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                  <text>}tlfock trial: U.S. - Japanese auto collision. -Page o1
Essentials
of the law

-Featured on page 8·1

Hi: 70s
Low: 50s
Details
on PageA2

Pr:eakness results - PsgeC1

•

nnts A Mulltmedta Inc . Newspaper

Mtddleport-Pomeroy -Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant. May 21. 1995

Vol. 30 . No. 15

•

ODOT's Access Ohio:
Feds stall state•s attempt to .
upgrade transportation system
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- It's two steps forward, one ..
step back for the Ohio Department of Transportation's
effort
to greatly improve the state's transportation system
1
by early in the 21st century..
Ohio sends nearly $1 billion in federal fuel taxes to
Washington every year and gets back about $625 million
for highway projects, ODOT Director Jerry Wray said
Friday at a news conference.
That shortfall is incfl'asingly important as the state tries
to find money for transportation upgrades estimated to
cost nearly $24 billion.
Transportation officials traveled to 10 Ohio cities Fri·
day to release the results of Access Ohio. a three-year
study of highway. rail, air and other transportation needs

Judge rules
suit against
Shell not a
class action

J0//1/
//1/T#E

.· . . E IMVI...ED
YO,.;~ #.O OPE!V/!14 plfRrtf

PAUL
BUNYAN

lie 1 Oul. ?'RII M u 24 at 6:30p.m. ·
Wednesda,, a,

GAMES
I. Off1Ci&lt;t l Paul Uunyan entry

h l an~1'­

&lt;IYU1iahle at the Jackson \IOI'l' only.

2. Rcgbtr:uion dc~k, \.\-ill he open ·
Thu rsday, J\:ht)' 25 &amp; Friday,
Muy 26 from Xa.m. tlntil8 p.rn .
3. Oflici::d Paul Bunynntenlf') hl :m~~
mu~t he completed and filed v.Hh the
Rcferct• nt 8-1 Lumhcr befnrc the:
begmning of ca~h contc).t. You mu.o., t
bl' at least IH years of u~o:.~ h1enter.

through 2020.
" For the first 'time in 'history, we know whar our Total
needs are in Ohio," Wray said. " They are enormous. "
" The slate's need far exceeds ODOT' s ability to fund
them." he said. "We don't need to raise taxes - we just
need to get back the taxes our people already pay.··
The report identified $23.6 billion in projects needed to
enable all modes of transportation to meet th e predicted
needs of population and business growth.
One finding: At current spending levels, it would take
85 years to correct capacity probl e m ~ along The entire
113,000 miles of highway in the state.
Gov. George Voinovich commissioned th e study in
1991. The plan would ensure that94 percent of Ohio's

LIIISI .
Countr · P~rformer
.01rect fro "1 Naefl't'IJJe

1UO a.m. &amp; 6:45 p'.m.

10:30 a.m.

1:DOp.m. &amp;7:00p.m.

11 :30a.m.

2:00p.m. o~ty

12:00 noon

3:00p.m. &amp; 7:1Sp.m. - 12:30 p:m::

12'x10'
Treated Deck

CD8Z7
c:.mGJ8Q

Have your picture taken
Packa~e
. with The Pink Panther
with 5/4 x6" Decking
Thur&gt;Gay, May 25 ·4:30p.m. to 6:30p.m

Sunday, May 28
Win A FREE
Shopping Spree
al84 Lumber

8'x8' Wood Truss
.Barn Package

$1 , QOO.

with 4'x8'
Grooved Siding

Me rchandise Certificate

ON
220D-Aey Avenue ·-.....

(1

Sate Prices Also C:aad At:
- ASHLAND , KY • • • • • . . . • . . (606) 329·0084
- GALLIP9!Jli~'!RY,_W~_,_, .......J~t~7J~~5~~~-..,..._,
MILTON, WV . . . . . • • . . . . (304) 743·9484
HUNTINGTON, WV . . . . . . . (304) 736·8484

mile SOII!h ol the.32 &amp; 35 interchange on U.S. 35)

Phone(614)286·8410
FAX 614) 86·0170

fri~ay, May'26 • 4:30 p.m. to 6:30p.m.
Satur~ay. May 27 · 11a.m to 1 p.m.

.\

WEEKDAYS: 7 At'!1 to 8 PM • SATURDAY: I AM to &amp; PM

. SUIIUAJ; lAM to 4PM

By '1M AasoclatiJd l'rHa

The .Ohlo Department o1 Tr~~nspartatlon'a "Ac•
cetta0hlo"atudyldentlflecl$28.3blllloninprojecta
neeact to ,_. the ataie'a tranaportatlon neede
through 2Q20. Among them:
• $11.2 billion for hlghwsys.
.
• $102 million for freight ralllmprovemanta.
• $3.1 bHtlon for public transit .
• $813 million for aviation.
,. • $200 nillllori for commuter 11111. I
• $55 million for bikeways and pedelltrian paths.

At 2nd
annual
'Wheels
and Keels'

MARIETIA. Ohio(AP)-A law·
suit ' filed in a fatal explosion at a
southeast Ohio chemical plant does
not meet the requirements of a class
action, a judge ruled Friday.
The lawsuit claimed that Shell
Chemical Co. was negligent and was
filed on behalf of residents who live
near the plant in Belpre, along the
Ohio River.
The cases now will be tried sepa·
rately.
The explosion May 17, ·1994.
kiHed three workers and prompted
the evacuation of hundreds of residents,
The suit said She ll should be liable fGr injuries and damage caused
by the explosion and release ofnoxioll§ fumes into the Porterfield area.
·flowever. Judge Ed Lane of Wash·
ington County Common Pleas Coun
said Friday there was no evidence
that the residents were injured or
their properties damaged.
The residents " have offered no
testimony as to widespread fallo ut,
damage or injury in this area nor of
similarclaims of persons that are not
members of the class.'" Lane said.
Winds carried ttie smoke from the
explos ion away from Porterfield,
where several of the plai ntiffs live.
Lane al so said the number of par·
ties in the class action suit had
dropped from 12 to six. He said ·" it
does not appear to this court there is
a large amount of liti gation concern·
ing thi s controversy."
Shell was pleased with the rul ing.
company spokes man Mike White
·said.

8y GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
POM EROY - The Meigs Cou nty BoardofComl)lissioners approved I0 of
the 18 grants applied for through the Commun ity Deve lopment Block Grant
funding Friday.
.
. .
.
The commissioners allocated $ 190.700 to' the projects that involved up·
grades to water lines and paving projects; and. assigned$ 16,000 in revolving
loan funds available for the projects.
·
.
Projects not1funded this year will be funded in the fuTure. said Fred Hoffman,
president of the Meigs County Board of Commis$ioners.
•"We had an avahlnche of projects." Hoffma n said. '"We try to spread them
around the county."
·
Projects receiving funding included: ·
·
·
• Tuppers Pl ains-Chester WaTer District. $47.000 fo(a water li ne exte nsion
project along Peac h Fork Road in Salisbury Township;
.
·
• TPCWD. $25,000 for a water line extension project in1o the East Letart
Falls area for agricult ural use:
• .
• TPCWD, $23;800 for extendi ng water lines along Cook 'Road in Bedford
Town shi p;
·
• Rutl and vi llage, $ 11,84 1 for resu rfacing un College. Long, Union and Hill ·
· streets;
• Salisbury To~nsh ip, $9,940 for paving Lower Route .?; .
·
• Sci pio Township, $ 16,03 V fo r sealing Harrisonville and Pageville streets.
• Middleport. $ 12,668 for repairing fire station roof and repairing a retainer
wall;
.
•
~ Chester Volu nteer Fire Department, $3.420 for replacing doors on fire
station:
• Syracuse. $20,999.49 for paving.Marina Drive;
• admi nistration, $16,000; and
• Fair Housing, $4,000.
Projects not funded:
·
•
• Leadiqg Creek Conservancy Distri~t. $ 121,840 for wuter lines. along
Naylor's Run, Starcher Road and Laurel Cliff RoM in Salisbury Township;
• Chester Townshi p. $55,929 for surfacing Baum Addition, Wi ldwood
Estates, Crew Road, Morgan Road. Ingels Street, Brown Street , Smith- ·

- - -·- - - - - - -

House Tra nsportation
and Public Safety Compopulation lived within 10 miles of a major high way mittee.
corridor. It would also eliminate bottlenecks in the freight
.·'Unless they come out
rail system. boost the state 's growing air cargo industry and say overw hehningly
and promote comn;mter rail and othertravel alternati ves in that they want a ga' tax
·
cities.
increase- or any other
The projecis range from $30 million over 10 ye~rs for tax increase -to pay for
public transponarion in rural areas to $1 1.2 billion for. this. you're hot go ing to
highways. The report does not include·the approx imately see much support on et·
$850 million the Ohio Turnpike Commiss ion said it needs ther side of the" ai&gt;le...
to improve the east-west toll road or the proposed Inter· 'aid Rep . Charle(a
state 73 project to Toledo with Portsmouth at a cost of $ 1 Tavares of Columbu&lt;.

Wheels .o f all sizes•••

Meigs commission approves
·10 projects for block grant funds
10:00 a.m.

Ohio transportation needs ...

billion to $3 bi ll ion.
The next &lt;tep " to develop an objective system of
dec iding which projects should be tackled first. That
process is scheduled to be completed Nov. I.
Wray would not say whether that means an incre"'e in
the state fuel iax -.but he left the option open.
A one-ceni increase in the tax would give ODOT $40
mi ll ion to $44 mi ll ion m~
. for consTruction. The cu rrent
tran&lt;portation budget ca s for $130 million m new con·
u ructioo.
·
The public had beuer be receptive ifODOT expects any
help from the Legis lature; said one Democrat on the

• At current spending levels, i t would
take 85 years to correct capacity prob.lems along the entire 113,000 miles of
highway in the state.·

Guard, CCC
assist local
flood crews

By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Ohio Arm y Nutional Guard meml&gt;c" ami the Ci&gt;ilian
ConserVation Corps. have jomeJ
and tov.n:
t.:rt"""' in ckani
last wct!k' ~ storm damage·.

Portions of Meigs County were
hammered by nash nooding la't
Sunday. along with continued hi gh
water&lt; late·r in the week. Officiah
have esti mated damage to the county.

at more than $3 mil li on. excluding
crop damage and tOwn,hip roads.
On Friday. th e Ohio Public Works
Com miss ion made $60.000 in credi 1
avail ab le for the rep lacement of One
bridge on County Road 25 and four
cu lve rt pipes. Meigs County Engi·
neer Bob Ea&gt;on said.
On Saturday. the CCC had 17
crew members work ing on County
Road 4 and 'County Road 12. \aid
Ike McDanie l, CCC camp manager.
"We'll have one hand ciew in
Rut land vi llage picking up trash and
depri~:- he added. The CCC unit i'
~tationed in Zaleski . The group be· ' - - - - - - - -- - - " - '
~an working i~ MeigsCOuntyThut\· . H0 ME·MADE BRIDGE - Meigs
· day.
· .
County flood victtms have relied o n
"We do a lot of the grun! labqr.'· their self·sufficiency and thetr neigh·
McDaniel said. Ditche,. are being bors to survive this week's flooding,
maintained and limited resurfacing Here, Bobby Fosler of the Rose Hill
is being completed.
area of Pomeroy crosses a bndge he,
On Friday. the CCC filled about famtly members and fnends made.
1.000 "'andba2s in preparation for mon: tlnnJ1n_;.:. lw .hl,k-· 1 .
.

!---- -·--.,.

THE WHEELS AND KEELS exhibi·
tors' display of new cars, boats and
outdoor recreation equipment got
underway Saturday at the Bob
Evans Farm in Rio Grande. The
event, sponsored by the Regional
Economic Development Associa·
tion, continues Sunday until 5 p.m.
Atieft, Jason Howard of Carmichael
.Farm &amp; Lawn Supply, Gallipolis,,
sets up a model John Deere tractor,
while at top, Robert Swisher and
Michael Harmon of Turnpike Ford in
Gallipolis examine Ricky Rudd's
Tide-spcmsored NASCAR race car.

--

' ··we've concenlrated our f.ffort'l for 'the cnun:'

.~n.~·mccr 1'1. )Jl'llln g

hack open." McDantel '"'d.
The Ohio Army National Guard.d1-\pat cheJ .thou I ~0
Continued on page A2
··

11'L'rnb~r-.

road:-.

to Meig"\

News capsules
Regional April jobless rates

Jobless rates decline

Today 's

Times-Se11tinel

16 ~t'C110n' - 17.&amp; Page'

GALLIPOLIS - rhe unemploymen t rate throu~h
ou t most of the re~ton decltned between March and . Buc..int''s
Dl
Ohio
April. according to figure' re lea,ed Fndn\ h; the
Calendar.
B2&amp;3
Ohio Bureau of Employment Servtce,. ·
03-7
OBES figure&lt; shuw the number t)fjoble" ""'"''" Cla.-ilicd'
Vinton
in Galli a County fell b) 1.5 percent· lrorn lJ &lt; tn ~
Comic'
Ins~rt
- percent· during the pennd.
A4
the UrlerrlpiOyml!nt rate 'm Me1g' Cttt.lniJ \\d' . Editorial•
Scioto
reported at 11 .5 percent fur Aprrl · dn" n I ~percent
Local
AJ
.
from the Man:h figure of 119 pert·ent.
Ohituarit•, ·
A6
Other regional April jllhle" rat" !March flgllf&lt;'
Melga
Sporl~
CH&gt;
in parenthesis )" ere ; Alht:n\ ', 5.5 (6 ..\ pcrccnn. Jad;,son, 6.5 O.O .perccno: La"rcnce. 5.3 (5.3 perccnlL
Along t_!l~_Rh o•r
Ill
8.7
(8
.7
percent).
and.
Vtnt&lt;&gt;n.
10.2112..1
Scioto,
Lawrence
Weathu
Al
i'CrCent).
Morgan Count)'·, :\pnl unemplo~ mcnl rat~: 'ol
12.
1 percent wa' the highe'l '" the 'tate. the .\)BES
Columns
Jackson
said.
·
Delaware County had tlic lnwc't joble" rate fnr
.!ark Andnw n
\4
the month at 3.0 percent
Galli a
[red
C
rm!
A4
The county and CI[Yralc:' are ·u nadju•qcd. meaning
they do not take tnto ~ccou~t ,easonal adjustment' tn
Boo Hocnich
Rl
Athena
employment.
.
Jim Sand2
Rl
•
Marcl'l '95
•
•
·
j~~~~~~~=S:=~~=~~U percent.
The statewide
wa' ~.(&gt; .__ _
tl\N!&gt;.ntull\a\k~PoN"fllnlt(l•
e ..unadJusted
una djU,te&lt;Irate
rae
wa&lt;Apnl
. percent
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
t tor
56
ThUs
~·

·-

---~

l___
.

•

.

1'

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•

Wellston's Pillsbury plant to expand, add 120 new jobs this year

WELLSTON - The Pillsbury plant located here will add approximately The facility" con•idered to he the large't p11u m.lnulac·tunng plant 1n the
120 new jobs in December when producuon of frozen wafnes is 'hified world.
.
·
from a plant in Chit:kasha. Okla .. cumpany officials announced last week.
Pill~bury . a Noith Amencan ha,ed '"h'11han ;11. Grand \leirop 1,ht,10
The change will mean the production in Wellston of Downyflake and PLC. produces a range of grocCf) ncm.,. lro1en r.~l&lt;l'. and relngcrated
private label brands, a business Pillsb_ury acquired when it purch..,ed Pet dough products for international c&lt;:&gt;n,umptoon
.
·- .......-GeogleitrlWad-o~ -Mii iJ~!ll!&lt;j; ___ ~~--r -. -~r--~·-..,~ .J.Q~au.d-i...Febrool'y. . •·
:... . ·~ ......,_.•- .. ,--. .., '......:..-'-. . _ -· , ]'h&lt;,' ~otn.pany is al~.a !!\.UJ.?!.~U[llll'ELol )i~~'IJS. anJ o,th_:r fc~~~oduct&gt;
• Pomeroy. $3 1,196.64 fo(water tank telemetry system:
Hmng 1S hkely to begtn In No~ember. company oftic13ls satd. Mosljobs to the tl .~. f1l00-sl!f¥oce"1ind commercml bakong mdu,tne'
·
. • Sutton Township. $1.600 for extending water line to township garage ori
would be in OP\'rations or manufacturing ca tegoric~..
Pillsbury's pre.~ence m WeO'ittm ha.' been mar~ed by the rapid expan~oon
Pleasant View Road;
Pillsbury's Wellston plant is bes! known for its pin a manufacturing..
of jobs and production o'er the pa,r IOyea".
Continued on page A2

•.

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•

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tb.J

Gallia County Court News

OHIO Weather
Sunday, MaJll

Commgp Pleas

Acai·W hi* rcaeca.ror

Joleplt L c.la, J-Ilt.

IIICH.

"

-

CNIIIIII

MclviD J. s.ew.t:-no u.t•
IYaillble, 11 IDO!Miw Clldl for twO
ccunts rlbrelklaa ...r '"*"iu&amp; IIIII
oneoountof 11110 iheft. Tbe41mlure
10 be terVed CClllleCUIMiy.
TimolhyR.S.....-.2082Satle
Rota 7 North, Glllipolil. pi sW
guilty 10 the Je. 1995 theft rla

•

Onllde, $450 Ill• COlli COliS, 30
daya Ia jail (Ill !Ill line .,. .,..«d), ona yar potwim llld a
lix-IIIOIIIIt licae •~~V"""'"
· Cld L Wray, 4?j5923· Stile
Roule 7 Saudi, CrowD Cily, $450
plus court c:ciltl, 30 dayl iD jlil (Ill
bul tblee • • • • ""d). CliiO ,_.
prn!wrioo IIIII I lix-IIIOIIIl lioeniiC

••.,...... Oaqe of clrivlna undr:r
••..,..,...... dillnisaeddurinl prelrial
negolialions.
.

picbip A pre-e~leiiCOin~ I sripri'lll

waordered.
Dhorce

• IColumbus !10" I

of2S~=~~=-both
Municipal

,,,,,

WDJlam S. MedltJ,judge.

Crllllbu!l
. JO!IepbM. Maylbb,18, 128 Bund.
Rolli. Oallipolia, $100 plus court
CCIIII, 10daya ill jail (IIJIIlCIMied} IIIII

line*"
CCIIIIIuaity aal-ice.
Orepy S. Umoe. $100 plus

,

Area News h1 Brief:
. Pomeroy man injured in wreck
POMEROY -

A

Cemetery meeting scheduled

Pomeroy 111111 Wll IDjwcd S.-clay wla bla
vi1laiC baiL Pt:aeroy

GALUPOUS - Pwple interelled iD lhe fuJure of Clay CbaDe1
Cemetery are c:ncoumged to atttm a meetinglb~. May 2S at
7 p.m. at Christ United Melhodlst Churcll, 9688 State Route 1
Soulh.
·

vebide slnlclt a utility pole m l'toal of the

Pollee
said.Ralrden's 1981 Mercury struclt the po·~· Llll.
Daniel
... at 6 :"'"
wbilc Raltden - eastbound 011 East Main Slreet. police ultL
Ralnlen was transportc4' VetcnnS Memorill tfQIPital and lalt.r,
trabSfened 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital, aa:onllng 10 a VMH nuninj supervisor.
.
. .
•
..
' A PVH nursing SUpeMS&lt;l' listed RainJen iD stable cooditiOII.
Rainlen was dted wilh failure 10 maintain QODtrol.
' Electricity was out in lhe ~ for 43 Jl!.inutes, according to
potice.
'#

Memory_Gardens plan service
GALLIPOUS - A Memorial Day and Vetei'IIIS Celebration
J:fogram btiS been scheduled at Obio V8Uey Memcx:y Grwdens for
onday, May 29 • 6 p.m. .
.
Tbe even~ sponsored by Obio Valley Memory Oanlena, will fea·
· ture VFW Post #4464 Quartertnaster Bob Wood as spealcer, The
V~, in conjunction wilh American Legioa Lafayette Post 127,
111111 host an honor guard and deliver a gun salute. ·
PaStoc Sherman Johnson or tbe Apostolic Faith Cbureb will give
!be invocation and lhe benediction wiU be presented by Pastor Jim
Lusher of Faitb Baptist Cburcb.
·
Mu!ic will be provided by soloisl Jim O'Brien of lhe University
of Rio Grande's Grande Chorale, while Robert Enyart and Keilh
Hanning will sing a duet of "Bridge Over Troubled Waters.~ Saxophonist Bill Ward will play "Amazing Grace,"
Members of Boy Scout Troop 11200 wiD lead those attending in
lhe Pledge of Allegiance and taps will be played by Jill Shriver
from dailia Academy High School. Members of the Soulhwestem
Cll!leue Girl Scout Troop wiU assist with registration.
An information tent will be set up on lhe cemetery grounds fiJI'
families needing assistance. Flags will be placed on veterans'
graves early in !be week and flags will be available at the information. tent. Refreshments will be provided, but lhere will be limited
seatmg.
·

No injuries reported in area blaze

SALEM CENTER.- No one was injured in a trailer f~re Friday
outside .Salem Center, ·Said Dick Lambert. Salem Center Voluoteer
Fue Department chief.
.
Angela Wright's EdmiJIKisoD Road trailer was destroyed, Lambert said Tbe f'ue was caused by an electrical problem. Tbe Salem
Center VFD responded to lhe scene at 4:17 a.m. wilh lhree trucb
and eight ruellghters.

Sheep clinic slated for Tuesday

Lottery numbers

of rain re-enters
:weather scene·on Sunday

Flood crews

A~~ -.

accond clan mail in&amp; ltl!IUcr at

P~oy.

Otuo,

Post Offia:.
Member. The Associ:ned Press. and the Otuo
NeWIPQJIC! Association.
SUNDAY ONLY

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
,

By Carrlu ~r Motor )lout~

One ww........ :................................... $1.00
o.ev.................
.................. m .oo

Leading Creek ends boil order

RU1LANU - The Leading Creek Conservancy DistriCI ended
ilS boil advisory which bad been in errect since last Sunday followit\g flash flooding, LCCD officials said.
The boil advisory bad been in cfrect for lhe areas east or Hysell
· Run, cas! or Harrisonville and north of Wi~esville .

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Sundar ..................................................... $1 .00
No sub1criptlons by mall penmttcd io a~~tll

whele motor carrier ser¥1tt is a~tailab~
Tbe S\lndaJ dmts ~Senlincl will not be resp&lt;m·
Jible ror adv~~n&lt;:e paymetltl rn.a&lt;k to ciii'TieD.
DollJ ond Sunday
MAIL SUIISCRIP110NS
Inside Gollla County

13 Wed&lt;J.............. ... .. ...................,.... $13.92
26 Weck!l ..,.............. ~~-~·-::!:.o~'R-·· .. ···$47 06 ·~

5 2 - ·.............. - ............................. 192.50
Rates OUIAde Gallla County

~ :::·: : ·.: :.: : :::: :: :: : : : : : :.: : :::~

~ ~ ............. ~

.. .__..._;... -•-- _..._.

Plm-

Spring Valley
Gallipolis, Olt.

~r-"7""~

-r··p-.-. •

Summer Quarter

Beg~.:.July 3

c

y

.

.

•

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er!

.'

Some Restrictions
Apply

Hurry, Limited Time Offer!

ESS {OLLEGE

A

Editor's note: Names and addresses are printed as they
appear on official reporl•. All newsworthy actions will be pub·
lished without exception.

"After being a homemaker and • mother ol two, I decided to make !he
commitment to return to college and update my employment skills at

SOUTHEASTERN

••

•

....

KNOWS THE VALUE
OFA QUALITY
BUSINESS EDUCATION

BEGIN TUINING FOR YOUR BUSINESS CAREER.
CAll US TODAYI 446-4367 .

•

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City l'olice cited. Richard A. Baker,
· 59, 164 Woodland Drive, Gallipolis. for assured clear distance in a
two-car accident Friday at the intersection of Second Avenue and
Spruce Street
Police said 'Baker was southbound on Second at 1:03 p.m., was
unable 10 stop in time and struck the rear of a car driven· by Jennifer
E. Daniels, 29, 189 Chickantauga Road, Gallipolis. Daniels had
stopped to make a left tum onto Spruce at the time or the .crasb,
according to the repon.
.
Daniels' car was slightly damaged and there was no damage to
Baker's car, police said.

-~

MELANIE HASKINS, SECRETARY AT F.A.C.T.S.

M

Driver cited in two-car accident

PHONE

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BAG

Gaining akllla In computera and acco~ntlng gavt me the knowledge
and conftdenee 1nHded to perfOID) § I n
the 11ualnn1 wortd.
·
ver thought about.returning to
1 would au~l to anyont whO
achool, .to contlder the bentlll8 of a butI i education. sac gave me the
aid Ill end Hit Mw.m I needed to aucceed."

A

•
onven1en
ours
ose

Vema J. Snowden, 63, 360 Third Ave., was taken to Holzer
Medical Cemer by the Gallia County EMS.
Police said a car driven· by Amy L. Sprague, 22, 3309 Bulaville
Pike, Gallipolis, was northbound at5 :26 p.m. when she was unable
to stop in time and struck the rear or a car driven by Jennirer L.
Baker, 17, 2997 Slate Route 141, Gallipolis.
The collision rorced Baker's car into the rear of a car driven by
Caroll K. Snowden, 63, 360 Third Ave., in which Verna Snowden
was a passe n~er, police said.
·

MElANIE HASKINS
SBC GRADUATE
WINTER QTR. 1993
DATA ENTRY SPECIALIST

Southtaatern Bualnn• College. Claaa Umt waa convenient for my family,
while 1 deveiQJ*I a grnt dHI of Mil nteem by compleUng all my course

H

•

saJd.

PASSPORT
AND ID PHOTOS

Worii·Whh 14.0 GPA.

p

GALLIPOLIS - · A Gallipolis woman was slightly injured in a
three-car accident Friday on Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis City Police

(USPSS2S-800)
Published each Sunday. 825 Third

••

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Minor injury reported in crash

Bibbee

Oullipolis.. Otlto. by t~ Ohio Valley Publishmg
Company/Mulumedia, Inc. Second clan poU·
age paid at G:.llipohs. Qhio 45631 . Entertd as

Planning for the 1!195 River Recreation Festival in Gallipolis over the Fou'r tb or July weekend
has begun. Festival organizers said tbe festival features an expanded entertainment budget, more
activities and a major Oreworb show. Festival committee members are, from left, Tim Maxwell,
Crystal Huntzinger, Wayne Benson (co-chair), Josette Baker, Shannon Seyer, Sharon Bowman,
Robin Fowler (to-chair) and Cbrls Cozza. Not present for photo were Sherry Maxwell, ·Bob
Burlile, Matt Coppler, Kim Sheets-Sbuetle, Brent Eastman, Carol Gibson and Donna Sanders.
'

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Q,ALLIPOLIS - A chain reaction accidenl on Upper River
Road Friday sent five people to Pleasant Valley Hospital with minor
injuries, Gallipolis City Police said.
·
Transported by the Gallia Coumy Emergency Medical Service
were drivers Paul N. Graham, 17, 5508 State Route 7 South, Gallipolis, and Brenda K. Darst, 38, 114 Peacock Ave., Pomeroy;
Rebecca German, 16, 1372 Kemper Hollow Road, Gallipolis, a pas·
scngcr in Graham's car; and Lucille Murrax. 58, and Clifford Murray, 59, botb of 189 Ash St., Pomeroy, passengers in lhe Darst car.
Police said Graham was 325 feet south of the Silver Bridge Plaza
at4:26 p.m. when he failed to notice Darst's stopped car .. ahead of
him and struck it in !be rear. The collision forced Darst's car into
the back of a truck driven by John C. Cremeans, 2A, ~17 Neighborhood Road, Gallipolis.
·
·
Damage was moderate to Graham's and Darst's cars and slighl
to Cremeans' truck. Graham was cited ror assured clear distance.

Tawney Studio

.

~~~~~~~~nMR

GALLIPOLiS - A special
open enrollmeut clinic for die Gal- .
lia County Women, Infants 1111d
Children supplemeatal nutrition
program bas been set for Tuesday
from 1:30-5 p.m. in lhe buemeot
· of lhe Gallia County Courthouse. .
WIC provides free nutrition
education, beallh care referrals and
supplemental foods, sucb as infant
fonnqla, milk, eggs, juice, cbeesei
cereal, peanut buucr or beans. The
items go to qualifying pregnant,
breastfeeding and postpartum
women, infants and children up 10
the age or 5 meeting federal 'nutrition and income guidelines.
WIC services may be available
to working families if income
guidelines are met.
. If planning to attend 'me open
enrolhnenl, panicipants must bring
die person being enrolled, proof of
idenlification for lhat person, and
proof of income for tbe household.
Anyone planning to attend lhe
clinic after 4 p.m . must enter ·
through lhe front door of lhe coonhouse.
For more information, contact
the WIC office at446-4612, extension 302.

Wreck sends five to hospital

...

Hoffri1an haid.

· __,
Festival Ianning-

Open enrollment
for WIC Tuesday

RIO GRANDE- Two Rio Grande women were slightly injured
in a two-vehicle crash early Saturday on Slate Route 588, !be Gallia-Meigs Post or the Slate Highway Patrol said.
CarrieR: Waugh, 23, and Cynlhia J. Waugh, 21, both of 909 W.
College St., refused treabllent a1 !be scene,lhe patrol said.
Troupers said Carrie Waugh was weslhound at 12:05 am. when
she braked aild began to slow. Cynlhia Waugh, driving a westbound
Jeep, was unable to stop in time and struck lhe rear of Carrie
Waugh's car.
. Damage was moderate to both vehid~s and Cynlhia Waugh was
cued for assured clear distance.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

~s Home Administration fundi•!&amp;
becau"e or the size of lhe project,

'

Sunday T'tmes-Scntinel/A3

Two slightly injured in accident

~ Chance

Block grants

May21,199S

...-Tri-County Briefs:____,

courtCOIU.Iix!DOIIthainjail (Ill but
IS days suspended) and one: year
DUis
probatioa for llkiiiJ*d CClllVCYJIICC
RalpbK. Haii,Middlelown.Dcl.. I of elllepl subl1wKi into a ccm:c· .
$450pluscouncosts. 3Cjdays in jail lioltal facility.
(all but three days suspi:nded). one:
Tammy J. Stewart. Oallia Hold,
year problltioa and a silt·manlh Ji. Second Ave., $100 plus court costs,
. ROCK SPRINGS ~ A sheep clinic will be sponsored by .all
ceose suspension.
30 days in jail (all tillt fi\le days susCounty Junior Fair members and lamb producers, according
Meigs
Keith G. Mosher. 21. Rio pended)oneyearprobationand$120
to Cbip Haggerty, 4-H extension agent.
.·.
readllllion for dilonllrly I:Oillluct afTbe clinic is set for 6 p.m. Tuesday in !be commercial building at
ter a warning. Charxc of resisting
lhe Meigs Fairgrounds.
arrest dismissed due to plea agreeRoger High, OSt1 Extension sheep specialis~ _will address !he
mcnL
By Tbe Associated Preu
students
about lambs, feed and nutrition and prepanng and bandlmg
•
James B.' Hall, 33, 560 Keesee
The following numbers were
lambs
for
judging.
·
selected in Friday's Ohio and West Road. Vinton, SUJOplus court costs,
Permanent
seating
is not available and panicipants are urged to
I 0 days in jail (suspended), one year
V.irglnia lotteries:
bring a lawn ,chair or hlankel For details call 992-&amp;i26.
omo
probation and three days community
Pick 3: 0·7·1
service for assau,JL
Pick 4: 5-4-4-8
Tuesday ... Dry. Lows 45 to 59.
Buckeye 5: 3-7· 12-24-27
By Tbe Associated Press
. Tbere were lhree tickets sold
: Cloud cover and cooler temper· Highs in tbe 60s.
. J
Wednesday ... Dry. Lows in lhe naming all live numbers drawn in
. atureS will ino\le into Obio on Sun·
upper
40s
to
lower
50s.
Highs
in
Friday
night's
BuckeyeS
drawing,
day. wilh min in lhe soulhem sec·
· and each winning ticket is wortb
tions. Higbs will be in lhe middle !be middle 60s 10 lower 70s.
$100,000, lhe Ohio Lottery said.
60s northeast to tbe lower 70s
The winning tickets were pursoulb.
chased
at BP #6633 in Perrysburg,
A cold front was · to move
I
City
News
in Mansfield and Mag·
lhrough Ohio Saturday nighl and
Continued from page A 1
giore' s Drive-Thru in Canton.
will be tbe focusing point for more
County
Friday.
The
guard
began
asThere were 246 Buckeye 5 tickshowers and thunderstonns aaoss
70 Sprinted
DOWN
Woody
ACROSS
sisting
with
damage
assessments
for
elS
with four of lhe numbers, and
lhe state. Low temperatures were
,72 Appraises
83 Fasling period
each is worth $2SO. The 6,501 tick·
the townships.
" 74 Meril
around 50 degrees.
84 Diminutive suffix
t' More secure
1 Lustrous fabric
ets
showing three of lhe numbers
76 "St. - Fire·
Around noon Saturday, equipment
Overnight, skies were clear to
2 Famed Texas
85 Brewed beverage
6 Bulcher shop item
79 Clothing
mission
mostly clear. Temperatures were in arrived from the 2 t6th Engineering are each worth $10, and lhe 58,473
87 Fixed gazes
10 Groups oftenls
tickets
showing
twofof
the
numbers
80
Lab vessel
·90 Rounded roof
3 Doughnul Shape
the middle 40s to lower 50s Battalion in Chillicothe and Ports15 Energy
82
Dregs
4 Abbr. in business
92 Asserts
statewide. Normal lows for tbis mouth, along with the I 12th Engineer are each worth $1.
18 Unaccompanied
84
Men of rank
The
Obio
Lottery
will
pay
out
5
Bom:
Fr.
94 Pierce wrth a knife
lime of year should only drop down Battalion in Columbus.
19 Burt Reynolds film
86
Cain's
victim .
in
Friday's
6
Scolds
$261
,822
to
winners
95
Wrinkled
fruit
into lhe upper 40s north tO lhe mid21 Hawaiian greeling
The engineering units have access
87
Pole
on
a ship
.
7
Seraglio
Pick
3
Numbers
daily
game:
Sales
96
Get
outta
here!
22 Opening
dle 50s south.
to two backhoes, two D-7 bulldozers in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
86
The
Kingston
8Sharif
98
Love
god
23 Broad comedy
Sunrise .Sunday at 6:12a.m., and five 5-ton trucks. Eason said. The
89
Car
9
Place
99
Add
liquor
to
$1,522,706.
24 Robber at sea ·
sunset at 8:44p.m.
guard will work on recovery and de91 Arch
10 Swiveling wheel
100 Island
In lhe olher daily game, Pick 4
25 Impassive
Weather forecast:
bris
removal.
93
Rips
11
Change
JOt
Traps
26
Dismounted
Numbers players wagered
· Sunday ... Pardy sunny north and
9.
4
Fairy
Ohio
Department
of
Transporta12
Anchor
1
03
Sacred
song
27
Flightless
bird
$346,214and
will
share
$134,100.
central. Pardy cloudy soulh with a
96
Farm struci!Jres
105
Keg
·
13
Bela
Kappa
tion
officials
have
supplied
two
back28
Command
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
chimce of showers. Highs from tbe
97
M
ililary shoulder
14 Resting period:
106 Housetop
hoes. and one gradall, with another $477,199.
29 Metric measure
middle 60s to middle 70s.
ornaments
2wds.
108 Gaelic
31 Japanese fighting
The jackpot ror Saturday's
Monday ... A chance of s~t~Jwers. gradall pending, Eason said.
99 Back lalk
15
Of
an arctic region ·
109
Dens
mel
hod
In
olher
storm
news.
the
American
Super Louo drawing was $8 mil·
Lows in tbe middle 40s.north to lhe
102
India's Q)pijal:
16
Type
style
·
11.0 More active
33 Betsy or Diana
·
lower 50s sou lb. Highs from lhe Red Cross will close its offices at 6 lion.
2wds.
17
Actor
Ustinov
111
Kind
of
tennis
35 Abound
WEST VIRGINIA
middle 60s north to lhe lower 70s p.m. Sunday at the Meigs County
104 scene
19 Carousals
113 Boxing malches
36 Later in time ·
Daily 3: 7-2.0 1 .
Emergency Services office . To resouth.
105 Where Rangoon is
114
Sickest
20
Identical
37 Swizzle stick
Daily 4: 1·6-7-2 .
Extended forecast:
quest help, residents must bri ng infor·
107 Sheep's coat
22 Houdini and
115 Climbs
38
Cigar
residue
Cash 25: 2-6-8-15-21-25
mation verifying their home address.
109 Throws in a high
118 Rope of wire
Belafonte
40 Penny pincher
Theoflicewiilbe openfrom9a.m.
arc
119 Condemn
26 Different
41 Unctuous
110 'Kicked
·
to 6 p.m. Sunday. Red Cross repre120 Give off
30 Particular
42 Philadelphia 112 Emmet
124 Take OUI
32 Feel poorly
~
Continued from page A1
se ntati ves have met with more than
44 "Call""'-"
113 Mosl slark
125
Code
name
34
Drooped
45 Sluff
, • Lebanon Township, $27,209.03 ·. 52 families in Meigs County.
114 Aslonishment
126
Ship
of
1492
36
--de-camp
47 Pencil remnant
for paving Township Road 29:
ResidentsinMeigs.GalliaandAth115 Skillful
127
Notable
lime
37
Drenches
51 Closet item
. • Lebanon Township, $9,620.75 for ens counties may request assistance
116 Brown color
128
Long
poem
.39
Toboggan
52 Capital of Oregon
paving Township Road 30;
by calling 593-5273 after Sunday.
117 Filmdom's "Dirty
129 Go away
40 Shopping centers
53
Made
a
meal
. • Emerge ncy Medical Service,
Also,thecounty'semergencyplanHarry•
131 Harangue
42
said
than
done
55
Rd.
Ready In 5 Minutesl
$28,424 for purchasing updated radio ningcom mittee changed the coun ty's
118 Lid
t33 Insert mark
43 Short sock
56 Inquired
equipment for counly volunteer fire planning meeling to ll :30 a.m. May
119 Keaton of films
135 Yearn
44 Horses
57 Ringlet
departments:
30 at the emergency opcra1ions cen121 Be worthy of
136 Sharpens
45 Spiral
58 Morals
• Bedford Township Volunteer Fire ter. Officials will cri tique the nood
122 Peace goddess
137 Zonked .
46 Lowes! point 2 wds.
60 Repulse
138 Of sheep
123 Spud
48 Make recordings
422 2nd Ave., Gallipolis
Department Comminee, $6l!,206 for emergency and make emergency
62 No! at all spicy
139
n
for125 Horse:s hair
49
Eye
part
63 Actor Whitaker
outfilling volunteer fire department: ,plans.
446-1615
140
Sluggish
50
Alexander
Graham
1
26 School dance
65 Slroll
Sutton Township's application was
141
The
Stales:
abbr.
130
Long, long lime
I .
66
Breakfast
fare
not eligible for CDBG runds.
132
Call
- - day
142
lrrigale
51
Showy
peiformers
·67
Understand
Commissioners have $174,000 in
'52 Gives up
133 lnlimidate
68 Yours and mine
funds 'IO distribute under the CDBG
53 Pursue "
134 Actress Gardner
69 "Exodus• author
The
program but can only accepl five of
54 Sketched
71 Foreheads
the 17 projecls, according to commis57 Carriage
73 Abbr. on a road map
sion President Fred Hoffman. How59 Contorts
75 Unclose, poetically
61 Formerly: arch.
ever. the board can group some
76 Rub out .
63
Deceives
77 Rowing ilem
projects togelher. he added.
64
Covered
bowl
78 -Bar bill
In addition. commissioners have
\
MOTOR
COMPANY
66
Apple
remnants
Bt
Steve,
Tim
or
already commined .to two projects:
the TPCWD Peach Fork Road and
See
East Letart water line e&lt;lensions for
Jerry
Bibbee
$47,000 and $20,000. respectively .
Marvin Keebaugh
Re sidents from Bedford Township
' '
allended the meeting, including
· Doc Hay man
LX-E
-Silver
w/gray,
cloth
Mildred Zeiglerwhosaid gelling water
Just 20 Minutes Ori\'e Straight Up
interior, fully equipped with
to people is essential. Nearly 200
Rl. 7 Nonh Thru Tuppe~li Plains
homes would be added across various
Automatic, Air, tilt, cruise,
42945 Slate Rt 7
part&lt; of the township not already cov·
power windows, locks, only
Coolville, Ohio· 4572,3
ered, Zeigler said.
. 614 667-3350
28,000 miles.
The Bedford Township water
project would have more likelihood
ofbetng funded through federa l Farrn-

·

Regional

Sunday, May 21,1111

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,. Ott •f Point Pleuant, 'IN

•

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@ ~OTOROLA

r'
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L. to R. : aobbie Shaver, (Intern from University of
Cincinnati), Terra Barker an R.on Ellis.
![PHARMACY

OUPON

save,_____,_,_____, ..

C:

UNITED STATI:S

· MOBILE TELEPHONE NEnVORK

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If you've never ¥1~ the Kmart pharmacy, bfiog'" ~new prescription r:x refil a prescnption 1rom
anolt'tftf ~ and ge1 S5 OfF with this coupoo. (Phan'r\aetSl will call dOctof tor authortlatton wnere
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tow prices. Preollouslj
1rnm another 1&lt;ma1
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coupon, ooe OOlClOO per custume.-. Not valid 1n COOlblnatioo With ¥~Y ottltrr oftur or where prohibited by
law. LA state law prlilibits use ol'c6upons fof cootrolle&lt;l substwK:e PftScripttons Coupa1 not honon!d

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You can .expect fast , professional servire
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�I

Commentary

Ma 21,199S

Nation/World
Investigators say bombing suspects 'cased' target ,
May21,199S

Sunday Tupes-Senti.ncl/A4

WHO squanders, its considerable resources
WASHINGTON - As the
intt;matjoopj commuaity mobilizes
to combat lbc deadly Ebola viru&amp; in
Zaire, tbcR iJ Ibis sad but salieat
fact about the world's pn:-eminellt
public health orpnizalioo:
The World Health OrganizJitioo
-which receives me-fourth of its
funding from American taxpa~
- budgeted $5.6 miUion in 1
95 for stationery and office supplies. Another $455,000 is put
aside for ·~hospitality." Put more
starkly, the agency that should be
in the vanguard fighting viral outbreaks like Ebola is spending more
money on office supplies than it iS
spending on disease control in all
but nine countries.
Just a few years ago, lhewtiO
was being lauded. for its efforts~
combat smallpox. An unprecedented $100 million, 10-y!:af effort by
the United Nations organization
successfully eradicated smallpox in
1977. The last remaining sainple of
the virus was finally destroyed by
scientists late last year. But those
glory days are now over.

A.,....._or .

111 Cowl SL, P., moroy, Oblo

(6U) 992-lls.i

I!.OBEilT L. WJNGETr
Publldoer
•

HOBART Wll.SON JR.

Eneutln Editor

MARGARET LEHEW

Coiltroller

A· MEMBER of 'Ib' ASioeiate&lt;l Preu, Inland Daily Pross
As!IOcialioo llldlhe American Newspaper Publilben Association.

LETIERS OF OPINION are weleome. They obould. .s thao

300 words long. Allletten 11e subject to editing IIICI must be siped with
name, ad&lt;llesa and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be
published. Lett.on aboukl be in good tute, addreniog issues, not

penonalilies.

Unusual times
for NRA, AARP
'

.

'

Sources at tbe U.N. and the
WHO teD us a biB part r¥ lbc Jll'l)blem today is its autocratic chief,
Hiroshi Nakajima, who is curreully

By Jack Anderson
,and
Michael Binstein
in his second term as director general. Critics charge ·that be is so
bent on bnikling a persooa1 empire
that the agency is often left unprepared by four-alarm calls like the
virus outbreak in Zaire. In the
meantime, · funds are scarce for
other diseases that are already decimating pans of the globe.
In fact, Nakajima bas often
seemed more concerned about
ensuring his incumbency than. promoting public beallll. The United
Slates hacked his Algerian deputy
for the post in 1992, so Nakajima
promptly fired him. An internal
audil later uncovered that, within

I

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHJNGTON - These are awkward days for two giants in the ·
inter~st group lobbying business. The gun lobby and tbe biggest of tbe
senior citizen organizations have tbe unfamiliar task of defending themselves.
. .
.
.
Demands and defiance, backed by tlje political power to reward or
punish, are their more customary patlern. ·
But for different reasons, in different forums, bolb the National Rifle
Association and the American Association of Relired Persons have prob-'
lcms right now. Chances are that it is temporary, and that they' ll both get
back to business as usual.
Still, powerhouse lobbies have fallen from dominance before. It happened to tbe once unassailable tobacco 'industry 30 years ago, after
Congress voted ID put health warnings on cigareue packages. The Association of Trial Lawyers of America. another politically monied interest, is
struggling now against the movement for lawsuit limits.
For the NRA, struggling with image problems after a diatribe fundraising leiter assailing federal lawmen, and for AARP, facing a Senate )lear- ,
ing on its conglomerate business interests along with itS hard lobbying
line against changes in senior benefits, these episodes probably will prove
no more than brief detours.
·
..
Their mass mell,'bership, their zealous supponers, and their c~paignumc spcndmg won t be affected.
·
The NRA held its annual convention in Phoenix this weekend, after reeleeling its hard-Une leadership learn over more moderate members who
wanlcd 10 emphasize hooters and gun hobbyists instead of the bastion of
opposition til any and every restraint on firearms.
Wayne LaPierre, the executive vice president, then volunteered ID tbe
AP a classic politician's apology foqhis letter to the 3.5 million NRA
mem~rs characterizing federal law erlforcement age11ts as "jack-booted
government thugs." likening them to l:ofazi-style storm troopers with " the
govern ment's go-ahead to harass, Intimidate, even murder law-abiding
citizens."
·
,
fnili&lt;~ly, he and the association had· defended tbe letter, in terms as
innammatory. On Wednesday, LaPierre said he apologized ·if al}yone
thought he m.eant 11\1-federallaw enforcement offi~ials, when .he was'aiming e~cesses mvolvlng.the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Ftrearms. ·
At a memorial to 157 federal law enforcement officials killed in the
'line of duty, President Clinton Said tl!e NRA ought to be ashamed of tbat
atlack.
· EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.
·

Reflections
lly John Ray Hunnell
Everyone has dates in history where they remember where they were,
what Iiley were doing, and they have mixed emotions about tbe event.
This article deals with the Silver Bridge Disaster.
· JJcc. 15, 1967 is a date branded in my mind· as one of tbe most trngic
pcriocls in history. Fony cars and 17 trucks plunged inlo tile Qbio River~.
It was around 5 p.m., traffic rush hour. But there were also many people oul Christmas shopping when Ibis disaster happened. Thousands of
people wondered if o.ne of their relatives, friends or neighbors was
involved. The pressure was immense.
.
As w'ith everytbing, time was Ulc clement. People' waiied by their
r11oncs, 1clevision sets and radios. News was dispatched as soon as possihlc, hul a lot of ·bodies were mangled with llle steel s,truclure. The bodies
were juS! looming there, waiting for rescue. Although deceased, their rescue lml 1o be accomplished before a positive identification could be
established.
,
By tl1c way, James A. Rhodes was governor of Ohio then and Hulett
Smith was governor of West Virginia
.
The Gallia-Meigs Airpon was just under construclion then. Workers
· had to rig landing lights fot Governor Rhodes. Upon arrival Gov. Rhodes
boarded an, Ohio Hi&amp;,hway Pa~l.vehicle, sur~eyed the scene and ~ct
wtlh Gov. Sm1th al ill'e"West Vtrgmta State Pollee headquarters m Pomt
l'lcasant .

Another intcrcsling fact is 46.6 miles of llle Ohio River pool was
closed to all traffic. Mr. and Mrs. Tom (Yvonne Scally) were the first Red
Cross members present. Citizens of the area worked together and made
over 2,000 sandwiches for the rescue workers. I know this fact may seem
trivial bul it proved bow people are joined together in a disaster.
This disn~lcr not only rocked tbe tri-county, but it rocked tl)e nation.
~ AOpt&gt;-SQIDC of you have gainCI;I SQIJ!C historical intrOSI&gt;CCI j&gt;y thiS arti·
Lie. 01c res~ or you .... rcmcmber when.

TOda
• hIs
• t 0 ry
·
II
·y In
l

By The Associated l'ress
Today is Sunday, May 2l,'the !41st day of 1995. There are 224 days
left in the year.
~
Today's Highlight in History:
.
·
On..May 21, ~927, Charles A. Lindbergh landed his "Spirit of St.
LouiS ncar Paris, complenng the nrst solo airplane flight across tbe
Atlantic Ocean.
·
On this date:
In 1542, Spanish cxplol'(!r Hernando de SolD died while searching for
gold along Ule Mississippi River.
In 1832, the first Democmtic National Convention got under way, in
Baltunore.
.
•
,
In 1840, New Zealand was declared a British colony.
In 1.881, Clara Banon founded the American Red Cross.
In 1892, tbe opera "I Pagliacci," by Ruggiero Leoncavallo, was ftrst
performed, in Milan, llaly.
In 1924, 14-year-old Bobby Franks was murdered in a "thriU killing"
commi~ed by N~than Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, two. studeniS at the
Univers1ty of Ch1cago.
In 1941, a German U-boat sank tbe American freighter SS Robin
Moo(e in the Sopth. A!!antic.
. .
·
,
.... In J95~•..Jbe.Lilllljlii..States-exploded_{be.J!!st ~borne bydf?gen.t!Q!nb
over !lilcm1 Atollm tbe Pacific. .
·•
~- Thought for Today: "Originality does not consist in-saying what no
one bas ever said before but in saying exactly what you think yourself..
_James Stephens Jrish'poet and novelist (1882-1950)
·
•
·

Simday Times-Sentinel/AS

"'!.'

ly
Y IDJ.RT
A~=~

for Its wasteful ways. A llttleDOiiced
1993 IIUdy by two Gocqc
nallon in 1@,1111Bt7 1993, be gave
Mason
University professors.
financial contracts to 22 of 31
Robert
To!lisoo
aDd RlduKd Wq- ·
memben of the WHO's executive
ner,
fOUDd
thai
76 percent or the
board.
Nakajima bas also bad his sbaR: WHO's $1 billion anoua1 bud&amp;« Ia
of personal travails. In one inci- spent on the staff. Many or tbele
bureaucratS puB down salaries well
den~ a government-run newspaper
above
$100,000, and live in luxury
in Russia reported that Nakajima ·
near
the
agency's Geneva bead- ,
tried to smuggle six valuable reliquarterS,
In the 1994-95 biannual
gious icons out of Russia in July
1991. The icons wm seized at lbe r&gt;.budget, $50 million was set aside
Moscow aii)IOrt, and returned to L'JUSl for meetings.
the Russian Orthodox Church. · ''Tile joke about WHO is, every
Nakajima. pleading diplomatic · tilnc they get a new program. lbcy
inmumity, was allOwed to continue put up a new buildins." one fruson bis travels. Several months after trated U.S. State Department offithe newspaper report. one Russian cial told our associate Jan Moller.
A5 btmdrcds of mi!Uons of dolagency issued a lame statement
saying Nalcajima bad ''uninlention- lars are spent on tbe care and rciedally misunderstood" cuSIOOls regu- lng 9f bureaucrats in Geoeva, other,,
lations when he bought the icons needs go largely pnaaended. In any
for $150 from an unidentified deal- · given year, the ·organization may
fund as many as 5,000 different.
er.
1
Under the stewardship of Naka- projects, meaning few projeCts get
jima - who was a Japanese pbar· tbe attention they desCrve. By fail- .
macologist before taking over the ing to focus its efforts on a few priWHO - the once-praised institu- . orities - sucb as malaria or
tion bas come under frequent ftre guinea-worm disease (whlcb the
WHO says it wants to eradicate in
the 1990s)- it cannot hope to
have the same impact as the smallpox campaigo once had.
Much of lhe money that doesn't
go to bureaucrats bas little to do
with promoting health needs in tbe.
Third World. Inordinate amounts
of money have been spent on seatbelt and anti-smoking campaigns
- wortby efforts, but ones, that
don't exactly make the pri,ority list ·
in poor countries.
•
While lhe WHO spends money
on posters pushing .auto safety in
Mozambique, where there are relatively few cars. starvation and displacement from a 16-year civil war
continue to wreak havoc on tbe
local population. Although WHO
bas enough money to vaccinate
every child in the world, funds are
still being spent on "oral health"
campaigns .jn wealth}' countries
like Bahrain and Australia.
six 'mootbs of Nlkallma'a Jellllllli-

Bomb•
- .
. 1111 !~ 1'11aotby McVc1gb ~
ano..... r man used 1 job-b~nun1
rudase to case the federal buddiDg
ys bcCore a Cll' bomb ravaged lbc
suuaure.Jaw mfOR:eiiiCDt officials
say.

·lnvestip!rn Mve etldence tblt
~cVelah Middle ICCOIIII- wae
. m dl'ect calillg lbc fcderlll buiJd.
m~ aod aoother buiklinl lllldcr lbc
guiSe of lonklDJ for 18 1 gncx
when: they could apply for 1 job. •
federal law olfiCiala told The Auoci8ted Press oa Friday.
The officials, who spoke oD

n,,.SecUtOf.$ 8
:.
h •
rr..,
rgue rOT p 0&amp;0 USe

.LOS ANGEl FS (AP)- A5 poeec:utm laid 0111 tbeir most detai)ed
I mUrder scawlo yet, a defcme allmlef' argued thai Jlfllly Jliloto6 of lbc
~.bodies of Nicole BroWD Simpson and Ronald Goldman would
C8U!f, ~ 81111 bomlr" injuron ilrlbc OJ. Simpuwt bial.
It s
anyone would loot Ill these pbolos llld not get sick to
their stomach ' attorney Robert Shapiro said Friday Ill a bearing over
wbelberlbcpbolollbouldbeiatroduccd
·
. Deputy Dlllriet Altomey Brim KelbciJ, wbo paeDied lDUliiCIIIB for
mtroduclna lbc pbntograpbs, said lbc defe~~~e waa trying IC)·T•teep fraD
. the jury lbc beat cvitleDce ofwilal we conlend OJ. Simpson did to his exwife and Mr. Goldman."
,

ml*"!r

Neither Simpson nor the jurors wm in the counnxm for the hearing.
Earlier, a DNA expen underwent a second day or cross-examination.
• 'Kelberg also raised the possibility prosecutors will seck an instruction
m second-degree murder in case jurors tion't find the pmneditation necessacy for a lint-degree-murder conviction.

..

condition. of aoonymity, sal~ the injured_bundreds more.
other man s ldc:odty II uncerwa.
Fortier reponcdly began talldnl
Two IICWipllperS eported today to tbe government Iller be was sub~at Michael Fortier, an Army poenaed earlier this monlh to ICSti·
frieod or Mc~cigh. told autboridca fy in Oklahoma City before a grand
be and McVciah cued the Alfnd jury investigating the April 19
P. Murrah Federal Building as a bombing.
larget several days before the bomb
The Times said Fortier told
explo&amp;:d.
· .
autbor.ities that be and McVeigh
Fortier, a Kingman, Ariz., rest- drove from Arizona to case the·
dent . a~d close friend of nine·story'federal building about a
McVet~ s, talked to federal jii'Oje- week before the bombing.
cutors m an ~PI to oegotiale a
The MQming News reported that
~ssible dea~. according to The lhe me9 asked specific questions
ew :Vort T1mes and Tbe Dallas about the Bureau of Alcobol,
M~mm~ Ntws. Both ~ qUO!ed Tobacco and Firearms offices in
~Identified law enforctment offi- the building , including queries
cials. ·
.
, about tbe· number of agents and
The. limes S&amp;ld F~ also' told bow many carried guns.
auth?ntles that ~cVetgh confided
McVeigl! and another Army
to h1~ about b1s plans for tbe friend, Terry Nichols. are the only
bombmg !JIODtbs before tbe blast, two suspects charged in lhe fuel-

We're Really
Proud Of Our Classy Employees

'You're 9(fa[fy tfie CL.9lSS

"Sitting here on my lily pad, lislening to all the new little fr~;~gees
croaking, I lhought it a good titile
to write and as~ bow things in

Fred W. CrOW
Meigs County are. It's been a long
time since I last was in county
Meigs. When I left for new advenlures long ago, the nights were·
alive with the shrills of relatives
calling each other in tlie warm
summer nights.
.
They sometimes beeanie so loud
1 could barely talk 10 my honey
who shared the night with me. yes!
The memories arc fading ~w, but
1 often have wondered if ;~ good

~~~e"~f~~::rsmCoy ~:~~~ti~e: ~~~

o
have serenaded the masses for all
these years~
Often my friends, Cr9ak and
Toatly, have croaked about why a
flag for the county Meigs, commemorating our distinguished past,
has not been initiated. Surely the
good cilizens have just been caught
up· in the rush of everyday trials
and tribulations and have not taken
the time to listen 10 our sweet song
or Uw night any longer. My buds,
Croak and Toady, are confident
that in the not too distant future, a
flag of honor for the. people of
Meigs w!ll come to fruition.
Tonight. as we sit here on a lily
pad savoring tbe sweet si,Ilell of the
new spring blossoms. we will be

thinking of the good peo~le and
~ends of the county that bugs the
nver. Perhaps in tbe not too distant
~uture. we will~ the frog flag fly.mg With~~ pqde to celebrate the
revered mgbt. songs of our silky
throated comrades. Sweet croaks to
everyone!"
' "Your amphibious friend, .Tbe
Croaker."
Do you feel that now· is the time
to resurrect the idea of a county
·flag with a frog embroidered thereon? It would be nice to be number
one in the state in some worthwhile
category.
·
As of Ibis date, there is only one
other classification in which we
excel in the state among the counties. If our information is correct
Meigs County has more curves ~~
'the Ohio State highway system
than any other county in the state.
One engineer estimated that we bad
at least 15,000 curves. To me, this
is a disgrace rather than an honor
Have you noticed tbe fine articles written by Dorothy Sayre? She
is a person who could easily
become syndicated if she continues
her writings.
·
· I want you to lcnow that 1 am
overy proud to receive a copyright
from the Department of Commerce
for a new play 1 have written. It is
entitled House of Angels and
involves several patients of a Dr.
QuackQ.Quaclc. ·
This play is to be used where
there is 3 large gathering or individuals and it is put on Without
rellearsal the night of the party.

.

Dollar value is just part of the pie
Currency risk isn't something
According to Safer, one of the
stock fund investors have bad advanmges of a weak dollar is !hat
to think much about - until it can make the goods that U.S.
recently. After all, the dollar bas companies export more aur;~ctive.
always been tops. right? Wrong.
llclicve it or not. U1c value or
lhc.·buck hasn't always been as
solid as a rock when measured Here's how: If a u.s. company is
against other world currencies. In making widgets and selling tbose .
some countries it has carried tbe widgets into Germany or Japan or
mosl muscle , but in others the countries where the dollar is weak
greenback has actually been erod- against that country's currency, tbe
ing in value for years.
United Stales has the low produc" We've just come through an tion cost advantage; it's cheaper for
extraordinary time," say~ Richard us to make tbe widgets (because of
T. Saler, portfolio manager o[ three the lower value of our dollar) than
of the Lexington Funds. ''"fhis it would be for the Gcnnans or the
most recent mqve in the Japanese Japanese to make them.
yen (agai nst tbe U.S. dollar) was
Another plus is that U.S . comroughly a 15 percent mov~ in about panics that don't export their goods
three monllls. Normally currencies don't face tile same import compe- ·
move... but not like that." .
lition ·when the dollar is cheap as
. ' Trying ID unravel tbe implica- Utey do wheri it is strong.
t1on~ of what a. weak dol_lar, means
''A weak dollar improves our
for stoclc fund ~nvestors 1sn t ~Y· wo~ld-w&lt;tle competitiveness
llecause tbere are so many_ drffer- agams\ other nauons whether that
ent t~ of muJual fun~s, d1ffere~t means we are selling into those
countr1~s those funds mvest tbe1r olller countries or they ha~e priassets m and different rates of manly been trymg ID sell agamst us
exchange from country to oountry, here,' ' says Saler. ''And. tbe U.S.
there's no one-s1z~~fits-all, answer alsohas ~ lot of multinational com--~to the q~esuon, .._What s 11 all pan1es, hke the~C~}ga:tes and the
~rr-for.my fund? ----~-- .-~---:Coca-Colas. S&lt;'i wfien 1!lefll'llnslal:e'7
There are, however, bottom-line their earnings back from the Swiss
dollar bas1cs. Here are a few:
franc or Japanese yen, tbose are
- Some advantages and disad- worlh more dollars tod:\y."
vanmges of a weak ddllar.
That last point is one of the reaU .~.

Dian Vu}ovich

·We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
.414 SECOND STREET
GALLIPOLIS

509 S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT

446-0166

992·5912

()~

•

EASTMAN'S

j

•

CLASS OF

i
J: :

· Each actor is given an outline of
tbe sub'ect matter and uestions
:.
asked Jfhim or her d~ng tbe pi:CC :t
He then responds. Everytbin is
Jibbed and, of course man ~
·•
answers come from the act~ lrar!ge ...,
I am also ·proud concemi~g our ·
lleart and cross desi 0 wb· h b
also been copyrigtted bey 't~
nepa~tme~t of com~erce
· . ~wo t ·
cg~Jryt~gtst~:ene year IS especially ~
Th'
:
•
and .tiS me~ondall~ilbtlllast for atbanges .:
Y mbore bee ~
100. ;~sptnrececenStllglb
.Y ere as . n •
an upsurge of buymg by the pnbhc, •
~£e~f [~~ea:;;. one who wolll_d· ~n- :
deceased,mthg ve~y. specla lOr ;
your.
.
en It IS suggested '
1
~~ _gf U Imme1!ately ~all_!-~00 - :
Reuteror·:~;0~touc WI om ~
_ore.
•
F~ those wb~!!1~e flowers each :
year or, graves. IS eart and Cf?SS '
c~11 1be a;ubsutute marker wh1cb .~
WI 3.'!' •O~ ~any years. We would .,.
~pprecl3te n 1f yo~ get your order ;:
'".1as
sooben ash poss1ble so that you •:
WI 1not . s ut out.
:
In God we trust. I·
' Carry on, (:
EDITOR'S NOTFE~ W. Crow '
.
- Lon~- ~
.l1me attorney .Fred W. Crow 1s ·~
.the contributor of a w~ekly . col- ::
umn to The Sunday !1mes-Sen- ~llnel. Re~ders wiShing · to ;:
applaud, cr~llclze or com~nt ,on ::
any subject (except religmn or ;
poUtlcs) are ~ncouraged ~o write to Mr. Crow m care of thiS news- :t

s

1

AM/FM
Cassette, Air
conditioning', V6
Engirie, Alum
wheels.

92

~~

..

1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM

JOSH EDWARDS
Oak Hill High School
Acorn Plaza Foodlimd

WILLIAM GAUL
Pt. Pleasant High School .
Gallipolis Foodland

Cassette.
Priced right for
a quick sale!

MIKE BURCHETT
Oak Hill High School
Buckeye Hills
Ohio Valley Foodland

~

....""
••

Power windows,

'1

•

I.

JAMIE MILLER
Jackson High School
Acorn Plaza Foodland

TIM SWANN
Oak Hill High School
Acorn Plaza Foodland

'

AM/FM•

:-•

SABRINA ADKINS
Oak Hill High School
Acorn Plaza Foodiand

Not Pietured But Appreciated•••

Air conditioning,

CORRY LENlGAR
Trimble High School
Burr Oak Foodland

power locks , Iill
steering wheel,
cruise control,
Black in color.

1986 CUTLASS SUPREME

DOUG PINKERTON
Trimble High School
Tri~Co1,.1nty Vocational
Burr Oak Food land

HEIDI EMMERT

Wellston High School
Wellston Foodlilnd'
AMY WRIGHT

\

Wellston High School
Wellston Foodland

'

KEVIN HALTERMAN

J

Wellston High School
Wellston Foodland

CLASS
OF
'95 1

GEORGE
McCOY
. Pt. _pJea!lant High School
Twin Riven~ Foodland
.

MISSIE SMITH
O!lio Valley
Christian School
Twin Rivers Foodland

VB Engine, Auto
trans, Air
Conditioning, 1
Low Miles, .Rear
wheel drive. ·

•j

•

STEVE DUNN
Pt. Pleasant High School
Twin Rivers Foodland

8 passenger
seating, Big 4.3
liter vs,auto
trans, Air
conditioning
Low Miles.

S

'

STEPHANIE OLIVER
Oak Hill High School
Buckeye Hills
Acorn Plaza Foodland

'95

sons why the weak dollar bas ·future," says Saler. "I kind of like :;:
helped the U.S. stock market.
tbe idea that 1 can diversify that ::
As for disadvantages, a weak (currency) rislc." One way Saler •
dollar means we b_ave ID pay more suggests minimizing currency rislc : :
for the goods and products we is by investing'iniD a couple of dlf- .=:
import Over the long-tenn, howev- ferent international or global funds, .,.
er, a cheap buck could lower our •
_Managing currency risk is ..
standard of living, increase the raiC only one part of the equation of ::
of inflation and push interest rates making money via mutual funds· :
up.
.
the other is picking the right stocks: :
- .Different types or funds react
Just because the dollar is weak •
diffetC!'tlyiDcurrencychanges.
compared with the yen doesn't ~
While there are n? guarantees, ~ean that buying into a fund that "~orne fund types -like small-cap ', mvests most of its a~sets in Japan is ~
funds- generally have less expo- going ID be a sure-wirl deal. ·
sure ID risks from currency fluctua''It's not a one-way decision "'
tions than others like iniCmational, that's just based on the currency.. :
glo~ or single.country funds do.
says ~aler. ••A strong curren~y :
If you own a small-cap fund, a docsn t necessarily mean that inter- :
lot of tbe small-cap stocks tend to · national funds will do well and a •
be domestit;a~~y o~ented. So, when weak currency doesn't me~n tba\
tbe dollar 1s falling, those funds mternational funds will do poorly.
may te?,d ootiD perform .as well as It all depends upon wbat countries "
"
otbers, . says Harvey Htrscbhom, you are in .and what stock
1
chief eclmomist ~d investment within the countries, ou've~lors: :
strategist for SteinRoe. "And some ed."
y
cct
:
funds that have a lot of foreign
Dl~n Vujovich Is the autho f
:
expos'!fe. like ~se ownin~ specif- "Stralf,ht Talk About Mot~: I '
ic fore1gn sccunues or ownmg U.S. Funds, • which Is published b
1
securities with a lot or foreign rev- McGraw Hill. Send questiQns t~ ;
enues, mig~t perform better." , . her in car~ or ibis newspaper.
i
But s~aymg aw~y from a partie·
(For l'!formatlon ·on bow to
:
•
Ular,typc of fund Just ~use ,you.-- - ·communic!lte electronltaii)"WWtb •·. : - - - - , . don I ~e for tbe currency expo- litis columnist and others, con·
:
sure bas Us riSks too.
tact America Online by calling 1_
•
"I don't l:now that I just want 800·827-6364, exL 8317.)
;
dollars if I' in investing for the
J :

'

of '95!

• DepoProvera-injectlon • Diaphraghm
• Birth control pill ,
• I.U.D..
• Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee S.cale

'•

. The. writer is plannin$ on writmg a history of ~e frog JUmps 3J!d
fro!! racmg wh1ch occurred 10
Me1gs County from 1966 thro~gh
198?. Tbe~e are ~any mte~estm_g
stones wh1ch are mvolved m tb1s
b1s1Dry.
In 1975, we attempted ID create
a frog flag, ~ our county flag. F?r
the mformation of the reader, it 1s
believed tbatlbere is 00 county in
Lbe slate that bas one_. The Ohio
Soc1ety for the Promotion of Bullfrogs Inc. felt that 1) we would be
the first C0\1\ltY in the state ID adopt
a flag, and 2) it should, of course,
bear tbe picture of a frog.
,
As a result, Lewis and Helen
Sauer designed a simple frog- flag
which would have satisfied everyone except sophisticates, deadbeats, oddballs, people with no
sense of pride and those who did
not like frogs, As it turned oul,
there were more who voted against
than for this resolution. Therefore
the maller was shelved.
·
The ncgalive feeling at that time
overcame Ihe desire of the frog
organi 7~1 tion 10 try to get tbe idea ·
across to Ule public.
So, lo and be bold, this past
wee~ I received the f?llowing commulucauon . For the Ufe of me, I do
not have any idea of who sent this
missive to me. It came from
Phoenix, Ariz., with a Florida
slamp. !tis a small world after all.
"April 30, 1995.
The Ponti
To: Mr. Fred Crow, from co~sin
frog .

Assistant Depnty Attorney GenAt a memorial at the state
eral Merrick Garland said FBI Department.ol Agriculture, Keating
agents need only be close enough joined agriculture workers who
to make sure nothing is removed or planted a whitebnd tree.

Con · ratu ations,
~9UDS~ ..

PLAIIID .PilEI I· BIOI
or SOU I BIAS,.

Jack Anderson and Michael ·
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Promoting the frog flag for Meigs County ·

Oklahoma,,

rw•h•ic•b-k.ll•le•d-l6•7~p•e•op;.l•e•a•n•d--and~-;;fe•ru;;'li;ze;r.;bo;;;m;,b;,bl;;;as;;;t;..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

.

Confidential Services
for females &amp; males.
eBirth Control Exams
.PapTests
.
•Te_ste &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling
·
. .Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
· •Methods include:

Fortier bas denied any direct placed a1 the sile.
.
role in the bombing and bas
A month after the wont leiTOrisl
declined to talk to reporters.
atladt on U.S soil tbe city reman·
bC=i the victims Friday with a pair
In other developments. investi- or ceremonies and beard their govgators and attorneys on .McVeigh's emor promise a "day ol justice "
defense team were to. inspect tbe
_
·
building today after reaching an
• "They guarded us ... with their
agreement with prosccuiDrS to keep last full measu~e of ~cvotion,' '
accompanying FBI agents from Gov. Frank Keaung said, M a cereoverbearing their discussions at the mony to honor tbe 12 ~~ law
scene.
_enforcement officers killed 1a the
''We worked it out,. • derense attack.
attorney Stephen Jones told The . . • 'Oklahomans .. have been
Daily Oklahoman. "We argued ~ev~y wronged: . lbc _govc:m&lt;JI'
about the FBI escort. It is their duty ~":will see 1ts day of
to watcl!, 001 lislen."
JIISUCe . .

CHEVROLET

• GEO

•

OLDSMOBILE

II~!!!!!G!!!!ENEJOHNSO!!!N~
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

616 -Eastern Av8..~~~-..flallipolis

614) 446:.3672

You've seen ·them working in our stores, when they weren't in
their Classrooms. Now they're graduating from high school.
To each one of you, Con,gratulations and Best Wishes as you
enthusiastically go from one phase of your lives ·
·right into the 'next. ·Good Going Grads!
.
EASTMAN'S
Your comm~ty Minded,
•
Low. ...Priced ·
.'
•

Snpermnrk"etsI

'.
"

�.• •

'

Sunday, May 21, 1115

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH ~ Point Pleasant, WV
,.....-- ..._

~imes- ~mtintl

'

--Area
deaths-- Bacteria possession suspect "faces charges
..
LANCASTER (AP) - A IIWI 13001. It Is DOW tml'bk by IIJdo.
wbo onlaed bnbnnlc pJaaue virus blotics but can be fatal If not
by milil wu IDdlc:ted Friday on a delected.

Alonzo J. Dickens Jr.
.
POJNf PLEASANT, W.Va- Aloazo Joscpll MBuster" Dickens Jr.,
• 15, Point Pleasant, died Friday, May 19, 199S in Pleas4mt Valley Hospital.
' '
, Born Feb. 1, 1920 in Kaytong, W.Va, 5011 oftbe lale Noob and Virllni! S. Fry Dickens, be W84 a retired 23-year employee of tbe U.S. Postal

Service.

•

A 1940 l!'llluale of Wah•m• Hlgh Scbool, be was a member of lbe
Bellemeai Onitcd Methodist Cbun:b, bail served as assistant superioteodent and superinteodeot of Sunday scbool at tbe cbun:b since t%2, was a
U.S. Army veteran of World WarD, and was a lifetime member of lbe
VFWandDAV.
He was also precedOO in dea1b by bis wife, Beuy Jane Hardman Dickens; and a sister, Mary EJi•abelh "'lib" Cooke.
Surviving are two daughters, Susan Bowser.and Mrs. Teny (Peony)
Shirley, both of Point Pleasant; a son. Josepb (Janet) Dickens of Gallipolis; live grandchildren and two gn:at-~ldreo; and tivo sisters, Mar. garet Kiocatd of Point Pleasant, and Siuab McCoy of Barberton.
Services wiU be 2 p.m. Monday in t)le Bellemead United Methodist
Cburcb, witb tbe Rev. Caaoll McCauley offtciating. Burial will be in the
Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant. Friends may call at the
Wilcoxen F~neral Home, Point Pleasant, on Sunday from ·2-4 and 7-9
p.m., and on Monday at the church one hour prior to the service.
·
Military gravestde rites will be conducted by VFW Post #9926,
MaSOII, W.Va.
In lieu of flowers, dorujtions may be made to the Bellemead United
•
·
Methodist Cburch Building Fund.

John W. Neville Sr.

charge of lttegal ponesalon of
explosives.
· ·
larry Waync Harris alao was
charged with iec:dviDa stn1en propertY. foraery aDd 1be mly!cmeteiYY
charge o( proy:ldioa false IDf~· .
lionlo obtain a license for the
explOsives.
Eaclt felony Is ponlsbablc by up
to 18 ·montbs in prison and a
$2,500 rme. The misdemeanor is
· punishable by up to ·six months In
jail and a $1,000 fine;
Harris,43,oflancaslet.~

$300 worth of yerslnia pestis, the
bacteria tbat causes bubonic
plague, from American Type Culture Collection in RockviUe, Md.
The plague killed one-fourth of
the European population In the

Tbe freeze-dried bacteria which is bamlell in that form arrived via Federal Express and
was confiscated by authorities
before it could be reconstituted.
The bacteria is reactivated by
adding dlsdlled water..
Harris remained free on bond
Friday, Fairfteld County Prosecutor
David Landefeld said.
Harris bas an unlisted phone
number and could not be reached to
curunent His lawyer, James Aranda, did not return a pbone call seeklog comment.
·
Harris previously told co-worft·
ers at a food testing lab in Colum·
bus that be was a white supremadlt
and sympiuhetic to the militia
movement, Superior Labs

. iDdictcd blm
spoRIDWI Brad Starreu sald.
Harrla was fired because be J~arris said be. WIIIICd 1be bllcleallegedly Uled company equipment ria for 'a book be was writlna 011
and certllication without permls- germ warfare. Police said be told
American Type Culture that be
sioo to obtli!! 1be bacteria. '
operated
a a laboratory but that
Harris waa aneatod May 12 and
charged with receiving stolen prop- lhere was no lab at the ~ be
eny. A preliminary lteariog was · provided.
Harris was charged wilb reeelv·
scheduled Friday In Lancaster
ing
stolen property,
MuniciPal Court bot Willi canceled
when. the Fairfield County grand

POMEROY - Units of tbe
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to ·nine calls for
assistance Friday.

1

RACINE

GALLIPOLIS- John WiUiam NeviUe Sr., 59, Gallipolis; died SaiUrday, May 20, 1995 in Holzer Medical Center. .
Born Aug. IS, 1935 in Point Pleasant, W.Va., son of the late John
William and Beulah Huddleston Neville, be was retired from Federal
Mogul Corp. and was a membt:r of lhe Cburcb of Christ.
Surviving are his wife, Debra Donnally Neville; live sons, Harry
Franklin Neville of Point Pleasant. Donald Joseph Neville of Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va., and John William Neville, Duwayne Neville and Lance
Neville, all of Gallipolis; a daughter, na Usa Johnsoo of Gallipolis; six
grandchildren; two brolhers, Bobby Neville of Pittsburgh, Pa., and David
Ne.ville of Arizona; and three sisters, Anita Stein of Pittsburg!~, Delores ·
Aeiker of Pomeroy, and Keitba Simksoo of Gallipolis.
He was also preceded in dealb by a granddaughter, and seven brothers
and sisters.
Services wiii be I p.m. Tuesday in !be Waugb-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, wilb !be Rev. Ralph Workman officiating. Burial will be in tbe
Suncrest Cemelery, Point Pleasant. Friends may call at the funeral home
on Monday from 6-9 p.m.

1:58 a.m., Eber's Gulf Station,
Tom Baldwin, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
SALEM CENTER
4:25 a.m., Edmundson Road,
!railer fire at Ronald Wright residence, no injuries.
'
MIDDLEPORT
9:23 a:m., Riverside Apartments, Sam Williams, Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
10: It p.m., Fire ball, Delores
Hanning, PVH.
SYRACUSE
10:46 a.m., Stale Rou'te 7,
Williams, VMH.

Fire kills Oak Hill youth

POMEROY
2:46p.m., Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center, ca~Jceted
enroute.
·
9:13 p.m., Cherty Ridge Road,
Barbara B-eeves, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
6:36p.m., State Route 681, Jean
Hawk,PVH.
RUTLAND
7:35 p.m., Meigs Mine 2,
Laucbey McCoy, Holzer Medical
Center.

I

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VEfERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Georgia
Marlow, Pomeroy; Virginia
Williams, Pomeroy.
Friday discharges - none.

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.........

.

ByGEORGEABATE
(TobyPdoo).
.
whetbcrMI:Gheellad•ymoney
Tlmt111 Smtlnel Sllllr
The Meigs High Sctlool student•
in her JIC!C"-11
.
Hi~
IIChool
mJdenu
need
t.felp High SMoot's Lmi ~foriiiOICtbtllamontb,said
10
undentand
the
law
and
bow
McObeedodledeoteringanimaai- Mick CliJds. Meigs High School
. the criminal justice system
nary jail.
S!Udeol government teacltcr.
The hiP tlcbool acnior S81 011
OlildssaidhisSIIIdentsroutinely · wodcs, Lentes said.
A lawyer from the pusecudie witneaiiiiDd tltil wcc:t dtirlns already do a mock trial in die classtor's offtce visited the schools
a mock trial In lbe Meigs County room.
one day each week. Leotes said.
Common Pleas Courtroom.
"This teaches about the legal
"We explain what we're
JodtiliJna&amp;inarycaae,McGhee system. ~ying is very effecdoing and set up'te81111," Powell
was IICCUied mlte'lillg a green tive," be
'"The mock trial SUP:said. ''Wealsocovc.rSoloeofthe
Ihirt from a dcptnlleot lltilRI.
plemelus the m81erial in the book.
"I was truant from school and They experience it instead of just · rules of law and stralegies."
I didn't W8Dl to aet cauahl." reading about it."
..
Tbe aaomeys take this opportunity to explain Ohio 'sjudiMcGhee told the stuc\!.nt proseeu- · Defenseattomey Sbannon S!881S
cial system to the students and to
tor why she fill.
said be may eontintlc and beeomc an
· glveoutsaneiofonnationabout
StudeniJIII*iCIItorWcndyFaw attorney.
'
laws affecting young people.
reaeated lbe IICCIIC.. McOhee hid
"WehadalotofbelpfromScou"
Studenta learned about a
been seen near tbc laCk of clothes Powell,MeigsCountyassistantprosenew
druilk driving law for undertbat had the ltan lifted.
cutingattorney. "Youdefmitely have ·
age drinkers, Powell said.
McGhee was seen leaving the to communicate and prepare."
As of last year, any driver
lllilRl in ll hurry. She had a green
Powell said the students worked
under 2 I yean old operating a
item undemealb her jacket. A aecu· hard to prepare the case.
motor-vehicle with a blood alrityguard-actedbyJaredHill"They did a real good job and
cohol
level of .02to .I percent is
chased after McGhee. Crowds came up with the details," Powell
now guilty of a fourth-degree
blocked his view of her for several said.
misdemeanor punishable by 30
minutes, Faw said.
The program may also alleviate
McGhee was later found with some students' fear of the court sys- days in jail and a $250 nne, be
said.
hcrjacketoninsideout,siaingnerv- 'tem - a system most people are
"That's one beer," he
ously and ihe sweater was found exposed to at least once in tbeir lives,
nearby. Faw detailed.
PoweU commented.
stressed
This information is espe"ltwastougherthan I thought,"
"Many people going into a courtcially pertinent during prom and
Paw said after the li:ial. "You have room are pebilied." he noted. ''This
graduation season, tradidonally
to come up from scratch to build mates the students familiar wilb tbe
a!imeofbeavydrinking forbigl!
yourcase.ltbinklawyersdoagreat system."
school seniors.
job."
Meigs County Prosecutor John
''This might save a life," he
1he case against McGhee was R. Lentes - who served as judge
said. "lfitstopsoneperson from
1110811ycircumstantial,meaningstu- overthiscase-delermioedMcGhee
driokioganddriviDgithasserved
· dent~anddefendersmust was innocent based on her testimony.
its pwpose."
work hard to win their case.
The prosecution needed to prove
The program will be held
' · "It can go eilheiway, it's not · beyond a reasonable doubt, which it
again next year. Because of
anunwinnablecaseforthedefense," did not meeL
·
Monday's lloodingthemocktrial
. "Both counsels did an exceUent
said assistant Prosecutor Chris
was rescheduled for Thursday,
Tenaglia.
. ·
' ' job," Lentes said. "You aU had very
which conflicted with Eastern
Statements were made by a good demeanor."
·
HighSchool'sawanlsceremony.
sates cledc (Carleua Carr), a secu·
The state could have asked more
rity g\Uird (Jared Hill), and a friend questions of !be witness, including

••

STATE ROUTE 248

Ju5t 20 Minutes Olive Slraighl Up
Rt 1 Ntn1h ThN Tuppers Plains

.

I •

'

MOTOR COMPANY
See
)erry Bibbeo
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman

-.•

t

Bibbee

Center in Columbus, where she
. was listed Friday in critical condi·
lion in !be burn unit. The hospital
said sbe was being treated for second· and third-degree burns over
50 percent of her body.
Scou Allen, 32. was in intensive
care at Oalc fiill Medical Center,
where be was in stable condition,
. !be hospital said.
. A malfunctioning elecbical cord
· caused the fire, according to the
sberifr s offtce. The state lire mar·
slial's .office was assisting Madi·
son-Jefferson firefighters in the
dead.
·
Mary Allen, 39, was transferred investigation.
Ito Ohio State University Me~ic&amp;!.

OAK HILL (AP) - Ftre swept
through a borne early Friday near
Ibis soulbern Jackson County village. killing a 9-year-old girl and
injuring ber parents.
Madison-Jefferson farefigbters
and Jackson County ~beriff's
deputies removed the f~ly from
. their home, which was reponed
burning at 2:14a.m.
Angelina Allen and her parents,
Scott and Mary Allen, were transported to Oak Hill MediCal Center,
·where the girl was pronounced

tu· ent cOurt:
Mock trial teaches
essentials of laW

.,

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REHEARSING TESTIMONY- Jeremy Imboden, seated, playslhnole of Bobby K6nk a stOre
security guard, while Weady Faw, prosecutor, prepares bim for testimony under lhe wakhfuteie of real
assistant Prosecutor Scott PowelL (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

I

SCENE OF ClUME-Jared Hill, a security guard alibis mock trial, describes the department store
events. Meigs County Prosecutor John R. Lenles, in the background, acts as judge in this imaginary case.
The Meigs Hlgb School students are members of Mick Childs government class.

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DEFENSE CONSULTS- Defense attorneys coUaborate on the best strategy to u~ in their client's
defense. The defense team won this mock trial.
. · .
·

~im Sands counts the .sheep_through (3~.11i~ .~Q"unty's hist~_ry

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PROSECUTION PREPARES - Prosecuting attorney Wendy Faw, at right, prepares closing
arguments as part or their case against an alleged shoplifter. Jared Hill, who acted !15 ~urity guard,
consults with Faw. Tbe students prepared for more than a month lo ready for the tnal thiS week, Faw.
said.

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BJ JAMES SANDS
.
S~al Correspondent
..
, In 1930 when the Ohio Valley
livestock Company stockyard was
builtinGallipo---~--~~.~eepwere
·;still the number
· one animal in
•Gallia County,
a positioo tbey
had held for
over 100 years.
Butbythe
1a1e 1930's the
sheep industry
in Ollllia County began its decline
· which continues to this day. In 1935
there were nearly 17 ,OOOheadof sheep
in Ga1lla County. In the I990' s there
are less than 1,000. The number of
sheep in Ohio declined from Smillion
in 1870 to 250,000 today. The top
. sheep counties in Ohio are MuskinandKnox.
•
·
gumThe leadill8 Gallia township in
sheep raising was Morgan Township.
In faCt abOut 25 percent of all sheep
raised in the county were in Morgan
Township. Another 25 percent of the

sheep were raised in Otesbire and
SpringfiddTownships combined. The
townships with the fewest number of
sheep were Gallipolis, Greenfield,
Guyan, Ohio and Raccoon.
Probably the zenith of sheep raising in Gallia County came during the
Civil War when !here were over
· 40,000sheep grazingonGatlia 'sroll·
ing meadows. The sheep industry
collapsed after !be panic of 1873, and
the number of sheep in .the county
declined to 16,000. The industry rebounded in the 1880's, only to col·
lapse again after the panic of 1893.
Overallthoughsheepraisingwas
again strong during World War I .
because the demand for wool unifonns was greaL
During the ~te 1860's tbe wool
market was so strong in the cOunty
that there were two wool ·miUs in
Gallipolis. Smaller miUs were also
.localed in Vinton, Centerville and
YcUowt.Own. The two rniUs in Gal·
Iipolis did.AA!9!i.P&amp;. ~spinning,
carding and even cloth ~ufactur­
ing.
The Union Woolen Mill located

feed one sheep in Ohio whereas on
the East Coast it might cost $2.
Sheep sold for anyw~ from
$3 a head to S10 a head in the 19th
century. But wool might be worth in
some years as much asS I a pound. So
it ':"'as~ business to buy or seu
arumals m some years. The price of
mutton held steady in the 19th eenIlK)' to aboUt seven to nine cents a
pound. .
,
. . Most Ohioans were not fond of
eallllg mutton even though in 1884
when tbe first big study on nutrition
came out, ~tsbowed mutton to be !be
most nutnbous meat. Mutton was
OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK COMPANY- Tbe stockyards in
eaten mostly during depression yean
Galllpoliswhlcb burned a few ,ears ago were e!!lablisbed in 1930 when
in Gallia County. Lamb was only·
sbeep were the mll5t numerous of aU stpck farm animals.
slightly moreanractiveas a food itern
on VineStreetwonanwnberofawards at Second Avenue and Spruce Street
The dec.Une of sheep farming~
for the quality of its jean cloth. The and known as tbe Gallipolis Woolen
Gallia County is lied 10 the decline of
mill took the medal of merit at the MiD or Waddell, Blazer &amp;. Co. Mill. .
the use of woolin clothing as well
Vienna, Austria Exposition in )873. This ~ter miU was built in 1869.
the growing popularity and devel as
The Union Woolen Mill was ~oth mtlls produced Iinsey and stock·
ment of beef cattle.
~
organized by Menager, Creuzet, tng y~; Je&amp;IIS; flannels; and dyed
·
~lerq andA)¢tire in 1848. ~xpert wool, .stlk and COIIOII: ,
.
James Sands Is upedal ~ .
mill workers werelirought here rrom--..-~·~'OGalllpotillmtUs~ ~,- .....Stteep.were rgooa-ex~mtntlll'tMStmdayTimes-&amp; · ··•· - ··--::1
Urbana, Ohio, Germany and England. ftrst.miUs ..yest ~f ~ Alleghemes to uct for all Ohio farmers in the 19th tioel. His address Is: U WitJc!·
The other wool mill was located use tndqstrial spmmng jacks. .
century as it cost about $1 per year to Drive, Springboro, Oblo 45066,

nb nn 1

n

The Panic of · 1873 severely
crippled the miUs in Gallipolis, lind
by the early i880'sbothwereclosed.
At one time they employed over 100
people.
.
Sheep were fairly easy to raise.
Tbeywerekeptinpastureyearround.
In the winter they were given extra
feed of com and hay, but most of the
yearthey&lt;;ouldgmzeonpasturefields.
The major problem with sheep
raising had to do wilb wild dogs and
wolves. Rewardsweregivenforwolf
hides for several years.
Sometimes neighborhood pet
dogs would till a lamb. Some dOg
owners refused to take responsibility
for the acts of their pets. Owners of
sheep would retaliate by shooting the
dog.
One.prominent doctor of Porter,
after havmg lost a number of sheep by
the actions of a neighbor's dog, sho!
tbe dog. The next day the dog's owner
cutdownallofthedoc;tor'sfruitJ,n;es,
which !)umbered into the bundreils.

�•

PegaB2·~·--JI Uwl

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

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Tbcrc "iin' t• no , _ for you

also deluaed ever¥ week with
to cook on Memorial Day. Mon- offers for credit cards. Quire oftal
day, May 29, tru you dOD't WIDDL you have been "pre-approved."
Tbe Burlil)&amp;bam CBJDp of tbe However, there's always an 8Callll!
Madan WQOI!mftl of America will panying little form to be filled out
be I«Vin&amp; diDDen from 11 am. 10 . seeking the "pertinent" informa6 p.m. that day at tbeir ball. You tion.
Not only do I think that a-edit is .
Clll "eat in" or "'ake oul"lbere Is
not a set price for yow' dlniler, you too easy these days, but I fall to
just lllllke a donation. Tbe orgaoi- understand if you are "prezatioo will also have baked 8~ approved" wby that lnfonnalion Is
needed. On just what basis were
for sale during tbe day.
Anyone wishing 10 dOD•te food you "pre-approved."
for the dinner may contact Mrs.
I'm also rebelling these days
Mildred Ziegler, 992-7170. Pro- against the agencies and businesses
ceeds wiU go for new n:stnJcms at who insis.t on having my social
security number. What does that
tbe camp's ball.
'
number have to do with receiving
Last call for help for tbe · tbe services or merchandise
Pomeroy Higb School ·Class of offered? We are constanUy warned
1965 Reunion.
to be very discreet in giving out our
Donna Carr bas beadeA a group social security numbers. I think it's
of local residents who graduated excellent advice and I "ain't doin'
.from the class In planning a special II no more" unless I feel !bat it's
get-together for the class in the absOlutely necessary to tbe circumafternoon as well as altendance at stance and that won't be·oflen. Will
the entire school reunion in tbe you join me? ·
evening next Saturday night.
-Tbe special class social event
And you may know, the
wiU be beld Croat 1.to 4 p.m. Satur- Women's Auxiliary at Veterans
day,
27, \It the Senior Citizens Memori!ll Hospital is awarding two
Center m Pomeroy. Those from $1,000 scholarships this spring to
otber cla&amp;ses at the former students going into medical related
Pomeroy High School who wisli i.o fields.
,
visit with members of tbe Class of
However, lbanks to a nice, gen'65 are welcome 10 stop by the cen- erous gesture on the part of Mrs.
ter. The class will be marking its Abbie Slratton, Pomeroy, an active
30th anniversary since graduating auxiliary member and vice presifrom Pomeroy High and probably dent of tbe organization, a !bird
none of them lrnow what bappeoed $1,000 scholarship bas evolved.
IO all !bose years.
Mrs. Slrauon decided to personNow about that help. Class ally provide a $1,000 scholarship in
members or albers who can belp honor of long-time, faithful auxildecorate the center for the special iary member, Mrs. Jessie White.
reunion are asked to be at the Jessie is quite deserving of the
Senior Citizens Center at 7 p.m. bon.or. Despite health problems
Friday. See you there?
over the years sbe bas logged in
over 14,600 hours of volunteer serTbe Eastern Higb SchoOl Alum- vice at Veterans Memorial. Abbie
ni Association reunioo-diuner and bas been generous in conjunction
a dance-:.will be a bit later In the with ber work at lbe hospital. Sevseason than some of the alumni eral years back sbe purchased a
events. It bas been set for Saturday, beautiful new piano for !he hospiJune 10, and will be beld at Royal tal's extended care facility.
Oak Resorl Alumni must purchase
advance tickets since they must
I suppose about the only thing
show those tickets on the night of good !hat can be said about all of
the reunion before they will be the rain we've bad this spring is
admitted to the resort grounds.
that the world around is certainly
green. Do lceep smiling.
I suspect that many of you are

Mar

Miy21, 1995

Sunday, May 21, 1915

•

----Gallia community cal~ndar---.....:.
·Tile Community Calelldar Is
publhlled ao a free service to
non-profit xroup1 wl•blng to
announce meetlnp and special
events. Tbe calendar Is no.t
designed to promote sales or
fulld-ralsera or any type. Items
are printed u space permlls aDd
cannot be guaranteed to run a
speclftc number of days.

...

Saturday, May lO
GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles in Recovery
9 p.m. St. Peters Episcopal Churcb.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Historical Sociely board meeting 1
p.m. and history day program 2:30
p.m. counbouse.
••• ·
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Narcotics Aponymous Clean and
Free Group 7:30 p. m. Epis~opal
Churcll.
•••
GALLIPOLIS - River Valley
High School Boy's. Quartet singing
and Ron Hammond preaching 7:30
p.m. White Oak Bapllst Cburcb.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Songfeli:l} p.m.
Bell Chapel Church with the Inheritors and Sboppe Family-to sing.

MERCERVILLE · - Mercerville/Hannan Trace Alumni banquet 1925 through 1992 4 p.m. at
!he school. Dinner at 6:30 p.m. For
reservations caU 446-7379.

GALLIPOLIS - Eastern Star
Wall&lt;-a-thon 9:30 a.m. Gallipolis
City Park.
,

. GALLIPOLIS - Taylor Family
Singers 6 p.m. Fait!J Valley Baptist
Cbu,rch.

CENTENARY - Ernest an Hilda
Clark-Hill family teunion 12 to S
p.m. ·o.o. Mcintyre Park shelter
bouse I. Bring co~cred dish.
.

CROWN CITY - Wilbur Slack
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Liberty Chapel
Church.

Sunday, May ll

GALLIPOLIS - Shaver-Davis
family reunion ll a.m. Gallia

•••

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•••

•••

County Junior Fairgrounds.
•••
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Bruce
Unroe 7:30 p.m. Mina Chapel
Church.

•••

•

CROWN CITY - Ralph Workman will speak, ll a.m., Good
Hope Bl!Ptist Churcb.

•••

. Mond"l;~•Y ll

...

THURMAN - Thunnan Grange
meeting 7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Divorce Sup-

port Group meeting ~:30 p.m. New

Life Lutheran Cburcb.

•••

·Meigs community calendar

copal ~un:b. •••

POINT PLEASANT, W.V'=

Nan;otlcs Anonymous Clean

...
...

.--

Free group 7:30 p.m. Episco .
Cburcb.
.
...
VINTON - Bible Talks
p.m. ViniOD Town Hall.
.-

7:~

·-

:

GALLIPoLIS - Ohio Vallt;Jt
Visitors Center HOST worbbQJI
6:30109 p.m. Bossard Library. •·•

•••

.

GALLIPOLIS - Galtla Coulilf,
Safety Council luncheon 12 p.c;
Stowaway.
•
-;-

, ...

.JUO GRANDE - Open Galj!!
&lt;farden Club gues~ nlgbt
6:30p.m. Ann Day s borne. ,

coolc«!

...
•••

CHARLES AND WANDA HIVELY

CELLULAR PHONE
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342 Second Au. :.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-4290
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RACINE AMERICAN LEGION HALL 8:00·11 :00 (?)
BRING OWN REFRESHMENTS
QUESTIONS: CALL 9'49·2216 or 247·2684

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FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL .

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FRUTH PHARMACY •

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia-Meigs
regional airport, pancake breakfast
beginning at 9 a.m. Sunday, with
.plane rides and FAA infonnation in
daylong activities.

ALBANY -Revival services.
Pearl Chapel United Methodist
Church, May. 22-28, .7 p.m. Rev .
Kenny Baker, ~.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs At'hletic
Boosters spring ban~ue~ 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday in the Mej s High School
cafeteria. Meat, ro s, drinks furnis~ed.

'l

MONDAY
RACINE - RACO of Racine
will meet Tuesday at Star Mill
Park, 6:30 p.m. New members
welcome.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDlEPORT - The centennial luncheon of the Middleport
Literary Club will be ~Jeld at 12:30
a.m. at the Middleport Church Gf
Christ. Response, an originljl poem.

RACINE - A meeting of the
Southern Local School Board will
be held Monday at 7 p.m. at the
school.

POMEROY T Wildwood Gar·
den Club, home of Juanita Will,
We&lt;lncsday, 7:30p.m.

_Middleport

992-6491 ~ •

.·~

ORDER By Friday, May 26 ...

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352 Third Ave.

Ph. 446·2327

Chair For

The
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On .
Father's
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Day! ·

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smoothly and effort lessly to an infinite number of pos1t1ons

FOR DAD

· I Cori11tltians 1.5 :57

•

' The Meigs County Coopenitive
'Bobf!ob_inson
Parish
'Steve Beha
'The Dally Sentinel
. 'Judy ~cDonald
'Pomeroy Public Library
'Chuck Kitchen
'Gloria John~on
' R_ep. John Carey
'Donna Grate
'At Hartson
'Sharon Wise
•Joann Robinson
'Brenda Barnhart
'Robert Markley '
'Sandy VanVranken
'Don Vaughan
'Darlene Van amen,
' Joe Humphrey
'Penny Dewhurst
·•Jeff Warner
'Bert c·hrlslian
•steven E. Beha lf
•e. J. Smith
'David Gaul
'Roland Wildman
· •sarah Wilkes
'Rose Schrock,
•scol1 Dillon
'Mike King
'Emalene Pran
IFrank Vaughan
'Dennis Hockman
'David Spencer
'Crystal Holsinger
'Charles Grueser
'Barbara Roush
'Dodger Vaughan'
· 'Les Hayman
•Jim Soulsby
'
'Cindy Mayle ·
'Peggy Crane
. . ' Bitt Frazier
'Gladys Cumings
'Norma Torres
;wMPO ,
.:....:..-~-· .~ ·: ~
'And the nearly 500 people who kneeled tog~ther o~ th;·~treels of Pomeroy to pray for America and
. Meigs County! ·
·

..

OH.

A Big

Pleasant Valley
· ~ Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center

. I
'Everyone· who participated in Ihe Prayer
VIgil and Bible Reading Marathon
'American Legion Drew Webster Post
•flllelgs Local Sc~ools Fellowship of
Christian Students
'Middleport Ministerial Association
. 'Meigs County Ministerial Association
'Aardvark Sound
•vaughan's Cardinal Foods
•sank One of Pomeroy
'Middleport Church of Christ
'Reedsville Nazarene Church
'Pomeroy-Middleport Llon·s Club
'The Meigs County Commissioners
'Tile Pomeroy Pollee Department
'The Vlflage of Pomeroy
'Mayors Dewey Horton and John
Bltiettnar
'Pomeroy United Methodist Church
'Meigs Courtly Chamber of Commerce
'The Gldeons
•WSAZ-TV
•
•WOWK-TV
·-+-·~f-..Jiic:kle• Hilldel~ralnd --. --~---- _ .. _.

...••-•
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STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS .

tufted p tllow back, plush pillow a rm ~ and deeply padded T-cUsh!On
seat ~nvelop you m ultimate conl tort . whether 1oung1ng or fully

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Rock of Ages offl!rs you a choice of ·s different colored gran~es.
·Whatever your requirements may be, complete satisfaction is
assured with Rock of Ages.
Hours: 9:004:00 M-T-Th·F. Others by appointment
•
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's93-6586 or 446-2327

TRANSITIONAL STYLING in a chair t ~a1's sutted to any home decor,
and will sure!y provide years or iamily-pleasing relaxatton. Btscwt-

The Meigs County Day of . Prayer
Committee would like to thank the
.D.AY" OF .· ~ ton owing individuals and organizations
p~
..... !":., for their support and assistance with the
cfJ?".:-:cfflu_...w';,.y. &lt;:~'cva,y
May 4th observance:
· ·

-·-

- .,.• ~- . .~-_,;:...

~

em.., c&lt;;$wnua/

•

....-••

Ritter, an assistant professor of
psychology at California State University in Fresno, reports lbe work
with Judith Langlois of the University of Texas at Austin and others
i'n the May issue or the journal
Developmental Psychology.

..

REG. $570

--

•..

f"o.- . Just.~ •.

tcr said. "All these molbers treated
their babies positively and generally saw their babies in a favorable
light."
.
The study follows others that
suggest good-looking people are
seen and treated by others as more
popular, smaner and bettet'at d.ealIrig with other people. The new~
findings, she said, demonstrate that
these •'appearance cues'· .are so
powerful. that they exist even
between mother and child. ·

''But thanks be to Gotl, which gi.v~th us
the victory thr01tgh ortr Lord .{P.m s Christ, ,.

...·-.

Cable Installed ·

If you order HBO during our 1 ¢ "installation
offer, you 'll get HBO Free 'your 2nd monlh
and, we'll send you o coupon to o:eceive o
FREE copy of HBO's original movie
,;White Mile" starring Alan Aida. · ·

MIDDLEPORT- Meigs Local
Chapter 17, OAPSE, Monday, 1
p.m .. Meigs Junior High School
cafeteria.
.
•

forinore Information CiiiJ (304) 675-5136

•

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POINT PLEASANT

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25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

Ladies &amp; Men:s

•

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,,-.,a
frliiq,;l•o a.-•• 12 Noon ·
Stliurtlaf Afpolalilaattlnlla•l•

2 PC. SUITS

•

~

wel

YSPECIAL

They have five grandchildren
Travis Sanders; Mallhew, Jamie
and Amy Irwin; and Christopher
Stroop. ·
·Charles is pastor. o( Campaign
Free Will Baptist Church and is
retired from Kyger Creek Power
Plant. Wanda is a homemaker,

Tuesday, May 13
3 p.m•
Pleasant Valley Nursing 8.. Rehab Center·
.S and 'HUI Road • Point Pleasant, WV

WJtft Cl'rro"*'m l'lcoll,. ..

·-

.,...., ••lhnchiti'MO a.-..6:00 p.m.
rue_.. ·8:30 . . . •7r00 p.m.

CARDINAL DRY CLEANERS

• LOSE ¥:10 LBS~•
• All
INNatural
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Aphasia Association and Stroke
Support Group

..........

--·
-'·-.

G~t

(Carlton) Stroop of Cambridge and
DOris (Marie) Irwin of Crown City .

388-~603

·'
.,.."

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Pleasant Valley

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy·Mason Bridge
992,2588
VINTON
Gallia County Display Yard
155 Main Sl

•

(304) 675·1675

GALLIPOLIS ·- Charles L. and
· Wanda L. Hively will celebrate
their 40th wedding anniversary
with an open bouse at the Kyger
Creek Plant Club House. Cheshire
from 3 to 5 p.m. May 27. Tbey
were married June 4•.1955 by Rev.
Alfred Holley.
Tbe cclebratipn will be hosted
by their children Sharon (John)
Sanders of Gallipolis, Charlene

....
.--.· ·----- Wedding policy·- --

t~e

SUNDAY

POMEROY - Bedfotd Volunteer Fire Department Committee.
special meeting Monday, 7:30p.m.
Darwin town baU.

Research finds moms treat
cote babies m·ore nicely .

INSURANC

CLASSMATES AND FRIENDS
POST BANQUET GET TOGETHER

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

to celebrate 40th

a ri11
·:::anniversary at an open reception culture .at Poi111 Pleasant Htgh
:.;:rrom 2to S p.m., May .28 at Trinity Scboc;&gt;l and tbe Masqn County
~nited Methodist Church, 615 Vocauonal School. He ts managel'
••viand St, Point Pleasan~ W.Va.
and co-owner of Dunn Farm Com·
:: The event is being hosted by papy on U.S. 35.
·:lheir children.
·
.
Clara· Belle was a fanner home
:: Tbe couple was married May dcmonslration agent and teacher at .
:·27, 1945 .at Grace Methodist PoJnt Pleasant Higb School. She
•:Cburcb in Gallipolis by Rev. W. " also worked with fann groups and
:::Stou Westennan.
· 4-H Clubs.
·
:: They are ·the parents of James
The couple requests gifts be · By MALCOLM RUTER
AP
Science
Writer
.
· ·W. Dunn of Henderson and Sarah omitted.
NEW YORK (AP) - In a
startling· demonstration of bow it
·"'
pays to be good-looking,. a new
study says cute babies get nicer
-.. Tbe Sunday Thnes-Sentinel the daily paper as space allows.
treaunent even from Mom.
:-regards the weddings of Gallia,
Photographs of either the bride
Mothers of cute newborns
..J\.1eigs and Mason counties as news , or the bride 'lnd groom may be sbowcd more affection toward their
:=::tnd is happy to publish wedding published with wedding stories if infants than mothers. of homely
,:stories and photographs without desired. Photographs may be 9ther babies did, as measured byj such
;~barge. .
.
black and white or good ~uality things as holding the child .close,
.• However. wt!llding news must color. billfold size or larger.
patting him or her and cooing
)neeL general standards of timeliPoor quality photographs will things such a~ "Hi, cute baby,
•:Jless. The newspaper prefers to not be accepted. Generally, snap· you're such a cute baby.''
j~ublisb accounts of weddings as
Mothers Qf the unallractive
shots or instant-developing photos
oollOOn as possible after lbe event.
are not of acceptable quality.
. babies spent more time than cute:.:: To be published in the Sunday
All material submilted for publi· baby moms did paying attention to
:.1dition, tbe wedding must have cation is subject to editing.
oU1er people and performing 'chores
.
: 1llk:en place within 60 days prior to
Questions may be directed to like checking diapers.
"We're not suggesting that par•':ibe publication, and may be up to the.editorial department from.! to 5
ZOO words. in length. Material for p.m. Monday through Friday at ents arc not completely in love wilb
.
.
IAlong tlu! River must be received 446-2342.
their babies even if their babies are
unattractive,"
researcher Jean Ritby the editorial department by
.
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to lbe date
of pubtication.
Those not mljking the 60-day
_,~--~------------------------deadline will be published during

STATE FARM

SOUTHERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
CLASS OF 1970
SATURDAY,·MAY 2nH
25TH REUNION • BANQUET 6:00 P.M.

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE, OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

Dunn Ftsber of Richardson, Texas.
Tbe Dunns have ·five grandchildren

~e~~~r~~eH~::f:s~~·~~ :e~d~!~ andc~~r;!~::'v~~~~

·ATtENTION

llfW 'A111111'$ • WAU•IIIS WElCOME

Dunns to mark 50th

.
.....
••

: I'OiNT PLEASANT, W.VA. ;;clifford and Clara B~lle (Mo.tter)

':'Entire Mont,. of May-

DEALER

~Hivelys

CLIFFORD AND CLARA BELLE DUNN
.

ladle lhaek .Clearly
CELLULARONE'
Best.

POMEROY - Tbe M~igs
County Veterans Service Couunission will meet on Monday at 7:30
p.m. in tbe Veteraits Service Offtce
in Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT - Special
singers, Tbe Ciutterburys, will be at
lbe Ash Street Free Will Baptist
Church, Middleport, Saturday. 7:30
.p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Chapter #283 OES meeting 7:30
•••
t
:'¥""
p.m. Grand Visitation br Worthy
CHESHIRE - Cheshire TowC
Orand Patron. Covered dish dinner .
ship
Trustees meeting bas beQt
6 p.m. Members to bring covered
changed
from 5:30 p.in. to 4:~
dish. Officers are requested to wear
p.m.
....
Cbapler dresses.
•!t'"'
Revivals
,~.
MORGAN CENTER - Revivjif
Tuesday, May l3
7:30p.m. May 14 through 27 MDI"
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics gan Center Christian Holiness
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peters Epis- Church.

Cellular
Phones
Starting At

Tloe c-unlty CuleDdar II
publlabed as • free, service to
non-profit 1roups wlsbln1 to
announce meetln1 and 1pedal
even'ls. Tbe calendar Is not
designed to promote sale. or
fund raisers of any type. Item&amp;
are printed *'! opace permits aDd
cannot be guaranteed. to rUil a
speclftc noamber or dafiPOMEROY - Rev. William
Ward, Middleport. will be guest
minister, 11 a.m. Sunday, Naomi
Baptist Oturcb. •
.

::t

•••

•
"~~Mq Glimn-Jimtiaal • Page 83

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

. ,...

_c---· REG. 930

FOR DAD.

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The great shape ol a chaise 1
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· into deep tufts of continuous
comfort. Res t your head on th1s
deep padd ed c.tishion. And. be
thankful you
bought a
BEAI&lt;LIN E! E~sy fingertip.
TouchMot1on® Wallaway® me·
chanism. Match1ng Touch·
Motion®.
Rock-A-Lounge!®
avail able.

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.•·

Sunday, ~ 21, 1111

-~

County ·~

eastaaU.S.,JaChiilaabeigh&amp;of200 wilhlhemaleinclolepunuiL .
FcibdRuil S.Pirtfou~.
feet), ~ Slippery Elm • We bikedlioneysuctleTnilbodl Wilt, or jua 10 «&lt;Ye dllouab. wid! a
Sb&amp;gbllkHictllryllldYellowBuck: diys.ln fld, twice~ aoo'''"' ct,ay. llqiiOWIIChlboacliolllballbo+u.to
eye (lhe ,only lndigeliouaBucteyeiO TbolhinllripOIDhedouttwodecnlld ForlholcwboJooie-,oalbowaIOUihem Ohio). The shrub liSICld for llarje.J18Ysquinel. Wejumpedlhe ler. bolls, CP ~. IIIII peMh bolla
idenlificlliOD II a Spice Busll. The deer, apin, Ia!« along lhe lnlil. Bodt 11e availlble 10 nat
1bo ...:t
pcl'll:'s pide shccl, allo, hu a brief time1 we bad SlllldofiS: would the llhact. 'BcR il J!Odii.. Jille ....,
~liYC on each.
· bUIIIIIIS or lhe deer move fin&amp;?
IIIII 1bo gloria ol Molher N-.e, 111 ·
• While the IRe foliaae wu DOC yc&amp;
On lhe two driva bome, we illite Ill 10e111 ri&amp;bt witb ~
out,thediffmoeeinbllkalldshapes oblcrved llllld banks covmd witb world.
~
still made'11'1 ioltleSting outing. 'Ibis ·trilliums. Anolher hint had 11'1 uo· {DorotbJ Sa71'8 ud IMr II•
pleasure wu incrcucd by the sprinr known wildflower, blue blooms on a band, Gtroae. r-eriJ fll MefP
fiQwer! in bloom everywhele. Many stalt. From ·the highways. the red- COillltJ, moved llere about tbret
species of buuaflics Dilled about in . buds and dogwoods 11e easily seen, Jean 1110 ud IIOW realde in a •tit
110 1111y of color.
alllo.
bouse fac:ln1 the Oblo Rlwr Jl#
Tbc dogwood and' Jedbud ¥1m
.We heP1ily rec:ornmelld ~ lrip 10 · below Syracue.)
.
beginning IIJ) blosaom.Thell'lib wm aaaaa~~~~~aaaaaaaaaaaaa
bouk:aed with CIIJlCISof spriilg belu·
IIIII
lics;purple,whilepaleblue,andyd·
low
violeu: Ilia.tiny blue flowers
bloo!nlng on a commonly-seen, but
unidemified, weed. An occasional
Satisfaction with hearing a.i ds and hearing care·
pa!Ch of trout lilies, qlllkcr ladieS,
depends upon wovking· with the' right professionals.
dutclunao'sbmcbes,lrilliums,atypc 11111111 He·ar For 19ife is a new network of audiologists· not
,o f Jacob's ~r C4l1ed Greek vafe- 11;11 1
·
·
h'
'
..
riao, and bloodrootS enhanced OlD' 11111 sa es people- who provtde et tc~l, . thorough heart~g!
werevetystecpPJd~uldhavebeen enjoymcn
. ' t,lllso. 1beze were proba- lllll care at a reasonable cost. You II work only wtth
hazanloull to smlll childlcn, but they bly six, or more, Dowen we did not
experts with advanced training and equipment.
.
werewonderfui.Aiongone,wec,ame know, and were unable to identify ll[jl The Hear For Life Guarantee
upon 110 old homestead. Re11U1811ls of larer in books.
lllll
thechimneywerestillstandingallda
Lake View Trail is a eire '10
If you complete the program we recommend for you
fewwealheredboanlsw~relyingon roureof2.6miles.Itisanea:ru:
and do n~t believe we have fulfilled the expectations IIIII
lhe ~~ wf~-~-dy...~ and evecy tum of the !J'Ii1 holds an- · IIIII we set, we will re~und the money you spend for aU
been u"' uuoa o u"' """""• uu.., other wonder It be~ · along the 1511 h ·
'd
· h'
f
h
·
types of daffodilS had multiplied , warer's edge~ winds across sev· 11111 eanng at s Wil m one year o pure ase.
.
gready over the years. They WOR a cra1 smaU stmuns into the forest. We 1511
splash of &amp;Old ~ lhe ~wy f~L obsetved fishennen co-existing with ~~
.
.
.. 1::'
It was a lovely linle haven mthem1~ Canada geese in the water. Well, the 11111
. 435 2nd Ave., Gallipolis
r~r
rr1
oflb( beluliful forest. Oil that day, geesewerecomplainingabit,butnot U
Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
~ deer bounded out. below DtU: · ~ying. Perhaps the ~eese were nest~ Pomeroy
H'd·t;!
~l ~Y seemed·to vanish mto thin 111.!1 along the shoreline and resented ll[jl
770 E Main St Jackson Ohio
""""'
IIIII
llf. Earlier, we had scared a hen tur- the inttusion.
llil
·
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llil
· key,fmmbtznest,rev~goneegg.
Throughout the walk on Lake
LISA KOCH
Honeys.uclde Trail m ~run View Trail, the songbirds and huge ll[jl Au.d iologist
,
11111
Stale Park JS a J!8lllrC .11'811 of only trees arc breathtaking. As we came llil M.A., CCC-A
U
abouto~halfmile.llls a very easy out of the forest inro a clearing with
walkw•thasmoothpath.AsHoncy- picnictables,wesatiOrestandwatch IIIII I Callloralree1/2
:Call for
• .oliiill
111111
suckle Trail's name implies, !here is the lake.!\ pail o~blackbirds were in llli:ll .I hour.co~sultallon
free
~Hear I 1511
8
ample _honcysuckle f!!on~ the lOUie. aco111'1Shipphasema'llearbytrcc.The
I Recetve
. A Hear: hearing aid
For I ...
Whenl!blooms,thellfwill,undoubt· male repeatedly ruffied his feathers
recommendattons~
•
L'~ • llil
edly, be perfumed with fragrapce.
and offC!ed his most romantic call,
abo~t treatment,
F~r cleanand check '~. ~ I
Visitors walking the trail arc . while tlie femaie seemingly ignored ll[jl heanng atds or
Ltfe· I Bnng tn your
I .l[jl
encouraged 10 pick up and retw'D a h' H
ld h
l'nl I
d. llil I asststlve devtees.
' , , g:: hearing aids!
I
llil
,
. . ,
,
un. e wou op a 1 e c oser an ·ll[il 1 Coupon exptres
1
1 IIIII
gwdcsbeetthatlllentifteS 15~~a:sand repeat his performance. She would llil 1 613195
•
• Coupon expires
·
· llil
oneshrubaloogtheroute. Ina~tion jwnpo~elimbaway. _Finally.he ~ew
L_.., _________ J2!~2, _________ .J1
10 a few trees were see daily, we 10 her hmbiShe left m franuc fl1ght l:!:'ll:!:'ll:!:lll!llll:!:'lll!lllnl:!:'llllllllllllllllll!lllll!llllllllll!!llll!!lllllllll!lllll!!ll
learned and observed some of the not'
~ 151115111511151115111lil1151115111511~ 1511 ~151115111511 ~1511 ~
so-common: Sassafras, Papaw, Wild
Black Cherry, Black Locust, White
Oak, Tulip (largest hardwood in the
B7DOROTHYSAYRE
We baWl jull bcpm to oxplole
&amp;hnaibiniOIIIhemObio,llllliflhoy
~~~elllu oxcilina 11111bo011011 wc'Ye
nvened, we
wiD be gclina
bact fre.
quendy.
On two
SWiday•noons
in
April, we
decided our
l(lring fever
.·
needed ap·
pcasjng; we bad 10 be oul in
suoshine iDd fresh air. The fnt day, we
biked a ~le of bai1l Wore conliouingontoFcltcdRunSIIICPalk.
We
finished our afternoon by walk·
ing Hoacysuckle Trail in the paiL
Tbc next week. we conccnuatcd en
Forked Run ll'8ib: Honeysuckle and
Lake View.
.
The two bai11 befcrc the palk
were not for a family. 1n areas, they

RACINE - Wendi Rutb Har- dant for the couple.
mon of Racine and Ricky Lee
Tbe bride graduated from
Miller of Stewan exchanged wed· . Southern Higb Scboolln 1993, and
ding vo,ws in a. ceremony at the is employed at the Radison Hotel in
Pomeroy United Methodist Church Mynle Beach, S.C. 1
April 14.
Miller graduated from Federal
Rev. Bob Robinson performed Hocking High School in 1990, and
the single ring ceremony at 10 a.m. the Police Academy at Hocking
The bride is the daughter of College in 1993. He was employed
AlbertS. and April L, Harmon of with the Glouster Police DepanRacine, and the groom is the son of ment prior to going into the U.S.
Larry and Linda.Miller of Slewart.
Navy.
. Crystal Harmon was an auen·

New church to be established
•
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. -

A new independent, non-denominational Christian Church will meet
June 4 at the Youth Center in Harmon Parle.
Named the Point Pleasant Chris·
tian Church, Sunday Scbooi will be
at 9:30 a.m. and worship hour will
be 10:30 a.m.
The West Virginia EvangeUzing

a

D
liJ

Harmon-Miller

Association along with the Kyowva
Evangelistic Association have been
instrumental in cstablisbfng the
congregation.
The interim minisler will be Jeff
Ranson from Barboursville, W.Va.
The church will be governed by its
members. For funber information
call675-3850 or 67~-450 I. ·

•
Pomeroy • Middleport • G8111polle,
. OH • Point Pleuant,
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JJ!IIIht 110...-JJmtWI· Page as

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INIIEARING 0 Hear

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CROWN CITY • Mr. and Mrs.
R. Crllow of Qallipol~s
:; . Ferry, W.Va. and Carolyn S. Davts
: : of Point Pleasan~ W.Va. announce
: · •the fonbcoming marriage or their
. : daughter, Barbie Sue. to Billy Todd
·. · Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
:: M. John$0n ofCrtlwnCity.
:.
Crilow is a 1988 graduate of
: . Point Pleasant High School and is
:: employed at Hills Department
:~!' Dennis

mJ r:-------.;..---.. ------------, E!J

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Crilow-Johnson

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BARBIE CfiiLOW A~D TODD JOHNSON

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CHESTER - Mr .. and Mrs.
Joseph Kraft of Media, Pa.
announce tbe engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Cbristine, to Randall
Babr of Philadelphia, Pa. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Babr of
. Cbcsrer.
•
The bride-elect is a 1984 gradu·
ate of Cardinal 0' Hara Higb
School and a 1988 graduate of VIIlailova University. She is a senior
systems analyst at DuPont and
· lives in Wilmington, Dela. '·
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aa

JULIE HAWK AND DOUGLAS CRITES

Kraft-Bahr
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aD Expe''rt h_eara·ng·ca''re! . •a
ED
a
a
a
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a

RICKY AND WENDI MILLER

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Sayre explores the trails~ ofMeigs

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Pomerqy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plell88nt, WV .

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Store.
· Johnson is a 1988 ·graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and a
1995 graduate of the UnivetSity of
Rio Grande witb an associate's
degree of applied science in electronics. He is employed at Hills
Department Store.
·
The open-church wedding will
be 2:30 p.m., June 10 at the Poioc
Pleasant Wesleyaii'-Church, 2417
Jefferson Ave., Point Pleasant.

Tbe prospective bridegroom is a
1984 graduate of Eastern High
Sclrool and a 1988 graduate of
Ohio UoivetSity, He is completing
bis masll:r of business adminisualion (MBA) at the Wharton School
of tbe University of Pennsylvania
in Pbiladelpbia and will be
employed by Generlll Instrument in
Hatboro, Pa. ·
The wedding will be Oct. 21 at
St. Mary Magdalen Church in
Media, Pa. followed by a reception
at tbe Ovetbrook Golf Club.
·

'

. · Hawk-Crites
.
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REEDSVILLE ...:. Roger and Coolville.
.
Shirley Hawk of Reedsville . The open church wedding will
announce the engagement and be 2:30 p.m., June· IO at tbe Tup'approaching marriage of their pers Plains S.t. Paul Methodist
,daughter, Julie Ann, to Douglas E. Church. A reception will be held
Crites, son or Joe and Alice Criles, there following the wedding.
Let us copy your old family
pho.tos. Special 2-5x7's for
$14.95. Reg. $19.~5. SAVE§
:.:~:~.oo. We also do passport
ph(,tOlS, identification phoand photo finishing.
3 to 5 day service.

EY STUDIO .
424 SECOND AVE.

Curtis-Jones

. GALUPOLtS

mJ

Company
wer Bear .
The OhiO R

conectible bears

.

.

204 N. Second. Avenue
Midd leport; OH 45760
6 14/992-4055

CE18e one of lhese
5El\R6
for your GRAD!

Former resident
earns master of
divinity degree
GALLIPOLIS - Steven Brown,
formerly of Gallipolis, received' his
master of divinity degree from
Southeastern Baptist Theological
Seminary during commencement
cxer.cises May 13.
·
The Son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Drown of Gallipolis, Brown is a
1976 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and a 1980 graduate
of Cedarville College receiving a
degree in pre-seminary Dible and
history.
lle is employed by the Oniled
SL11cs Postal Service, Raleigh, N.C.
and is pursuing a career in pa.'toral

LET'S HAVE A
EMORIAL HOLIDAY!
-WITH PATIO FURNITURE FROM LIFESTYLE-

- News policyIn an effort to provide our read.
.ersbip with current news, the Gal·
lipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Seminel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the dale of the
event
All club meetings and 'other
news articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days or the ·
occurence.
All -material submitted for publication is subject to editting.

ministry.

lie is married to Debbie S.
Myers-Brown. They have a 6-yearold son, Brett and reside in Wake
J'orcs~ N.C.

•ARIELLE 5 pc. Dining Patio
Group ·includes 42" round glass table top and 4 llrm
dining chairs.
SALE

s39900

\

All POOL PATIO AND LAWN GROUPS

$1.29

or Wilh 16 oz. Son Dnnk

For Only

s1.99

Cheeseburger
Lovers Night
Every Thursday Night

f....--~ · --t--·· 39~ach Limit to
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Gallfpollis &amp; Rio Grande, OH

ellness Center
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Pomeroy • Mld~leport o Galllpolla,
OH o Point Pleuant, WV

Sunday, May 21, 1915

,

Entertainment

May21,1995

ments

•

•

•.

J

Sunday Tunes-Sentinel /B7

People -in the news

•

The mapzine, Novella 2000, publisbcd the photos recendy. ~ show
·
Juan
Carl01 wearing only 1 hiL Most of the pictmes are laclr:ing in detail
. BURBANK. Cllif. (AP)- The bomb lq1lld blew up Tom Seilect's T·
The
photo have not created a acantlal in Spai,n, where tbe king and ~n
·
lhirt Ia lbe liDFilf duly.
.
A peR:ellelll tolbe ICICf'solllce MWalt Dianey SIUdios made ~et:urity Softa ~y top opinim polls • UIC! most popular and respected peqonili·
npa..,iti!onnlilellfliiiCIMJUI bccMitelbeycouldn'tdelenninetheCOIIIellts using Ill X~ ties.

nymriine.

NEW YORK (AP) - Hillary Rodbam. Ointon
WilliS 10 nix naysaying.

\\

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SHANNON METTER AND JASON THOME ·

·Cobb-Sheets

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marcum announce tbe
engagement and upcoming marriage of their daughter, Melissa
Marcum to Matt Jusws of Vintoa.
Marcum is a 1994 graduate of
River Valley Higb Scbool and Is
attending ibe University or Rio
Grande.

maniage.

Singletary is the daughter of
Bob and Susan Singletary of Winficild , W.Va. She is a graduate of
Winfield High School and Kentucky Christian College. She is
employed by Putnam County
Schools.
Leach is !pe son of Chuck and
Katbi Leach of Gallipolis. He is a ·

Smith-Howes

lNDEPENl)ENCE, Kan. (AP)
,-A pilot wbo bombarded the city
with tOlls of toilet paper during a
rooftop-buzzing flight in a small
plane was acquitted of flying under
the influence of alcohol -but coovicted of Jittering.
"H was done stricdy as a dare,
as stupid as it may be," said Robert
B. Moore, 38, of Dallas.
Moore was also convicted
Thursday of refusing to take a
breath test. He could get up seven

NLLOW ,.HESE DIREmONS •.•
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graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and Kentucky Christian
College. He is employed by Graceland High Scbool. New Albany,
Ind. where be is bead of the math
department and head basketball
coach.
The wedding, will be 1:30 p.m.,
June .17 at Teays Valley Christian
'Church, Hurricane, W.Va. A reception will follow at the Hurricane
Valley Community Center.

If yat• f"f' planning~ wedding •
ll1en you Jlaould come see ru at

JJrofe,&lt;Mional Weddin5 JJhoto5rapher&lt;!J

Haskins-Tanner. '

Wh ot droam.e aro ll!l dc ·or ...

You will have over 190 llyletl of
h•~edos lo choose from . We lwve a .
l(lrge seleC'tiofl of the latetl 1tyles
and· romplime"-rary a uet~snrif»tJ for
tltiA teperial ortat~ion .

Dt'!Qc'llll ••r yr•uf t·ltild\IC(,X~d,.,..llll ll nl be-1118 n OOdt&gt;~ All dreut-d up
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tk&gt;• n Ult" iNP to thfo amn of yoos dreau
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Yo~ drY" '!Ill('• i ycu•, ,.,,ddm,s

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•

ST. AT. 124 MINERSVILLE
(Former Sloan Carpet Building)

4,000 Square Feet
Bigger &amp;Better
Selection of Ceramics
Sign Up for Classes

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1·B00-56D-LEVI

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• Illness
or -Injury
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1-~~'~u0~462-5255

• Health Care Events
• Support .Groups."-''-

Another comniunily.service of the Holzer Medical Center,
100 Jackson·Pike, Gallipolis, OH 456$.1-1563

COLONY THEATRE
FRI . THRU THURS

PG

446.0923

A!Y~J·\

Univ. of Rio Grande

OUT OF THE

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RED·BRUSH
Sat. May 20, 8 p.m.
Sun., May n 2:30 P·lll·
. Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins
Ariel The•tre 426 2nd. Ave. Gallipcilis, Oh

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Ga.llipolis. Oltio

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iffOSPITALS.
Bwlding aHealthy Communi~

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Health Fair

•

Wednesday, May 24

446-9280

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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Regular Hours:
9:30-4:30
Tuesday-Saturday

From 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a weel~,
a specially trained R.N. is on duty fo · ans~er
yQur health care qu~stions.

AND

THE BRADY BUNCH
MOVIE PG-13
44ti'-t 088

Crow's on top of lhings. ;
Hoeflich's 'round lhe bend.
Sands' in lhe past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

Sun Hpven-Tanning Sal~n

~

•

them there? "Nobody knows."
Anything else? "Yes, they're
breaking down."
Does Ibis life-threatening detail
botber anyone on Rusta? Not so's
you'd notice. Does it have anything
to do with tbe story or is it even
mentioned again? Nope.
· A huge. 500-year-old wall gir·
dies the entire planet. This prodigy
of engineering divides dark and
light zones. Why? Because tbe people of dark and light are at war.
Why? Nobody says. Maybe it's
over who's paying for the wall.
In an era of starships, the technology on Rusta is strictly horseand-buggy, crossbow and blunderbuss. No cars, no trucks, nb cities
and no towns. A rural cabin bas TV
monitors. but no electric lights or
indoor plumbing.
·

~~---------.., Found Onl31 At

992·2289

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HOT.LINE

MAJOR PAYNE PG·13

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KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

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STATE ROUTE 124

. In accepting the award, execulive producer Diane Alklnson-Hudsiln said "We pledge to stay out of
tbe talk show-gutter.'' Winfrey
came to tbe stage to accept ber second award or the nigbt. for best
talk-show host.
·Winfrey's ftrst award was presented by·Merv Griffm and Vanna
White.
Before 'the presentation. Wb.ite
was host for a tribute to Griffm, a
pioneer of t!te talk-show format
whose show helped Jauncb the
careers of many performers.
including Woody Allen. Jay Leno.
Billy Crystal, Paul Reiser and Jerry
Seinfeld.
·
Griffin was on stage moments
later as executive producer to
accept the award for "Jeopardy,"
Wbicb woo the Emmy for outstand·
ing game audience participation
show.
f "Ge rai ·H .
'
Rena Sofer o
ne
ospi.Ia)" won as outstanding supporting
actress in a drama series and Jerry
ver Dorn was given the prize as
outstanding supporting actor in a
drama series.
.•
The program is a presentation of
the National Academy of Television Arts &amp; Sciences in cooperalion with the Academy. of Televi· .
sion Arts and Sciences. .

CHUCK NORRIS

'lly SCO'IT WILLIAMS
so.
. Like another golfer, Dr. Joel
JI.P Televisioo Writer
' NEW YORK (AP) - "Wbile Fleischman of "Northern Expo·Dwarf," a two-hour, made-for-TV sure," Rampart bas to serve his
fantasy movie airing Tuesday night internship in a provincial place full
on Fox. is so incoherent, disjointed of eccentrics. In this case. it is the
and poorly written that only sabo- planet Rusta, which is quirkier !han
Cicely. Alaska. to say the least.
l3ge can account for iL
Earth-like, it orbits a white
How else could this flaccid pastiche see the light of day? How dwarf system - a cluster of small,
coul.d Francis Ford Coppola's name pale. massive stars that keep it,
appear on it as executive producer? moon·like, with one side forever in
How could Bruce Wagner ("Wild daylight and the other in perpetual.
Palms") admit authorship of Ibis stormy darkness.
Let's not quibble about the
addled .screenplay?
·
· The tenuous narrative of earthquakes, killer tides and mon"White Dwarf," a .pilot for a pro- ster storms that would wrack such.a
posed seri~ concerns the coming . place. Hovering in Rusta's lightof age of an arrogant, Earth-trained side skies are huge, metallic
physician, Driscoll Rampart (Neal spheres, called "regulators," tbat
.
. McDonough), who's still swinging eliminate this unpleasanllless.
How
long
have
tlley
been
there?
•
a putte~ in the year 3040.
Saying it's 3040 don't make it "Ten thousand years." Who put

NEW LOCATION

lll'f&lt;ir• ,-.(

i'Oilr d~ff"

talk-shoW host - for the ftfth consecu!ive time - Winfrey toppe9
Pbil Donahue, Leeza Gibbons.
Regis Philbin and lealhie Lee Gifford, and Vicki Lawrence.
In capblring the outstanding talk
show prize at the 22nd Annual
Daytime Emmy Awards, "The
Oprah Winfrey Sl)ow." beat out
"Donahue," "CNN &amp; Company,"
"Leeza" and "Live with Regis &amp;
Kathie Lee."
"General Hospital" also took

home two awards, winning for outstanding drama series and the prize
rotbest drama series writing team.
The best actress award was presented to Erika Slezak of "One
Life to Live." It was another year
of disappointment for Susan Lucci,
who has played Erica Kane on
"Ail My Qlildren" for more than
two decades and has failed to win
· the top actress prize despite being
· nominated 15 times.
Justin Deas of "Guiding Light"
won best lead actor in a drama
series.
The eight members of the directing team for "All My Children"
won the top prize for directing.
Other winners included
Jonathan Jackson of "General Haspital" as outstanding younger actor
in a drama series and Sarah
Michelle Gellar of "All My Cbildren" as outstanding younger
actress in a drama series.
Sbari Lewis won ber fourth consecutive Emmy as outstanding performer in a children's series for ber
show, "Lamb Cbop's Play,,
Along," and "Wbere on Earth is
Carmen Sandiego" was named
best animated children's program.
Fonner network correspondent
and NBC anchor Linda Ellerbee
· accepted the prize for "Nick
News," as outstanding children's
series. Ellerbee is the show's executive producer.
The Lifetime Achievement
11.ward was presented to Ted. and
Betty Corda}' who were instrumen· tal in the creation and ~uction of
"As the World Turns ' and "Days
of Our Lives."
After winning her ftrst pri~ for
best show, Winfrey didn't take tbe
stage but waved to the crowd at the
Marriott Marquis hotel. The program w~s broadcast live by NBC.

'

'446·3401

Qua lily F onrmlwear al

~-""r • ~.!.~i~ ·-.,Ill)-- ~li.rrl'

('ttl/ nor to a.,.O,d IC\'Im'{

' MARLENK AIG
:J)y
•Assoclated PRSS Writer
: NEW YORK(~)- Repeating
;ber performance from last year
Oprab Winfrey collected Daytim~
Emmy Awards oo Friday niSbt for
,!Jest talk show and top talk-sbow
host.
~ "This is so sweet," sbe said.
~'It's truly a blessing to bave IbiSreward for doing something I so
love everyday."
·
·-; In winning the award for best. .

Tues, Thur. &amp; Fri.
10:00 A.M.-Noon; 7:00 P.M.·9:00 P.M.

PHOTOGRAPHY

l!flo.llJ~t·1•1'1.. rt'~ t)Cftuty

• Susan Lucci, left, and ber daughter Llza
Huber await lbe start ortbe llnd Annual Darllme Emnty Awards
:: ceremony in New York Friday. Lucci nominated for tbe Outsllnd·
ing Lead Aclre!lll in a Drama Series aWllrd for ber role as Erica
i Kane on the daytime drama "All My Children," a role sbe bas
; played for more tban two decades, was disappointed again after
.
' losing for tbe lStb lime. (AP PbotolAdam Nadel)

,'----~ -

assisted by Linda Pugh.
The choir will alsq make stops
at Zion Church of Chris~ Pomeroy
7 p.m., May 28 and Howells Mills
Christian Assembl~ . Ona, W.Va .
June 12.

~-i'r~

l'l!lllll "llli l!!rf'

. months in jail and $1,000 in fines
at sentenCing June 13.
Authorities said Moore was
drinking with friends when be
bragged he could bit Main Street
from a plane with a roll of toilet
paper.
The pipeline patrol pilot rented
a single-engine plane and ·bought a
four-pack of toilet paper, then .
swooped over town.
Police said he missed Main
Stroct.

God's Kids to present musical

GALLIPOLIS · Tammy Renee
Smith of Gallipolis and Dewey Ray
Howes of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
announce th·e ir engagement and
upcoming wedding.
Smith is the daughter of Linda
Black of Thurman and Lyle Smitb
Sr. of South Webster. She is a 1991
graduate of Gallia Academy lligh
School and a. 1994graduate of tbc
University of Rio Grande College
of Nursing . She· is employed at
Pleasant Valley.llospital as a regis·

rn

Justus is a 1991 srailuate of .
Nortb Gallia Hlgb School and is
planning to attend Ohio State Vni·
versity in tbe fall.
Tbc wedding will be 2 p.m.
Aug., 12 at tbe F'trst Cburcb of the
Nazarene, Gallipolis. A reception
will follow immediately.

Toilet-paper bombardier
convicted on littering charges

. Singletary-Leach
•

0 rah .takes two Emmys; Luc~i lo~~gaJn

.

SUSANNE SINGLETARY AND CHAD LEACH.

.GALLIPOLIS • Susanne Singletary and Chad LMch announce
!heir engagement and approaching

Mrm tiled of AmeOCIIII being ~~Cgative. Wo bave
111 mucb to bo p-lleful fiX in our country; lbc first

cancer

\

Marcum-J ustus

GALLIPoLIS - Diana and Jobn
Thome is the son of Daniel and
Metter Jr. of Litchfield Township Beverly Fry of Medina and Charles
announce tbe engagement of tbeir and Margo Thome IJf Spencer. He
daughter, Shannon to Jason Thome. 1s a 1992 graduate of Buckeye
Meuer is the granddaughter of Higb Scbool and a 1994 graduate
William and Rosalee Waugh of of Ohio State University AgriculGallipolis and great-granddaughter tural Technical Institute with an '
LAURA COBB ANDVJUfilSiirn
of Floyd and Lona Clary of Crown associate's degree in dairy ~e­
City. She is a 1991 graduate of ment. He is a self-employed dairy
MIDDLEPORT Donna employed as a nurse and resides in Buckeye High School and plans .to producer.
gr:aduate in June from Ohio State
The wedding will be June 17 at
Spears of Middleport and Wayne Columbus.
University
with
a
bachelor's
degree
First
Baptist Church of Valley City.
Cobb of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Her fiance. a 1989 gracjuate of
·
in
·
agricuhure
education.
•
.anno.unce the engagement and Meigs Higb Scbool and a 1993
'llpproaching marriage of their ~radua~e of Obio State University.
daughter, Laura Cobb, to Jared IS ·a lbtrd. year student at the Obio
Sheets, son of Jim and Jennifer State University College of
Sheets, Harrisonville.
Medicine.
·
·
. The bride-elect is a 1988 graduThe open church wedding will
ate .o f Meigs High School and a be 4 p.m. June 24 at tbe Middleport
1994 graduate of Mount Carmel Church of Christ
College of Nursing. S be is

.

lldy aid Friday cltlrilfl I live, hour-long appearance on "CBS This Morning."
· The llltWolt lmlgbt Mn. Clinton togelber with an audielice of several
llundled,Jilothen at the CBS' Ed Sullivan Tbcalel, lbc home of David
tc=rman's sbow. Tbey coven:deverydling fi'Om parenting and breast
to ed•nrinn.
.
~
•.
•

MELISSA MARCUM AND MATT JUSTUS

Metter-Thome

•.

'

NEW YORK (AP) - Meliisa Etberitlge is
The bomb squtd was MmiiiiOIIed, llld lhe pecbge was blown sky higb
pondering marriage and childral with her lover.
Thunday. It turned out 10 conllin allbirt llld aome petunia seeds.
The singer, who is a lesbian, said she and her
Infonnllioa lbtM lbc IC:illdef wasn't tlisdosed, and no one would say if
lover, Julie Cypher. talk a lot about holding a wedi
Selleclt was at his office atlbe time.
ding ceremony.
.
"I
think
it
will
bo
bercfootAnd we'll both wear
MADRID, Spain (AP) - The royal palace is tbreatening legal action
~an Italian magazine tlwpublilbedpbotosofKingJ uanCarlos sunning dresseS." she said. "But it won't be traditional."
As for kids, "people reD us, 'If you wait fer the
himself in the nude on his yacbL
Thepalacc"deplorealhCpublicationintheltalianmediaofamanipulated rigbtlime. it will nevercome,'MEtberidgc said in the
photographic aerjes. apparemly ~~ aome years ago, which affects the June 1 issue of Rolling Stone. "But the urge is
privacy and reputation of his maj~y ," the palace said in a stalement Friday. happening more and more."
Sbe promises .that details on conception will be
"The: king, as • Spanish citizen and as head of state, has these rights
"closed to the rest: of the world.•
. Melissa Ether!dge
protected under the constiwlion."

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FOR T~E ULTIMATE_TAN:Say YES.}

•

,•

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

'
Sunday,May21,1995

wv

SHS seniors receive scholarsh.

0 1r~-jmtinel

ports ·

atassemb

....,L-0

~-.~~~----~~~---------~~~

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
T~D:.es~~~~~h.el Staff

RACINE- Mm: 1ban $91,000
in sdJolarsblps was awarded Friday
to seniors in tbe 199S graduating
class or Soutbem High School.
Announcement of tbe scholarships and other recopition came to
students during tbe annual awards
a,ssembly held in Charles W. Hayman gymnasium.
Valedictorian Matt Morrow,
captured tbe most funding in schol- •
arsl\ips. He receive tbe Obio Academic Scholarship, $I 000 a year
for four years, one-half tuition
grafil for four years at Marietta
College valued at $30,000, and
$1,000 a &gt;'ear rene~able for four
years from the Ernest and Maxlne
Wingett Memorial Educational
Trust Scholarship Fund.
Co-valedictorian David Picl&lt;ens
was the recipient of the Creed
Janes Scholarship from Ohio University, $2,000 a year for four

PATTY GRAHAM AND STEVE SMITH

NORTHUP • Mr. and Mrs.
Smith is a 1969 graduate of GalGlenn Graham of Northup . lia Academy High School and 1973
announce the en'gagement and of lbe University of Rio Grande,
upcoming marriage of ibeir daugh- receiving a bachelor of arts degree
ter, Patty Ann to Stephen Lyle in secondary education. He is
Smilb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll employed by the State of Ohio
Smith of Gallipolis. Graham is a Qepartment of Transportation.
1975 graduate of Gallia Academy
Tbe open cburcb wedding will
High School and a 1981 of Univer- bo I :30 p.m., July 8 at Northup
sity of Cincinnati, receiving a bach- Baptist Church witb music beginelor of science degree ·in fashion ning at I p.m. A reception will fol ·
design. ·
low in tbe Cburcb Shelter House.

Circus elephants riot at mall
HANOVER, Pa.· (AP) - An
impatient driver's hol)king born
spooked a line of circus elephants
outside a shopping mall, causing a
near-riot that left windows
smashed, cars dented and one
pachyderm injured.
Several cqnfused, trumpeting
elephants lumbered through the
parking lot Thursday at the North
Hanover Mall, breaking a van window and silting on several cars.
They also crashed through windows at a Sears Auto Service store.
"They just went between lbe
cars like they were Matchbox
cars," said Addi Scholle of Littlestown. "The trainers were chasing after tbem. The elephants were

Timber Country rallies
to capture Pr kness
By ED SCHUYLER JR,
BALTIMORE (AP)- Timber Country derailed
Thunder Gulch's chances of winning the Triple Crown
while keeping Wayne Lukas on track for a training
record with a victory in the Pr~akness on Saturday at
Pimlico.
Timber Country, the 1994 two-year-old champion,
won for the first time in five starts this year, took the
lead in midstretch and held off Oliver's Twist, while
Kentucky Derby winner Thunder Gulch had to sente for
third in the field of 11 three-year-olds.
It was the sixth ·straight year the Derby winner failed
to win the Preakness. The last to do it was Sunday

•

I

1i

·'

·J'
~

.;....:~.

•

f

going crazy, making all kinds of
noise. We were scared."
One of lbe half-dozen elephants
witb lbe. Clyde Beatty-Cole Bros.
Circus was cut and was treated by a
veterinarian.
"I work witb large animals,"
said Dr. Donald L. Yorlets, who
was delivering a calf when he was
called. "Usually not Ibis large."
With a worried crowd watching
and Freda swatting her trunk back
and forth, Yorlets injected her with
an aneslbetic and stitched up tbe
wound.
·

ln~ians,"

Valedictorian Kendra Norris
won tbe Onerbein College Scholar
SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS - Tllese
.rls and Matt Morrow; aecond row, Muy
Award for $3,000 a year for four
Southern High School adiotan were awarded
Chmey, Courtney Ro111b, Andrea Moon, Am)'
years and $1,000 a year for four
more than $!11,000 In scholarahlp lunda at Fri.
Weaver and Cl.udette ReltUIIre; ba.c k row,
years from lbe Wingeu Scholarship
day's awards usembly. From left an, front row,
Randy Blllg, ,Jimmy Randolph and M - Ftah- ·
Fund. The tbird Wingett scholarShannon Morarll)', David Plcke111, Kendra Nor· ·
er.
ship recipient was Mason Fisher
who also received the Holzer Clin- Y ~ar Trophic~ based on athletic Chris Hamm, tbe Dekalb Agricul- zenship; Courtney Roush, activiic Science Award and the Southern abthty, acadenuc aehtevement, and tore Award· Mason Fisher and ties; Chris Hamm and Courtney
High School Teachers Scholarship citizenship qualitie~ ~ere Ken~a Courtney R~ush, social studies; Roush, drama . .Perfect auendance
Noms and Ryan Wdhams.. No~s )'dattbew Morrow, O.U. History awards went to Brian Anderson
of$200.
·
·
&amp;!so
won tbe OHS~ Archie Grif- . Award and Daughters of the Amer- and Tmcy Pickell
·
Recipients of tlther awards were
fm
Sportsmanship
Award,
the
lean
Revolution
Essay
Award
;
It
was
announced
t)Jat
Man
Andrea Moore, University of Rio
Scholar
Athlete
Award,
and
the
Kendra
Norris
and
Mason
fisher,
Morrow,
David
Pickens,
Kendra
Grande Honors Scholarship,
$6,000; Randy Bing, Hocking Col- Army Scholar Athlete Award for Air Force malb and science· For- Norris, Mason Fisher, Courtney .
lege Scholar Award, $300; Court- senio_r girls. Mason Fisher was rest Teaford, work study; Willie Moore, and James Randolph qualiney Roush, Marietta College; rectptent of the Scholar Athlete Childress and Forrest Teaford, fied for honors diplomas and
$9,100 for four years; Amy Weaver Award and ,Ar!"y Scholar Athl~te industrial arts; Mary Chaney, awards of merit. Also qualifying
and Andrea Moore, University of Award for semor boys, and Bnan Claudeue Reitmire and Bridget for an award of merit was Ryan
Anderson ~as . awarded the Varney, home economics and FHA Williams.
Rio Grande ROTC Scholarship,
OHSAA
Archte Griffin Sportsman- awards; David Pickens and Mason
$1000 per year.
Presidential academic fitness
Fisher, science; Mary Chaney,
ship
Award.
Jimmy Randolph, Southern
awards went to Matt Morrow,
Recognized and _gi~en honorari- ' business education; K~dra Norris,
Nmional Honor Society ScholarDavid Pickens, Kendra Norris,
an
medals by Pnnctpal Gordon Brian Anderson and Mason Fisher
ship, $200; Mary Chaney and
Mason Fisher, Brain Anderson,
Fisher ~ere Mason _Fisher, Brian mathematics; 'courtney Roush:
David Pickens, Howard Lawrence
Randy Bing and' Grant Circle.
Anderson, Grant Ctrcle, Andrea English.
Scholarships of $100 each;
Moore, Courtney Roush, RaQdy
The Ohio Uni•ersity Alumni
Claudette Reitmire, Bela Sigma Phi
David Pickens and Courtney
Bing, James Randolph, and Amy
Association
presented dictionaries
Scholarship, $300; Shannon MorarWeaver. Presented tbe "best of tbe · Roush, foreign language; Tracy
to
lbc
OUtStanding
juniors or Southity and Courtney Roush , Racine
class" awards were Miittbew Mor- Pickett , vocal musfc; Sabrina em High School, Charles J. Harris
Area Community Organization
Congo; instrumental music; . Counrow and David Pickens.
and ~ennifer Lawrence. ·
Scholarships of $200 each.
Other
awards werit to ney Roush and Mason Fisher, citiSelected as recipients of the
Larry R. Morrison Athlete of the

BE INDEPENDENT AGAIN

·PRICE

CAPTURES PREAKNESfi - Timber Country
(rar left), with Pat Day in tbe saddle, pushes ahead
or the rest or the field on his way to the winner's circle In the 120th running or the Preakness Stakes

BACK TO SECOND - The Cleveland Indians'
Dave Winfield (left) slides back to second base ahead
or the pickofl" tbrow to Boston shortstop Luis Alicea

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Gallipoli s
446-7283

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By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Bob Spears came on to get a fly out
and a double-play grounder with
rwo on and none out in the ninth to
propel 23rd-ranked Ohio State to a
16-15 win over Northwestern in a
second-round Big Ten tournament
game Saturday.
The Buckeyes (37-21), the Big
~Ten regular-season champion, sur·
vived to play the lo se r of
Minnesota and Purdue in today's

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BOSTON (AP) -Albert Belle
and Jim Thome homered as
Cleveland scored four runs in the
eighth inning Saturday to overcome
a two-run deficit and beat the Boston
Red Sox 7-5.
The lpdians rallied against the
Boston bullpen for the second con·
secutive game. On Friday, Cleveland
scored six ninth-inning runs off closer Ken Ryan to win 9-5. The B9ston
bullpen h1fs blown six of nine save
opportunities.
This time , the heroics saved
starter Orel Hershiser from a loss in
his first appearance at Fenway Park .
The former NL Cy Yo ung Award
winner allOwed five runs on eight
hits, striking oul three an d walking
one.
Eric Plunk (2·0) pitched I 1/3
innings, striking out the side in the
eighth, to get the victory. Jose Mesa
pitched the ninth for his fourth save.
. Boston led 5-) when Belle
ope ned the eighth with a line drive
home run off Alejandro Pena (I- I)
that banged off the wall behind the
Icent~rfield bfeachers. It was estimat-

ed at 435 feet. One out later, Manny snapped a three-game losing streak
Ramirez and pinch-hitter Paul with a 10-6 victorv over th e Toronto
Sorrento singled before Thome Blue Jays.
·
homered off Derek Lilliquist to give
After Ca ndy Maldonado broke a
the Indians a 7-5 lead .
3-3 tic and put Toronto ahead with a
Yankees 7, Orioles 2
two-ru n si ngle in the fifth, the Tigers
At New York, Mike Stanley and rallied against pitchers Pat Hentgen,
Danny Tartabull each doubled in Mik e Timlin (1-1) and Tony
two runs in a five· run thir~ inn ing Castillo.
1
and the New York Yankees defeated
John Fla herty started the rally
Baltimore 7-2 :;aturday to break a with a so lo homer with one o ut.
.four-game losing streak. · . .
After Chad Cu rt is flied o ut, Lou
Melido Perez (2-6), who !-on his Whitaker sing led; took second on a
first decis ion since April 29. allowed ba lk , moved to third on a wild pitch
only four hits an.d two unearned run:-. and scored on passed ball to tie the
in six innings. Bol;&gt; MacDonald and game.
Bob Wickman wor ked the fina l
Bob Hi gg inson and Ceci l Fielder
three innings.
, walked and Franklin S tubh ~&gt; hrokc
Pat Kelly doubled with one out in the lie with a double . After an intent he third off Orioles starter Sid tJOnal wa lk to Travts Fryman. pinchFcrnandez (0-2) , who then walked hitter Gibson drove home Fielder
Bernie Williams and gave up an RBI and Stubbs . Gomez. who hit a .solo
si ngle to Randy Velarde .to give the homer in the fourt h. fo llowed with a
Yankees a 1·0 lead.
two· run si ngle·.
Tigers 10, Blue Jays 6
Jo hn Doherty (2 -2), the seco nd
At Detroit, Kirk Gibson and . Detroit pit cher , got the victory. He
Chris Go mez each hit two- run si n- worked five innings and allowed six
gles to highlight a seven-ru n seventh hits and three earned runs.
inning Saturday as the Detroi t Tigers

Bu cci hit a liner to cente r that
Ka c;;:ma r s na red with a ..,hding
cateh. Kaczmar then threw the ball
to .second t&lt;? get the doublc_pl&lt;t: and
prevent any further damage .
OSU starter Phil Vogdmetc r (5 2) got the 'l'in despite ge ttin g
rocked for nine earned runs in six
innings. Northwestern starter Brad
Niedermaicr (10-5), ,w ho su rren ~
dered 14 hits and 13 runs tn -+ 213
in nings, took the lo" .

team concerned with getting cars ready for Indy 500
Eric Bachelart of Belgium co m·
pleted a tour-lap, tO-mile qualifying
run at 226.8 75 mph , followed by
Lyn St. James , the only woman
entered in the race, at 225.346, and
Brazilian rookie Chris tian Fittipaldi,
Emerson 's nephew, at225.246.
After th at, with the su n shinin g
brightly and the track heating up. the
re st o( the teams ready to run chose
either to work on r4ce day setup or
to find more speed for a lat er quali fying effort.
With riv e more spots to fill in the
33-car field; qualifica ti ons were
scheduled to continue Saturday and
Sunday. Once the J.jn eup is full ,
fa ster cars ca n bump out the slowes t
of the qualifi ers.
Bachelart 's car is ow ned by part·
ners Dale Coy ne and W:tlter Pay ton,

the forr11"[ NFL star who bought
into· th e team during th e winter.
Bachelart, whose engine failure left
him 32nd in hi s only Indy start in
1992, joined teammate Al essandro
Zampedri ofJtaly in the tentative
field .
Zampedri, an Indy rookie , was
one of 25 qualifiers on the opening
weekend of time trials, making the
lineup at 225.753~
·
' 'Eric didn't have much time in
the car before last weekend and he
was running 224s. so we were confident ," Payton said. · ' He jw;t con tin·
ued to progress."
Looking ahead tO his firs t Indy,
Payto n said, " What we ' re · goi ng to
do is run a very clean race and stay
in there . ... Were just going to continue to maintain and keep .cons is-

Ieney up~"
second only to fellow ro&lt;&gt;kie Hisco
St. J ames. &lt;Juali fying for her Sala;:lf of Chile on the hump liSt.
fourth In dy 500, broke her women· :-. Sl"lla7ar w a~ the slowest of lhl' first qualifying record of 224.20S for die week qualifiers at 22.5.023.
1993 Mi chigan 500. Her hest· prev1- ·
·: 1 ran fbt out all fuur laps. "
uus qualific~1 tion run atlndianap&lt;lll:-, F1ttlpald1 ~ald. ·· 11 11''\ no t good
was 224. ~ 54 las t year ,' when she enough. I'm gomg to go (1 Ut again in
started sixth and fin ished 19th.
my oth er c~tr ... , l· m \UTe I could
During the fast run. 'he sc uffed "hrtn g the speed up one or two miles
the right-side tires o f her U.lla·Ford (an huur). ··
on the conL'rCte wall.
Each car cn~cred IS allowed up to
'' I wanted to let the car run free three ~)t"fJCllll atlcmpts. In o rder to ·
and misc~J ]culatcd a ltttlc th~1~ and ' quality ano1hcr c&lt;n . the ;:i lrcadytouchcd the wall." she 'aid. ·'But I qualtftcdcar
w11hdrawn.
knew th e car was f1nt:. II didn ' t
1llhnny P;usom , 50. an I l·time
upset the car at all and I kept my Indy \ Iarin a;rd the oldc~1 driver
foot on it andjlffit kept going."
entered th " )car. might not he ahlc
The y·oungcr Fillipaldi . who. ltkC to n!.tlc ~r qu&lt;~hfy1ng all t:m pt rifler
his uncle, came to the IndvC ar nr· cra"h1ng h1.., pr1mary car in
cuit from Formula One . wiu~ happ)" Saturda~ ·\ carl; practice . lie wao.,
, W!lh his run ,· although 11 left him nnt mjurcd.

h'" "'he

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Yankees &amp; Jays w1n

end the game.
Fuller drove in four runs with a
10:30 a.m. game. The winner of the this season.
Pitching was almost non -e xistent three -run homer in the third and a
double -el imination tournament
Northwestern 's No. 3 hitter, Ron
earns -a berth in the NCAA tourna- Rojas, who hit a three-run home in thi s game, as the teams co m- solo shot in the se venth. his lOth of
run in a five·run seventh , hit a bined for 31 hit s, 48 baserunners the year. He also had a double.
ment.
The Wildcats (36-19) trailed 13- medium fly to left that ,scored Ken and seven home run s, with the
Mike Stritch also hit a pair or
Wildcats hitting six. ·
homers and drove in th ree run&lt; ,
4 through five innings and were Killian to cut the lead to a run.
Brian Fuller, who had two home .· Brian Mannino dro ve in four whi le Jake Suffian drove in three
down 16-5 going into the bottom of
the seventh .
,. '
runs and a double and drove in four runs and scored three with a home runs with a home r and two singles.
Northwestern had hit 34 home
But trailing 16-14, they loaded .runs, then hit a sharp grounder at run, double and a sing le, while
the bases with none out in the ninth OSU shorts top Chris William s. Scott Kaczmar also scored three runs in its 53 previous games .
The Wild ca ts had five runs in
against Ron Nelson, OSU's third Willi ams !lipped the ball tp second runs with three hit s. For mer
pitcher. On came Spears, who had sacker Mark Carek, who in turn Portsmouth H.S . three -sport star · and t1he bases loaded with only one
'three gf the Buckeyes' four saves threw o~t Fuller at first by a step to\ Mike Estep added three hils.
o ut in the seventh when Carmen

owned by driver Bobby Rahal and
By MIKE HARRIS
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- The Carl Hogan . Fillipaldi spent most of
vaunted Penske team wasn 't wasting. Friday's final full day of practice
· any time worrying about getting into working on getting his new Lola up
the Indian apo li s 500 Saturday . to speed, whil&amp; Unser got into the
Instead, it was getting its cars ready second Lola for the first tim e
Saturday morning,
tp ru'n in the race.
"The Penskes .are st ill in the
Going into the final two days of
time trials for the May 28 race, nei- qualifying lin e. but it seems like
th er AI Unser Jr. nor Emerson we : ll have better luck with the
· Fittipaldi, the last two drivers to win Lolas,'' Penske s pokes man Dan
Indianapolis 500s, had qualified.
Luginbuhl said. " The guys are out
A two-week struggle to get their there right no w working on the race
1995 Penske-Mer&gt;edes race cars up setup and, hopefully. we'll be able
to speed apparent Iy ended Saturday to qualify the m when the wea ther
when they chose to spend the early conditions are better lat er in the
·
part of the third of four days of time day.''
trials preparing a pair of newly
Three drivers took advan tage of
the cooler opening hour of quali fyacquired Lola-Mercedes cars.
Those cars were acquired from ing Saturday to make it into the ten·the rival Rahai -Hogan Racing , co- tative field for the 79th Ind y 500.

SEIKO AND
PULSAR WATCHES

Reg. $259*

10 Point
Diamond
.
Reg 299

in cooperation with the
HMC Volunteers

P~nske

DIAMOND
ANNIVERSARY
BANDS

in the fourth inning of Saturday's American League
game in Boston, where the Indians recorded a 7-5
•
win. (AP)

•

·osu gets pa,s t Northwestern 16-15 in Big Ten diamo·n dfest

59518.

•
•
•
•
•
•

Saturday at Pimlico Racetrack in Baltimore, Md.
Oliver's Twist (rar right) took second, while
Kentucky Derby winner Thunder Gulch, who finished third. (AP)

t

,.flltQUISI'II09{.5 :JIt)£'£ J'EW'E..G1?,Y

SP!l(I!J{(j

UNBELIEVABLE

Silence i 1989.
Whil Lukas won 't train a Triple Crown champion
this year, he can .record a fifth consecutive victory in a
Triple Crown race should Timber Country or Thunder
Gulch prevail in the Belmont Stakes.
Ridden by Pat Day , Timber Country carried scale ·
weight of 126 pounds over the I 3/16 mile s•on a fast
track in I :54.4 and paid $5.80, $4 .20 and $2.80.
Maryland-bred Oliver's Twi s t, who made a 40minute van ride from trainer J. William Boniface's farm
Saturday morning, returned $16.80 and $6.40. Thunder
Gulch returned $3.60 after . finishing in front of Sta r
Standard.

In major league action,

years.

Graham-Smith ·

sect!~~.S

• Diamonds
·Gold Chains ·
&lt; • Selko Watches
• C"roaa P"ena '

-~;lfare'Colns

\

By BILL BARNARD
SECAUCUS, N.J . (AP)- The
payoffs for the first 10 NBA .'draft
lotteries included such lucky breaks
as Patrick Ewing , David Robin son
and Shaquille• O ' Neal and a n
unlucky one in Pervis Ellison.
An influx of underclassmen co n·
cerned with the possibility of a rqok...je sa lary~ cap taking~ effect in 1996
. has made the 1995 draft a deep one.
but ther e is no Clear-c ut No. I
choice. That means that today's lottery at the NBA · Entenainm en t
Studios won 't have the anticipation
of the Ewi ng ( 198 5). Robinson
(1987) and O'Neal (1992) years

when the league's balance of power"
hung in the balance.
. This year is more like 1989, when
Sacramento won the lottery and
chose Ellison over Danny Ferry and
Sean Elliott.
Sophomores Jerry Stackhouse
and Ra sheed Wallace of North
Carolin a, Joe Smith of Maryland and
Antonio McDyess of Alabama could .
merit as much consideration by the
team winning the lotiery as sen iors
such as Shawn Respert of Michigan
State , Ed 0' Bannon of UCLA and
Bryant Reeves of Oklahoma State.
Another similarity between 1995
and 1989 is the avai labi lity of a tal·

ented player who never played college basketball. ·
Shawn Kemp was taken 17th in
1989 by Seattle, a decision the
SuperSonics have no t reg1eued. This
year, 6-foot-11 Kevin Garnett al~ost
certainly will be taken by one of the
11 non-playoff teams .participating
in today 's lottery or by· one of the
expansion ·teams, Toronto or
Vancouver, who will pick sixth and
seventh in the June 28 draft.
Today 's lottery will only determine the top three spots in th e draft,
with the rest of the teams determined
in reverse order of the·ir 1994-95
records.

. Thus the Los Angeles Clippers. Philadclphw. Golden State. Delrotl ,
with the worst record of 17-65. will New Jersey. Mi ami . Mtlw aukcc and
pick fourth if they dun: t have one of Dalla, .
their ping-pong balls drawn from the
Mtlwaukce . Dall:ts and De lroll
drum today. Washington (21-6)) were the 1994 loncry wtnncrs. with
won a blind draw with Minn esota the Bucks · taking Glenn R ohmson.
(also 2 1-6 1) . .&lt;o the Bullets can pick The Mavcrt cks 'tuuk Jason l&lt;tdd and
no worse than fifth , while the the Pi stons selected Grant IIII I.. who
Timberwolves could pick as low as ·
eig hth because the expansion team s
are as~ignGd the sixt h and seventh
spots.
Sacramento (39-43), the best of
the non-playoff team s, will pick 13th
in the draft unles.s it is drawn as one
___,
of the top three picks .
The other teams in th e lottery are

v.

l'H'

chO.\L' Il cn -wmners of the
&lt;'r the Year award last week.

R Otiki~.·

Thc drum frLHll \\oh1ch 1he pmgJ'X'I tg hall-. v. Il l ht' drawn will have

l.tllXl b,tll'. w1th the Clipp&lt;!rS having
250 h.1ll'. W"' htn gton 183,
\1J lv.·,Hil..l'c U(2 and

'0

ori down to

Sc1cramcntn v..1th five .

_

Ailing Parseghian traveling for sick grandchildren
CIN CINNATI (AP)- Four hip surgeries and one knee operation have
made it difficult for former ·Mfanii University and Notre Dame football
coach Ara Parseghian to travel.
.
But travel he does- if it means getting money for research that may
help save the lives of his three youngest grandchildren.
Last September, Parseghian learned that Michael, eight; Marcia, six; and
Christa, three ; have a rare and fatal genetic disorder called Niemann -Pick
.
Disease Type C.
·
"There was a period of about a month of terrible grieving," Parseghian,
'72, said in an interview with The-Cincinnati Post last week.
"There's no shame for a grown man to ·cry. You think about the bows
and the whys of this. I don't expect every day to be a bright shiny day, but I
didn't expect this, obviously. It was a shock."
After the initial grieviog period, Parseghian, his wife, Katie, and the children 's parents, Michael and Cindy, decided to take action. They formed the
Ara Parseghi all MediJ:ai.Rt:sear~h Foundation to r~i§e money to try to find a
for the disease .
.
·
' i'Otiti11lltiortwill-lwtve raised $1-:75'm11timl·by' theend of this month,
Parseghian said.
'
Niemann -Pick usually strikes children between five and 10. Because of a

missing enzyme, the body is unable to metabolize a specific type of cholesterol.
The cholesterol then accumu la tes within Jhe cells of the I iver, spleen and
brain; and dam ages the nervous system. Death occurs within five to 10 ·
years.
The symptoms. include poor coordination and an inability to put words
together in speech.
· .
None of the three children know s about the disease yel. Their older
bro.thcr, ll -year-old Ara, does .
Parseghian said the girls are not showing symptoms yet .
"We've got a little time, maybe four to six years , with them ,'' he said.
" Michael is the one we have a deep concern about. He's eight and he's
shOwing significant symptoms."
Parseghian was a halfback at Miami University in the 1940s, the head
football coach at Miami in the 1950s and eventually went on to win national
ATHLETES OF THE YEAR- Kendra Norris (left), the daughter
cha mptonsh1ps to 1966 and 1973-as head coach at Notre Dame.
.
of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Norris, and Ryan Williams, tbe son of Mr. and
. •, ·
:
.
·
.
., '
,
.
.
Mrs. Jack- Wmiams, were. awarded-the Larry .R. Morr.ison Athlete or
Donahons can be sent to: Ara Parseg.btan..Medoca~Re•ea&lt;eh.EoundatiO.ll,_~.the Y.ea.t:J.r-nphies .at .Er-lday :lt.Jl\l'~rd assemblv...M...SOJilhe.,.D HiiJil..
Box 7878, Notre Dame, Ind. , 46556.
•
School. Selection waS based on athlclic 'abUity; {jiortsmanship letters -.earned, academic a~ievement and citizen,bip.·
'
·

I

�:.;:P&amp;ge:~C2;!·~·==·~·~•:•·:-:;;Jientl-:!!;;!'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~Po~m:•:ro:y~·~M~J:dd:l~epo~rt~·~G=•:II~Ipo:!!lla~,!o:H~·~P~o~ln~t!P:I•:•:sa:n~t,~WV:.~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~~S:u~nci=•Y~·~IIay=
-~2~1,~1~1=15
:: In the NBA playoffs,

Area sports briefs_

·

n Knicks down Pacers 92-82 to force seventh game t9day
.,:•

•• ••

BJ BANit LOWBNDON
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Patrick Ewilla 1111 tbe New Yodt
IC'JI!dr! bldt • ua ror Ills 11nt
NBAd!ampk..lhip.
. Tbe ICnlcks, who trailed tbe
Indiana l'll:en 3-1 to their Blsan
COIIfereace aemifinll, evened tbe
~eric~ wltb a 92·82 trium!D Friday
nigllt.
Ewin1 bad 25 poiDIS and IS
rebounds to lead tbc Knlcks, wbo
ca move Into tbc conference fmals
~Bih!st Orlando by winnin~=
7 today iD Madi1100 Square
.
No visitor bas wa1 a seventb game
in 1111 NBA playoff series since

•
•

.•

~:

•;

•
::
•
:

•:

:

•
•
::

•

1982.
"We feel very confident. We
believe in IIIJJXIw:a." said Ewing,
wbo kept tbc Knlcb alive W~­
day night in New Yon: by hilling a
shot witb 1.8 seconds to play for
tbc winning basket.
The Knicks stayed alive by mating bavoc with Indiana's guards
for mucb of tbe game. For tbree
quarters, Reggie Miller and bis
backcourt maiA:S were beld to two
baskets and 11 points on 2-of-18
sbooting. Tile result was a 69-59
New York advantage after tbree
quarters.
.
"I tbou,lbt tba,l we did a tremen·

dous job. We stepped It up and
were really denyiDg," said Ewing
of a defenlive. effort tbat Umited
Indiana to 35 percent shooting
from tbe field. to tbc thitd quarter,
Indiana was mly 3-for-16 from tbc
field IMid went neatly eigbt minutes
witbout a fteld goal. .
"We were jUil playing basket·
ball. We made our run. They made
their run in tbe fourtb qqarter,"
said Ewing, noting tbat tbc Knidts
played much better tbaD wben tbey
lost Game 3 here 97-95 in overtime.
'
"In Game 3, we didn't handle it.

rigbt," be said of Indiana'• run.
"We Jot ratUed .... ToniJbt. we
stayed rocused lod we made a run
orourowa."
The Pacers were led by RUt
Smits witb 21 points and Milia;
bad 15 ofbis 18 pointsin-tbe fourtb
quarter, wben Indiana cut a 16polnt deficit 10 tlu= witb 5:32 to
play.
But Miller lllso bad bls prob·
lems in tbe fourth quarter. After bil
two free !brows with 5:32to go left
Indiana trailing 79-76, Miller bad
tbree turnovers in tbe next tbree
minutes and was also called fat a

Turkey numbers posted
COLUMBUS - Tile Ohio l)epanment of Nlbltlll Raources•
Division of Wildlife aDDOUnced lbat tO 826 wild 1111teya were killed
tbrougbout tbc Buckeye Swe tbla
IXIIIIpiiCd to 9,098 in 1994.
In Gallia Coumy, 662 birds were kilk:d, wb11e in Mci11 COUDty,
351 were brou~ down.
In neigblning oounties, tbe totals nm as follows: Atbens (458),
Jackson {494), Lawrenoe (263) IMid Vlnron {58S). •

sw
wbo went on to win NBA
rookie ol tbc year booon wilh tbc

technical foul wben be slammed
tbc ball down following a traveling

re-.'

Knid!J.
New Yort's effort.,...., Jodi,

call.

"I just didn't play wei~" Miller
said.
The Pacers DOW fllld tbemseJVCI
in tbe same situation as last year,
wben tbey led tbc Knicks 3·2 and
lbcn lost tbc final two pmcs of tbe
Blstan Conference fioall. But tbcy
are still talking oonftdentally.
"They bad to win tbree in a
row. Now we go to New Y~Xt We
will win Sunday," said Indiana
glllll! Mark Jacbon, a former New
York blgb scbool and collegiate

-··
auanls worbd to perfec:lioD
(oriDOIIoltbcgamc.
.
"We bid a OOIIIdoul effort to
10 out and get IDIO thiD defeasive·
ly and '?: to keep diem
peoe·
tralin1, · • Antbony Muoa laid.
"We didD't WMl to give diem tbc
oppclriUDity lhotl tbcy get 10 often
out ohbeir poll poe. We made up
our mJods tbat iD order to beat Ibis
teaJD, we're going to bave 10 play
grea1 perimeter defense. ••

Division III district final Monday

from

LUCASVILLE - Soutbern's baseball team will face
Portsmouth East In tbe Division ill district tille game Monday at S
p.m: at Lucasville Valley Higb School.

Basketball meeting Monday

'

By l'ERRY KINNEY
'CINCINNATI (AP) -Pete
Scboutelt bas come a long way in
tbree starts, since bullpen coacb
Grant Jackson helped blm figure
out bow be was tipping bls pitches.

His ftrst start, April 29 in San
Diego, was brutal -- live bits and
six runs in tbe ftrst inning.
· Tapetime.
Jackson tbougbt be saw
Scbourek taking the baD out of bis

glove a cenain way. Scbourek did
it because of tbc pain.
' "My arm always burls,"
Scboureli: said. "That's tbc life ofa
pitcber. The "P" next to your .
name stands for pain, ••

AAU-sanctione~ girls' basketbal~
RIO GRANDE - Sixteen of
the top AA U $iris' basketball
teams from Obto and West Virginia will participate in tbe first
Bob Evans RestaW'1111111t/I'ri-Coun·
ty Stars Invitational Tournament.
which will run from Saturday 10
Monday, May 29 at tbe University
of Rio Grande's Lyne Cen~ .

The tournament features eigbt
teams from the 1S·year-old dlvlsion and eight from tbe 16-year-old
bracket. Included among squads
participating bis year are the
defending West Virginia state
AAU champions in bolb divisions
and the defending Obio state cbampion, now playing in the 16-year-

But be tried to eliminate tbc dpoff mannerism, and his second start
was better. He allowed five bits ·
and two earned runs In 4 2/3
innings in a loss to tbc Mets.
His tbird start, a no:decision

old bracket;
The West Virginia champs from
last year are the Soutbern Stars
from the Princeton area and tbe
Mid-Ohio Valley team from Wasbington (Ibis town is. west or Parkersburg). The top contender and
defending champ (JOII1 the Buckeye
State is lbe Ohio Expresss, a Lan-

more.

caster-based club composed of
players from many areas of tbe
state, including Lima and Balli-

~layed

Saturday

lndiWI ar. New York., 3:30p.m. (NBC)

AMERICAN LEAGUE

- ....»:DifL £d.

r.-

801IOD ......... ,.......... J4

•

6 .100

New Ymt: .............. JO 9
Toronlo .................. lO ll
Baltlmore .................9 11
Detrolt ..................... a IJ

.1:26
.476
...

so

.nt

1iA
3.5
4.5

•

6
10
11
12
14

.614
.524
...so
.~

.JM

6.S

9

.591

II p.m.
.
'
' New lcncyat Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.

Toroato l; Chlc~~oao wllll

HoNoRTHosEWH
DIEDIN
.
'

6 ..5

1995 F-150 FORD SUPER CAB XL7 414

STATEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION

11

.soo

2

.500

2

Tex• ..................... ll

12 · ...71

l.:5

Toronto 4, Delroil 2

'
CLEVELAND 9, Bwtoo S
Baltimore 7, New Yort. 5
MUwaukec 1, Te•• 0
Oltland 10, KauM C,:it)' 3
Mia.aeiOta 8, Setttle 6
California 6, ChlCip S

·. They played Soturday
CLEVELAND (Henblaer 2·1) at
Bc.too (CorDier 1·0),1:05 p.m.
T""""" (Hell... :Hl) Ol Dooroil (BohiUIOn 0.0). l oIS p.m.
Baltimore (Feraaadez 0·1) at New
York (Pete% t-11), I oU p.m.
Callfomla {Saadenoa 1·2) II Chlcaao
(AbboB 2-t), 7:0S p.m.
Milwaukee (Wetman 0-3) at Tes:u
(TcwDbouy2-1), S:OS p.m.
O.tlaod (SloUiemyre l-0) 11 Kllllu
City (Hanoi t-0), &amp;:OS p.m.
Seattle (Belcher 0-0) at Minneeotl (Erk:Uon 1-3), 8:0!ii p.m.

discrimina~ion

bumper, tilt wheel, cruise control, sun visor

w/cab lighls, cast alum. wheels, local truck,
9,000 miles, like new, PW &amp; PL.
WAS $28,616
,

I

CLEVELAND {Bhw;;t 0-1) Ill Boslon

(HillliOI 3·0), I :OS p.m.
Toro110 (Ouzmaa 0-1) a_t Detroit

p.m.
Baldmore (McDonald 0-0) at New
Yortr.(Hitdlax:t 1-2),1 :35 p.m.

(BcrJRIID 1·3),1:15

~

Milwaukee (Sc~nlan 1- 1) at Texas
!-2~

MS p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
E&amp;Mtm DMilon

»:

Ium

L £d.

.GI

.5-4~

3 .5
·3.!i

Philadelphia ....:...... IS 6
Adanta ................... l2 to
Monlrcal ... ............. ll 10
New Yort.. ........... .IO 12
Florida ..................... !i 16

.714

.H5

.455
.238

2 ..5

.311

s.s

.0~

SL Louil ................ 10 l;J
PioW&gt;,.a/1 ................ &amp; 13

1988 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS CIERA 4 DR.

Put YOUR LAMB
In The SPOTLIGHT

·iow 84,

1992 BUICK PARK AVENUE 4 DR.
V-6 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., AM/FM

l

stereo cass., air cond., tilt &amp; cruise,
cloth split seats, dual power seats,
power windows &amp; power locks, local
car, 31,000 miles, like new.

Wucern Dl•lfllon
Colorado ................ IJ 9 .S91
San Francisco ........ 12
Lot Anaela ........... lO
San Dieao .............. 10

II
12
12

.!ill
.4.SS
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I ..S
3
3

WIN $100
For any Stste !=air or
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Friday's scores
New Yort 5, f't\lladelphia I
CINCINNATI 2, Colorado 0
Alllulla 4, Florida 0
Hous!Oil 10, Montreal 2
Chica,o -7. Loll Aaaalel-3
Pittsbur&amp;h 8, San Di~go 6

.

San Fraoci•co6.'St. Louis !i

They played Saturday
St. IAuia Qlill 2-0) at San PraiK:iaco
New York (Jhrnild! 0-0) II Philadel-

phia (Oreea 2·2), 7:0S p.m.
· CoiONIIdo "(Ollvaru 1-2) at CINCIN-

NATI (Smiley l-0), 7 : 0~ p.m.
Florida (Rapp 0-3) at Allllllta (Mcrctcr
l-1),1: IO·p.m.

Moatrnl (Hnry 0 -2) al HoultOD
(Reyaolda 1·2), I :O.S p.m
ChiCiao (Bullinaer l-0) at Lol Allae·
Itt ~hae:z 4-1), IO:M p.m.
.
Pillabuflh (Waan« O.!i) at San Dleao
(Sonclcn 2-0), .IO,OS p.m.

Today'• games
Florida (Burkett 3-2) at A.llnta
(Smoltz l-2), 1:10 p.m.
New York. {Jollel 3-1) at rhilldelphia
(Mi....,. I -I), l:lS p.m.
Colorado (Aceve® 1-l) • CINCIN-

NATI (liMo 1-1), 2:15p.m.

Monttcal (Ueredla l·l) at llouatoa
(Swi . .ll-1), 2 : 3~ p.m.
O!lcqo (Tt~~ehel 2-1) " 1.oo Anacl,.
(Voldco0-1).4oOS p.m.
Sl. lmlil (Urbml l-1).111: Sag FraatiiCO
(Mulholland l-1). 4:0S p.m.
PitllburJh l'Netel• l-1) " San Dieao
(Dena 0. l), 1:05 p.m.

WIN $50 for any County Fair
Market Lamb Champion

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WILL BOWL ·
May 23-7 PM
May t 0·12 Noon

Company

1987 FORD
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. ..

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1993 NISSAN KING CAB, 15091 , rod, AM -FM cassene;
rear niP seats. sport whetls. rear slider
1992 NlSSAN TRUCK. 15088, 22.000 miles,
sport wheels, clolh ilteriof .... .. ... ...... ,.... ..... . ... ...
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$10,820
S8634

sport wheels, ciOitl inlerlof ..... :........... .... ............... .•
.... :..•.... $9970
1988·00DG!·DAKOTAPICt&lt;UP, 15096, red. AM-FM stereo,
rear step bum~r. tow miles. ." .. ,........................ ~
15496
11193 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE, ,5054, tl'etn. '"""'"· ar, '.IM-f~

"""'·1ft,

"""'·- -··•bag.

1'6

1992 DODGE CARAVAN, 15019, pewter, V6, 7 passenger,
au1omalic, air, AM/FM cassene. rear defroster. cloth 1ntenor .

$11 ,900

$10,650

1988 DODGE DAKOTA LONG BED, 115028, ~ue .
automatiC, AMIFM. rear sl1der, ctoth interior

S6415
. . $4995

May 25- 6:30PM

May 25-7 PM

..

I

.G ENERAL ~OTORS- GENERAL MOTORS
1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM, 15099, automalic,

air, AM·FM cassette, spqit wheels ..... .....

Friday Fami~ Twosome · June 2-6:30 PM
· Bumper League/One
Parent-One Child 4·7
Sunday Adult-Junior

June 4-6:30 PM

June 2-6:30 PM

June 4-7PM

David Frey. Attorney
.
Business Plannin~
Marianne VerMeer. Doug Grt'en, and Deb McBride
Small Business Development
Center
_..

-

~.,...,. ...~,..- .. r-~...,.........--------

C\995 BANC ONE CORPORATION

1992 CHEVY 5·10 PICKUP, 15101, Tahoe pacilage, au.
$7495
cassette stereo. bed ~ner . step buml)ef ._.
1~2 DODGE CARAVAN, 1507~, white, auiomauc, aK MHM
$10,239
cassette. au bag, rear oefloster
.......
1993.CHEVY LUMINA APV, 15083, aulomatlt. arr,AMH~
$11 ,250
camt~e, lilt, crUtSe.~XJNer 'I!Yidaws &amp;locks, '16 !nglne
1993 CHEVY LUMINA APV, 15082, alloy whee~. automaiiC.
S1M3t
air, tilt, ®se, r8ar defroster .. ,.......... .
1992 OODGE CARAVAN, 15086. blue. eutomalk:. 01r,
$9334
AM ·FM cassette. alr bag. cloth inteoor

~M ·F I.t

Hl88 DODGE DAKOTA PICKUP, 15096, red. AM·FM stereo,
rear step bumper, low m~es ......... .. .... ·........ ,.... ,., ....... ,.. ::~ ..... S5495

.

-

Admission is free. Refreshments available.
-

*

May 11-12 Noon

Date: Wednesday, May 24, 1995
Time: 10:00 am - 3:00 pm
Place: Ohio University Inn, 331 Richland A~nue, Athens, Ohio

...

Beat rising Interest
Rates by buying now!!
More car for your ·
. money... More money
for your car!!

May 11-12 Noon

BankOne's Small Business Information Fair

441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

*

May 10·7 PM

'!1".

Executive

NO
MONEY
DOWN

May 10-6:30 PM

BANKEONE-

•Stocks
•Corporate Bonds
.•U.S. Treasury Securities
'•Mutual Funds
•Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
•Insured Money Market
Accounts
•IRA's
Contact:
Jay Caldwell

2,995

--·--·~--- ~ OURS.ERVJCE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.-FRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12

.

' "

PAYMENTS
Due Until
AUGUST

1989 CHEVY S-10, I499S, black . AM·FM cassene,
automauc, bed liner, sport wheels. rear bumper ........ ...............

Representatives from the following organizations will be hosting exhibit'l
that detail their products and service"!.
,
Enterprise Development Corporation
ACEnet
Small Business Developmf:'nl Center
l11e Women's Business Resource Program ·
Southeastem Ohio Regional Free-Net
Whatever it takes:
US. Small Business Administ ralion
Hnnk Dm·. Al.ht NA
Athens Chamber of Commerce
Vlt •mbt·r 1:1 )IC
Bank One. Athens
l110mas Patiitt, C.P.A.
p
Mathews Insurance Agency
Design In Advertising

OFFERING:

8

See Jack Rou.b, VIctor Arms or Bob Ross

'

NO

1991 CHEVY S·10, 14970, I\IHM cassefte.
.
spoS WheelS, rear bumper, !Jed Kner, .............................................. $6900
1993 NlSSAN PATHFINDER SE, "'"''· 4&gt;4. a•onabc. air. All fM cass ,
til. CNise, power Wll'ldows &amp;locl&lt;s, sport wheels,one owner, clolh inlerO" 118,995

~

-

•
I

Wednesday have a
May 10-12 Noon
Ball League
(Earn a new ball bowling 15 wk.)

.

The

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING

.

cagefest ..Scontinu~fromC-2&gt; .

WILL MEET
May 2-6:30 PM

Phone Skyline Lanes at 446-3362
For Further Information.

2:00 pm · 3:00 pm

THIS WEEK'S SPECif\I,S

3.8 V-6 eng ., PS, PB, auto.
trans ., AM/FM stereo
cass., tilt &amp; cruise, PW &amp;
PL. rear window defroster,
cast alum. wheels.
WAS $14,995

NOW

To collect your cash award
subm~
a piclure of your
champion lamb with proof dl
purchase of 150 pounds or m~re l'u1in" Mills. Inc.

~'NBA,playoffs--- -~--·-~

-

1994 MERCURY
SABLE OS 4 DR.

.

(l.&lt;k.-1-1), 4,0j p.m.

).3

$ ~~;. 815,110
1

WAS

LEAGUE
Tuesday Ladies Trio

Information is the key to creating and
expanding s II business opportunities.

eng., power steering, .power
brakes, auto. trans., air cond., AM/FM
stereo, PW, PL, tilt wheel, cloth split
seats .. rear defroster, good tires, local
one owner. Extra clean
WAS$5,995

4 .!i

SUMMER 1995 .
LEAGUE SCHEDULE

Several teams in the bracket have Mtd-Ohlo Valley (Washington, ·
played at the national level and are W.Va).
veteran AAU clubs.
Tournament passes are available
., Each loam participating is guar- for $10 each.
antced a minimum or four games.
Teams' records in lbeir individual
pools will decide the seeding for a
. single-elimination round 10 be
played on Sundax, May 28 at 4:30
p.m.
The final four teams will meet
in the semifinals on May 29 at·
noon. The 15-year-old title game
starting at 3 p.m. and the 16-yearold final played at 5 p.m. Each
game will consist pf two 16-minule
halves. Licensed referees will oversec the action . A 30-second shot
clock will be used.
Pool "A" in the 16-ycar-old
bracket fealures the Golden Eagles
(Chillicotl!e), West "irginia Thun- •
dcr (Hunlingh .. , W.Va.), Urbana
Blue (Urbana) and the Tri,County
Stars (Jackson). Pool "B" features
the Lady Shooting Stars (Huber
From writing a businessplan to securing a small business loan. don't miss tllis
Heights), the Ohio Express (Lanopportunity to gather the infonnation you need to succf:'cd in small business. Come
caster), lbe Southern Stars (Rock,
to Bank One's Small Business Infom1ation Fair and attend 1hf:'se valuable seminars.
W.Va .) and Urbana White
(Urbana).
10:00 am - 11:00 ain Risk Management and Analysis
In the 15-year-old divisi&lt;,m. Pool
"A" is comprised of the Logan
John Lavelle
Lady Bobcats (Logan), lbe GallipoMathews Insurance Agency
lis Lightning (Gallipolis), tbe
Golden· Eagles (Chillicothe) and
ll:OO am · 12:00 pm Small Business Start-Up,
lhc Hocking Valley Stars (LancaslAccounting and Tax information
cr) . Pool :'B" features Urbana
Thomas W Pariitt, C.P.A.
(Urbana), SEO (New Lexington),
Tri -County Stars (Jackson) and
· 1:00pm -2:00pm
Legal Issues for Small Businesses

ttow 817,995

Feed "NEW" PURINil LAMi
SHOW CHOW .

.·SKYLINE LANES
BOWLING .CENTER

Small Business
Information Fair.

®

5.5
to

Central DivWon
0\Jcago ................. .1:1 1 .650
Hor.mton ................ .! 1· 10 ..524
CINCINNA1L ..... t0 10 ·.SOO

9

V-6

:us

(Roacn

~AU

PS, PB, auto. trans., quad captain
chairs, air cond., tilt &amp; cruise, power
windows &amp; power locks, A-1 condition, ·
rear sofa, bed, low miles.
WAS $21,995

under any of I his organizatiOn's programs or activities.

Seattle (Johosoa 2·0) at Mlnnuota

(T.....ll -2).loOS p.m.
•
California (Bielecki 1-0) at Chicaao
(Betc 0· 2). 2:05p.m.
Oaklaod (Ontivcroa 3-1) at Kanaa1
City (Gubicza 1-l),
p.m.

NOW

.
23 995

1993 FORD E-150 CONVERSION VAN

The person responsible for coordinatin g this organizalion's
nondiscrimi nal ion com pliance cfforls is Phillip I. Miller•. Personnel
Manager. Any individual, or specific class of individuals, who feels I hat
this organization has subjected them to discrimination may obtain
further infonnation about the statutes and regulations lisled above from
and/or file a wrillen complaint with lhis organization ; or the Secretary,
U.S. Department of Agricuhure, ·Washington, D.C. 20250; or the
Administralor, Rural Elewification Administralion, Washinglon, D.C.
20250.. Complaints must be filed within 180 days after the alleged
discrimination. Confidentiality will be maintained 10 1he extent possible.

Today's games

GALLIPOLIS - The American Cancer Society's Gallia-Meigs
unit will bold its annual golf tournament on Tbui'Sday, June 8 ·at
Cliffside Golf Course.
All ·players in Ibis tournament, wbicb will allow players to
choose their partners, must Have a verifiable bandicap, as lbe team
will use 10% of tbe total team handicap to determine tbe champion.
For more information, call tournament chairman Marvin Boxdorfer at441-1104.

351 V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto. ttans., air cond.,
AM/FM stereo w/CD player, cloth captain
chairs w/rear bench seat, 8 foot bed, trailer
towing pkg., bed liner, chrome rear step

BUCKEYE RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC., 4848 Stale
Route 325 South, PO Box 200, Rio Grande, OH 45674 is the recipient
of. Federal financial assistance from the Rural Electrificalion
Administration, an agency of the U.S. Department of Agric~lture, and is
subjec11o the provisions of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as
amended: Section 5Q4 of the Rehabilitation Acl of 1973, as amended:
1he Age Discrimination Act of 1975, as amended: and 1he rules and
regulations of lhe U.S. Depanment of Agriculature which provide 1hat
no person in the United Slates on lhe basis of race, color, national origin,
age or handicap shall be excluded from participation in, admission or
access to, qdenied lhe benefils'
. of, or olherwise be subjecled to

'

ACS linkfest scheduled

p.m.

s.s

tl;.

2 &gt; _ _ _ __
w/n.!~:::;tW=·~'"....,~from~·~c-~

curve ball wu workinJ. I could chance came in tbe fourtb wbea
!brow it anytime. \1 fell I could Walt Weiss singled and tried to
score (ran ftrsl on Larry Walka-'s
!brow any pitcb for &amp;'4rlke."
· Colorado manager Don Baylor double. But second baseman Brei
wasn't sure if It was just Scbowdt Boone relayed a !brow from right
or left-banders in general. Wbatev- . fielder Reggie Sanders and cut ,
•er, bis Rockies seemed confused all down Weiss at lbe plate .
night.
"You bave to take cbances
"Our approach against left· wben you can," Baylor said. "We
banded pitcbing ... " Baylor said. haven' t been knocking the cpver
"To see tbe different swings play· off tbe ball lately."
ers lake against left-banders ... It's
Colorado got a runner 1o second
abnostlilce we never see tbem.''
base only one otber lime, on a
Baylor said be even saw a pat· passed ball in tbe first, bu 1
tern to Scbourek' s pitcbes, but It Scbourek got Dante Bicbeue to pop
didD't do any good.
up to end tbe inning.
"His pattern tonight was fast·
"I've been known to have rough
ball in, a little curve ball and ftrsl innings," Scbourek said. "As
change-up away," Baylor said. long as I can getlbrough tbat, I can
"We couldn't get on one particular settle down."
pitch."
He !brew 117 pitches in eigbt
' The Reds (10-10) rea-cbed.tbe innings, and Jeff Brantley pitcbed a
break-even mark after losing their perfect ninlb for his second save.
fust six games of lbe year.
The Reds did all their scoring in
"I tbink everyb~y· s getting tbe fourtb. Deion Sanders singled,
into a rhythm now," Scbourek said went to !bird on Barry Larkin's
of tbe Cincinnati pitcbing staff.
swinging bunt and scored on RegJose Rijo (2-2) got bis secqnd gie Sanders' double to right-center
win Wednesday in Montreal. Jobn field . Boone single&lt;) borne the other
Smiley (1-0) goes after his second run.
tonight, facing Omar Olivares {1Kevin Ritz (2-1) allowed just
2).
.
one bit in tbe first tbree innings
Tbe Rockies • best scoring before the Reds broke through.

RIO GRANDE - Team penning will be featured at tbe Bob
Evans Farm on.Saturday, June 3 and Swulay, June 4.
The object of team penning is for a team of bone-mounted riders
lo separate three specific cattle from the herd and .e11courage lbem to
enter a pen in tbe middle of the arena The team accomplishing tbe
.L1Sk ·in lbe least amount of time wins.
.
There will be riders of various ages competing for prize money
in various events, including open penning, pro/am penning, youth
penning, open and pro/am sorting.

Wodnetdo1
Philadelphia al N.Y. kanaera, 7: 30

oeriol4-3

Friday's scores

•

Tod..,.
M...t..,.

V111couver S, St. Louil 3; Vaacounr

3
4 ..5

OaklaDd ................. 11
Seatlle .................... IO

10

N.Y. RJDJert at Ptiii!Miclphll, 7 :30

WiDIIUiCS 4-3
~le~ao 5,

WuluaDIYW.

CalitonUa ............... l3

NHL playoffs
Friday's scores

&lt;Anlral DIYWon

CUlVELAND ...... .t3
Mllwal.ible ............. ll
Kan• City .............9
au.,10 ....................a
·Mhuaw ................l

N.Y. Rupa at Philadelphia. 3 p.m.

.

·

Reds

Team penning featured

New Jeneylll. PitUb\!fa,h, 7:30p.m.

l'ill~Jilii%''H9¢k~~!\iil!i:!\: ,rl

S

PHONE 992-2:96

AflODtEPO 1, 0~

Conference scmlnnals
1'1tt1 pl•yed s ..urday

Today's game

Major leagues

SOUTH THIRD

.

GALLIPOLIS - The seventh annual Bob Evims Yoittb
is
scheduled for Friday, June 2 and Saturday, June 3.
The ftrst activity of that weekend will be a June 2 golf saamble
at 12:30 p.m. at Cliffside Golf Course.
·
On June 3, tbe rcmaindei- of tbe activities win be on tbe University of Rio Grande campus.
·
From 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., tbere will be a baseball card show at
Lyne Center.
'
At 11 a.m., youtb games (bubble gum blowing contest, baseball-,
basketball·, football· and soccer-related activities, etc.) wUI be held.
At noon, lbere will be an auction at Stanley L. Evans Fteld conduct·
ed by Tun Evans. At I p.m., tbc Reds Dream Team and tbe Gallipolis American Legion Post 27 basebaU team will begin play on the
field.
.
.
All proceeds from tbese events will benefit Gallia County's
youth basebaU and softball programs.
·
Former major leaguer Mel Clark, a resident of Mason, W.Va.
will hi: the guest speaker.
For more information, call Brett Bostic at 256-6774, Randy
Finney at 446-6637, Tom Meadows at446-7570 or Tom Hopkins at
446-8755.
..

be highly ·competitive, witb all
teams possessing quality players.
{See CAGEFEST on CJ)
·

According to tournament offi·
cials, the 16-year-old division will

461

They

JJob Evans Youth Day set

tournament to begin Saturday

Su Jote S, Ca11.-y 4 (l ar); SllD J01e
wi .. aerie~ ... 3

Ho111ton at Phoeni11:, 3:30p.m (NBC)

Ibis
beatinl Cokndo 2-0.
Scbourek (1·2) allowed six bits,
struck out eight and walked two.
"It was just like in Miami,"
said a jubilant Scbourek. "My
(See REDS on c.J)

against tbe Marlins, yielded eigbt
strike outs, five bits and one earned
run In seven innings.
Friday night be pitcbed .eigbt
strong innings and tbe Cincinnati
Reds got to .500 for Jbe fust time

.

GALLIPOLIS - There will be a basketball meeting for boys
planning to enter Gallla Academy High Scbool as seventb-graders
Ibis fall and their parents oo Monday at 7 p.m. at tbe GARS gym.
Those wbo can't attend tbe meeting sbould call GARS varsity
coacb Jim Osborne at 446-3212 or 446-9284.
'

1995
.• Reds blank Rockies 2-0 to reach .500 mark for first ti·me in season,
• ;.
:-·
•
••
•

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

Sunday;May21, 1995

"

'

...

.

1993 CHEVY CAVALIER RS , 15060, dark pewter. au.
automatrc. cruise. rear defroster. dual m11rors. cloth rnte11or .....
1993 CHEVY CAV~UER RS WAGON, 14919,red , Blr,
automatrc. ·AM/FM cassette, ciuise. powerloeks, tuggage rack
1991 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, 14941 , blue . autornalJC,
air, AM/H~ ~trlt, CfUI$e, power windows. V6 alloy wheels
1994 PONTIAC SUNBIAD LE, 15032 , arr, AM1FM cassette,· ,
tilt, clott1m1er10r. 28.000 miles
1993 r:;;HEVY CORSICA lT, 14985, whrle 3!1. allloma!lc tilt.
cruise. AM/FM ca·ssetle. power lOCks. refH delrosrer

$6195
$7355
$7595

$7995
$9790
$987'0

1991 CHEVY CAMARO RS, -5048, AM/Ft.l cassette , automal&lt;.
air, tilt, crurse, power \1/ir.dows, rear defroster
. $9270
1993 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S, 15055, blue. arr
automahc, AMIFM cassette 1111, CrUtse, power seals &amp; wrndows
$11 ,650
1992 SUICK leSABAE CUSTOM, 14935, dark blue all,
automauc. AMJFM cassene, 11~ . crwse. power wrndows &amp;locks
111 ,820
1993 OlOS 88 ROYALE , 15001 , green. V6, 81r, automatic:,
AMIFM cassette, tilt. crUJse, power Windows &amp; seats .. ,. . ... .• $12,350
1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S, 15053, wMa V6, ati, M,
cru1se. aulomallc. AM/FMcassene· powet seats &amp; wmdo.,rws, allo~ wneets $12,850
1992 CHEVY CORSICA, 15081 , automaltc, all. AM·FM cas$ette,
cloth lntenor, tiH, alloy wheels .
.~
. S7928
1994 OLOS CUTLASS SUP'REME, 15080, wnile, at.nomatic,
air. AM-FM cassene. power ~eats &amp; wmdows 1111 c~urse
$11 ,450
1993 PONTIAC GRANO PRIX LE, 15084, g1een. automabc. arr,
tl , cruise, AM·FM cassette, PQWer w1ndows
$9439

-

1988 HYUNOAI EXCEL.GL, "5074, low miles.
AMJFM cassette rea1 defroster. doth interior

$)495

1993 HYUNDAI EXCEL, WS058, red. 4 door AMFM
cassene. dual mrrrors. rear defrostel. 22 .000 m~tes

$6870

1990 NISSAN STANZA, 14904, reel 4 doo~. atr IIU1orMI.IC.
AM/FM cassene 1111 cruise rear delroste1

$6495

1990 MAZDA PROTEGE, 15110, white alloy v.fleets .
sumo0f. AM/f"M cassene. cru1se, power wmdcws
..
$71.10
1992 TOYOTA COROLLA, 14676, all, au10malic,
rear defroster , cloth rnte1ior
..
$8925
1993 NISSAN MAXIMA SE, 15057, bladt, a1r, 8U1om&amp;IIC. AMFM .
cassetle, Bose radiO M. cn.Jtse, leather alloy Ymeels, power sunropl $18,995'

'

1992 DODGE DAYTONA. 15085, ted, AM-FM cassehe
ttlt. e:rui5e. cloth tnlenor
$7478
1992 FORD ESCORT WAGON, 14983. ted, automabe,
AM·FM cassene. rear del1oster, dual m1rrors, cloth mtel'lOf
$6595
1992 MERCURY TOPAZ GS, 15004, wMe a~omattc. AM·fM
eassene, tt\t, crurse pOwer wrndows, seats, alloy IY!leels
$7Uil
1992 DODGE QYNASTY , ,5051, wtute. au. automattc,
AMJFM cassette 1111. cru•se. arr bag
S7910
1992 FORD TEMPO, •sooa, V6. aUiomatfCJatr. cru1se
rear'delrosrer, cloth intPIIOr
$6865
1992 DODGE DYNASTY LE, 14991 , whtle, a11 au1omatte.
AM!fM cassetle. 1~1. Clts1so powe1 .... tn~s. a1r bag
$8350
1992 DODGE OYNASTY. ,495~. gold V6 _air. automahc
AMn:M cassetle, ti~ ClU15rl at( bC.'f, cloth tntenOI
.
.lm5
1991 FORO PROSE Gl., 14946, lltue ar1. slandard Shift
AM/FM cassene. allo~ wheels. Owl ITitr,ors fold Oown rear seat
$7415
1994 FORO TAURUS LX, 1505e, 811, automat&lt;. AM 1Ff.4 cassette.
rill, cruise, allay wheels. power seat &amp; w•rtdows, hyless entrw$12,550
1192 FORO T·BIRD 15006, VS englne&gt;amamahc. lill
cruise, power wrndows seats &amp;.lock.s
$8375
1992 MERCURY TOPAZ GS. 15040, bluf, 1&lt;. a~omal&gt;&lt; ,
AMIFM. cloth rnlenor
., .
$8450
1992 EAGLE SUMMIT OL., M5022. gr~:t~·. a1r, automatte,
AM/FM .casSette tear def1osle1 spor1 wheels
S8875

1992 FORO TEMPO GL.. .5041 , blue, aulomatte.
AM.FM, cloth 1ntenor . . ... . .
.
$1625
15193 DODGE DYNASTY LE, f5050, green, V6, automatiC,
a:r, AM·FM cassette. 1.111 crur.;e pow~ wrndow5 &amp;seats an bag 1 . 111,320
1993 MEACURV TOPAZ. 14t90, green, automatiC. a1t
AMlFM cassette:"utt, crots'a, power lOCks &amp; windows ..
$8W5
1992 FORD TEMPO GL.. 15039, sutomattc, air,
AMIFM, ctotn lnlenor

�,,

•

Pate C4. ~

I

II·---~ illnol

..

'

Sunday, ll!av 21, 1995

Smiths among
.KVDP winners

Ohio fishing report

Smith, Cowboy Eul Smidt,
T ommy Andzcws, Jim Saulldcn
: and M ike Stowen were lbe will·
ncrs in May 13 action at lCatlawba
• Valley Dragway. ~
Keith Smith, wbo Is from (]».
I lipolis. won the Pro Divlaloa .ID
Don and Gtcria Outs' 1971 Dodae
Demon. Second place iD that dlvl·
sion belonged to Larry White of
. Pinch. W .Va. , who drove a 1978
Malibu. RaCine drivers M~ and
Justin Hill made the semifinal
1 round In their 1969 Camaros.
In the Modified ET Division,
Earl Smith, who is from Evans,
W.Va., won with his 1972 Vega
wagon. John Turley or Hurricane,
W.Va. came in second, while Greg
Fowler o f Point Pleasant, W .Va.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hen:. is the weekly fishing report as '
provided by lbe Division of Wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural
Rcsoun:es:
Southeast
FORKED RUN LAKE
Minnows are being u.sed to take
crappies and saugeyes. Anglers are
also using power worms to take
larl!emouth bass up to 25 inches.
Ra~nbow trout prefer power bai ts,
wax worms and marshmallows, with
sizes ranging from 10 lo 13 inches.
TYCOON LAKE - Use crank
baits fished in shallow water to take
largemouth bass. Yellow perch aver·
aging seven to eight inches are being
caught on minnows. Black jigs and
minnows are being used to take
crappies up to 12 inches in the
near.s hore areas with submerge'ct

toolc !bird
In the Blown Alcohol Funny
Car l)i vision , Andrews, who Is
from Burlington, N .C .. broke the
old uack record (4.372 seconds) set
by S¢otty Cannon In 1994 with li
4 .267-second run on the 1/8-mlle

course In a 1990 Trans Am.
In the Street Division, Saunders,
who is from Eleanor, W.Va. won
. with bis 1968 Plymouth GTX, best·
ing William Hartigan of Scott
, Depot, W.Va.
. Stowers, who is from Hunting·
- ton, W.Va .. won the Junior Drag·
• ste r Division, be sting Timmy
· Chambers of St. Albans, W.Va.

.

Forked Run

SOU'IliSIDE, W.VL - Kcilll
'

Outdoors

May21, 1995

ALL·SEOAL ACADEMIC HONOREES- In
recognition or lbelr classroom achievements, 19
Gallla Academy High School student-athletes
received 1995 all-Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League academic c0 rtiflcates during Thursday
evening's annual spring sports banquet at Buck·
eye Hills Career Center near Rio Grande. In front

are (L·R) Chris Wasch, Mark Clark, Eddie
Nehus, Dan Magn"ussen, Erik Jeffers, Ryan
Barnes and Chris Smith. Behind them are Becky
Knight ; Carolyn Skinner, Jenlce Haner, Carrie
Miller, Valerie Spence, Beth Skinner, Amanda
Davis, Kale Guts, Neeltma Kool, KeUy Caldwell,
Andra Boggs and Ltza Holeskl. Not present but
' also among the honorees was Heath McKinnlss.

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&amp;Tycoon Lakes hold trout and perch bounties

structure. Meal worms and red fishing with live bait . Fish with
Northwest
worms are good baits to use when small worms in the shallow woody
MAUMEE RIVER - White
fishing for bluegills and sunfish.
areas 1o take bluegills.
bass and a few walleyes are being
· Southwest
·
Central
caught on jigs and twister tails, and
GREAT MIAMI RIVER- The
GREENFIELD LAKE- This minnows fished below bobbers. Top
river provides excellent smallmouth 14-acre Fairfield County lake was spols include the deeper waters
bass fis~ing from Sidn~y down· drained and restocked in 1989 with be1ween Orleans Park and 1-475.
stream tp Hamilton, .e specially . largemouth bass, bluegitls and chan· White bass and some wl)ite perch
below the many tow -head dams . net catfish. The submerged brush are also being caught ) n downtown
Lots of rock bass, bluegills, carp and piles located near the dam are good Toledo and below the Grand Rapids
suckers can be found lhroughout the 11 places to fish for bass. Bluegitls can , dam ·on minnows.
.entire ri)ler system . 'some of the be taken on red worms and wax
SANDUSKY RIVER- Some
smaller tributaries enlering the river worms.
white crappies and while bass are
also offer good largemouth bass
KOKOSING RESERVOIR- being taken on minnows fished in
fishing, especially in the .area near Use minnows beneath a bobber deep water. Low numbers of
the Ohio River.
fished in areas with shoreline brush walleyes are being caught on jigs
CAESAR CREEK lAKE - The and .fallen trees when seeking crap- and twister tails. The top spot is in
tributaries in the upper half of the pies. These same areas hold fair downtown Fremonl between Slate
lake offer good opportunities to take numbers of largemouth bass measur- Street and Hayes Stree1.
white bass during May. The back· ing up to 20 inches. Live bait, spin·
Northeast .
water ooves are good places to take ners and small crank baits are used
BEACH CITY RESERVOIR .crappies and largemouth bass when with success when bass fishing.
An abundance of bullhead catfish

According to park rangers,

Bia.ck beat sightings

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DMsloa of Wildlife
, I!• CLEVI!:LAND (AP) - The recent stptl&amp;l of a black bear Ia
I"· tills city's es,wlcle saburtxi may have alarmed some residents, but

sta'*

blollltkls said bears generally pllse no threat to people and
. pets; '
.
j._if
So llow did a bear wander Into suburban Clevel. . d?

W. .~'As: ~ck bar populations Increase iD Pennsylvan~ and West

Virpla, lbe occun:eaces of bears In Oblo are also IDcreaslas," old .
.Sten Wilcox, asslstaat wildlife muagement supervisor In the

Record Drive
·
•DENVER (AP) - It won the
immediate nickname of the
f~ve." one that it sUII holds.
With 39 seconds to play in the
1986 AFC championship game on
' Jan. 1, 1987, the· Broncos trailed
Cleveland 20- I 3.
Denver bad the ball on ils own
; two-yard line and quarterback John
Elway somehow moved the ball 98
: yards for the tying louchdown on a
1pass to Mark Jackson. It took l 5
·
1plays in 39 seconds .
'
Denver won !be game 23 -20 on
a field goal in overtime.

Dlmloa oiWIIdlllt'• Akron ollke.
Tbe bat Is believed to be two to three years old and weigh up to
250 pounds. II was ftrsl slehted April 29 in Geauga County's

NFL sf!irs popular
NEW YORK (AP) - NFL
players dominated a Harris Poll
taken earlier tbis year of America's
most popular sportS slaB.
Five ·or the Top 10 were pro
football stars. Joe Montana of .
Kansas City, Troy Aikman of Dallas and running back Emmett
Smith of the Cowboys finished secALL-SEOAL HONOREES - Baseball player
ond, third and fourth.
Brett
Cremeens, softball players Valerie Spence
Dan Marino of Miami was ninth
and
Meghan
Kolcun and track-and-field athlete
and John Elway of Denver was ·
Burt Wood (L·R) received aU-Southeastern Ohio
lOtb.

Claridon Townslllp and likely crossed into Olllo from
J'eaaiylvanla.
While bear ·sighlings iD Ohio are uacommon, Increased public
awareness !las led to more reports of hears roaming through north·
esst aad so•lbeasl Obto.
The dtvlslt!n sai!J II received 47 reported sightings in lS counties
last year.
·
Law ealorcement Ofllclals contiDued to monitor the bear's jour·
aey tbRagb Gesup County In hopes II would not be banned and
eventually move out of populated areas on Its way back to
Pennsylvania.
' But Ia some cases, hears need to be protected and public safety
asSured, wblch results In die animal's capture.
,
Several years ago, state wildlife officers aod wildlife biologists
JUeived tniniog In handling bears that become I nuisance.
A few bears have since been shot with tranquilizer dans, captured and released elsewhere In Ohio.
.
Tbe: division's strategic m1nanmen1 plao states: ''Cu~:renl
treads show Increases In quality forest lands in the east and south·
east portions oftbe state that could help euhaace bear uumbers."
The division advis~d people who see a bear in a poplulaled area
should leave tbe besr alone and keep pels indoors. Bears never
should be led. .
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Urban bean often are aUrscted to pet food left outdoors III"Ouud
boii!Oi, trash containers ·aad any other places where food Is avallible. .

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Athletic League certificates during Thursday's
annual Gallta Academy High School spring sports
banquet at Buckeye Hills Career Center near Rio
Grande.

ranging in size from e igh l to 14 bass, crappies and cat{isb nouad
inches is found at Beach Cily. Use Wh ite Oak, Straight , ~ed Oak,
traditional catfish baits fished along Bullski n, I:agle and Obto Brush
lhe bottom for bes1 resulls . Saugeye cree ks. White bass are making
fishing is best follqwing a reservoir spawning runs iota White Oak and
discharge and whe n the waters begi n Ohio Brush creeks.
to clear.
Lake Erie
CLENDENING RESERVOIR S mall mouth bass fishing is
This lake offe rs some of the region's improving in the western basin. In
best bsss fi shing opportunilies. Fis h addition lo the islands, the area cast
at moderate lo shallow deplhs with. of Sa nd usky and in the vicinity of
live or imilation baits du ring lhe H,ur o n is providing s ome good
morning and early' eve nin g. small mouth bass fishing action. ·Usc
Crappies, bluegills, flalhead catfis h blac k-ha ired jigs or soft craws for
and saugeyes are present in moder- best results. Walleye fi shing success
ate numbers.
. has bee n spotty due to numerous
Ohio River
weal he r fronts moving through the
, The tribulary backwaters prov ide re gion. High numbers of fish are
the best fishin g ih the Meldahl Pool. prese nt t hroughou t t he western
which encompasses a 95- mi le b ~sin. T rolling .s.mall crank baits
stretch of the ·o hio River. Excellent provides improved l uccess com·
opportunities exisl for largem oul h pared to drifl fishing.

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·Respect for ·w ild animals may prevent trouble

Increasing in Ohio

' B)' JOHN WJSsE

- Sports briefs-

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Sunday nmes':SentiDd IC3

By BILL SCHULZ
Associated Press Writer
· Some people go nuts around
bears!
.
" I remember one lady in particuJar was trying lo set her young child
on the back of one of the panhandler
bears 10 try to get a picture," says
Kim DeLozier, wildlife biologist at
the Great " Smoky Mountains
·
National Park.
" People have no concept of what
a wild animal is. We have a concept
that they are something you can see
and hold and love and hug. People
don't understand ho\V life is out in
·1he wild . It ' s pretty cruel. It ' s a
Iough place to make a living."
Many bears in our nalional parks
have found il' s easier to make a liv·
ing off of well -meaning but mi s·
guided humans than it is 10 scrounge .
for groceries in the forest.
Once black bears figure out l~at
people equal food they can lhink up
incredible ways lo gel thai food for
themselves.
.
" We've had reporls of bears that
jumped out ·of a tree onto people 's

backpacks, trying to pull the backpack off of lhem," DeLozier says.
In another case, campers had run
a cable between two trees and suspend lheir food from the cable .
" A ranger has a photograph of a
bear walking on top of that cable out
to where the food is," DeLozier
says.
" When we see a bear at the side
of road and throw hamburgers and
hot dogs 1'\it, we' re training them,"
DeLozier says.
·
"For a wild animal , lheir num ber-one defen se agains l us is lheir
fear of us, lheir only predalor. When
we la ke that fear away by fe edin g
lhem , we have pullhat animal 's life
in jeopardy . We make it more likel y
to be shol by a. poacher" or hil by a
car.
A 542-pound .bear which a park
neighbor had been feeding for ye ars
wa s shol by a poache r just befo re
Chri stma s, DeLoz ier sa ys. Th e
shooter hasn' l 1been found .
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. DeLozie r says the key lO safely
for molorists or picnil:lre r~ in parks
is don't feed the bears.
J.

" If yo u see a bear in a developed
If yo u ' re bac kco untry hiking,
are·a (of a park , such as a pi c nic keep your food wi lh you at all limes.
area). secure your food in lhe lrunk Don'l lay down yo ur pack and go
of your car or a safe place" whic h off lo lake pictures, DeLozier says,
usualiy means behind a metal wa lt , because if !here's a bear in the area
DeLozier says. " If he's Ihere, he's he' ll find il. When yo u make camp
lhere fo r your food."
· hang you r food at least 10 feet off
Do n' t s lop yo ur ca r along Ihe lhe ground and fo ur f~el below a tree
road just to see a bear. Firsl, il can limb or away from a 1ree 1runk.
leave you in need of a low lruck or
If you run inlo a bear on lhe trail,
ambulan ce w he n I he next ca r stand your ground, make loud nois·
doesn' l stop . Second. there' s po l a es, 1hrow things in lhe general direc·
lot of room alongside a road If the lion of the bear, and slowl y move
bear decides to gel up close and per- off, DeLoz ier says.
sonal.
·• A lo1of people who encounter a
The maj o rily of injuri es in the bea r along the lra il will throw lheir
park are minor in nature, nips on Ihe packs down and ru n," he says.
hand, lhe bear grabbing somcone 's
" You ' ve ju &gt;l giv en Ihe be ar a
arm , De Lozier says. ··somelime s good lesson on how lo get food from
1he bea r misjudges where 1he hand· 1he nexl pe rson. If 1he perso n won ' t "
oul ends and lhe hand sta rls.·•
feed Ihe bear wi llingly , bea rs wilt
If il is necessary 10 slop and ·lake sta tl chas ing people, people will run
a piclurc, slay far enough away fro m and lh row packs down and they wilt
lhe bea r lhal it doesn' l pay allention g&lt;;l food Ihal way."
10 you.
. · "As vis ilors 10 nalional parks, we
~' If lhal bea r had beelt ea ti ng ·need 10 res pec t wild animals and
berries, and now it's watching yo u1 respect thei r w ild behavi o r,''
you'v e cha nge d il s be havior a nd DeLozie r says.
you 're loo close," DeLoz ier says.

[)ivision of Watercraft continues safety inspections
COLUMBUS
Durin g
Nalional Safe Boating Week a nd
the Memorial Day Holiday week ·
end, the Division of Watercraft wilt
offe r safety inspections at 1he following launch· ramps and marinas.
Today: . 10 a.m . • ll
Shawnee State Park Marina, I -II

a.m.; Shawnee"Siate Park Ramp, 11

a.m.·noon;
Friday : Ohio Bru sh C r ee k
Ramp, 6-7:30 p.m.
Saturday: .12 p.m.· 1:30 p.m.
Po rtsmo uth Cily Landing, noo n1:30 p.m.; Tycoon Lake, 1 p.m.;
Lake Ves uvius, 4-5 p.m.

c·m

Sunday, May 28: Turkey Creek
(Sh a wn ee State Pa rk ), I I a.m.·
noon; Holiday Poinl Ramp I I a.m.·
noon; Holiday Po inl Marina, noont p .m.; lr o n 1o n Ci1y Ramp, 2-3
p.m.
Monday, May 29l Jackson Lake
State Park, noon-1 p.m.; Lake Alma

S1a 1e Park, 3-4 p.m.; Lake White
State Park, II :30 a.m.- 1 p.m.
For further inform ation on safe
boating
and boaling reg is tratio ns
1
call or wrile Division of Watercraft,
640 Second S 1ree1 Po rtsmo uth .
Ohio 45662, or ca ll 6 14-353-7668 .

Jndiana DNR sees peregrine falcons returri to Fort Wayne after long absence. i
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) - ·
Pereg rine fa lcons were lhre aiAfter a three -year a bsence, pe rc- · ened by lhe wide use ~ f peslicides
grine falcons have re iUrn ed to Fon after World War II, and are qn the
Wayne.
slale and federal endangered species
Bi o logi s ts fr o m the Ind ian a list. The birds we re on ce e xtinct easl
Department of Natural Re sources of the Mississippi Rivet.
Pe re grine s a re cons idered the
recently verified that two birds seen
in lhe downtown area du ri ng lh e fastest animal o n earth beca use of
·
hun ling dives up to 200 mph.
past month a re peregrines.
" There is a fem ale lhat was
The governmc nl has been trying
released last year in P:vansvill e. and lo reslore lhe pe regrine populalion
a male lhat b y a ll acc"o unl s was since the 1980s. More th an 4,000
released in Birm ingha m, Al a.," ~aid peregrine falcons have been released
John Caslrale, a DNR biologist.
in 25 stale s, in c luding 60 in fo ur

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By JOHN WISSE
Division of Wildlife
MARS EI LL ES. O hio (A P) Occ upanc y ra tes in so me of Ohio's .
exisling wood duck nesl boxes have
exceeded regional averages, wh1 ch
is good news fo r ma in,laining Ihe
· s tatus of thi s po pul a r wa terfow l
species.
.
Th e lraditi onal wood duc k nesl
box has helped this duck make a
remarkabl e recovery during the pasl
20 yea rs, lh e O h io Divis ion of
Wildli fe says.
Erec ling and mai nlaini ng lhese
so-ca lled aparlments fo r ducks helps
to offset th e co nt in ui ng loss of
mature trees whic h forme rly provid·
ed an .abunda nce of n al ~ral ca vi lies
for Ibis tree nesting bird.
In coope r a l ion wil h priva le
landow ners and publi c wi ldlife area
ma nagers, Ohio's w il dlife officers
and wildlife biologists have erccled
m ore l han 400 new wood d uck
bQxes Ihis yea r. The Divisio n of

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NE W 1995 NISSAN SENTRA , air.
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Air, cassette, sliding rear window· ····· ··:···

15 ' 999, ·
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NEW 1995 DODGE
INTREPID

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.,

NEW 1995 DODGE
STRATUS ES

said John Daughe rty, wildlife man·
ageme nt supervisor in the Divisipn
of Wildl ife's norlh west O hio dislricl
office in Fi nqlay.
.
June ". lh e pea k m o ~lh wh e n
baby wood1 es balc h m Ohto. Wtthm
24 hours fo llowing their h~ tc h .. lhe
chtck:s htllhe water for lhe f~rsl 11me.
These newly hatched woodies wi ll
resemb le adults al e1ght wee ks of
age and la ke I heir firs I nigh Is 60
da ys following Iheir halch.

Prices

Slatt At
$1,850

BAQWICIL

V6, automatic, air, power windows and ocks, tilt wheel . •
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GM Car or Truck or Save Big $$ on A Clean,
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I994 Ford Ranger ......,.. 19999
1994 CHEVY
1994 OLDS CIERA
I 984 Olds Delta ............. 12995
s9,49.9
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1985 Buickle5abre, ....... 1349S
_ _ _.._:__ _ _-+----!...----1 1984 Ford LTD................1249S
993 Bonneville SSL.. s1 6995
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VB, loaded .

1991 Olds Delta 88 ........14995

2973 P iedmont Rd .. Huntlngt.:on (304) 429 ·47 88 • ._.......,

Wil dli fe now mai nlai ns more ·1han · ~2:s::::~;::::::::-:iM
=o=n;.·;;F=rl~.9~:;30S·=5==Sa;t~.9=:~30;_.:·~2;;:::-:5:::;:~;;:::~;;, 1
5,000 of these artificial nes1mg cavi- ~
ties o n p rivale and publ ic lands
throughoul Ohio.
O n the nearby Kil ldeer Plains
Wi ldlife Area. for example, 1hcre are
The
220 wood duck nesl boxes in place
whic h provide an e~cellenl e nviron- .
menl for wood ducks. Today, lhe
wood duck is the mosl numerous
nesting waterfowl species in Ohio.
In northwest Ohio, lhe Division
'• of Wildlife says 42 percent of ils
wood duck nest boxes erected on
See
private land and 62 percen1 of lhose
Jerry Bibbee
on public la nds were ulilized by
Marvin Keebaugh
wood ducks. Both utilizalion rates
Doc Hayman
4 dt. - Frost White, Charcoal
are above t he Mississippi Flyway
average of 38 percent.
.
JUit~MmuaOrt.-.s~nist&gt;tUp cloth interior power cruise door
At. 7 Nooth Thru '1\optoe,. PWnt
'
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"That's an excellent utilization
locks, tilt, AM/FM, Only 25,000
4294.5 Sta te Rt. 7
rate for what basically is corn and
·...--'lllytitarrcountry.
·
·Coolville; O hio 4572J..-; ··-tniles;"\'eryi31cayr,weitcared
we fi nd utilization rates are at or
614 667-3350
for 'automobile...
slight ly above the Flyway average,"

years old.
•
"Eve n if Ihey don" I lake up a nest
sile Ibis spring, il"s nol imponanl ,""
she said. '"11 is imporlan l thai lhey
survived the winte r and can now •
bond and nexl year or lhe year afler :
gel il alllogelher.
•
" If Ihey don "t mate Ihis seaso n
and survive the wi nter, I suspect
· we'l l sec lhem b.ac k," s he said.
'"They are fatthfu l lo a nesl sile. "

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1995 OLDSMOBILE
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lulely su re (it's from Birmi ngham).'"
sa id Janie Fink, a .raplor specia l is I
from Aub urn who helped wilh the
loca l re lease and is moni10ri ng the
two birds.
" If yo u cou ld look al him in a
scope, he's really a speclacularly
bea uliful peregrine. righl oul of Ihe
tex tbooks, " she added.
Biologisls now are wailing 10 see
if Ihe bi rds will male. somcl hing
F ink said usually does nol occur

HOLIDAY POOLS, INC.

Bibbee

,.

or three yea rs old, so 1'-rrl no t abso- unti l pe regrines are at least tWo :

.DO·N TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Wood du cks. are lhe mosl nuincro us lhr o ugho ul Ihe eas lern lwo-'
thirds of Ohio and often seen on lhe
Ki ll deer Pl ains Wildlife Area.
They a re we ll adapl ed lo forcs l
wetlands, es pecia ll y swa mps.
Conlinued. effor ls to res lore Ohio's
we tla nd s and main la in this" apa rl ·
. me n I commu nily fo r wood du cks
has helped increase wa lerfow l numbe rs in Ohio.

1994 Pontiac Grand Am SE

'

altracl pe reg rin es. Onc e lh e lwo
were spo tte d , bi olog is ts wen t to
work idenli·fying lhcm .
On e wa s id c n lified by painl
. markings on· ils wi ngs as Freedom, a
fem a le rel eased lasl s umm e r in
Evansville. Numbers on a leg band
helpe d idenli fy lhe male, wh ic h
reporledl y was released lasl year in
Alabama.
" He's sporting qu ite a bil of adult
pluma ge for a year-o ld bi rd : He
looks like a bird lhal might be lwo

Ohio's wood duck population t!XCeeding I
regional averages, DOW officials claim

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Indiana cilies - Evans ville, Fori
Way ne, Ind ia na po li s 1and So uth
Bend. ·
·
Appro xi malely 10 to 12 of the
Indiana peregrines have died , bul
lhc s tate has had so me succ e ss,
Caslrale sa id. Las l mo nlh . a peregrine pair nesling in Indianapo li s
hatc hed four babies. The adults were
re lease d 10 Wi s'co nsill a nd
Ke n lucky.
Bio logisls pl aced a nes l box on
t he roo f o f lh e S umm il Squ a re
bu ild ing in November, hopin g lo

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$1 1000 Cash Bac k 1992 Cad. Broughamva,...~siB 999
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rebi.ltes to de~l41r
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Pomeroy•

PageCI•

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Sunday, May 21, 1985

• Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

~Farnlfllusiness

•

1492,

(

Therapy program e_xpanded

the Sea.
ln1995, , '·
Don
ood
.
•s Conquering ColumbUs.
Conqu~red

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GALUPOLIS - Donna Parireau, MSW, LSW, a resi~nt of
Jackson County, bas joined die 111ft Ill Woodla!!d Cenlm. Inc. 'Sbe
rea:ived ber uncbJ111dua!e dcgm: Ia soda!"work from Ohio University and a Maslen Degm: from Ohio SJa!e University:
Ms. Pariseau ~ in tbe aeaanent of children and families. Sbe bas experience, having worked wilh foster and adoptive
children and families.

Champion earnings up

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HUNTINGTON - Champion Industries, Inc., announced lhat
earnings fix- the seoond quarter inc:reased by 14 percent over second
quarter 1994 figures, rising to $800,000. Earnings one year ago
wer~ $7~1,000. Champion's earnings have exceeded a year ago
1
gs m every quarter since tbe company went public in January,

00
The board of directors of Cbampioo bas declared tbe company's
regular quarterly dividend of S cents per share. The dividl:nd, voled
at its May 15 monthly meeting, wiU be paid on June 23, 1995, to
sbarebolders of record as ofJune 2, 1995.
.·

Cash dividend of$.06 declared
was $21,2()()
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$15,995

Air ~onditioning
Power Drivers Sea!
Cruise Control
16" Alloy Wheels
I

now

POMEROY - Articles of. inccrporation have been filed with lhe
office of Secretary of State Bob Taft by lhe Community Cab Company. Inc . Pomeroy . Robert Barton of 190 Mulberry Ave .,
Pomeroy, is both ·lhe incorporator and agent.

Don Wood has the largest selection of
Toyota Trucks in Southeast Ohio.

Workshops scheduled
was$18,995

s16A99

' 1 ~ lcltcl i,lltrlh Cl

now

$ .

$19,995

'y)

·1m ,Jt,t krLL·I

·

'li1

from

.

()Jd,tt!Oh:k

CutJ,t,, :-.u

.

IW 2491monlhfor24
.

lll'llll'

now

$17,995

IIOidlS'

Loaded with
Leather IHterior

was$20A20
h lltl H

·~~::;

)(l

XLT
now

$

S.OL VB Engine
Automatic wl Overdrive
Air Conditioning

'

was $23,705

$16,899

9r

249

'y) hml \\' iltcb t,tr CL

now

.

I monlh for 24 lhOitdiS'

. 3.8L V6 Engine
Automatic Transmission
w/ Overdrive
7 Passenger Seating
Air Conditioning
Cruise Controlfrilt Wheel
AM/FM/Casseue
And Much More

And

:Closed end lease. $500 down plvs f1rs1 moqth, seaJrity depos11, and Ia~ . Based on1 2,00.0
miles per year Opllon to purcnnse at teaso end ot $1 3,068 eo TOtal payments ol $6·,373.68

I''": I I ill

Com ersion Va n
•
•
•
•

1 .

$299 I month fa{ 24 11101td IS' .

was $18,940
'95

~lerc ur\'

Cougar XR7

now

.

s16A95

$
.
.
l8L V6 Engine
IW
I monlh fix' 24 no td IS'
Automalic Transmission
wl Overdrive
Power Windows and Door Locks
Cruise Controlfrilt Wheel
&gt; L--416Cast Aluminum Wheels
Power Driver's Seat
Rear Window Defrost

299

V8 Engine
AutomaJiC Transmission .
Cast Aluminum Wheels
Starcraft C'nr&gt;ve"&lt;inn

Large selection conversion vans.to choose
from! See us soon for the best selection!

'Closed end toase. $750 aown ptus lirst month. socu uty depos11. and tax 'Basec! on 12 ooo
mrles per year Opllan to purchase atlee.se end ol $1 1 174 60 Total payment s of

$

now

• 4.0L V6 Engine
• Automatit Transmission
.wl Overdrive
Air Conditioning ..
Power Windows and Doors
• Cast Aluminum Wheels
Cruise Comrolffih Wheel
All Terrain Tires

1W

$7.~8 80

24,799
I

'95 C\IC ~.liMI
Co11rersio11 Va 11

only

$18,995
-

$399 I month for 24 ~

- -

,

'ClOsed end lease ssoo down plus 11rs1 month, security depos11. and tal Based on 12 000 m1tes
per year Opt!Ofllo purchase jlt lease end 01 $18 612 75 .. Total paymenls ol S10,198 80

'

cent Soccodato, vice preAidelltal
Biltmore Jeep Eagle Chrysler
Plymoulh in Rye, N.Y., an alllueot New York: suburb. His deal~bip is surrounded by Lexus.
lnfiniti. Mitsubisbi and Acura
dealers wbo emplo)I-")JJO!e'tban
200 people, be said.
"You're IIOl putting Japanese
people out of work. You're
putting Americans OUI Of
work," be said. "The net result
is bad, jus! from !be point of
view of unemployment, fewer
dealerships."

--

TICKER:
Dow Corning COrp. sought·
bankruptcy protection to insulate itself from rising breastimplant liability lawsuit claims..
.BeliSoutb Corp., one of lhe
nation's largest regional phone
companies, said it would trim at
least 9,000 jObs, doubling a previously announced reduction
plan ... mM sliced tbe pay of top
secretaries as much as a
third.

---Business briefs---. WILMINGTON. Del. (AP) DuPont Co. announced plans to sell
its medical products businesses to
help pay for !be April buyback of
its shares from,Seagram Co.
The four businesses that wiD be
sold have combined annual sales of

about $1 billion and six U.S. manu·
factorin g sites, the company said
Friday. The medical products businesses were chosen because con·
solidation .is underway in the health
care induslty.

Phlegar named new Gavin plant manager
CHESHIRE - Recent manage·
ment changes bave been made at
Obio Power Co.'s Gavin plant,
company officials announced.

Duane T. Phlegar was named
plant manager and Wayne T. Irons
will assume tbe assistant pl ant
manager's position.

Pblegar, who bad been assistant
plarit manager for about a year, bas
been employed by several Ameri·
can Electric Power System opera!·
ing companies.
He joined Obio Power in 1972
as a performance engineer at lhe
former Wpodcock Plant, and later
took assignments at Gavin,
Appalachian Power Co.'s Moun·
taineer Plant and Indiana Michigan
Power Co.'s Rockport Plant He became assistant manager of the
Amos Plant operated by Appalacbi·
an Power in 1986.
·
Phlegat earned a badelor's
degree in mechanical eng ineering
from Ohio Northern University in
1972 and a master's degree in busi·
ness administration from Murray
. State University in 1986. He also
participated in the PJ!P Manage·
ment Development Progra m ·at
• Ohio State' University.

He is a licensed professional
engineer in Obio and is a member
of the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers.
lr01is joined Ohio Power in 1978 ·
as a performance engineer at !be
Mitchell Plant He earned several
promotions there and became oper·
allons superintendent in 1987. · ·
Irons then served a one-year
assignment as an operations coordi·
· nator in the Mechanical Engineer·
mg Department of AEP Service
Corp .• Columbus , before being
named operations supenntendent at
Obio Po~e~·s Tidd PFDC (pressor•zed flUld•zed bed combustion}
oemonstration plant in 1989.
The Cumberland, Md ., native
received a bachelor's degree in
elec trical engineering from West
Virginia University in 1977 and a
master's degree in business administration from Wheeling Jesuit Col·
lege in 1989.

By MARK E. SMI11I
available, your different alternatives
My income level exempts me and their w consequences. Since the
from being able to~~ a contribu- decision to be made can lrernendously
' 9~ l'o !l tl &lt;ll Cr.tlld :\ \ 1
tion 10 my inllMdll,al retirement ac- impact yourfmancial future, you must
count {IRA) carefully rae! the informalion proWAYNR L. IRONS
DUANE T. PHLEGAR
from my wes. vided and understand it fully. Seeking
Automatic Transmission
Are IRAs slill a !be assistance of ao invesunent prow/ Overdrive
good tpveSI- fessional can help.
Air Conditioning ·
ment fr« me?
Basicallytherearetwothingsyou
Cruise Control and Tilt Wheel
IRAs are can do regarding your lump sum dis.
'
Delay Wipers
-~;;;;;.;;,""7-!1! - -·displayed, discussed and dcmon- cides are restricted, Ulus requiring a the Ohio Agricultural Statistical
an excellent tribulion. You may ask for a check ByHALKNEEN
private pesticide applicator's Service says that all responses are
AM/FM/Cassette
way to save f~W However if you receive cash for the
POMEROY - April showers slrated.
\
On June 8. .the annual Southern license . Without the license, local confidential.
ABS
r e 1ire m en t. distribution, tbe IRS requires voilr decided to become May floodwaLocal
enumerators
will be conDriver's Side Airbag
Even though employer to withhold 20% of the ters. Both farmers and homeowners Ohio Hay and Pasture Day wm be chemical dealers can lose their pestacting
farmers
for
this
nationwide
ticide dealer's license if they sell
will be weeks recovering from laSt . held from 2-9 p.m. at the
many individuals like yourself can- alnount as part of your income w
survey
of
American
agriculture,
restricted chemicals to you.
not currendy take an IRA tax deduc- due on !be money.·Ioaddilion. a 10% week' s .downpours and flood OARDC's Jackson County Farm
A private pesticide license is first by' mail, then by telephone
located
at
the
intersection
of.
State
tion, these retirement savings plans early withdrawal jlCnally may apply~ waters.
Wooden structures should have Route 93 and Standpipe Road, just obtained by passing a series of spe· interview. The data collected is
are still aaractive for their taX-deto make reliable state. region·
·Your second choice is to roll several weeks of drying before sou th of Jackson . For further.infor· cially designed tests given by the ·used
ferred compounding feature.
at
and
national estimates of crop
Ohio
Department
of
Agriculture.
repairs are made. Be careful when mat ion please stop by or call ,the
Late on April S. the House of your lwnp sum directly to an IRA feeding flood-damaged grain and local extension office.
Tbe tests cover the effects of cbem· acreage, grain stock s an&lt;! hog
Representatives passed H.R. 1215, Rollover account and not pay any
. icals on lhe environment, proper inve.ntories.
Nitrogen application
bay to farm animals. ·
!be Conuact with .\merica Tax Relief taXes until you withdraw the money
Producers th emscl.vcs rely on
Hank Bartholomew. OSU safety measures, bow to read -a
Important meetings
'Y:'i C,Jddi,1L ,,,,Lill lll'\'dk
the
data to reach valid production.
Al:l of 199S; The House Ways and at retiroolent
chemical
label.
knowledge
of
pests
Forage crop fanners and graze&lt;s Southern Ohio grazing coordinator,
marketing
and investmenl deci·
'J'I 11.~ 1 .In"'"
only
and
diseases.
and
state/federal
laws
Means Commit!CC approved the
Unfortunately. about 70% of plan to attend the following two suggests the application of 30 to 50
sions.
Members
of Congress and
and
regulations
affecting
pesticide
measure
Man:h
14
and
at
!be
time
of.
Previous Owner Loyally
people receiving lump sum distribu·
important meetings in lhe next few pounds of nilrogen to trazed pas·
regulators
use
the
information to
this writing, no further details were lions do not roll them over to an IRA weeks.
Power Reclining Seats
turcs right after the spring flush and application.
discount of an exira $1000.
provide
better
reg
ulations
and farm
Local
county
lraining
sessions
Special Leather Seating
aVIilable.
May's Southeast Ohio Grazing reproductive stage of cool .season
accounL By not putting aside this
programs.
This bill includes lbe American money for their future, they IIDl only
Chrome Wheels ·
Council meeting at lhe John and grasses are over. Normally ·this are given In lhe late fall and early
Industry analysts . extension
Dream
Savings
accounts
{ADS
acWood Trim on instrument Panel
lose a large ponion or the money · Mary Ellen Wozny Farm at 24025 occurs in late June or early July. winter months. If you need a pri· agents , farm organizations and
counts) which would replace present-. available !0 them, but they are reducBrister Road in Coolville. Tbe This additional nitrogen application vate pesticide license before then. agricultural lenders need the infor·
and Door Trim '
Woznys raise a Murray Grey herd can boost summer forage produc · please call our extension office at
law nondeductible IRAs. Contribu- ing their chances for a fmancially
• Gold Ornamentation ·
mation for ·a variety of reasons .
992-6696 for further infonnation .
lionstoanADSaccount. which would secure retirement and losing out on .and use various forms of controlled tion.
• Theft Deterrent System
. (Hal Kneen is the agricultural
Agriculture survey ,
Planning· to apply post-emergent
grazing. Plan to look at their 1994
be nondeduclible, would be in addi- an opportunity to accumulate funds
extension
agent for Meigs CounThe USDA Survey of American
tion to conuibulioos made to a de- taxdeferred-which experts agree is planting of "switcbgrass," a sum· herbicides rather than pre-emergent Agriculture will begin in the first ty.)
.
mer forage grass. Fencing equip· herbicides due to wet ground conducu'bleiRA under present-law rules. the best WilY !0 save for retirement
ment and watering systems will be ditions? Remember many herbi- half of June: James E: Ramey with
Qualified disuibulioos from an ADS
account would not be included in
If there is a possibility you may
taxable income.
work: for aoolher employer someday
The muimum annual contribu- !bat offers a similar retirement savPHILADELPHIA (AP) - With
tion !bat oould be made to an ADS ingsplan,youmaywanttokeepyour
'94 LinL'oln Ttl\\ 11 Ctr
fraud investigators closing in, a
account would be lhe lesser of $2,000 regular RA and your Rollover ERA
foundation lhat once promised to
or lhe individual's compensation for SCJnlliiC. Thatway.youpreserveyour
double the money of charities and
!be year, and $4,000 for married ability to roll your distribution (your
philanthropists agreed to liquidate.r
couples !bat have at least $4,000 in . Rollover IRA) into a new company
its
assets and begin settling up with
combined annual compensation. The plan at a later date.
its
creditors:
· bill also would permit deductible IRA
U.S . Bankruptcy Judge Bruce
contributions of up to $2,000 10 be
An_y n?R·~ assets tbata:epru:t
Fox
agreed Friday to change lhe
made fiW each Spouse.
.
?fthe distnbuhon can be put direcUy
bankruptcy
status of lhe FoundaMeanwhile, why not talk with mto an R~ Rollover. account. For
tion for New Era Philanthropy
yclUI' f!IU!I!Cial adviser now 10 find out example. tf Y?U .rece• ve s~es of
from Chapter II to Chapter 7. That
how IRAs fit into your retirement youremploy~ sstockxgudon t~ve ·means the death of the suburban
1ans1 ·
to sell them m order to put the~ mto
Philadelphia foundation, which
P
an IRA Rollover.
An extra $1000 loyalty discount for
owes millions of dollars to ·some
Since tbe rules and regulations 300 creditors, including universi·
current lincoln owners.
I am being laid offtrom work at governing retirement plans are com- ties. museums and some of !he
nation· s most sophisticated
lite end of tbis month What is lhe plex and can freqlHlRUy change~ you
best strlltegy ror lavesUng the lump should alw~ys discuss the situation investors.
'·
sum distribution I'D receive trom with experienced invesbDentand tax
my employer's retirement plan?
professionals. Your w adviser can
N~W YORK (AP) ~ Two
·
·
. explain !be latest IRS regulations~- giant Japanese banks !bat plan to
Since money in retirement sav- garding lump sum dlstribulions and merge next year will combine tbcir
CAQILLA C,
ings
plans
isearmarkcci for retirement, !be taX inferences of your choices. Just Cal ifomia subsidiaries. creating the
~TOYOTA 'f !:'9!£11~ ....... ''r' ...........................
it is granted certain taX advantNes by 88 important, however, is seeking lhe state's fourth-largest bank.
!be IRS. However. if lhe money is assiS·Mft•• of 30 expen"enced re~
Bank of Tokyo and Mitsubisbi .
out
pn·or
to
age
S9
112
spec'
!i.e
Bank,
will form lhc world's
1
1
,.....,
•
ment planning ~ressionaJ,
someone · largestwhich
NEW BUSINESS OPENS -Cheryl &amp; Co., a
!a lily feeling as they visit our business," Ms •
..,.~
bank wben they merge in
tllllnuniflcationsresulLCon""'""'nt!y
new
family
balr
salon,
Is
now
open
for
bu.•lness
Sanders said. Grlllld opentng·and opening hOWJe
.
....,....,•
who
is
trained
specifically
Ia
cvaluatApril
1996,
will
consolidato
Bank
BUICK'
specials will be the weekend .of May 15"17
it is wise to review all your opuons ing tbe current alternatives, who can of California - a wholly owned at 600 Third Avenue In Gallipolis. Jeff and
before making a decision about what
· · and
Cheryl
Sanders
of
Gallipolis
own
and
man~ge
Refre~bments will be se.rved, and door prlz~
do with a lump sum distribution assessyouruniq~-Sl~on,
sug· ~ubsidiary of ~itsubisbi Bank_tbe
new
salon.
Tbe
recently
renovakd
buildmg
•
The public Is invited. Sale, hours are
------~ -·~- -~·· · --- -. ...,...,_;,.,.,.-+JI'-'~--ii;;;;; 1n~liremenrplan:-. gest ways .to mmumze taxes while . mto San Franc1sco-based Umon at the corner or Cedar and Thlr.il,.is-de~orai$1!;L.~~~--- awanled.
Mcimlaythtmigb- Saturday, 9-lhm.-$-p-m.,--anct------- ·
~·- · mutmmngmunr. · :- · --- "
B,1gl\.. 72 percenroWITed by !lank
evenings by appointment. Tlie phone n~mbf,r Is
Youremployerisrequiredbytbe
ofTokyo. Thej!Ction was expected, witb a nostalgic tpuch, emphasizing some of !be
building's
origltiallnterlor.
''We're
hoping
to
.
446-1131. Staff members besides Sanden are
IRS to prvvide you with a wriuen
Mark· Smltb Is IISSoclate vice but the b.anks did no! f?rmally
give
back
to
the
community
a
hometown
bosplSusan Asb and Betb (Sandy) WIUlams. .
noclce stating Jbe amount of money president, Advest,.Inc. .
announce the plans unul Fnday.
'All Prices after rebate .

s13A95

Floods curtail farming

operatio~s

in area

$29,995

Discover the Difference.
'

Athens

step was ~sary as a way of
demonslrating U.S. resolve to
shrink tbe $66 billion trade
deficit wilh Japan .. Aulo lrade
aa:ounts for J110St of lhat imbal· ·
ance. .
The 100 percent tariffs don't
take effect until June 28, when
lhey'll be applied tetroactively
. to importS that arrive after Saturday. Tbat leaves plepty of
time for a resolution.
·
Publicly, Japanese automak·
ers expressed optimism. Richard
Thomas. the general manager of
Honda's Acura division. told the
Autoolotive Press Association in
Detroit Friday· that be believes
"fairness will prevail."
Nonetheless. tbe quick esca·
lation of the longstanding Japan·
U.S. acriminony took tbe U.S.automotive induslty by surprise.
Even car dealers not directly
affected by tbe dispute
expressed anxiety about what's
next.
.
"It's going to create qpite an
economic problem," said Yin-

Business briefs

was $26 975 ' ·
'95 Ford Explnrer XLT

MARIEITA ·The Marietta College Small Business Development Center will be offering workshops next monlh for people
interested in sllirting their own business.
0~ June 7 and June 21, Patrick Amrine will be conducting a
start a business workshop. This workshop will provide a general
overview of what potential enlrepreneurs should cbnsider when
staning a business. Eacb of these seosions will be followed by a
business plan preparation workshop. These will be held Jun.e 14 and
June 28, Pamela Lankford will conduct these sessions.
. Each seminar will bc .on a 'Wednesday from 3 · 5 p.m. at !be
SBDC offices at 213 Fourth Street. For more information 0£ to reg·
isler,
contact !be SBDC at (614) 3764832
or 1-800789-SBDC.
.
'

scale unemployment from !be
doubled price of the targeted 13
AP Business Writer
car
models. A $64,000 Acura or
NEW YORK - This got
$100,000
Lexus is unsellable,
ugly flist.
they
said.
When lhe Ointon adminislra·
domestic ·
· Moreover,
tion slapped 100 percent wes
won't
necessarily
automakers
on Japanese luxury import cars
enjoy a sales boom. Dealers of
Ibis past week, ll)e move was
Cadillacs and Uocolns reasoned
seen as a bluff to get Japan to
lhat
impon buyers would switch
quit procecting its domesuc auto
to
German
brands instead. In a
lllliJtel fnm imports.
f
urtber
ironic
twist, lhe Ameri·
Many American automotive
can
makers
of
pans tbal go into
workers who perceive tbe
tbe
targeted
Japanese
models
Japanese as unfair adversaries
..
could
be
burt
if
sales
drop.
liked ·what Clinton did. They
Trade-law experts said !be
saw it as ao overdue action lhat
sanctions could quickly expand
would cow lhe most important.
· into other areas lhat have nothU .5. ttading partner into capituing to do with cars. Tbe
lation an&lt;! give Delroit- a more
Japanese .might decide to buy
equitable place in Japan's showAustralian wheal, Brazilian
rooms and auto-parts warehousoranges
or Canadian lumber; .
es.
wbicb would burt American
Something else happened.
suppliers.
The Japanese didn't back down.
In one sign .of an escalation
They rushed to unload bun·
coming
only a few days after the
· dreds of Lexuses, lnfinitis,
sanctions
were announced, East·
Acuras, Mitsubishis and Mazdas
man
Kodak
accused rival Fuji
at U.S. seapons before a SaturPhoto
Film
of squelching its
day deadllae. They vowed to sue
ability
to
compete
fairly in
tbe United States at the new
Japan's
photo-film
mark~L
World Trade. Organization. ·
''I find it bard to see any pos·
They'.re likely to win because
itives,"
said Julius Katz, a for·
technically lhe U.S. sanctions
mer
deputy
U.S. trade rcpresen·
are illegal under global trade
tative
in
Wasliington.
"The
law.
·
1
sanctions
this
week
were
a
very
In Ibis counlfY, luxury import
serious
mistake.''
car dealers predicted bankrupt·_
Clinton aides argued lhat the
cy, horrendous losses and large-

Br lUCK GLADSTONE

now only

'Closed end lease. $500 down plus l1rsl month, securrty deposit, and tax. Based on 12.'(00
mites per year. Optron to purchase at tease end of $15 ,882 35 Total payments 01 $7,648 80.

$20,995

now

.

$19999

IW

was $29,550 · .
'SJ-t

Sunday, May 21,1195

seen· as bluff;
Japanese fail to .back down

Timely·answers about
retirement planning

'Closed end Ieese, ~1 ,000 down plus lirsl month secunty depoSit , and ta)( BasOO on 12.000
lfllhn per year Oplioo to purchase·at lease end ot 511 .547 BO Total payments of $6.373 68

I

NEWARK • The Board of DirecJors of National Gas and Oil Co.
deelared on May 18 a cash dividend of $.06 per share on tbe common stock, payable June 26to sl1atebolders of recotd on June 12.
This is the 971h consecutive quarterly cash dividend issued by
National. The matter of dividends, bolh cash and stock, are carefully reviewed by lhe directors at eacb meeting of lhe board of directors. All shareholders should understand lhe directors may adjust
dividends to reflect lhe earnings capaeity and cash requirements of
the Company.

Incorporation articles filed

was$19,910

•

lOL V6 Engine
Autoinalic w/ Ove'rdrive
Air cl:onditioning
Power Windows, Door
Locks and Drivers
Cruise Control
and Tilt Wheel
AM/FM Cassette

"' l:tto\ k I ,·,,;l't''

6-way Power Seats .
Remote Keyless Entry
Power Mirrors
Electric Remote Mirrors
Cruise Control
AM/FM/Cassette
' • Power Windows and
Door Locks

ABS

"Closed enr1111ase. $500 down plus 11rs1 month, securrty ctepo!Lil , and 1a11. · Based on 12,000
mikls pel" year Opt1011 to purct\ase at lease end of $13,356. Total payments of 58,923.68

Section D

-Business briefs___, Clinton's-move

Columbus

I

1times--mtmel

.

.

.

•

DON WOOD

@

AUTOMOTIVE~ INC.
East State Street, Athens, Ohio ·

593':01;641~ ~-~~~--:-

·-L··

' Sale Ends Saturday, May 27!
..

.

•

'·

•

•
•

•

�or

PageD2·.- '••-....-~ nuJ

Pom~~Y • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

- -·The House of the Week-:----------...:......._ _ _ _ __

Country Home Is Filled With Elegance

Sunday, May 21, 1 .

Terror fears prompt Clinton to block White House street

Restoring an
old foundation

."

By BRUCE NA'IBAN
. AP New If ntwes
By POPULAR MECHANICS
mortar in a V;Joint to e~poae ~
The ennd facade of this coun- "''' '''' ··
For
AP
Sptdal
Fnturea
edges
of the brick looks~·.
try home is defined by brick fac..
Wbe.n
restoring
an
old
founda·
··
The
unevennesll of tbe JOIIIIS ~
ing, triple dormers, elepnt raillion,
a
standard
monar
starting
mix
a
ru~bl~
or s~ wall. ma1ccs th!S
ings and a covered front pi&gt;rch
for resiOI'alion wolt is 1 part port· repamung proJect a i!it harder. A
with colwrma and round-top winland cement. 2 to 4 parts lime and 8 general rule of ~b JS to ~w as
dows.
to 12 parts sand.
much of the buildmg matenal (to
A long entry hall leads to the
You may have io do some Ibis case the s~ne) as you can.
central living areas of Plan F-49,
experimenting with lbe differenl
_Keep the IDIK as dry as possible,
kinds of sand available locally dner than you W!JUld for. brick.
by HomeStyle• Deaignera
before you choose what's best. It's You'll need a vanety of different
Network, Which features 3,568 ·
OK
to mix. differentlcinds of sand size pointing 100ls O!l band to 1}11
square feet of living npace.
to
try
10 get lbe consistency of the the differ~nt slz~ j~mts, and w11l
SymmetricallY placed on either
mortar
as close to tbe original as find yourself sw1tcbmg constanUy
side of the entry hall, the living
possible.
Keep the mix relatively between them. These are conunonroom and dining room are bright·
dry
it's
easier to wodc wilb and · ly available at masonry supply
ened by a pair of round-top winyou'll
get
less
splatterlns.
bouses.
,.
dows.
Try to be as neat as possible,
The final step In this job 's
The family room, ~hich is
be~ause Ibis will reduce the time asing and cleaning the results of all
straight ahead from the front
spent on cleaning lbe surface w~en your bard labor. This must be_doQe
entr-y, connects the otherwise
you are done.
. a day or two after your repa1111iRg
separate fonnal areas. An 18-foot
When it comes to tinting agents, is complele. Don't wait aoy longC{.
ceiling crowns this expansive
iron oxides are lbe best way to go. since you must do Ibis while t1!_e
casual space; while two sets of
the faalde of
oountry home, which include• triple dormers, ornate rail- Tb~ se oxides · are available at monar is still soft and hasn't comFrench doorS flank its fireplace
IUld a covered front porch with arched windows.
masonry supply outlets. The tint .is pletely cured.
-:
anywhere from one-half to 2 perFirst, wei the wall down thorand lead to a covered porch and
cent of lbe vohmJe Of the mix. 1
ougbly - really saturate it. Then
adjoining backyard deck. A wet bath has an arched window, a 12foot
sloped
cei!inB
and
a
stei&gt;'UP
Start
wilb
about
one-eigblb
tea·
apply
a weak solution of muriatlc
bar is located en route from the
spoon
as
a
base,
and
work.
your
actd
to
tbe new spots you've JX)ilitquarter-circle
Jacuzzi
tub
ur.der
a
family room to an open kitchen.
way-up
from
lbere.
Make
four
samed.
Generally,
you'll end up wilb:a
columned
pergola.
Highlights in the kitchen
pies
and
let
lbem
sit
four
or
five
solution
that
is 4- 5- or 6 parJs
On
the
upper
floor,
a'
long,
balinclude an Lrshaped island cookdays
(lbe
mortar
will
lighten
up
water
to
1-part
muriallc acid. {The ·
top and a breakfast nook that is cony hall overlooks the family
considerably
over
time)
and
see
acid
is
sold
in
a sl&gt;lution fonn to
bathed in sunlight. The island room and leads to three goodmake
it
safer
to
use. Therefore, die
which
one
comes
closest
to
tbe
has a snack bar that allows easy · sized bedrooms and two full
original
color.
Then,
try
80ing
a
lit·
solution
you
create
for cleaning
service to the breakfast area and baths. Two bedrooms have pritie above and a little below this your masonry work Is .dependent
the n~by dining room. Aiound vate bath access. A game room at
mix, to give you two. more shades on lbe strenglb of the acid solutidn
the corner., a porte cochere is the top of the stairs may be used
to choose from. ·
you buy.)
·
convenient for unloading gro- as a guest room, a nursery or a
Out of lbe lbree, one should be
There's an easy way to arrive lit
close enough so lbat your repaint- the right mix. Add a little acid 10 ·a
ceries on rainy days, and a back home studio.
ing blends in with tbe rest &lt;Jf lbe bucket or water and drop in a pieCe
entry hall leads to the utility
(For a more detailed, scoled plan
walL
.
of tbe new mortar. If it doesn't
room, the garage and the open- of this house, i11cludill,f guides to
The
basics
of
repainting
bold
foam, add a lillie more acid. The
; railed stairway to the upper floor. estimating costs a11d finaNciNg,
true
for
any
foundation
wolk.
Firsl,
minute
the mortar foams, you'ye
On the other side of the family· send $4 to House of the Week,
lbe
joint
must
be
cleaned
out
10
a
attained
a chemical reaction
room, the secluded master suite P. 0. Bo:r 1562, New York, N.Y.
deplb about lbree times lbe widlb between lbe lime and lbe acid, and
features dual' walk-in closets and 10116-1562. Be sure to i11clude
of lbe joint. So, if you're working lbe mix is ready.
:
a suMy sitting area The private the number of the platt.J
on a one-half-inch-wide joint, cut it
Just brush it on the wall with a
back to 1 1/2-inches.
soft or natural bristle brush. Don\1
Various sized cold chisels and leave it on for more lban a minute
sliff wire brushes are gOod cleani.ng oi' two. FoUow Ibis with a tboroug)l
.. tools ..Be sure to brush away alllbe rinsing wilb a bose.
·
esign F49 has a long entry
and a game room, three full
mortar
before
adding
your
new
·
Tackle
patches
of
only
10
to
15
hall, living room, dining
baths and one half bath, totaling 1-'~lf_....
mortar.
square feet at a time. No matter
room, faptily room, kitchen and
3,568 square feet of living space.
Keep lbe joint moist and layer in bow good you are, you're bound to
breakfast nook, a utiliiy room
An attached three-car garage has
lbe new material - don' t try to fill slop a bit of lbe monar on the fa~
and back entry, four bedrooms
space provided for extra storage.
it all at once. On interior walls or of lbe brick ot stone.
any areas below grade, it's OK 10
But if you kept lbe mortar mi x
fill
the
joint
nush
wilb
the
wall
surdry,
it sbouldn'l require lots of
ARCHED WINDOWS Illuminate the living room, which hao been
face.
On
exposed
areas,
shaping
lbe
elbow
grease or a strong acid sohr·
converted to a home office or formal den in thio_·home. ·
·
·
·
tion
10
remove the mortar stains.
l
~ ~.

.... .. -

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....,....,.,. __ I

Investing in a condo or co-op·

F-49

•

"""""" .
23' " 32"

I

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II

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.......,.am
II' K Zf

~t- ========-=-...,...wiiil...__~ F-49

Automobile insurance without the car

FROM WE front porch, the eniJy hall flow8 Into the heMt of the
home. The front-oriented fonnal living and dining rooms are
thougbllully removed from the rest of the home, while the central
famJty ·room Rowa to aU the home' s living areas. A sunny, open
kitchen olrers an L-ohaped Island cooktop and an adjoining break·
fast area. The master suite Is privately located and feature• a poah
piden bath with a ' 12-l'oot oloped ceiling.,

I

To Order Study Plan

Full study plan information on this house is available Jn a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Sell It, Ranch Homes, 24 of the mosl popular from this
feature; Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common
problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Send check or money order payable to the AssQlliated Press and this
label to: House ofthe Week, The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,
New Yorll, N.Y, 10116-1562.
.
Clip this order and rerum label

EnclOsed Ia S41or plan No.-------~----.,-EnclOsed Ia $4.95 each lor the bookllit(s). _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Nam•·--~------------------~-----------City_

State (ZIP)·- - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

(

I
''

By Bruce Wil~ams
things is going on here. Ei1be r
Our son moved to an urban area something was lost in rour telling
where cars are more of a nuisance of Ibis saga or your son s insurance
than an asset. He then sold his car agent wasn't paying attention and
and called tbe insurance agem to dispensed ~me very poor advice.
cancel bis automobile insurance.
What tile agent may have sugThe agenl said lbat if he canceled, gested is that your son get what is
his rate would shoot up lbe next called a non-owners policy. This
time he applied for insurance. The would give him liability Insurance
agent suggested thai our son con- on any automobile be used, such as
ti nue his policy, usin8 our address a rental car or a friend's car.
to insure a car be no longer owned.
Obviously, he cannot use your
He went on to say that if our son address, since he does not live.
drove a car owned by someone there. He also cann·ot insure· an
who bad no insurance, be would automobile lbat be doesn't own. As
bave a bi8 problem. Whal do you to lbe raise in rates, I don't think
lbink?- N.P., Des Moines, Iowa · ib'at is true, but I have no 'solid eviDEAR N.P.: I think one of two

..'.

'.
should consult an estate planner a$'
soon as ·possible 1o learn bow to'
DEAR BRUCE: I have CO's in trans fer Ibis wealth with minimal
my name, payable at my dealb to tax effects.
"
my children. Does this mean lbey
(Se nd you r q uestions to: :
have to pay inheritance tax?. If so, Sma r t Mo ney, P.O. Box 50 3~:
is there a different way to leave Elrers, FL 34680. Questions o~·
what I have to my childre n general interest will be •'!Sw~r~ ·
another kind of investment per- in future columns. Owing to t.h..,·
haps?- M.M., Endora, Kan.
volume of mall, personal replla :
..
DEAR M.M.: Unless your estate cannot be provided.)
exceeds $600,000, there will be no
Bruce Williams Is syndkatect•
::
federal estate income lax. In the writer ror NEA.
(For lnrormi.Uon on how tO:.
event that it does, tbe funds you
mentioned .will be counted as part communicate el~lronlcally with::
of your estate.
this columnist and others, contac("
If you do have a substantial . America Online by calling 1·800-o"
:
estale (exceeding $600,000), you 827-6364, ext. 8317.)
dence to the contrary.

.

-----::----Questions &amp; answers -----_.... .
'·'·

By PqPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
Q: We had a IJ!'W church built
two years ago, and we slut don't
have a concrete basement Door In
it. The basement walls are always
damp. Sometimes lbere are
beads of water and mildew on
them. There Is ako a real musty
smell lit times. I don't think we
have water coming from the oUt·
side. I think we have a serious
~weatfng problem. What do you
think?
'
-~ _.A!Jt.§.Q_u~ds .!i~.!.IE'. of mois,;
tur~ IS cnlenng lbe baSCmt!l'rt from
lbe dirt floor. If your church can!1ot
afford 10 cover lbe dirt floor wilb a
concrete slab, iben It sbould at least
cover the floor with 6-millimetcr

both pro and con on this subject.
polyethylene sheets.
Even when the dirt floor feels What's your opinion?
A: Driveway sealants are a condry to the touch, . a considerable
amouitt of water still evaporates troversial topic in many areas of
into the atmosphere of lbe .base- the country, primarily because lbey
menl because of lbe capillary rise are often used by traveling bunco
of ground moisture. According to arlists to bilk unsuspecting bornethe Small Homes Council at lbe owners out of lbousands of dollars.
University of !Uinois, lbe soil under In many cases, a sealer simply isn't
a 1,000-square-foot bouse can needed, no mauer bow clever or.
release as much as 18 gallons of persuasive the sales pitch.
But mass hysteria aside, drivewater per day lbrough evaporalion.
· Even witb a concrete slab or way sealants do se..Vc a purpose in
vapor barrier covering thi: floor some situations. They are often
area, it may be necessary to use a . required when riew concrete is
..dchumjdifier.,to- bell" control the poure&lt;t in.lale illtlnm·Ih--ln..4bis
instance, a sealant keeps water
amount ofmoiswre.
Q: I han a concrete driveway from entering lbe slab and poppin8
and I'm confused as to whether f tbe surface witb tbe .first deep
need to use a sealer. I've heard (reeze.

a:

Ironically, the more years
driveway goes without a scalan(, :
the less it is likely to need one. Th~.:
reason is lbat nonnal surface krime •
from dirt, car !ires and, yes. oil' :
spills help seal tbe concrete. I~ :
yours is a re!Jttively new drive, or It' :
you've nouced unusual surface ·•
degradaiion, then a sealant is p~ :
ably in order. Tbat is especially, ;
true if your diive bas a rough sur::.:
face lbat bas been finisbed wilb a• •

broom.

·

.: '

.....

To submit a question, write 1¢·
"'
• Pqmlar .Y~ani_q, )?.ewler.&amp;m~~·
Bureau, 224 W. 57th St. NewoYork, N.Y. 10019. The most ,lnter- ..;
esting questions will be answered=
in a fulllre column.

·

·

lied.
Taken together, they are
designed to combat not .~~the
lbreal of a car bomb but
such as lbe 1994 crash o a
plane orito t!Je White J-!ouse
or tb~ gunJII'e lbat twice hit th
mansion !ast fall._ .
.
fficial
A ~ruor admmJ!'II'liUt 0 1 .:
speak!ng on condition anonyuu
ty, srod ~at even before the bombing Apnl 19 In Oklahoma, top .
Treasury official~ bad become co~.vinced that closmg Pennsylvama
Avenue was necessary.
.
" If you bad an~ reserva.tions,
then Oklahoma City look them
away," the official added.
"Closing Pennsylvania Avenue
to motor 'vehicles is a practical step
to protect against lbe kind of attack
we saw in Oklahoma City, but I
won't allow the peoples' access to
the White House and lbeir president to be curtailed," Clinton said.
Clinton was briefed on the recommendations earlier this week.
His initial reluctance to close tbe
street gave way to concern aboul

f SO:
laW:

°

·
N
BOAR
D
8 ULL ETI

Get an average size room and
hall, cleaned $34.95; Two rooms
&amp; Hall $49:95: Five Rooms
$99.95 Call Captain Steamer
Carpet Cleaner (304) 675-1304
Expires 5/31 /95
""'""· by

decorated designs of your choice
for your cakes . Wedding,
Anniversary, Birthday, Graduation
Candy..made to order for special
occasions and everyday. Mints
for wedding , graduation, parties.
New to area ·chocolate .
wedding cake toppers.
D.J 's Crafts Shop
2390·Jackson Pike Gallipolis

HOME HEALTH
CARE
\

By
READER •s
DIGEST stores, good schools and easy financial background, especially if unit, any condilions and restrictions ·
BOOKS
access to public transportation pro- the umts are new. Consult your on your rights as an owner and the
)'or AP Special Features
·&lt;eelS your invesunent.
local consumer affairs office to association's election. For a co-op,
For many homeowners, the cozy
- Carefully inspec~ your unit, learn. wbelb~r lber~ ar~ any out- . you receive a copy of the ssune
cottage of lbeir dreams has been lbe enure compl~x an~ ~~ common stand!ng chums agamst lbe owner lease 8iven to all tenants. IJ
replaced by a condominium or co- and manages tbe butldmg. The &gt;or budder.
.
declares rights .and duties as a
num,ber of shares depends on your
- Check .lbe price of recently shareholder and lbe powers of lbe
operative apanment.
Condos and co-ops are units in uniL s SIZe. Monlbly ~rontenanc e purchased uniiS atlbe county office board.
an apartment building or a town · c~arges, based on sbar;s. are a por- of tbe recorder o~ deeds. ~f the
- FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE
bouse complex. Neig b bo~s share t10n of the bmldmg s ~o ngag e value of the unlls IS not nsmg as STATEMENT for the past three
enJrances, elevators. grmirids, park- charges, laxes and m~mte nanc e fast as olber local· real estate, you years tells you in dollars and cents
ing, recrealional facilities and other costs. Tbc board of duectors may want to reconsider buymg. bow well lbe complex is run, and
eolnmon areas.
shareholders elected by owners to Documents
1
wbelber lbere is a reserve fund for
Wben ·you buy a condo, you m~ tjle co-op - \approves sales of
. Before signing on the dotted emergencies and lar8e rep:iirs. I( ·
receive a deed and own tbe un it umts and sets .ana enforces bylaws line, read and have your lawyer also tells you lbe accuracy of lbe
that you live in. With uther resi- and rules 10 ·operate the building. describ es physical details buyer monlbly char8eS and possible need ·
·:
dents, you are a co-ow ner of the Before you can sell your shares, the and seller. cost·and down payment, for special assessments.
BYLAWS
AND
RULE
S.
common areas and pay a monthly areas .. If yo u· suspec t stru ctur al monthly fees, taxes and closing
mamtenance fee for theu u~keep. pro blems, hire an engi ne·e r to date. For a co-op, it also states the delails rules governing lbe board' ·
Residents elect an assocJatton to inspec1the premises.
niHDber of shares bou8hl. It should and tenants and defines unaccept:;
make rules and regulauons. But m
- Talk t&lt;il olber owners about also provide fo r re turn of your able behavior and remedies.
MANAGEMENT
AGREE-'
general you are. free to sell your llle complex, its managemenl and down payment if rejected by the
condo w!~out mterference fro':" problems such as noise, traffic and co-op board. Consult your lawyer MENT explains the cost of operat•.
· ing lbe complex. It is often accomlbe assoctation as you would a pn- security. If lbe developer bas built
for olber provisions as well .
panied by lbe service employees:
·
or owns other complexes, talk to
p k 11
·
d
vate house.
Wb~n you buy a co-op, you 8el the owners in lbose developments ~e~~ lb~e~~~e;~stocumeg tf' contract wh1cb tells bow much
shares m lbe corporauon that owns as well. If lbere is a bigb turnover
required:
cornm n Y employees malce. when they are
buyer must be appro~ed by the of residenls or many units rented
-DECLARATION OF CON- due for a raise or a new contract ...;:
. board. What ~oLook For
by lbelr owners, lbe building may
DOMINIUM (or PROSPECTUS al l of which affecf$ your maiute,
•·
- Bef~re mvestm~ m a co~do
nol be well run.
for new condos) slates the physical nance charges. .
PURCHASE
AND
SALES'
or co-op, _mvestigaie •ts _locauon.
- Read the .prospectus careful - exrent of lbe complex and plans for
An auracuve area witli convement
ly. Check lbe owner's or builder's
its management, llle value of each CONTRACT for a condo or co-oP, ,

·

By NANCY BENAC
It was really JUSt a quesuon of
Aaoc.illted Pnu Writer
.
whether it was going to close
WASHINGTON - One IIIOIIth before we bad an explosion or after
after terrorism seared America's we bad an explosion~ - and I'm
, coasciousne&amp;s in Oklahoma City, lbankful lbat it's been done this
~tCHntanrelU&lt;;t811UYC~ way," be said. · .
,, tbe 'W!Uie House section of l'ena·
Passers~y and tounsts wandered
,..sylviiiWI Avenue to cars and trucks about cunously, many sadly In
.:satu~day because. of mountioa agrc~ment that an avenue wblc~
.~ty coocems.
. . . · re~ned ope~ lb_rougb four pr~&lt;
, It was a starlc and \J•squ1euna dential assassmauons and !lluluple
.acknowledgment that even on wars sbould now be closed.
·:America's Main Street. people are
. "I· guess we have to accept it
. "vulnerable to the forces of OJ1a· because of the change in society,"
llized destruction from within and said Phyllis Quarterson, of Tulsa,
,:' beyondourborders," Clinton said. Okla. She bad come by to see the
::. The street that only a day earlier dogwood tree the Clintans planted
.·.~arried an estimated 26,000 cars on lbe White House lawn in memo".P.ast lbe White House was eerily ry of the Oklabo!D8 City bombing
' quiet. At daybreak, workers victims.
"stacked concrele barriers three deep
Closiqg off Pennsylvania
.at each end of two blocks, then Avenue lo traffic was only the•most
··tried to soften the image wiib con- visible of 11 recommendations
··Crete flower pots.
Clinton adopted to improve securi1
Tlllffic behind lbe White House ty precautions around ~e Wbite
"
~was blocked off as well.
House. Others are des1gned to
• Secret Service Director Eljay restrict air traffic, beltcr coordinate
··Bowron said it was inevillble lbat · lawenforcementwolkandimprove
'lhe.avenue.would be closed.
· communicalion . Six were classi...

D

···:--r

Pomeroy • Mlddl~port • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

.Sunday, May 21,1996

Medicaid/Medicare
approved, disability
approved &amp; passport
approved·

Nite crawlers 99e doz.
Meal worms 30 at 59¢ ·
Minnows: Crappie 69e doz.
.Sass 99¢ doz., shiners $2.50 doz.
Crawford's Groc~ry. Henderson. WV
BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
·Engineer............. ,.......... $49.00
Wellington ...................... $49 .00
Loggers ......................... $50-55
Harness ........................ $59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
.Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

ACRYLIC NAILS $35.'00
REG . $45.00
Special for month of May at
Micheal &amp; Friends
1056 Jackson Pike
446-0698
ni
Association
BPHS
NGHS
1995 Banquet, May 27 at Buckeye
Hills Career Center.
Doors open. at 5:00
Dinner at 6:30. $9.00 per plate .
Reservations due by May 23.
8PHS: Donna Cottrell Broyles, 85
Locusl St.Gallipolis, OH 45631,
44?.'2071 NGHS: Diana Gillman
McCarley, McCarley Rd. Vinton.
388-8319

For all your Video Needs
Transfers, Video Taping etc.
Call VIDEO TRAN S FERS
446-6939 or 441 -1370

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

SPRING SAVINGS

SR-22
Cancelled/ Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

In most cases the care we
provide to you or y!lur loved
ones can be provided at no
cost to you. Also Hiring
CNA's, HHA's &amp; PCA's EOE
614-446-3808 Potential
Clients May Call
1 -800-759-5383

SERTA MATIRESS $59.00
$1 9.95
BED FRAMES
$99.00
RECLINERS
$49.95
4 Drawe r Ch esl
4/pc. Bedroom Suite . $499.00
'FLAIR FURNITURE
675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

P hone (614)446-6111

Brunicardi Music Inc.
330 Second Ave. Gallipolis
New shipment of
beautiful Kimball P ianos
S ave now during our
Spring Sale .
5 Year Financing Availa bl(o)

. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, well
maintained, Green School,
Buy direct from owner,
Save$
$55,900, 614-446-8158

Mercerville/Hannan Traqe
Alumni years 1925 thru 1992
May 27 , 1995
Hannan Trace School
Reservations call (614) 446-7379
Katie Mull ins. Sec.· Treas

AIRPORT
OPEN HOUSE
PANCAKE BREAKFAST
9 AM - 11 AM
SUNDAY, MAY21, 1995
"WATCH AIRCRAFT
COMPLETE"
SPOT-LANDING CO NT EST
Wina ride in world War II .
Trainer. Stearman· Rides and
Airplane Rides ALL DAY.
Lun ch available ater 11 :00 a .m.

a

Me igs Alumni
Association
1995 Re u n ion and
Dance. Saturd ay, May
27, t995
Meigs Hig h School Gym
Doors o pe n at 7: 0 0p.m.
Da nce fro m
9:0 0 pm to 1 :00 am
$ 5 pe r p erso n

Full Gospel Business
Men's Fellowship
Mo nth ly Di nner Banquet
Ma y 2 6 at 6:30 p .m.
C. H. Mc Kenzie Building
by Fairgrou-nds
Reservations: 446-7154
or 446-0538
Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
All Makes
Smith Buick-Pontiac Gallipolis
446-2282
Moving Sale
2nd Street Syracuse Denise
Reitmire Home Interior, furniture,·
baby clothes. Litlle Tyke toys, ·
kn ick knack. Sun. May 21st thru
Sat. May 27th

Now Open For The Season
Bedding Plants, Vegetable
Plants, Hanging Baskets,
4 in. Geraniums, Shrubs &amp;
Trees, Rose Bushes,
Strawberry Plants
HUBBA RDS·
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse 992-5 776
Open Daily 9 am - 5 pm
Sunday 12 noon · 5 pm

Call 446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE... __INFORMATION
_,_........... -·--,:,_JA_.
-~-----.,.,..,..

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
. everyone!
AUTOH IO Insurance
Gallipolis

All American Sound Systems
For all your entertainment needs
Deorah &amp; Pete Peck (Owner)
Karaoke &amp; D.J -Private parties.
Employee Parties. School Dances
(6 14) 245·9696

It's Bar-B-Que Time!
Grain Fed Custom
Beefs
446-2109
For Sale
Coca-Cola 600
Tickets
May 28
Must buy tickets &amp;
· Hospitality Pases
both Call 949-2707 ·
after 6 p.m.·

the effect a car bomb could have
..
.
the
'den and the
not Just on bu pres~ t ri ts"
1
0
8~!~rnmJ:'wb·~
~oo!
';::e ~fi
1

v:: ~~
c Cl' ·

'

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d tb

secuJ~ 10.::e:~=~~ni~\is :e~:~

radio ~dress but assured AmeJ.
cans lbat tbey could still visitlbe
White House_ and even protest
outside it
"It should be ·
a
bl
'ty te seen as
to 51
e secun s P necessary pre•
serve our freedom. not Dati of a

respon ·-

IOGJ-tcrm restriction of our freec~om,• • be laid
Clllitoa msiSied that for his part,
" I will be ev~ bit as active and in
touch with ordiDary Americans as 1
have been since 1 took ollice "
lbebeigbtened security~ 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue is part of a
worldwide trend in which many
governments are erecting more bar·
ricades to vehicle traffic to protect
against car bombs, administraiion
officials said
•
·

1be coocrelt barrieR that went
up around tbe White House are
seen as a short-term solutioa that
eventually will 8ive way to some
son of more ai:slbetically pleasing
pedestrian mall
Tbe Nationilt Capital Planning
Commission was given 90 days to
develop recommendations on a
design for the pedestrian mall and
the best ways to reroute traff" in a
city that already ·bas its share of
traffic lligbunares
·

Ale w c·111.
I Jl Chl•et Wl·nnl·ng praise
,.

.

IV'

•

J rt

·
WASHINGTON (AP) -In his
first week as America's ne-w spy
boss, John Deutch delivered on a
promise to sbake1 up the CIA, WC?"
kudos from b1s
overseers 10
congress, confessed to a "secret
desire" and compared himself to
Van Go8b,
'
Artistic flare aside, Deutch
wasted no time making an impres·
sionatlbeCIA
I
Cban8e in lbe intelii8ence business is far from over, and lbere's
plenty of time and opportunity for
things to go sour, but. for now
Deutch is 8etling credit for sketch·
ing a new beginning that could
restore some of._tbe CIA's lost Ius-

.
·
R-Texas, chairman o( the House
Jntel~gence Coounittee..
.
Combest is a fum believer m the
need for a central intelligence orga.nization, bul be and many others on
Capitol Hill have worried that lbe
Clinton administration cared too
little about 'the CIA to get It bacjc.
on its feet
After the flameout of R. James
Woolsey, who resigned as CIA
director in January, ·lbe disastrous
Aldrich Ames spy scandal and ailegations of other CIA bun8lin8 .
Deutch' s firSt turns of the tiller are
. drawin8 an usual amoun( of atteo·
tion.
In a small sign lbat things may·
be different under Deutch, be took
I
~_•'At Ibis point cenainly it seems lbe unusual step of not only hold·
that everylbing is on the right ing a "1own meeting" with
track," said Rep. Larry Combest, employees at CIA beadquaners on

·
,
his first day on lbe job. but be even
released a Jranscript afterwa_td . .
Then on Monday be JD~lled
reponers to bis office to explain an
initial round of new mana8ement
hires - moves lbat produced more
change at the upper reacbes of the
CIA' s b~ucracy ~ ever b31&gt;'
pened dunng Woolsey s two-year
tenure. . .
.
.
Dav1d Wbtpple, .a reured c:'A
officer who beads lbe Assocl3llon
of Former Intelligence Officers,
said Deutch has many more difficult decisions ahead but may have
lbe kind of clout and cbaracler to
pull off a successful CIA Jransformation.
" He is in a position to be much
.more commanding lban any d'IreC·
tor before bim," Whipple said.

'Motor voter' law registers two million
WASHINGTON (AP) - Nearly 2 million Americans have registered to vole since the "motor
voter"' law, easing registra,lion,
took effect almost five monlbs ago,
Attorney. General Janet Reno said
Friday.
''The law promised to open lbe
doors to the democratic process,
and now it is delivering on lbat
AnnouncemeRts
SHOOTING MATCH

American legion Farm
Bailey Run Rd.
1 till ? May 21
12 Gauge
card of Thanks
The
Nolan wishes to thank
everyo ne wh o sent
!lowers, food, cards and
e•pressed condolences
or wh o he lped in
anyway in the recent
eath of El ea nor
.(McBride) Nolan.
Special than ks to
Cremeens Fune ral
Cha pel, Allred Holley,

promise,'' Reno said in a statement
marking the second anniversary of
President Clinton's signing of lbe
National Voter Registration Act.
In lbe fu:st lbree months of this
year, Alabama registered 42,900
people compared with only 23.000
duting lbe same period last year,
Reno said . Georgia registered
181 ,000 in January-March com-

Exhumations sought

Card of Thanks

Thanks
The many people that
don ated pies and
supplies. The many
people that gave their
time to help. The
wonderful people that
came to our Mother's
Day Chicken and Rib
Barbecue dinner at the
Tuppers Plains Fire
House. II was a great
success . The 50-50
drawing was won by
Marcia Guess.
Terry Deem
President
Tuppers Plains Fire
Dept. P.O. Box 158
Tuppers Plains, Oh
45783

and the comm unities of

Bidwell, Harrisburg, and
Co ra.
Yo ur ki nd
expression of sympathy
an d friendship wi ll
al.ways remain in our
memories. Thank yo u
fo r your thoughtfulness.
The McBride
i
The Nolan
Card of Thanks
The family wishes
to express o ur
heartfelt thanks to
friends, ' neighbo rs,
and the lpving
commumty who were
so ki nd during the
illness and death of
our beloved wife,
sister, and aunt ,
Vytice M. Sellers.
All the cards, calls,
visits, flowers. food.
and prayers were a
source of comfort
and love which
meant so much and
helped us all through
.this sad time .
S.pecial thanks gb
out to the Racine
Emergency Squad ,
our fnends at the
Senior
Citizens
Center of Meigs
County, Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehab
Center, Bruce Fisher
and Associates, the
Long
Bottom
Community Center,
and . Rev . Aaron
Young and the Fi rst
Baptis t Church of
Ra c1ne who were
the re to ease our
troubles.
Words can never
express
th·e
appreciation and love
we feel lor all the
persons who have
touched our lives 1\iith
their kindness.
Sincerely,
.
GeGrge. Sellers &amp; The
Pullins Family

Card of Thanks

~==:::=====,
Many Ihanks to everyone
for Ihc prayers. OowerSl
gel
well
cards,
maicrial.
inspiraiional
visits, telephone call s and

every

other

ki ndness'

shown during my Slay in
Veterans

Memoria.!

Hospiial and EXIcndcd
Care.

· Spe cial

Ihanks

Admim strator.

I.o

SetHI

Lucas, Or. Villanueva, Dr.

Drila, Dr. Mansfield, Ihc
nurse's,

and

pared with onl y 85,000 in all of
1994.
"The law is working because it
makes sense," Reno said. " The act
asks states to prov ide registration
fo rms at motor vehicle offices , ·
hand them \lUI at other social agencies and let people register through
the mail. It is one-stop shopping government made easy."'

other

emp loyees . I received

splendid care . May God
eve r bless each of you .

Lula ll amp10n

SPRINGFIELD (AP) - Investigators probing suspicious dealbs that occurred at a hospital a decade ago
want to exhume lbe bodies of up to six more patients
during the next few weeks.
A panel of five medical specialists concluded that a
muscle relaxant called Pavulon might have caused nine
dea ths at Spri ngfield's Community Hospital. Clark
Cqunty Prosecutor Stephen Scbtimakcr.said Friday.
Pavulon can kill or paralyze if administered incorrectly.
One of the paneliSts told tbe Dayton Daily News for
a story published Saturday that be thinks foul play was
'
involved.
" Personally, yes, I do believe someone was killing
patienls willl Pav ulon:·· said·the panelist, wbooi lbe
newspaper did not identify.
Schumaker said the panel recommended the exhuma·
tions after reviewing the cbans of 43 patients who died
at the hospital. 'lne pariel voted unanimously to recommend nine exhumations. But investigators have delayed
making ariYdccisio11 in three of the cases. he said.
SchiHDakcr wou ld not identify ibc six patients or say
when the bodies might be exh\IIDed. He said all of the
1bo&lt;dies arc buried in Ohio.
" We. want to try to get it dOne as soon as possible, .
proper notice 10 family members," said Ted
, n •m4J, chief of the special investigations division of
Dureau of Criminal Identification and lnvesti-

Police issue citations
GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis City Police arresred and
Mitchell L. Adams, 36, Island View Motel, II 00
1'.-:---·-Ave.;Gallipolis, late Friday on a charge of assault
Ciled by police Friday were Angela S. Barcus. 20.
154 Kelton Road. Gallipolis, no child restraint; Mqnna
J. Miller, 37, 33 16 State Route 218, Gallipolis, expired
operator's license; Kenneth R. Hunter, 375 Texas Road,
Gallipolis. no operator's license; J;unes M. Deaver, 19,
265 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, no seatbelt; and
Acee E. Rowley, 21. 39048 Sumner Road, Pomeroy,
driving under suspension.
Public Notice

Card of Thanks
The family of Rev.
Flore nce L. Smith
would li k.e lo . extend
our special thank y()u
for a ll "th e prayers,
love,
kindness·,
flowers, food, cards,
visits a nd if we were
in your thoughts,
thank-you.
A. special thank you
to Rev. Ken Baker,
Rev. S. Hausman,
Rev. ·Bob Robinson,
Rev. K. Rader, Rev.
Waugh and Rev.
R.Grace, Snowville
Church,
&amp; Pearl
Chapel Church.
The pallbearers,
Racine E.M.S., home
nurses, nurses of
Holzer Hospilal 4th
noor Easl, Chemo &amp;
Radiation Dept.
Last but not least,
wonderful Wood
&amp; Philip
Upton for
the
beautiful music.
This thank you
mt from
the
bottom of our· hearls
Mnd means more tha·n
words can say. God
I"'·'"''"': ''-...,•" .. &amp; every
one or you,

Public Notice

111 1,1 2 W~ Second Street ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report Form Pomeroy. Ohio 457 69 ,
990 PF ror the Kibble during regu lar business
Foundation Bernard V. hours for a period of 180 ·
Fultz, Trustee, is available day~
s~bsequent
to
foi" public inspection at publication o! this notice .
Bernard V. Fultz Law Office,· (5) 17, 18, 19, 21 , 22,23

PersonalS
AU. NEW DATELINEI1000'1 ot .

MEN ANO WOMEN on cor-·

baM ·INiilbll m mae~ a date
you lllri~t Col-t 1·800-2:26Q.4.4..4 X~ . lt .D&amp;nWt. 18+ B' 213~.·

Experf•nc• the ultlmat• In new
age dertnQ, 1-aoo-s2s-8000 en

8121!. u.-..; 1&amp;.,

Ur&gt;11ar Co.,

I!Q2.Q54.743l.

Fat Bumora: C.l8 t~sa

30 Amouncements
ADOPTION : A declaf0n of~l ove
tor rour baby. Wa know h can
work. We can pr001lde you with
J&gt;NCO ol mllld, ,._hg thot ""''
bobr wtl bo to...,, -lcaVJegal
tXpeft... paid. ANM call Ul at

CUt• Mind Puppy, Appro• . 7
Months Old, Good Wit'! Chiklr«~.
Nteda Room TD Runl 814·448·

..... 1.
Eight klttena to good home, r.,.
bobtai~ 1614) IIQ2-2218.
.
Free to Qood home. hamatera &amp;
lab rnce. 304-117S.1oee.

Full blooded Coillt, mal•. neutered., to home In counlry. 3046JS. 11 03 or 3Jlo.ll7&amp;-6620.
0no j9lir old cal gnoy ond
whit• . IIUtr tr.lned, good with
&lt;Nidron, (6 t 4) 118S •'lOQ,

60

Lost and Found .

our home. HIOO-B!G-0302.

40

Giveaway

2 female 6mo old kllte:na, nHd

,.,,,.., -

-304-&amp;7S-2S87.

5 Killen • • Mal• And. Female, e
'Waatu Old, long Hair. Grly I
WhiiO,

0317.

To Cwing HolM. 814-«e-

F-

loot Saorrd.lr 'btomond Ring In
VlciniiY or
500 AM llor·

nFound l)lj24. ~~ot.

.

CoiJ 81....,. .

Loat: Blac:ll I Whlrt Melt Cat
Mudaoc:k Area, Chlld1 ~1. ~.. •
wonll814-378-2552.

�·-

I

..

•
f!.1i'L0Vr.H

110

:n

'

' GaiUpolls

'

~~~&amp;~V":':tc~tn~hy~·,..,.,.,.,uo
AU Yat&lt;l 811ft Mull Be Paid li1
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

tM der before lht ad Ia ta run.

Sundly tell... • 2:00 p.m. Fridly.

Monday tdltion ·2:00p.m. Salur·

AVON ., buy or 1111, Marilyn, ft.
dopooodont ..... 1101 112·2645 .,
1«10.2 w

Help Wanted

Eltcirlc Mo10r Shop - · Full

.. LUMBER

11m1 Help. Uacr..ar. Elautcll,

~';!!~!!..,
-·~~-a

=·~-~~----,--1 Coroor 0PPGtlunldtl Available
Pomeroy,

Middleport

Help Wiillld

Wllh 14 lumllor Compon,, TM

~- OrloNocl- um.

&amp;Vlclnhy

IS IN GERMANY ·~=~
Coli 304-e7&amp;-IIS7 0t i;
31118.

Ont Ton Dtllvory Truck Exporl_ . Holplul, Send Rooumo To:
P.O. Bax 24•. OalllpoNI, OH

olfil:ll.

larvt M - 11o11 Drir* D1oo
lrlbulot f!illl ..... To Lac:oJ ......

t:J..'l:!l'?.

Cu•- otM
..........,.,
S

111t1

'a'n.ll ....... a Wr,
Forry, UIOIM, liDO dtpotiL

at

.,...,.._

fltoJ, Etlalo c.r-. Prolloalonal
lttinlng, ERA Town I Counuy
Ellllo, - · Bocldt Sllln.
311W7J.IIioll.

=. .

FINANCIAL

210

•23- ........

Prole1llonal TrH Service, ComBuck~t Truck
StMoo ·50 FL Roodt,
Romaval. Free Eatl,matlll In·
180 Wanted lb Do
.......... 24 Hr. ·e n..- Strv·
Itt -Coli And Sa\111 No Titio Too
Act Trot Strvttt. Compltlo 1roo Big Or Too SmoNI 81• 388 118-13,
•r•. 20yra. eap. &amp; fnaured, frH 114-3117-7010.
e1dmate1. 11•-••1· 1181 or t·
plete Tree Care,

-.o

..

Cora For 2 SChool Aged ChllcPn
8 A.M. ·8 P.M. During Summer,
Brtakfall • Lunch Furnlahed.
Chri1tlan Home. R1f1 fii!Cel. 114205-SOSI.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•

'll!llMS:

CASH..t

OlllCK. VISA Oil ,

.

'Emmy
Love 'Beck:J;
· '.frank_.ie

..,

Auctioneer: Lee Johnson
•

••

~0 Lots &amp; Acreage

AII:IOIIJit
XIOfD. 1HU:8ALD 4'Jit9

CONCESSIONS·AM VEl'S AUX

1

'

f-""'-.B;nR~A"-N"'D"'S"S"U'C""H:;-;--;A"S~
i 'M""A""K"'IT""A','So7ANBORN, SK, GOODYEAR

STACK-oN, STANLEY, COLEMAN, SKIL, ALLIED, OLYMPIA,
MIT,OIT,MILWAUKEE,&amp; MANVMOREI!
WOODWORKING EQUIPMENT
~ Reciprocol Saws · 9 CirculllT S.ws

I ·

~

[PLUS: MANY MORE ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST!!
AUCTIONEER'S NOTICE: All merobandioo wUI bO oil'mod at Sale. Mui:baodiec
subject to prior Nlos. Qutmit.ie8 m.y vary. Aud..iCIJINU"s Vert..l iostroot1011. r..b.
prooodonoe OYorprioled infOft!lllloo INSPiiCI'ION is lwo bows bofono ..Oe. VAUD
TAX CERTIFICATES MUST BE PRESENTED OR SALES TAX will be clJArsed- oo
exocplions. NOT lti'.SPONSIBJ-1: 1'01. ACCIDENTS!
JOHN D. THEOBALD AUCTION COMPANY
P.O. Box 129, Elkhorn, NE 68022
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1995
10:00 A.M.
Located at 2007 Marquette Ave. In Point Pleasant W.Va will be s~lllng
the estate of Beulah &amp; John McNeiL John was an auctioneer In the
area for many years.
FURNITURE
3 pc. large Cannon Ball B.R. suite, Link Taylor Colonial pine, 3 pc. Vicl. walnul
BR suote w/frutt pulls, oval marble top lable, square marble top table, outslanding
tall Rosewood poster bed, Rosewood oval table, Lyons &amp; Healy walnul pump
organ, oak Queen Ann Ladies Secretary, Cushman maple D.R. suite, fancy oak
. sodeboard. early lg. plank bottom bench stretcher base, 5 leg round oak table, hall
trae , fdncy oak -sewing machine, cedar chest, spi nning wheel, 2 drawer Sheraton
ntght stand. round oak table , oval walnut table, organ stool, oak chair, Benlwood
chatrs, wtc.ker sofa, wtcker chair, Fernery, child's wicker rocker, painted oak
flalwail, patnted oak kotchen cabonet, round fern stand, 8 drawer oak spice box.
round oak pedestal table, Highland house sofa, 2 matching high back occasional
chairs, coffee table, modern hall tree. shaker style rocker, pressback oak rocker,
walnut carney shelf, trunks, 2 drawer secretary base painted &amp; more.
GLASSWARE'!
, .
Lg . selection of glassware, carnival glass, pilcher &amp; bowl, compotes, stemware,
. cobalt Austria, church plates Peniel, Hickory Chapel, iron stone dishes and more.
TOYS
.
.
Old Joys, ball glove, bats. leather footballs, Mickey Mouse puppel, toy stove , old
battery operated bear.
STONEWARE
Marked stoneware George Gist Letart WV, #2 Hamilton &amp; Jones Penn .. jas
Hamilton Penn . 3 gal jug w/brush blue. several other jugs, crocks.
COLLECTIBLES
"
Lg. selection old comic books, Bonanza, G.L Combat. Donkey laie's and more,
great selecloon of old books, 7 vol. set of Land &amp; people, Zane Grey, Spiril of
Border, set of Scribner Radio music library piano &amp; others, early blue &amp; white
coverlet, several good early quills, fancy carved kitchen clock, ship clock, unusual
onyx &amp; cast t_ron·ship lamp, lamps, old Shay Beer &amp; Ale Adv. Buggy &amp; horse chalk
&amp; r.ubber, chona doll , Queen Ann jewelry case, blue &amp; white granite pan, blue &amp;
whote splatter coffee pot. very fancy Ansonia casl iron shelf clock , fancy irons, iron
pots, early store type hanging oil lamp iron w/milk glass font, ea~y hanging oil
lamp, old purses, excellent piclures &amp; frames, mirrors. double sludent lamp silver
plate i tems, lg. safe bank, J.E. Steven &amp; Co. 1897 small Kent safe bank mi~ . size
tea kettle, all lamps, coffee grinder, linens, dolies, buggy seat. early b~skets, old
saddle, wooden bucket, barrel churn, old fountain pens, coal hod wilh claw feel,
and more.
·
HOUSEHOLD
19": color ,remote TV, Kenmore dish washer, Litto.n microwave, Hot Point
refngerator, Gobson refrigerator, Magic Chef 20" electric range, Whirlpool upright
freezer, Whorlpool wa,sher &amp; dryer, some lools: wagon jack, table saw, shovels,
racks, lawn lurMure. ,
.
AUTOMOBILE
198t Buick LeSabre, vi'nyi fop, loaded, P.W., P.L .. A.C., stereo, 18,955 acl. miles. •
AUCTIONEER NOTE: An oulstandlng auction . Bring a lawn chair and spend the
day.
Auction conducted by :

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Mason, WV (304) 773·5785 or 773-5447
Lunch
__.....__·--·"-'- Auctioneers: Rick P~arson #66, Kevin Meadows #A-116
·
·- -· Administratar:'SanWel McNeil- · --·.. . , .
Terms: Cash or Ctie.ck wilh ID . Oul of state buyers must have a currenl
bank letter of credit unless known to Auction Co .
Not responsible for accidents or loss or property.
Licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia .

•

"'v PHONe RDI1lE
50 Local And EaJabllohtd Sl1to,

13 Atroa And Born &amp; Houao, 3
Btdroomo, t 112 Balhl, LR, &amp;
8t• ue 0835

-Dr.....,,

',

w.-.

-.o

Earn lt,600 Weeki,, Opan 24 GA~LIA COUNTY: Jull Eall Of
868 588.
. S•tt RL 117, 30 Mlnulol Souili 01
~..
=
•
Galllpolla, 358 Wooded Ae&gt;eo,
Uldmtlt Multi·ltvol Marketing Dl¥idod In 18-TI&amp;CII Ronglnll
Ptan. one ptDduct - gold and 11- From · 5 To 34 Acral Each, Afl
Mr aolnt paid weekly. 12DOO~ For Sale On land Canll'llc:t With
·teooo pooolblo, ground lloor op- 10~ Down And tO~ lnitrHI For
J1011Uni1Y, Call Motlc tt (61•) 11112- 10 Yearo, Some Of Tho Prlcu
7641.
Are: 25 Ac:rea, 11•,oaa, 34 Acr·
;_;,;.:;_--------1 eo, $t8,000, And 7.Actoo $S,GOO,
VENDING: Won1 Got Rich Ouldo. 814-775-1173.
WIR Gil A Steady, Caah Income, :_:..-..:.::.:..;_;;.=:-:-,..,..,.---:
PYicodTo SOli, 1 8QOoJ1204782.
GALLIA COUNTY: Juoo Eaol 01
Soatt RL 17, 30 Mlnuin Soulh 01
Galllpolio, 25 Wooded Acrea
OVerlooking Th• "Ohio Riwr,·
REAL E STAT E
$22,000, Only $2,000 Down And
1284.30 Per Month, 10 Yeara, 1Ltrl11-.
10% lnllt01\61+775-V173.
3.1
for Sale
Marthall Student Apanmentl,
We
Give
tO~ OiiOCDUIO For Caah now availatM, O.poalt required,
2-siDrr garage, belide New HaAll 10 Year Contracll Have funiolood. 31J&lt;H75-1713.
. ven Supermarket, .bonam floor And
A~ Yoar BaiiOO~
NiU 211odroom wid hookup, Rtf·
complelely "modeled, 2 bays;
.
(front bey 40':t28', rear bay
orencH. DtpoaiL No pttl. 110•·
32'&lt;23'), 100'x40' loo, $18,500. Mobile Home Lo! lo&lt; Rem, Eloc:trlc 875-51Y,
or Gao B14-3tiH438.
I:;;:.:;~------On• Hdroom apartmtnt 1n P1
3Homo, In Country For One and 11• acre with electric Pl•aant, hlml&amp;Md, dean 1 nice.
Sale By Owntt. Satolng On 3 Act- haok·up and watlt avlilablo, two no p.m, Phona 304-875-1388.
... Rural w..... Lottitd eo-. - buildings. S..dbul)' Rd., 1014)
Toln Rivtto T-. ,_ aocopdng
Plltriot And NGtthup, Prima Hunt- 992-&lt;!277.
applica1iont tor 1br. HUD aubaldIng, 1148,000, 81...:1711-2240.
REMOTE, botulllul, rldgo-IOp ized apt lor oldtrly and handl·
3 Btcl- 2 Btillo, ..... Pump, land; lhf•• mllea aoulh of Car- capped. EOH 304-675-8871.
· Gaa Furnace, 1 Acre, Garage. panler, Ohio, ML Union Rd. !Col· I;::::::;::.:;:;;,::.;..:;;:..:;:;.;:;.__
Adell,.. Area, $62,000, 8t•.:J67- umbia TR 14~ ; 7.145 acres. Furnl1hed Efficiency Shirt Bath.
$7060; s.o•7ICIOL 14542: loihet All Ulllitleo Paid, ft•51Mo, g11
7287.
parc:elt available). Owner fin~c- Second Avenue, G1llipoll'- 814·
Brick Rllnch, 3bedraom, 1 11 lng. coo for good map, 81•-5113· I =ue:..:3110::::&amp;._ _ _ _ _ __
21ootho, booomom, garage &amp; t3a· 8505
·
Uplltlto, 3 FIOQ;J;) Btlh (t em lind. 4n'ilol fnHn PI Ploooanl
(Ripiay Rd) Cal Sornot'liae Really Sc:enic Valley, ·Apple Grove, rggm), Furnished, Cktan, ~eler­
beautilul 2ac Jctl. public water, ence and Oepoall Required, No
3Q4.8JS.3030., 304-8JS.3-13t.
Clyde BcMonJr.,:IJ4-516-2338.
Ptt161H4&amp;-151g, .
Buy Thio New 2.000 Sq. FL Home
' Ver'/ clean one bedroo·m apartAnd Pay No Toes On It For The .
mem in Middleport, call et•-992Next 14 Years. 3 Bedrooms. 2
5304 Ot81H411-3W1.
Balho, 0Wn11 Financed To OUtlllitrl Bupt 814-446-21151.
Wedge Apartment•. 1 &amp; 2br., no
pets. 506 Burdette Screet. 304-·
0wntt 3 Bodroorn. Full Ba,.
875-2072 ahw 5pm.
maent Uadl~an Ave. W/Withoul
U1ra PI, 40 loL Roduco To Sale.
450
Furnished
814-3711-2lle8
All real estate advertising in
Rooms
Collage, norlh end Mt Vernon
this newspaper is subject to
Ave., Pt Pleasant $5D,500. 304Rooma lor rent - week or month.
the Federal Fair Housing Acl
175-2405.
SiBtdng at $ t 20/mo. Gallla HotII.
ol 1968 which makes It illegal
G14-446-8580,
to advertise ~any preference,
FlaUock Groce&lt;y·A good &amp; going
b&amp;fllneia, all atock, equipment, &amp;
limitation or discrimination
Sleeping rooma ·wtlh cooking .
rehi -oa. Coli Sornot'lillo Roalry
b8sed on race, color, religion,
Alao tralier apace on river. All
"'304-G75-3030 or 3Q4.8JS.3-131.
haok-upa. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
se)( tam_iiial sta1us or natiOnal
:IJ4-773-5851, Muon WY.
origin, or any Intention to
Houle lot oalo by owner. 1 room'
make
anv
such
preference,
2 full bath&amp;, Crab Creek Rd.,
MERCHANDISE
iimitalion or discrimination."
$3fi,VOO. 304-e75-585t.
...__ Col i -

WELCOME.'

TIJES.MAY13 6:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS, OH
'
Johnnie Jackson Am Vets Post *13
108 Liberty Ave.

IZM. 1«)0 ... '930.

l. ocol - n g Roult For Salt.
Ollflo Rnontltl Ff-m Oulcld~
Now Wan Snack a Soda Ma·
chlnoa. Call Now, 1-800-350• ..... VEND.

PUBUC. 1

.

:Happy
(jraiuation

SaM .Bamet wlle't Atmr Surplu'
ulld
. . _ . _ '""'"' clo.,.ng,
112-22te.
by Sandyville Paot Ollltt, noor&gt;
pryor, Rofrlgortlot, Air 8pm
Fr~S.un . (tnh·no chtcko).
t Bedroom, Kite..., Apjllltrictt Condldonor, Iller...... Colo! 904o2J3.5855.
.
T.'t,
814-258-1231.
FurnlahH. Nice locallon Far
Shopping &amp; Ento&lt;ltlnmenl 81•·
Satra -lo houot
lin wl
448-:2!157.
530
Antiques
oloulttt and IUIO - · 150 firm.
:10+4175-2802,
2 BR. Gaiago AloL Go - L No au, or Hll. Rlvorlno Antlqull,
1124
E.
Moln
Stroot,
011
Rt.
124,
Ptt1l UOO.oo Monlh. Dopotlt.
Staltwa)'
Elev•tors
And
Pomera)'. Hau11: U.T.W. 10:00 Wnaelchalr ISCOOttr llhl Far
eu •~e ?"» Ot 11.........em
o.m. ., 8:00 "'"'· S&amp;rtodoor UIO ., Carl, New And Ultd, Bowmana
2bdrm. apts .• IOtll ~Metric, ap- 8:00 p.m.I14-ID2-25111.
~814--7211
pllonon luml-. laundry raom
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
.......... .. - l n ....... 540 Mllc811aiiiOUI .
Appllc..ono lftiiUit tt YIIIIQt
Uprlgh~ Ron Evan1 EnltfpriiOL
Merchlnd._
a,_ Apm, Ml or col114-llfllJacklon, Ohio; I.IJ00.53H52tl
3711. EOH.
12 gauge double barrel model
311
StYagL 22 - I oloOI U Thr" piece mauve, ~~~en and
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Hlge aec:Uonal wllh
per In·
p111o1. 311W75-1!180.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
clner and ...,.,. ·ercellent conESTATES, 52 Woa-d Drlvo 10.000 BTU- air oonc1it1or&gt; dltlon.l850,1f1•)742 38!!? '
lrom f228 11 1201. 10 lloop ... 110't f250, 304-IJI2.21120.
Tlirtt prom cfro1111. t1zt 7, one
&amp; movln Coli 114-448·2681.
Equtllblllng Opporto,;oy.
2Twin Size Mattre11, eu-.we- woddlng - · long 11-1. lolgh
nec:1c, .._ bock, noodo hoop, hall
111108, 1.1J00.217-.0301.
Furniohtd AparUntn~ Utilllltl
ptltt. 814-V4g·248t or 8t•·387·
Paid, 1 lltdtoom. UpaJairo, soc. 2wocldlng-l¥01,2bri- g28tl,
ond Awnut, Gtllooolll, No Pall, maldl dre,n ea I • lace dre11.
Excellent Condtdon, 814·441- :10+4175-&lt;208.
g523,
TournomonL Puaoa good lor til
Air Condition11r, Waaher, Couch, prackl roundl, 10Urnament. plua
Furnlohtd Efllclonc, '"5/Mo. Table IChalra, Computer Tape,
Utllllloa Paid, Sharo Both, 807 &amp;otng RoOOtlltt, Tralltr, Goll lnonl portcing. · - :IO+e75-108A
Second, Gtlllpollo, 114-448-4418 Illig, 81+148 322&lt;1.
WNII'illoltiDIIIC10rl(qcJ
Ron Alliaon, t21D Second Ave-7P.Il
Apple lie Computer, Monitor, nue, Galllpollo, Ohio, 614-4•8·
Furnllhtd tftloncy, P1 PltaMn~ Poinltr, $200; Nordic Tra~ Pro 43311.
.
til u•ldoa Ptld. -ng. Dtp. reg. llodel Lilla 11oo1 814-3711-2218.
$2115. :JOol.87&amp;.7111:1.
.
WHfTFS METAL DETECTORS
Ba!i¥11od. doublt IUOIIot, owing, Ron Alioon, t 210 Scotond AwtG..tloue IMng. t ond a bldroom lolglo doolr, caraoa~ lingle otrallor. nuo; Galliopllo, Olio. 61~
apartnwnll •t Village Wanar and 311W75-05411.
43311.
Riverside A.JIIIr~tl In Middl•
port Ffom $232-1355. Coli 8t•·
882-68511. Equtl Houllng Oppor-

r-

I.EASIIIG SERVICE t-100-458-

330 Farms tor Sale

DEALilllS ·

'.
.

PUBLIC AUCTION

•·

OPBNTOnll!;

.,

EQUIPMENT LEASING, START

, jOitlolioJnlna-Hiah .......... To•l
Coat t1110. lb. l'wUr, IWIKER

MASTERCARD :

I

=lilt

'lOUR OWN BUSINESS. Com-

Roolkog. !lldlng,
- Lawn
• - Care,
Palnllng.
Complete
Pa-0'1 • Dttkl. Odd Jobo, Fttt Will Houl Wlltf, FKI SWJmmlntl
Eatlmoltl, Ouoranlotd WOr~l Paoli &amp; Mow Lowno, lt4-2&amp;e·
814-4o!H132, 814-441-tM
tg77 Aflll7 P.M.

\.'

- Buslneu
Opportunity

..-.

,,

IJOO.~.

MISCElLANEOUS: 30 Pipe Wrcocbcs • IOO's Alles · 18 Jumper Cubics
Hl" Cur bide Bl. • 8-115 'fc. Drill Bit Sets, tOO's Batte!)' Past Cl=rsIOO's Tow Ropes &amp; Simps· 100 Ratchet Straps- 17 Cross Slide Vices, 4" •
IOO's Rdls Elcctricol Tape· JOO's Ball Peiu Hammers- S!""f'CJliJls Stones

-nco.

8' . . . . Dd1t rt · t2IO lrm.

nl- tnrl • . . - . - . - " "

AvoUablt. Coli Ruoo llurdotlt, t ·
IQ0.25t-t!010•
---..:,:~.,;;.....:..;!....,__ 1 Now t8115 14x10, Inti~ Mitt·
INafiCEI
lng, tlepa. blocka. oneJ""'
OHIO VMaY PUIILIIHIIO co. homoownlfo lnou,.,.. a llx
_ reGIIInll•tl1 lhat rou do bull- rnMfla FREE kM: ,.._ Orlr .1021
'· - w i l l pooploJOII ..,_, ond - . .,..11207.17 pariliOtili. Col
1101' .. 1-80Q.I37-3238.
until ""' ..... ltwto 1od

._ c_..

....
'\

Saoond-.

-

Apa ......
torR.nt
1and2t 1MIIn r •••••·

~-:--:-=:--.;;.::;::;::I Mou
2,poymonll and monlnl
::
Now 14a70, 2 or :lbt. F.lnontlng dopa Ill -ltod, no .,.., 8 1•·

INDUSTRIAL SHOP EQUIP.
4 Cherry Pick= · 7 luck Siands
48 Wood Oti.,ol Scl3 • 7 Table Saws
Welding Hose· 3/4" Socket Scl3
' Vuricty of Drills· Wood-Lalhc Tool•
IOO's Wire Bushu ·Duct Tape
10 RDuters • 34 lolmsoo Levels
60 Bolt Cuucm- Parts Washers
Tape MetiSUres • 72 Squares
2 1/2 Ton Floor loeb- Tool Boxes
8 ·Top Ouu Cordless Drills
6 Engine Stands- 10 Omiu Hoist
IS Belt Sunders· IOO's Htunmers
14 Drill Presses (Ooor &amp; bench)
i8
Leather
Tool
Pouches
•
Saud Paper
89 Sofcty Goggles - Vice Grips
1
AIR/BODY EQUIPMENT
SHOP loX)UIPMENT
5 ·AIR COMPRESSORS SHP &amp;down Come-a,Longs- 29 Botdelncks
· hnpscl Socket Seta· 24 Air Chisels
IOO's DozeutHi Gloves· IOO's Files
' 43 Quick Coupler Sets • Die Grinders
IOO's Sledge Hammers ·. 53 Calipers
· t7 Air Cut-off Tools - 26Sond Bluters
IOO"s Socket Seta· IOO's Pliors
' 28 ·litter Bug Souders· 20 Air Drills
28 Tap &amp; Die Sets - Hacl&lt; Sows
40 Professional Sp-ay Guns • Air Hooc SOTQl'que Wrcucbes • Screwdrivers

'.

1114731 AFTER I P.M.

440

-ikon.

-.

- . - lid Lilt Clotlr, a14-

••

:J::'F'::.

::0:.

FAf1L1 SlJP~liF S
!'. l I .,1 f r; ff)(K

I'()IIW.JOBS

,.,.....,...-_,....,......,-,--,..,..-1

-Who!......,,

I 320 Moblll Hornn
tor S.le

Work IIOOJiii

112.. Mr. To 8llrl Pfua'Corritfo, Sorlono, .Cittkl, Mtln·
' -· Fo• An Appllcailona &amp;
Eaom Info. Call 1·100·111-1111
Eat S2. I lUI. 4 RM. 7 Otjl.

Farm Hand, Mull Have Exporlt:;"~=
Muot
Or Farm Eqodl t•C. Btrioul Cllandlao Our line 01 ""llenol Socrtlar' IRtcoptlonlll
Sicilia, ErolllliUIZ·
Advance. DHdllne: 1:OOpm the Provide a.An E•c•llent Training .;,-==~.;.;::..:•1.:..;4-3D..::.;7...;·7..;,11L::..__ I lloltllrltU In - . lltlgo, And lno Word Proce11lng, Frtnch
day llolote lho ad It ., run, Sun- P•og10m Thol lncludk Salol Furnllurt StiH, Somo Cltrlcol, Athono Coundoo. l.ltll Ruumo
day tdlllon- 1:OOpm Fridly, Mon- And- .()n ~-.
lmmedlalo ~lnJo Full Tlmo, To: Paroonntl, 268t CouOIIY Rd
day tdltlon IO:OOLm. Stlurday.
•1. Soulh Alin~ Ololl oJieiO Or
Appl,
A. , ·12: P.M. Mon, Fox t-lt&lt;t-377.-,
CSR Potillona Roaulro ComPillt Tuto &amp;tOWtd,
Someone n..-cf wenlng• and
Ln.otylt
Fumltura.
80
Public Sale
K,.,olodgo Ollumbor And Buld·
rtlll&amp;lldl tD iCIN'IIDr lldltlr...,..
858
Thll&lt;l
·
Gtllpolll,
No
IIARI&lt;ETIICl
and Auction
lng Mlllritla. Good Skllto
an ln. her home near Pomeroy.
Roqulrtd In -Dooling Wllh Con- ;_Phor;.:;;-,.:.COI::::II.;,==----I Extlllng &amp; -..Jog Co,_ Ao by wrilina Tho Dolly SonlATIENTlONII
A Ma.Uting ·Admlltlooo1 Dlroo- nel.-cia
Wedemeyer'a Auctlan Service, traciOfa. (2041'. ln1lde ~ Out~
BaJI )'21.0, PorMray,
101 Fot 100 Bed Nuralng Homo.
Galpollo, Ohio 614-3J9.2720.
- Saloo).
Dl!lo 45719, (lhrlng oaporltn~.
ME'IOUANAEI"'MT'I
Mull Bo Paraonoblt, Sail Mod·
_.,.,_
Yatecl And Cr..tlwt. Medicare, ..... _ &amp; Rick Puf'IOn Aucdan Company, Offering A Competitive Stllrtlng
Mtdlttld Knowltdgo Enonllol. So...O.ne To Rebuild Old Boro,
full time auctioneer, complete Salary, Full Benefit• A.nd A
THEN ~.~~·WORK
~· ~ ~
•
Roquiroa Eattlltnt Wrlnon And
auction at~vlct. Licensed Sllong •Promote From Within•
lNG FOR PfANUTS?
- 1 CcornmUnlctlion S1t111a. Ex· 814-3DH151.
tee,Ohlo &amp; West Vlrgmla, 304 - !'IIIIey. Poaolblo Relocation. Dlo., Pnxlutlln .. Flald
I
talltnt Saltry And Bontlll Pack· Toklng -'lcodona lo&lt; dozor op;,773-;.:;.:57::,8:;5;.:0t:;.::IJ4-:..;,;,7.:,:73-;.:544:;;,7:,;.·_ _
U. II,
.,.tof1: bac:khM Opetlltor-; truck
ago.
NMillotSaloPtt3Sic i:vo
drlv..-1. Mual bt willing to worlc
90 Wanted to Buy
Soo:JmAmold
Paid Commlaolono For Sand Rtoume'o To: Sttnit Hllll porl-lme. Dtll)o Sonlinel, P.O. Bax
Monday, Mar 22l1d
0...81- . , 111 a,.,_
Nuroing Conlor, 311 Buc~rldgt 7S-07, F\wi•CJ1, otio 45?18.
1 P.M . .e P.M.
All Eapanoo Paid Vocadono e.. Rood, Bl-1. OH •15814, Aotn:
AI&gt;OIVAt
'1 Four Monlhl To ThoH Who Palrlck AII&amp;On, Admlriotralot, NO TOURISM DIRECTOR- Patl·dmo
Cooo ..... Hou- Or Eo-1
84lUMBEii COUPANY
20 ht&amp;iWk. Nood ~cor,
Dutil
PHONE CALLS PlEASE.
~ ~ Of FumiDino, Applllnc·
2200 Ar:t " wiHing
to •rn word proc:eulnD'
.., .. Eie. Alto Appraloal
Jot1c1on, OH
Past 'Zonthlr Contest Have In· NaN 3 People To Sell Avon, computer, organized, llleln'lln' ''l'b'III14-371-272D.
perlonabllty, high
::UaJang Corw.. ee Muooang, !8 C
I ~~.~~~8~33~58!:______ !:'~ood
C - 1 4 wliHI drive In good
An ECJQOI ~ Empldlplomo or lolghtr, ovoldonl
Ro1ox. 11,000.00 Cull, Go Grifo. Babylliltt For Ont Child In Mela1 County. able to travel lnl
runritog
31J&lt;H1H857. I----'-':.;__ __
Stereo'l, Wid• Screen T.V.'1, Your Home? Prelw Adult lacfr In out Weigl County, handle office
Fou•~ HoiTuba
Galli polio Or Addloon ArH, Coil work. Send reaume to Ueig1
Clean Late Model Cart Or
E""*'t'o. ...._ 114-446-1012.
Trucllt, 1187 Modtlo Or Ntwor, ARE VOU A HIGH SCHOOL ......Too Motor To UIL
County Chamber ol Commlfce,
So My Ou••tion To Vau ·r, What
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 111011 Eaoo- SENIOR· IN NEED OF A PART· Ata
Comml-. 238 W. Mlin.
You WtiUng On? Vour Ship On Duty Mtdlcal Ia Pleoood To Tou~om
!"'"~-...,~~"~"'~lllpo'~L~---1 TIME JOB? C._ lniO lho Weal To Come In?
Announca Our Now Omto At 995 l'llmtto,, 0H by Mo, 21. (Thil II
a ftl'advertlaement, prevlaua
Decar~~tld awneware, Will ltle· VIrginia Armro National Guard. h Moy Bo.loll At Sol. WSo, Wt · PlY SullO •210, Galipophonoo, old Iampi, old ihoinno,.. 0111 Jobt como wllh llonellla K~• C.nHelp
-lla, Ohio •5131. Cam!~ Spend A -~otilbtkv-)
~-~
"" fu
tducalion~~l aulatanca, manthly
Night Or Twa In Our Furnl1hed
tlrl. old ~a. an1n1ue mltura. paychltck (atartlng PIIY Ia more 'tbu Frld llWHO AI£·WE?
. WIU1F,E A:ONSERVRION
Aportmonl Wioh A l'lloL Worll 2
Riverine Antiques. Rull Moore. than to per hour), and fret job
JOBS
.
KIRBY DISTRIBUTING
Or 3 Dayo And Eorn A WHkl Qamo Wal&lt;lone,
814·182,2526. We ,b u, Jralning. Slay in achaol and Join
Stturlty, Main7 PINE ST.
Pay. All Shlfto Art Available For
Ohe Guiord. 304·875-5837 or 1·
GAU.FOUS OHIO 41131
Calumbua Work. Starting Wag• ltntnCI, E". No Exp. Necototry.
HlrlnJ. For Info Call 1211)
·OOn'l Junk Ill SeH Ua Your Non- 1!100-&amp;42.-3818.
· (814) ..,.1•1975
11 17.00 An Hour. For Further Now
7Q4.00t0 Ext 8710,-g A.M. To II
Working Relrl~eratora, Fraazer'
II You Don'o Bell..a II Cin Hap. Dttlb Clii1.1J00.50tl-&amp;773.
P.M. 7 Doyo.
Wuhera. Ot.yera, Mlcrowavea.
pen To You Then It Won't! But
Color T. Y:o VCR'I, Air CondlllonFor Thoae Who Want More Out
ATIENTION UNEMPL&lt;71'ED
era, Computers, Olfk:e Machinee. .
'lOUTH AGE tJI.21
ol Lila, And Are W\Ritlg To Got Off
Public Sale
Eit.81&lt;t-258-t23&amp;
There Aooelo, 111 Sol 'lllu AI Tho
&amp; Auction
Galllo -llalgo Community AcUon TopOl
J I D'a AuiO Parts tnd Salvago, Agenc:y Ia Seeking Applicant•
AND THATS PDSmYEII
buying wrecka, ·1unk autoa I For Temporary Summor Employ·
trvtltt. Aloo. partl for otlo. 304- ment Aa Cuatodlal, Stcretarlal, Gallia -Melga Community Action
HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
773-5343 or 773-5033.
And Uainlllnance TralnMs. The Agtncy JTPA Program 11 Ac·
c:eptlng
Application•
For
Thl
Fol·
ANTIQUE AUCTION
Top Prieto Paid: All Old U.S. Employ"*" Would Bogin In June lowing Temporarr Summ11 PoaiCoine, Gold Rlngl, Sllvor Coitoa, And Ia EIPICIOd To Lui For Ap. Uorw:
SUNDAY MAY 28 AT 10:00 A.M.
Gold Colna. M.T.S. Coin Shop, ~10T,.._ II ltwolvto P""'ldlng Ro151
GallpoiiL
ALBANY OHIO
mtditiiEnrlchmont Eduttilontl
Houro PatWotk 32 Or 40
Serwlcea. Workalte Rwlew And
PREVIEW' 1:30 A.M. DAY OF AUCTION
Wanood To Buy, Junk AuiOo, Any Pay Raoa 1•1.25 Pat ...,r
MalnMnance. Record Main·
Concldon. 811·38&amp;-9062. Ot'81··
45 miles east of Chillicothe
And Olloot RoQuirod At&gt;
Appiltanll May Bo High SthOol I
446-AIRT.
Take
US
50
and 32 west ot Athens j!nd exit onto 50
tivlI'OIItlon
Roqulroo
8A
DoColiogo Sllidtntl, GradutloO. Or
Wanted to buy- antique and u~ Out Of Sc:hool. Succe11lul Ap- grH In Education, Valid Ohio west lowards McArthur. Auction is quarter mile on left
furniiUre. no llem too large or too plicant. Wu1t u..t Program Ell- Teaching Cordllcott. Valid Driv- sig ns posted.
· amal. Will bur one piece or com- glbliry RoQulromontl Including In- or'o Llctnot, And Alliable Trano- Wal. bookcase w/2 drawers in bottom ; oak hoosier
plete eatat&amp;l, Oaby Martin, 814- como, Ago, Galllt ·MIIga Rool· potfOilon.
style cabinet with porcelain top; bakers cabinet; 2 oak
doni, And Oiheto. Priorioy Conoid992·7441 .
oration Will Be GNen To Appllt· Po1ltlona Will Require Travel ln secretary bookcases one orig. fin .; oal&lt; wardrobe; wal..
Wanted To Buy; Junk AuiOI With .Inti Age 18 ·21. Pre-App/lca · Gallla And Meigs Countioo. Ap·
Or Without Molora. Call Larry tiona Mar Be Obtained AI The pllcadon1 May Bo Oblalnod And and oak breakfront cupboard; 2 oak flatwall
Rooumeo Submlned AlTho eM cupboards; oak manlle w/beveled mirror and columns
iJIIeiy. 814-3118-9303.
Following CM Offices:
Olllco, 8010 Notlh·Sialt Roult 7,
to floor ;· oak dresser; wal. marble insert dresser; oak
. Wanted: Lillie Tykel Outdoof 8010 North State Route 7 Chtolilro, OH •5820-0272. Dead- highboy; orig . store regulator runs; mahog . baby grand
Caatle In Good Condition, 814· Chell'ire.
' line For Subml11on II 4:30 P.M.
piano; large quantity of dresser mirrors and yokes; oak
245-5887.
On Tuiilday, Mar 30, 111115.
slant fronl desk; early chest w/backboard ; bed w/press
11541 Third - · GaiNpoNL
EOUAL OFPORTIJNITY EMdesign; pie safe; dresser w/mirror; 2 library tables; 2
•
PlOYER
Or COli 81~1018.
long green slag glass mission style hanging lights
w/heavy metal; fancy mahog dresser w/mirror yoke
Public Sale
gone; washstand; pie cupboard; 5 legged table; twin
ilon and brass bed w/curved ends; old delivery bike
&amp; Auction
w/dunlop seal , possibly harley; as found cannonball
cherry rope bed; trunks; as found fancy depression
I able and six chairs w/sideboard; watt ' bowl
w/advertising; childrens books: Remington and Vaio
Saturday June 3, 1995 10:00 am
Gough print books; hull vase; weller vase deep blue
•
w/llowers
; piclure frames and mirrors; other smalls
From Rio Grande, Ohio take State Route 325
and
collectibles;
consignments still arriving.
Sou th 2.9 mile s to ,CeAterpolnt Road.
check, or check w/positive ID.
Terms
:
Cash,
travelers
Centerpoint Road 2.4 miles to the farm . Watch
'
Out
.of
state
buyers
not
established need bank letter
for signs.
·
lor check acceptance . Food available.
1993 Playtime 24' Watercraft, 1988 50 hp Force
Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson
motor
Near New - Vemeer 504- Super I Round baler
614-698-6706
(baled only 130 bales), two row Ne'w Idea
Licensed and Bonded In Ohio
Cornpicker, New Holland 7' haybine, Massey
Business Partner Frank Hutchinson
'lJo[[.
Ferguson hayrake, Kuhn hay tedder, John
614-592-4349 .
Deere manure spreader, 9' wheel disk, Baltic 3
&amp;
pt. fertilizer spreader, New Idea lime spreader,
Freeman 2000 loader, 6' tr acto r rotoliller,
Massey Ferguson 7' mowing machi[le, 6'
ANTIQUE AUCTION ·
brushhog, cultivators, Oliver plows, hay wagons,
Sat. May 27, 1995 10:00 a.m.
Happy Ads
antique horse drawn corn planter, 3 pt. dirt
This is the personal property of the late Thelma
scoop, round bale hay movers, creepfeeder,
Chase . Located lrom St.Rt. 33 at Darwin, Ohio. Go 3
•
round bale feeders, head gate, new yard roller,
mile.' on St.Rt. 681 to 1-!anning Rd. to Chase Rd. Walch
lawn, garden and shop equipment too numerous
for auction ·signs.
to mention .
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTION ITEMS"
Terms : Cash or Checks with positive J.D.
Oak Sellers kilchen caoinel w/flour bin, oak wash
stand, flatwall cabinet wflglding glass door, hall seat
EVELYN S. COX- OWNER
w/glass .. oak secretary, rocking chair, square stand,
245-9574
corner shelf, waterfall 3 pc. bedroom suite. chest. oak
GEORGE E. WOODWARD JR .•
wash stand w/towel rack , Viclorlia cabinet, New Haven
fancy
kitchen clock, oak library table. #1 ten gal. small
AUCTIONEER
family size creamery focit power woo~ churn cap. 1 to
379-2844
4 gal. pot. Dec. 1893 and Jan. 1895, 1896 J .N.
Not responsible for, accidents or loss oi property
Reimes gi~ss piggyl, allidian green glass &amp; melal
electrified lamps, oil lamps, walnul fancy dresser,
2nd 'Birtfitfay
fancy single iron bed , metal bed, Jenny Lind baby bed,
(j5l.~ 'EWj'£.'1{'£
6 wood chairs , childs kitchen cabinet, wood
Public Sale ·
advertising boxes , cast iron pot, baby buggy, high
'}.{I'JCJ{U£, I I
chair, Silverton radio, manlle clock, headlight for early
&amp; Auction
(£ittfe Logger)
1900 Ford . milk cans, Model T steering wheel, grain
We Love You!
cradle, wagon jack &amp; .buggy slep, Avery mower lool
2 Day Auction Sale ·
box, neck yaks, Blue Bailey 5 gal. cream cans; iron
Daddy, Mommy,
kettles, Syracuse chilled. plow co . #.401 horse plow,
Fri.,
May
26
&amp;Sat.,
May
2710:3oa.m.
Aaron &amp; Jeremy
Voss
· prefeclion #6 washing machine , 3 runn ing
Fri., May 26: The following will be sold at 202 Joan's
converts
buggy to sleigh, binder seat, egg basket, corn
Place, New Ha.ven Heighls, WV.
sheller,
lanterns,
Oak high back bed, wall telephone,
Child's dry sink, big round oak table w/claw feet, choice
wagon
w/rubber
tires and 4 original wooden
Thornhill
oak dressers, ornate sideboard (rare), ex. hice flafiNall
wheels, 12 ga. shotgun, 22. pump rifle, 1/2 buggy
cupboards, Hi-Boy, very nice old ice cream table &amp; 6
wheels, Model T fronl axle, . I. H. sawtoolh plow one
chairs, night slands. old coffin, w/skeleton. 3 choice ~ron
botlo.m. wicker· basket, corn jobb,er, pink &amp; green
beds. oak wash stands , very rare 6 tin pie safe, podium,
depression,
Iris, Hull, Ruby, Imperial dishes, cookie jar,
oak victrola, old trunks,· shoe lasps , old Wheel ·barrow,
lern
stand,
Mimosato
treddle sewing machine , picture
wagons, writing desk, quilts, stoneware, Palatine, \NV;
lrames.
quills,
stone
jars,
oil lamp parts , zink lids, and
Donaghho, Hamilton &amp; Jones, plus other decorated jars
lots
of
small
items.
Rpund
white frost #42,1 ice box
and jug. crocks, Dazey cHurn and others, apple butter
w/rotary
shelf.
kettle, apple peeler, many old lam~s. brass wash boards,
"HOUSEHOLD"
many old tools. glassware; Carnival , Fenton, Depression.
Table &amp; 6 .chairs, Super Matic electric range, electric
Dozens green jars, hay forks, Mail Pouch thermometer,
hospilal bed, lift for bed, Ieiding wheel chairs, potty
pitch forkS, anvil, dinner bell, many items not listed.
chair,
floor lamp, chest ot drawers, cedar wardrobe,
Sal., May 27: lte_
ms to be sold at the Funny Farm on At .
double
metal wardrobe , B&amp;W TV, Gibson uprite deep
33 , 5 miles North of New Haven.
freeze
&amp;
more.
·
Very nice sidebo(itd , ex. nice oak dressers, bunermilk
"Mise"
cabinet, lialwalls one unusual 6 pane, iron beds, brass
Misc. tools, pipe vice, tool boxes. hJsking pegs, apple
bed, big 4-leaf clover stand, wriling desk, sel bunk beds
peeler,
brown crock, wooden ironing board, block
like new, table &amp; 6 chairs. Victorian chairs. big cider
McGuffey
Books, army saddle, one wom~n
plane,
big. regulalor clock &amp; olhers, large writing desk,
Happy 21 Birthday press,
saw,
metal
water
can,
harness, platform scales , wood
podium, stoneware: 1 pint A.P. Donaghho, WA Ellis,
pulleys,
corn
jobber,
carpenter chest, buzz saw,
Racone, 0 ., 4 gal. laced Donaghho, 1/2 gal. Hamillon &amp;
May22nd
kerosene
cooking
stove,
1949 Chev. pickup, buzz
Jones, 1/2 ga. Donaghho &amp; quarts, large amount old
saw, wood wheels , single horse plow, pilchforks , BJ&lt;es,
SCOITMOORE
dishes, beer signs, old lamps, chicken crates, sad irons,
hoes, Choremasler garden plow, w/cullivalor plow,
big wagon wheels, Dazey churn Donaghho, 8 gal.
Two down and
,
lawn mower and lot~. lots, more.
Excel;sior pottery laced. ~Ius other items too numerous tO
LAVERN
G.
CHASE.
ADMINISTRATOR
t·~.
"'
,J..-.-•-·-"' ·.:~, "I"0'-"-'·__,.-·- - '-1 list
... · {}ANSM~TH~AUGTIOJIIEEB ...
Lurid1served
by
The
Fl'iendS'Of
tl1e"New·HaveA,lit&gt;rary.
\
That's the way to go
·'"'
Racine, Ohio Ohio #1344
Love You
Cash Posilive ID Refreshments
' WV·License #29
"Announcemenls
by auctioneer lake precedence over
Mom&amp;
Ph, 1-614·256·6740
printed matters."
~~~-.--:-:~-:-..,....,..,..,,-1 Monogor Tral-l'llllllono Allow
All Yord Soltl Mull Be Paid In 'lllu To wn 'lllu L•n. 114

.••.

180 WllltiCITo Do .

L&amp;J.. 11IV Do
180 -..-

180 Wililldlb Do

AVON I All Arooa I Shirley
........ :IO+e'/So1421.

SERVIC~'-;

Sunday, May 21,1995

Sunday, M•y 21,1115

Proi41IIO,.I Pet Grooming. All
Btotdo, R• •ble Rt111. GUll· 580
Fruits &amp;
anootd Saolalactlon, Your Pall
V.agetables
Stcond Boot Fflond. L•vo Uoouete tf I Can't Gel To Phone, Or Black Ratpberry Plantl, Al10.
Cd Atl8r 8 P.Y. Call AnytirM For Blackberry Plantl, 11.25, 114·
Appo&lt;ltmom, 6t+25U550.
215-!ia36.
Aln T..-rl•r Pupplea, Ap~rox. I Red '&amp; while IWMt potaiO ptam;
Wttkt Old, Weaned, IU-•41- call a1•·742·2220 or 114•742·
382t .

2773.

Real

Generel

o Homes

--27113.

a,

Split-level on appro:t. 1 1f2atrll
near Pt Pleasant. House hal livIng room, dining rooni, kitchen,
4bedroom&amp;, 2 1/2baths, laundry
room, burily room wilh kitchenene
I fireplace, and 2 car garage.

Allo has t 2'x2•' bu il ding. Call
304-075-21161 aher 5pm.

This newspaper wlii no!
knowtingiy accepl
advertisements for real estate
~which is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
adverlised in this newspaper
are available on an f}Qual
opportunity Oasis .

EIRtrlc. reclining llh chair, 150;
10• 2hp. thlckne•• planer, used
Wf'flialo, $275, 614-885-4408.
Eloc:Uit W....ichal" And Scooi·
era. New And UHd, Indoor And
Outdoor Modell, Bowman' I
- - e . 814-446-7283.
Good used lurnlture· matching
lofa and lav• aeat wllh zipper
cushions, coffee atep and end Ia·
blea, 25• wood cabinet RCA TV,
floor and table liiTIPI, round m•
pie dining room table and chairl
wllh two leavea. white metal bal8
cabinet with formjc:a top, awlvel
rocking chair, one Lazy Boy ro·
clinet, •tack whitt ..,.., ohtl•oa.
on• pustr oarclen plow, e1•·9D25251 Dt814-VIIS-3521 oloat2Pm.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapalled, New a Rebuilt In Stock.
Coli Ron E - I-IOII-53NI52ll.

KI-d
.,......... Burning Soo•o. $300,

814-+11Hl518.

Kitchen Coblneoa. Mull Soli,
Prlc.e Reduced, 1500 •1• ·••• ·
B854.
• •

~~:;;::::;::.;__ _ __.;=:::..jf.-------.,.;:,=;4

Steel Bldg Sup&amp;r Sale. 30x•a.
4Bxee. 50X110, 60:t120. Save
Thousandt. Some AI Low AI
$3.00 Per Sq. Ft. F11t Delivery.
61.c;..e98.217G.End 5-31 .
·
560 Pets for Sale

1

AKC roglotetod
pupa,
21coma1H, 3mtloa. au ohotl &amp; pe.
J*&amp; 3D4-885-3274.

AKC Siberian Hu1ky Pups, Blue
Eyea,
Mal•a:
S175; 1UI81527.
Femalea:
$150;Cak'n,
Smatt.l11

WISEMAN REAL ~STATE, INC.
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555

Carolyn Wasch • 441-1007
LOretta McDade • 446-7729
American Cocker Spaniel Pup~AKC """llltttd Chtmplon
Sonny Garnes. 446-2707
"""
'
ine,814-319-2128.
.L----------~----------:--------....,;..1
ANNOUNCEMENTS

i----------;...._________;...._______:-_.;,__________,

on both enda. 1300. 304-875- Loaded, New Ca~petl 814-37G-

~2no~_Ahw~e~P~.M~·---------­

658a

&gt;lgh~

•. ZI02.

Metal f';ooflng &amp; Sldlnjl. Check
Our Prlcet Belote Vou Buy. Altiz•Farm5uppty.I14-24S.5183.

Household

COrpoll Yleyl In Soock S5.00 Yd Mooiberg soo 12 gauge pump,
320 Mobile Homes
&amp; Up 110 Panerna Of Kitchen Car- ventilated barrel, alas aiug barre4,
pat In Stock. Over 35 Patterna maple atock, nice, $250, (814)
for Sale
VInyl In Slldt Mollohan Corpooo, 247-lm
614--7444.
:::::~=---::-::--c:--'C"':""
10x50 trailer, wlpaliD fence, large
Uovlng-mutt 1811. Satellite dian,
building, Diehard, 1acre, $15,000.
RENTALS
. Ccunuy Furnllur•·Furnlture fa.r amo1 old, paid $3800, atklng
304-5~2802.
- - - - - - - - - Ewory Room. tlni., Rl 2 Nor ill, PL 13400. 30ol--ll75-3198.
PloooanL 31J&lt;H75-e820.
12x$2 Homelte, gaa heal , &amp;lc. 410 Houses for Rent .
New I 00,000 BTU Hi EHiciency
cond., new carpet, ssgso. 61.t·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
furnace New Heat Pumpa,
«Ut15.
One b~droom ~4 room hOUie), Wnhers, dryera, relrlgeratora, Ga1
Very Reasonably Priced, One
$200/mo.,
deposit
required.
128
12)180 Mobile Home $4500 614· Union Avenue, 614-992-2009 or range1. Sk•oa• Appliance•. 78 Uted 25KW Elecltlc Furnace,
Vine Street, Call 814·448·73St8, Cennl Air CondjJioner, Free Eatl·
387·705o4.
304-773-5707.
t.IJOO.~.
matea. 1·800-~tn'-8308 Of 814t2x65 El Cona De luxe Mobile One bedroom houae in New Ha446.e308.
LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
Home, 610-4411-8323.
ven, $100 depoa!t, StSO month Complete home furnlahlnga. Queen Size Walerbed, Frame
Houn: Man -Sat, D·6, 114·4•8- Wlih Mirror, SSO, 610-4411·2751.
... 14)185 Hom~me. gaa ~eat, new rent, 30+882-2180.
.0322, 3 mile• au! Bulaville Pike
lhrough out, rWNt carpet, 3ton cen.
420 Mobile Homes
R&amp;S FurnitUre. We buy, sell and
Ftoo lloiNery.
... $11950. 81 o-«6-0175.
trade antique, ,.wluatd housefor Rent
PICKENS FU~ITURE
tiiH2 New Moon trailer. 12165,
hold lurnlshlnga. Will buy any
New/Uoed
two bedroom, $5000, Inquire at 12x60 2 Bedrooms, All Electric, ·
amount. large11mat1. 505 Second
Brown's Trailer Park, 6U -Q92· AC. Large Lot, $280/Mo. + De- No appliances. Houaehold fur- Sl.. Mason, WV. Owner·Rocky
posit, Relerenc:e~ Required. 81._ nishing. 1/2 mi. Je'rricho Rd. PL Paaraon ~773-5341.
39o49.
Pleasant, WV, call 304-e75-1450,
446-088!.
81-4&lt;-HO 6118
... 1g7• ·14x70 Holly Park, llep·up
kitchen and dining area, one full 2bt tralllt, R o - I DtpoiiL
bath, two bedroom•. very good No pet1. Alao 1ralltr lot. Rt"I2N,
candilion, C814} ge5-438Q ...,.n.
Ll'CU•'
Rd on
Po Plootonl ·1-=======R=e=a=I=E=st=a=te=G=e=n=e=ra=l
====:::;31J&lt;H75-1078.
,.
• lngL
1885 14X10 Skyllnt, 2 Btdooomo,
• Stove, Relrlgerator Window, AIC,
2 Declca, Renled LOt; Addiaon,
Si2,000 814-3ti7·7G03, 810-446·

e

now In stock. Sh»ta qulpment.
I ::114-8=.:.:.7;.;~&gt;..:7.:42=1~.-.,.-,,..,..-,--

1121 SR 588· Charming 3
BRs. 1 1!2 sto ry offers
·
238 Merry Road 3 BAs ~
~
fl
Groom Shoo ·Pot G.....,;ng. F•· hardwood floors, knotty 1/2 baths . eat·i~ k,~~~~·~d~ Road . $~~~~ m '
turing Hydro Bath. Julie Webb., pine wall over the stone FA , rear deck and
• 1.17 acre lot, Buckeye 1
1·
•
Bohlnd
"-~~
T1llCti11H46-0ZI
ft'rep
la
ce.
Basement.
=Wol•
--·
· back yard . $45 ,900 ·
Road $12,500
122t
13 : Gravoly Frono Mounlld AKC Reg cocker Spaniol pup- I _g~~;;$~5~6~,5~0~0~_..!#~5~09!..1::~=:::.::::::=:_.[:::::.:_=.=:::::.---_:_:=~
Ro•'l' Plow. $21!0, 81&lt;-2.5-5544 ..... fttli ohoto · ·· t125. •
-IP.M.
30o-773-5011altot5pm
'

Lawn Chlel riding lawn mower,
12hP 30•cut •soo. Wizard RotoGoods
UIIet, rear Unoo, 5hp, $500. 304·
2pc brown ttctionel wlroclinora 516-206G.

510

Goavtllall. _....,. &amp; drainpiPe

3 Bedroom 14l70 With Exp:ando
Furnlohtd Or Unfurnlolood In Addavillc&gt; Sthooi ·Diooic~ 81•·•40·
7t28AIItr.:30P.M.

For Rent 2 Btd•oom Troller In
1Q87 1•x6S Fleming Houee, ui'l· SmaN Trallet Part.;, 3 112 MIIM Out
, dotplionlng lnctudtd, $7100, call .Bulavllle Road, No Petl, Depolll
Requll'ed.I14-+MJ.1104.
81 oHitl2-3955 allatlpm

r .

~
~
-

~
·
,

""'"'
Mam 0/firt· Uit/·8826
9SIJ CWri O.nprl Ntf

Bid•·ti1.0Mv456N

Gl,;r-

~

.....~,

THE HOME LOAN EXPERT
Says
.

'

Your Credit Is Not As Bad As You Think

PURCHASE
REFINANCE
CONSOLIDATE~

.

~
A

~ ~hzkB•n ~~rl! Offirt • 44([.(ot/06
1J Lfn!l St
GnllipuJU,OitHt451J/

Real Estate General

.Slow Credit, Judgments, Bankruptcy
Our Specialty

Never An Application Fee
Purchase with as
little as 5% Down!
•
. .
ALL AMERICAN HOME
111 Acre farm with complete set of buildings, New 2430 sq.
ft . home. plus a 3 SA Mobile Home. Standing timber, all
mineral rights and 2,000 lb. tobacco base. Good county
road . Call today 446·7699
*740

x

I

::~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~;;·--~U-1s~m~a;.ll?acreage

wiLLis

beautiful rolling or
&amp; all115
treed with
throughout.
ac. trails
·m/1. The
land is
plantecr·appro:oC'"3;omr plne il·r~S&gt;:-·1 - ic·----c-· .. ~·-

6-

44 9538

~~d~~:46-~~~~ant.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
•

virginia

L.Smith

asa-

&lt;

Before you buy...
PREQUALIFY!

MERIT

VERY EXCLUSIVE HOME • With a bit of
woodland. Huge 4 bedroom, 2 story with 2 1/2
balhs, fbrmal living rm. &amp; dining rm. , 15' 23'
family, Loads of cabinets in an equipped kitchen
with breakfast nook, large utility room serves as
anoffice, partial basement Heated pool room 31'
x 53' wilh a lovely 18' x 36' pool, attached
garage 25' x 29'. Home can be bought with

LOT· SPRING SUBDIVISION
One large lot approx . 101'x171 ', City water. city sewer,
natural gas, electric, all are available at this lot. Prepare
NOW to build your dream hOme in this pleasant, quiet, and
nice subdivislonjust a short distance out of Gallipolis. LOt
N17. Realtor Owned.
1731 ·

We pay cash-for
land contracts!

MORTGAGE
'

COMPANY
1
I

--8QO.---_M
. ·..B:c.R-1-~-08·
,
. ~
.-~-1:~~-- ~.;;J-

MB#0489

-~-------··~··-

�.

•

Page 06 • ~c-..,.

....

~

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

allul

... .._
......
,
~
*

110
....

"""
!tot Pull ... "'";
a.!.....,., wIt Row "'JS: 1111 11M Allie t1 .MO;"NH

•

271 Wire Tlo Beloit t2.4ICI; 1r
Alum. E'-., t210; Nl Gn&gt;und
DtiW SIN 1dor tao: J0-4210
T - t.H.A. Duala ... 200 Hl8.
.ILOOO; 12' 1H :ua Ilk 11,210;
OreviiJ W.gon W IJO a...
IIICI,11441Q411111WIP.M.

-.u-

John Delre 2140 I11,100;John
Delre 2140 110,1011; John 0...

2140 110.1011; Jolin " " ' ' I10,11GG.
.
Hor~• - !Md:
Johol
• 171 RouiMI Balor
M, 710; John Deero 431 AaunO
.11 ,11110; 2 .JolofO... 327
Square - . 11.710 EICh; . , Round- 15.1!10:

Allod814-3117-- - -

ro.-

Eqo~~L~=-AIIO

---Drlvo
I.AWN

- . 011411114

11~2412001~~

1111

110

c-

Plgo llltlldlng' Siod!, 814SN-21111.
.

--·1-

-

Bob

Autoa tor Sale
.... a.lcll L.aSoln. 11-1 ...,......,
125,000 mlloo, runo llko now,
tiiiO. (1141 247-o12112.

....

Help Wanted

110

110

RN•s to $30

per hour

SALES POSITION
Immediate Sales Position
Available.
Progressive
and growing Heating and
Cooling Company seeks
Top Sales Person to

repreaent them in real·
dentlal and commercial
sales. 95% company
genera(ed leads. 100%
financing available. Generous commission. Territory
southeastern
Ohio and norlhern Weal
VIrginia .
HVAC back·
ground helpful, but not
necessary. Must have
previous outside or In·
.home sales experien ce.
Contact 1-8()().767· 4223
between 9 am-4 pm.

..

of Gallipolis is now accepling applications for
Gallipolis office. Manager PosttiOn Possible.
Accepting Resumes at 150 2 E astern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH .
For Information call (304) 675 -27'22
- Full or Part Time Positions Installer Position A Vail able
Call 304 675-2722

110

Help wanted

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR
Growing

activated

carbon

company

in

Columbus , Ohio, has an immediate opening for
an evening shift supervisor. Mjnimum of 5 years
management experience, including exposure to a
union environment. Experience in l;landling bulk
materials and o p e ra ti o n o f cla ss if ic a tion a nd
thermal proc es s ing e quipm e nt would be
beneficial. Educat ion sho uld inc lude co llege level
technical courses.
S e nd re s ume in confidence to:

Gaiii•Melgs Community Action Agency Ia
seeking appllcents for temporary aummer
employment as custodial, secretarial, and
maintenance trainees. The employment would
begin In June and Is expected to lasl for
approximately 10 weeks.

per hour

- IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT-

HelpWanted

AnENTION UNEMPLOYED
YOUTH AGE 16·21

LPN's to $20

NATE COMMUNICATIONS
/CELLULAR ONE

Lots · of work
·throughout Central &amp;
Southern Ohio in
'
hospitals IICUr CCU,
step down, med.
surg., &amp; ER), private
duty, &amp; &lt;orrectional
staffing.
Minimum .1 year
experience.
Call Paulo

Applicants may be high schooVcollege students,
graduates, or out of school. Succeuful
applicants must meet program
eligibility,
requirement Including Income, age, Gallia·Melga
resident, and othe111. Priority consideration will be
given to applicants are 18·21 . Pre-applications
may be obtained at the following CA offices:

614·846~8398

&amp;

750 BOitl • llotOI'I

HelpW.IIId

lor Bile

cr..,
h.aaa: - .
.,,__

RUSSELL D. W OOD, BRO KER ;..... A46-4618
Judy J)eWilr.. ...
441-0262
J. M er r ill Carter....................................J79-265 1
Rulh Bar r ... :.............. : ............................446-0722

J ..................................

BRICK 1 1/2 STORY AT THE
EDGE
OF
TO WN ! 4
bedrooms , 2 baths , living
room. I(Jtchen, large front
porch. Convenient
#712

WHAT ABOUT THIS! 2 large
lots· and th1s very nice ranch
home with liv1ng room. dining
room , k 1tchen . 3 bedrooms.
.There 1s an electtlc heat
pump. blacktop drive. 24xJ2.
detached garage , plus 2
storage ~ buildings
&amp; a
complete sateUite,system . ·
N740

712 SR 588- Ow'ner will I
contract." Newer carpe ted
hvmg room, 3 bedrooms ,
basemen1. garage.
1713

-.;;_
...
'
· ··,
PART-TIME FARMER! . 2
story -modern 4 bedroom
house, 2 baths. 2 car garage.
Lois ol road fron tage. approx.
#710
28 acres,

LANDI LANDI &amp; MORE
LAND Approx 176 acres of
DROPPED PRICE $5,000.()(). ideal hunting land , frontage
FARM ACREAG~ . Septic and along" Raccoon Creek t/719
water already on property,
72'x103' barn 1n excellent
JUST THE RIGHT SIZE FOR .
conditiOn, cO rn cr1b, silo, A SMALL FAMILY OR
f~n cing . tobacco allotment.!
Approx . 60.78 acres. OWNER SINGLE COUPLE! t story·
WANTS SOLD. YESTEROAYI ~ome lo caled close lo
1724 Gallipolis, 3 bedr6oms, llving
room, k1tchen. 1 car garage .
OWNER WANTS TO SELL $30.000.00
1763
NOWI MAKE HER AN
OFFERf 4 BR , t .5 stOI}I home GOOD RENTAL INCOME TO
which has been remodeled . 2 HELP MAKE YOUR MTG.
BA. 1 car detached ga!age, PAYMENTS • Vinyl sided
concrete driveway. 20 + a~':.:2 home with 2 baths &amp; more.
..
.
plus a 3 bedroom mobile
LARGE. ... COMMER~IA"t: tmme ,V.IIage ~lllilies . N73:i
SPACE FOR SALE! Plenty of
parking &amp; warehouse space. TEN ACRES, PLUSI County
Great many potenllal business water available. Call for more
opportunities.Call for more information $10,000.00 1757
Information
1683

0488 Roger~ Wa10rpraafing. E•
llllllohod 1171.

• career Advancement
• Flo- - " " Plan
• Paid Holid.-,sl\'acatlons

buDd a

9 ACRES MORE OR
OVERLOOKING T·HE

~~~~ ~

RIVER included is a
bedroom one story nome .1
Priced at $47,900 .
1718

WEST MAIN STREET - Pomeroy·
Nice 1 1/ 2 story frame home, 3
b e droom s, 1 1/ 2 baths , full
basem e nt with 2 car garage, utility
a rea, N .G .F.A. Furnace . Unit air,
c able and new decking. , ASKING
$38 ,000
.

a

CHI;SHIR£- 1+ ac res ·of ground
with a M obile Home on site that is
pr~sently rented. 2 other Trailer
Hook-ups
an d
a
large room
blockhouse
elfioiency
that
is
curre ntly rented . If your looking for a
rental investment th is could be your
"MO NEY
MA KER"
ASKIN G
$30,000

LARGE
COMME""'"L I I
BUILDING &amp; OVER
ACRESI
Loads
possib1lit1es. approx . , 5,
sq. ft . concrete flooring ,
for more details
.
N733

POMEROY- OWNER WANTS TO . M c NICHOLS ROAD- 5+ acres with
buildingCurrently
SELL AND HAS REDUCED THE Frame/Block
used
as
Bait
Shop.
Stock
and
PRICE· 3 bedroom Ranch Home on
Equipment
being
sold
separately.
small lot in town. Property has a full
basement, central air, woodburning Older Mobi le HOme on site is
fireplace, attached 1 car garage. optional. Make an ·offer. ASKING
OWNERS HAVE LEFr TH•EIRII I
$12,000
"AGENT OWNED . ASKING $29,900
NEST ALL ALONE. Start
movmg immediately into this
RACINE- 2 lots with River Frontage. RAC IN E· 1982 • 14x70 M obile
bedroom , t ' t/2 story home,
Use lor camping, lishing or boating Home. Total .e lectric with heat-pump
good sized kitchen &amp;. living
or
could be used as a trailer lot. NC.Ashley
woodbu rner,
built-in
room . Part basement
Close
to
park
,
firedept
.
and
local
Rutch,
bookshelves.
Enclosed
front
Detached 2 car garage. Call
banking
and
shopping
.
Buy
this
one
porch
&amp;
rear
porch.
3
bedrooms,
1+
today for complete listing.
now andgel ~II set up for the acres.
"N ICE
PEACEFUL
*731
summer!! ASKING $9 000
LOCATION A N D LOTS OF ROOM
'
.
TO RUN" ASKING $19,900, 00
..
·~-.--~
.-..-....~
........ ~...............~----..~- .
.
.
~ ...... ~. ~.. . - ~ ........ _. ..,._.. ...~. -·~ .. ~ .......... ~~ '

.

room, dining area, kil&lt;:hen,
bedrooms . Large lawn. *725

........

·--

WE HAVE SEVERAL NEW LISTINGS AND ALWAYS RADYTO LIST
MORE!! THE MARKET~ GOOD, SO IF YOU WANT TO SELL OR LIST
YOUR PROPERTY NOW IS THE TIME!! CALL US TO G~T YOUR HOME

leader hi the log ho1ne I
Industry ·for over IS

1881 Geo Tractor, 4wd, new
Wrangler Rldllll, bug
air &amp; etc, enra clean,
814-ll92-7574.

years.

~Odyoot
~•hector,

1110 Cavoller, lapood, 2door, 1 111110 '$moho 1100, Shaft Drlvon.

'

Of'IIClotiHn "'-".OYU.

&lt;twner. 67,000mllel, exc cond. Front And Ree.r OiiC Brakes, Ex·
llu Tomo 304-075-2691. _
collont Condition. 11.500. Firm,
814-441o0485.
UOO Geo Priam, ss.ooo e 14·
111182 HDndl XR250R, laaka

Audrey

Mow, Grl)', Plulh lntarlor, I.Oided,

11181 Honda XRBO Looka Good.
RunoGoodiBOO. &amp;14-388-9771 . .

.,g_ga Plymouth \lovagai mini vu1,
\r-8, $12,900, air bag, power
loclco, cruiH, dlt wheel, 814-247·
8872.

twin engine, Iota chroma, gold

ttlm, ... c:ond., $3,000. 304-875·
2074.

1994 Thunderbird lx. ~m &lt;a•

1901 Yamaha V·MIX

Mary

S, 150

750 Boats &amp; Motors

l

•

G)

·-L£rtD£R

Galaxy 19 Fr. Open Bow,
170 HP Mere Cru iser 110, Garage
197111

l

·APPAOX. •2 ACRES LOCATED ON HARRISBURG
ROAD . CO RN EA LOT. , HAS WI\TE R TAP.
&lt;=&lt;::H liiC:TI=n BUI LDING SITE. CALL FO R MORE

~======;:=;::::r=;:=======~l

I

tlood Realty ,

j n n eed of the 'woof' of l ove Garnet brought to l he
flleve n Wood family w ho had lost th eir mot her too
farly. W ith Garnet, the magic was there, and lh e
~randc h ildr e n , al~o. grew up to apprec1ale the home
she created.
: While on her deaihbed, t he husband and failhfu l
i:ompanion of her I ale. years ·and her constant right
hand in selling up a new loom with the yards of
lva rp, Lee Morri s was 'th ere to testify 111hat we lost.
[n Garnet- a weaver's hand thai wove with love.
\Fi l ma H. Pikkoja

APPLE GROVE· ()orcas' Rd. - Appro&lt; 6 acres of nice
laying yard and a one story ranch with B rooms. 1 112 bath,
3 or more bedrooms, family room, dining room, and a step
saver kitchen . Also a detached 2 car garage, workshop,
and attached shed.
580,000

Real E sta te General

:' M EIGS
~BIG

RUTLAND, A recently remodeled home with new vinyl.
siding , new rqof, and textured walls . Has 2 bedrooms and
one bath and attic space that could be used for more. room:
Comes with equipped kitchen and washer &amp; dryer.
WAS. $30,000 NOW $28,000

C O U~TY

BEND REALTY, INC.

m
l

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER '(!!:r

... . Cheryl Lcmlcy .............. 742-3111 ~nY

"IM MEDIATE OCCUPANCY! For this 1 1/2 story
:home, 3 bedrooms , living room , dinirg room, kitchen
·complete w/refrigerator &amp; range. 30'x32' garage
•situated at College Avenue . $20's. ·
11746
.
.
I
.
MULBERRY HEIGHTS! Convenient r&lt;1nch, 2 or 3
~edroom home with attached garage . X·tra nice lot!
Priced at $58,000 .
#759

RAC INE· Rl. 124· Wai.t till you see this 3 bedroom home
with beautiful hardwood floors in living room a detached 2:
car garage with 1 bedroom apartment over it. App.rox. 5
acres.
$65,000

.

MIDDLEPORT· S. 2nd Ave. - A very well maintained 3
bedroom home that has alot of extras. You 've got to take a
look at this 2 story home. With It's open stairway, living
room with fireplace and ~ardwood
floors.
$69,000
.

;

.

47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD! Alum inum sided 1 1/2
story home, living room, kitchen , over sized detached
2 car garage. FA electric furnace . Additiona l mob1le
~orne hook -up. Must call today 1or .a n appointment!
;
#558

SYRACUSE· A large t/2 acre lot w11h a ranch style house
that has 3 bedrooms , big living room, family room, sun
room and 2 baths . Has a 3 car detached garage with a one
bedroom apartme("lt above Some fruit trees and grapes .
$69,500

4st LINCOLN STREET! 2 Story alum . sided home,
!Wing room , d ining room with built -in c~ina/buffet ,
~tchen, den , 2 baths, central air &amp; morel
#758

ANTIQUITY· Approx . 13 acres with one of the most
beautnulllndescribable views of the Racine locks the river
bottoms, and hills. You can see for miles. A 9 roOm home'
with 3·4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room wilh fireplace
glassed in 85 ft. porch and a 97 ft. long deck to see the
view. A 4 car garage and 2 heat pum~s . Veiy privata althe
end of the road.
'
$120,000

~UILDING LOTS siluated In Pomeroy. Lots range
from approx. 2.808 acres up to 6 .726 acres. Call
.
#751
tOday for more information.
•""-···-·

·•--1--;!1!---~~~~~~~ua:~~'i.' ·
4.702 acres m11 ·
J.881 acres m/1

-I

f' ·

u,ooo .

r,ooo~"-

9,000
8,000

WANT TO OWN A HOME? NO MONEY?
GOOD JOB? GOOD CREDIT? .
CALL BLACKBURN REALTY TODAY.
We are mortgage con sultants. You may be SURPRISED
, at what you can buy.
Call 614-446-0008.

Dept.GDT,

P.O. Box614
Ripley, WV 25271
J...so0-458-9990

Real EstatB General

Real Estate General

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER - ....•....•.......•.. 311-8126
WIL MA WILLlAMSOH..•. ....... , •••.••... ,._ .......•21&amp;-0036
EUNICE NIEHM ...• ..•.........••............ ...- ........ -.....1tt7

LYNDA FRALEY ., ...........••...••.............,....... .......aiOfl
PATR IC~ RO SS ...... ...... , .................. ...•..·.... 245-i575

8 ..~11 Qffir• · .U&amp;-MH

11021 REMARKABLY SPACIOUS

prestl~ious

4/5

Gr ea t ro
om designed
w/cal hedfor
ral oetlhig living
and
bedroom
home
woodb umlng 1lreplace,plant rm ., kilchen has
many caoine&lt;s &amp; an Island work area.braakfaSI

nook
overlooks
pond,
formal din1ng rm ., 6 ac
m/1, Call
Virginiaa388
-8826.

PATRICIA.HAVS_........•...........•....•.............. &amp;46-38&amp;1

1 1015 BEAUTIFUL NEW BRICK
on
Cora M1ll Ad 3 bedrOOfTIS, 2 fUll baths, gas
heat , cent. air. 2 car anached garage + a ~nd
garage with workshOp area that w1ll hokt 2 to 5
more cars. 1.063 acres Call Pany Hays lor

details.

446 -3 8~.

-

Inc.

11 D20 COUNTRY CHARMER Just a great
neat &amp; clean place far a family. Oak cabinels in

the kit. Range , Reg., DW, white carpet inLR.
Garden Tub &amp;shOwer tlath, 24x24 detached
garage. Above. grouhd pool. 2 At:. . m/~ .
1873 REDUCED PRICE· 117 Acres close to
new freeway, hOspital ,. shopping ctr . wa.ter.
gas. sewer. Adjoining Pmecrest Nursmg
Home.

·

. Mobile Home Hook -up

··-

,

,......

.

1996 HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL· Large 7
, 2 story home, 3 BR. large kitChen, DR. 3
air furnace. Beautiful treed lot

'

'

~~

I

.

.

11022 ENJOY A WONDERFUL ALL BRICK
RANCH · 2 bedrooms, great home very

kit , ut1lity rm., extra :storage rm 2 car attached

•s~roUCHoFCLA.ss. ThEf remarkable garaQe. Also\a

spacious home w1th YIUW ot the county Italian
t1le toyer, cattledral ce1hng With balcony, 3 BR ,
2 1/2 baths, ll'fing room wiih woodburn1ng
fireplace , eq01p k!lchen, br&amp;ak.!asl room has a
lp. window, stereo speakers throughout, brass
light fudures and much more. 2 car attached
. attiC storage. 2 acres m/1 Tills hOuse
iS,~~~~~~;:~~~ free ol best
h I Make
~our
I
f f
• •

.,

.

see

... -"

~--

I J 1j1 n

- ,

C
.
l

nght

rental hOme

w;garage Just

tor the mother·m·li.lw

11007 NEW LISTING 10 a;c m/1 off SA 160
onKelton Ad close to town. Hilltop v1ew w!lots
ot trees Very secluded
11001 IMMACULATE/AFFORD ABLE co1y 3
bearoom. Green Twp L A w .·r~r eplace full
bsmt . new w1ndows. cab1net s. Jenn A~r ra nge
ref , cMhwasher Lovely treed yard

1
1

-. ·.
11004
RIO. GR ANOEI
BUILDING 1850 S q Fl. 3
Larg~

storage

a corner lot on a

HOME WITH 3 BEDROOMS- t car attached garage , 2
f!JOre or less .
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT! !!
BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME · CHAROLAIS LAKE DRIVE located on approx 2.78 acres with sun room , hot tub,
and sky light$. MUST SEE .

car unattached garage on 2 1/2 acres

FARM FOR SALE -Brick home. barn. 2 sheds and pond
on 49 acres rnore or less . City.Schoo11S. Cal~ Ia see .
LOCATED IN WALNUT TOWNSHIP · Mobile home
with 2 bedroom on one acre more or less. w1th county
water. satellite CALL TO SEE I.!!
HOMES AND APARTMENTS FOR RENT·
REALTOR OWNED '

· (614) 742-3171 or"l-800-585-7101

POMEROY· Crew Rd. - A large 1.5 acre lot w/Barringlon
Doub!ewlde, sitting on full basement. Home has 4 SR.,
dining &amp; family room, &amp; in ground pool, back deck. t481
$49,900

CHAROLAIS HILLS SUBDIVISION Rustic log home on the lake ... This new
built 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, 2 car garage
.ho rne oHers country living and peace &amp;
quite all located 5 minutes from Holzer
Medical Center. This home offers 1824
sq uare feet of living space with a great
113 Acres m/1 CLAY TOWNSHIP 2400
room and spectacular views. QUIET
pound tobacco base, 4 room house, oil
' NEIG HBORHOOD .
heat,90 acres wooded. $75,000
'
PLANTZ SUBDIVISION· $56,900 • 3 or 4. 1429 OFFICES,OFFICES, OFFICES •
That's whal lhis 3,000 sq. ft. building
BR brick &amp; ~ ame tri-level t t /2 baths , LR ,
offers. Located onSR 160 near Holzer.
Family room, kitchen. new roof,new Siding.
Ideal lor many uses . Call for more
CALL FOR AN APPOI!'ITMENT TO SEE.
information.
RACCOON
CREEK CAMPS
&amp;
-GARDENS Localed at Ewington. ShM
or long term lea~es. Cheaper than
owning.

CO MMERCIAL SITE ON . EASTE RN AVENUE,
CORNER LOT PLUS 2 ADJOINING" LOTS. 2
DW ELLI NGS , PR ESE NT LY RE NTED .G REAT
LOCATION FOR .BUSINESS. JUST LIStED!

Garnet M orr is
.It t akes pat i en c~ to be a weave r. It takes tal ent and
Reai .E state General
.
it takes love.
J'i~;;!;;!;;!;;!;;!:;!;::~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~il
,
G~ rn et had all t hose qualities whe n she, w it h a
quiet sm i l e and ab undant un se l f i shn ess, set out ihe
yards a nd yards of wa rp to be i n ter lace d w ith
32 Locust Street , Gallipolis
:Swiftl y tossed woof to create beaut i ful cloth on lhe
446·1 066
~co rns i n t he Gall ia Co un ty Se nior Ci t izen 's Center;
:and before th ai , in the Ga ll ipolis Deve lopme nt al
Allen C . Wood, Realtor/Broker-446·4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
P:nter.
Mose Canterbury, Realtor-446-3406
: L i ke an em pl y loom, Garnet was the younger
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
} ister in an orp haned fam il y, valianll y trying to be
Tim Watson , Realtor-446-2027
)nature beyond her year s for her b rol hers, who were

POMEROY • Mu lberry Ave. a 3 bedroom double traHor
with a shingled roof. Has large living room lots of storage
room .and beautnul flowers.
ONLY $27,500

DEBBIE DRIVE •
EVERYONE
SHOULD OWN A NEW HOME AT
LEAST ONCE . This 2 story beauty
features· 3 or 4 br 's, 2 baths, beamed
ceilings in the LR &amp; family rm, cherry
cabinets in kitchen, 6 in. outer walls &amp;
much more . FantaMic view.

lJ l.•.uu S/.

$4,!100, 814-388-8744.

State Route 338 • Ai:ross from Ravenswood Aluminum
approx. 8 acres and a 2 story frame home that has 3
bedrooms and on e bath . A nice view of the river fr om the
front porch.
$25,000

HYSELL RUN AD.• Approx . one acre with 2 bed room and .
a path home-very private Country setting . Storage building
and a beauti ful antique heating stove.
$14 ,900

Log
Structures, Inc.

Appalachian

VILLAGE OF C HESHI RE ... 3 BEDROO M, 11 /2 STORY
HOME HAS N ICE LAWN , DECK , ABOV E GROUND
POOL ... $44,000!

tor Sale

Kep~

P. F loyd , 446·3383

ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE UNIVER SITY OF
RI O GRA N.DE. COM FO
a TBL
A,i,aei)ROOM HOME
UJM1 .AOOM WITH
HAS 1 1/2 BATHS,
FIREP LACE, .QEJi::li ~
, GARAGE AND OTH ER
OUTBU ILDIN\SH!01:5"MY LOT HAS GARDEN SPACE ..
CALL SOON FOR AN APPO INTMENT TO SEE THIS
HOME!

c:c, Looka

• 1995 Cllovy Botetto, 4 Cy~nder 5 And Runo Llko Now $800, 814·
Speed, CO Player, Goad Gaa 379-2001.
....... $1 2,!100 114-256-1o482.
1993 Yamoha 11mberwolf, 2 WO.
Ul\8 Now $2,800, 814-44&amp;-e938

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Broker

NEW ON THE MAAKET... 3 TO 4 BEDROOM HOME
CO NVENIENTLY LOCAT ED IN TH E CITY. 2 bATHS,
DINING AREA OR FAMILY ROOM OFF KITCHEN.
VERY AFFOR DABLE AT $32,000.
'

Tlria &amp; Battery,

InteriOr, loW nilet, otking $14,!100. $5,000, 814-441· 1267.
804-875-7721.

F. Canaday,

446-3636

1888 Yomaha VIrago I 1oo·cc, V·

Httt, climate control air, leather Mil... New

from

Call or write for more
lnfomatlon. ·

25 LOCUST ST. • GALLIPOLIS

Good, Runa Good, $800 , 614 ·
1112 Chryoler Filth Avonuo, Uko 3fl8.1nt.

Afllr. 4P.M. 81~754.

Choose

over
70
standard
models or we'U custom
design one for you.

.!1000.

l'lfn"".,... Sll.M.HOI.ISB CQMI&gt;NoiT· L.l'.

TURNER, Broke~....~.,.~~....&gt;.;:;;-;;;:-:992-56112
BRENDA JEFFERS ..................................... 992·3058
~E RRY SPRADLING .......................... (3041882,.(.1,1i8
C H A RMELE SPRADLING ................. (304 -884Wif98
OFFICE ............................ :............... :........... 99N886

COUNT!ff SECLUSION • With the
convenience of city living. Located 5
minutes from Holzer Medical Center, this
spacious home res1s on 6.25 rolling
acres and offers 5 bedrooms, 2 kitchens,
and 4 · bathrooms, with many other
custom feathers. This home would be
great for the professional family or a two·
family duple&gt;.

bome

Strudu"' bas been

PONDEROSJ\"
&amp;~

DOltll:

loa

Appalachian

~·

POMEROY-H av e you e ver wan te d
Min i Farm wit h a ni ce 1
to ow n
.1/2 Story Ho m e?? W ell he re it is ! !
6.67 + ac res of g r ound -pa rt i;:~ lly
fe n ce d , n ice gard e n a r ea and a
great ya l ?.f. Hom e h as 3 b ed room s,
nice la rge living , room , ba th, utili ty
room,kitc hen and d in in g room .
Close to t o wn yet a ll th e E xtra of
Co unt ry Living . All T his Can Be
Yours For $39,900 .

NEW UST!NGIII - Establis~ed Body
Shop Business and home on same site.
The property oHers a large body shop
with a 12 x 18 office space and 10 x 30
storage area, aU contained on 1/2 acre.
The ranch style home offers 3 bedrooms, ..
1 1/2 baths and a very large living room.
There is a detached garage, all located 5
. miles from SA 7 and 5 miles from SA
162. $59 ,900.00 .

convenlena~ I

yearI

MOBILE HOME ON LY- A 1971 Kirkwoo d with 2
bedrooms, 1 bath , underpinning porch, and blocks, Has
c.entral air and natural gas forced air furnace.
$5,000

NEW LIST ING- Syracuse- Great
P lace!! Great
Location!! ·
This
Home Sits or a nice quiet Street.
This home has 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, large living room, equipped
kitchen. dining room . Refrigerator &amp;
range less than 1 yr. old . Also
there's a dishwasher. Utility room.
with newer washer and dryer. Front
porch; side deck, large 3/4 acre lot
with lots of flOwers, trees and some
fencing. Gall lor your appt. ASKING
$59,500

Rllidendal or ODrnm.ttdal wiring,
,_ or ropolro. Muw llcenaed electrician. Ridenour

durabUity
11exlb01ty In dellp
a few of the reuonsl
why 20,00 ramBles

DURST RIDGE RD· A 2 story home with 3 to 4 bedrooms,
din ing room . Has 3'--beautifu l view of several hills and a
nice lot, front porch , and a cellar. Has 2/3 acre.
ASKING $25,000

PEA RL STRE E T · MI D DLEPORT1992 Modu lar Home o n D ou bl e
Corner Lot with beautil ul view of the
Ohio River!! 6 rooms, 2 baths , 3
bedrooms. Level lot. Landscaped .
New Lennex H .P./C.A. Nice Place.
ASKING $61 ,900

AP PROVED FOR FARMERS
HO ,.. E! 4 bedroom ranch .
vinyl siding , newer electric
heat pump /c enlr~l air
conditioning, 2 car garage.
City Schools!
1760

Uncondl"'". . .COli
-.
Locll
rolorenooo
fulnllhoG.
1 (lOIII 287.0571 00 (1141 237· 002Mi.

enerc

III 992-6191

LE NDI! R

Joe Moore, A...ociote 441-1111

Lawrence EnterpriMI T.W. la· .

Coml'ort,

L. Hart ............ 742-'2357

1St

..IJl Ronn y Blackburn, Brok.r, Phone; (614) 446-0008

LOG HOMES

. OFFICE 992·2886

992-2259

514 Second Ave .• GaUipoti•. Oh. 45631

•enco. 1211 Goo F . . -, L-P
I Not. Hnl Pumpo I Eloctrlc
FurMcH. Free Eatlmalel.. If "'u
lloft't Coli Uo Wo 8ofl Loool 11444!1-1301, 1-100· 217-8301, wv

Columbus, OH 43229; FAX \6141 431 ·689-4.

992-6191

liJ

Electrlcallfld

31133 or t~m-11321.

,EitOJont Cond.lon, 74,000 Miles.

Tamm ie ~eWit1 .. 245-0022
Martha Smilh ........ 379-2651
Cindy D rongows ki 245-9697
Cheryl Lemley ....... 742-31 71,

ANY REASONABLE OFFER 2 STORY BRICK WILL NOT BE REFU SED! FOURTH AV ENUE· Nice
Nice a lum ./brick ranch. back lawn approximately
beau1iful lot, detached 1 oar 46'x150'. 1 112 baths, living
garage. Needs a little TLCI rqom , dining room , kitchen .
FA gas furnace . Storage
Let's make a deal, today!
1727 buih:Jing. $43,500 .
M722

B&amp;SAIENT
I :&lt;lfiNQ

~WilL I

In Memory

NEW LISTING - L o n g b ottom - One
Story Fra m e S id i ng H o m e ·with 3
bedroof)ls, 1 bat h, livi ng roo m ,
s p acious ~i t c h e n . F u ll basement ,
covered ceme nt sitting po rch, 2 car
garage wi th work s hop. Approx. 1
acre of l e v e l gro un d. A S KING
$43,5000

lirlprovetnentl

Get on the right tra ck with Ponderosa, a d ivis ion of
Metromedla Steakhouses Company, LP. Opportunities are
currently Ot~ailable In Columbus. If you have so me college
and at least two years r4!1staurant or reu."ll management
experience, please forward your resum e to: Chris Carter,
Hum an Resources Manager, 1381 Bolen hill Avenue. ,

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

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

840

Now Is an idQI tline to consider I move to Ponderosa u we
launch our apanded menu and achieve further success In our
market.
You'll Ond our conc9pt and careers infin itely m~re rewan:t.
Ina than any fan food erwironmflflt. Wrth a realistic: opportunity 11:0 become. a General Manager with in a yar. S day work
weeks, an Intensive 9 week tr.tininc program, and:

EQO.ML

BLACKBURN REALTY

Refrigeration

Horne

810

Accessories

GET OFF THE FAST FooD
AND 0N·'fHE FAST TRACK

Real Estate General

Kathleen M . C leland

OFFICE

.........

Ace Vlnrl Sldlnt 20'11o OW Sola, Eloctrlcol, WVOOD308, :JOol-875Vln)'l Sldlnt /Rapllcamont Wlnd- 1781.
New gat qanke. one ton
awa,
Roaffng, 25 Yearl Eaper_
......... loor moll, o1o.
linca. 114-3117-0113.
Real Estate General
D &amp; R AulD. Rplay, WV. 3114-372-

r::-:::--:--:-:--~:----:- 1

STOP BY &amp; PI C K UP A F REE QUALITY HOME S
BOOKLET, TODAY ! SEE HOMES IN COLOR !!

Auto Pans &amp;

760

'

-·

Real Estate General

.

SlH '! IC f S

crl. 5 ......

......... AII-I'M - · aJCOI.
..... OOOidllion, 113,2!10, 114-742·

L. Brinager ...... 949-2439

Sherri

i-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

~

1883 Yamaha PW 50

EEO

Troc:tor /TIIilot PIIIIJnt IM!IIbla

WI-.
Seff.C.talrlod.,~~~~~~§~~

1357.

.

,_, .... ..,.,...,,,wn
, ... Ford Aqor,

Henry E. Cleland Jr.. 992-6191

Henry E. Cleland

.

-redo, Loodod,
4114 JOG 12,100,

11114

.
Tracy

. .. . . . .

Et-lc Or Ilea,
Air.
Good
23FtConcllon.
s.arcroh 12.2!10. 114-2111-

I a I \ AC, E - . . Condldonl
40,000 Mlal, I:CO, 114-4411-

A~ OJ

Real Estate General

301-ZM7 . . . &amp;pm.

1501 Ford F·150 XLT LIMt Ful)o

Real Estate General

835 N. Cas sady Ave.
C o lumbus, Oh io 43219 '

-.

camoti...

Z31il·

• Vory c .....,.tltln Salaries
• Quarterly Bonuses
•Reautar Increases

llaml

810

In CIIJ Llmlto, ~;~ IWooklr 1
•&amp;or•rol-plallup.tdo- ~~~
'
If tar UH on
IIC.
t7,000. Col -·Mz·201t or 820
Pllnblng •

SOMEONE TO CLEAN HOUS~
2to3 Days
8·12 ttours Per Week.
Pays $5 - $6 an hour, according to
experience. Need references &amp;
resume. Send to 110 Prospect Hill,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

331 OS Hiland Road
Pomeroy
or call446-1018 or 992·2222.

Sutcliffe Corpo ra tion

C.iipll'l •

1111 Yollowotona 31' camper/
houlatllllor, Hoa twO ~ upon-

367- 70$0

WESTERN
MEDICAL

7110

Motor Hamil

NEEDED

859 Third Avenue
Gallipolis

8010 North State Route 7
Cheshire .

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

• 401 (KI Plan •

Hou111 per week 32 or 40
Pay rate
$4.25 per hour

Attn : GS Pers onnel
Barnebey

HllpWa111d

00

10

FULL TIME PO S ITION

110

Posting Date: May ) 2, 199S
The Unlvenllty of Rio Grande announces an opening
for a sublttltute teacher In the Child Development
Center lor aummer work only.
Aasoclate Degree In Early Child Hood Dtvelpment
required. Previous Experience with work with pre·
school children preferred. Work week of 37 112 hours.
SaiiiiY $4.75 per hour. No benefits.
Interested candidate• should send letter of interest
and reaume before the deadline of May 30, 1995to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason, PHR
Director of Human Resources
UniversitY of Rio Grande
Campus P.O. Box F27
Rio Grande, OH 45674
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community
College Is Art Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action
Employer
I

o

REGISTERED ANGUS And ChiAnguo Bullo And Hollar• 1710 . 1188 OIIUJ 500, con.. rllblo,
Up. Excellanl Bloodllnoo, Sloto 118,000 o~QINI mlloo. runotdrRun FOrint, 114-2111·15385 Jlclc· aood, goad car Ill rntore, lt4·
1112-4111.

Managemenl
Trainees
Excelle nt program for
good leadeo:s. Apply in
person or mall resume
to: P.O ..Box 10
Barboursville, WV 25504

110

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TRANSPORTATION

71

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POSnlONANNOUNCEMENT
SUBS11TUTE ASSISTANT TEACHER
SUMMER ONLY

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.iUUJeIJ

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lWo Ill" pipe cenio croutnoo ............ 21fl, . , . . .
4'114'. . _ orev::T..,",!~· 100 ••••wnl s.l.. WMt t P.M. 17
buohol. One ....
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50111.
.... lilt Of Good~
To Ba Soldl All Conolgnmonll
630
LlveatOCk
Wolcomo, Ho•llnt Avollabla.
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1- 12 w- o ...,o, 25; 114· - • Ll.,
..1112-2322.
1148-2017.
~~.;:·~..;.;:~~-4- ad a.M, ...""' ON-on- . 640 Hly • Gl'lln
guo, Agr•111ve Bruder 1110, 22 to1g -.d 1oa1oo, 112oo, 1 boll
8t4-:m.151L
or 1L 304-8711-1:111.

Now Holland 1!10 Round Balor llmoualn bull .. realtttted , ..,.
tl.2!10;
!104SG ... 1!10; lingo I - 2 Jr. ald. 314 Unouoln
~T-o,M-o; .,_ JM111no - . 314 Llmoulln holfCoolllldol•o. Wr~ r
Hor ere t COWl W/31• Llmoualn

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HORSE
COORDINATOR

Sunday, May 21, 1995

.

LOTS OF POSSIBILITY - Concrete building . with
commercial spac.e downstairs, 3 room apart upstairs ,
also two bedroom mob1le home at rear. JUST WHAT
YOU ARE LOOKING FOR
VACANT U.ND . Approx. 7.3 acres in Green Twp . City
water availa.ble, PRI CED RIGHT.

11025 1661 McCo rmick Rd . · A Rare Jewel
close lo town 3 Bedrooms, 3 balhS, calhedral
ceiling, eat -in kit formal din rm, huge liv1ng
room. utility room, back &amp; !rent porch Bldg. 4

AC m/1 Secluded Paradise.
11 027 58 &amp; 62 Olive St. · Corner of 3rd Great
commercial buildings: Can be sold separate.

Call for mrormahon
1894 READY FOR SUMMER CHANGE;, !hal
Is· artordable, call Wilma on !hiS 4 bedroom
home that has lots or space lor everyone and a
nice large 101.

I
3 bedroom ranch, 2
fireplaces . tun basemen!, comfortable hvmg rm,
2 car garage Renlal home also

1874·

1999 GREAT RETIREMENT or staner home
2 BR, kilcMen &amp; DR 1 acre m/1 Super buy
$34 ,9(X)

LOCATED IN CITY OF GALLIPOLIS E1egan1
HOME located 1n !he coumry w/4
batM.new carpet &amp; new roof Pnce reduced to Bnck Beauty- Located 1n the city 2 story. fl.JII
basement &amp; garage Des tgned lr great hvtng
$65,000
F~rsl floor has formal entry w/LR &amp; formal OR
11005 JUST REDUCED, IIllS level~ 3 bedroom Cherry cabmets In !he kttchen Breakfast &amp;
mobile home 1s . like new, you won 't believe powder room Second floor offers 4 BA &amp;
aM 1s pnced nQht. so call Wilma beaut1lul BA. Basomelll has 4 rooms . SR. FA
w/ftreplace, laundry room. storage room. new
turriace wtCf.A Very mucn more ' Ca!l Virg1n1a
L Smith 388·88261446·6806

..

1938 FOR THE FARM MINDED PERSON. thos
50 acres Is pnme pasture land, also a 4
bedroom ·farmhouse that needs a little TLC,
call Wilma for more info

H30 INVESTMENT Seven Un11 At;lt5 Prtme
loca!lorl Gall !or more mtormahon

1973 OWNER .WANTS SOLD YESTERDAY,
this 3 bedroom 1993 mob1le home will 1mpress
you , very love ly, wi!h 1/2 acre lor and 2 car
garage , call Wilma rqr dmalls

11011 ACREAGE, ACREAGE, 103 in alt and 1f
seclus1on IS what you want then ·th1s IS It, 4
bedroom farm house that IS m gOoOcond1110n,
ready to move Into condition. can Wilma and
make thaT .~!!!~~:!!..!!:~..!!:
11009 NEW LISTING !IRICK RANCH located
tn AddiSOn · 3 bedrm, LA. wflovety carpet.

lf8il5 REDUCED, REDUCED, nice commerc1al
lOt ready to bu1kJ on. call W11ma lor more infQ

equipped kitchen full base.ment, covered

NEW 1994 MORRIS LEXINGTON mobile home locafed
in Quail Creek park . 14 x 70. MUST SEE CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT.

patio . attached oarage 2 car bam building. 3/~

HOME FOR SALE 3 bedroom, bath. living room. family
room. kitchen, fenced in back yard. REALTOR OWNED .
PRICED AT $45,000 .00

#964- OUTSTANDING 5 acrts TRACT build
your masTerpiece on one ol the LAST kHs
LAKEVIEW EST. 5 ac'l!S $33,000 2 :J.48
$25,900 4 kJts on White Road Subject

NEW LISTING· 2 homes located on approximately t 1/2
acres. One home has 8 rooms. 3 bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths.
living room, dining room, family, kitchen. One home has
a rooms. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, kitchen,
fam ily roOm . Both have rural water, LP gas Furnace, and
more. Call for appointment to see
FOUR LOTS . Each lot ,;ontains appro&lt;. 20 acres . Two
lots have frontage on St. At. 218 and 2 have frontage,on
Cox Merce,illo Rd. CHECK ON THIS ONE.
.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
rtJ
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
Lll.
,

1·8Q0.894..1066

1!"000

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS
Y.tCIS UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES .
BROCHLiFirAT SOMI! OF THI!'tOCAl.'BJI.NKS~-­
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS .

...

-&lt;~

ac m/1

11018 NEW LISTING· owner will sell or lrade
ior a mobile hOme tt11s 2 bedroom rancn wl!tl 1
1/2 acres, call Wilma.

restnct~

covenants.

·

11024 NEW LISTING· 116 acre tarm
pnme ~stum land and 50 acres o1 WOOds
tne farmer or the hunter w1th a • ~m
farmhouse that has been remoc:lled with new

carpet, centra! alr, alQt of spaee M'\ ttus home
dose to town, call Wilma for a peek..
•

LIS'riN•~· You will want to see
4 bedroom w1th 1/2 acre lee! lot
close to the 35 bypaS$, Is priced to sell so
better llurry on thiS one, call Wilma
this well

11019 HEW USllNG· 3 bedroom ranch
!amity room and a large level lot In a
M;ghborhood, Prk:ed riglo, so bettor huRy """
cal Wilma on this one it won·.t las1 tong.
hil6 been compietty remolded inside and out.
·
m a sechJCied spot that you will slmpty love, a ftSQ COMMERCIAL BUILDING In the City
rnust to see, call Wilma
~ 'x80 ' block b!&lt;%1 w/~prox. 3,900.aq. tt, 1tO
e1ac 1S OOOr $45.000 Ill Smrth 318-

220

11016 GREEN 1WPJI_a....._.,;;.,.,_.., ,I..._633 _ BV¥~ T.\j!,S0 DOUB.LE Hg_f!I~(Dr._..,._ ~j"~·68Q6
'
lal"ti'T"'"-ctm ~ ~ .... tence and good road
lrwe&amp;tmenl. or ,M!fn'l"72"'&amp;:"ret llltt re~ hlllp
-.-.... . ·-.., . . . -~.
frontage. ~Ito tOtting. mostly pasture. some
withe payments Located ln .nK:e little town :Cooo5LAND CONTRACT· 1.31,000 prtc'e
woods. $35,000.

cloSe to GallipoliS

•

down. $.33,000 balance 9% .~

$33471 P&amp;J

Cloaa lo-3 Bod ranct~

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Pomeroy • Middleport • GaHipolls, OH ." Point Pleasant,

Ares farmers are urged to take safety
precautions ~uring long days coming up
By EDWAJtD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS -lt was a very
discouraging weet for farmers in

our area.
Last week was CQilSldered prime

time for corn and soybean planting.
Grass hay needs to be harvested
before fast ~g maturity.
Who k.Dows how long before
IObiCCO and vegetable plants can
be set. A word .of caullon! Accl·
dents happen when working loog
hours. On those loog days that are
.sure to come in the near future,
plan to take a few breaks for
refn:sbment needs, or a quick nap.
Seed of numerous plant species
ingested by livestock survive pal·
sage through the digestive system
and germinate .in tbe feces. The
seed trait that confirms survival in
forage legumes is bardseededness.
Cattle excrete most seeds
between 24 to 72 hours after ingeslion. Work completed at Texas A

a:.

.

&amp; M and reported at the American

Forage and Grassland Council
meeting in 1994 showed lbat without bard seed, feeding lesume seed
becomes an expensive protein supplement.
Most commercial seedlots of
clover and alfalfa generally bave
low hard seed content. From the
Texas information Birdsfoot
Trefoil could work because it
generally produces a lot of bard
seed. Dr. Jim Gerrish, University or
Missouri researcher at Linneus,
·Mn. (will· be in Gallia County on
August 25), likes tQ let trefoil in
one pasture go to. seed then bave
cows graze i~ then move them into
another pasture the next day where
·he wants to introduce more trefoil.
Announcing the Southern Hay
· and Pasture Day, June s; 1995 at
· lbe Research Station just soulb of
Jackson, on State Route 93. The 2
p.m. - 9 p.m. program will feature!

- ..

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wv

Sun~ay, May 21, 1195

'

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Swts, Page 4·

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a bay making demonstration with
several equipment dealers cooperating from 2 • 5 p.m.; a pastUJ'C tour
and related demonsuations 6 • 7:~0
p.m.; and keynote speaker, Dr.
Harlan White, from Virginia at
7:45 p.m .. A refreshment break
wilh a food booth will be available
at Sp.m.
.
Plan to take part in any or all of
lbe'UCtivitles. We are hopin' for a
warm dry day, if not we will just
do tbe best we can as no rairt date
is planned.
Reminder to private pesticide
applicators of the record keeping
requirement when using restricted
use pesticides. It still looks as if
you select a "form" of your choice.
We have some single sheet samples
available upon request. Stop at the
Extension Office.
·
Edward Vollborn Is Gallla .
County's exte1111ion agent, agrl·
culture..

Pacers
advance in
playoffs

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Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
882
Pick'4:

8086
Super Lotto:
4-7-10-12-37·43

7

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NO. I IN CINCINNATI ZONE • A Cloclnnatl Buick Zone omcial announced Thunday
that Smith-Bukk Pontiac, GaiUpolis, Is Cllrrent·
ly ranked No. I In cllltomer •lilfactlon for ill
service areL The Cincinnati zone coven lllOit of
Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and lndia.na.

Tbe rankfnl rellec:ts tbe c.....,_r lnel ol
all dealership ~U.fac:tlon whlclt Includes 11peell
of the purchue and service experience, tile ofll·clal said. The award II based upon a one year •
leiT!l ending In March, 1995. Slalt members are
shown above at tbe Eastem Avenue facUlty. · ·

·crop acreage reports vital
line to USDA loss benefits

..

By LISA MEADOWS ·
·sed Gall' Co
C
S
ta unty: . om, oy· ' providers if the Insurance has been :
GALLIPOLIS - The recent' nu .
purchased lbrough a private agent.
beavy rainfall and flash flooding • beans, and Tobaca_l are msurable.
Farmers who purchased l)leir
bas prompted tbe Consolidated
In order to ._,ecetve USDA bene·
basic
crop insurance at the CFSA
Farm Service Agency (formerly fits AND crop m.surance benefits in
office
can file lbeir crop lnsurailce
ASCS) to remind producers of the lbe event of a disaster, crops. must
acreage
reports at the same time..
new requirements for acrease be·reported by July 5. Crop msurlbey
repoo
acreage for farm Jl[i&gt;·· .
reporting and the link 10 crop loss ance acreage reports mu~t be
benefits.
signed by the Insured or a destgnat· gram purposes. The CAT and NAP.'
The Noninsured Crop Oisaster ed agent. Acreage reports f&lt;J': farm covemge replaces the ad boc crop Assistance Program (NAP) is a program purposes must still be disaster programs of past years. ;
new progr!IJD available for crops filed ~~ the CFSA offiCe; however, Unlike previous disaster programs.: ·
not covered under crop insurance. crop msurance acr~ag~ reports producers are required to report :
This program provides a compara- must also be filed w1th msurance acres planted to receive benefits.
ble level of benefits as that offered
under the Catastrophic Insurance, .
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAY.
but NAP involves no fees.
customer appreciation day in downtown GalEmployees of tbe Ohio Valley Bank washed and
lipolis.
.
. .
.
· Planted acreage on NAP reported l:ly July 15th to the Consolidated
cleaned customers' car windows during a recent
·Farm Service Agency (CFSA), ur
no NAP benefits will be paid in the
event of a crop loss. The NAP proWASHINGTON (AP) -A pro- be higher, feed grain production
Domestic use "and exports are gram 'is triggered by "area-wide"
this
year
is
projected
to
be
244
miJ.
duction decline is expected to
expected· to remain ''relatively ·Josses in the event of natural disaslion
metric
tons,
14
·percent
below
reduce feed grain supplies by'? perstrong," according to USDA's ter.
A· major requirement for parllcilbe record set last ~ear.
cent Ibis year.
Economic Research Service.
pation
in USDA programs In· 199S
The Agriculture Departmept
is
that
·crop insurance mu~t · be
says lbat while carrying stocks will
obtained on all insurable crops

. Vol. 46, NO. 16
Copyrtght1995

. MIDDLEPORT- Stephanie
Snyder of Middleport, a physical
lberapist assistant, has jo10ed the
physical therapy services at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Assistants follow patients
lbrough their treatment plan and
assist physical therapists. Said Snyder, "As a physical therapy assistant .. I work with patients who
requ•rc the use of exercise, gait
trammg, use of beat and cold, ultrasound, endurance training and
many olber treatments to increase
their ability to return to normal

resides in Middleport with her busRoger and their 18 monlb old

Enrollment drop vexes·college Officials
· · COLUMBUS (AP) - Student enrollment in lbe state university system 1is expected 10 drop for lbe second straight year Ibis fall, and a state
education official said Ohio's strong economy is partly to blame.
Three universities expect significant declines of 5 percent to 6 percenc
Kent State University, the University of Akron and tbe University of
Toledo.
"Six percent would be really high," said William Napier, lbe Ohio
Board of Regents' vice cbanceUor for external affairs. "Our decline systemwide was less lban 2 percent last fall.' •
Napier told The Columbus Dispalch for a srory published today lbat a
similar decrease expected for lbe next school year is related to the low
statewide unemployment mte, which was 4.6 percent in April.
"One factor ... is lbe relationship between college attendance and lbe
economy,", Napier said. "During times wben lbe economy falters and lbe

number of jobs declines; we see more robust enrollment. During tiines
when jobs are ple~tiful, enrollment generally slips some."
The rising cost of tuition also hurts enrollmen~ several college ofticials
said.
.
·
Most of Ohio's 13 public universities have told the state they expect a
fluctuation of 2 percent in enrollment. Ohio State University anticipates a
decrease of just under I percent. ·
The University of Toledo appears to be faring the worst. After an
almost 6 percent decline in enrollment Ibis year, lbe school expects another 6 percent drop' Ibis fall.
·
·
The university raised summer tuition by· 4 percent, and trustees are
expected to approve an increase of about 5.5 percent for lbe fall, said
Scott Kelley, associate vice president for financial affairs.
Lower enrollment hurts the university financially, despite the tuition

IMPRESSIVE SIGHT- Tbe 144 Meigs
High School graduates In their maroon and gold
caps and gowns Hoed up outside the school Sun·
.day afternoon In preparation for the procession·

Puzzle A 2
I

ByGEORGEABA.TE
military or beginning work, Mor- .
Sentinel News Staff
_
row said.
Soulbcm High School graduated
Kendra Marie Norris gave lbe
58 students from its 199S class at salutatory address by stressing to
its commencement ceremonies her classmates the need to work to
Sunday night.
be successful.
The Rev. Mark Morrow, in his
"The key to success is desire,"
baccalaureate address, challenged Norris said. "It means making sacthe graduates to work as team rifices that others are not willing 10
members as they ~nter the real · make. By making these sacrifices,
world. ·the end result will be well worlb
People need encouragement, the effon."
Morrow said.
She said her peers should not
"Who I am makes a difference," fear misL'lkes, buJleam from them.
said Morrow, a 1968 Southern
"Never underestimate yourself
graduate. Morrow's son, Matt, was · or your abilities and always
one of the class of 1995's co-vale- remember that thing s aren't as
dictorians.
scary or impossible as they may
Many students deserve honors, :!Cern," Norris said.
'
panicularly those students who
Co-valedictorian David Franklin
worked harder but did not get the Pickens said the· graduates need to
highest grades, said Morrow, pastor have· a destination.
of the Middle(JOrt First Baptist
"The impo&lt;tant thing is to say
Church.
,
which of these goals is bener lban
The graduates should honor the other: The important thing is
their family members, teachers, that these people have a destination
school administrators and fellow and aren't just wandering aimlessstudents, he added.
ly," Pickens said.
These students also should be
High school may have involved
challenged and supported for con· · simpler paths. but afterward the
· tinuing on to college, entering the

Snyder earned her associate
degree of applie.d science from
Shawnee State University. She
NEW ADMINISTRATOR
Patrick Airson has been
named new administrator for
the Scenic Hills Nursing Cen·
ter, Bidwell. Alrson has 18
years experience in the management field, and ti and one·
half years experience In long
term care. He bold.&lt; an Associate Degree of Applied Science
from Ohio University, and Bs
degree In health from OU. He is
married to Patricia Bell Alrson.
Alrson has lived throughout
southern Ohio most of bis life.
He is currently in the process of
relocating to .t he Gallipolis
area. He Is a member of tbe
chamber of commerce and
buman resource councU.

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NORINCO SKS SEMI-ALITO.RIFLE .

22 MAGI'&gt;I.JM

-'

.

al. Co-valedictorians Shllo Dawn Moore, left,
and Heidi Sue Huffman led th' graduates Into
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium for commencement exercises. (Sentinel photo)

·Future challenges outlined
.t o 144 Meigs High·graduates

activity."

.

Sport Shop

increase and a slight increase in state subsidy.
There's no money for faculty raises or improvements· to programs or
infrastructure, he said.
1
·
Like other universities. Toledo lost 20.5 percent of its budget- Sl4
million- to state cuts between 1991 and 1993. Student fee increases
have made up most of the difference.
.·'There clearly has been a transfer of burden from the state to our stu·
dents. It is clearly an issue that concerns us,·· KeUey said.
Kent State projects a 5.7 percent decline for the coming year.
"It does present a financial challenge." said Larry Kelley, vice president for business and finance at the university. "It's a big hit because we
have fewer people paying tuition, and the state funding fonnula is 'almost
exclusively enrollment driven ."
·
lie said lbe economy, tuition costs and lbe dwindling number .of high ...
school gmduates have contributed to the school's situation.

Speaker stresses .teamwork
as Southern graduates 58

Business briefs ·
HONG KONG (AP) - With
lbe gradual opening up of lbe RussiaJ] Far Eas~ and lbe easing of tensiOII on lbc Russian-Chinese border, airlines will shortly be flying
over areas that were once militarily
sensitive and sealed to foreign aircraft.
Previously, planes flying from
North America to Asian destinations - such as Beijing, Shanghai
and Bong Kong ·- had to skirt

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 22, 1995

Feed grain supplies projected to decline,

Snyder joins PVH staff

Low tonight In 50.. Clear.
Tuesday, sunny. Hl&amp;bs In mld·
80s.

Kicker:
972711

in the Larry R. Morrison Gymnasi •
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
urn for the commencement proSentinel News Staff
"Plan your future, for your gram. The processional of graducareer plan is like a road map. it ates was led by valedictorians Shilo
will let you reach your goals and Dawn Moore and Heidi Sue Huff.
man, followed by Jason A, Taylor,
objectives in lbe most direct way."
That was .lbe advice of Michael also a valedictorian; Crystal Lynn
S. Wilson, speaker at the 27th Vaughan, salutatorian: and the
annual Meigs High School bac· other graduates, all attired in
calaureate and commencement maroon and gold caps and gowns.
Melissa Ann Wilfong gave lbe
exercises Sunday afternoon.
invocation.
Rebecca Sue Meier,
Wilson, a 1971 graduate of
Meigs High School who went on to class president, gave lbe welcome, ·
.graduate from 01\io University, and introductions were by Eddena
become a certified public accoun- Jo Russell, treasurer. Special music
tant and attained a partnership in included· "Chorale and Shaker
the firm of Cummins, Krasik &amp; Dance" by lbe Meigs High School'
Hohl Co., Columbus, told the 144 Band, and two selections, "It's So
graduates that "education is lbe key . Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterto success in Ibis increasingly com- day" and "Against Ail' Odds" by
the rvteigs lligh School Chorus.
plex worid.
The UJCee valedictorians and the
"Technology is the future," said
Wilson, who went on to describe salutatori:m spoke before Principal
the world as "moving forward at an Fenton Taylor, presented the class
incredible pace, a place where to Larry W. Rupe, president of lbe
computers and other technology Meigs Local Board of Education,
who awarded diploma's. Jaclyn
will touch every aspect of life."
lie challenged the graduates to Dawn Swartz read the class roll,
plan their futures, make the most of and Amber D. Blackwell gave lbe
their opportunities and learn all symbol of graduation.
they can learn as they go along.
In her address. Huffman disThere was standing room only cussed the unique purpose in life of

Once jailed
Point mayor
·wins at polls

each person and lbe special plan
whi~h God has for each one.
'lOur responsibility is to discover what it is, and have the coumge
to live it out. It will not happen
without effort. Doing less will
always be easier U1an doing more,
and cutting comers will always ·be
easier lban playing it straight," she
said. In conclusion, she challenged
her classmates to "do your best at
whatever you do. but above all
else, remember lbe God who gave
you lbe ability."
Moore examined success, the
diversity of definition, whether it
means money or fame, or meeting
your goals. In an address marked
wilb humor, the graduate discussed
being different, and her view of
success as being able to reach
goals.
She called on her ·classmates to
set their ambitions high, keep lbeir
cynicisms low, and show the world
what success is.
In his address. Jason Taylor
challenged the graduates to go for
their dreams. He said no dream is
too wild or too far out of reach if
enough effort goes into achieving
it.
(Con11nued on Page 3)

RECEIVING DIPLOMAS -Southern Local
Board of Education member Don Smith present-

track opens up, he added. .
"Some of us have been tbe
adventurers and taken the roads
that are known to be rougher,"
Pickens said. "We realized tbat
these roads may be long and rough,
but they lead to smoolb highways
of gold."
Life is just beginning, be added.
"We are well;prepared now,tbat
it is time for us to take a test drive,"
Pickens said .
Co-valedictorian Jacob M~tlbew
Morrow urged his fellow gmmlates
to set high goals.
"You don' l need to hav.e your
whole life mapped out just now. at ·
least, where you're beaded to,"
Morrow said. "If you tackle things
as a series of small goals, it is a lot
easier to get something done."
Wilb smaller steps. detours may
be easier to take to get to the goal.
he added.
"The little detours in life make it
more interesting and personal,"
Morrow said.
Soulbem Local Board of Education member Don Smith presented
the diplomas.

ed diplomas to some of the 58 graduates of
Southern High School during graduation cere·
monies Sunday night. (Sentinel photo)

S~atbelt concerns prompt plans for recall

By CATHERINE O'BRIEN
Inc .. Mazda Motor of America Inc.; of the customer complaints,
WASIUNGTON _The Trans- American Suzuki Motor Corp., according to NHTSA records. Nis·
portation Department plans to lsuzu Motors America Inc ., Subaru san has sold some 2.01 million;
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
recall Japanese-made seat belts on of America Inc., Daihatsu Motor Mitsubish1 , 699,181; Mazda
(AP) - Mayor Russell Holland
millions of cars sold from 1986 Co .. General Motors Corp., 360,433; Suzuk1 115.874; Subaru
didn.'t need a get out of jail for-free
through 1991 because of concerns Chrysler Corp: and Ford Motor Co. 101.005; lsuzu, 89.902; ~a1hat.su,
card ..lle won anyway.
the buckles somellmes fail to latch
The Dctro.ll News reported m 7.514; Chrysler 951,040, General
The Republican was 're-elected
or unlatch, government sources Sunday's editions that eight com· Motors 466;902; and Ford 265,000,
to a third tenn Saturday, virtually
said.
·
pames bave already agreed to lbe accord tog to NHTSA documents.
fresh out of jail for misdemeanor
Eleven. automakers _ eight recall and the other three were
The list nf m(lkes mcludcs some
, embezzlement: ·
Japanese and the U.S. Big Three_ expected to agree today. The News of the companies· most popular
The voters, be said, held "no
have 8.77 million vehicles wilb lbe did not·identify which companies vehicles, including the H&lt;;&gt;nda
grudge ar all" ovc_r his guUty plea
Takata Corp. seat belts for those had not yet agreed: .
· Civic, AL'C~rds a:'d .Acura; N1ssan
for cashing a $28 check wntten to
years. But government sources told
At least 63 inJunes ~ but no lnfiniti ; Mllsubtsht Echps_e; and
The Associated Press on Sunday deaths - have been reported from Mazda MX-6 and 323. .
.
his town.
Hollan&lt;! received 1,032 votes, or
Tiui agency has .been mvest1gat· lbat not all the car companies bOld accidents whe're the belts were
76 percent, to 371 votes, or 24 persignedontoafinalagreement
used, according to NIITSA docu· ing the belts Since October.
cent, for George Vaughan.
RUSSELL HOLLAND
The department's traffic safety DJCnts.
Automakers supplied by Takata
arm.
the
National
Highway
Traffic
There
have
been
rrtbre
than
700
.have
reported lbousands of warran"The community support and
the family and everything was Water Department and held the Safety Administration, tentatively complainis lhat the Tnkata belts ty claoms for scat belt rcpalfs or
good for me," Holland said. "This money for a weekend before tum- scheduled a news conference for jammed or failed to lock or unlock. replacements.
Tuesday to announce the safety Some consum.ers indicated tbe · NHTSA , the companies and
was probably the best victory I've ing it in to lbe town secretary.
Mason County Prosecutor recall which would be ·one of lbe onmge plastic p1ece of the belt ~ut- Takata have declined to discuss the
bad yet."
·
ton had chipped off and fallen mto cost of a recall. The Detroit News
·- -'U!e l.lli!Y.Or S('.C"nJ~ "&lt;!SJS in jail D.amon Morgan said it wasn't an targes't in history.
last month roc cashing the check . isolated incidcnf.'"AS~parrora--p1ea~,. Tile companl{.ls with·lh&amp;-belts--~-llle.bi!.(.l:!c.jammjng it. . ·-· .. ~"-.e~iglatcet~c,ou)d exceed $1 bil ·
that a fu'ncral home wrote for lbe bargain for Holland. the pJosecutor are: American Honda Motor Co.
. Honda has sold an esumat~d 3.7 lion. The co~nie! a•d1akilla,
purchase of two U.S. flags. Holland agreed not tc seek addt11onal .Jnc .. Nissan Norlb America Inc. , mlll!OD cars w11b the bel!s 10 the also refused to dtscuss wbo would
said he cashed the check at the charges.
Mitsubishi Motor Sales of America Umted States and has .rccetved 200 pay for the replacements.

- !
~

~

According to the complain I
information filed by customers,
replacement of the bell assembly
has ranged from .less than $100 to
hundreds of dollars.
Telephones were not answered
Sunday a.' Takata Inc. m Auburn
H1ll~. M1ch .• a North Amencan
subs1d1ary of Takata Corp .. or a1
most of lbc other car compamcs .
Nissan, General Motors, Ford and
Chrysler spokesmen dcch~ed on
Sunday to dtscuss. the spec1fics of
any ncgouauons w1th NHTSA. _
Honda had bc.en talkmg with
NHTSA ahc:mt fllung the bel~ voluntanly m a servo.ce camprugnm
which the CO?Jpanoes would noufy
car owners ~·th the T~ta belts to
bnng them 10 for repair. The cam- .
pa1~n would have all~wed lbc compan~es to avo1d publicly acknowJ.
cdgmg a veh1cle defect lbat could
affect safety.
.
Takata bas satd the buckle's
...t~lwuo.buuon . ~~i~be~~en~~~~:~~~~,._,,,..,
cued by cha,.n.~g_tton's
used and the v•

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