Porsch11, Cadillac•. Chevys.
BMW's, Corvettea, Alao Jeeps, 4
WO's, Your Area . To ll Free 1·

ing Garage Kept, Silver With Ma·
roon lnlertor, 79,500 Miles.

$3,500 514, 37g -2728 Or 30&lt;·
937·3363.
1989 Uustang GT. low miles, ex·
cellenl condition, adult dnven, 4
speed manual, garage kept. 304·

773-5381 .
1990 Modal Mullang GT, To1a11y

600-8g8-H76 Ell . A·2614 For
Cunen1 LlstingL

720

ltucks for Sale

1976 Ford 3QO 4 Barrell Heavy

Full size 1992 Chevrolet van with
39,000 miles, new tires, PW, PM,
plfear seat makes quee.n size
bed, coloJ TV, VCP, Iron! &amp; rear
heater and air, while wlgray
stripes, like new, asking $13,000
or rtasonable otler, call 614 ·992·

Hall, PS, PB, AC, AMIFM Cas- 8012 oher 8:00pm. .
sene, No Rust, Mint Condillon,
Runs Good, 814·448·7424, Leave

IAes,.ge.

·

1992 Ford Econollne Ven, call
614-742·2220.

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
1986 Ranger 373 V-8oa1 Wllh
150xP Evinrude Motor And 24
Condit~n

oaoi S9,995. 61•-992-2770.

BlO

20' Chackma&lt;a Convincer, opon
bow, atereo, exc:. condidon·lntlde
&amp; ou~ all equip includecl, E-Z load

---...,;;.,-=~=.:..;.::;....._

Real E•tate

Budget Price Tranamiaalona,
Used ! Rebuilt, All Types, Over
10 ,000 Transmiuiona, Clutches
flywhetla, Overhu81 K1t1, 814·

good cond. S6.000 . 30&lt; -675·
77111
1980 Pon1iac Trans -Am Au -

(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

~

-....-~

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley.............. 742-3171

1992 • WO Suzuki Sidekick,
AuiO, AIIJFM Cusene, 1 Owner,
1860 Thunderbird 2 Doors. Au - $8,000 Negotiable, Excollarlt Cgn.
lomatic, 2 Tone Blue IGroy, $500, dlionl81~·4&lt;8·8810 .
1
61&lt;-3711-2435.
11193 Mazda MX-8LS, One' Own1G82 Olds Cutlaaa Cruiaer, good er, Weh Maintained, Power, Of'Net'
inopeclion, $400, 080.
Air Bag, Sunroof, Rear Spoiler,
1981 Chevy Caprice Wgn, runt

Gold Pickage, New Tifea, 83K

good, w/403 'Oidt engine. $400,

Milia 111,900, 61•-••HI641.

080.304-875-3573.
1984 Chtwy Celebrity
parts tn engine, runt

H. all ,_

..

1gg3 Plymoulh Sundance, Au-

'

••

lcrmal dining rm., Mll&gt;Uernent, •
car garage. Also a very largo •
car tlolaCiled garage, More ltlan
an etn. VLS 3111·88211/...a-e8011.
11018 SECLUDED IN ntE
WOOOI 28 ICJel IA/L 3 badrm,.
2 llY. Addison area. FREE ClA$.
A relteat from tho hustle &amp; bualle.
can be uM&lt;I lor a hunllng camp
or jusl enjoy a poecelul qUilt life.
All&lt;! 2Z poinDina
~~~~~-·
VLS150
1201
LOCATED
ON SR
Oklet' 2 slY. 4 badtms .. 1 bath, 3
acres mJr plus a larg~ barn.

25H3olil, 614-256-6&gt;4417.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

•

Call VL"S 368·

development land

!
'

or commercial use. $15&amp;,000.

1

Coli PollY Hayea 410-3e84.
I20IM H!W US'TINO Vacanlland

1.1S ac . m/1, gently sloped.
Raccoon Rd . ACce11 to boat
ramp on Raccoon Creek l
parking tor your boat trallor.
BeautifUl lot to bulk1 your dreem

m¥- ~. . - .

•'

•'_

. •'

l ··
~

- ·'
j:
.•
·,·

:

..t 'Jt' '
I

1

otaao IO&lt;K trallort Coli

Jult Bl!refy Off At. 3311 entiat tile end of McNickln Rd.
• Hunter's Paradise- Brldee Dream Home Appro• . 32
wooded acres with a t896 skyline double wide, 3
bedroom, 2 bath, remodeled kitchen with an extrallowtop
on the lafand, ceramic tile counter tops, solid oak cablneta,
and many other ellras.
$71,100.

I NEW UlnNO R..-led
t8 3 12x85' Slarduol mobile
home room.
with ·
-· 3ooBR's,
largl!
living
SkUlled
2 ac.
ril/1
with a l'&lt;loft up lor another mobile
home. Just 10 mlnulaslrorillown .
can Panv Ha~ 4111-.
12001 R£DUCEDII City ochoolo.
vary nice 3 BR a 2 balh ranch
home wtoxtra lot. tJvln!l rm. w/FP.
Large fam. rm. wtwB stove,
beamed calling a largo bay
windOW. Dining room W/IIUIR In

,,

.

cloae to

traewar and Stale Route. Publ~
ullllllea a~allabte . Land level to
rolling. Excelent lor develiiPmenl

.

.
~

Jhelvea.

Large

'

.

•,

'
•

•
l

•'

alorage

roomconnecllng FA and garage.
Gao heat, central air. Kl!cnen
~ wJranoa. rtlllg. a ow.
covered patio rn baCk, patiO In
front. Clllld'o play houoe and
owing In back yd. 2 car 111raga
wllh ltOf@Qt tlh8lve1. QUICII tltile
wanted I 1;111 Patty Ha~r
prlvalt lhowlng IOdayl
.

:J8'r

PORTLAND ROAD- Racine- Very nice modular sitting 01\
appro•. 2 acres of flat ground. Home has cathedral
ceilings throughout, 2 skylltes. garden tub, fireplace,
satellite, heat pump and central air all for.
WAS $ei,OOO NOW $114,000.

State Routa 124 Neer Corn Hollow- A ranch otyle hqme
with 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. Has new catpet, new lliflYI,

51&lt;1 Second Ave., ·GaUipolio, Oh. &lt;15631

fresh paint and border. Nice Oak Cabinets. Looka Uke , _
and alta on approx. t acre of level yard.
WAS $ei,OOO NOW 112.000

Rannv Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008

Joe Moore, Associate 441-1111

SYRACUSE· River frontage approx . 3/4 acre. A 3
bedroom t 1/2 story home thai has an upttaiiSihl!t fln't
finished. Each bedroom is large and h8S' 2 doNia alto a
large front poreh.
SIO.oaD

3443 St. At. t4t -Green Twp.
brick &amp; vinyl ranch on .33
acm, m/1. Three bedrooma;1
bath, FR, t car garage and
fenced back yard. $64,800
1500

POMEROY· Wehe Terrace· Really naat and niCe home.
Has a largo L-Shaped living room- dining room, n1ce
modern kitchen , full basement, 4 bedr001n1, tlllCI an attic
for storage. Has 2 lots with 2 car garlg8 on OIIPOIIIe llde
of roed. Price Reduced Owner wants to aeH.
t40.000

COURT
RESIDENCE - Older
home has 2 sep.,
converted back to
Faces city park.

'

'

-

SR 338 -- LETART TWP - 2.88 Acraa of '
Vacant
Ground .
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSIONII River VNIWII Great Eluntlng
Ground II .Possible - Building Site. A
BARGAIN!! ASKING $10,000
.
·
POMEROY - 2 Story Older Home ''wiTH
Ornate woodwork, some stained glass
windows, 3 bedrooms, khchen, living room,
dining room, flraplace, bath, H.W. gas heat.
Carpet and hardwood flooring. Small cut
buiiGing, front and aide po&lt;ch. River View. A
little TLC - Thll Could Be A Real Beautyll
REDUCED TO $18,900
.

-

porc_htl, 2 car gar. VLS

'

--ri·

'

. ,,.•-:-,-.
.

I

~"'.':~.

ltgu U3 NI8V LANE
4
btdroomo. 2 t/2 bltho. tovety
~ftcllorl w/NI In brukfut no.
formal dining rm .. Sunken living
rm . wlll,.place. family rm., new
rumece. lttechod 2 car gerage.
dotlchod 2 car gar~~g~, lnground
poor
&amp; poal · t..ovety t,.ed
yard wJou~£...dlctc In the rear,

,

,.! '

-yord.

388 ·

~

EASY LIVING .. .'88 mobile
llorM and .a·acre m/13 or 4

be 1or you. n -.~lUI long.

z24X&lt;IO
bllhl. loll of cloMt ~·
QIIIIGII with llor1Q8,

12X11..,. bldg.• .._..
dllh. Hell Plllllll Jull one ye~~r
lid. P7,5ClO.. SR 5541301

.

"~

"~::~/'./ ·~.?z,.
1~~-1!''
-~~l~

'•
...

. , ,. ,..,

.~ ·

.

'

,- :.e

120tl NEW 1111 lunol1fno 11'
• 10' Oullllandlng mobile home

'
•••

'..
~

\·'

-.

'••
\

'

with a deck, special cabln81t ,
w lndows:l and bultt -ln music
centtJ.
bedrms, 2 balha .

boautilullrot 11 ac: mil Close lo
town. VLS 388-11128

CORN HOLLOW RD- A feed store complata wHh stock.
Hao a small block building and a hugo block building
partially flnlahed, an old barn and appro•. t .2829 acrea.
Call for your appoin1menl.

I

• I

CLELAND HILL RD- A nice country setting· A ten year old
raneh style home with wrap around poreh. heat pump, 3
bedrooma, 2 1/2 car garage, tlllCI bam sitting on approx. 33
t /3 acrn. Plllly wooded tlllCI part1ey pasture.

POIIIROY• 08boma St.- Approx. 255 fool frontage and
loti of Gepth. All Clly ltiYicn available. Could mike 2
trltlftr loll.
WAS SI,GOO NOW 17,000

DOftE T\IRNER, lroker.........................ta.JIRRY IPAAOLN .................................. Ml4131
CHARIIILI. IPR.ADI..ItiQ ...............................I1~31

•BETTY JO COl

l .

••

CLELAND ROAD· Langsville 80 acres of lovely 19111ng
land 7 1/2 acres of H In hay· many beautiful homesHes
some oak and walnut trees an mineral rights included.
$110,000

POMEROY· Nayfora Run· A 3 bedroom ranch style home
with ~lUng lana In living room and dining room, hu
woodburner atova. Just a little wave out of town, K you
want the OOillrtOfenc:e of l*1g ctose to town but the 1M! of
country you will Mkt thll place.
&amp;27,000

BRa, LA, ldlc:hlll. dlnklg - ·

•'

110 Into country living tills could

EAOLE RIDGE RD- Sitting on approx. 1t acrn of cleared
rolling land II a 2 ltory home mostly bulh appro•. 4 yaara
ago. Hu en open kllchtn- living •oom area, 4 bedrooms,
one balh. and a room for another bath. Newer rear deck
011811ooklng a country pond. Low Maintenance with , _
vinyl siding and heats and COOls with a heat pump.
WAS $1111,000 NOW $111,000

I

•'

Are you tired of paying rent? Here's your chance to be
the landlord . 8 hOuses on Lincoln Drive and t on Brown
Alley. Very well kept property. Most of the hOuses have 2
bedrooms, living room , k~chen . &amp; t balh. A coupte aro
larger. Nice Income. All have vinyl &amp;lding.
S185,000

11128. ..
11017 AN EXCELLENT
•uv.e.92 acrea mil of ltvel 1o
rolling land. A wall conotiUCttd
31• BR home. ·ADP&lt;oxlmatofv 4.5
mllol au of lllnttin. Ohio. K you

m,ooo

'•I

•

WAGNER LAND- A 4 year old ranch with 2 bedroonllancl
2 baths. Has a heat pump. carport, and a nice front poteh.
Also has a mobile home hook·up and llalttlng on approx.
one acre.
sea.ooo

1111111 Located 580 Bulavllle
Pike- All brfCil ranch, 3 btdrms,
1 1/2 balha. utility nn VO"f laiQ!I
kit, enclosed patio rm ·2
LETART - Large level lot filled with ilowera
truh trees and also a t4' x 70' MObile Home
with room addition. patio, appliances, 3
bedrooms, 2 batha, elec:. heat CIA. well &amp;
TPC avaWable, septic and gorgeous 'l!lrer
VIew. ASKING $31,500

--

UIC 8 U -U8·8850, GalliPOIII
Ohio.
•

...

.,

In kn. wtrongo ""·• ~w. Fam. rm,

tomatic, Air, Rear Spoilar, 52,000

like new one. Mlltl, Asking S•.700 080, S1•-

s1,050. 304-773·51&lt;5.

..

\

12000 RENT W/OPTION TO
PURCHASE ALL IRICK
IIAHCH 3 btdrmo. 3 balha, all

·l'.•

DUPLEX FOR SALE - Historic part
of town, live in one unil and rent the
other. Face the palk and enjoy the
view.

Residential Or Commerc:ial Wir·
ing, New Serv1ce Or Repairs. Li·
canHd Eleclrlclan. Wlllh Eltc·

OFFICE 992·2886

BLACKBURN REALTY

RANCH HOME LOCATED AT 15063
ST RT 180 in Vinton, Ohio. This home
has 2 BAs. 1 bath, large FR. LA ·as well
as DR. This home is carpeted. New
siding and Insulation adds to this home.
There Is a carport and a large deck on
the back of the. home and bsmt.__

Electrical. WV000308, 304-8751796.

245-5877

1fl1 Chrysler LeBaron Convert·
able, ~.cellon! Cooclllon, v-e. All
Ex&lt;ras. Low Mileage. Always Ga·
raged, 61&gt;1-446-6137.

..

-. ..,,

ctnatd tltclrician . Ridenour

304-675-4841 ArnR 8 P.M.

General

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

new

tomatic, 2 Doors, Sunroof 455,
Good Shape, &amp; Psr11 Car, $1,500

Broker

MEIGS COUNTY

or commercial Wing.
llf'lice or rtplira. Mllltr U·

Aestderllial

Improvements

9671 Ask For Dave Russell.

1973 Corvette, red, L-48, 350ci.

~~~i"'__.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;dR~e~a~I~~~G~e;n;e;ra~l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_ _ __

RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY This
almost brand new ranch style home
rests in over 7 acres of woods ·wilh
approx. BOO ft of creek fronlage. Some
of the many features are 4 BAs, 2
baths, 16&gt;&lt;21 Kit w/range, refrig, disp &amp;
OW. 15x15 DR, 16&gt;&lt;21 LA w/french
doors, 2 large treated decks, vinyl siding
&amp; an unattached 2 car garage. If you
don'1 want to look at your neighbors,
YOU MUST SEE THIS ONE. ASKING
$115.000.

Home

BASEMENT
oailar wlalumlnum whaoiL $4,000.
WATERPROOFING
304·882-2241 .
Uncondilional liftliN guarantae.
Auto PartS &amp;
Local roforonces lurniohod . Eo760
labllshod 1975. Call (81•) 448A.ccessorles
0670 Or 1·600-287-0576, Rogoro
waterproofing.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(61 446-3644
David

You Oon1 Coli Uo Wo Bolh LOMI
Fr" Eattmates, 1·800·2e1.ootl,
e1c-410.aaoe, WI ooa.s.

With E•· _ _ _ _ _....:.,_ _ __

Roller Engine Nitrous Oxide Traction 8an, Cu atom Wheels &amp;
Tires, 614 -448 -4827,814 -448 -

.•

l&amp;l

Hell Pumps, Air Conditioning, If

SERVICES

Vol! Evinrude Trolling Motor. 18

Ft. Excellent

home or to

'•

EleCtriCal and
Refrigeration

11034 50 ecrea mfl ol prime

""""•ted,

...

General Home a.1ln·
tenenct· Painting, vinyl siding,

'

,

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191 '.1..·,·',

'·~·

C&amp;C

!~MOO . OO

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742.-2357

......,

Appllanc;o Plrll And Service: AI~
Name 8rondo Over 25 YHra Eaperianc.- All Work Guaranteed,
French Clly Moytog, 814 -UI7795.

0N11tHI 6808

~w.r~f~ll,..

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-800-894-1066

lmprovementa

1882 Bluo s-10 5 Spaod, AMifM

4dr., V· 6, good shape, $2195,
814·742·38:12.

Home

810

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1-------·
-m_.--~-19g1 Sllve•ado. Call 30•·675-

r
Office .......................... 99i.2259

760

1991 Ford F-1 50 Cus1om 300 e
Cylinder, 5 Speed, 66,000 Milia,
Good Condioon, $5,800, 81Ho48••16 Ahlf 5 P."

$4,800 080.614-379-2645.
1008 Ch8Yy ext cab, 4wld, auto',

maroon velour interior, 124,000
miles, recovered ttlell, no dam·
age, 014 ·949 · 2311 days, 814·

&amp; 4-WOs

&lt;Ilion, e14-2.5-5588.,

1995 Ponliac Sunflre, • 1 8,000
Miles, Auto, Air, CD, Cruise, Till,

1

Vans

1990 Dodge Dakota 5 Speed,
With Capper Top, Excetlenl Con-

1968 Z·2• Cavalier. 2.8 V8 multi· Bll Beretta GTU, au&lt;o, V-8, black,
nice, 13105; 88 Olda Delta 88,

port Fl. loaded. n ice car, $2 ,400
or trade lor 4x4. 304-875f07o4.
1987 Cutlats Calais, maroon wt

mann Wetcome. Hauling Avail ·

VIola Collo Ban, Barbara Tho· 614-592-2322. 610-~531.
mas B14-245-G820.
Hay &amp; Grain
Wurtltzor Conaole Plano &amp; Bench 640
Pecan Flnloh 1g73 Mobile Tuned
Round Bales Hay For Sale,
A..O S950 61-1.-1a.3.
Srored ~Barn, 814-245-5117.

NOT ONE BUT TWO HOMESI
First home consists of lots of
extra rooms including 5
bedrooms, two baths, large
foyer, dining room, kitchen ,
detached garage, nli!e sized lot
being approx. t.24 acres; the
second home approx. 6 yrs .
old with 4 bedrooms &amp; 2 baths.
Listing to numerous to
mention. Call for more details.
.
1813

commercial office and 21ot5 on , NeW PRICEI $39IIOO y
3rd Avenue zoned reSidential. MISSING A GOOD
OUR
All has . lots of p01ent1al OPPORTUNITY
posslblhttes . . Call for more PURCHASE
·
TO
complete deta&lt;ls. 1864
bedr
THIS HOME - 3
oom &lt;anch with a LCHECK IT OUTI REDUCED shaped Mchen, dining &amp; IMng
PRICE TO $3~900 cozy home room, atteched carport l.ftlstty
level 1
L ·1
·
with nice level lawn. Covered ou
e us shoW h to
front porch, mce. SIZed room~ . Y ·
Call for an appo~ntment. Can t
go wrong at thiS pnce. 1832

Horst~ : AU t&lt;inda And Colon
614-446·4nO .
'

710

Henry E. Oeland Jr .. 992.-22S9

NEEDS A UmE TLCI one floor Priced In lho $30'1 - 1• x 70
LOG CABIN - Needs moved plan Ranch. Offers 3 br's full Mobile
on 2 acres m/1.
from present lot. Tastefully bsm1, one car garage, 1.92 ilci8l Has 1rontnome
and baclt pon:haa and
well Insulated. Priced m/1 Has nice size lawn tor thole a shod. f400t
In the low 20's. 1 12S
ramll'( COOk Outl. Prlce&lt;l In lh8
40's. 1128

139 Sanders Drive

~

1831

,.

Hydraulic HoMI, Made To Order

Canning -1001. pick your own,
your own containers, Eu· New IdOl 708 Olenl Uniayllom
With Combine &amp; Grain Table
gone OSvll ftlrO\ 614-247-3263.
$3,500, Hew Idea 2 Row Corn
Clorinot With Cue &amp; Music Plcka-$1,000,114-2.5-5515.
Stand Coil After • P.M. 61•·••6·
~'~&gt;"f _,. S75. 0075-1g2s.
7496.
Livestock
CONSOLE PIANO: rtoponolble 630
pony -led ID mol&lt;o low monlh~
payments on plano . see locally. Alpine Goats, Does &amp; B illeyt,
814-258-6262.
calt. 1'80ti-2118Ut8.

COD STYLE HOME
THAT
HAS
, CITY
CONVENIENCES! 1 t/2 story
vinyl sided home . 3
bedrooms, t 1/2 baths. living
room, dining room, kitchen,
basement. Detached garage
&amp; carport. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
1858
COMMERCIAL
•
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY!
Includes 2 dwellings on 2nd
Ave . which are zoned.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Allen C. Wood, RaaHor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, ReaHor/Broker-446-0971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
lim Watson, Realtor-256-6102
Patricia Ross, Realtor

Musical
Instruments

.

brtng

.,~.

NEW USTINGI RODNEY
AREA • Uke new 14' x 70'
-••; 8
•--22'
,...,.,..,
""""
WI'th
Llvlng
expando .
room,
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhS.
Uke new 30' x 40' mlltal
garage with a clearance of 18
feat. Used presenby for
tractor. machinery &amp; some
. automobile repair. 3 Acres of
beautiful land. This Is one that
you will like t871
.

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

Building
Supplies

Repaired, Now &amp; Rebuilt In SIO&lt;k.
Adorable Chow puppies, excel Call Ron Evan• 1-800-537-9528.

blower. $300. 614·949-2297.

,,

570

446-1066

Rio Grande, OH Call 814-2455121 .

AERATION MOTORS

'

t~&lt;.!'

..'

good condillon

VAry

13.200, 814-1192-e332.

. ,. .

Structures, Inc.

LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

ows, llnlela, etc. Claude Winlera,

Bag 304·67S.150ol.

Airedale, Chowa, Poodle&amp;, Dalma-

b lade.

Log

!'!o!!r!!~RI!J]H~MJ!C•

Bloc:k, brick, sewer pipes, wind -

Gol.l Clubs-3 Wood $40. l,tizuro
Driver, Graphite Shaft $40. Ping

Appal achian

Real Estate

$150, 61Ho46-6591 .

Car Uh lnslalled, Slaitglides. lth
Charrs, Call Fo r Brochure , 614 446-7283.

Silver Marlins Rabbits 8 weeks

____:.0_7_:70:_·-======-l9~220;_.-:"::---:::----l~===:.-.:.::.:.:.~:.:JI
1

$350; Drum Sol $75; Cheal Draw-

1

Call or write for

Excallenl Tampermonl. May Sao
Poren!S, $200 Each , 614-38e-

era, Tappen Sell Cleaning Range,

Scooters

Wheelchairs, New /Used, Van

614 99
es,
· 2-5073.

Months. Shots /Wormed Upda'te.

Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza.
Off Ever( n-Mng, Every Day!)

World Book Encyclopedia With
Ch ildcrall 2 Vol . Dictionary And
Cyclo Teacher $165, Canning
Jars, Pinls &amp; Quarts, 614-387·

$35 ; 1981 Olds $700 Or Trade,
250 Yamaha $400. 61U46-eBgQ.

mal

male fleas &amp; licks. Checks Doggy
and Hot Spo1s. Contains

sonabfeSar~rcaSU-886-l31!

Drake satellite system , fisherJYa·
hama 11ereo speakers, sectional
with rediner coucl'1. 304-882-3446

Registered Siamese kltlens, all

1199.00
LawMontt1 1 PaymetllsfREE
Color Catalog CaM TQ()AY

Water Wells Dr• lied, fast Rea -

from largo porch. $275. 304-8822438.

2•5-11821 .

Ilona, Wolf Hybrids Pit Bu lls
Scottish Terrier, Cock8r Spaniels:
Alaskan Malamute, Husky. Puppy
Palace Kamela, 814-~0429.

li~~~~~O~·~T-~c~a:•~6~75·

70 5tandard model&amp;
we ' II c ustom design
for you .

Registered Chow Puppies, Cute.
Cuddley A.nd Growing! First
Shot!, Papers , $150 Each , 814 -

HAPPY

tire $4
.00;. 304-675-6743.
door with hinges &amp;
!mot&gt;.
s~oo

Corrter paneis Gnd black rod •ron

4

Conmerc:ialiHome Units From

$5.00; canning ~nl jars $1 .25/doz
quor!S, SI.SOidoz. While sidewall

1·800·537·9528.

Registered Beagle Pups , Bold
Stoke tAocll.y Mt Blue Tidl. Excel·
lent Gun Dogs, $100 Each, 61.41 ·
388 9418.

This Wooks Spedala: Rottweilen,

Table fan S2.00 : Circular floor lan

300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans En18rpr•aes, Jackson. OH

Paymen1s We lcome. 614 ·388 -

o•:HI.

FO&lt;d 800 lrtclor. approx. 42 hp ..
hal front end loader &amp; T acrapar

446-4618

'-

Log
Structures has been a
leader in the log home
indunry . for over 15
years. Chooac from over

Drag Disc I Couple Sinale Plowa
81•·3711·21211 AFTER e P.ll.
'

lkWitt ............. .................441-0262 Tammie DeWitt ................................ 245-0022
J. emU Carter......................... l/9-2184 ,.,~•w••~n••w• ""'"""""""""""' '"' "' 3/9-2651
. _,,.., .....................................742-3171
Ruth Barr................................... 446-7101
~~r:-~~~

Appalachian

~

Ju~

Stud Serv1ce Puppies. Grooming,

Bur. Soli &amp; Trade. All Breeds.

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

Autos for Sale

1D84 one owner Monte Carlo, 2
door V-8, nice car, asking $1800,

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

home thia year!

Puppy Pslace Kennelo, Bo'ord~ng ,

Iurrng Hydro Ba! h. Oon.ShOOIS

PARACIDE
SHAMPOO: Kills adult male &amp; le-

rciiODI · Why 2,000
ramilico 'will build • log

aale, 10 lba. l ull grown , $250

Call 614·•46-0231.

1-1100-&amp;42-1305.

Concre1e &amp; PlaiiJc Septic Tanks.

Jack Russell Terrier puppies for

Groom Shop ·Pel Grooming. Fea·

JACK

durability and flexibility
in dcsi«&lt; arc a few of the

Old Molhar Placed 2nd In Pur·
~od 0oa A Fa' 614 367 1016
·~
t '·
" -

WOI.FF .ANNINGBEDS
,,
Tan At Home
Buy DIRECT and SAVEl

[ll

Comfort, convenience,
energy
efficiency,

614-446-1933.

710

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

LOG HOMES

Recognized Safe &amp; Effective
Against Hook, Round &amp; Tapeworms In Dogs &amp; Cats. AvailatMt

~GI-.....,._. • Page D7

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

sunday, August 18, 199ii

;:;;::~~::=~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i

Pets for Sale

Pets for Sate

Auguat.18, 1996

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OPPICE ......................................................... 112-a.

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Sunday,August18, 1~

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

Ohio Lotte.ry
Rockies fall
to Reds 9-4
at Riverfront

Election
areas set
for FSA

l

RESERVE CHAMPION HOG- Riverside Food Mart of Pomeroy
purchased tha reserve champion hog from Arlc Patteraon for
$3.75 per pound. Shown are, from left: Little Mister Daniel Buck·
ley, Fair Queen Amy Smith, Patterson, Swine Princess "-Y Hunt,
Fair King Larry Willis, and Kathy Hall, Barbara John1011and Llaa
Mitchell representing Riverside Food Mart. (T·S Photo by Brian
J. Reed)

Home National Bank...
Continued rrom D·1
Weese, O.D.; Nicholas Detwiller, S2.25. Mid·
dlepon!Pomcroy Rotary Club; Nichole White,
$1.90, Holzer Chn&gt;c; Jennifer Gocghlein,

Roben Eason and Anomeys Little, Sheets and
Warner.
POULTRY
Prices are given as per market pe11 .

S2.3!5, Wcsam Construction; Chad Wheeler,

SI.90,1Wmon Heating and Coohng; Malthew
Justioe, $2, Forc~t Run Reody Mi.; Lester
Parker, $1.75, Oiler's Deer Cuning: Kristi
Warner, $1.60, Farmers Bank; Steve Kautr.
$1.75, HiD's Oassic Cars; Carrie Sheets, $2,
Ken's Appliances; Adam Chevalier, $1.90,
Bourn Lumber. Leslie Parker, $1 .60, Greg
Kaylor Home Medical; Andrew Upton. $2, TriGreen Equipment; Alyssa Hoffman, $180,_
Don Tale Moton; Nicholas Delwiller, S2&lt;f5,
R&amp;tG Feed and Supply; Amanda Wheeler,
$1.90, Farmers Bank; Chris J~de. $2.25, Jay
Hall; Joey Richard, $1.65, Mike Canan for
Sheriff and Jeff Warner lnslll'1J1Ce; Tmvis Lod·
wtck, $1 .60, Fanners Bank; Brandy Groham,
$2.20, Burlile Oil; Mary Rankin, $2.10, Jay
Hall; John01han Haggeny, $3.00, Jay Hall;
Abbie Chevalier. $1.95, Cannichnel's ~;&gt;wn
and Garden; Kayla G1bbls, $1.65, Hawks 76
and ~arm Supply; Billie Jo Welsh, $1.75, for-

Kevin BIIICher, G.C., $295, RidetiClW' Gas;
Edward Oil~ R.C., $310, J.D. Auto Sales aad
JetrWamer lnsuranoe; Manhew Kilt, $120,
Kroger Food and Pharmacy; Mike Guess,
Sl20.1!ankin's Oub Calves; Melissa CUCS$,
S100, Bob Ashcraft Logging; Odie Karr, $70,
King's ServiStar Hardw,..; Roben Johnson,
$90, Home National Bank; Alban Salser,
$125. Home Natiooal Bank; Bteot Butcher,
'$80, Produa:n LivestockAslocialioo;Jeremy
Shanks, $100, Burlile Oil and TltppeR Plains
Citgo; Brian Hupp, $95, Vaughan's I.G.A.;
RobbieWeddle,$100,AnomeyllemardFultz;
James Westiohn, $70; Manhew King, $100,
Pine Grove Fanns; Brad Runyon, Monro Muf·
Oer and Brakes; Eric Runyon. $95, Dr. Dou·
glas Hunter, M.D.; Melissa Kirk, $60, Ervin
Trucking; Ashley Graham, $95, Bobb's Log.
gmg and Lumber, Kenny Zuspan, S'Xt. Fann·
en Bank; Manhew Salser, $60, Holter Hoi·

es1 Run Ready Mix; Eric ThorrulS, $1.60,

steins; Mike Salser, $60, Birchfield funeral

Home Creek Enterprises; Billie Sellers, S1.80,

Home; Steven McDaniel, $60, fanncn Bank;

Home

Je§sica Amott, $50, Home National Bank
Sarah Hauser, $55, Ridenour Cas.
'

Nation:~!

Holzer Oinic;

Bank ; Betsy Sheets, $2.1S,
Lon Harris, S1.90, Greg Kay-

GALLIPOLIS - On AugustS, tlte
Gallia and Lawrence County Farm
Service
Agency
Committees
reviewed and detennined the local
administrative area (LAA) boun&lt;laries for the FSA area commiuee
elections to be held this fall. This is
one of the first steps in the election
process.
In compliance with changes
required by the Federal Insurance
Refonn and Department of Agriculture Reorganization Acl of 1994, the
county FSA committees set these
boundaries.
RESE!WE CHAMPION STEER - Big Bend
meat manager Bob Thompson, Foodland rap. Under the new regulations com·
area Foodland stores purchaaad the reaerve
resentlve Jim Johnaon, Beef Prince Joah
bined county offices will be repre·
champion steer for $1.75 per pound from Jaaon
Hager, Fair King Larry Wllll1, Ja1on Pullins, Fair sen ted by ONE area committee ratl)er
Pullins. Shown are Adrian and Tyler Eastman
Queen Amy Smith and Little Mlater Daniel
than two coun1y conimillees. FSA; 'an
with Foodland owner Bob Eastman, Foodland
Buckley. (T·S Photo by Jim Freeman)
agency of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture -· fonnerly named AS~S.
administers farm commodity, crop
insurance, and conservation pr{)·
grams for farmers and makes faim
ownership and operating loans.
Elections will be held to elect representative directly to the area committee. Galli a and Lawrence counties
are divided into five LAA's or voting
areas. All five LAA's will have an
election in 1996.
The LAA's in Gallia County a~e:
LAA-1: Cheshire, Addison, Gallipplis, Clay, Ohio, and Guyan Townships; LAA-2: Morgan, Springfietl:t,
Green, and Harrison Townshifis;
LAA-3 : Huntington, Raccoon, Perry,
Greenfield, and Walnut Townships.
1 The LAA's in Lltwrence County
are: LAA-4: Washington, Decatur,
. Symmes, ~id: Elizabeth, Hamilton,
Upper, Lawrence, and Mason Township; LAA-5: lronlon, Windsor,
:Rome, Fayette, Union, and Perry
' Townships.
' These area recommendations wer;
detennined by using similar farming
practices and the number of eligible
RESERVE CHAMPION RABBITS - Kroger
Kr9{1er manager Dick Wari'ter, Nick Leonard voters within each area. The Ohio
Pharmacy and Five Points Driving Ranga pur·
representing Five Points Driving Range, and State Committee will review the area
chal8d lha reaarve champion pen of rabbits
Little Mlater Daniel Buckley. (T·S Photo by Jim designations prior to c:lections this
from An Tobin for $600. Shown are Fair King
Freeman)
fall.
Larry Willi•, Tobin, Fair Queen Amy Smith,
Boundaries of LAA's, a boundllfY
map, and the number of farms within each LAAare available
Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) - A be challenged in court.
and Congress before getting Glick· are county executive directors Ot
compact designed to increase New
The compact won approval by all man's required signature.
the Gallia-Lawrence Farm Service
E;ngland dairy fanners ' incomes is six New England state legislatures
Agenry.
·
being hailed as a boost for the North·
east's small family fanns, struggling
to survive in the face of competition
rrom larger operations elsewhere in
the country.
· Bui dairy fanners in Midwes1ern
states arc distressed, saying it would
put them at a competitive disadvantage.
Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman's signature on the compact last
Friday capped an eight-year effort by
New England lawmakers. But Mid·
westcrn senators, who pressured the
Clinton administration to kill the
deal, said they expect the compact to

~~¥ER11o~

Perry Hill Farms; Kayla Gibbs, $1.80, Birch-

ftekl funeral Home; Kristi Wwner, S1.80.
Chester Agri-Servict;·Brandon Bobb. $2.75.
East Ohio Lumber Company; Kay Hunt,
Sl 80. Downing Childs Mullen Musser Insurance; Andrew Upton. S1.80, Hawk's 76; Alicia Walker. Sl .liS, Lakeview Fanns: Canie
Sheets, S2.10. Holzer Clinic; Eric Thomas,

::.t~

..

$.191. Dr Thomas Spencer. DO.; Abbie
Chc.,alier, $1.85. County Engineer Robert
Eawn 111\d Allomeys lillie Sheets and Warner;

Chad Wheeler, $1 .15, Bibee Motor Com·

pany : Steve Kauff. SI 80. Summerfield's
Restaurunt; Betsy Sheets. $2 .05, J.D. Auto

D &amp; p LANDCLEAR.ING

Sales;SheenaG•Imorc.
SI85.Dr. GregLinS&lt;ott, DD.S; Chad Hubbard, $3.20, Downing
Childs Mullen and Musstr Insurance: Adam

a..valiet, 1260. wcsarn Construction: Billie
Joe Wel!h. 12.01. Royal Oak Family Reson.
DAIRY MARKET FEEDER
Price IS eiven as per pound
RacbeiChapman.SI61.CountyEngincer

Patri"Ot, Ohi"O

614 _379 _9277

Farms, HOUSIOQ
. DeveIopmentS, Rl 9ht 0 f

ways,

Brushy Areas and morel Call today!

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

DON'T FALL BEHIND
.

tePA 1Cfttor"9*: liS t04 -

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.._COlliN' W ••

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(PA: MAT otltlor 097 or ACT II)

ManhaiiJalvenity has •raachtl ntlo
llllkt wp. e&amp;ll"t'- - • accessllle
to plople wflt.liYt Ill tht
Pollt "'-1.t/G It oh ana.

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;By KIMBERLEY MURPHY

Teton County Search and Rescue crew members, on toot and horseback,

Air Force officials had released no information about a possible cause of the

:garrytng gear for President Clinton. All nine people aboard were killed.
They cam~ at the rugged wreckage site, where bodies still had not been
"' The 15 mvesllgators received supplies from a helicopter that was able to removed. Eight Air Force crew members and a Secret Service employee were
i!!md near the high-mountain site in the Gros Ventre Wilderness area. No trails killed.
·
;Or roads lead into the location on Sheep Mountain, known locally as SleepWitnesses said the plane took off to the south and had started heading easl
Indian Mountain. "
when it struck the II,3()().foot mountain and exploded in a lireballlhat could
:.": The four-engine C-130, based out of Dyess Air Force Base near Abilene, - be seen for 20 miles.
:l'cxas,.crashed aboutl0:48 p.m. Saturday, about one hour after it landed in
"II was way too low," said Anne Skov, who watched the plane from her
;!.8ckson to pick up a presidential vehicle used during Clinton's nine-day v~a- front window. "After I saw it, someone called and asked if we were all right
•lion m the area.
and that there was a plane crash. I said, 'Oh, my God - I saw the plane."'
The airplane was to shuttle lhe presidential vehicle to New 'York City,
A Clinton administration official said the pilot reported havj~g mechan·
:wpere Cltnlon celebtated his 50th birthday Sunday nigh!.
ical problems and began to return to lhe airport at the time of the crash. But

before.
"First it looked like lightning had struck the mountain," be said. " But
when it kept burning and suddenly quit, I realized it WB!n't a forest lire."
Meanwhile, Jackson businesses flew thejr flags at half-staff and church
congregations devotcd Sunday services to the nine victims.
" It 's just all sad to me," said resident Susan Luers. "It makes you won·
der why, why all this had to happen."
Clinton said he and the first lady were "very sad and shocked " by the
crash.
"This is especially painful to us because (the victims) worked for me and
did an invaluable service," he said.

~Aatocieted Prats Writer
spent more than three hours Saturday night and early Sunday getting to the · crash by Sunday night. Officials tentatively scheduled a briefing for today.
:' JACKSON, Wyo. ~ Military investigators camped al I 0,500 feet near · site - located about 15 miles southeast of the Jackson Hole Airport along
·John Walstrom, a Jackson resident who saw the flames , said he visited a
:~e ":reckage of a military cargo plane that smashed into a mountain while . the nqrthwestem edge of Wydming.
. vanlage point Sunday to get an idea of what he had been watching the night

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~Magnate's 'bundling'
: h ighlights political
~contribution concerns

~

Auto. and Much,
Much Morell
Balance of Factory
Bumper to Bumper
Warranty!

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As usual, an overflow
crowd waa on hand for
$aturday's Demolition
Derby at the Meigs
County Fair. The derby
was held In front of the
grandstand before a
more than capacity
crowd. Above Ia some
of the metal grinding
action frofll Saturday's
action, wfllle.at right,
members of the Pomeroy
Fire Department worked
to extinguish a small fire
In the engine of one of
the cars at the derby.
The fire department was
on hand for the derby In
case they were needed,
as was the Syracuse
Emergency Squad In
caaa of Injuries. (Sari·
tlnel photos by Dave
Harris)

President Clinton's economic plan
would put an inlolerable tax burden
. .-2-n !_lit next, &amp;C9cratiOJl,f,RQ Sll~ -···
iiadm : " cannot lei that happen. •
1
1
The Texas billionaire beat fonner
•Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm by a
nearly 2·1 margin Sunday in a pri·
mary in which fewer than 50,000
people voted out of I ~13 million eli·
gible, a turnout that Perot found dis·
appointing.
Asked 10 explain the low turnout
-today on ABC's "Good Morning
America," Perol said "I'm not sure ,
,bul we'll find out." i'le said the
;1urnou1, coupled with his low rating
:i n the polls, didn'1 concern him
'because "I'm focused on trying to get
our country's problems solved. "
"The two parties and the estab·
lishment arc panicked," Pcr01 said on
NBC 's "Today" show. "The people
will have a voice. It's going to be a
really interesting period."
, Perot accepted the Refonn Party's
nomination Sunday ncar where
George Washington regrouped his
lroops during a biller winter in 1he
Revolulionary War.
. About 2,000 party mcmhers
.awa.&lt;h in campaign paraphernalia
'attended the high school pep rally[like p~rty, chccri~g Perot lhroughout
his hourlong acceptance speech.
The speech was vinlagc Perot He
kicked off his presidential campaign
saying he would talk of the hard
_issues, unlike Clinton who, he main·
1ained, only says, '.' I feel your pain."
1
"If you want them 10 feel your
pain, let lhcm have retirement and
health insurance like yours," Perot
said.
In a hoarse, often-cracki ng voice,
Perot turned his speech to Ihe nalional debt and jobs going overseas,
favorite subjects in 1992 when he
made his first run for the presidency,
garnering 19 perccnl of the vote as an
independent. During that campaign,
American Enterprise Institute said the his talks on a balanced budget turned
study demonstrates that poverty is the nation 's auention to the deficit .
As he has done previously, Perot
caused by lhe deterioration of Amerturned to chans and graphs to illusican families.
"Whal this shows when you gel trate his points.
He criticized the Republicans'
right down to it is that there is a great
deal of poverty in this country, and it economic plan that combines a tax
comes from broken families," Dou- cut and supply-side economics,
which have been dismissed by some
Rias Besharov said in an interview.
. Near Iy 38 percent of people in 1u "voodoo ~conomics ."
households headed by a woman were
"I said in 1992. if we ever do this
1
poor in an average month in 1993, lhc again we'll be in deep voodoo," Per·Census Bureau report said. Fony-six ot said, sparking laughter.
percent were poor at least two 1 Asked today about the RePUblican
months, atlll 17.2 percent were poor !Party's proposed tax cut, ·Perot said:
"This is Washington 111 its worst. It's
continuously for 'l-4 months.
I "The corresponding proportions irrational. It's not based on logical
of people in married-couple families planning and decision-making."
who were poor were significantly
Perot said Clinton's economic
smaller - 7.7 percent, 13.7 percent plans would mean "a liule baby born
and 1.6 percent, respectively," the tonight will pay an 82 percenl tax
rate. I cannot let that happen.,;
report said.
.
' An estimated 22 percent of people
A major decisi!&gt;fl still facing Perwho fit the government's definition ot is the choice of a vice presidential
of poveny in 1m rose above it in running mate.
1993. the report said.

Childre·n compr.ise almost half
of nation's 'chronically poor'

..

..

.

and over, were chronically poor dur·
ing the same period."
The average poverty threshold
for a family of four in 1993 was
S14,763. The government calculates
poverty levels based on a family''
income, its size and the age of the
head of the household.
People in families headed by a
married couple were more likely to
be above the poverty line than members of other types of families, the
report said.
"Single-parent families generally
have female householders (heads or
households), and people in remalehouseholder families
much more
likely tQ be poor than people in mar·
ried-couple families," it noted. .
· President Clinton has said be will
'sign a welfare-overhaul bill recently
pilssed by Congress even though
some of his fellow Dem6crats say it
· ·l m and '.l993,-"~ siid TJ. m~er. t11e is'too' hai-sh on children arid will push
re'""''s llilthor. "AbCut S jien:eill of mcire of them into poverty.
But a scholar at the conservative
~ elderly ~IJ!joa, persons 6S

(IIEC 210)-COIMtl Alti*l tPII: 017 or ACT Ill

IOCDI
IHEIOI

'

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. (AP) Ross Perot, fresh from claimins his
Reform Party 's presidenlial nomitla·
tion,.~nackcd the economic plans 'o f
his two major·party opponents today,
calling Bob Dole's proposed 15 per·
cent tn cut " Washinglon at its

WASHINGTON (AP) - Chil·
dren made up nearly half- 48 per·
~~ - of the chroni~y poor in
1992 and 1993, living in families that
·stayed below the poverty line in
every month orthose years, the Cen·
sus Bureau reported today.
Among the overall population,
more than 8 percent of all American
children were cllfonically poor during
the time period.
About5 pertent- or 12 million - or !he nation,'s total population
was cluoniCIIIy poet in 81124 months
of 1m tllld 1993, the report said.
That fi~. was not statistically different from the 5.'1 percent, or 12.5
- million, who wen poor for all of
. 1991 aM 199i. ' I
''Thedifferenc:es in chronic poV«·
ty are strikinJ. EIJht percent of chil·
dren venus 3 pen:ent of non-elderly
adults~ poil(iJl-:11124 months of

THURSDAY

soc

Derby draws overflow crowd . . . . . Reform
candidate
. .
takes aim
at rivals
-.

By PAUL BARTON
.'Gennett News Service
WASHINGTON - Employees and family members associated with
CinciAnati magnate Carl Lindner have given close to $400,000 in political
contribution&amp; so far in the 1995·96 election cycle.
'
Lindner's companies are just a few of the prominent Cincinnati linns
where executives and employees are busy contributing to candidates nationwide, Federal Election Commission records show.
· • Wl\en executives of the same company and their family members end up
gLving to many of 1he same candidates, the practice is refened to as
"bundling."
It remains one of the key issues in the ongoift! debate over how polilical
campaigns are financed, especially at the congressiomil level. Critics see
bundling as a way for companies and otl)er special inter~sts to skirt FEC lim·
.its on the amount of money ihey ca~ give to ~8ndi~ates through political
, actiQn CpqlQ)ittees.......,w ....... .-..~ .6A ·• · ot·· - -• ....ft-""1-· ~ ~
·
· ·:· The ii~~for ihe Lindn~ a'nd their employees rellkt contributions of
f200 or more oply, the FEC thre,lhold for itcmization. They also do not reflect
money given directly to political partie~ in the name of one or the Lindner
firms rather than an individual.
Contributions related to Lindner and his firms to the Republican Party
alone already total $794,000 so rar in this election cycle, according to Com·
mon Cause.
·
Among the Lindner-related contribulions to specific candidatcs so far and
c~ndidates receiving them :
·: - Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Cincinnatl: $2.000 from Ronald Walker of
'1\merican Financial Corp.; $1,000 from Thomas Hayes of Great American
Insurance; $1 ,000 from Alan Lindner; $500 from Beuy Lindner; $1 ,000 from .
Carl Lindner; $1,000 from Carl Lindner Ill; $1,000 from Charlene Lindner;
$'1,000 from David Lipdner; $1 ,000 from Frances Lindner; $1 ,000 from Keith Lindner; $1,000. from Martha Lindner: $1,000 from Robert D. Lindner;
and $1,000 from Craig Lindner.
-Rep. Rob Portman, R-Cincinnatl: $1 ,000 from Gary Gruber of Great
American Insurance; $1.000 from Thomas Hayes of Great Amorican lnsur·
tl!lce; $1 ,000 from Karen Horrell of Great American Insurance; $1 ,000 from
Donald Larson of Great American Insurance; $1,000 from Jerry Shroal of
Great American Insurance; $1,000 from James Evans of American Finan·
cial; $500 from Karl Grafe or American Financial; $1,000 from Neil Hahl
o! American Financial; $500 from James Kennedy of American Financial;
$1,000 from Thomas Mischel! of American Financial; $1,000 from Robert
Ruffing of American Financial : $995 from Fred Runk of American Finan·
cial; SI ,000 from Ron Walker of American Financial: $1 ,000 from AnthoQP Battaglia of Chiquita Brands International; $1,000 from Dc;nnis Doyle of
Chiquita; $500 from John Lanier of Chiquita; $1,000 from Robert Kistingcr
qf Otiquita; $1,000 from Joseph Stalenhoef of Chiquita; an~ $250 from Wil·
f{Cd White of Chiquita.
- Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolls: $1 ,000 from Robert Lintz of
American Financial; $995 from Fred Runk of American Financial; $1,000
from Ronald Walker of Americ11n Financial; $2,000 from Alan Lindner;
$~ ,000 from Betty Lindner; .$1 ,000 from Carl Lindner; $1,000 from Carl
Undner III; $1,000 from Charlene Lindner; $1,000 from Courtney Lindner;
$],000 from David Lindner; $1,000 from Edyth Lindner; $1 ,000 from Frances
l;indner; $1,000 from Keith Lindner; $1,000 from Martha Lindner; $1,000
(~m Paula Lindner; $1 ,000 from Richard Liqdner; $1,000 from Robert Lind(~Qntlnued on Page 3)
·'

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presidentia.l shuttle 'plane crash ·leaves 9 dead

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35c.~l8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 19, 1996

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TUESDAY

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.....

Pertly cloudy tonight,
lowe near 70. Tue1day,
partly 1unny, chenca of a
ttorm. Hight 85 to 90.

'

with Cassettes. Air,

Fall semester begins August 26th
COli"'

.

,.

Cars Fully Equipped

IJel Registered TDday!
MONDAY

Pick 3:
9-2-3
Pick 4:
14 44

'~"

Northeast dairy farmers get new compact

lor Home
Eagle
RidgeMedical;
farms; Mntthew
Kay Hunt,Jus1ice,
$2.25. $2.10,
Home ~-----------------------..
Na1ional Bank: Jennifer Goeglein, $.190, Or.
Melanic: Wctsc. D.O.; Elaine Putman, $1.85.

1-~::.u

on Page 4

committee
elections ·

FEEDER CALF - The grand champion dllry feeder calf waa
purchlaed from Rachel Chapmen for $1.65 per pound by Melga
County Engineer Robert Eason and tha Pomeroy law firm of Lit·
tie, Sheets and Warner. Shown are, from left: Fair Queen Amy
Smith, Doug Little, Linda Warner, Eason and Chapman. (T-s Photo by Jim Freeman)

Super Lotto:
9·1 D-21-26-35-37

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