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                  <text>Pomeroy • Mlddlepolt,- otilo

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

· }tllcmorlal Da11:

ONOR HOSE

A time for
remembering

Thunderstorms
possible today

-FMtured on page B-1

ONOR HOSE HO lED N

xm.es -

I

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

•

•

Middleport Trophie~ &amp; .Tees

King Hardware
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply. Ingels Furniture and .J
992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

The Shoe Pla·ce and Locker 219
992·5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fisher Funeral Home
992·5144

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Home National Bank
RACINE
949·2210

SYRACUSE

CHESTER, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2121

Downing·Childs·Mullen·Musser
Insurance ·
992·2342

'

.992~2556

POMEROY, OHIO

Veterans
Hospital
992·2104

'

OHIO

992·2975
POMEROY, OHIO

Crow's Family Restaurant
992·2432

POMEROY, OHIO.

The Daily Se~tinel
992·2155

POMEROY, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy.
OHIO

Swisher &amp; Lohse P.harmacy
POMEROY, OHIO

Williams &amp; Associates
Insurance
POMEROY, OHIO

I
,

OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Adolph's Dairy Valley

y 992·2955

MIDDLEPORT~

GRAVELY TRActOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO

•

I

985·3301

Ewing Funeral Home

992·3985

.

992·6128

Bau

992·6533

Ridenour Supply
985·3308

992·2635

,_Iller

'lie ~~me,. o1 tiM Unltlld stdli H - of R.,.
_ , . _ ,..,_,eta. }olrlil4
Frlt»y
PrNident Clinton Ullintl him to
-.ld« 11M~ on bal8llelng the ~t. ·
,.mb«•, Including Frank Ci'eme•n•, R0./llpoll(l, elreaed ft»lmportatreeotlhe
and •XJII •••"' thelrwllllnglllla to worlc with him 11
he would rwfhlnlt
cu,.,.,t poe/lion.
·

'

_,..,. •,.,_,to

-111'8

h,.

·w. muM not ,., w. oppottimlty p8A .,. by,.

balancing the budget by 2002, bargainers frol)l both
IMp. Cl•m- Nld. "Thlal• far too IIIJPOfUnl ftx
chambers must resolve.differences.
lire fUIUIW of our llllt/on to p/lly PMflun polll/u
with II..
'
.
They'll begin after next week's Memorial Day recess
and hope Congress will approve the measure - which
does not need President Clinton's signature- by late the federal government
But when the Senate completed its own budgel-balancJune.
ing
road map Thursday. its plan lacked immediate tax
Differences loom over defense .spending. Medicare.
Medicaid and other programs. But the most im'portant reductions. underscoring the dominance of the champer's
. more deficit-wary elders. Instead, the plan promised $170
discrepancy is over tax cuts,
The House included a se ven-year, $350 billion tax billion in lower levies, but only if the government reaps
reduction for families and businesses in the budget it that amount in extra savings from eliminating the deficit.
"It is tbe most imponantarea we have to focus on ... said
app1;0ved May 18. That reflected the dominance of Speaker
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and other conservatives who see House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich, Rtax cuts as the "crown jewel'' of their effons to remake Ohio.

Because of .the political emphasis given to tax cu ts by
many Republicans -. mcludmg Senate Majori1y Leader
Bob Dole. a prestdenttal candidate- it's cenain that lhe
House-Senate compromise will include some form ofta•
cuts. probably somewhere between lhe two ligur"'.
. But the House budget signaled the reductions it prefe",
mcludmg a $500 tax credtt for children in families earning
less than $200,000 annually; reducing the capital gains 13,
rate on pro fils from propeny sales and enlarging busine'"
writeoffs for new equipment
The Senate budget contained no specitlcs. Bu1 Dole c;a 1d
he '!'ould light fortax credits for children, expanded 1RAs.
a capital gains taxcutand
other items.
• Differences loom
The battle lines between the two are already
over defense spendforming. On Thursday.
Mcintosh. Rep. Sam lng, Medica,,, MedJohnson. R-Texas,and 77 Icaid and other proolher House Republicans
wrote Gingrich, c;aying grams. But the most
, they would vote against
important discrepany co mpromi se that
"significanlly dimin - ancyisovertaxcuts.
ishes'' the House tax cul.

Mental health Gallia County veterans prepare to-observe Officials outline
.service lays
Day·with monument dedication-: status of road,
·o ff workers · Memorial
By KEVIN KELLY
_ _ _ _ _ _ _--,1 b •d
•

A SALUTE TO THOSE
WHO GAVE THEIR
LIVES TO PRESERVE
OUR FREEDOM

T'IIT'iT

'

WASHINGTON (AP)- House and Senate Republi-..
cans face a struggle over tax' cuts as they prepare to craft
a compromise plan foreliminating the federardeficit. And
to Democrats who believe the GOP always marches in
lockstep, take heed.
"Unfortunately, the Senate reflects the old way of
thinking, ·and that probably reflect• the factthatthey had
~ery little turnover last year bet ause only one-third of
them were up for re-election.'' said freshman Rep. David
, Mcintosh. R-Ind.
· " I'd bC disturbed, deeply disturbed," said Sen. John
Chafee, R-R.I., when asked his reaction should the House
tax package prevail.
.
Now that the House and Senate have approved plans for

This Memorial Day, we would like to pay tribute to the
many brave men and women who have given their lives
to uphold and protect our country~ ideals.

992·5020

J

Vol. 30, No. 16

Freshmen send letter to Clinton

Taxes loom as most sensitive
hurdle fdtr compromise budget

Those Who Have Given Their Lives
To Preserve America~ Freedom

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- May 28, 1995

GOP tax cut battle:

.. •

992·3322

Details
on PageA2

•

(

Dairy Queen Brazier

HI: 70s·
Low: 60s

992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Farmers Bank
"YOUR BANK FOR LIFE"
POMEROY
TUPPERS PLAINS
. 949·2136

Ridenour TV &amp; Appliance
. 985·3307

CHESTER, OHIO

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A local mental
health ,service has laid off 17 employees as it shifts achildrer.:s treatment program from in-house to inhorne treatment. And not all of the
workers will be rehired:
"Some of those can be called back,
some cannot," said · Dr. Bernard
Niehm. director of Woodland Centers. Inc.
Many of the laid-off employees
had caretaking responsibilities related to the children staying anhe
Children 's Residential Treatment
Program facility. Since the switch
emphasizes at-home and out-patient
care. those Services will not longer
be needed, Niehm explained,
_ The employees received layoff
notices Thursday and Friday. ,.
It is too earlier to tell how many
will be asked back, he added. Many
are already applying for positions
"'ith the new program.
The change was initiated after the
center learned the CRTP would not
be funded next year.
Niehm said the 317 Board, which
handles Woodland's funding. felt
lhe program was not being ulilized
enough to justify the expense.
The board is more interested in
funding the new program proposal,
he added .
. "In temis of children and family,
this new service will have more
~mphasi s on treatment of the whole
family," Niehm said. Unlike the
Cfi,TP's patienls, the new program
will leave the child in the home
environment and work with solving
problems within the family. not just
the individuaL
Continued on page A2
.

~~-~--._....,.;...

n~~·L~~g~~~StaffGallia County

~.

veterans will
have another reason to celebrate Memorial Day
when they dedicate a monument commemorating
thecontributlons ofevery co~nty resident who served
in wartime,
The ceremony will follow the annual Memorial
Day observation in the City Park at II a,rn. Monday.
Finishing touches were put on the monument last
week. although James Saunder~ oftheGallia County
Veterans Association said the task of adding more
names lo the monument 's black marble panels wi II
continue.
The four-foot-high
structure. funded by

..

donations from vel-

erans and other orga,nizations, sUrrounds
the Doughboy Manument and contains.
panels bearing the
name s of Galli a
coun1ians who served
in every conflict from

WorldWarltoDe~

1---"'"

Storm. The p· els
FINISHING TOUCHES- Jerry Mullett, left, and Jim McKinley of Chet Baker
h
. &amp; Co., Canal Winchester, placed a marble top on the rim ol the Gall Ia Cou!lty
eac carry app xt- Veterans Monument In the City Park In the above photo, while atlefl, McKinley
malely I50 names.
works on the top near a panel bearing veterans' names. The monument will
In addition, bricks be dedicated Monday.
carrying individual
l
names are thebaseoftheDoughboy. needed to remind the public of veteran s con1ributions.
Saunders explained.
Opposition to adding more memorials in the park by ihe City
About 2.000 names are yet to be Commission and the Gallipolis Park Board prompted veterans 10
.
inscribed . Saunders said, partly be- putthe issue before volers in a May 1991 referendum. The issue was
cause 'not all veterans' names were submitted in time for the approved by a large plurality and the association spent the next three
dedication, During Monday's ce remony. a table will be set up for years raising [he $83.000 required to build the memorial.
people to supply their names, and names will continue to be
Approval of the memorial's de sign last falf allo wed
accepted until early ·October. he added,
.
grou ndbreaking lo proceed on Ve.terans Day, The general contnrc"We wanted to try to get everyone who se rved. especially 1hose tor on the job was. AOK Builders Inc.. Cheshire. owned by Paul
who didn't have to go overseas." Saunders said,
Knox. also a ve teran.
·
The dedication marks the end of a rocky path for the monument.
Veterans raised mote I han $120.000 in donations and will use the
·conceived by Sau nde rs and Bob Barcus.six years ago as a means remaining fund s lo. maintain Ihe memorial as well as add more
of keeping faith with the sacrifices made by local veterans.
names. Sau nders said. '
Saunders said the Rus se ll Memorial in the south endoflhe park
"We wanl to impress.on p~~pk thatthis is not finished- there
was incomplete and veterans felt a more fitting memorial was will be more names added." he said.
.

-

Meigs selects industrial site
By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Meigs County officials have given a Tuppers Plains site top
priority for potential industrial developnlent.
All of the potential development sites considered would,llave lower. startup costs than th e Great Bend site. sa id Ron Schuhz of Burgess &amp; Niple ,in
Parkersburg, W.Va: Great Bend has been the long term preterred mdustnal
si te .

News capsules

By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Stall
.
Meigs County highway officials oUIIJ ned road and bridge
work that has been completed and remain' ahead at Friday ·,
Meigs County ·
Board ofCommis- liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=====
sioners meeting.
Disaster assistance ...
More than ,$3
million in damage
COLUMBUS- Vlctlmaollloodhas been attributed lng In Meigs County will be ell·
glble for low-Interest recovery
10 nash nooding
two weeks ago, of- loans.
The Small BuslnHI Adinlnlsficial&gt; said.
tratlon
on Thursday decl•red ft»
County road.
county
area becauiie ot
bridge and culvert floodinga disaster
May 13·14.
damage was estiThe toana also will be available
mated at more than to residents In Gallla, VInton lind
$686.493. said Athena counties who were afDavid Spencer of fected by the flooding.
the Meigs County
Gov. George Volnovlch had
Engineer's office. asked the SBA to examine the
The Ohio Army damage In Meigs County.
Temporary SBA offices will be
National Guard
activated about 30 set up within the next few days.
be
M ·
mem rs to e•gs
County last Friday 10 help clear debris and roads and
townships assess damage .
The .Civilian Conservation Corps helped with assessments. road and bridge work. The Ohio Depanment or ,
Tmnsportation provided crews and equipment for more ,
than four days.
"We got total cooperalion from all the agencies." Spencer satd,
The nal1onal guard &lt;pread 220 tons of large stones. 5S
tons of pit run and 3.4ton, of tly ash.
The guard completed "ork on the foll'?wing lownship
roads: bank and cu lven repatr, Che,ter T.ownship Road
11 2: culvert pipe. Salisbur; Town&lt;hip Road 27A: bridge
repair. Salem Township Rllad I5: pipe repair. Sulton Township Road 124: culver! rep;ur. Salem Township Road 34:
and bridge repair, Sal"bur~ io"n,hip Road 165 ,
'\
· The CCC .worked on County Roads 12. 4 and 13. 3 1ong
wtth OD0~1e CCC al"' p1cled up debm in Rutland
Continued on page A2

GOOD MORNING

•

Philip Morris recalls up to
88 cigarettes, cites filters
NEW YORK(APl- Philip MatTis USA halted sales of
many cigarette brands Friday. including versions of lop
selling Marlboro. and dispatched legions of sales representatives 10 collect up to 8 bi Ilion possibly tainted cigarettes.
The nation's biggest tobacco company said "a small
percentage" of filters was contaminated and it doubted
any reached the public, bul could not be sure.
With the tobacco industry under intense pressure over
the health effects of smoking, the company decided on a
sweeping pre-emptive strike that could deny millions of
smokers their favored brands for at least several days.
· The contamination could cause smokers such ,•'lempomry discomfort" as eye. nose and throal irritation. dtwness. coughing and wheezing or just leave a bad taste in the
mouth, the company said.
'
· A prominent tobacco critic called the recall absurd ,
"A company that makes products that are lethal and
responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths 111 the
United States a year seems suddenly to have laken an
interest in a lillie dizziness, '· said Dr. Alan Blum of the'
l3aylor College o~edicine in Houston.
·
The recall affected 36 package styles. including 1he
Marlboro red box. Marlboro soft pack and gold box and

rl ge repairS

Today's

Times-Sentinel

16 Se&lt;lions- 174 Pages

Business
Calendars
Classitieds
Comics ·
Editorial&gt;
Local
Obituaries
Spot'!$
Along the River
Weather

.

Dl
83&amp;6
03-7
Insert

The Tuppers Plains sile- about60 acres- has a gently rolling terrain. the
loca1ion has a 10-inch water main right at Slate Rou1e 7. That size pipe could
accommodate fire protection and. regular use. ·
.
1\4
Sewer systems currently aren't availab le, but should be ready by the fall of
1996, Schultz said. Three-phase power is on-si le. and it is just four miles from
A3
a four-lane highway.
. .
.
A5
The site is 400 feet from state Route 7 and 1.000 feel from Stale Rou14 681,
Cl-6
west and south of the Tuppers Plains crossroads. owner George Collins said.
"I feel we have a favorable price for the site." Horace Karr said.
Bl
·An environmental asse,\s ment will determine if Qi l and storage tanks have
A2
contaminated the property . Sawdust remains on the site from the former Ohio
Manufacturing Co., a pallet company. with some farm land also on the
"'
properly, Collins said.
gold soft packs of Marlboro I 00'&gt;. Marlboro Light•
Columns
South ofthis site, large amounts of developable land are available, according
and Marlboro Lights IOO's. It abo incl~ded vanou'
, to Collins.
.
packs of Virginia Slims. Benson &amp; Hedges. Merit.
Jack Anderson
A4
''There's a pot'ential for some real jobs," he said. "ll's within 25 minutes of
Cambridge and Basic.
.
Fred
Crow
M
At~ens and Parkersburg. Tuppers Plains has tremendous growth polential."
Spokeswoman Karen Derr1gan the company e~­
Bob
H!lfflith
87
The officials chose the site over three other sites:
pects up to 8 bilhon cigarette' may be returned. nr 4
Jim Sands
• !55-acre property near State Route 32. owned by Denny Facemyer, This
percent of the annual U.S, production nf 220 billion
Ill
;ite had slopes at more I han 20 percent grades, water not available on site. bul
cigarettes. The recall doesn't invohe tigareues sold
a six-inch water main is located two miles away. Sewer is not on-site,)"!lile
overseas. ·
three-phase electricity is not available.
·
• 80-acre property near Flatwoods Road. owned by Patty Pickens. The site
has access to a five-inch water line from Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District. An eight-inch line is located about 3,500 feet away. Sewer and threeWASHINGTON (AP) -The Clinton administration rejected Japan's lions slilrted quickly to. clear the way For an early deci"on from the Genevaphase electricity are not avhilable. Access could be from County Road 26. This
request for urgent talks on lheircontentious aula trade dispute Friday. saying based World Trade Orgamzalion.
was the nauest site:
•
it would .be belterto wait until,about a week before America·, punitive tariffs
Now. Japan· s case will be handled under normal WTO rules. whiCh mean'
, 20-acre property near State Route 124 in Sutton Township, owned by Paul . take effect.
that a final resolution could take a year or more. allowtng the U,S. sanctton•
Thaxton, This site has a rolling terrain. but much has more than 20·percent
U.S, Tmde Representative Mickey Kantor suggested ip a letter to the agamsl 13 models of Jai)ane'e lu,ury cars to remain in effect.
slopes. A four-inch water line is available on-site. but sewer an.d eleclricity , Japanese that both sides meet beginning June 20 in W.ashinglon. The tariffs
The enure d"pule o'er the tunmg of talks"'"' ju&gt;t the lale't high-tension
acces.rlif!Timife(["SeweHould be-hOQked on to Racine.
-·-- · --- -- ;1&gt;f 100 perceni on$5.0-binion..wortb of)apan~se luxury autos a_~,S.C.be&lt;Wied . maneuvering between the tw:o nauons over the auto.issue. Before Kantor's
"The Facemyer and Pickens sites have some attracti,ve parts, but you· d have
to take effect June 28.
a~;oluiceuienf. Secretary of Stan: Wal'ren'ChnS!opher met Wtth Japan's
more loops to close," S_chultuaid.
.
The U.S.. ann6uncement was a rebuff to a Jaeanese effort 10 get consulta- ambassador to the United States .. Tak!ILu Murayama.
7
-· ~
·
ConilnUi&lt;l on pilJI' A2
- - - - - ~;;;;;;;;;;;::_~~~~~~:;:;;;~~:::;;;;;::;:;;;~;;;:;:o;;;o,:;.._ _,;._________.....,..,;,=,.....,._...:...____...;__~J

.

United States rejects Japan's proposed May auto talks, suggests June

•

.
'

'

�..
Pege A2 • il•

SIIIICIII)', May 18
and

rorccut

MICH.

RIO GRANDE - State Skill
Competition winners from Buck·
eye Hills Career Center were Ill!:·
ognized by !be Gallia-Jacksoll-Vinton 1oint Vocatiooal Board of Education during its recent meeting at
BHCC.
The board recessed from its regular session to attend a reception
)
for the students, parents and advi- ·.
sors and to award· resolutions of
commeiJdation.
Honored were, in t.be BPA state
competition, Tabby Siders, parliamentarian; Tracy Ervin, fU'St place
in keyboarding and national contestant in class scrapbook; Catrina
Siinpkins, fU'St place and national
contesta11t in class scrapbook;
Kerry Sexton, lOth place in fmaitW. VA.
cial specialist; and Karen Fulk
Legg, lOth place in payroll
accounting.
In the FHA/HERO state competition, Anita Saunders received a
degree in the Power Qf One Degree
Contest.
lal
S11111y Pt Cloudy Cloudy
Honored in the VICA state competition were Dawna Hill, Misty
Hayes , David Jacobs , Stacey
Kingery~Jennifer McGuire, Jennifer M ee, second place in the
state o ning and closing ceremonies contest, and Paul Hughes,
third place in automotive servi~e
so uthwest had somewhat heavier . technology.
During the regular meeting, the
cloud cover.
Temperatures dipped to the mid board granted permission to the
40s in the north, while the mercury Adult Division to provide career
got down only to the mid 50s in U1e services for Jackson-Vinton Community Action Agency with career
far south.
Record high temperature for information presentations, and a
Saturday was, 94 in 191 I; record job fair for Summer Youth
Employment and Training Program
low 34 in 1961.
participants.
. Sunrise Sunday is at 6:07 a.m.
Adult Division program budgets
and sunset is at 8:50 p.m.
for
cosmetology and PC AppliJ;aWeather forecast:
tions
were approved. The board
Sunday ... Periods of thunder"
approved
the following part-time
storms ... Mainly in tpe morning
hourly
contracts:
Karen Bums, coswest. Highs in tlle 70s.
metology
instructor;
Diane HamilMemorial Day .. ;Panly cloudy
ton,
PC
Applications
and computer
with scattered thunderstorms. Lows
instructor;
Crystal
Harmon,
in .thc 60s. Highs from the upper
ABLE/JOBS
and
PETE
clerk;
Roy·
70s to lower 80s.
Jone
s
and
Steve
Walli~
.
first
Extended foreca•t:
Tuesday ... A chance of showers responder instructors; and Martin
nortb ... Fair south . Lows in the 50s. Wallace, Job Profiling/DIT.
ABLE aide Debra Taylor wa~
Highs in the 70s.
Wednesday ... Dry. Lows 50 to approved as a part-time substitute
for the remainder of the current
55. Highs ~n the 70s.
school year.
In personnel matters, the board:
• Employed summer school personnel.
• Approved Frantina Johnson as
Canton and Ameristop Food Mart
substitute off-campus personnel for
#29&lt;i) in Toledo. .
There were 208 Buckeye 5 tick- the remainder of U1e school year.
ets with four of the numbers, and
• Approved U1e following cerlilied substitute personnel for 1995each is worth ·$250. ·
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled 96: Lissa"Adkins, Don Bolen, John
$1,431 ,495.50, and winners will Boyd, Janice Bryant, Kelly Burreceive $191,573.50.
delle , Angela Caldwell, David
The jackp()l for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing was $8 mil-

,,

""·

sc·attered storms threaten
Memorial Day observations
·By The Associated Press
Scattered thunderstorms are in
Obio's forecast for Memorial Day,
with highs armmd 80.degrees.
The threat of thunderstorms also
will exist on Sunday, with high
temperatures in the 70s.
On Saturday night, showers and
thunderstorms were expected to
move across the state, although the
chance of thunderstorms in the
north was most likely after midnight. Lows rapged from the mid
50s in the north to the low 60s in
the south.
On Saturday, skies across most
of the state had a mix pf clouds and
sunshine. Temperatures ranged
from the low 70s in the nortll to
around 75 in the south, with somewhat breezy conditions.
Fair weather was the rule on Friday night, with thin, high clouds .
over most of the stale overnight.
The north saw clear skies and the

Ohio,

w- Va. lottery picks

By The Associated Press
The followin¥ numbers were
selected in Friday s Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO

Pick 3: 9-7-0
Pick 4:6-7-9-1
Buckeye 5:7-9-16-17-23
Two tickets were sold naming
~all five numbers drawn in Friday .
night' s Buckeye 5 drawing, and lion.
each ticket is worth $I 00,000, the
WEST VffiGINIA
'Ohio Lotlery said today.
Daily 3t 8-8-1
The winning tickets were purDaily 4: 0-3-6-2
.
. chased at The Paperback Mart in
Cash 25: 4-8-9-14-20-25

Mental health service ... ,
Continued from page A1

Also this week. the center's board
: oftrusrees announced it wi ll slOp serving a federally funded program for
underprivileged pre-school children
July l.
"We feel we can no longer act as
gra,ntor of the Head Start Program,"
Niehm said. "We feel we have all we
can handle at this lime with mental
health services."
In its role as grantor. Woodland
Center accepted all fiscal and. legal
responsibi lilies of the progmm. Niehm
said problems between the center and
Head Start's administratron also encouraged the split.
"Everyone did not see eye to eye as
to what should happen. how it should
happen and when it should happen,"
· he said. "I think they were expecting
they would have more freedom to do
v;hatthey felt as the administration at

f~ IDoliiJf[-

tUSPS 515-800)
Published cao;: h Sunday. 82!i Third Ave.,
GallipoiLS, Oh~ o. by the Ohio Valley Publi~h i ng
Company!Multimedia. Inc. Second clus postage paid at Gallipolis, Oh io 45631 . Entered a.•
second$1au mailing matter at Pomeroy, Oh10,

Post Office.

'

Head Start should be done."
As grantor, Woodland had to approve and sanction the program's decisions, Niehm said.
Stepping out of the picture should
not affect the program, Niehl" said.
Head Start is winding down for the
summer, giving the program three
months to find a new sponsor. ·
Johnnie Russell, a member of the
Woodland board of trustees, said the
center is not leaving Head Start to
fend for itself.
"We will conlinue to assist the pro-

gram until they lind someone else,"
he said. "But we will not assume legal
responsibility:·
Woodland has served the program
·since 1983, when it took the responsibility from the Gallia-Meigs Communit.~ Actior Agency.

Higt)way repairs
Continued from page A1
Village and filled I,000 sandbags, ·
Spencer said.
The following roads still need work,
with cost estimates for base and surface repair:
· ,
• Titus Road. $50.426.77:
• Lasher Road, $54,305 .7):
• McCumber Hill Road, $34,91 0.84;
• Mallons Run Road, $31.419.75:
• Painter ~ide Road, $1 0.473.25;
• Peach For Road. $13.964. 34:
• Red Hi I oad, $10,473.25;
• St:ir Hall Road, $10,473.25:
• Hysell Run 'Road, $2.094.56;
• Pomeroy Pike Road, $1,199.22 ;
Strc&gt;ngs Run Road. $6,982.17:
'.j,!&lt;,ech Grove Road, $2,396.12:
Ridge Road, $10,473.25:

___

..;.;.;;......,..-.
.......__
........ AJJr
/ts Allillllle
WAKT

Mc111bcr: The .A uociated Press. Md the Ohio
New1peptt Auocintibn .

site
The Sunday timet-Sentinel will ~:"!=:~.~
slble for advance paymenu made 10 carriers.
Dally and Suncby

MAILSUBSCIIIPT!ONS
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·Regional
--Tri-County Briefs:___, Family
..----Stirring the pot .----.

Cor•tln1uad from page A1
the next meeting for
3 p.m. June 15 at the chamber. At this
meeting, the board will deQide the
access route and how the property's
acreage could be divided.
Attending the me.eting were: Julia
Thornton, George Collins, Horace
Karr, Rich Jones, Denny Facemyer,
Patty Pickel}i,_ Fre!LH.offJ!!Ml_,_ :faul ,
'!feed, Efi~beth Schaad and Steve
Story.
•

Meigs targets delinquent fines · ·
. POMEROY - Individuals who have not paid fines and have
0\ltstanding court costs should beware, Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby said.
'
.
. .
Soulsby bepn Friday trying 10 clear the county court docket
.
while colleclin back fines.
Mit wW pay for people who have 'the8c to c:ome in." Soulsby said.
"Anyone who doesn't, we'D linda jail for them to be in."
. Residents wilh failure to comply and failure to appear charges
wiU be targeted, ~ wilh lhosc wtlh outstanding ftnes, he added. .
More than $10,
in bat:Jc ftnes are due !be county, Meigs Pros·
ecuting Attorney John R. Lcntes said.
.

Area man jailed after accident
OALLIPOLIS - · A Vinton man was lodged in the Qallia County
Jail at 1:03 a.m. Saturday on cbarps stemming £rom a one-car accident late Friday on County Road 104 (Davis), according to the Gallin-Meigs Post of lhe Stale Highway Patrol
Timothy D. Robineue, 34, 678 SOOII School ROllll, also Buffered
minor visible injury in the wreck, but refused treatment. lhe palrol
said.
Troopen said RobineJe was northbound, three-tenths of a mile
south of County Road 100 (Teens Run) at 10:15 p.m. when be
failed to negotiate a right-band curve and ll'avcled off !be left side of
theroud.
Robinette's car then struclt: a ditch, causing modentte damage to
the car, troopets said.
Robinette was charged with driving under !be influence, failure
to control and no seatbelt

Two injured in Friday wreck

KERR - Two Gallia County residents weze injured in a two-car
accident Friday at tlle inierseetion of County Road 55 (Belhel
Church) and Slate Route 160, the Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe Stale
Highway Patrol reported.
· .
Talcen to Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia County Emergency Medical Service were Floyd D. Kingery, 78, 973 Evergreen
Road, Bi1Jwell, and Charles E. Curnutte II, 16, 2489 Mill Creek
.Road. Gallipolis.
.
Kingery was admitted for observation, a hospilal spokesperson
said, and Curnutte was treated and released.
The patrol said Curnutte pulled from Bethel Church onto 160 at
9:21 a.m. and collided with Kingery's northbound car, which then
struck a gw\rdrail, according to !be report.
Curnutte was cited for failure to yield.

PLANNED PIIEN,IOOD
OF S'OD7BEIS7 OliO

Car-deer crash injures driver
GALLIPOLIS - A Vinton woman was injured Friday when a
deer struck'her car on Vinton Avenue, Gallipolis City Police said.
Erma L. Hogan, 58, 143 Stumbo Road, was taken to Holzer
Medical Center by private vehicle, but the hospital had no record of
treatment, a spokesperson said.
Police said Hogan was westbound, ISO feel east of Pine Street, at
4:14p.m. when a deer crossing. the street struck her car in the driver's sade.
Hogan reportedly suffered facial and car cuts in the·acci.dent,
which moderately damaged her car, police said.

•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
•Methods include:

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tum- expressed concern that the provi• DepoProvera-injectlon • Diaphraghm
. ing up pressure for his anti-terror-,· sion could infringe on the civil libism package, President Clinton erties of domestic political groups.
• I.U.D.
• Birth control pill
accused congressional critics Satur• E~pand the role of tlle military
• Condom/Spermicide
day of trying to deny police in lighting terrorism. Clinton wants
Sliding Fee S.cale
expanded wiretap authori ty and to involve U1e militilry when terrorother tools t1Jey need for a fight ists are contemplating the use of
·We accept Medicaid and private insurance,
"we have to be able to win."
biological or chemical weapons.
414 SECOND STREET
509 S. THIRD STREET
''I want the police to stop those Cun·ently, t11e military ~join in
people cold," Clinton said in his criminal investigations. only when
GALLIPOLIS
MIDDLEPORT
weekly radio address. "The restric- . they involve nuclear weapons.
. 446·0166
992·5912
tive view taken by some people in
"T11erc's simply no reason why
Congress would handicap our abili- we should use anythin g less th an , . . . - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , :
ty to -track terrorists down, follow the very best we have to light and
them when they move and· prevent stop the extraordinary thrC\u now
their attacks on innocent people."
posed by chemical an.d biolog'ical
Congressional critics maintain , terrorism all around the world,"
that Clinton's proposals go too far, Clinton said.
and could erode constitutional proCritics are wary of giving ,the
tections and infringe ·on civilliber- military a greater role in domestic
ties.
law enforcement, warning of
At issue are Clinton ·proposals potcnti:~ government abuse of indito:
vidual rights .
• Expand wiretap authority .
• Place traceable materials in
Clinton wants police to he able to chemicals that can be used to make
move their wireraps without getting ()ombs . Clinton wants to include
.'
a new court order each orne terror- tiny plastic. tracers known as "k1gists move to evade surveillance .
gants'' in certain explosive materi.
Now there 's an i~rproved non-chlorine
"W e· shouldn'·t force law als so ~•at bombs can be tracked to
care program that lets you treat your pool
cnforcemenr'to lose valuable time their source.
fewer products.
"Every day that g~ by withby making them get a court to
SoftSwim•• is the simple, gentle pool
agree that a terrorist is trying to out a law like this a terrorist can
program from BioGuard8 It's
knowin gly evade us, " Clinton walk into a store and buy material
completely compatible
argued.
. that is virtually untraceable," ClioThe Senate voted 52-28 on f'ri- ton said.
with your Baquacil pool,
day 10 block a Democratic attempt
The idea of explosive tracers has
so there's no expensive
to expand the government's wire- beeu around for years .
or time-'l:onsuming
lajlping auth"?~~Y · Republi cans
switchover involved.
The difference is,
you'll spend even less
time maintaining
the water, thanks
to our Improved
Formula Clarifier. It gives
you enhanced water clarity and improved filtration because
it contains patented Cleart:;uardN peroxide stabilizer.
. Plus, with our BioGuard training and technical assistance, you'll always get expen advice and professional service.
• up to 40 miles/charge
Find out more about SoftSwim - the simple, genlle
• Variety of Models
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• Indoors/Outdoors
• Electronic braking
• Powerful 1 H.P. motor
• Disassembles

..

OAUJPOUS - The OuYJD TOWIIIhip llld Clremf'Jeld Town·
lhip volunteer fire depar!IIICIIII ba~ been aWII'IIed panll from !be
11a1e fn 111111hal"• offJCe, arealegillaun aid.
Stile Sen. Jan MicliiC1 Lona:h'Cil'deville, and Stale Rep. John
A. Carty Jr., R.-WeUstoa, aDIIOUIICCd le)III'IICly Friday that the
~YID depaalmeitt waa IWMdecl $6,400 and Qlealfldd fefighiiCI'I
will get $4,000.
.
The pill will provide die clepltim.-rtmtuiCIIU with fircflgbttn' polleCtive cJocbina: or other needed cq~
The money waa aulhorized by H.B. 'IS2 and allow• the a!lle fue
nunhal 10 expend $492.SOO IIIJIUIIIy. Guran and Oreenfaeld 1111111"11 112 department11eceiving pulls thta yew. · . .

Crash leaves three dead

Theft reports made to police
GALLIPOLIS - Theft Complaints were made Friday to Gallipolis City Police by:
·
• Michael Zeoli, 41 Central Ave., who said tools were removed
from his truck while parked at his residence sometime between 9:30
p.m. Thursday and noon Friday.
·
• Mutih Skeini, owner of the Pony Keg, 1321 Eastern Ave., who
said several boltles of alcohol were stolen from his store !lliring
business hours on Friday.
-----.
• Kim Greene, 75 Locust St., who reported tllat two bicycles
were taken from the carport of her residence sometime between
6:30 p.IIL and midnight Friday.
.
The incidents are under investigation.
. In other matters, police issued citati&lt;ins Friday to Gerald S. Warren, 22, Valley Vew Apartments, Rio Grande, for public intoxK:a- .
lion, and Cammy L.Shaffer, 28, Henderson, W.Va., for no operator's license.

. Ifyou like Bagua~il;
you'"lllove SoftBWim·
for yoUr pool.

'Editor's note: Names and addresses are printed as they
appear on ofrtcial reports. All newsworthy actions wUI be pub·
lisbed Without exceptton.

leave act
:adoption
discussed

POMEROY- Mike Swilber.
director of tbe MeiJI County
Depallllleot of Boman Services,
diiCUIIed the need for !be ll1optioo
of the federal family medical leave
act requlremenu Fridlly with the
Meigs County Commimonen.
The family leave tK:t wW benefit
numerous emp~ces. Swisller said.
Mil is lhe law, Swisher said.
About 12 work weeks of leave
can be taken within one year for
lhis type of leave, Swisher said. An
individual's seniority can not be
changed during the time off with
leave.
The commissioners .also
approved a one-year contract for
individuals who teceive welfare to
obtain child care at !be Tri-County
Community Action center in
Athens. Many clients attend school
at Hocking College and Ohio Univenity. Swisher said.

Come In For Demonstration
70 Pine St.
Gallipolis
446-7283
~----

BOWMAN'S

765 E. Main

HOMECAR£ ¥ED/CAL SUPPLY

286-7484

Ya~ksoi'f"

·-

L____:..;.,_li~o~l~l!:F~re~e~1~~j;~~~~---..:__:.._J

~~
.
·1··
-

'or Galllp~lls 446·3051
-

~- · ·-----·

--,--

.

.

-~~

286-7297,

__. •. ~~arz...c.LidBooOu.rci•• '~"~"BoUII 'nc . o.c.•.....GA:J0031.,,...

POMEROY - The schedules
of Memorial Day services to be
conducted Monday by Meigs
County American Legion postS are
asfollows; ,
DREW WEBSTER
9 a.m., .Rock Sprinp Cemetery.
9:30a.m., Sacred Heart Catholic
Cemetery, Pomeroy.
10 turi., Beech Grove Cemetery.
f0:30 a.m., l)81'8de moves from
rU'SI Baptist Church, Pomeroy, to
stage on parking lot for a program
atll a.m.
I p.m., Memorial Gardens.
1:30 p.m., move out from Com- mons at Chester,
3 p.m., Hemlock Grove Cemetery.

FEENEY·BENNE'IT
8:1S a.m., Legion Hall and leave
at8:30 a.m.
8:4S a.m., Middleport levee.
9 a.m .. Middleport Riverview
Cemeiery.
9:15a.m., Bradford Cemetery.
9:30 a.m .. Middleport Hill
Cemetery.
10:15 a.m., Addison Cemetery.
10:30 a.m., Cheshire Gmvel Hill
Cemetery. ·
·
11 a.m., Middleport Gmvel Hill
Cemetery.
11:15 a.m., Legion. Annex
memorial. ·
1 p.m., Howell-Hill Cemetery.
1:30 p.. m., Burlingham Cemetery.
.

No injuries listed

GAlLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic recent agreements are in addition to pocket cost.
"We understand that area insurbas recently compl,eted additional existing clinic participation with
participa~ion agreements with a Aema Heallh Plans Inc., Mountain ance agents are workillg diligently
number of health insmance compa- State Blue Shield and Federal to accommodate both large and
nies. Thele new. agreements offer Mogul Corp. (now Borg-Warner small employers who want to convert their insurance coverage to a
even more health care options to Au10111otive).
local residents and employers, clin·
Daniel said the clinic's June I responsive participating plan,"
ic officials said.
cancellation of the participation Daniel said.
The most recently-finalized arrangement with Community
agreements intlude a preferred Mutual Insurance Co. has prompt·
provider agreement (Prefer One) ed a number of area employers to
in a hurry... TRY
with Central Benefits, a Columbus· 'conven lheir coverages to an insurCLASSIFIEDS
based insurer active In lhis area. er participating wilh Holzer Clinic.
This new managed-&lt;:are ~Ian · com"We are not advocates of any
plements the llllditionalmdemnity particular insurance carrier." he
REAL nME
msurance agreement that exists said. "However, we fully agree
SAVERS.between the clinic and~ Central wilh lhose employers who believe
Benefits.
it is in the best interest of our
The clinic's long-slanding patients and their employees to
446-2342
agreement with Blue Cross and have insurance coverage which
Blue Shield of Ohio (Cleveland minimizes the individual's out-ofBlue Shield-BCBSO), an area
insurer for many years, was also
renegotiated to continue panicipation wilh their indemnity plan. Furtber, the clinic and BCBSO are
'
finalizinf arrangements for the
company s Super Blue mapaged
care plan.
Holzer Clinic and United Health
Care of Ohio have also concluded a
new a11reement. whereby clinic
physicaans are the participating
providers for tlle United Health
Care of Ohio managed care product
that will be offered for area
employers.
Holzer Clinic Administrator
Roben E. Daniel said "we are very
pleased to announce these recent
agreements. .
·
''This provides additional health
insurance choices for area employers and slabilizes Holzer Clinic's
OFFER GOOD THRU MAY 31, 1995
relationship with the heallh insurance companies," Daniel said. "The
mtn health insurance selection· we
OHIO RIVER PLAZA, GALLIPOLIS, OH.
have in our area, the lower the
PHONE 446-9495
health inswance premium rates are
likely to be to the consumers."
thatthe
Danielaloo

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In area shooting
RUTLAND - No one was
injured, when a series of sholg'!"
blasts were ftred at a North Main
Streei home early Thursday. said
Meigs County Prosecuting Attor·
ney John Lentcs.
.
An apparent neighbor dispute
caused one house, one vehicle and
one storage facility to be struck
with shells at 4:10a.m., Lentes
,said.
Charges are pending against
individuals, Lentcs said.
"If there .are any altercations
they'll be arrested and brought in
immediately, We do not want a
shooting to occur," .Lentes said.
"The sheriff has exira patrols in
that area"

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. Roger WUUams, left, and Roy Moses took turns Saturday stlning bean soup for the annual
Centenille Bean Dinner and Parade that kicked off the Memorial Day weekend in GaUia County.
Tb~ parade drew more than 30 units and wound Its way through tbe village to tbe Community
Park, where soup and eornbread, along with other food iterm, were served. The day's activities
Included Jive entertainment, demonstrations and a waterbaD fight by several area volunteer fire
'
deptu1menlll. (T-S photo hy Kevin Kdly)

Meigs posts
plan Monday
observations

BE INDEPENDENT AGAIN

Relax. Bring your pool to BioGuard~

•

'

Fire units win state funds

Curfman, Marcia Dill-Schaefer,
Jane Dunn, Kelly Flanery Kisner,
Katb y Frye, 1ack Haley, Diane
Hamilton, Mary Lou Henderson,
Delmar Hoskins, Carl Jiviilen,
Frantina Johnson, Linda Johnson, ·
Angela Jones-Butts, Michael
McDonald, John Milhoan, Debmh
Moore, Roben Muller, Elizabeth
Null, Jimmy Prater, Mila Raymond, Herbert Redman, Christopher Slllne. Linda Specht, Roxie
Underwood, Dawn Walker. Cofer
Walls, Kathy Weber, Harvey
Woltz.
• Approved the following noncertified substitute personnel for
1995 -96: Deanna Biars, Garnet
Keels and Hilda Sanders, cafeteria;
Ann Casey, Clintop Dean, Lana
Lewis, Lorrie Lipovich and Heath
Richards, custodian; Joan Beman,
Deanna Biars, Gamet Keels, Lorrie
Lipovich, Hilda Sanders, Billie
Taylor and Patricia Vernon, educational aide; Janice Bryant, Sharon
Dalton, Garnet Keels, Lorrie
Lirovich, Barbara McKee and
Kll,tblee n Nelson, secretary; and
Sharon Dalton, Terri Jividen and
Lorrie Lipovich, switchboard.
LEADING THE WAY - Co-valedictorians Rachael Polcyn,
• Approved and presented a resleft, and Cindy AriOStead Jed ~e 159 graduates of River Valley
olution of commendation to Lili . High School's dass or 1995 Into commencement exercises Friday
Roush, recently selected as the
· at the University or Rio Grande's Lyne Center. Ceremonies were
regional and. state recipient of the
moved Indoors when Inclement weather threatened earlier bl the
OAACE Outstanding Administraday. Polcyn and AriOStead were chosen to share valedictorian hon·
IYr.
~
ors due In part to their rankiiiJI among the top 10 percent of the ,
• Granted permission to ' partici•
class. (T-S photo)
pate in the state and federal school
lunch program in 1995-96.
• Granted permission to continue as a member of the Ohio School
Boards Association Workers Compensation Group Rating Program.
CHILLJCOTIIE (AP) - A car went left of the center line and struck :
• Approved facility, usage agreeanother vehicle, killing three Chillicothe residents and injuring a fourth, :
ments for th e Diversified Health
the State Highway Patrol said Saturday.
·
:
Occupations programs· field study
Driver Gregory W. Dennewitz, 31, was killed when he crossed tlJ e cen- ·
with Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
Pinecrest Care Center, Heartland of ter line at about 9:30 p.m. Friday on Ohio 772 just south of Chillicothe, :
said a man at U1e patrol who decllhed to give his name.
'
:
Jackson and Moizer Senior Care
Passengers in the other car, Cathy E. Eckard, 41, and Joy E. Bethel, 28, ·
Center.
also were killed.
:
• Accepted a donation of electriThe driver of the second car, Earl 0. Bethel, Jr., 35, was taken to Grant ·
cal.equipmenl, from Borg-Warner
' Medical Center in 'Columbus where he was in fair condition Saturday, a:
Autqmolive Inc., Gallipolis.
nursing supervisor said.
;
• Granted permission to apply
The
relationship
between
Earl
Bethel
and
Joy
Bethel
was
not
immedi·
to~ Ute following grams and accept
ately
clear,
the
patrol
said.
·
funds awarded .to the district: Eco·The
accident
remained
under
investigation.
nomic Education Unit Coordinator,
· Chillicothe is 44 miles south of Columbus.
PALS Research and Development,
Equity Technical Assistance, Displaced Homemaker and Comprehensive Support Service, Adult
Full Service Cemer and the
Appalachian Center for Higher
Et) ucation Greater VisiQns Program. .
• Accepted a bid from Ruth M.
Confidential Services .
Stowers for the house constructed
by the Building Trades program . .
for females &amp; males.
• Approved the Authori zi ng
•Birth Control Exams
Political Subdivision Cooperative
1
•Pap Tests . , ,
Purcha~ing Resolution.
•Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases

Clinton pushes passage
of anti-terror legislation

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A3

May28,199S

Vo-ed ·board honors
competition winners

OHIO Weather
Accu-~

Sunday, May 28, 1995-

Pomeroy • M~leport • GalllpoHa, OH • Point Pluunt, WY

b

•

-~~

MEMB E~

&lt;404 SECONO AVE
o•LUPOliS, OHJO 4S8J 1
AMERICAN GEM SOCIE 1V

�..

I

Commentary

Ma 28,1995

....

- §unday, May 28,1995

ADblaloaof

W Third A..., G.Pipolk, Ohio

1ll C®rt SL, l'oaMroy, Ohio

(614) 44'-:1341

(614) 11!11·1156

ROBERT L. WINGnT

Publloloor

HOBART WJLSON Jlt.
·EJ:eeutln Editor

MARGARET LEHEW

Colllrollor

A MEMBER of The Auociated Preoo, Inland Daily Pren
Anocillion and lbe AmericMI Newapaper Publillien Auocialioo.
U!TTI!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They tbould be leu tban
300 w&lt;Xda lone. AU !etten ..., subject to ediliD&amp; and must be oianed with
name, addreu and telephone number. No uaaisned letters will be
published. Letters abould be in · aood !Ute, addreuina ioouee, not
penonalitieo.
·

Guest editorial:

Sacrifices recalled
o·n M~morial Day
By REP. BOB STUMP
· · Sacrifice. It's a word we au know. AU or us have made some saCrifices
in our lives. We make sacrifices reo- our family, fco- our close friends, even
for our neighbors and co-workers. Persons in the Anned Forces make
-many saCrifices, and over one million Americans have given their lives,
the ullimate sacrifice, while serving in our Nation's armed forces.
Throughout history, members of the Anned Forces have risked their Jives
not merely for their family or their coworkers, but for a cause represented
by the American flag, and the freedom to choose and the libeny to succeed which it embodies.
Some Americans are too young to remember; others bave too quick:ly
forgotten. How imponant, therefore, that we bonor our veterans, that we
learn from them, and that we teach others about history, about war, about
sacrifice. We are still reminded about Korea, Vietnam, and more recent
encounters. We should not, however, allow the memory, the lessons, and
the sacrifices of our terrible world wars to fade. Proud veterans of those
wars are among us today. Their presence bears witness to sacrifice.,
Fifty years ago this month, our Nation was beginning to absorb the
meaning of victory in Europe, to realize what the final tally was in terms
of lives lost or shattered as the result of the awful conflict in Europe and
North Africa. In April of 1945; President Roosevellliad died of a cerebral
hemorrhage at Warm Springs, Ga. The battle in the Pacific still raged as
scientists neared completion of the nrst atomic bomb. The sacrifices
would continue for four more months, and then the bloodiest of all wars
would be over.
.
Veterans of World War I .saw staggering losses in biuer trench warfare
and history's frrst use of such horrible tactics as gas warfare. Fewer than
20.000 veterans of that brutal conflict are· still alive today.
.
Cemeteries in two small towns in nonbwest Maryland contain the dead
from the battle at Antietam, wbere more casualties occurred in a single
day than on any other day of the Civil War.
The United States and the world learned of the awful toll of war when
two of Mathew Brady's assistauts photographed the dead of Antietam.
The pictures brou,ght home the s~klng to~ of war and its accompanying
sacrifice when they were nrst displayed m 1862, and they are no less
shocking today. It is fitting thai eacb Memorial Day, the 2, I00 graves of
we Union dead are decorated with small American flags, a scene wbicb
stirs the conscience, but wbicb only hints at the sacrifices which took
~ place on the day of the battle .. In a-nearby cemetery, there are no decorations for the graves of 2,400 Confederate soldiers. We hope that these ·
graves will be decorated on Memorial Day.
.·
· Battlefields and cemeteries remind us of the terrible sacrifices and loss
of life in war. But many of us or our family members remember all too
'directly the experience of war. The nrst half of this century saw two
world wars. These were the "wars to end all wars." How wrong we were
to think the experience of war was behind us! Consider Korea, Vietnam,
Lebanon. Grenada, Panama, The Persian. Gulf, Somalia and Haiti. We
have asked much of our fighting men and women.
Allhough many members of our Anned Forces are buried on foreign
soils, there are cemeteries throughout this country which contain the
remains of the very best that America bad to offer. Remembering is what
Memorial Day is for, and what gives it meaning is how each one of tis
remembers the great sacrifiCes which have made possible the blessings we
share as Americans.
.
(Rep. Bob Stump Is the chalnnan of the U.S. House of Representa~
lives' Committee on Veterans AIT!Iirs.)

sidiary.
Newcomb declined to COIIIIIICIII
on bis bandlinl of the case, wbidl
outraged bla employees and baa

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
prompted an investigation by District of Columbia ,U.S. Attorney
Eric Holder. Texaco has denied it
violated any law and wlll.challense
any OFAC attempt to impose ftnes.
Texaco hardly appears to be an
isolated incidenL Newcomb's conduct during three Vielllam embargo
cases is also under scrutiny by
Treasury's inspector general. Documents obtained by our associate
Dean Boyd indicate that New·
comb's actions during a short-Jived
probe into Mobil Oil Corp. are
among the topics under investiga.
lion.
In a 1994 affidavit, Newcomb's
tllen-assistaut chief of enforcement
claims that be launched a probe
into Mobil in 1992 after receiving

•

repons tbat a pallet of tbe company's resin had been seen at a VIC!,
namese plastlca factory. At the
time, a U.S. embarao barred lttlde
between Americao companies and
Vietnam.
, . After consultinJ with Newcomb, the agent be§an drafting a
summons for Mobil s documents.
But as he put the fmisbing touches
on the order, the aaenl' states that
be was called by Mobil's lawyers
wbo said they already knew about
the probe.and were anned with an
e·xplanation for the resin. Tbe
agent, wbo was stunned by tbe
apparent security breach, asked
Mobil officials bow they became
aware of tbe · probe. Mobil's
lawyers said Newcomb had "told
them about the al,legalions," the
'affidavit reads.
•
An~ered by what be considered
was ' nothing less than a tip-off,"
the agent visorously complained to
superiors. According to the affidavit, Newcomb later acknowledged that be bad mentioned the
probe to a Mobil official wbo bad
called bim on an unrelated mauer.
Mobil spokesman Jobn Lord

~-·~

.

Both Newcomb and the authot·
of the affidavit declined to be interviewed on the affair. But another'
official familiar with the probe says
Mobil responded to the order with:
a "perfect" explanation lhat agents
could neither prove nor disprove. ·
With no evidence indicating Mobil •.
committed any wrongdoing, OFAG,
closed the case.
•
Unfortun~tely, questions about',
Newcomb lingered on. Suspicions,
were fueled again during a 1993.
Jus lice Depanment probe into pos-:
sible false statements by former
State Department legal adviser~
Abraham D. Sofaer in connection'
with bis representation of Libya.
In July of that year, D.C. Assis'
taut U.S. Attorney Eric A. Dubelier '
requested that Newcomb's office!
tum over aU documents relating to'
a licenSij which OFAC had granted
Sofaer to represent Libya. But
accordi'lrg-IQdocuments and gov-:
ernment officials, OFAC failed to
tum over the complete me.
One document suggests that,
there were conversations between·
Newcomb and a subordinate aboutwhether Newcomb should "give
up" certain memos to lhc prosecutor. In a rare action, the prosecutor
was eventually forced to serve
Newcomb with a grand jury subpoena to retrieve the full file.
Newcomb declined to be interviewed about his actions in the
case, which ended with no charges
beii)g brought against Sofaer. A~
investigators delve into a host of
allegations, OFAC' s entire enforce:
ment staff has been transferred to
the U.S. Customs Service.
·
(Jack Ande.rson and Michael
Blnstein are columnists for Unit•
ed Feature Syndicate.)
·

Tom· Hart's memories of school days past
At the left comer of this end of sound paddling. Wilbur hadn't
the room was a cupboard where we helped himself any by crawling up
kept our dinn~r buckets. In the under the schoolhouse floor, where
right corner was a little ben€b on be was so difficult to dislodge that
Mr. Biggs bad to wait him out We
could
hear the smack of the paddle
FredW. Crow
and felt awful about poor Wilbur,
which sat the bucket of drinking until be finally came out and didn't
water, usually filmed with chalk seem to be suffering much from the
dust, and its attendant tin drj_nking ordeal.
cup. Later in the year, we w~re all
Mr. Biggs also punished Ernest
required to bring our own cups.
.Cullums, but since Ernest was only .
Our drinking water came from a a small frrst grader, be flopped bim
spring that issued from a crack in over bis knee and administered a
the rocky side of a ravine that ran spanking with bis thick heavy
behind the school bouse. A recepta- · ·band. Bernice Pratt had accused
cle into which a bucket could be Ernest of spitting berry seeds down
dipped, had been picked out of the the back of her dress. Mr. Biggs
rock. This spring was a little too didn't accept Ernest's explanation
high on the face of the ravine for us that be bad spat the seeds in the
smaller barefooted boys to drink opposite direction, but they bad
from without climbing up and somehow circled around and got
squalling on its rim. Some of the down the back of her dress.
Although eight grades were
older girls complained to the teacher that they didn't Jilce'us doing that taught, there were still study peri·
becau se we got our toes in the ods during the day. During _these,
water.
Mr. Biggs entenaincd himself by
Our teacher, George Biggs, bad catching mes in his hand. He was
· taught my father many years very good at it. Sometimes be
befere. This was bis last year of would doze.
teaching. He was a big man, or at
At these limes Guy and I, as
least seemed so to me. I also well as others, would engage in our
thought bim quite old, although be favorite game of pencil rolling. We
must have been only in late middle would stan out pencils at the top of
age since be could run quite rapidly the desk and see whose rolled off
wben playing ball or other games the lower edge fiCSt As time went
with the older children.
by, more and more entered the
He was kind to us small first game until the room was so full of
graders, although be sometimes the sound of rolling pencils that
pretended to be mad when we got Mr. Biggs would wake up with a
wet playing in tbe small stream stan. .
near the school, or did other objecOne day a pel\Cil sharpener was
tionable things. We were in awe of installed in the school. I was surhim because the older boys told us prised when nearly everyone lined ·
that he bad a paddle studded with up to sharpen bis or ber penciL I
nails.
couldn't understand bow everyWe believed in this prick:ly pad· one's pencil could need sharpening
dle until later in the year .,vben, to at the same time. Mine didn't
our horror, be dragged Wilbur require it until some lime the next
Williams into the schoolhouse, ran day. Sometimes a lack of interest in
everyone else out, and gave him a things mechanical shows up at a

very early age.
·
The schoolhouse was surround-'
ed by large beech trees that bore a·
heavy crop of nuts that fall of 1926.
All the older boys filled their pockets with beechnuts at noon, and ate
them on the sly during the afternoon, kicking or throwing the shell
under someone else's desk.
The beeches were old and some
ofthem had wing-like buttresses
where several of us established
play houses . Robert Jones and I
had ours together. We had accumu•
lated some pieces of poncry,
including a tall broken drinking
utensil with a long thin spear of
glass.
Emerson Jobes came by and
took it away from us , explaining
how terrible it would be if one of
us should fall on it This possibility
had never occurred to either·of us. I
mention this trivial incident to
illustrate how oblivious small chi!'
dren are to hazards that are obvious
to adults, or even older children
such as FJilerson ....
(To be &lt;1ntlnued)
This week again· found me writing from my hospital bed, but,'
thankfully, it's not like last time
when I was writing from the intensive care unit
In God we trust
Carry on,
FredW. Crow
EDITOR'S NOTE- Please'
read next week's colunm by Mr.
Crow for the conclusion or thiS'
letter.
·
Longtime attor11ey Fred W • .
Crow Is the contributor of a•
wee)j.ly column to Tbe Sunday:
Times-Sentinel.- Readers wl!ihln&amp;:
to applaud, criticize or comment'
on any subject (except religion or:
politics) are encouraged to write" .
to Mr. Crow in care of this news;
paper.
·

I have wriuen several articles in
which I interviewed individuals
who bad very interesting stories.
People may even call some of•
my friends "characters"! If my
friends are characters, then the old
adage of peas in a pod certainly is
'not true nor applicable to me.
Over the years I have talked
witb Tom Hart, a former
schoolteacher. Tom lives with his
wife, Cecelia, wbo is also a former
school teacher. Tbey have .three
children. Jack. Lance and Hilda.
Tom, wbo bas a remarkable
memory, prov.ided me with the fol·
lowing account of his early school
years, Old timers, read, enjoy and
reminisce.
TOM'S SCHOOL YEARS
For some reason, I'remem.berthe first year of school better than
ail the others put together. Guy
Quivcy and I walked together lhc
. 1.3 miles to the Darwin School. His
mother accompanied us the first
day.
The schoolhouse was a oneroom affair where all eight grades
were taught by one teacher. Tbe
By The Associated Press ·
. desks and seats were the long type
. Today is Sunday, May 28, the 148th day of 1995. Tbere are 217 days.. that accommodated two students.
left in the year.
Guy and l sat together near the pot. Today's Highlight in History:
bellied stove that heated the room.
On May 28 1934, the Dionne quintuplets - Anneue, Cecile, Emilie,
Dnring the winter, the stove was
Marie and Yvonne -were born to Elzlre Dionne at the family frum in often so hot we bad to shield our
Ontario, Canada.
faces from the beat. About the time
On this date:
the fire would die down enough to
In 1533, Engl3nd's archbishop declared the marriage of King Henry be comfortable, Adrian Smith ,
VJIIto Anne Boleyn valid.
whose seat was in one of the far
1n 1863, the fiCSt black regiment from the North left Boston to fight in corners of the room, would come
the Civil W.ar. ·
up and throw more coal on it
In 1892, the Sierra Club was organized in San Francisco.
The teacher's desk wa. on a oarIn 1929, tbe first all-color talking picture, "On with the Snow," ·. row, six-inch elevation of the noor
opened in New Yo{k.
·
· ·.
.
·. · .
that ran the width of the room.
In 1937, President Roosevelt push~ a button m Washmgton s1gnalmg Between the teacher's desk and
that vehicular traffic could cross the just-opened Golden Gate Bridge in those of the students were two long
California.
recitation seats where entire grades ·
In 1937, Neville Chamberlain became prime minister of Britain.
could sit in line and recite in tum as
In 1940, during World Warn, the Belgian army surrendered to invad- caHed upon, or go to the blacking German forces.
.
. board and write as required.
In 1957, the National League gave its approval for the Brooklyn
Dodgers and New Yurt Giants baseball teains to move to Los Angeles
and San Francisco.
.
In 1972, the Duke of Windsor, wbo bad abdicated the English throne
•
to marry Wallis Warfield Simpson, died In Paris at age 77.
In 1977, 165 peopte'were killed wben fue raced through the. Beverly
NEW YORK - You're not . owner. Or belong to a cenain reli- eo-authored .an incisive boOk that than 17,000 pages of regulations~'
Hills Sup(1erCiub in Southgate. Ky.
.
necessarily mad if you're angry gion.
.
·
relates events today to the words and proposals on the 1976•
· . J0 1984, President Reagan led a state funeral at Arlington National about the government
While exuemists may resort to and actions of Washington, Madi- Resource Conservation and. Recov-r
Cemetery for an unidentified American soldier killed in the Vietnam War.
You may be among a large violence and gain the headlines, son, Adams, Jefferson and others. cry Act
.
ln· l987, Mathias Rust, a 19-year-old West Gennan pilot, landed a pri- number of people wbo fear governThe title, It's Tta Time Again,
One of the most alarming com-•
vate plane in Moscow's Red Square after evading Soviet air defenses.
ment is too involved in personal
refers to the Boston Tea Party. ·
pilations of regulatory excess is:
Ten years ago: David Jacobsen, director of the American University affairs. Or a taxpayer harassed by
, Stephen Moore, a federal budget "Red Tape in America," a just,•
Hospital in Beirut, Lebanon, was abducted by pro-Iranian kidnappers (be the Internal Revenue Service. Or there' is also a quiet, concerned, analyst, documents government published ~llection (by The Her-•
1
was freed 17 months later).
just someone worried about gov- peaceful, intelligent, informed, )106· edema in Government: America's itage Foundation) of horror stories'
Five years ago: Iraqi President Saddam Hussein opened a two-day emment waste and irieffectiveness. . ilive, constructive, patriotic popu- No. 1 Growth Industry. Govern- taken from newspapers and governArab League summit in Baghdad with a keynote address in ~bich be said .
Most Americans arc angry about lace that worries if government ment employees now match manu- . ment documents.
if Jsmel were to &lt;Jeploy nuclear or chemical weapons against Arabs, lmq 'how public money is spent. Almost isn't the problem. .
factoring in number. Tbere were
Red Tape was compiled by two
would respond with "weapons of mass destruction.''
every small-business survey shows
There is nothing on-American 3,975 pages of law in the J985 I&amp;S young researchers, Craig Richard·
One year ago: Palestine Liberation Organi~tion officials announced fury over costly and foolish about it either; it might be more code; by 1992, there were 9,400 son and Geoff Ziebart, as a labor of
that Yasset Arafat bad named himself interior minisler of the autonomous demands. Almost no one can be correct to refer to it as typically pages. Spending on poverty grows; concern. It lists hundreds of stories;
zones as part of an interim government; 14 other prominent Palestinians, sure they haven't violated some American and part of the same tra· so does poveny.
tbe sources alone suggest tbe
ll!~l!J! Arafat allies,'were appoin~IQ.Q\!Je[J1Qsitlons.
.
.
federal regulation co- other.
dition established by the founders ·
Author James Bovard docu- breadth and depth of t.b e anger
··---· · fod:iY's Binbdays ~ ACIU'ssC3\ron Baker 1s'"M.1:os-Aiigetef"Uktrs- ~Y-otniO!f'rbavc-tobc-young,· nor. ·of the country. It was very evident ments and describes Jbe intrusions among Americans. -~--~, --··~-..
executive Jerry West is 57. Singer Gladys Knight is 51. Actress-director must you be old; or black, white, in.the last election.
of government in Lost Right: The
(John Cunniff Is a business
_ _ _ - Solldfa t..ocJce.isAL_,
--· . _ __ _ _
_ _ -~.
red oryellow; rich o~~· Or an
It is evident too in letters to the· Desrruction of America'! Liberty. analyst for The Associated ,
Thought for Today: "All the troubles of man come from b1s IiOfl(nOw-. . cnvuonmentiilrst, logger;-IJI!ermr!~ditor;-in· IJl8gazines, in·books.
• An example: Ti!c-Envuonment Press.)
--.'
'
ing bow to sit still." -Blaise~. Frencb philosopher (1623-1662).
an, Republi~an, Democrat, gun
Barry Asmus, an economist, bas Protection Agency bas issued more

Today in history

Anger with government not limited to a few
John Cunniff

George Y. Gilmore

confums that before n:oeivinl IlK!
SIIDIDIOIIS, MobU bad pbooed Newcomb on a tolally unrelated iuue.
During the phone call, Lord told us,:
Newcomb only "mentioned In
passing that OFAC would be send•)
ing Mobil a letter asking about a.
reported sighting of ·tbe plastiC:
resin" in Vietnam. Lord says this;
conversalion occurred "only a day
or two" before Mobil received the
summons. However, the Bfent's 1
affidi vit suggests that Mobil wa!j'
informed of the summons - andJ
tbe underlying allegations - ai.
least a week before receiving the '

summons.

-~ · Pomeroy •

MldCJieport •-Gallipolis, OH • Polnt-Pieesent, WV

--Area Deaths--

Sunday TIDlCS-Scotinel /A4

Embargo chief earning n~gative reputati.on
WASHINGTON- The bead of
the federal agency charged with
enforcing U.S. trade embargoes
against outlaw nadoos' Ia ill dan&amp;er
or earning an outlaw reputation
himself.
Until recendy, Ridlanl R. New·
· comb, director of the Treasury
Department's Office of Foreign
Assets Control (OFAC), bad
received ouly praise fco- his efforts
to freeze the assec.s of foreign dictators and punish embargo-busten.
But now the career government
executive is fighting allegations
leveled by bis own staff and other
officials that be bas compromised
probes of majco- American companies suspected of embargo viola·
lions.
The most sensational allegations
involve OFAC'"s 1992 probe of
Texaco. The Associated Press first
reported bow Newcomb allegedly
ignored the recommendations ·of
his staff to fme Texaco's Caribbean
subsidiary $1.6 million for selling
fuel to Haiti's military junta in
apparent violation of the 1991 U.S.
embargo: To date, OFAC has taken
no action against Texaco or its sub-

-

Many accept flooding
risk without insurance

•

By SHARON COHEN
Associated Press Writer
GAU.IPOLIS -()eorp Y. Gilmore, 82, Gallipolia, died 'lbunday, May
When Deborah Pavia's borne in
2!1, 199S at hla Jellidence, followlnJ an extended IDnea.
Missouri was swamped by flood' Bo-n Iuly 12, 1912 in Mlrlinpon, W.Va., lOll of the 1att George P. 8nd
waters in 1993. sbe was wiped out
Gerlcva OmninJ)lE GilnlcR, he was a 1930 padn•te of Gl1lia Academy
Two years later, as the rivers rise
~&amp;b Scbool and lllellded West Vir.
again, she fears she'iLface the
glnia S111e Collcae, He padualed
same dilemma: buge losses and no
from the Univemity of Rio Grande.
insurance.
She never expected this predica. A teacher Ceo- several years at the
ALL ABOARD· Tickets are oa aale now for a new eYent on tlae
ment "They said it happens once
Old Lincoln School, he was later
JU,:ver-Rec:reation81 Fettlval ltlnenry. A Firework&amp; CrulH Wlll. be
in a hundred years," she said of the
employedatKaiser Aluminum corp.•
otrered
on
the
P.A
•.
Denny.
Boarding
time
Is
8:30p.m.,
July
4
at
tbe
Great
Aood of 1993. "I thought,
ll.aVCIIIwood, W.Va., reliring in
GaUipolls
Parkfront
Doc:k.
The
P.A.
Denny
Wlll
return
at
11
p.m.
welt,
in
another hundred years I
1980. He wu a member of the Paii1l
after the ftreworb display. Music wiU be provided by D.J. Kevin
won't
be
around to worry about
6eet ~Cbllldlll!idamcmber
it." I
Nott and a mal wUI be catered by Holiday Inn of GaWpoJJs. TickoftheAncientY&lt;RLodgeii33,F&amp;
ets are available Ill the Gallla County Chamber of Conuneree, 16
But the swoilen Mississippi and
AM.
State St., Galllpollo. Ticket numben are lbnlled. For more InforMissouri rivers are swallowing up
He wu alsopm:eded in death by
mation caU the chamber at ~!16.
fields and engulfing homes. And
hla wife, Esther.Lewis Gilmore, in
though water has just trickled into
1992. They wen: married Ian. 9,
her West Alton, Mo ., basemeht ,
1939.
Ms. Pavia knows it could get worse
· Surviving are six sons, George
before it gets better.
(Judith) Gilmore of ArlingtOn. Va .•
She has no flood insurance, she
folm (Lydia) Gilmore of Columbus,
said, because she still hasq·~
rebounded financially from 1993,
Andrew Gilmore of Kerr, Daniel
POMEROY - A one-car accident .sent one man to the hospital,
wbeu her home was submerged in
(Iill) Gilmore of Tallahassee, Fla.,
according to Pomeroy Police Department reports. ·
41 inches of water. She recently
and lames GilmOre and Norman
Donald Elkins, 16, Pomeroy, was driving nonb on Mulberry
considered buying a policy - and
Gilmore, both ofGallipolis;adaugh·
Avenue
when
be
lost
control
of
bis
car,
struck
a
utility
pole
and
then
still plans to - but instead bad to
ter, Andrea G. Davis of Columbus;
GEORGE. GILMORE
a
con~rete
pole
at
5:53p.m.
Friday,
records
sbow.
spend money on a used car 10 get to
12grandchildrenandagreat-gmndElkins
was
charged
with
failure
to
maintain
control
and
expired
her job at a pharmaceutical plant
·. child; a sister, Oean (Henry) NonnanofColurnbus; two sisters-in-law ,Emma
tags,
repons
stated.
"It's peen a struggle trying to
'I,'oles of Point Pleasant. W.Va., and Ullian Crawley of Columbus; a brotherHe
was
transported
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
by
the
get
back to where 1 was," said Ms.
in-law, 1o1m H. Lewis of Columbus; and many nieces and nephews.
Pomeroy
EMS,
where
be
was
later
treated
and
released,
according
Pavia,
a 38·year-old single motl1er
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Paint Creek BaptistChurch, with
to a nursing supervisor.
of three . ''It takes .money out of
the Rev. Dennis Hurt offiCiating. Burial will be in the Pine Street Cemetery.
A passenger in the car, Janice Elkins, was not transported,
your pocket every day . I don't
FriendsmaycallattheWaugh-Halley-W()O(JFuneraiHomeonTuesdayfrom
records show.
think people realize the ii!Ue things
6-9p.m.
tlmt are never replaced. We never
. . The body will Uc In state in tlle church one hour prico- io the services.
caught' up with doctor bills and
Masonic servict&amp; wiU be conducted in the funeral home by Ancient York
hospital bills."
RUTLAND- Tbe Lc;ading Creek Conservancy District ended a
Lodge 1133, F &amp; AM, at 8:30p.m. Tuesday.
Two years after the recordboil advisory for all customers east of State Route 124 and Brad. The sons will serve as pallbearers.
breaking disaster that buried many
bury Road Friday, officials announced Saturday.
Midwest river towns, Ms. Pavia is
Honorary paUbearers will be Robert Gordon Sc:, Henry Norman, John
among the large majority of people
l:.ewis, lack Carr, John Ragland, James Mitchell Sr., Gilbert Craig Sr. and
living in these high·risk flood
John Howard.
zones who don't h&gt;we llood insur·
GALLIPOLIS - Membrial Day activities sponsored by the Gal·
ance.
1ia County Veterans Service Commission begin Monday with a
Some can't afford il; the average
parade down Second Avenue and end with a memorial service at
premium,
the government says; is
the Doughboy Monument, Veterans Service Officer Steve Swords
$300
a
year.
Other~ feel hi story
said.
'
CLIFTON, W.Va.- Josephine A. Knopp Justice, 79, Clifton, died
won't
repeat
itself
or bought poliDedication of the new Gallia County Veterans Monument will
Friday, May 26, 1995 at her residence.
cies after 1993, then let them lapse
foUow the observalion.
.
· Born April IS, 1916 in Clifton, danghter of the late Harry and Maud
after a year.
The parade will form at Second Avenue and Spruce Street at
Stewart VanMeter, she was a homemaker and former .cook at Wahama
or some 9.5 million households
10:15 a.m. and head downtown at 10:30. The ceremQny in the park
High School.
in
tlood-prone areas , slightly more
begins
at
11
a.m.
She was also employed at Lakin State Hospital and the DuPoot plant in
than
2 million- or about 21 per·
Parkersburg, W.Va. She also operated a board anj! care home for the
centhave federally backed flood
elderly for many years.
.
insurance, according to the Federal
She was also preceded in death by her husband, David Allen Knopp;
I::mergency Management Agency.
three bro!hen, Raymond Stewart, .Lenard VanMeter and Ralph VanMeter,
Nearly half the policies are in
and a grandson, Cheste~ D. Knopp Jr.
.
He went on to create the Pink Florida, the agency said ; the
LOS
ANGELES
(AP)
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, William D. and Darlene
Panther after Warner closed its
Knopp of Toana, Va., and Chester D. and Patricia Knopp of Maabews, Isadore "Friz" Freleng, animator internal animation department in National Flood Insurance Program
of
Bugs
Bunny,
Daffy
Duck,
Porky
covers Hood-related damage conVa.; a daughter, Julia A. Darst of Clifton; eight grandchildren and 10
1963.
Pig
and
a
host
of
other
loveable
nected to hurricant!s.
great-grandchildren; a brother, William D. VanMeter of Clifton; .and two
He won Academy Awards for
cartoon
characters,
died
Friday.
He
Thousands of flood· ravaged ressisters, Lucy Johnson of Milton, W.Va., and Kathleen VanMeter of Hac· was 89.
four of his Warner Bros .. canoons
idents
of the Midwest took out
risonville.
·
- 1947' s Tweety Pie , 1955 's
No
cause
of
death
was
released.
flood
insurance
policies m1d thouServices .will be 11 a.m. Monday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Speedy Gonzalez. 1957's Birds sands more acceptetJ goyernment
During
his
30-year
reign
at
Mason, W.Va., with Timothy Vaughan and Randy Wimmer offteiating. Warner Bros., Freleng gave .life to Anonymous and 1958 's Knighzy
Burial wiU be in tho Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral Sylvester and Tweety Bird , Speedy Knighl Bugs. He won a fifth Oscar buyouts ol' ti1eir homes af)er devastating losses in 1993, hu t' they stili
home on Sunday from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. ·
for Tile P1nk Plunk , starring the are the.minority .
Gonzalez and Yosemite Smn.
Pink Panther. He also won three
Less than ) 0 percent of more
·Emmys.·
POMEROY - Unit s ·or the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
POMEROY - Iuanita Sayre, fOOl)erly of Portland, di~ Saturday, Service responded to eight calls for
·May27,1995 at Sycamore Hospital, Miamisburg.
assistance Friday, with one transfer
·. Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, call.
TUPPERS PLAINS
'Pomeroy.
8 a.m., State R6ute 681, motor
vehicle accident, Delores, Amy and
Usa Watson, refused treatment
MIDDLEPORT
R:09
a.m.
; Story's Run Road, ·
GALLIPOLIS- Thelma Elliott Weaver, 81, Bulaville Pike, GaUipostructure
fire,
false alarm .
. lis, died Thursday, May 25, 1995 in Rutland. She was a homemaker and
8:28
a.m
..
Story's Run Road,
!"ember of the Silver Memorial FreewiU Baptist Cburcb in Kanauga.
Glen
Priddy,
Veterans
Memorial
. Born Dec. I, 1913 in Mason, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late
HospiwL
Henry and Maggie Reitmire.
· 10:48 p.m., Gen . Harting.cr
Survivors include five sons, Howard (Alice) Ellion of Athens, Henry
Park,
Jonatlmn Bootl1c, VMH .
(Bertha) Elliott and Herman (Mary Ann) Eliion, both of Point Pleasant,·
RACINE
W.Va., Herben (Marcia)·Elliot of Rutland, an.d Harold (Catherine) Elliott
·
4:34
a.
m.,
Basilan Road , car
of Pomeroy; five daughters, Julia (Frank) Long and Dianne (Everett) Hal·
fire
,
fa
I
se
alann
.
ley, both of Gallipolis, Anna (Rusty) Baird of CbiUicothe, Kathy (James)
I'OMEROY
Stewart of Rutland, and Sue Pearson of Point Pleasant; 29 grandchildren,
5:23 p.m., Overhrook Nursing
29 great grandchildren and three great-great grandchildren; and several
Center,
Ada Newdl. VMH .
step- grandchildren.
5:53
p.m .. MulbCI'ry Avenue.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in de.ath by bee frrst busmotor
veh
icle accident , Donald
band, How'ard Elliott; ber second husband. Peariey Weaver; one son,
Elkin
s,
VMH,
Janice Elkin s.
Harry Elliott; one sister, Mamie Thorpe; ber adoptive.!!lother, Julia Bose; .
refused treatment
and' five grandchildren.
6:42p.m., Peacock Street, VonFriends may call. 2 p.m. Sunday at the Silver Memorial Freewill Bap·
nie
Todd, VMH.
tist Church until the service, which· will he held 11 a.m. Monday at the
church . .
. Burial will be in Flat Rock Cemetery. Grandsons wiU serve as pallVETERANS MEMORIAL
bearers.
·.
·
·
Friday
admission ~ Randall
In lieu of nowers, contributions may be made to the Silver Memorial
Racine.
freewill Baptist Church radio fund. Arrangements arc under the direction McClain,
Friday
dischar ge - Waiter
·
of the Willis Funeral Home.
Wears. Pomeroy.

Area News in Brief:

Pomeroy man injured in wreck

1

LCCD lifts boil advisory

fd emorial Day observation set

Josephine Knopp Justice·

than 400;000 structures in bigb·
bazard flood zones iu Missouri and
Illinois are covered by national
flood insurance. according \0 a
recent op-ed piece in the St Louis
Post-Dispatch written by AI Moore
of Aema Life &amp; Casually in Con·
necticut..
.
"I don't understand what it is
that keeps people from protecting
themselves," Moore said in a telephone interview. "People can't
have forgotten."
He noted many river communities aren't affluen~ but also specu· ·
lated some people beUev~ the gov·
ernment will ride to the rescue
again if there's another huge nood.
''The thinl&lt;illg prevails that if
there is a big problem, the federal
government is going to come in
and make us whole again," said
Moore , who coordinates flood
insuran ce for his agency. "That
simply is not true."
.
l n fact , a measure signed into
law last year imposed new restrictions on Oood insurance. It requires
residents of high-risk areas whO
recei vcd a FEMA grant after tbe
1993 di sas ter to buy coverage if
they want to be eligible for certain
kind s of aid 1f they are flooded
again.
It also established a 30-day
waiting period before flood insur·
ance takes effect, instead of the
previous five days.
.
Charles Higg en botham , Ms.
Pavia's father and next-door neigh·
bor, bought flood insurance on
Tuesday. He knows if his housewhich he rebuilt with his life &gt;av·
ings after the summer of 1993 - is
damaged within tl1e next montl1, ile ·
wiU not be covered.
He said he hadn't acted sooner
because he couldn't afford the
$445 annual policy . ''I'm stupid
!'or waiting," be said. "They told
me tlle water was coming. I had to
find a person I could borrow
money from."

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388-8603

Meigs EMS runs

Sayre

Ohio Valley
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Thelma·Weaver

Everyone is invited
to join us for

Memorial &amp; Veterans
. Celebration

Hospital news

•

Monday;·May 29, 1995
6:00p.m.

·Bob Wood, Quartermaster of VFW Post #4464,
LIFE- HEALTH- DISABILITY
will deliver the tribute..
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T!u GIBBS lfJi'l(c!
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(Across from Riverside Golf Course) .
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Agents: P.J;, Sean, Gregg &amp; Dqrothy
Phone:
n-a-ssse-or-1-800-664@3362

*Singers will perform patriotic &amp; inspirational music.
*Drawing for aFREE SPACE in the Veterans Field
of Honor or The Garden of Devotion.
*Drawing for aHeritage Family Bible.
Drawing for aHeritage Air Sealed Vault.

*

INFORMATION TENT AVAILABLE
"Memorial Counselors on Duty to Assist"

*Refreshments Will Be Provided *

__ . ..

BRING YOUR OWN LAWN CHAIRS

1- ~-~ Neighborhood Rd·.

446-9228 ·-~-----·Gallipolis, oil

I

�Nation/World

28, 199S

SIIC said Judge Lance Ito called
her into his chambers Thursday
afternoon after questionina other
jurors before her and read to her
from a letter that accused her of
writing a book. 1be letter also iBid
Bunten•s husband had conlacted a
literary agenl
"This is so far frmn the ttuth,"
she said. "I mean, I don't know
who would be writina these letters
to lbe judge."
Bunten said she bad not made
up.ber mind about Simpson's guilt
or mnocence.
" I thouabt I was pretty much
.down the middle, at least r was trying 10 be," sbe said.
She said the most compellina
evidence thus far bas been the
blood of Simpson's ex-wife Nicole
Brown Simpson on his socks and
his blood on a glove also stained
with the blood of Ms. Simpson and
her friend Ronald Goldman. The
glove was found on Simpson's
estate.
·But.Bunten said the prosecution
needs more to prove Simpson
guilty of killing Ms. Simpson aod
Goldman on June 12.
"I defmitely need sometbin!lto
tie Mr. Simpson in with the tllood
drops," sbe said "I don'tlrnOw if
having your own blood drops in
your home is against the law ....
They would have 10 have more.''
When jurors staged a one-day
protest after three deputies were
ousted from jury guard detail, Bun-

I

'

DISMJSSED - Frandne Florio Bunten, dlsmlaod u • jurw
In the O,J, Slmpeon double mUrder trial, dlsawed her departure
from the Jury with the media Friday In San Gabriel, Calif. (AP)

ten was.among panel members who
wore black to COUrt that day.
Bun1en denied reports that she
led the protesL
Bunten was replaced Friday by
a 71-year-old black woman who
said during jury selection that she'd
never beard of .Simpson, bad no
opinion about his guilt or innocence and r~:ad the newspapers
only to keep up with her favorite
· hobby- horse racing.
"I haven't come to no conclusion one way or the other," the
woman said during jury selection..
Her selection brought the panel
configuration to eight blacks, two
whites and two Hispanics. There
are still nine women and three men
on the panel. The alternate' pool of
four, which started at 12, now bas
three blacks and one white; three
women and one man.

Feds consid'e r·cutting a deal
with friend of .bombing suspect
By PAUL QUEARY
Associated Press Writer
OKLAHOMA CITY - Federal
prosecutors are negotiating with
attorneys for a man who said be
cased the federal building ·with
bombing suspect Timothy
McVeigh, a senior federal official
said.
··
But authorities want to check
Michael Fortier's story before concluding a deal, the officia110ld The
Associated Press on Friday.
"I think they're banding draft
.Jl!IP.lrs back and forth, •' the official
srud of deal proposals for Fortier.
. But the source refused to predict
· when or even whether a deal might
. _
: ~ be reached.
The official said that Fortier
made statements as a bid to open
' · 'negotiations, and that be 10ld investigators last week:
• that be drove McVeigh from
Arizona to Oldahoma City.
. • that McVeigh told him of his
intention to blO';' up the federal
building.
• that he helped McVeigh case
the building, which was ripped
apart April 19 by a 4,800-pound
fertilizer and fuel oil bomb. The
bombing killed at least 167 people.
Fortier has not yet appeared
before the grand jury, the source
said.
"Negotiations are in the bands
of his lawyers and tbe prosecutors, •' the senior federal official,
who spoke on condition of
anonymity, told the AP. "He's not
just sitting there cooperatively
telling us all be knows.''
It was not immediately clear
•· ·what reduced charges the government might offer in return for his
testimony against other defendants,
"We can't just put bim on the
stand to say this," said the official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, "The defense will show tbe
CNN tape ofhim saying McVeigh
· bad nothing to do with it, and the
jury will conclude he was lying·at
. least once.''
. On May 8, Fortier told CNN: "I
do not believe Tim blew up any
building in Oklahoma. There's
nothing for me to look back on and
say. 'Yeah, that might have been. I
should bave seen it back tben.'
There's nothing ~ke that."
Authorities were cbecking gaSoline stations and hotels as well as
relatives to try to conftrm Fortier's
statements about the trip to Oldahoma City before the bombing.
·
Fortier and McVeigh worked
together in a hardware. sto.re in
Kingman, Ariz ., after servmg m the
Army.
A federal law enforcement offi·
cia! bas told the AP that McVeigh
and another man, whom the official
wouldn't identify, posed as job
applicants as they went from agency to agency in the Alfred P. Murrah buUding and another Oldahoma
City building.
Mack Martin, an Oldahoma City
lawyer representing Fortier, did not
return phone calls from The Associated ~ss Friday. ·
McVeigh, 27, ancl Nichols, 40,
are the only .people c~ged so far
" • ~- . In the lloolbing. They could get.the
death penalty if convicted.
•
Also on Friday: .
.....----. Oislrict Atlorney Bob Macy
said be will ftle murder charges in
the deaths of bombing victims who

were killed away from the federal
building . Macy didn't have an
exact count. but said people who
died in a parking garage were considered away from the building.
Two people died in the Oldahoma
Water Resources Building actoss
the street from the Murrah building
and two were killed in the Athenian
Building.
• Oklahoma City Mayor Ron
Norick and Oklahoma Gov. Frank
Keating asked Rep. Frank Lucas,
R-Okiahoma City,to seek additional disaster relief to .help the city
rebuild from the bombing. A proposed bill already earmarks $240

million for a new federal .building,
increased federal law enforcement
and Federal Emergency Management Agency costs. But that bill
does not provide money to assist
the city itself, Norick said.
• The Dallas Morning News
reported Saturday that Terry
Nichols' wife, Marife, suspected
Nichols in the 1993 suffocation
death of her 2·year-old son Jason in
she married Nichols, who bad gone
back to the United States for a
time, the newspaper.said. But when
they moved to Michigan, Nichols
ueated the boy as his own, Marife's family told the paper.

ASIDNGTON (AP) - Wltb
the auc1a1 support ol a home-stale
Republican, Henry Foster woo a
clolc vote Friday that sent his surgeon general nomination to the
Senate floor. 1be outcome gave the
White House new hope Foster was
building momentum against a
threatened fiB buster.
The Labor Committee voted 9-7
to recommend confirmation, and
three of the opposing Republicalis
said they would vote to end &amp;o flliliuster later if it came to lba!.
President Clinton, appearing
with the NasbviUe, Tenn., obstetrician-gynecologist at the White
House, said Foster deserved "his
day in court in the Senate:"
Sen. Phil Gramm, a contender
for the Republican presidential
nomination, renewed his pledge to
try and keep the nomination from a
vote by the full Senate.
"I am going 10 filibuster that
nomination and the president and
his supporte~ 81]: gomg to have to
get 60 votes to end that filibuster,"
' the Texas senator said on a campaign trip in ·Iowa. He said it
wasn't clear whether or not the
nomination would be approved if
brought to floor vote. .
Sen. Bill Fris~ R-Tenn., a cardiologist in his ftrSt year in Congress,
waited until minutes be(ore the
vote Friday to give bis enthusiastic ·
support .to Foster, whom be has
known for years.
.
Feist urged colleagues to judge
Foster; "not based on politics, but
rather the man - his qualifications
and ability."
Feist is the sixth Republican
senator to say be will back Foster,
giving the doctor 52 votes - or a
majority of the Senate - if all
Democrats back him. Overcoming
a ftlibuster, Ll)ough, would take 60

votes.
Republican Sen. Jame$ Jeffonls
of Vermont also joined the Labor
panel's seven Democrats in favor
of Foster - a decision be
announced immediately after Foster's confirmation bearing last
month.
In addition to Gramm's opposition, Senate Majority Leader Bob
Dole, another GOP presidential

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National Cancer
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Sunday, june 4
Cancer survivors, their family anJ friends are invited to a FREE
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gifts, clowy.s and

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The

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contender, bas suggelltld be miJbt.
not bring the nominadooiO a vote.
However, Dole recently baa
softened bis position, saying bo
would meet with Foster bcforo
deciding what to do. He said Friday ·
he opposes the no~inatlo~ a~d
believes "confltlllllllon remams Ill
doubt," but will meet with the doc-· It,.
tor in June.

•.

r.:=====:;-11iiiga~s:Cs~u;n~St;;.re~a;m"'iiMi;;o;to:;irh~o;m;,e shelterhouse~ Come and enjoy games, food,

Marvin Keebaugh

Along the RiVer

Committee's vote offers hope
of
confirmation
for
nominee
·
W

·Latest ex-O.J.
(juror disputes
·racial an.i mosity
By JEFF MEYER
A.-oclated l'rea Writer
LOS ANGELES - A 38-yearold telepboo~ company worker
bounced as a juror from the O.J.
Si.mpsoo trial says she saw no
racial animosity while serving on
the sequestered panel.
"I was looking for personality
conflicts, not racial issues, and
maybe that's the .way I saw it,"
Francine Florio Bunten said a day
after becoming the eighth juror dismissed from the high-profile case.
In a live Interview on KABC
radio Friday, Bunten said sbe was
shocked to learn from her family ·
and friends that she had been
accused of racism by another dismissed juror.
"I'm not a racls~" she said.
She conceded that she aod dismissed jUia' Jeanette Harris. who Is
black, did not get along well, but
not because of their racial differences. Harris bas accused Bunten,
who is white, of kicking her and
another black juror.
Bunten denied the kicking incident, although she said she did
inadvertendy step on one juror's
. toes as she squeezed past him into •
her juror seat.
''The juror then leaned over aod
be told me, 'You did that on purpose, and if you do that again I'll
trip you,"' Bunten said.
Bunten also said she was the .
victim of false reports that.she was
writing a book.

•

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• MASON • ·• POINT Pu;ASANT .- • NEW-HAVENl

Section B
Sunday, May 21, 1995

Memorial Day

Poppies
symbolize
human toll
ofWWI

Meigs ·oldest World
War I veteran reflects
on his war years

POMEROY- Memorial Day is
the nation's day for rememberingremembering those who went to war,
remembering those who never returned.
This year only a few veterans
remain who can look back 77 years ago
to the final year of their great war, the
"war to end all wars"- World War I.
Perhaps they w,iil remember their
famous commander, Gen. "BlackJack"
Pershing, commander oft he American ·
Expeditionary Forces in France .
Maybe they 'll remember a 20-day
battle at Belleau Wood (which began
on Memorial Day 1918) and the allied .
victory there which marked the beginning of the endofthe war for Germany.
And even some may remember
the bright, red poppies of Flanders
fields which have come to symbolize
the human toll of modern warfare .
in not so many more years those
veterans of World War 1, now with a
medium age of 95 , will be Memorial
Day memories, gone but immonalized
by·the symbol of the small red poppy
which is World War l's unique contri·
bution to America's Memorial Day
tradition .
It was during a lull in the fighting
on a Belgium battlefield in May 1915 '
that Lt. Col. John McCrae, a Canadian
army surgeon, looked out from his '

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.
Times-Sentinel Staff
ALFRED -"I'm just an old World War I veteran, no better or no less than any other
veteran," said Garner C. Griffin of Alfred who recently celebrated his 99th binhday .
Born in Meigs County on Apri125, 1896, Griffin is the oldest andoneofthe county's
last two living World War I veterans.
On the wall of his living room hangs a picture of the Company in which he served
in 1918-1919. Below that is a plaque commemorating his 75 years of membership in Drew
Webster Post 39, American legion. The plaque was presented to him at the recent
celebration of his 99th birthday.
On that occasion, the honor guard of the Legion gave a 21-gun salute to the man who
described himself as being "dumbfounded and unprepared for all the pomp."
Griffin, who stands straight as a poker and shows a keen sense of humor, lives alone
in the small community of Alfred, in a house hfs called home for a half century.
·
His wife died 30 years ago, his only daughter in !991, his son-in-law in 1994. He has
a grandson living in Col unibus, the closest of only a few surviving relatives. He says that
life hasn' t always been easy.
But Griffin is nOt a man to complain. ·
·
·
Writing to a friend recently, he said that he is on the "tail end of a long line of Scotch
Irish ,p.eople, and as everyone knows their hobby is humor." .
·
"I like gadgets, maps, and ribbons, while shoes and shirts, and ancient history books.
My bookcases are full and I have books piled high on the floor. 1 save everything from
Bible explanations to the Crucibles of Creation, to evolution," wrote Griffin in a letter.
"In pretty good health, just old" is how he describes himself.
He says he manages to get along preuy well, even doing his own cooking, and that
he can go into the kitchen and "mix up messes that women don 't know anything about.''
Griffin, who uses a typewriter for his correspondence, recently wrote about his
experiences in World War l. He titled his reflections, "Cooties and Coal."
"I was 22 years old when 1 was called into the service at Camp Sherman, near
Chillicothe and assigned to Company B, 333 Infantry of the 84th Division as a first class
private .
.
.
.1
"We trained at Camp Shelman about six weeks, then shtpped to Camp Mtlls, Long
Island
where we trained abOut two weeks, then
went to New York. Harbor and the East
,
'
, I
Rtver.
.
"The shi p that our. company boarded was the Baltic, on loan to the United States by
Cunard lines of England. It was a passenger ship, rearranged as a troop ship: Three tug
boats hauled us out into the main New Yor)(Harbor, where the convoy of 13 shtps
collected. We had two lead ships that carried the troops. Theothershipscarriedeverything
that made up the division.
.
·
"In the harbor, we changed from harbor pilots to sea pilots. Three Coast Guard cutters
accompanied us for three days; one in th e lead, one on each.side. We were 19days crossing
the Atlantic, zig-zagging our way to keep submarines off our trail. Nothing very exciting
happened until one morning the two guards in the crow:s nest saw an object dead abe•?·
"I was doing gua'd duty on the forward deck, whtch was roped off from the mam
deck, and I saw the object which looked like a nail keg floating half full of water. Taking
no chances, the gun crew fired one shot and the object disappeared.
"When was reached the English shore, convoy split. Our ship turned into the English
Channel and docked at Southampton. The other lead ship went on to Liverpool. We came
together in London for inspection by King George. His posse, seated on six bay horses,
were dressed in bl.ack shoes, white stocki~gs, blue knee pants, and little blue caps. Their
saddles were all dolled up with other finery. We didn't relish all of the pomp, bullhat \"as
King'George's way of welcoming ·us to Europe.
"From London w~ went .back to Southhampton where we crossed th e English
Channel at night with no lights. Even out wrist watches went into our pockets. The English
Channel was infc.sted with German submarines, but we landed safely the next morning
at LeHarile, France.
'
1'ln France our beds were mostly Mother Earth, except when we Jived in squad tents,
the army issued us Jiule mattresses, st uffed with straw, about three inches thick, We had
to turn th e mattresses over every morning to keep th em from molding. .
"Keeping warm and cooking was something else.
"We found a 30-gallon oi l drum, the Army issued some stovepipe, and a few sticks.
but we needed rriore fuel. Just over the hill was a narrow gauge railroad and a sta tion where
the trains stopped to take on fuel, water and passengers.
,
. The fuel was coal pressed in little blocks about the size of half basement blocks. As
each of us passed the station on our way to QUr tent, we would 'hook' a block of coal to
supplement our Army issue of wood. The inspector came around every m~rntng to see 1f
we had anything we shouldn't have. You know, the ftrst thtng you learn tn the Army ts
to keep your mouth sh ut. The inspector knew that, but still. he had to report the truth. We
knew when he was coming and rolled our blocks of coal outside the tents. He saw that we

trench at newly marked graves sur-

HONORED- GarnerS. Griffin, 99, one of Mei~s County's two living
World War I veterans, was joined by legionnaires Frank Vaughan, Wayne
Milhoan, and Mick Williams, I eft, fora picture during a recent visit to his home
in Alfred. Griffin was earlier presented a plaque by Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, for75 years of membership.

had a warm fire but no extra fuel. He knew well enough that we were burning coal from the
smoke, but he never saw any coal. After he left, we rolled the coal blocks back inside. Thus
we all worked together to make everything as pleasant as possible. ·
"On the stove, we used an old meat can to boil our shirts to kill the lice which we called
'cooties,' as big as' wasps - well, not quite. They were ferocious eaters. Shirts were army
issue, all-wool and two sizes too large, so afte.r we ran them through the delouser they just
about fit.
"Wewere generally on the move. When railroad box cars were in short supply, we had
to hike. Our packs weighed 60 pounds, our guns, nille pounds, plus our belts loaded with five
rounds of ammunition and our ca nteens full of water which we replenished at a river or
creek. Our issued rations consisted of two or three cans of vegetables, three or four cans of
corned beef hash, a couple of cans of jam, and ourhard tack buns about the size of a wiener
~n.

.

.

"We generally junked the vegetables to lighten our load but kept the rest. When officers
called a halt at nightfall, we got our earned beef for supper.
"After that a .couple of us peeled off the outer covering of our packs. joined tH em
together making a linle tent large enough for two. We got some dead grass or pine brush for
a'bed, and, with our packs for pillows, crawled in, tired out from the day 's hike. It seemed
only a few minutes until morning roll call. We struggled out, parlly alive , Wllh stiff necks
to stand in line and be counted. Then we had breakfast of jam and hard tac: k washed down
with a linlc water. The ground would be frozen and .the pot holes covered with ice. ·
"Soon we would be on our way. going where, nnbody knew."

Meigs County man recalls life as a POW of World War II

·I f Waiting For A Loan
Makes You .Angry, Punch This.

Member FDIC

~imes- jmtintl

·

-~EN DEll

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m~ss p~oduction and

national distribution of a red silk flower in remem-

brance of World War I casualties.
By the end of the war, anificial
poppies were sold in France to raise
funds for war disabled· and refugees.
The British Legion, comprised of veterans relief organizations, sold the silk .
flowers to aid the war disabled as well.
In 1920 the newly established
American Legion assumed national
sponsorship for Moina Michael's
poppy day . The firsi nationwide distribution of poppies in America, in J 921
with Frenc)l-made flowers. was on
behalf of 'the Franco-American Children 's League to assis tchildren in devastatt:!d

an:~a~

of France and Belgium.

In 1922, lhe Veterans of Foreign
Wars sponsored a Memorial Day distribution of French-made silk poppies,
and the American Legion and its
Aux1liary d1slributed crepe poppies
made by veterans in Minnesota hospitals, both to assist America 's needy
veterans.'
By the next year, the practice of
•sponsoring Memorial Day distribution
of poppies made by American veterans-hospita l patients was in place. II
carrie's on to th t~ day.
The artificial poppies are made by
patients in VA work·therapy programs

there," he s~id , noting that beother ships
By CHARLENE
fore the ships even left !he dock
frequently. he
and brought
HOEFLICH
said,. he and his
in San Francisco, he had made
to
the
back
Times-Sentinel Staff
wife and son
contacts, sold the goods and
POMEROY -''For three United
;.vould get in the
had a partial payment.
,
States.
years · and three monlhs, we
trench and lay
O ' Bri~n returned to Maand res idents of veterans ho mes who
went. to bed hungry . every
there
" like
niiasometimelatertosetuphis
are paid small sums for !heir work.
night, and we got up hungry O'Brien had
s poons"
for
former business. He spent the
Local units of the American Legion
every morning, but somehow gone
to
hours, even days
next 20 years there and then
Auxi liary and the VFW purchase th e
we survived ."
Manila in
poppies from their headquarters. and
at a time.
moved to New York where he
Frank 0' Brien was de- 1934 to go
community volunteers distribute them
"You had to·be
had an .international trade ofto donors just prio! to Memotial Day .
scribing his family ' s experi- intobusiness
really innovative
fice.
Poppy donations are used by the oran
ence during World War 11 as with
When he retired in the midto survive," said
ganizations
to provide reh abilitation
prisoners of the Japanese in uncle.
He
O'Brien, whote1970' s he moved his family
and
financial
assistance for nee dy vetthe Philippines.
was well escalled !he many
back to Ohio. His wife has since
erans
and
their
families.
The Meigs County native, tabiishedasa
times he saw the . died. His only son lives in Flornow residing in Columbus, his lrader
of
"liltle puggies
ida.
IN FlANDERS FIELDS
late wife and small son were American
hauling corpses
O ' Brien was born at HemIn l'landcrs fields the popp1c'
residents of Manila when the ,goods there
. out " and wonlock Grove Aug. 30, 1906, the
blow .
Japanese took over the Philip- before the
Between the c rosse~. row on row,
deredwhetherhe
son. of Mr. and Mrs: John
Th
at mark: our plncc; and in !he
pines in 1941.
war starled.
O'Brien,andattendcdthe Bearand his family
sky
They were among the The family
would be around
wallow school where his fath er
T he !drh, s11l l Oravely s inging.
manyciviliansstrippedoftheir was one of
another day. He
was a teacher.
Jl y
possessions and taken as pris- thousands
Scarce heard am1d the guns besaid pris oners
Now thai' he is retired he
lo w.
oners o[ war eking out a mea- who lost evewere shot for the
spends much of his time. trying
gee existence for more than rythingtothe
smallest infracto make life better fo r others.
•
We arc the Dead. Short day~; ago
in
the
desolate
Japanese.
three
years
His hobby is making banREMEMBERING CAPTIVITY- Frank 0' Brien displays \ions.
'
We livcJ, fell dawn. saw su nset
Sanlo Tomas prison camp,
O'Brien
Fortun a te l y
jos and entertaining. He regunumerous photographs of himself and his family along with
glow,
waiting, hoping, and praying . credils his
other mementos and newspaper stories of the three years he O' Brien had put
L&lt;lvcd &lt;~nd were llWCd, and now
larly plays at nursing hom es
wt.
lic
·
friends outfor a liberalor.
and his family spent as Japanese prisoners of war in the $4,000 in a bank
and retirement centers In Flanders fields
Philippines during World War II.
Gen . Douglas MacArthur side
the
in the States. It
" u~ually a couple of tim es a
who had vowed that he would camp for his
was everything
week.''
Take op our quarto! with I he foe:
return to thePhilippines·to free family's surth e
family
Every Memorial Da y for
To you ftom fali1ng hand., we
the prisoners came Feb. 7, viva!. He said some foQd and made from rice and water.
the past dozen or so years, - .thro\\
owned when they stepped off
The torch; be yours to ho ld il
1945, a day, O' Brien says, he supplies were tossed over the ·
A bamboo hut of grass and the ship in California in 1945.
O'Brien, affectionally known
high
will never forget.
compound wail and they soon palm fronds tied logether wilh
However, it didn 't take long
as "the banjo man," has relurned
If ye hrcak fanh with us wh o diC
Thin and bedraggled with learned how to make ~o wilh reeds and elevated four. feet for O' Brien to get back into the
10 Meigs Counly to participate
We &gt;hall not sleep, though poponlylheclothesontheirbacks, w~atever they had at ha~d . He a~ov~ the gro~nd w~s bUJit by business world. A form er assopies grow
in services at ,he Burlingham
ther, were taken from the Phil- satd there was were no toilet fa- 0 Bnen f?r hts famtly .
In Flanders fields.
Ce metery where his parents arc
ciate gave him a $50,opo stake
--"-'ippines .by"shifno Austral·ia-.e&lt;!1lities;nn•bedding;-noilledical
He sat~ that und~.tll«e~ th \h.e... S.Qtha.tJl~S9Ultipwrehase goods..-- .. burie d:~ .... .. .. ...~ ... ----·~-..,..,--··· tolmtm1o tnrMd?rae~~ · ,. _....,_ __ ,.~ There they were transferred to supplies,andthattheironlyfood hut h.e dug a trench. When tfie and ship them back to Manila.
He'll be 'there tomorrow
(1872-1 91 8)
. " ...:__, _. _
came in a daily ration of gruel shelling began, and it came "They neede d eve rylning
with his banjo.
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rounded by wild, red corn poppies and
wrote the poignant opening line, "In
Flanders fields tho/poppies blow ..." to
a poem that came to memorialize the
'war's fallen around the world.
"In Flanders Fields" appeared that
year in a British magazine and quickly
spread to the United States. The poem
.grew in popularity among Allied sol·
diers and civilians ihroughoutthe war.
In America,, Moina Michael was so
moved after reading it in a magazine '
that she vowed 10 keep its message
alive by wearing a red silk poppy for
the rest of her life. Her gesture cap·
tured the public's imagination, and he
proposed an annual poppy day with

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-s-unday, May 28, 1995
- '_
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
T~·--..-Cimn-Jhnti.W • Page B3
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Sunday, May 28, 1995

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

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ements

-Honorin volunteers -

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199S fund drive of the Melaa
Cotmty Unit of the Amalalll Can· cer Soelety (ACS) will be beld
'lbunda Y a...
l·ht at the Satlor 0"..zens Ceoter, Mull)erry Helabts,
Pomeroy.
.
A goal of $9,500 bas been let.
Funds wUI be IIICd to provide ICI'·
vices to Meigs County cancer
patients and to aid In reaearcb
efforts toward eradication of the ·
dJSeaSC.
Preceptor Beta Beta Cbaprer or
Beat Sigma Phi Sororicy is again
beading up the annual drive with
assistance from members of other
_chapters, Xi Gamma Epsiloo. Obio
Eta Pbi, and XI Gamma Mu.
Eleanor Thomas is chairman.

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YEARS OF SERVICE - Kevin and Sandy .Dennis, wbo bave
served as Youth Leaden for 25 yean at Faith Baptist Cburch, wiD
be bonored at evelilng oerv~ 6 p.m. tonlgbt at the ""urcb, 3615
Jackson Pike, Rodney. They bave led the World of Life Club on a
volunteer basil aloce l!nO wben the cburcb began. A pie and sand·
wlc:h fellowship wlll be held after tbe evening service wltb cards of ·
appreciation and testimonials concerning the Dennis' ministry•
For more information eall Pastor Jim Lusher at 446-2607.

Marcum-Justus

CLELAND

ibbs-Cieland
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs.
Lesley R . Gibbs of Pomeroy,
announce the· engagement and
approaching marriage. of their
daughter, Stacey Renee. to Jerry L.
Cleland, Pomeroy, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry L. Cleland.
MARY· COMPSTON AND ALBAN CURTIS
· The bride-elect is a 1989 gmdu·
ate of Meigs High School. Sbe
attended THE Barber School in
·Reynoldsburg and is employed by
Her fiance is a 1989 graduate
POM.EROY -· Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Compston announce the Eastern .High School and is atlend- Fantastic Sam's 4n Gallipolis. Her
engagement and awroaching mar- ing Ohio University where be Is
· riage of their daughter, Mary majoring in mechanical engineerMelissa, to Alban Curtis, son of ing.
A family wedding will be held
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Curtis.
The bride-elect is a 1992 gmdu- at the home of the bride-elect's parate or Meigs Hlsb School and a ents June 10. A reception for the
licensed practical nurse employed couple will follow 2 p.m., June 11
by Overbrook Center.
at Royal Oak Resort.

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Compston-Curtis

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grandparents were the lale Edward
R. and Anna M. Marlin and the late
Harold and Helen Gibbs.
Her fiance graduated from
Meigs In 1990 and is a self·
employed truck driver. He is the
grandson of Vada and the late
James Smith, and the late Wayne
Cleland and Anna Cleland Hart
The wtidding will be June 11 at
the Bradbury Church of Christ.

VINTON • Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marcum announce the
engagement and upcoming marriage of their daughter, Melissa
Marcum to Mau Justus, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Justus of Vinton.
Marcum is a 1994 graduate of
River Valley High School and is
attending the University of Rio

Grande.
Justus .is a 1991 grad.uate of ·
North Gallia High School and is
planning to auend Ohio State University in the fall.
The wedding will be 2 p.m.
Aug. 12 'at the F'JtSI Church of the
Nazarene. Gallipolis. A reception
will follow ..immediately.

All ma!Crial submitted for publication is subject to editing.
Questions may be directed to
the editOrial department from I to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

SaD Into Summer
WltbAPVH .
ellness Center
embershlp

To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by th e editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m, prior to the date
of publication.

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CHRISTINA DENNEY AND PHILLIP POPE

Denney-Pope ·

I

SUZANNE CLAY AND BRYAN DURST

Clay-Durst
:

CHESTER Ronald and
Gayann Clay of Chester announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter ,
Suzanne Gaul Clory, to Bryan
·David Durst. son of Uary and Ruth
Durst, Tuppers Plains.
The bride-elect is a 1991 gmduate of Eastern High School and will
graduate in June from Ohio University. Upon graduation she will
be employed by Wyn Molder Plastics of Circleville as Human
Resources Manager.

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The prospective bridegroom is a
1988 graduate of Meigs High
Sc ho ol and a 1992 graduate of
Muskingum College. lie is
employed by the Eastern Local
School District at Tuppers Plains
Elementary.
.
Rev. Sharon Hausman will omelate the open-church wedding 4:30
p.m., July 22 at the Chester United
Methodist Church, Chester. Music
will begin 30 minutes prior to the
ceremony.
'

KennedyWilliams

PLAIN CITY - R.T . and Barbara Stewart of Plain City,
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter. Maggie Kennedy. to Cpl.
~ Semi D. Williams, Cam~ LeJeune,
• N.C., the son of Jim Williams, Jr.
: and Karen Podgurski of Rochester,
: N.Y.
t The bride-eleCt is the grand1 daughter of Jane Williams of
• Langsville. She is a 1995 graduate
-' of Jonathan Alder Higb School and
" Toiles Technical Cen~ in Graphic
.. De s1gn.
.
4
"'
Her fiance is a radio technician
• in the Marie Corps.
i
The wedding be at Camp Lele1 une in June.

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MAGGIE KENNEDY

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In an effort to provide our read~ ership with current news, tjle Gal#
lipolis Daily Trwune and TIU! Daily
! Sentinel will not accept weddings
';: after 60 days front the date of the
- event

-·-

!
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All material submitted for publication is subject to edilting.

V.Jiq Driw•Point Ps.:-,t. WV

(304) 675-7221

***·

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reunion .at Jerry Haner's residence
GALLIPOLIS - Cardiac Sup- . 11756 S.R. 7. Bring lawn chairs. .·
port Group 2 p .m. french 500
•••
Room Holzer Medical. Center.

-

SEE, APPROVE &amp;

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Swbteet lee ol $5 00 per porson pnyabiO whon porlrl:ltl 5 ore

·.

II II on lhu number ol e.dvtlrlrSIKJ

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·Virginia Dental Service
William V:. Bell,--D.D.S., Ine.

•
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109 POPLAR FORK RD.

1031 QUARRIER STREET

Scott Depot, WV•757-7441

306 Atlas Btd ., Charleatono343·2954

Regular Hours:
. 9:30-4:30

~

Phone 446-1405

TuesdAY:~II.tiJ!d_ay

Gallipolis
··-·--~-1

..-

446·3401
"We cater to a woman's
fitness needs"

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286-1553
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With Chromium Plcollnate

NOTICE: WILL BE CLOSED
FRI., JUNE 2 &amp; SAT., JUNE 3.

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LOSE ~ 10 LBS.

10:00 A.M.-Noon; 7:0!1 P.M.-9:00 .P.M.
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614-446-6700

·----··
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SIGN UP FOR CLASSES
TUES, THUR. &amp; FRI.

842 Second Ave.

•••
•••

Revivals

Cb// nor lo tJvoid ~ yotudalr:! I

PAYTON WHITI

4,000 Square Feet
Bigger &amp; Better
Selection of Ceramics
.. :ii""·.

TAWNEY STUDIO

We; offer Caro. Concern. e. nd Coepelence

(Former Sloan Carp~t Building)

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POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Narcotics Anonymous Clean and
Free Group 7:30 p.m. Episcopal
Church.

hlt!e girl f~nl.uy into t.he ~wn-up reetily cf lln Unfor5eU.11ble doy' .
ceFtured fore Yer in pi cele.~ photo&amp;J'IIpbl tl~l . drr•u M ~

NEW LOCATION

SAME OAY SERVICES ON RELINES AND REPAIRS!
DENTURES START AT $143 PER DENTURE!
SMALL ADDITIONAL CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

~~~

"t01.1r woddif18 con

Payton won. a saving's bond,
five-foot trophy. crown and
embroidered sash.

,

24 exposures ...... .. .. ..

-----------FOLLOW THESE DIRECTIONS...

in 611 lin and l~e -Y~~I k.i~doYn lhe 161e lo lhe ~~~ o( "fOUI d~&amp;
You dre~ed your weddina would be perfect _the ~~od or of
your drea.a tfle f~ oce d Lhe floweM. the ~y ci you recep.ioo

She is the daughter of Mark and
Julie Whitt of Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS

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THIS AREA KMART HAS A PERMANENT STUDIO OPEN EVERY DAY
Wednesday.- Saturday, 10 AM-7 PM (CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY)
On Sun. 10 AM (or store openiag. Hlaterl-6 PM (or store dosing. llear8er)

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Whllll drel!la&amp; are •ado of . ..
d ildhcxx:l d roM~&amp; ci beins 11 bide~ fi ll dre&amp;66d up

She bas the opportunity · to represent West Virginia and Kentucky
in the 24 to 35 month girl's age
division in the National Competition in July at Hollywood, Calif.

c:ol.loctra us wr tam•tv . but only ona adve rt rsed coii Achon por ·- :··· · ., .... t hOICOol paso ana OOdlgrpuncl
AdclrTIOMI pows takon lor ophonal por1!flll collect•on w11h no
purctlase Portra•t Siles apprO••male

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Write
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Off KOOALUX I
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I envelope and seal couoon ~nd roll inside
Coupon expires 5/ 31 / 95 Excludes 1
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JJrofe&lt;!J&lt;Bional Weddif18 JJhoto5rapherc5

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PHOTOGRAPHY

,
GALLIPOLIS fERRY W.VA. ' Payton Whitt was crowned
WV/KY Baby America in the 1995
Baby America Pageant for West
Virginia and Kentucky April 29 at
the
Charleston
Marriott.
Charleston, W.Va.

'

TO REDEEM:

~~_,:r-~

.Whitt wins
regional baby
beauty pageant

1

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Premium Film Developing I

1 frame and panoramic orders.

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GALLIPOLIS - Haner family

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per order and may not be combined w11h i
I anY other offer. ElCCiudes 1 Hour lab, 1/2 1

EUREKA- Revival May 21
VINTON - Bible Talks 7:30
through
28 Eureka Church of God .
p.m. Vinton Town Hall with Timo·
prayer
at
6 p.m. and services 7 p.m.
thy Vaughn and Randy Wimmer.
with special preac.hing and singing
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics with Missionary Annstrong. Pastor
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peters Epis- Robert Smith.

CROWN CITY - Stapleton
Family Singers and Wilbur Slack
speaking 7 p.m.Liberty Chapel
·
Church.

I

I
C -41 process 35mm full -Ire-me color 1
1 print film . single prints only. Umrt 1 coupon

calendar------~
copal Church.
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CHESHIRE - Gravel Hill

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;~;~~e~::e:::s~:::
and breast examinations.

I

Columbus, a professional chorus,
and with the Colwnbus Symphony
Chorus. He is also a church soloist
Wigglesworth graduated from
Georgetown (Ky.) College with a
. an. d
bac h e Ior ' s degree I n mus1c
completed his master's degree in
music education at OSU in 1993.
He has studied with Professor
Karen Peeler at OSU and Professor
Belinda Andrews-Smith at Ohio
University. He is listed in Who's
Who Among American Teachers
and is an MENC nationally-registeredmusiceducator.
He is the son of Rose Wigglesworth of Gallipolis and Ernest
Wigglesworth of Taveres, Fla. He
and his wife Kim reside in Gahan·
na.

GALLIPOLIS - Multiple Scle- Cemetery Memorial Day Service
rosis Support Group 1:30 p.m. New · 10:30 a.m. Middleport Post Ameri·
can Legion 128. Special speaker
Life Lutheran Church.
Jmnes Sands.
CROWN CITY - Dan Beaver to
Tuesday, May 30
preach II a.m. Good Hope Church.

I

Evening Appointments Available
Our Regular Service Is Available At All Offices.

'

Topic will be hypertension.

::
CENTENARY - Lambert Fami:' ly reunion 12 p.m. Raccoon Creek
.
.
: . County Park.

Super Low Price! Super Big Value!

GALLIPOLIS • Tina D~wn Larry Baker of Middleport He is a
Fulks and Michael Shawn Baker 1986 gi.aduate of Meigs High
announce their engagement and School and attended Ohio University. He fs . employed as a
upcoming marriagc.Fulks is the daughter of Barbara paramedic with the Oallia County
Fulks and the late, Donovm1 Fulks Emergency Medical Service and is
of Gallipolis. She is a 1987 glJ!dU- a member of the Middleport Fire
atc of Gallia Academy High School Department and EMS.
The open church wedding will
and a 1993 gmduate of the University of Rio Grande and Holzer be 4:30p.m ., June 3 at the First
School of Nursing. She is Baptist Church in Gallipolis. A ·
employed as a registered nurse at reception will foUow in the church
fellowsh ip hall.
Holzer Medical Center.
· Baker is the son of Phyllis and

PHOENIX (AP) - A man
The cat bad some wounds that
bothered by the frenzied barking of probably resulted from running into
his penned-up dogs went to investi- fence s, wildlife officials said.
gate - and found a mountain lion
The animals pose little danger
in his back yard.
unless they are cornered, said state
"Sure I was scared," Joe Perez ranger Brian Anthony. "They're
said Friday. "I would be crazy if I more scared of us than we are of
wasn't scared. I ran back in the them." be said.
house.· '
Game and Fish Department
workers· shot the lion twice with
•tranquiliz er darts, then released
him in the Bradshaw Mountains
south of Pre.•cot~ hoping it would
make a new home there.
Authorities believed the big cat
was a yearling who had come off
South Mountain,~ park preserve on·
the southeastern Phoenix border.
They said he probably was pushed
out by other lions and was looking
for territory to establish as his own.
No one was injured . .

••

.... . .

Fulks-Baker

Mountain "lion caught in yard

•·
,
•·
.. : .

Custom Fitted Dentures In One Day At Our Teays Valley Office
By Our Prol"sslonals Al)d Trained Stall.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualified Technicians.
CALL TOLL FREE 1·800·926-0025
For An Appointment or Information.

;.

;
:

~t~P.w.&amp;Rehab Cenw

....

.The Commu(1lty Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wlsblng to
announce meetings and special
eve.lts. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers or any type. Items
are printed liS space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
Sunday, May 28

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

News policy

All club meetings and other
news articles in the sociecy section
must be submitted within 3(} days
·Qf occurrenlij:. l\Jl birthdaynnmt·:
be submitted withm 42 days of the
occureoce.

:ml'!M~$

Italian!, Bush was selected to return
there this summer under full scholarsbip.
.
She has studied voice with Pro,fessor Duane Mahy at Oberlin, P!ofessor Eileen Davis at Obio State
University ·and under Kimberle
Wiggleswoi1b, a doctoral candidate
at OSU.
Bush has sung at numerous
churches in the Gallipolis area and
around Worthington. She is
employed as a soloist at Trinity
Episcopal cathedral in Clevelaqd.
She is the daughter of Kala Sue
Bush of Worthington, and the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Calvin W. Waugh of Crown City.
Wigglesworth appears regularly
in the central Ohio area as a member o,f the Cantari Singers of

.
~---.,.--- G allia community

.,
:·

Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white ot good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos ··
are no~ of acceptable quality.

VINTON- Mr. and·Mrs. John .l Denney isa 1993 graduate of
R. Denney of Vinton announce the River Valley High School. .
engagement and appmacbing marPope is a 1992 graduate of
riage of Jbeir daughter, Christina North Gallia High School. .
M. to Phillip M. Pope, ~n of Rose
The open wedding will be 5
Husk of St. Louis, Mo. and J.D. p.m., July 21 at Bob Evans Farms,
Pope of Houston, Texas.
Rio Grande.

'

GALLIPOLIS- Abra Kathleen
Bush and Michaels. Wigglesworth
will offer vocal &amp;elections during
the dedication of the Gallia. CountyVeterans Monwnent on Monday In
·
th.e C .lly Parle·
·
. . Bush, who resides In Worthing·
ton, is a senior vocal performance
major at the Oberlin Conservatory
of Music. Wigglesworth is vocal
music director at Johnson-Monroe
High School.
'
Bush performed her recital at
Oberlin last month. She appeared
, in the production of the operetta
The Bartered Bride as Esmeralda,
and has taken roles in numerous
other operas, musicals and theater
productions.
,.
After studying 1o Urbania, Italy,
last s ummer at the Centro Studii

.•

Th.ose n_ot making. the 60-day
deadlme will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.

By RICHARD LORANT
Day Two: Car auacked by gobblers. They soil lawns: peck
Associated Press Writer
turkeys on the Edganown-Vine- away shingles and stop traCr~e.
TISBURY, Mass. (AP)
yard Haven road .. Chipped palnl,
Some consider them a delightful
Martha's Vineyard Journal, Day · slowj!d traffic.
--(!
part of the local fauna. others a
One: Saw Carly Simon walkin~
Day Three: Buy more~n- growing health. bazartl and a menalong the street. At least I think it screen.
ace to eldedy islanders.
was Carty Simon. Was that Walter
Hundreds pf turkeys are roam- ,
Their only predators are brave
Cronkite behind those big sunglass- ing this summer resort island, dogs and bad drivers, so soon there
,
descendants of escaped domesqc will be more of them .
es at tbe drugstore?

Vocp/ists set for monument dedication

--Wedding policy·-~
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and is happy to publish wedding
stories and photographs without
charge.
However. wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness . The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.

month&gt; ro~ a prosthesis or W. 1g; tance available is based on indivldtranspOrl8llOII to ~ from medical
ual need, the local budget and the
and therapy appomtnlen!S up to policyoftheagency
$100
a year at 10 cents
a mile.
S ummer camp programs
·
.
Rehabilitation
services
are also
are
'lab! and
. lude
. .
offered free of charge to children
aVlU e_ ma~ mc
asmting and young adults bein treated ~
~llents m ret.urnmg to thcu fauu· cancer or in remission~ The cam or
hcs,
are sta f'.ed WI· tb vo1unteer connps
· occupations
tbr communtties
gh uai ed 1and
d .
ou
· n v sttor ·~ group selors, physicians and nurses .
~og:~~· such as the rea~ to Information is available by calling
co .ery program wh_lch prov~des Pat Boyer, executive director, GaJ· emollo_nal support and m_formation. lia-~eigs office, 1-800-446-7479,
. Pallent ~ducation IS also an or visiting the office at 444 Second
;r~nant part of the semces and Ave. Gallipolis
.
IS IS accomplished . thf?Ug~ edu'
·
catiOnal program, .distribution of
The local unit also provides litpamphlets, booklets and andiovisu- erature and anatomical models for
a! program, ~ well as referrais to · use by the Meigs County Health
other commumty resources.
Departnlent which provides free

will be conducting thedoor·IO-door
canvas io June. All workers will ·
have idenlilication and will be distribuling
· 1-t,tc:rature.· on cana:r.
According 10 JIDI Thoma&amp;, pte~iden~ last year the JocaJ unit coo·
tributed $9,1SS to cancer reaean:b
and su....,...
""""., and spent S4•168 on
public education, patient and QOIJImunicy services in Meigs County.
Services available to Meigs
Countians include the loan of hcxne
care
equipment sucb
as
wheelchairs hospital bed, walkers
and commodes, as well as the
'
vision of -diapers and unde~
one-year limlt of $20 a month for
medications, cm:ssings, borne care
and ostomy supplies; and $40 a

Martha's .Vine"ard
going to the birds J '

'

MELISSA MARCUM AND MATT JUSTUS
GIBBS AND

~S..§~1s !!!Q~,Q.rlve goal at ~~..!.?,&lt;29. ....

· Fri . 9·8

$399°0

• Plant Stands
• Assorted Colors
• Patio Accessories
• Cafe Sets
• Tea Carts

'

TJfestvle
FURNITURE SHOWCASE

JHiRD &amp; OLIVE

446-3045
---1!111"'____
_

'

�m: Page 84 • Jl~ Gblue-~

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~-·: Sunday, May 28, 1995

Sunday, May 28,199S

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

-·-

:I
I!f:
.••,
!I•,

Father
Caldwell, Robert G:

I

II

,.
...h·
!}.
....

Bennett, Clyde E.
(Shorty)

.

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••'
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,...,

July 6, 1919 ·Aug. 24, 1991
PFCArmy

.

MEMORIAL DAY, MONDAY, MAY 29,

.,•I

...••.

. ~' I

'

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We ·hold you In our tho•ualml
and memorlea forever. ·.
Always In our .h earts,
VIrginia, Donnie, Frankie &amp;
Melva and all your family &amp;
friend a.

•

•
•

I

••I•••

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Son • Daddy - Brother
Blanton, Erskine E. Jr.
Aug. 11, 1955- Feb. 21, 1986
Army

You were a light In our
life that burns forever
In our hearts.
Joyce Blanton

Father
Bush, Kenna H.

Dec. 1, 1937 · Dec. 1(1, 1992

May 2, 1915 ·Oct. 8, 1992

Forever mlase.d, never
forgotten. May God
hold you In the palm of
His hand.

PFC Army 'NW II

May the light of peace
shine on y,our face for
eternity.

Sadly milled by wife and
children

Husband
Cale, Kenneth M.
June16, 1932. May 31, 1

3 Bronze Stare • 2 Purple
Hearts
BMC Navy • VIetnam
NancyCale

Always In our hearts,
Your
Unda &amp;

•

•"
••••
••
;.

j:

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l' .

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'.

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,I

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Husband ·
Colley, Donald Richard
(Buck)

.

:',1.

Father
Carter, Ellis L.

11-

jl

~:

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,I
,I
••

Staff Sergeant - Army

a

:!:I'

We hold you In our
ho · ts and memories
orever.

II

..,."
••••

Always In 01.11' hearts,
Donald, S~, Danny &amp; David

••

ol

pi

Husband &amp; Father
Cox, Denver

Husband .
Davis, Michael E.

Dec. 7, 1968 - May 28, 1990

Sept. 5,1919- Dec.15,1990 .

Aprils, 1947- Nov. 15, 1993

Son, Brother
Davis, Michael E. .

Husband &amp; Father
Davis, Richard E.

AprilS, 1947-Nov.15, 199ji

.; • Sept. 13, 1924 • Sept. 6, 1988

Jan. 21, 1948: March 7, 1995

July 24, 1918 - Feb. 15, 1995

'I '

Daughter
Cox, Rebecca Dianne

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God
hold you In the palm of
His hand.

Forever missed, n•var
forgotten. May God
hold you in the palm of
His hand.

We hold you In our
thoughts and memorres
forever.
Mary E. CoxDoria Birchfield

Johrl &amp; l\lancy Cox
&amp; Family

· Rosemary Smith Colley
&amp;Sons

i

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God
hold you In the palm of
His hand.

You were a light in our
life that burns forever
in our hearts.

Always In our hearts,
Sandy, Krlatl, Angle &amp; Scott

Avanelle, Larry and
Patti Davis

,I

'

·:

Mother
Deem. Rhea Ann
Sept. 4, 1947 ·Dec. 19, 1993

You were a light In our
life that burns forever
in our hearts.

In Remembrance Of The
Beat Mother That God Could
Hava Ever Blessed Me With.

Avanalle, Larry and
Patty Davia

•

"

Forever Loved and
Cherished by daughter,
Teresa' Deem Davis

.
·~'

Drummond, Gary D.f
Ocl. 22, 1944 -Aug. 24, 1992
Army

Though out of isght,
you'll forever be in my
heart and mind.
Always In our hearts,
Michael &amp; Danlelle
· Drummond

Husband
Economous, Robert S.

Husband
Flack, Ernest R.

July 9, 1945- Dec. 12, 1993

Jan. 10, 1919- June 24, 1992

Evans, Dean R. Sr.

1st. Lt. U. S. Army

PFCArmy

Specialist Four
U.S. Army
The days we shared
were sweet. I long to
'
you again
in God's
heavenly glory.

We send this message
with a loving kiss for
eternal rest and
happiness.
Wanda, Brittany &amp; Carey

In my heart forever,
Gloria Dene Evans

The days we shared
were sweet. I long to
see you again i.n God's
heavenly glory.
Louella Fleck

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••

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::
·':;

Son
,
Gibson, McAvery
Eugene

:1 .

:I

Husband
Guinther, Edison
)

·'·:
.,.•·•·

May God cradle you in
His arms, now and
forever.

:!..
•I

Cpl. U. S. Army

You were a light in our
life that burns forever
.in our. hearts.

We hold you in our
thoughts
and
.
'
memories forever.

SadlY missed by Daddy,
Mommy, Sister Shereena &amp;
Grandpa &amp; Grandma.

••

••
•I

::•

Harrison, Wayne L.

Aug. 15, 1914 · April30, 1986

'

Brother
Holt, Eddie L
Dec. 6, 1961 - May 6, 1979

.

Jan. 17, 1911 - May 27, 1976

June 26, 1993- June 26, 1993

••

.

•

Harris~n,

Wayne E.

I

Pvt. Army
You were a light in our
life that burns forev_er
inour hearts.

Wife, Brotl1ers &amp; Sisters

With love,
Edith :Jackson

VIrginia Guinther

Husband &amp; Father
Higginbotham, .
Paul W. Sr.

You are In our thoughts a~~
prayers from morning tf)
night and from year to year.

Dec. 8, 1927 ·June 19, 1988

Husband .
Hughes, S. Lewis

Uncle
Hunnell, Charles A.

Son
Jackson, Eddie Ray

Aug. 31, 1994- May 28, 1995

March 21, 1906 · July 20,
1994

Aug. 28, 1911 ·Jan. 6, 1944
Brothers: Edwin, Robert &amp;
Marvin U. S. Army

Sept. 29, 1958 ·Aug. 11 , 1985

Your courage and
bravery continue to
inspire us as we hold
you in our thoughts
and memories forever.

Allee Ramey

are in our thoughts
and prayers from
morning to night and
from year to year.

Holzer Hospice
Patients

,\

You were a light in our
life that burns forever
In our hearts.
Wife-VIrginia Hughes,
Children-Ray, Doris, Janet
&amp; Families ·

HMC Hospice Staff and
Volunteers

\

Jackson, Johnnie A.
Sgt . U. S. Army

Thanks For Our
Freedom!
· Shirley 'Hunnell' Millar

Jan. 7, 1926 ·Jan. 27, 1995
Cpl. u.S. Army

·

We send this message
with a loving kiss for
eternal rest and
happiness.

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God
hold you in the palm of
His hand.

Charlie and Polly Jackson
&amp; Family

Charll!l and Polly Jack10n
&amp; Family

\.

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Wife· Edith, Son- Ronald

Hople

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

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

.......

.--~

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••

.

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•

Dec: 22, 1954- May 1, 1989 ·

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God
hold you in the palm of
His hand.

•I
•I
•I

Son
Jackson, Roger E.

·'

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••

"I

"

,••..••

1

Husband
Pierotti, Hugo

••••

::
:

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Brother.,
Murphy, Clinton L. Jr.

.,:

Oct . 18, 1958 - Feb . 21, 1'995

.,••••

·'·'
'·:.,.,

•••••
•

••
••

·I

Your courage and bravery
still inspire us all, and the
memory of your smile fills .
· us with joy and laughter.
Though out of algh~u-~ 11
forever be In my heart and
mind.

.Grandson

Parsons, Lincoln Allen

ctl,l I '" "''"

T,

Grandma &amp; Grandpa·
_ParSOIJS

~\o.·~.

Husband
Prest~n. Julius

Oct. 5, 1993 ·Dec, 20, 1993
You were a light In our life
that burns forever In our
hearts. ·

l\n.•~

.... '· (

Feb 25, 1911 · July 17, 1995

!

The days may come
and go, but the times
we shared will always
remain.

Husband
Rankin, Vinton A.

Wife
Reapp, Marthil

Wife &amp; Mother
Roberts, Mildred L.

· Father
. Sheri Saunders

Father
Sayre, Roy Allen

April 21, 1928 · Feb. 19. 1993

Husbanq
Riddle, Garland

June B, 1919 ·June 14, 1992

April20, 1926 ·Dec. 28, 1964

Feb. 3, 1915- Dec. 4, 1990

May 14, 1898- Feb. 5, 1976
Mother ·
Effie Saunders '
Oct. 13, 1907 • Nov. 19, 1984

Aug. 20, 1928 : Nov. 26 , 1992

Sargent Army
Signal Corps

May God's graces '
shine over you for all:
time.

Aug. 27, '1925 ·Sept. 1, 1992

Your courage and
May God's angels
• bravery still inspire us
guide you and protect • all, and the ~emory of
you throughout time.
your smile fills us with
joy and laughter.
Always In our hearts, ..

Esther Pierotti,
Rosa Lea Richie

't

Evelyn Preston ·

I

May God's angels
guide you and protect
you throughout time.

Sergent U. S. Navy

· We hold you in our
1houghts and memories
forever. .

•
••
Harry Reapp and Family •

.

'

The D. L Roberta Family

We hold you in our
thoughts and memories
forever.

•
Husband
Shaver, Francis L.
Jan . 7, 1913 · May 25, 1991

Korean Conflict
Army

Always in our hearts,
Sandy lind Krlsli Davis &amp;
Emlleen Sayre

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God
hold you in the palm of
His hand.

May God's angels
guide you and protect
you throughout time.

Danny &amp; Shirley Cunimons

..

•

July 1, 1928- Feb. 3,.1970

We hold you In our thoughts
and memories forever.

Mary Garwood

...•

Father
Spencer, Stanley G. Sr.

Jerri Gilbert

Pauline Shaver

Margaret Rankin

••
•I

••

·'.,.,•

•

!

....

••

••
••
,.
••
••
:t·•
:I

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Husband &amp; Father
Staton, William
Aprll16, 1916 - Aug. 13, 1992

Forever missed, never
. forgotten. May God.
hold you in the palm of
His hand. ·

Father
Stewart, William H.
Aug. 6, 1906

•

'

We hold you i'n our
· we hold you in our
lth,n•
and memories
lthough·ts and memories
forever.
. . forever.
Always In our hearts,
Deloria, Twlla &amp; Familiae

Mother
Rebecca 'Pearl

May 3, 1909 - Sept. 8, 1989

•

•

•J

-pee. 2, 1993

Mother •
Stewart, Eula B.

Oct. 4, 1916, Jan . 7, 1994

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God
hold you in the palm of
His hand.

Always In our hearts;
Deloris, Twlla &amp; Families" 1~-.11·-

- -·

I Clarence and Judy, Ron and

1-.J.Jc~yc:e~ltl\re and Cathy and
families

Special Friend
Venters, Gernie

Husband
Waugh, John Lee

Feb. 11 , 1945 - March 24,
1995
Cpl. Marines
VIetnam

Thank yoL( tor the
wonderful days we
shared together. My
prayers will be with you
until we meet again.
-~

.___'·==P~h,;.y
_l_ll.-s._M_a~ao_n_____.

J

'!
:

June 11, 1930- Oct. 1, 19~

,.'
~

Forever mlaied, never ;
. forgotten. May God hold l
you In the.palm of His hand,•
Thank you for the wonderful
_ days we shared together.
My prayers will be with yqu '
until we meet again.

~-

Varble WilugiY&amp; Clfll!ll'l'n- _...
, ~

Husband
Williamson, Michael F.

Father
Wolford, Lacey

Jan. 4,1933 - Oct . 9,1994

Jan . 25, 1951 ·· Nov. 24, 1994

Nov. 21, 1921 • Apiil 27, 1994

Sgt. Army

1see you smiling, I feel
your joy &amp; peace in my
own. You're my best
love &amp; 'friend thru all
time.

5th Armor Division Tech.
Sergeant

Forever missed, never
. forgotten. May God
· hold you In the palm of
His hand.

!

'

Husband
Whitt, Charles L.

~e&gt;

J

-

·~

Naomi J. Whitt &amp; Children
--~- ·--

Mlaa you, Love •
Mary (Fraley) Williamson

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God
·hold you in the palm of
··-·· ·.. · His· hmct~':"-·
- Alwaya-ln-our'hearta,
Mike Wolford, Nina Klrb

Father
Wright, Charles F.

Daughter
Wood, Paula Marie
·• · "~""' 30, 1.976 · Nov. 13, 1989

We send this message
with a loving kiss for
eternal rest and
happiness.
· Jim &amp; Pam Wood
&amp;

Aug . 11, 1915 · Aprll22, 1989

Husband
Wooten, Russell A.
April 12, 1899 - Nov. 12, 1994

Thank you for the
wonderful days we
shared together.My
prayera.w ill be wltlll-YC~U -1·
until we meat again.

P. F. C. Army

Thank you for the
wonderful days we
shared together. My
prayers will be wHh you
.until we mefl(llga,la •.•--1.--.Mom, Jennifer, K•tl•v
and

�I

Sunday,May28,1995

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

.The mystery of the missing whiskers
~ cats in our bam to keep the ro-

B;, DOROTHY SAYRE

dents out of the grain. The cats lived
and stayed in thebam,buttheyrardy
laslcd more than a few years. Owls
and other predators kept the feline
population low. We usually had two
tofourcatsinthebam. Theyenjoyed
squins of milk from the cows at milking lime. as well as a pan of warm
milk morning and nighL
Mymeniorydoesn'tincludewhat
Smoley Beans' name was before the
incidenL but he was a gray, nearly
grown,catwhenthefamous"handle"
stuck.
We were having a family picnic
on the farm one evening. we had
placed aringofrocksalongthecreek
bankandbuiltalittlecampfJte. A can
ofport:'n beanshadbeenopenedand
placed on the coals. Smoky Beans
had seen people, and smelled food; so
he came to the. picnic, uninviled.
Exactly how it happened was unclear
buttherewasaloudmeow,thebean;
were over-turned 'in the
and
.Smoky Beans was jumping out of the
smoke and flames. He was not injured, except forhisfelinepride. we
had no beans with our picnic that

lull Canrit;es, theyounptchild
feels leltout,and die oldestfocb they
n held up as 111 example and~­
ized forerythina. The
~childim

a convinced
the baby of
the family is
never punished, and,
therefore, the
youngest is
the perfect
scapegoat for all the children's adventures that go awry. I was the baby
of our family, and I can tell you it was
no picnic with two older brothers and
a sister. Of courie, my sister tells it
differently.
I was four when Smoky Beans
came into our family. Smoky l)eans
was an unusual name (or a caL Of
course, Smoky Beans turned out to be
the most talked-about cat we ever
owned.
·
How Smoky Beans became our
cat, I don'tremember. He was probably.bom into the bam catfamily. We

r.re.

·

eW~ning.

A month or so lalet, still in the
summer, thefourofuscbildren were
swimmin&amp; in the ol' swimmina bole
underouradjoiningpaslllla' bridge.
My sister climbed out onto the bridge
and said, "Look at this." She was
holding Smoky Beans and pointing to
wheze his whiskers had.been. They
were only little ~ bristles. Someone had cUI his whiskers.
Immediately,allmysiblingssaid,
"Dorothy...." Of course;'I denied it
because I hadn'tdone iL After much
balfgering an4 bringing my pareniS
into the matter, I fiJially said I had
done it just to close the issue and
avoid a spanking. Nor that culling a
eat's whiskers was a serious offense.
but my dad had a rule that lying always deserved a spanking. I figured
with both brothers and my sister ac, cusmg me, .I was a goner. I had to
confess.
For "yesrs, the entire family
laughed about Smoky Beans' episodt;5: 'fl!e can_ofbeans, and Dorothy
clllbng his whtskers. I would laugh,
too, but I al~y~ w_ondered who had
actually cut his whiskers.
As I grew older, I started think~

,__ Auxilia

~...~$unday, May 28, 1995

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

fund raiser··-....,

ing about Smoley Beans llld his
~shave." If was a aue mysu:ry, but
I've decided J c:oulda't baWl JIOII''bly
doae il. even if I would bave hid the
thought of culling his wbiskerl.
Can anyone im18iJ1e a ca holding ail1 while a four-re---old girl
(justbr.ly four) Cllloffhiswhiskers?
IfI hldappiOithed him from tbe front
with scissors, he would have dar1cd
awaybeforelc:Ouldhaveclipped them ·
off.He~toobigformetohaveheld

him under one arm and clipped with
another. IC I would have had to hold
him down: I would Iiave been
scratched, even though he was tame.
Cats don't like to be forcibly held. I ·
don't think Perry Mason could have
made a better defense. A little girl
could not have done iL
So, the question of "Who Cut
Smoky Beans' Whiskers" remains a
mystery.Ionlyknowwhodidn'tdoit
(Dorothy Sayre and her busband, Geroge, formerly of Meigs
County, moved bere about three
years ago and now reside in a new
bouse facing the Ohio River just
belOw Syracuse.)

WHITE ELEPHANTS, ANYONE? - Members of' the
Women's Auxiliary at Vetenns Memorial Hospital will be staging
their sec:ond annual outdoor ''White Elephant Sale" !I a.m. Thurs·
day and Friday on the lot adjacent to the hospital. Libby Fisher,
auxlllary ·presldenl, displ11ys some of the several'hundred Items
which have been contributed ror the sale. Anyone wishing to give
their ''white elephants" to the ..1e may leave them at the auxiUary
counter In the hospital lobby. All proceeds will go toward helpful
hospital projects.
·

Bird featured in Directory ofAm~rican Crafts
design.
GALLIPOLIS - Lonnie Bird of ~eehniques of early America to be are featured in th~ directory.
featured
in
the
directory.
Bird
was
chosen
for
outstanding
A brief description of each
Gallipolis bas been selected to
craftsperson's
wod&lt;: is included. as
Entries
from
across
the
country
·
wod&lt;:
in
the
furniture
category.
appear in Early American Life
.
well
as
their
address and phone
are
evaluated
and
rated
by
an
inde·
The
Early
American
Life
Direc·
magazine's exclusive 1995 Direc·
pendent
panel
using
the
criteria
of
tory
of
American
Crafts
showcases
so
readers
can contact
number
tory of American Crafts August
to
period
style,
quality
of
baskets,
clocks,
dolls,
furniture,
them
direcU
y.
fidelity
1995 issue.
The August issue of Early
Every year, Early American Life craftsmanship and ability to glass, leather, miniatures, metal,
increase
in
value
over
time.
needlework,
painting,
paper,
pot·
American
Life wiD be on sale June
selects the top craftspeople work·
Those
craftspeople
who
receive
tery
and
textiles,
all
reflecting
the
13.
ing witb tbe traditional tools and
the big~st scores from the judges highest standards of traditional

Ariel Theatre to hold week-long youth string camp
be three chamber music concerts
featuring professional musicians
from the Columbus, Ohio Valley,
West Virginia and Pro Musica
Symphonies.
On Parent Night, a panel of
musicians and music teachers from
the Ohio Music Teacher Association will be on hand to discuss
issues affecting P.arents of music

GALLIPOLIS • The Monis and
Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre will
sponsor a string camp for youths
June 26 through July I.
The Ohio Valley Chamber
Music Festival, will be a week-long
· . camp with art and drama activities
• on music history. chamber .music
ensembles, 'music theory games
and a suing orcheslra.
During the evenings, there will

Meigs
community
calendar

students.
The week will be capped off
with a perfonnance by the children
in the Gallipolis City park I p.m.,
July 1 as part of the River Recreation Festival.
Composer, musician and educator, Scott MiciJ,al, will be on the
faculty of the Ohio Valley Chamber Music Festival as well as a fea·
tured performer on th.e concerts.

as

PORTLAND Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m Tuesday
at the township building.
WEDN,ESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Junior
Golf League, 9 a.m. Wednesday ,
Meigs Golf Course. ages 8 through
16. For more infonnation call Carol
McCullough, 9982·5322; Cheryl
Thomas, 992·6763 or the golf
course.
POMEROY
Narcotic
Anonymous, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Pomeroy. Any·.
one .with drug problem encouraged
to attend. No fees. no dues.

Presented '13y

1

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q ~'E'J{'D

00.1
.1'.1 f 1ill. fJITfV
ID IJI ill.('])
:JVL:JVL 'U.I'(;
_! :.0../1...1'(;
(7

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c{ 6

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'!f 'Toney Vingess
SlJ9{'IJ.Y'Lry;
JU9\£'£ 4t/i
,
Virecte

.

2:30p.m.

On tfie ;Front .Lawn OJ

Meigs Junior Jfigfi Sc./Wo{

HOUSE OVERfLOWINC7-'-'-·-·-j-'T
-:-- - Si:/uffi"1Jiira3fveiiue =:_ !Miaiftipiirf~·-·
ClEAN II WITH
. ctASSJIED
ADS-"5~~~-'\"'-~11~-2.!1'l.fQS_e o_(!JI:in tfie (Oncert wi[{..E!J!wvea in!~ tfie
Meigs Junior Jligft 5luaitorium

. ..

~

... ..

..

..
•

•

What 1services should we offer - - - - - Any suggestion?
(

Bring this I~ &amp; receive 15% off any purchase )

GINGERBREAD HOUSE OF GIFTS
110 I Viand Street .
•
WV

II

Silver Bridge Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
Pomt Pleasant,
·~Hours-M·F t0-8; Sat. 10·6;
~.llou;rs-MI·Sat t0·6 Closed Sunday 1!i1!i1oJ
Sun 12-5
I

•

:., · Beat oft he Bend ...
·.·

activities of the Green Bay Packers,
By KATIE CROW
Congratalations to Nicole Nel- and no wonder, his son-in-law, Mison, daughter of Diana and Gary chael Bartrum is a member of tjle
Nelson and Rebecca Evans, daughter team.
Mike and his wife, Jennifer, still
JOhnny Evans,
both juniors, reside in Kansas City. In fact Mike
. and I essica has been teaching in the area and
Radford, a sen- Jennifer is continuing her college
ior, daughter of education.
I attended bilCcalaureate and
Charles and
Janette graduation ceremonies a1 Southern
·
.
Radford. The that evening. ·
A very classy act to be sure. Rev .
Eastern High
School students Marie Morrow's address was excel·
were recently lenL

r.B.9L9\[rJJ CO!J{C'£2{7'

.'

to offer _________________________

Katie's Korner

. The Community Calendar is
published
a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
~ events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
.are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
. specific number of days.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Ala-teen, 7 p . ~ . for their softball talent.
The sixth grade class at Chester
Sunday, Sacred Heart Catholic
was honored Thursday
Elementary
Rebecca also shared the MVP
Cburcb.
award with a young lady 1iom Alex- with a reception, followed by a promotion ceremony and dance.
POMEROY - Rural Life Sun· ander.·
It was very nice and very much appre·
Rebecca
and
Jessica
were
named
day obseryance, Pomeroy United
ciated
by the students.
Methodist Church, 10:30 a.m. Sun· to the first team, all district and Nicole
day, speaker fonner Athens District wus named second team aU district
Just a reminder that pool passes
Rebecca was also named second
superintendent, the Rev . Ben
for
London
Pool, Syracuse; are now
team
aU-Ohio.
Edwards.
on
sale.
Fantastic.
If you buy one now , through
POMEROY - Gods Kids, GalCongeniaiPatThoma,dispatcher June 10, you get a second one free.
lipolis Christian Church •. program
at Zion Ch urch of Chnst, State for the Pomeroy Police Department Passes are $25 each.
Route 143, Pomeroy, 7 p.m. Sun- for the past 14 years, will be retiring
PasSes may be purchased from
day.
within the next 30 days.
the pool manager, Keith Eubanks at
Pat has been so helpful over the yesrs 992-6635 after 6 p.m. or at village
MONDAY
- always lending a helping hand. We hall. The number there is 992· 7777.
.,
RU'I'LAND - Rutland Garden wish her the very best of retirement . Paid single admission is $3 for adults
Club, 7:30 p_m Monday, home of
· • and $2 for children.
Pauline Atkins, New Lima Road.
They were such nice affairs.
Chelcia Bratton, co-hostess.
Last weekend Gordon and Linda
In closing there were two girls
each
having a piece of pie. The one
Fisher
entertained
with
an
openhouse
MIDDLEPORT_:_ OH KAN
for
their
son,
Mason,
and
on
Sunday
young lady had a small amount of
Coin Club, 7 p.m. Monday at Burkett barber shop, social hour and Bob and Rueua Crow for daughter, whip cream on her pie while the other
training,session preceding meeting. Kellie. Very, very, nice. Good food young lady had a huge amoilnt.
not ui mention visiting with folks you
The one with the least amount
TUESDAY
haven't seen for sometime.
mentioned to her friend that she
POMEROY - Big Bend Com·
I know there were many others thought that only one tablespoon of
munily Band, rehearsal, Tuesday, 7 who honored their graduating sons cream was to be used. She answered I
to 8 ·p.m. at the high school. Con· and daughtel3. I just happened to at- did use on tablespoon, one after ancert June 4. outside, Meigs Junior tend those mentioned abov,e.
other and another and another.
lligb School.
Enjoyed talking to Fenton Taylor,
principal at Meigs High School.
And so it goes.
POMEROY - Meetings of Fenton is cenainly well versed on the
girls interested in trying out for
cheerleader on Tuesday; 8:30 a.m.
for junior girls at Meigs Junior
High; 10 a.m. for girls at Meigs
High Schoot.

\

Michal has won awards from the
American Society of Composers
and Publishers (ASCAP) and the
Ohio Arts Council. He will be
joined by Moriel Weaver, director
of strings for Chillicothe City
Schools, one of the largest string
program~ in the sta,te.
.
Enrollment·is limited. For more
information, call tile theatre at
(614) 446-ARTS.

Help the Gingerbread
House to help our
· customers.
Please fill out

Takin

by Bob Hoeflich

Mrs. Ruby Grueser of Min- schools bung in the lobby and signs
·:•;ior&lt;viiiiP. must be so proud of her giving the names of the schools
were on the walls. Refreshments
:~":3~~~~!~g;~~:;~H~!e:~itw
Grueser.
:~
Heidi
ber master' s were served and the interesting pan
about that was that each piece of
:~~leg~ee of divinity on May 21 at the
:.As:Dwry Theological Seminary at cake carried the initials ·of one of
the area schools as well as tiny rib· ~ Wilmore, Ky., and Mrs. Grueser
· bad the opportunity to attend com- . bons in the colo~s of that school.
.· mencemcnt to see ber granddaugh- Must have been a big job to create
·: ter receive tbe degree. Rev. a cake like that. Napkins also w~
::. 'Grueser is now serving as pastor of in the colors of the different htgh
:: the Valley United Methodist schools.
Coming in to serve the refresh·: ·Church in Portsmouth. She is the
:. daughter of Ed and Sandy Grueser ments were retired employees Lois
BurL Evelyn Lanning, Jean Werry
·: of Reynoldsburg.
RAILS-TO-TRAILS· Terry Berrigan, director or Ohio Railsand Addie Norris. High schools
.: ::~ Si~ce it is "alumni weekend," represented in the decorations and to-TnUs and Edna Whiteley display a map of the Discover Ohio
Trails System. Berrigan and Steve "l'be World Walker'' Newman
·: It's a pretty good time to look back. refreshments included Middlepor~
began biking, biking, ·canoeing and horseback riding the 325 mile
·.
Cbip Haggerty was really Pomeroy, Rutland, Wahama,
Southern,
Racine,
Eastern
and
long
Ohio to Erie TraU May 1~. Whiteley joined the two Friday to
· pleased to come up with a photo
hike
from
Frazeysburg to Coshocton.
from Aug. 21,1959. The photo was M
A nice touch for the weekend.
·. of Midtllepon youngsrers wbo par·
elgS.
..
With the weather
having been as L-.....
·
•
ticipated in the .community's stickball summer baseball program. it has, it's bard to believe that Herlnfonnation with the photo indicat- itage Weekend is moving in quick,
ed that these youngsters "would he
the meat and substance of forth- ly. Taking part in activities downDEAN'S LIST
coming Yellow Jacket varsity alb- town on Saturday, June 10, will
- letic teams in nine or 10 years." Meigs County's !75th AnnivefS3!Y
GALLIPOLIS . · -William
:::::However, some of 'em became Committee and the group bas us Christopher Guinther, son of
William and Beverly Guinther of
· Yellow Jackets while others act just abOut ready to go.
The time capsule fmally is to be Gallipolis, has been named to the
•• became Meigs Marauders as Mid' "dleport High School gave way to , buried near the monument at the dean's list at Marshall University
the larger Meigs High School. And. courthouse in ceremonies sched' for the semester ending May 1995.
Guinther earned a· 4.0 grade
: of course, some moved away to uled for 11:30 a.m. Several
attempts to bury the capsule earlier point average. He is enrolled in the
other communities.
College of Science and is majoring
•
The names will ring some bells have been foiled by bad weather.
The Big Bend Community . in pre-pharmacy. 'He is a member
::, with you. The pictured group
Band, directed by Tony Dingess, of Pbi Eta Sigma National Honor
~~1pcludes Billy Hensler, Denn!s
will be on band to present the Society and bas been selecled for
.;:~:,JJoggs, Birdie Demoskey, Denms
:; Wise, Danny Wise, Ronme Clonch, music. Refreshments wiD be served membership in Gamma Beta Phi.
~ Dale Clonch, Mark Halley, Earl·
to those attending and there wlll be
MASTER'S DEGREE
GALLIPOLIS -·Patricia Caranniversary collectibles for sale.
~c Thomas, Mike Bratton, Dennis
:::' Ault, Steve Krinke, Jerry Daven- Several other activities including man, daughter of Edward and
the duck race are being planned for Sarah Carman of Gallipolis,
·;1fott, Jeff Boggs, John Ingels,
.;•-:Richard Haggeny, Jerry Stobart, ·saturday by tbe Pomeroy Mer- received a master of science degree
.; Bobby Lewis, David Krawsczyn, chants Association. ·
in adult and .technical education
Everything will be out,doors. from Marshall University (MU)
~ · John Krawsczyn, Mike Gress,
~ ~ Chipper Haggerty, Danny Lewis,
Go 'way, rain. ·
May 13.
. ·
&lt; jimmy Clatworthy, Timmy Hall,
Carman is a 1973 graduate .o f
Don't you love all of thf? memo- Gallia Academy Hil!b School and a
::': Mike Van Cooney, Tim Demoskey,
rabilia that comes out for display m 1974 graduate of Gallipolis Busi·
:
Duffy Craig, Jan Long, David Dod·
various business houses on alumni ness College. She received a.
.:' son, Bobbie Rice, Danny Evans
. weekend? Numerous business regent's bachelor of arts degree ·
~ ' and Vernon Little.
houses come up with odds and ends from MU.
·
~.
How green their valley was, eh?
from the various high schools to
She is a program assistant in the
revive a heckava lot of memories. orientation office at MU and reside.
:;. The Farmers Bank did sucb a
I'll tell ya. It's almost enough to
~ . good job at staging an open house
==~W.Va.
make you 'keep smiling,
'! in recognition of alumni weeli:end.
'Flags from the various high .

---

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

AcademiC
news

(((Waf( :for We[[ness''
during the .

J-fofzer Senior J-fea[th Waf~
Wetbiesda!fi ·May 31 jrom2 to 7p.m.
On the 0.0. Mcintyre 2.3 mife Vemo ?Jai[
(".Bo6 9vfcCormicl( 'Rgad to Pine Street)

1

Sponsored by
Holzer Medical Center's

...

i _
...

·LRodhey
alumni to. reunite.
'" .... .
..
'

.
RODNEY • Plans bave been
~ . completed for the fifth reunion of
;:'".students and their families who
• attended Rodney School in Green
:. "T-ownship. ·
• •, The reunion will be 4 p.m.; June
at the ROdney United Methodist
:::t;:hurch with a potluck dinner_
~ : Those attending are asked .to
~ · bring a covered dish and any pte-.
- ~- cores or mementos they might have

:::10

of their days at Rodney.
Letters have been sent" to those
who can be localed. The commiltee
members working on the reunion
arc Louise DeL ill):- Greenlee,
A•inabelle Baii-Fellure, Luella
Hughes-Sanders and Molly VancoPiymale.
Anyone knowing an alumni who
has not been contacted may call
..Molly-Piymale-at 446-1214.

..

in cooperaC with the
HMC Volunteers
'

For inore infQrmation call the

Hntzer-H-eahh Hotline
~.:=-:o.---'1 -800~462~2-55-~-

�•
I
-

People in the news

·

r.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil · wcrl!! on

NEW YORK (AP) -Sbe could 111111 diD IOUIIds lib I Beatie Jract." the dnlllmet Jlid 'Jbunday.
The Bnt* "could !lave lllllle Ibis Ia 1967: be lllid.
with her smile. So whit effect would
Miry Rictwds baw in her undies?
.
S111r joiaed PauiMcCirtaey and Oocqe IW1i8on In W01kiaa IIOUUd an.
Oh, Mr. Gnat+t-t: L.oob lite wc'H find okl Lelua vocal to Clettte the new m:min&amp;. oae of two fMIUmlln a fivebow Bcalln clocwac:allly . ., Ia Ncmmbcr.
.
OUlnextyar. .
Miry Tyler ~ win CIVCI'I in her
Hearina lemon's Wlke 011 ape
e.y, Stair llllid.
·n-prea:yemo~ional,"hesaid. -webadtofeelthllhe'sgoneforacup
IUidca wcu in a accneln the movie "FFirring With
of tea, that he's gone 011 boliday, but he'111ill then. That - the only way
Dilaster."
I could aet t1u:ouah iL~ won the role after llrims •tnmd very
~exily" forameetinglla bole!, diD director, David
WASHING10N (AP)- Former Texas Gov. Ann Richlrdl has a
0 . Russell. said in the June issueofGQ mqazine.
·
Ruacn, mindful d. Moore's wholeailn~e imaJe, message for y'aU: Buy your own Dorilol.
.
"Fu
tholleof
you
whoc:omc
up
tome
it
ailports
with
1
!llllidt:
011
your face
~iidil"'-' ori&amp;ina1IY WIIWCd to cut her in 1 Jess pj'ovocalivc
101
JWt. But diD 57-yar-dd acueas lobbied for lhc wanq to know if I bave a baa of Dorii08 - I want you to know the point
role, he lllid.
· Is Y91J're suppoacd to buy them. I'm 1101 supposed to pw them to you,"
"Mary is not walking lmllld lhc whole movie lite IIOmC Marilyn Monroe RicluWs told an amuaed crowd 'l'hunday.
,Richards lnd another Democratic governor who was turned out of offoce
Ro1ssell.-d. -webadalotof coavcnatioosabout it, .00 the role is not
IOille cartoon."
'
in November..:.. New Yodt's Mario Cuomo- taped 1 TV cCllllmeltial for
Moore's publicist, WendyMorris,confinnedFridaythll"lheleisarather Doritos thipl monlhs ago.
Richards was in IOWIIas mastet of ceremonies-Cor an 85th binhday roast
ncy ~CeDe, where she's in bed with her husband, we:arinsa bn and panlies."
I
.
.
of Texas journalist Sarah Ml:Qendon. The former governor kept the crowd
NEW YORK (AP) - Ringo Starr and his old Beatles bal(lmalel felt in stitches with her jokes and dCadpan delivery.
llnlnJC m:onlins a new·song with the disembodied voice of John Lennon.
LAS VEGAS (AP.) -The !beater at the Mirage hotel has been renamed
The gpod news for Bcallemaniacs, though, is that "Free As a Bird" "'uuly

-·t

type:

'

'

Singer sends
10 students
to seacamp
CINCINNATI (AP) - Three
years ago, singer Jimmy Buffett
·started awarding summer camp
scholarships to students interested
in marine biology as a payback for
tbe way area fans supported his
. yearly concerts.
This year's winners were
announced Friday, even though
Bu.ffett was not in tbe area. His
weekend concerts had to be
rescheduled to September because
the Ri verbend outdoor !beater had
been flooded by the Ohio River.
· 1 Ten students received allexpenses paid scholarships to
attend Seacl!lllp, a nonprofit marine
biology Cl!lllp in Big Pine Key, Fla.
The winners were chosen from
among 4,000 ninth-graders who
read and reported on tbree books
and wrote an essay on tbe impor'
tance of reading.
Winners and their schools
announced Friday were Tony
Collins, Aiken; Emma Leicht,
Western Hills; Greg McGruder and
Kanisha Carter, Dater Junior High;
Jardana Peacock and Tiffannii
Tbecy, School for Creative and Performing Arts; Tasba Ford, Hughes
.Center and Ian Dahlman, Monica
Vargas and Jason Clark, Walnut
Hi Us.

~casper'

for Siegried &amp; Roy becan"" of the magic they'w worked Ill the bolt office, •
•1 can't imagine where The Mirl(le wauld be without Sie11fried .tRoy.Milqe Rclllrll Inc. chalrm111 Stew Wynn told stockholden 'lbunday•
·N~ of this happens by JNIIIc or by accidenL"
·
Wynn said the illusionists have drawn 3.6mil· ..--~--:------,
lion people and 11eneratet1 $250 million in revenue .
I
siqce they bepn performing at the resort-in 1990.
The 1,.500-seal theater, formerly known as
'I'hcatre Mirage, has consistently drawn standing•
room-only crowds.
·

OPRAH WINFREY SHOW· Oprah WlntreJ' 1111 aJQp Luella, 1
6,200 pouad elephaat at the opeala1 or "The Oprah Wlatrey
Show" FrldaJ' In Chlea1n. Oprab, used Luella ud 1 sec:oad eJe.
pbaat w Wutrate the combined weight Iiiii reported by Clllla from
raDI w the lhow's hotllne. The reported wel11bt 11111 ol 534,333
pouads b7 50,000 raaa equala the wel1ht or 16 elephaats.
(Photo/Steve Greea, baadout)

is back with something for everyone

By DAVID GOQDMAN
As Harvey works on getting
The beautiful Moriarty and talthese dysfunctional demons on tbe ented Idle are let down by their
Associated Pres&amp; Writer
~
Casper tbe Friendly Ghost, tbe analyst's couch, he's preoccupied one.&lt;Jimensional roles. This type of
kindly ,TV cartoon cbaracte.r who . with memories of his deceased movie can always do with a couple
of creepy baddies whose stylish
haunted baby boomers in the 1950s wife, Amelia (Amy Brenneman).
and '60s. is back to spook their
Casper and Kat become great nastiness makes them memorable.
'children - counesy of the. people. !)uddies. The lonely ghost can only But it's all too bland and pre, who brought you "Who Frl!llled ·float and watch as his paramour is dictable. Their characters are
Roger Rabbit" and • :Jurassic filled wilh adolescent angst over a stereotypes and are ahnost as disPark.''
~
cute guy at her new schooL
appointing as Elizabeth Taylor's
'(be resulting film is not wilhout
First-time director Brad Silher- portrayal of Fred's motber·m-law
its shortcomings, and there's a subo ling is a willing recipient of the in "The Flintstones."
plot heavily geared toward adoleS- special effects technology pioFirst-time screenwriters Sberri
cents. The state·of·tbe-art visual neered by the movie's executive
Stoner
and Deanna Oliver cut their
effects leav~nough for grown-ups producer, Steven Spielberg.
teeth
in
television, like Silberling,
· ·
The ghost.s cooked up by tbe
to enjoy. too:
and
sometimes
that background
. This Casper isn' t quite as sac- wizards of Industrial Logbt and
shows.
'ITJe
movie
throws too much
charine-sweet as his TV incarna- Magic and eight-time Ac~demy
into
the
pot.
Including
a little from 1
tion. He's a '90s kind of kid who Award-winner Dennis Muren
every
successful
special-effects
gets a bad case of puppy love over are!\' t cartoons plopped on top of
one girl in particular.
live action . They're see-through extravaganza of the last few years,
She' s Kat (Christina Ricci), a creations with subtle expressions in an effort to grab all segmentS of
· sober-minded· child who shows up that blend seamlessly into the real- lhe potential market.
at the abandoned Whipstaff Manor life action.
The rickety mining cart that
with her widowed dad, Dr. James
A sensitive voice-over by descends on a narrow track from
Harvey (Bill Pullman), a ghost Malachi Pearson helps make the the mansion's library through a
therapist.
central relationship between Kat series of trap doors to a cave-like
He's been hired by the rulhless and Casper. tou ching, and Ricci's laboratory is straight out of tbe
Carrig110 Crittenden (Calhy Moriar- acting continues to mature follow-. "Addams Family."
ty) and her unctuous sidekick (Eric ing her "AddmnsFamily" days.
Idle) . The slimy pair want the She puts in a full-blooded perfor·macabre mansion cleared of spiril&lt; mance, considering she has to play
so lhey can get at a cache of trea- to imaginary creatures and special
. sure bidden somewhere in its effects.
depths.
In a Mr. Rogers cardigan, glassSo Dr. Harvey must face off es and hair lhat keeps nopping into
against Caspco;'s obnoxious and his eyes, Pullman ("While You
bullying uncl es -S tinky, Fatso Were Sleeping '' ) is convincing as
and Stretch . They're a kind of the melancholy, eccentric professor
ghostly Three. Stooges, who come who also is a solid dad.
up with increasi ngly creative ways
to chase "fleshics" out of their
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
bouse.
fRI., SAT., SUN.

DALLIPOLIS • Cliff McCarthy,
a photographer with a social conscience, will display his work
through June at the French Art
Colony.
McCarthy's exhibit entitled.
"The Creative Eye of Cliff
McCartby: A Photographer with a
Social Conscience" will be exhibited June 2 through 28.
He says o{ photography, "I
accept that the invention of photog·
rapby about 160 years 11110 was the
most significant conlribudon to life
in the modern world photography
manipulates time. With a click it
halts time and events. Some photographs function like time
machines. They energize the mind
to reflect back, resurrecting the
tragic or elating feelings which
accompanied that past"
McCarth'Y is no newcomer to
the art world. He has been teaching
art for the past 35 years, J~~Ost of
which were spent at Ohio University in Athens. ,He began his shldies
in 1940 at Layton School of Art,
Milwaukee and then went on to the
University of Wisconsin, where be
completed his master's degree.
Painting was McCartby' s first
medium, exhibiting regularly. in
Ohio and the Midwest. In the last
few years though ~is Cl!lllera ,work
bas
increased,
replacing
McCarthy's love for painting.
"I consider photography an old
friend. My attraction to photography goes back to the seve·nth
grade." he said.
Integrating social conscience
and art, McCarthy said bls first
consciousness of a world lieyond
his was when be saw the story of
Pancho Villa drl!lllatized in the film
Viva Villa, starring Wallace Beery.
The year was 1934, and McCarthy
was 13 vears old.

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·•

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'

$4,294,398
4,264,716
4,o40,266
·3,394,675
2,933,249

6
7
8
9
10

•-one race win

Mario Andretti'
A.J . Foyt ....
Bobby Rahal•
Michael Andrelti
Danny Sullivan•

2,796,931
2,637,963
2,603,130
2,095,666
1,870,757

RIO GRANDE -

- - - - - - - - · - - ·--·-·

--

Former

Philadel~ Ploillies outfoelder Mel .
· Clark will be the guest speaker for

youth activities begin at II a.m.
These activities include a dunking
machine, duck pond, bubblegum
blowing contest, tricycle races,
hayrides, a water slide and others.
·As an added aUraction this year, a ·
chance will be offered to dunk a
basketball on an adjustable. rim .
. Each dunk wiU entitle the· participant. to a cjlance to win the basket

the ~evcnth Bob Irvans )&gt;outh Day
aclivities silled for June 2-3.
The event raises funds for youth
baseball and softball programs in
Gallia County. .
Clark. who was signed by the
PloiDies organization in the summer
or 1950 while be ·was a student. at and Its SUpport.
Ohio University, served a term
At noon, an auction wiU be held
with Philadelphia's Class A team on the Stanley L. Evans Athletic
NEW YORK (AP) - Bret · White .Sox bem lhe Detroit Tigers
The Tigers didn't get anolher hit in Schenectady, N.Y., before being Field. Different kinds of sports .
Sabi:rbagen pitched lhe first com• 1-0 Saturday.
until Chris Gomez singled to lead called to majOrs.
memorabilia will be on hand and
Dere (1-3) cruisC\1 after getting , off lhe fifth .
plete game of the season for the
Since hos retirement, he has Tim Evans wiU be the auctioneer.
New York Mets, who snapped a out of a first·fnning jam: Altl10ugh
Chicago loaded the bases with been a part-time scout for the
Following opening remarks by
six-game losing streak with a 6-3 he gave up six walks, two of tl1em two out against reliever Brian .Phillies.
· Clark, the area Reds .Dream Team
victory over the San Francisco intentional ; he allow ed just three Bohanon in ttie sixth. But Brian
Clark's address, set for 12:45 and the Gallipolis American
Giants ol! Saturday. .
Maxcy, who won ·his major league p.m. on June 3, is one of a number Legion team will play a baseball
hils.
Roberto Hemandez pitched the debut Friday. came in and got of activities that begin June 2 with game.
Sabernagen (1-1) , showing no
. signs of the shou lder stillness that nintll for his seventh save.
Karkovice on a grounder. .
.a golf scramble at the Cliffside
At I: 15 p.m., competition for
forc ed him oo leave his previou s
Detroit's Felipe Lira (0-3), makNotes: Chicago's Lance John· Golf CourSe in Gallipolis.
the following games begins: radar
game May 19, gave up seven hits, ing his first m ~jor league start, had son missed th e game with a so re
The price of entering the scram- gun, football throw, pop-ups,l!asestruck out five and walked one.
a shulllut until Karkovice led off foot ... Gibson's homer Friday tied ble includes the cost of dinner; to ball throw, race 10 base and soccer
He lost his shutout in the nintlo th e fifth with his thin! homer, a· him wiU1 Dick McAuliffe for I Olh be served at 6 p.m. at the .Cliffside kick. Participants will compete in
when Glenallen Ilill hit a lhree-run towering shot into tlle upper deck place on Uoe Tigers' career list wilh Shelterhouse.
specific. age groups and at specific
homer.
The schedule moves to the cam- tunes.
192 .... The White Sox entered·Satin left.
Matt Williams went 4-for-4 for
Bere got into trouble in lhe first urday's game wilh 10 or more hils pus of the University of Rio
For more information on prices
lhe Giai1ts w!Uo a double and tlu"Ce when two walks and a single by in their last eight games .... Thomas Grande on June 3. From 10 a.m. and activities, contact Randy
singles.
Lou Whitaker loaded lhe bases. But reached base safe ly in seve n until4 p.m .. a sports card show will Finney at 446-6337, Tom MeadThe Mets' Bobby Bonilla hit a he fanned Kirk Gib so n and got straight plate appearances Friday be held at Lyne Center.
ows at 446-7570, Tom Hopkins at
two·run homer in tl1e lhird inning Travis Fryman to fly out to end the and Saturday against the Tigers
AI the track and field area, 446-8755 or Brett Bostic at 256MEL CLARK
off Jose Bautista (1-1). Jeff Kent lhreat.
before grounding out aga in st
6774.
also homered in the innjng off
•
Bohanon in lhe six lb.
Bautistll, who was lhen ejected by
umpire Bill Hohn after. bitting
Kelly Stinnett in .the back with a
pitch. ·
TORONTO (AP) -Lance Par- He ten with two out and two on in Manny Ramirez and got Dave
Expos ~. Dq!lgers 1 .
ri sh broke a scoreless tic with his the.eighth. Tony Castillo got Carlos Winlleld to ground out to end the
MONTREAL (AP) - Carlos
first home run of the seawn, a . Bacrga to fly out to end U1c inning • mnmg.
Perez pitched seven shutout innings.
. A crowd ol 47.143. th e second
thr ee-r un shot, and AI Leiter and Darren Hall pitched the ninth
for his fourtl1 str·aigbt victory and
for hi s third save of the sea;on . It largest ot the &gt;oea&gt;on. wiuched tloc
pitched
7
2-3
scoreless
innings
Sat·
Rendell White homered, leading
urd ay as the Toronto Blue Jays was t.hc firsl time the lmh ans. weft.! game.
the Montreal Expos past lhe Los
defeated U1e Cleveland Indians 3-0. sh uiOut tl1i~ scrt'iOil .
Angeles Dodgers 2- 1 Saturday.
NOTES : The Indians. five
After Bud Black bad pitched six
The loss was only tl1c seventll in
Perez (4-0) gave up eight hits,
:on,le,;s innings for Cleveland, me last 22 games for the American grunc' i11 fmnt of tllc seeond·place
struck out six anti came out after
Carter and John Olerud hit con· League Cen tral Divison·lcading Kansas Crty Royals prior 10 Satur·
iss uing his only walk, to Raul
;
singles off Eric Plunk to Indians, while the Blue Jays won day 's games. haven't had a six·
Mondesi leading orr th e eighth.
for only' the U1ird time in II games. game lead since th e end of ihc
start tbe seventh.
Perez lowered his eru·ned-run averAfter Plunk got two outs, Par·
Leiter got a break after Alben 1954 season ... Black has a 19-9
age from 2.14 to 1.93.
-··
rish hit a 1-2 pitch into U1e second Belle and Eddie Murray opened tl1 e . record in day gru)les &lt;wcr tl~e past
Tile Dodgers scored tl1eir only
deck in left field for his 309th second with consecutive si ngles . five seasuns. He is '28 -'5 i1t night
run on Roberto Kelly's two-out,
career home run , third among Belle wandered too far past 'econd over the ~amc sp:tn .. Ramnez
RBI si ngl e in the ninth off Mel
catchers behind Carlton f'isk (376) on Murray's hit and W&lt;ts caught in extended his carecr -hrgh bitting
Rojas. Out Rojas got the final out
streak to II gmnes wiU1 a single in
and Johnny Bench (327).
·
a rundown for the' fir~t nu t of the
for his nintlo sa vc.
Leiter (2-2) gave up four hits, inning . Leiler the11 ~truck QUt the seventh ... Leiter i&gt; the only
Mike Lansing's single off
.,
Blue Jays starter not to give up a
struck out seven and walked three .
lsmael Valdes (0-2) in the fourlh
_,
hom e run U1is season ... Toronto's
knocked in White witlllhe game's
Rolx.'flO Alomar broke rul ·O-for-11
first run . White was aboard on a
slide against left-banders with a
one-out double.
DUESSELDORF, Germany lvanisevic and Igor Savic 4-6, 6-.1. fourth-inning sinJliC.
While opened tbe seventh with
(AP) - Goran I vanisevic beat 7-5 in doubles.
hi s fourth homer, against Rudy
, .
Russian Yevgeny Kafelnikov 6-4,
Sergi Bruguera beat R.icbard
.
7·6 (7-4). helping Croatia to a 2-1 Krajicek 6-1 . 6-4 and Alberto
Seanez, who left the game later in
the inning after pulling a groin
I ..
victory and berth in Sunday's fmal Beri)Sategui topped Jacco Eltingb Pacers edge Magic
muscle.
of the S 1.8 million World Team of the Netherlands 6-4, 6-4 as . INDIANAPOLIS , Ind . (AI') .
White Sox 1, Tigers 0
•
"
•
Cup.
Spain swept singles against the The Indiana Pacers edged the
. ___: _,DETR01T (AP) - Jaso!!_.~.~~.,~.- .
Sasa Hirszon of Croatia upset Netherlands for a 2-I ·Rcd Group ·Orlando Magic, 105-100 in the
t-·~·t ,l~
pitcheo eight innings..f6rnis first
FORCED OUT· Los Angeles' Jpse Offerman is forced out at
Andrei-bbesnokffi/. 4-.6, 7·§ (7-4), victory. Elt!n£h and Paul.Haarhuis third game of the Eastcm Conler·
win · of ,.the season .. and Ron
second by Monlreal;s.Mlke Lansing in fifth inning or play 8~ Mon6-2 to win the Red Group. Kafel· won doubles against Beo'!l'sategui enec finals Saturday ." tlicMagiC '-· ·
2-1.
_JQ .. -~KaJito·v.i·!J.! toonie'!&lt;!_ as,~~ Ch)cagp _· treat Saturday. T_h_e Ex_po~w~n, 2·1. (AP)
.,___!liko~ and Andrei Olb9vs_k_y_be~~nd Carlos Costa 6-1 ._!_-2.
.,__ ·stiiUeads the series.
_
......___..

·Mets down Giants; Expos
trip .Dodgers; Chisox win .·

Sports brl"efs------

• Illness or Injury

...

--

Rick Mears""
AI Unser Jr.""
Emerson Flttipaldi"
AI tlnser Sr."'"
Aria Luyendyk'

I

..

GIFT CEATIACATES AVAILABLE I

4

1
2
3
4
5

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Blue Jays stop red-hot Indians ·3-0

l:1S,911S DAlLY
ftATIM~!S

Leading career money winners

.

Certain Restriction Apply

,.,

00) ........ , . . . . . . .

Ray Harroun
Jules Goux
Rene Thomas
Fr~;~nk Lockhart
George Souders
Graham Hill

~ ---------

Phones

Calt 446·ARr5

(,

t911
19t3
1914
1926
1927
1966

Former Philadelphia outfielder
Mel Clark to appear at seventh
annuai .Bob Evans Youth Day

·rrack record

Worlct War II

Rookie winners

Henderson, WV
Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande, OH

COM IIKl SOOft I ---""\
CLINT BAS'I'VOOO/MrltYL S.TUI:P In
•&amp;JUDGES OP IIADlSON COUIIITY•

HOLZER
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Anllther communtty·sei'Vk~ of th.e Holzer
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World war I

Cellular

Morrlo &amp; Dorothy Haaklna

':20, 9:20 DULY

446-1088

441Hl923

Every Thursday Night

-Entire Month of May-

Ariel Theatre 428 2nd. Ave. Gallipolis, Oh

WH .I tE YOU WERE SLEEPING

AND
. PAU!-Y SHORE
IN
JURY DUTYPG·1S

MEG RYAN, KEVIN KLINE

s1.99

Cheeseburger
Lovers Night

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Friday, June 9, 8 p.m.
Ohio Valley
Chamber Music Festival
June 26·30

_, IAtiU

MARTIN LAWRENCE, WILL SMITH
IN

$1.29

or With 16 oz. Soft Drink

CELLULAR PHONE
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AVisit to Grandmother's

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The Ariel Dancers

JOHNN~

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Open Dally 9-5
992·5n6
Open Memorial Weekend: Sunday 12-5; Mon. 9-5

~p. 1 ~~- 1, , 1 ,r 1

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BUBBARDS GREENHOUSE

Gentlemen and lady,
start your engines!

'

By MIKE HARRIS
Maybe favorite Michael Andret· Cosworth or an (Mercedes) llmor'&gt;
AP Motorsports Writer
ti will finally manage a win for lhe Probably no~" Menard said. " Is it
INDIANAPOLIS - The sights family that has been shut out at better than it was a year ago? Yeah,
THIRD
and sounds will be the same.
Indy since his father Mario took the Is it better than it was three years
TURN
ago? Probably. So we'll just have
About 400,000 people will be checkered nag in 1969.
TERRACE
Track facta
wedged into the Indianapoli~ Motor
''Everything seems so different to wait until race day and see .
HALL OF FAME
Speedway on Sunday. Jim Nabors this year," Michael Andretti said. We' re real bqpeful."
Track sla: 2.5 miles
.
•
MUsEUM
Another question mark is Scott
will croon "Back Home Again in " Maybe that means I'll win . Or
Front straight length: 518 mlle
Goodyear,
who finished second to
Indiana."
maybe
it
just
means
somelhing
new
. ·~
Dlgree Of banking: Straights: flat
Unser
Jr.
in
1992 in the closest
And, as usual. tbe 11 rows of will keep me from winning. It
. comers: 9 degrees, 12 minutes
Indy
finish
ever
- a difrerencc of
three race cars each will roar to life should be one o( the best races in
.043
second
s.
Goodyear
made it
as Indianapolis matriarch Mary years because so many guys could
GARAGE
onto
the
outside
i)f
lhe
front
row
Fendricb Hulman delivers the com- win it."
witb
a
car
rolling
on
unproven
Firemand,'"Gentlemen and lady, start
lnlhe front row are lhree drivers
TOWER
who don't even have regular rides s lone tire s - how's th at for
your engines!"
NORTH
FIRST
FOURTH
bizarre'' - and powered by a new
But this is no brdinacy Indy 500. in the Indy-car series.
·
TERRACE
TURN
TURN
There's speed all right. The
Pole-winner Scott Brayton leads Honda engine untested over 500
TERRACE
TOWER TERRACE
TERRACE
fastest field in history - and one everyone in Uoe lineup with 13 pre- miles.
Barry Green, manager of the
of lhe most inexperienced.
vious Indy starts and never has linThere's no AI Unser Jr. or ished better Ulan sixtlo in lhe mce. ' team fielding a car for 1994 runnerEmerson Fittipaldi. Roger Penske
Arie Luyendyk, who won lhe up and I 995 favorite Jacques Vilwon't roam the pits wilh his head- fastest Indy 500 in history at leneuve expects a wide·open race,
STANO
phones.
. 185.981mph in 1990 and has three but doesn't think lhe Menard-pow·
A brief history- The 2.5 mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway .opened In 1909 as an automotive testing and
Mario Andretti isn't here. Nei· top-5 finisbes'in the past fove years, ered cars are go ing to be a factor.
'' I think there's eight, nine very
competition lacility when the car industry was thriving in Indiana. Its tirst races caused the track's crushed
ther are A.J . Foy~ Johnny Ruther~ generally is overlooked)when
. strong contenders," Green sai d.
ford, AI Unser Sr. or Rick Mears .
favorites are chosen.
stone and tar surtace to break up badly. The surface was immediately repaved with 3.2 million bricks. It has •
. How can this be an Indy 500
Bolh are on the from row thanks " Michael Andretti is well overdue . .
been known as the 'Brickyard" ever since ..Th(ee race dates in 1910 911V8 way to just one spectacular race In
wilhout
lhose
guys?
in
great
pan to their affiliation wilh His teammate. Paul Tracy. didn 't
1911, when the Indianapolis 500 was born.
·
•
I·
Team Penske wasn't able to team owner John Menard, who qualify so well , but hte&lt; run well all
qualify Unser or Fittipaldi for the took a chance - and spent a lot of month . Robb y Gordon has been
$1.4
33-car
field, while Andretti, Foyt. money - developing a stock block strong. Teo Fabi's been very very
Winning drivers
Rutherford,
Unser Sr. and Mears, V6 turbocharged· engine that has strong ....·Then we have lhc HonAverage
with
16
Indy
wins among them given tbe'm a l)orsepower advan· das and Scott Goody·ear ai th e
speed (mph)
Wimer
1.2
front. ... The fact tl1e Penskes are
from 1961 through 1991, hav e tageovertherestoflhefield.
16o.872
1894 AI Unser Jr.
.Winner.'&amp; share of'
·retired from driving.
Each qualified at better than 23 !' not there will not .make our job any
·
It 's been a strange month of mph to be pan of the fastest racing easier."
1993 Emerson Fittipaldi 157.207
1.0 . prize money
As for th e Menard dri ver&gt;,
May
atlhe
Speedway,
ru•d
it
could
field
ever,
an
average
qf 226.9 12
134.4n
1892 AI Unser Jr.
get even stranger in lhe 791h run· mph. The big question is : Will Green said, "I dont know whelher
176.457
1991 Rick Mears
oing of lhe Memorial Day weekend · eilher finish the race? The rehaholi- they got a lot of race distance on
ty of lhe Menard engine is one of this engine or not. Th.ey certainly
185.981' classic.
.ao
1890 Aria Luyendyk
What
nex
t?
Lyn
Sl.
James
'the
biggest question marks of the have been very fast when lhey arc
1989 Emerson Fittipaldi 167.581
running, but they didn't appear' to
becoming lhe first woman to win race .
11994 total purse: $7,864,800
144.809
1888 Rick Mears
lhe world's richest and most ·prestiMenard, whose budget is about do any long runs 'here during U1e
.60
gious race'! Bryan Herta beComing $6.5 million for the only race hi s monlli. I would be very surprised if
162.175
1987 AI Unser
lhe lirst winner rrom Uoe last start- team r.un s, points out Uoat several lhey get lhe same fuel mileage we
170.722
.1886 Bobby Rahal
ing spot? Ho w about Japan' s drivers have finished this race in
•
will geL And I believe fuel mileage
152.982 · Hidesbi Matsuda, who used to be a cars powered by tb.e V6 powcr1985 Da~Sullivan
·.40
will be a big factor during lhe race.
Bud(lhist monk?
plant, including the elder · Unser,
163.612
''I'm not counting them ou~ but
1884 Rick Mears
Hey,
why
not.
Anybody's
likely
who
was
U1ird
in
1992.
·
I
don"t
think they are str ong con·
162.117
1983 10m Sneva ·
to come out on top after this bizarre
''Is it as reliable as a (Ford)
tenders at U1is poin t..''
·
1882 Gordon Johncock 162.029
month.
139.084
1981 Bobby Unser
1990 1994 1980 Johnny Rutherlord 142.862
1960 1970
1930

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ALL FLATS ...... Reg. $6.50...... NOW $5.75
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Reg. $5.95-$8.95 ........................... NOW $5.75
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...·.:.

Indy 500 field has speed, experience

--

PIZZA LOVERS NIGHT
EVERY
TUESOAV NIGHT

For Only

Sectioii c Sunday, May 28, 1995

LSOLTTH
STANO M STANO

99.2-2156

For Only

'

~

79th annual 500-mile race ·
Sunday, May 28, 1995

News Hotline

CLIFF McCARTHY
McCarthy's exhibit will consist
of recent photographs from his triP,
and from his "Forest and Friends '
series.
He has offered to bold a Photography Lecture/Semjnar, from 1 to 3
p.m., June 10. The free discussion
will deal witb photography at the
documentary level and how to
make documental)' style appealing
in the art world.
McCarthy took forst and second
place in lhe Professional Photography Division and the Best or Show
grand prize in tbe French Art
Colony's 4th of July Competition
and Exhibit in 1994.
This month's exhibit is sponsored by Irvin· s Glass.
. French Art Colony gallery hours
are 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Tuesday
through Friday and from I to 5
p.m., Saturday and Sunday. .

.

INDIANAPOLIS 500 ·

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Louis Gossett Jr.
wants a ~aaining order 1111ainst a "',(lllliUU he says is
~ending him racist hale mail. ''
.
'
The actor flied the request in cowt Thursday
against Mary Kay Nelson, who identifies herllelf in
the letters ooly as •erazy Mary."
Gossett, who won an Oscar as the hard-bitten
drill insuucror in "An Officer and a Genlleman;
said hu letters so unnerved him that he changed his ChrisUnaS plans in ~
to protect himself and his children.
.
·
He asked for an order to keep the woman away from him, his fl!lllily and
his pnipeny.
Nelson has been in jail since ber arrest Jan. 4 on charges of battery on ll
police officer ancl resisling arresL
•
.•

,....---Co/ossa/loss------ Photography fills the
FAG galleries in June

-

pOrts

Entertainment

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sundaynmes-sentinelJBs
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Moboy, ............. ol'ltol!oot·
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Mo....a
New Yllfll · ....... to u
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netdw, orr waiV«&lt; rro• .._
OM. PliDid ~ ...,._, . . !

FrW.,'tG._..

. -.. T - -&lt;Ooc-ioood
. SEAm.BMAIINBR:s.S
Tim Do¥11. .....,_, !&lt;&gt; T - ol'llto ,._
cl nc Cout Le1pe. Rec•lltd Tim

--pll-.ln&gt;mT-

112

1'00111AU.
Nollooll r ...
~ooopo

w

2
3

NEW ENGLAND PA'I'ItRJB-Ilo.
aiaaed TroJ Brow• ud a., ~..
widerecei--.

l&gt;i•r• o
Pilllbtql! •• Cokndo

SOtiTHWEST CONPERI!NCI!ElectedDr. Tom 1\41Mrpneicklll
BRIDOI!PORT-IIunodlDO ......
womee'1 IOIXCII' co.dL
DUKE-Aa...nocod T.C. Tllito. ,...
' Din&amp; bac,k. hM been decl.-.d
1 "ieall)'
loeliJiblo ood will . . play tbla Col.

Sao l'tlllcllco 6, New YorH
AtlaDtll, HouitoD 3

Cioclllaai 4•.St. Loui13
S..ar4f17•tGtonld

I.DIAIIIeleo(ValdeoQ.I)Il( - 3-&lt;f), I :3!11'-m.
San Ftaaciloo (Bautiata 0-1) 11 New
Yort(Sob&lt;rlll.leoi.O), 1:40p.m.
florido (B ..tea l·l) ll Cbf"''CI

.

W ASHINOTON STATE-AD·
tbe rtllJILitiOD O( litob Culle111&amp;1, womu'• trxk aad n.ld _. QQIIr
DQUDCed

country COIICh.

7:os

N1A Pl117alr G ' -

Coloroilo (Swift 1.0) ll Pittol&gt;,.ah
(Neqle :3-1), 7:0! p.m.
Alluta (S"moltz 3-2) • Houttoa
(l)nbok 1·3),1'05 p.m
Cill&lt;iaaal (RIJo 2·2)" SL Louil (...,._
cioa l.'l), I:O.S p.m. ,
-

CONFIRENCE FINALS
Mcood117, Moy 22
HOUIIDD ,., SU .Utollio 93

T-.,,M.,%3
Orlaodo 10!, hdluo101

W.........,,MO!f24
HoUitol106, Sau Aol.oaio 96
Thut'llh.J, ,.., 25

s.. ., •• c.m..

S.. Dieao (Aihby 2·3) ot -pllla
(Sdtilliaa 3-0), 1:3.S p.m.
Colondo (Freemon 0.2) ot PilllbirJh
(Wbile 0.0). 1,35 p.m
·
SOli Pralle""' (Portupl2-1)" New
York (MUe;ti 2.0},1:40 p.m.
Clll&lt;ia. .l (SchoURt 2-2) ll SL Louil
(/octooa O.l), 2:1! p.m.
florida (WIIIll&gt;&lt;n H) at &lt;lii...D (Foo-

Orludo 119, ladiana 114, Orludo

leadllfii'B 2..0
........,.,M'IJ%6
Sal AIIOIIO 107, HouelOa 102,
Houltoa leadJ • • 2·l

s•• .,...,. Moy 27

Orl.uoo&gt;olliDdiiDI,3:30 p.m. (NBC)
Su.Uy,MIIJJI
Su Aatoalo 11 Houatoo, 3:30 p.m. .

l« 3-2), 2:20p.m.

Aduta (Maddux 3-1) Ill Huultoa (Kilo
1· 3), 2:3l p.m.
.I.DI ADadeo (Nomo 0.0) ot Mo,.,e&lt;l

(NBC)

Mood.,,M.,Z9
Orludo otlodlaD.l, 3:30p.m. (NBC)

(........, S-1), 8:0! p.m
Alnerlan r....BeltDlYW.
W L

.s..... .. . . .
Deltoll

16 10

.61!

GB

........... 14 14

~00

3

........ 12 13
......... 11 I 6
........ lQ 16
CtntraiDI'ilkMI
W L
Cleftlud
........ 17 I
KuoM City ....... 13 14
MlJWMIPe
.... .. 13 I!
Chicaao · ......... 9 16
Miaoe.ota
...... , 9 19

w... ot..w-

w L
caurornia '"""" 18 10
Ooltllllld
......... 16 12
Seattlec
.. :........ 1!1 ll
Teo•

........... 1l 13

fl'lday'• G!Unftl
Delroltl, Chlcaao 7
Clevetand 1, Toronto 4
TeUI6, MIII*Obl 5
.K.uuu City I. Mllwauteo 3
Ootllllld 4,Now v..t 3,
B~loa I, CallrorDia 3
S..Wec I, Balthoorc 3

c.....

Ttooodoy,MIIJ 3t
Houuoa It SID Aatoolo, 9 p.m.
(NBC)

Pd.

New Y•t
Toro.r:o
BaJtlmore

UCLA-Aaaaulcad the reeipMkaa

oro.,. AU::biloi,IDell'l aoll COIIICb.

(NoVWTO ~~2:20p.m.
SOli nt.oo (Vol.....,. 1·2) ll Plliladol·
pbio
0.01.
p.m.

I.

.

COLLEGE

-•pllta 2. s..

I ,

Wedne.a.,, M., 31
Indiana at Orlaado, 9 p.m. (NBC), if
Dectall)'

Thund-.,,JWMl
SID Aotoaio at Hou1too, 9 p.m.
(NBC), If.......,.,
Frida,. Jun•
Orlolldo .. 1odioDo, 9 p.m. (NBC),

.410 lll'l
.«n .S 112
.31.5
6
Pd.

Gl

.6a()

-

.411

l

;164

!1/2

.360

........,

a

.

u

Sacarday, Juu 3

Hou11oa at San Antonio, 3:30p.m.

a

(NBC), II 110Ca1WY

.:J:U 9 Ill

su..-,,June•
. IDdiau at Oflaado, 7 p.m. (NBC), If

Pd. CB
.643 .m 2 ·
.!136 2 112
.!36
3

ft~

'

l"nL PlayolrGI-

CONFERENCE SI!MII'INALS
S.lurday, Ptf.7 :1e
Pillabur&amp;h 3, New Jeney 2
SundaJ1 May ll
Detroit 6, San lote o

Plollodelpllilll, N.Y. Roaacn4.0T

Chicqo 2, VllDCOUvet I, Of

Mondii,J, MaJ 22
Philadelpbla4, N.Y. Au1tn l, OT
Naw )mey 4, Pittabur&amp;h l

.

Tuod•r,M.,.u

Detroit 6, San J01e 2
Chicaao 2, VUK:Ouver o
Wedaeld•J• May U
.
PhilldtlDhia 5. N.Y. Raoaen Z
New Ieney l, PilJil&gt;1011h I
'I"'IMandaJ, MarlS
Detroit 6~ Sao Joto 2. Dctroll lcadl

SalurdaJ'•
Chkoc• (B.,. ().3) at Ddlolt (Uro 0.2),
1:15 p.m.

Cleweland (Black 0.1 fat Toroalo (Leil·
... 1·2), 1: l~ p.m.
New York (Pdtinec 0..0) 11 Oakiud
(Ontivao. 4-1 ), •:0.5 p.m.

Te1• (Roam "-2) • MintaOU.

oaico:l-0

(Qua-dado 0.2), I :Ol p.m.

Chlcqo 3, Vuooowt' 2, 01', Olic.

Kanal Cll)' {OubiCZI 1-4) It Milwau·
kee (BoON J.l), Bi0.5 p.m.
Bc.LDD (Wakefield ().0) at c.Jifomi•
(BieJeitll.O), JO,O! p.m:·
Bald...-e (Fcmaodoz 0.2) II Soon1e

ao leadllerioa 1-0

Frklar, M., U .
.
Philadelphia 4, N. Y, Rauaen 1,
Pbilildelphia wh11 ...tt. 4-0

New Jeney 2, Pitllbur&amp;h l, or, New
Jcne.y ltldlletie&amp; l·l

(Wei~ 1·2),1Ml p.m.
Sunday'• Game~

s.. un~a,, M., 11

2-3), 1:15 p.m.

(ESPN2)

Chh:a1o at Vaacouver, 3 p.m.

Chicqo (Baldwl.n 0.1) II Deuoit (Wei~
Cleveland (Nqy 2- 1)

VII

o£TRorr noBIS e....u..t lrill

!, Clllcafo3
Mo-9
...... _ .

cwwm

I

Mucy, pltdw. !rom TaWdo ol' lito lol«·
aaUout IMp. Sel.t R.udJ P sal: 11'101,

Cll

.460
.•29

1

Opo,-.--.

.411
4
.4%3 5 112
.414
6

................... 13 I!
Sao IJieeo ........ 12 16

I

ct.I!VII.AND ~
MMII: Cltrll:, pltcll•, to 11lfl'alo oC tbe
Alaerlc:u Aa1oeil&amp;lo1. bcalled Chad

Cootrllw L .... Gl
......... 17 10 .6]0) ......... 1611 .!193
I

.....
c - ........ "11 ur:. JJ6
s........._ ...... u •• Jl1

CbicaiO

.... 1s.dar diool&gt;lod 1IIL

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......... 13 "
.... ..... II I!
.••..••..
w... _12 17

1 Ia

BOS'I'ON lfl) SOX-% ,

N-Il~
~ •••••• :tO

'

Detroit at SaD Jose, 7:30p.m. (ESPN)

ar. Toronto (Dar-

sllltd.r!,., M.,. :11

wiD 1-l).l:ll p.m.
Teul (Olivet 0.1) at MIDneiOLI (Radke
2.1). l'Ol p.m.
JCauu City (Pitllley 0-0) 11 Milwaukee
(SJH"b 1·1~ 2'0! p.m.
New York(Rlvtnl 0.1)

New Jeney at Pltlaburah, l p.m.

(FOX)

.

Vaecoowr ill Chlcaao, 3 p.m. (R)X).
lfaeceuoojo
M•..Jo Ma7 :zt
Sao Jon at Detroit, 1:30 p.m.

at Oai.laod

(llarP&gt;y 1·2), 4:0l p.m.
· 801toD {Stle 3-1) at Callrotuia {Fulley
l--4), ,.:05 p.m
Blltimore(Browa ~l ) at Seattle (Bocio
2.0}, 1:05 p.m.
'

(ESPN2), If

n_,-

T ..... 11J,MOJ3t

Pituburlfl at New lertey, 7:30 p.m.
(ESPN), If ...,.ary

Chieaao at Vaacouver. 10:30 p.m.

II!SPNl. if.........,.

Fr5da:r'• Sport• Tr...ad.._

. Detroit 1t S.u Jou:, 10:30 p.m.

BASEBALL

Amort ... ..._

(ESPN), If IIOCcll8ry

som b.il two-run bomcn, Fred :
McGriff bad two RBis and Chipper ·
Jones bit a borne run, his seventh of :
the season, just below the upper :
deck in'rigbl field.
·
Kent Merker (2-1) picked up lbe :
win with five' innings' work, g1ving :
up six bits and three runs.
.,
;
Expos !1, Dodgel'll 4
At Montreal, Gil Heredia (2-3) •
suuck out a career-bigb eigbt in 6 :
2·3 innings and left wilh a 9-2lead. :
Tim Lalcer drove in three runs ·
for Montreal, two during a four-run :
second that ended a sJretcb of 24 '
scoreless innings by Dodgers pitcb· ;
ers.
,'
. Dodgers starter Ram~ Martinez :
(4·3) bad bis worst outing of the .
season. allowing se~n runs on six :
biiS in four-plus innings.
Pirates 4, Rockies l
At Pinsburgb, Paul Wagner (1- :
5) won as a staner for the first time ·
in nearly a year. holding Colorado :
to Jhree hits over seven innings.
;
He was helped by four double ·
plays and held the middle of the :
Rockies' order- Dante BicbetJe, ·
Larry Walker and Andres Galarra- ;
ga -to a combined 0-for-8.
;
Dave Clark drove in two runs •
with a double off Juan Acevado (2- ·:
3) in a three-run sixth inning.

Griffey out three months with
·.broken wrist; Indians win again.

Bill Hubbard

New Jeney at ,ttlburJh, 1:30 p.m.

(ESPN), If - " ' 1

.

.

Sal Joao 11 Detroit, 7:30 p.m.

(ESPN),i(DCCtSwy

Vancouver 11 Chic:aao. B: 30 p.m.
{ESPN), i( DCCtSiilt)'

Heyday not O ller (Ior
'egen
Jl
. · dary dr1•11er.s
.

If

1

.

If I

By JOE MACENKA
AP Sports Writer '
CONCORD, N.C. - Tbey
came from places like Las Vegas.
Orlando, Fla., and Keokuk, Iowa.
to drive in a race thai offered no
prize money and was less than nine
miles long.
The~ knew coming in that The
ReJurn ,pf The WinsJon Legends
· was nothing more .than a chance to
renew soine old friendships and see
if they suU bad some of the ability
that made them stars in their beyFor 24 drivers, that turned out to
be enough.
. "It was quite a deal. I'll Jell you

By MIKE FLAM
Associated Press Writer
Ken Griffey Jr., l&gt;aseball's nearest equivalent 10 Michael Jordan,
will be taking a brealc from tbe
game he's best at. Unlilce Jordan;
Griffey's sabbatical is nol by
cbolce.
.
. Griffey will miss up to three
months afler breaking bis left .Wrist
Friday nigbt in SeatOe's 8·3 victory
over Baltimore. He will undergo
surgery today 10.have a plate inserted in the wrist.
Griffey, who hit his seventh
bomer of the season in the fifth
inning, broke bis wrist making a
spectacular catcb two innings later.
He made a leaping catcb of a deep
drive by Kevin Bass, tben fell
down on the warning track.
"I thought I bad justjammed It
pretty gQO\I at ftrst," Griffey said.
''Then I looked at it and I could tell
it was brolcen."
"That's probably the greatest
caleb I've ever seep," Orioles
., manager Phil Regan said. "It was a
tremendous catch and· a tougb
break for tbem. He is sucb a great
athlete and an outsJanding ballplayer.''
After falling Jo the ground and
flipping the ball with his glove to
left fielder .Darren Bragg, Griffey
slood up and immediately swted
walking to the dugout, noticeably
grimacing.
Seattle team orthopedic surgeon
Larry Pedegaoa predicted that Griffey's rehabilitation would take
three months.
"It is nol writlen in s10ne that it
will talce three months, but it is a

innings.
Tigers 8, White Sox 7

Pinch-bitter Kirk Gibson bit a
two-run homer with two iluts in the
boJtom of tbe nintb off Roberto
Hernandez (0-2). Gibson was bat·
ling for Juan Samuel, who was 3·
for-4 with a bome run.
"In lbe 26 years I've been in the
major leagues. I've seen (Joe) Morgan, (Tony) Perez and (Johnny)
Bench and I've never seen a guy do
.it as many times as this," Delroil
manager Sparky Anderson said.
"It's so many times it's silly. He's
the best I've ever seen at it."
Tbe win went to Brian Maxcy
(1-0), who was making bis major
league debut after being recalled
from Triple A Toledo earlier in the

what, that's some hard&lt;racing,"
Bobby Allison said. "I bad a good
time."
The group o( retired stock car
drivers that showed up for last
week's event at Charlotte Molar
Speedway had an average age of
60. They ranged from Richard
Childress at 49 to Smokey Yunick
at 71.
,.
The retirees drove 35 li!JlS on a
quarter:mne layout, competing in
so-c alled Legends cars: 1,000pound vehicles powered by 1,200cc molo~cycle engines.
It marked the second time Cbarlotte Motor Speedway and R.I.
. Cortlnued on C·3

-

Tim Raines' one-'out solo homer
in the eighth bad gave the White
Sox a 7-6 lead.
J obn Kruk, playing bis third
game with Chicago since be was
called up Wednesday, drove in
three runs.
Indians 7, Blue Jays 4
Omar Vizquel bit bis careerhi~th third homer - aU this week
- a leadoff stiot in the eigbtb
inning that broke a 3-3 lie in
Toronto..
More conventional power
sources, Paul Sorrento and t,ianny
Ramirez, eacb homered twice as
Toronto's Pat Hentgen (3-2)
allowed a Jearn-record five home ·
runs.
. , .
Ore I HersbiSc:r (3-1) scanered ·
six bits over seven Innings, and
allowed lhree runs.
Rangers 6, Twins 5
Will Clark, who hadn't played
in four days, homered on his frrsl
swing and drove in three runs for
visiting Texas.
Otis Nixon, who bad two doubles, two singles and scored twice,
bad the third four-bit game of his
career in support of Bob Tewksbury (3-1).
Kirby Puckell collected bis
1,000th career RBI with a third•
inning double for Minnesota, but
Kevin Tapani (2-3) gave up six
runs in 5 I· 3 innings.
Royals 8, Brewers 3
Kevin Appier (6-1) notched his
AL-leading sixth victory in Milwaukee by working out of two
bases-loaded jams and slranding
eight nmners. ·
.

When Griffey made the catch,
Seattle was protecting a 4-3 lead.
"It's a small consolation that
bis play helped us win tbe ballgame." Seattle ~anager Lou
. Piniella said. "II ~oes 10 .show how
competitive he is. '
·In other American League
action, Detroit topped Chicago 8-7,
Cleveland beat Toron10 7-4, Texas
nipped Minnesota 6·5, Kansas City
topped Mil)Vaukee 8-3. Oakland
stopped New York 4·3 and Boston
· JrOunced California 8-3.
Griffey's injury overshadowed
Randy Johnson (5· 0), wbo struck
out a season-high 13 and took over
the major league lead witb 62
strikeouts. IJ was lhe 53rd time in
his career and third time ibis season
Johnson struck out at least 10 il] a
game.
Tina Martinez hit a two-run
homer for Seattle and drove in
three runs.
"Obviously it's disappointing," •
'he said. "There isn't a team in the •
majors · that wouldn'l miss a guy
like that."
•
Ben McDonald (0·2) allowed •
six hils and four runs, s1ruck out
four and walked five in five

....... ....
LBs.•.
•

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FRUTH PHARMACY· •

il

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ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
lllddltport

1112 ltl1
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FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT .CONTROL

July 6-14
For information
Eber Pickens Jr.

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Sat. 9:3Q·2

:::s .....,...... ---....;::: ..s

While Cbarloue provided tbe
&lt;:ars and the facilities. Reynolds
}&gt;&lt;lid the drivers' expenses for tbe
s:vent.
"We didn'J pay the drivers to
~compete," Gossage said, "but we
pied to show them a big time.·'
• "This couldn't have lieen
)licer," said race winner Ramo
:Stoll, the 197~ Daylona 500. pole.:Sitter. "The money wasn't all thai
:J!reat, but we had a great time."
• · The event was billed as a return
lor the retired drivers. A number of
}bern, however, have never really
· li:ft the span.
: Take Childress. for example. He
move in 285 races from 1969 to
:;1981, never finishing better than
-!bird . Childress then turned his
ltttention to being a car o~ner,
wbicb bas proven to be a much
more lucrative venture. He now
fields the car driven by seven-lime
.Winston Cup champion Dal~; Earn·
llan!L
: Allison, the winningest driver in
'lbe Legends field with 84 Winston
X::up victories, currenlly owns the
~ar driven by Derrike Cope.

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He wu joking, of c:ourse. and it
wu the fnt time the Spun felt like
joking in a week.
San ADIOOio still bas 010 answer
foi Hakeem Olajuwoo, who bad43
poin11, 11 rebounds and five
blocbd lboU two Digllu lfler bil
41-polnt. 16-rebound perfO"Dance
in SIMI Antonio. But the rest of tbe
ROo:kets coaldn't come through
wbcn tbey were needed.
"We knew It wouldn't be
easy,'' Olajuwon said. "It's 1101 a
lll8lter of lettin&amp;lhem off lbe hook.
They are a tough team. In lbe second balf, they made some tough
shots !bat tbey didn't make in San
Antonio."
Johnso¥1, wbo bad 20 points ;uKI
13 assists, made five of six free
throws in lbe fmal 45 seconds 10
clinch the victory and assure a
Game 5 next
nigbt in San
AniOnio. The Spurs point guard,
c::rng despite a sore rigbl ankle,
no blriiOvers.
His bactcourt partner Del
Negro, a victual no-show in the ftrSt
two games, lied his playoff career
~igb with 19 points.
Robinson scored six of bis 29
points during an J1·2 spurt as the
Spurs pulled away fro~ an 89:89
tie to go ahead 100-91 wilb 2:05 10
play. But. as usual, the defending
NBA champions didn't die easily .
Robert Horry made bis fourth 3poinler wilb 1:48 10 play 10 make it

Heyday..

Tournament

HOLIDA.\ ' POOLS, INC.

m.

•
•
!brows
wilb
26
seconds
10
go,
!.ben
:
101-94, !ben after San Antonio's
Dennis Rodman made one of two made one of two witb 16 seconds :
remaining 10 make it I 06-100.
free lbrowa, Smith made his fourtb
Clyde Drexler scored 21 for •
3 of the game to cut the lead to .
Houston, only four in the second
101-97 wilb 1:27 to go.
•
Olajuwon, proving be is monai. balf, while Harry added 18.
The Spurs ouJseored the Rockmissed a 14-fooJer ~nd Johnson
made two free throws witb 45 sec· ets by IS points at the foul line,
where tbey were 26-for-32, com- •
onds to play.
Olajuwon's 3-pointer with 32 pared with 11-for-13 for Hous100. :
seconds left sliced the lead to 103- The Rockets were called for 26 •'
100. But Jobnsori made two free fouls. San Antonio for 15.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .:

COMMERCIAL DUTY
TRIMMER

•

MfffJChou ,.,,_.,..,.
-IACICau.uwmJ!

1*

Little League

.

Spurs stun Rockets with 107-102 win

HOUSTON (AP) - In Ibis
Texas tango, tbe bomec:ourt advanName-1101
Scl!qnl
tage is a mytb. Homeeowt disadBlazer-3b ................................... ,.5-6
vantage ia more like IL
~Academy
Jolm Bro~Wol............................ .S-8
ISO
River Valley
The San Antonio Spurs, tbe
D BnmU..·3 ....................................6-0
165
Oat Hi11°('95)
team tbat worked all 1euon to
Ma.:rt 811111-JDof HtUooooM oo ouoououn""''""S,..9 ,165
Rivcr.Valley
•guarantee tbe bomecourt edge·
Casey C•naday·lb/p ............................6-2·
230
GaUla Academy
throughout the playoffs then lost
]81()(l I&gt;ailcy-ofp ....................;, .......... 5-11
160
GalliaAcademy
two in a row at home 10 }lOUIIOOliO
Kevin Edwarda-lflp..............................6-0
180
RiverVaUey
open the Western Conference
Bobby Fiak-lflp ................................. 5·10
160 River VaUey"('9S)
finals, turned lbe tables on tbe
Scott rniH.t-if .....................................S-9
140
Oak Hill
Roctct.s Friday 'oigbt with a 107·
Jamie Gruber-c.....................................s-9
ISO
River Valley
102 victllry. .
Eric H:=s-c .............................. 5-10
160
Gallia Academy
The 16,000 or 10 Rocket fans
Wes M Ctl'kle-iflp .........................., ... 6-7
180
Oat Hi11"('9S) · wbo gathered at The Summit to
Buck Re)'I)Oida-1blp ...... :.....................6-2
210 River VaUey 0 ('9S)
celebrate anolbcr victory en route
Gary Stanley·iflp .................................6-1
180
Meigs
10 a Lone Sw sweep Mid a re111m
Chris Toler-111/p...................................6-3
230 River VaUey*('94)
trip 10 tbe NBA Finals instead wit·
Trent Thonuas-of/c .. , ............................6-1
190
Oak Hil1*('95)
nessed tbe .rebiltb of tbe Spurs.
Ryan WilUams..of!p ..............:..............6-0
165 .· Soutbem0 ('95)
This wasn't lbe stumbling, ten·
Cory Wilson-lf/ol................................. S-5
130
GaUia Academy
tative San ADIOnio team !bat had
dropped two at the Alamodome.
Head coach- Tom Meadows
Inslmd, David Robinson made the
*('95) -graduate and year ·
big plays down the stretch and,
with considerable contributions
from
Avery Johnson, Vi:k Del
Post 27 slate
Negro, Sean Elliou and Cb
Per·
12m
OIJpoDOpt June 2S ......................I..ogan-t p.m. son, tbe Spurs cut Hous100's lead
May 29 ........ ..........McAetbur-ooon June 28 .. _..... Point Pleasant·3 p.m. in tbe best~f· 7 series 10 2-1.
May 3l... ............... at Ripley-S p.m. June 30 .......... .at Pumam-5:30 p.m. ·
"We woo the Denver aeries on
June I ................... .Waverly-3 p.m. July 2 .............:.........Glouster-noon lbe road, lbe Lakers series 011 the
June 3 ......Bob Evans D.T.(S)-ooon July 5 .............. .at Meigs (S)-5 p.m. road and we won our first game of
June 4 .................. at WeUsiOn-noon July 7-9 ... 10ur.ln HuntingiOO-TBA Ibis series 011 the road," San AntoJune 8 .......at Point Pleasant-4 p.m. July 11 ....Chillicothe (S)-5:30 p.m. nio coach Bob Hill said. "We'v.e
June IO ........... ,..........Putnam-noon July 15 .................. Lancaster-noon goteverytbing backwards."'
June 11 ....................... .Meigs-noon July 17-20 .DistrictS lOur. 8l URG
For the ftrSt time in Ibis series,
June 14 .........at Glouster-4:30p.m.
and W~UsiOO lhe Spurs looked like the balanced.
June 1.7 ..............Pickerington-noon
Note:
all
dates
are aggressive team that won 62 regu.' June 18 ....................WeDston-noon doubleheaders unless otherwise Jar-season games.
June 22 .................at Albens-5 p.m. noted.
"We had a sense of urgency that
June 24 ..............at McArthur-noon
(S): single game
we haven't bad," Elliott said.
"That's the best we've played in
lbe playoffs. If we win Sunday, we
c.ont!ued trom c-t
bave tbe homecourt advantage
again. Maybe we don'J want it"
Reynolds Tobacco Co. teamed up
Sam McQuagg, the 1966 Fireto put on a race for relired stock car cracker 400 winner, is a pilot in Jacobs supports tax
stars. In 1991, they provided old Columbus, Ga. Richard Brick- on off-street parking
Winston Cup cars for the drivers, bouse, winner of the 1969 TaUadewhich turned out to be an expen- ga 500, is a fanner in Rocky Point.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Richard
sive venture .
N.C., and Pete Hamilton. a four·
"It cost us $300,000 10 stage," time winner from 1968 to. 1973, is Jacobs, owner of the Indians base·
ball club and several downtown
!rack spokesman Eddie Gossage in real eslate in Norcross. Ga. .
said. "It probably won't be any·
Even though they bave branched buildings·•. has ~came the first
wbere near thai this time. Having out in various din:ctions since their major downiOwn propeny owner 10
access to these cars, we could do it driving days on stock cur racing's support a proposed tax on off-street
!
more economically." .
·
top circuit, they all appeared. to parking.
"I
will
endorse
it."
Jacobs said
The speeilway and Reynolds bave one !bing in common during
in
an
interview
published
in The
plan discussions soon about tbe lbe race: ·the competitive rue.
Plain
Deater
today.
future of the races, Gossage said.
The race was slowed by eigbt
Mayor Michael R. Wbite and
At-this point, there are no plans for caution flags, and bumping and
allier
political leaders are consider. a seniors tour or even an annual banging represented tbe rule rather
ing
the
taJt to pay for Cleveland
event. Instead, a more likely see- than the exception.
Stadiwn
renovations. A task force
.:nario would be a race every fe'!(
Elmo Langley. who won the
the
mayor
appointed recommended
years.
1991 race. was the ftrSt driver elima
15
percent
lax, although .lower
"These little cars are really inated this time. lcnocked out by a
and
other
taxes are being conrates
.great," said 1962 Southern 500 multi-car spin on tbe_second lap.
sidered.
W!nner Larry Frank. "I lhink with
a rew races us guys could get really

--

&lt;

•LOSE ¥: 10

• · All
INNatuntl
3 DAYS!
C.H. 20111

Gallipolis American Legion
·
Post 27 roster
.

Memorial ·

Gary Gaetti bit a pair of two,run
homers, and has 'four homers .in his
last three games.
Bob Scanlan (1 -3) gave up five
earned runs on six hils in 6 1·3
innings as Milwaukee lost its sixlh
straighl at home and IOtb in 13
games.
Athletics 4, Yankees 3
Oalcland won in familiar fashion, coming from bebind on the ·
strength of Terry Steinbach's IWO·
run homer in the bottom of the ~v·
enlh.
Jim l..eyritz drove in all three
runs for New York with a pair of
singles. .
·

day.

serious fraclure,'' he said.

ThundiJ, Jwae I.

BALl!MoRB ORIOU!S-AdiAady Voa Slyb. ootJiddor, !rom lbo 1!·
day di11blrod U1t Recalled Jeffrey lfarD.
mond1, outrieldcr, rrom Bowl• of 1ho
l!ul&lt;tD Leque. Optlooecl An1ur Rloodoo,
· pltcla", ud SbctmaD Obaodo, outfielder,
to Roc:hatcr or the latcrudo!WI a..e.,u..

day.

lbe Reds ahead.
AI Pbiladclpbia. Michael Mimbs
AP Sports Writer
Jarvis &lt;2·2) worlced six inninp (3-1) pitched a two-biller, struck
They started 1-8. lbey aR now and allowed three runs on nine bits. out four and walked one in tbe
16-11. It's safe 10 say tbe Clndn- Hector Carrasco allowed two bits Pbillies• flrsl shutout of the season.
uati Reds ba~ turned tbc:ir ICIIIOII in the final 2 1-3 innings for bls
Gregg Jefferies and Dave
around.
third save.
Hollins drove in runs in the ftrSI
Cincinnati woo liS fifth llnllgbt
In other games Friday, Florida inning Cot Pbiladelpbia. wbicb kept
game Friday nigbl. beallng tbe SL beat Cbicalo 5-3, Pblladelpllla beat Andy BeiiCS (G-5) winless Ibis sea·
Louis Cardinals 4-3 10 mOYe wlthiD San Diego 2-0; San Francuc:o beat son.
one game of lbe NL Central-lead- · New Yale 6-4, Atlama beat HousTbe bits off Mimbs were douIOn 8-3. Montreal beat Los Angeles bles by Ken Caminiti and Andujar.
ing Chicago Cubs.
With 15 vic~ in their last 18 9·4 and PiJISburgb beat Colorado Cedeno.
·
games. the Reds an: playfug bellel' • 4-2.
. Giants 6, Meta 4
than any team in baseball - even MarUm 5, Cubs 3
.At New YOIX, lbe Mets' bullpen
the Philadelphia Pbillie8, winners
At Chicago, tbe Cubs lost failed again.
of 17 of their last 21.
ground in the NL Central by losing
With 1be scort14-4, Doug Henry
"It was an ugly wiD," winning to lhe team with the worst recool in (1-3) enrered in the ninth and gave
pitcher Kevin Jarvis said. "All's basebaU.
·
up a leadoff double to Mark
·weU that ends weU. AD of tbe aed·
Tommy Gregg, Kurt Abbott and Carreon. Jerr Reed sacrificed, but
it goes 10 tbe guys wbo put tbe runs Charles Johnson bit solo homers Henry misplayed the bunt for an
across the plate."
and the Marlins came back from a error and Darren Lewis followed
The Reds. winners of nine of 3-1 deficit.
· with an RBI single. One out taler,
their last 11, bave played so well
Pat Rapp (1-3), wbo bad lost bis Eric Gunderson Jhrew a wild pitch
that they have gone from the worst last four decisions. scattered nine !bat allowed Reed to score from
record in basehall on May S 10 tbe bits over six innings. He was sent third.
founh-best In the NL and tbe SCV· down to Class AAA Charlotte alter
Rod Beck suuck out two in tbe
enth-best in tbe majors today.
.
the game so that be can pitdl in bis ninlb for his IOOlb career save.
Barry Larkin's two-out sinjlle regular rotation spot while Florida
It was lhe sixth sttaight loss for
capped a three-run seventh innmg bas several days orr in tbe next New York.
that gave Cincinnati the lead for week. Rapp will be recalled for a Braves 8, Astros 3
good after they !railed 3·0. Tbe June 6 stan.
AI Hous10n, lhe Braves did most
_ Reds slarted the sevenlb wllb three
Mike Perez (0-2), the second of their damage against starter
hils off Rene Arocha (3-3), with Cubs pitcher. gave up the ue·break- Greg SwindeU (3-2) in the first I 1·
pinch-hitler Thomas Howard's sin· ing homer to Johnson in the sev· 3 innings.
·
1
gle driving in a run. Two batters enth.
Mike Kelly and Marquis Gris·
laJer, Larkin's two-run single put Phillies 2, Padres 0

Pomtr.o.y • Mlddltport • Gt1111)9111~ OH • Point Pleasant__WV

-

rally .for fifth straight win 4-3

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

0

.

~nday, May 28t-!_~

STATEWIDE GUNS

69 Sycamore Strtet

. .
614·446·4349

----,

GaiUpolis,..Ohio
-·-·..

•

I.

�•

~~Pomeroy-. Middleport- 6alllpolla,1&gt;H •

Point-Pleasant, WV

-

t
-'Suriaiy,-r.ey~8.~1995 .

· Sunday,-May-28, 1995

~

Geiger to address Gallia .c ounty OSU alumni May 31
de1rees iu a timely manner, and 1
believe we should do all we can to
belp our teams be success fill." says
Gei1er. "We want to be the best we
can be iu an !bat we do."
Geiger's put NCAA llliplmenll

Geiaer also serves on the U.S.
Olympic Committee's Gymnastics
Triali Orpnizina COIIIIIIi~ and ia
a put member of lbat organizatloo'a
Athlete Development and Budaet
and Audit rommitteea.
· ·

The alumni banquet will pegin at 7 p.m.
at the Holiday Inn in Kanauga. Geiger,
the guest speaker, is expected to arrive
during the social hour (6-7 p.m.).
include tbe Men's Basketball
Committee and tbe 1993 Special
Commitll:e to n:view fmanclal coo·
ditions in in~era&gt;lle&amp;iate atbletics.
Siuce 1992 be bas served as cbalr
of the Division 1-A Committee on
Cost Containment for lbe National
Association of College Directors of
Athletics (NACDA).

Geil!er IS also lbe lone director or
athletics on tbe newly-formed
College Alcohol Study Advisory
Board, which is sponsored by
Harvard University's School of
Public Health.
Geiger is a 1961 graduate of
Syracuse, wbere be wiiS a member
of the Syracuse crew team and oom-

peted on the 19.59 Pan Am Games as
amemberoflbe U.S. team.
Following graduation, Geiger
heJan his career in inll:rcollegiate
athletics in 1961 as the fresbman
rowins coac11 11 Dartmouth College.
Ia 1964, Geiaer was named
Syracuse's asslstaut albletic director,
a positioll be beld until 1970. Tben
be becatDe assistaut commissioner
for lbe Eastern College Atbletic
Conference (BCAC).
·.
·
Geiger became director or athletIcs at Brown in 1971. He left Brown
iu 1975 for Pemisylvariia. In 1979;
be left for Stanford, staying until
1990 to lake over a Maryland program !bat was under NCAA investigation . When be left Maryland,
order and inteJrity bad been
restored, and that univenity was at
the beginning of wbat was seen as a
new and )X'QIIIlsiug era.
· Geiger and his wife Eleanor are

ALL-DISTRICT PERFORMERS • Twelve
Gallla Academy Higb School track and field
performers ·were named All·Dislrict rollowing
tbelr efforts recently. Tbey qualified for the
regional this past week In Lancaster. First row,

len rlaht are Jenlce Hanner, Sara Walker,
Whitney Hastwell, Jackie Berry, Susan
Facemire, and Becky Knight. Second row, Bo
Davison, Aaron Salisbury, Eddie Nehus, Brett
·
Baker, Burt Wood, Setb Thompson.

Wood returns to state meet;
GAHS thinclads establish marks
LANCASTER • Gallia Academy High School junior ace Burt
Wood advanced to this week's
state track and field meet ln.
Columbus for the second year in a
row after finishing second in botb
lbe discus and shot put events here
Friday.
Wood tossed the shot 57 fee~
and three-quarter inches to finish
second behind Wheelersburg's Rex
Pyles who won the event with a
toss of 57 -I.
·
Wood tossed the discus 176 feet
to place second behind Pyles wbo •
~ also won !bat event with a ross or
176-7.
Wood will !brow the discus at .
2:30 p.m., Saturday, June 3,
·according to Coacb Keith
McGuire. He will throw the shot at
·
·
lla.m.
Wood broke his uncle's school
record in ·the discus. Willie Wood
owned the .previous marie of 175
feet. set in 1982. Burt now owns
both the shot and discus school

records at 176 and 57-6.
Eddie Nebus just missed going
to the state meel He placed fifth in
Friday's 880 meter run. His time of
2:00.2 was identical to fourth
place, same as·Pbil Edmunds' time
from Meigs. Afrer lbe race, an electronic timing system revealed
Edmunds was the winner.
Nehus' Ume 2:00.2 broke the
school record of 2:03.2, set by
Courtney Hutchinson in 1991. It
j'u st missed tbe overall school
record set wben Ron Ferguson ran
880 yards (a slightly longer distance) in 2:00.3, wbicb converts to
1:59.6 in merers. Ferguson ran bis
rcdlrd race in 1970.
Gallipolis' 4 by 800 relay team
of Nebus, Aaron Salisbury. Bo
Davison and Bren Baker placed·
.seventh in a time or 8:33.3. It was
't
the best o fb
t e season an dJUS
missed the school record of 8:20.8.
Balcer was 15th in the 3200
meter run with a time of 10:47.
· In tbe girls events, the Blue

Angels 4 by 800 relay team of
Becky Knight, Sara Walker, Jencie
Haner and Wbitnc;y Hastwell
turned in their best effort or the
season, finishing lith with a .
10:38.6 finisb. This ranked them
sixth for Ibis event in GAHS girls 1
!raCk history.
Jackie Berry placed ninlb in lbe
200 meter dasb wilb a 27.9 performance. She missed the state finals
by .1 of a second. She.finished the
season ranked fiflb in GAHS history in this event.
Susan Facemire was 13th in lbe
3200 merer rnn with a 13:37 effort.
She is ninth in !be school's history
books in that event
Coacb McGuire said he was
happy with. the girls perfoll!'ances,
and pointed out everyone 1s back
next · year. GAHS had just one
senior on the girls squad this
spring.
.
In tJ!e team standings, GAHS better.''
Utadley played her second con~
finished 1Oth out of 54 teams, the
school's highest fmish ever accord. ing to McGuire.
-Sports briefsTRAcK AND FIELD
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) .' National discus champion Mike
who shared the first-round ·lead
Gravelle, suspended January after
with Clements, had a lost ball, a
failing a test for steroids, was
shot into a gully and another into a c.tenied by a judge·to compete in the
bunker- all on No. 5. It produced
Bruce Jenner track meet Saturday.
a uiple bogey-7 and he went on to
However, Gravelle's lawyer
said Superior Court Iudge Stuart
a 74 and a 138 total ..
And Tom Purtzer, a former win- Pollak indieared he rnigbt n:instate
ncr of this title, hit two in the water Gravelle for next month's national '
on 9, made an 8 on i.be bole, and ·chrnnpionships unless lbe athlete is
shot 76-147. He, too, missed the given an administrative bearing on
his appeal.
cut. . •
COLLEGE
So did U.S . Open champion
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) Ernie Els of South Africa and Mas·
Notre
Dame assistant basketball
ters champion Ben Crenshaw . Els
coach
Jimmy
Black resigned jn the
was 72-143 and Crenshaw 75-ISO.
aftcnnath of a domestic abuse case .
Defending champion Nick Price
tha.t led to his arrest earlier this
just made it at 69-142.

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PHElNE·-304~JE£P.--

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:Sports
-deadlines
•

•
• Tbe Gallipolis Daily Tribu~.
~ The Daily Sentinel and the Sunday
: Times-Sentinel value the conuibu. • tions their readers make to. tbe
~ sports sections or these papers, and
: they will continue to be published.
· However. certain deadlines for
: submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and
related articles for basketball (sum-·
' mer basketball and similar camps
fall under the summer sports dead·
· line) and other winter sports is lbe
; last day of the NBA fmals.
·
• The deadline for submissions of
:: local baseball· and softball-related
; photos and related articles, from T•
• ball to the majors, as well as olber
: spring and summer sports, is lbe
: day of the last game of lbe World
·. Series: - - · ·_
.
~
The deadline for photos and
' retiued articles for football and
: other fall sports is the Saturday
•: before the Super Bowl.
'· These deadlines are.in place to
.: allow contributors the time !bey
_need to acquin: lbtbe~~ir~~:~~;~-,.
· the. photogQU&gt;by .s
: of choice and to give the staffs the
:...'__.-~·chance to poblisb _these items in lbe
appropi'lme-season·l'er· ~~

---r
•

ATHENS - Marietta, Athens
and Logan dominated the selections for lbe 1995 all-Southeastern
Ohio Atbletic League teiUlis·team.
League champion Marietta (80), wbicb won for the sixlb straight
year and the niiltb in the last 10
seasons, got seniors Matt Dawe and
Seth Richardson as well as junior
and player of the year Ben Richardson on lbe dream team. Representing Athens (5-3) were seniors
Adam Portley and Adam Richardson; while LQgan (5-3) -got seniors
Sco1t Arthur and .Doug Gambill on
the team.
All but Adam Richardson
receiv~ all-league honors in 1994.
PorUey and Ben Richardson were
. the only players 'Who also received
· ~11-SEOAL honors in 1993.
.
:- Marietta's Mike Miller was
·named the league's top coach. .
: Also participating in lbe league
:were Gallia Academy (2 · 8) and
:Jackson (0·8).

$

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AS LOW AS

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I

Notes: A Lyne Center membership is required ·to use lbe facilities.
Faculty, starr, students and admin'istrators are admitted wilb their ID
cards.
Racquetbjlll court reservations
~can now be made one day in
advance by calling 245-7495 local~ ly or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
All guests are to be accompa·nied by a Lyne Center membership
bolder and a $2 fee.

The Gravely Professionai-G riding tractor is job·engineered .to
deliver four seaso.ns worth of profc~sionaf results.

""'......... _., • .., e.__.,. ...

4 DR. SEDAN

.

4 DR. SEDAN

$189~

ner of lbe New Jersey-Pittsburgh
series. ·
·
" It toolc a tremendous team
effort to beat the Stanley Cup
champions," defense man Karl
Dykbuis said.
Dylchuis .wa~ part or a young,
energetic Ayers defense that just
ran rings around the Ran~ers.
"Their defensemen JUmped in
and played well and that won tbe
series for them," Rangers coacb
Colin Campbell said.
While the Flyers are primarily .
known for ·their "Legion of
Doom'· line featuring Eric Lindros,
Mikacl Renberg and Jobn LeClair,
their defense has started to catch
everyone's attention in lbe playoffs
; Lyne
Center
slate
.
-particularly the Rangers'.
Tbe defensemen were instruRIO GRANDE - Here is the
mental
in a fm;t-round series victo: schedule for lbe week. or May 28ry
over
Buffalo. And in the four
: June 4 at tbe University of Rio
games in the New York series.
• Grande's Lyne Center.
Philadelphia defensemen scored
:
Fitness center,
the winning goallbree times.
•
gymnasium
Eric Desjardins and Kevin
11nd racquelbllll courts
Haller both scored overtime .gameToday -closed
winners in the first two games in
Monday- closed
Philadelphia.
l'riday nigh~ Dykhuis
Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
helped
wrap
up
the series with two
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
first-perioli
goals
as tbe Flyers
Thursday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.'
scored
the
game's
first
four goals.
Friday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
"We
weren't
able
to compete
Saturday - closed
down
physically,
we
were
worn
Sunday, June 4- closed
before the series began," Rangers
captam Mark Messier said.
Pool
Through Sunday, June 4 closed
·

Bibbee
RL 7 Nanli'l'bno'l)ppen Pllblo

DODGE STRATUS

NEW YORK (AP) - Tbe
Pbiladelpbia Ayers took six years
to get back into the Stanley Cup
playoffs, and only two quick
rounds to get back to the conference fmals.
· Tbe Ayers, who last appeared In
lhc pla~offsdn 1989 wb~n tbey
played sn the con terence finals
against Montreal, made it back Fri·
day ili&amp;ht with ·a stunning, fouraame sweep of lbe defending Stanley Cup champion New York
Rangers.
With their 4-1 victory, lbe Ay,j:rs earned a berth in the Eastern
ponrerence finals against the win-

The

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
J .... 2 0 - Drift SttaiPI

in the first oveftime to alve ·the lis' gatDe-winnine play by inno- around and I stopped II the side
Devils a 2·1 victory and the 3-1 cady tlltin£ a shot from !be ri&amp;bt tllld walled lbere. He~ ~~
lead Ia the Eastern Couference boards in the New Jersey zone. and tbere was no ODe by me.
semifinal
·
Goaltender Martin Brodeur wbo
Wreuet didn't even know
New iersey can wrap up tbe bad 32 saves, sent the puck io the Broten was there.
..
seriea S110day at Pittsburab. The left boards, wbere Jobn MacLean
"He made a great pi~~.
series winner will play tbe collecll:dittllldstarted~ice. ·
Wrenet aald·of ~ac~an. He
Pbiladelpbia Ayers, wbo advanced
MacLean passed up a sbot showed a lott:~fpatlellce.
. ,
to lbe ronterence rmat Friday nl&amp;bt opportunity in the ri&amp;bt faceoff cirRoo Francss bad tbe Pen gums
by completing a sweep of the Stan·
cle in the Penguins zone and lbe · goal but . be missed a rebound
ley Cup champion New York swung around the nel He skated attempt wslb 11 msnules left m the
Rangers.
out into tbe left raceoff circle overtiiDe that c.ould bave evened
•'Tbis is a very good boclcey before sending a cross-ice pass to lbe best-o~-7 senes.
.
team we're playing" Penguins Broten alone at the right corner
Pengua~s defensem~n Cbns
center Troy Murray sifd. "They'se aplnst a defenseless Ken Wregget, Joseph saad the Pengum~ know
very disciplined and it's down 10 a wbo was spectacular making 49 !bey are capable ofsebounding.
do-or-die situation mllcb as we bad . saves.
"It'~. gol~g to be tougb«:r.': !Je
iu tbe first series ..We bave 10 come
"Actually I tbougbt be was added. I think New Jersey as qusll:
out in our building Sunday and win goiug to sboot it wben be was com- a bit betll:r team !ban Washington
one game."
lng w~;· Broten said. "I. tbou&amp;bt w~ . Tb~re's ~o reasou why ~e
Murray actually started lbe Dev· then: DUpt be a n:bound like I got can t do It We ve got a good solid ·
on tbe first goal. But be went team."

Flyers s.weep Rangers 4-1

secutlve round without a bogey in .rying about what everybody else
isn't doing."
shooting 68.
Nicholas made five birdies in
Bradley saved par three times
and chipped in for birdie from 40 her first eight boles en route to a ·
feet on the par-4 13tb. Sbe also 67. Sbe made a bogeys on 13 ood
made birdies on Nos. .5, 11 and IS 14 before making up a stroke wilb
as sbe pushed her two-round total a birdie on lbe (lar-3 151b.
"I've been waiting for some;
10 9-under 135.
"I've just played pretty solid," !bing lo happen," said Nicholas,
Bradley said. "'I'm not sure wbat wbo is also looking for ber ftrst
the difference is, and I haven't real· victory on the LPGA Tour. "This:
ly dwelled on it. I'm roncentratlng round boosted my confidence
on what I need to do and not wor- cremendously."
.
.

Parry owns two-stroke lead in Colonial
got in most of his round before
FORT WORTII, Texas (AP) Craig Parry used some bad tennis wind~ reached full strength and put
as a stepping stone to some good some bite back in the course that
.yielded subpar scores to more than
golf.
P3rry, lbe halfway leader at the half the field under Thursday's
Colonial Invitation, said he and fel- benign conditions.
The dead calm of the first round,
low Australian Ian Baker-Finch
took a two-week break prim: to Ibis" however, gave way to gusty winds
Friday. Fairways and greens
tournament.
"I feel I'd been playing pretty became harder and faster and the
w'ell and sort ·of nothing wa.s hap- disasten; common to Colonial again
a wailed the unwary.
pening," Parry said.
John Daly, for example, went
So, on the break. he and Bakerfrom
an opening 71 to a 77 and
Finch spent much of the ume play- .
missed
the cut for the final two
ing tennis in Aorida.
·
"No golf. We didn't even talk rounds.
Hometown
boy
Clark
Dennis,
about golf. We wanted to get
entirely away from golf," Parry
said.
. .
And, he was asked, how 1s h1s
tennis game?
"Bad," he said. "Real bad.
We're both real bad."
But his golf game turned
around, despite a bout with pink·
'Cye, and lbe 5-foot-6 Parry turned
in Friday's best round, a 5-underpar 65, and 'roolc a two-shot lead at
131, nine under par.
"llloolcs like I'm in pretty good
shape. to dO something this week·
end," said Parry, who bas yet to
win ·since joining the U.S. tout 111
1992.
He was quick to add, however,
that much can happen in 36 boles. ·
#42033
••Anyone within seven shots can
win,'' be said.
.
. But, with a 10-20 mpb wmd
n:storing some teeth to the Colonial
Coumry Club course, there were
precious rew close to hi':~.
.
-Lennie Clements, sull lookiDg
for his first victory in a IS-season
PGA Tour career, was second
alone a!l33 after a 69.
$9,300.00, 8.10%, 60 mo.
Jeff Maggert, wbo bad a bole· $1
Cash or Trade. ·
in-one in his round of 68, was next
$600.00 Rebate. $400.00 1st Time Buyer.
at 134 and tom Lehman followed
at 13S after a 68. No one else was
within five shots or the leader.
Parry, one or the early starters,

' BAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
~(AP) - The Pilllbur&amp;,h Penguins
:have aln:ady proven bemg down 3·
•1 in a best-of-7 series isn't an
:OO.IIcle tbatcan't be Oven:ooie.
: lust weeks aao, they became lbe
:13th NHL club to overcome !bat
defldt wben they rallied to ellmi·
)late !be Wasbiu&amp;ton Capitals iu lbe
f!PCDtD&amp; round of the Stanley Cup
playoffs.
: If the ~auins want to advance,
they're gomg to bave to rome back
·aaain from 3-1 down, allbouab it
~£Ill be touper diis time against a
New Jersey Devils team that bas
\OS! only two of nine postseason
J8111CS Ibis year.
Tbe Devils put the Penguins in
\hal predi~ent for the second
stralgbt senes on Friday night as
~eal Broii:D scored wilb 1:24 left

•
ANDY GEIGER
•
tbe parents or two adopted sonsi
seven·year-old Phillip and six-rearold· Gregory. During their stay at
Maryland, Eleanor worked .as a
research assistant in m·athematics
education, specializing in the devel:
opment of a new curriculum rot
middle sebool malbematics.

Alderete·has ·new attitude
CORNING, N.Y. (AP) Loretta Alderete bas a new attitude.
No longer does abe slam golf clubs
and become outraged over a bad
sbot. Lately, ber aame hasn't given
b&amp; mucb .reason to get angry.
Tbe 32-year-old from San
Clemente, Calif.. remained atDOOg
tbe leaders halfway throuah tbe
$550,000 Corning Classic after
shooting a 2-under-par 70 Friday. ·
"I used to be a botbead,"
Alderete said. "I've worked real
bard on meUowing out and not letling golf dictate my attitude . I
learned the bard way that you just
don't get anywhere wilb !bat ldnd
of attitude.''
Alden:te, was at 137, tied with
Alison Nicholas for second, .two
sbots behind Pat Bmdley. Sbe bas
struggled for most of ber 10 years
o':'~l\ Tour. A non-exempt
m
ekbe bas never finished
better than 141b and bas won just
$77,943 in her career.
·
She is playing in just ber second
LPGA event this year and is staying at the home of a local family
because sbe dldn' t bave enougb
money for a botel room.
Earlier tbis month, Alderete
earned S1,02S by winning a touma·
·ment on lbe Players West minitour.
The winner at Coming will receive
$82,500.
Alden:re, wbo bad never led any
tournament until sbe tied Bradley
for the lead after the first round,
had sole possession wben she
moved to eight under with a birdie
on the par·S Sib.
Poor tee shotS led to bogeys on
the next two holes, but she finished
lbe day making a 40-foot putt for
birdie to remain in contention. Sbe
did not .make the cut in seven pn:vious appearances at Coming.
'' 1 make things nerve-wrack.ing," she said. ·"I'm not J!aying
any attention to any of lbe stakes.
I'm just tryin~ to do my best. ·
· I know I m capable of playing
this kind of golf, it's just a matll:r
of doing it. You can always play

.

.

Pomeroy • '"M"-Idr..dleport •-o81npolla, OH • Point Plelunt; WV

[Devils edge Pengu.ins, take 3-1 series lead

.

COLUMBUS - Andy Geiger ia positioo of executive ~ of the
in the process or completinR his first National Collegiate Athletic
year as Ohio Stale Univa'Sily's Bib· Association, OSU president B.
lelic~.
Gonion Gee called his new AD "!be
Tbe 5S-year-otd Geiger was IIIOSt qualified person in America for
named OSU's seveuth director ou Ibis position."
.
April 29, 1994 aud officially
"At Maryland be re-establisbed
assumed bis ~w dulles 011 May 16, confidence in a program lbat was ill
1994.
disarray," Gee added. "He restored a
He bas 34 years or expericuce iu sense of manasement, leadership
iuten:ollesiare athletics, with the last and academic integrity in lbe face of
31 baviua been iu administration. · very tough ro!l(litlODS."
Obio State is the ftflb iustitulioo
Geiger's programs bave emphaat wbicb Geiger bas served as atliiet- sized a balance between academic
ic director. His previous teuures and albletio success. At Maryland.
were at Brown University, tbe be ~vamped lbe academic counselUniversity or Pmlsytvania, Stauford ing and support system and tough·
Uni_versJty and the University of ened lbe admission standards for
Maryland. respectively. He was at albleles. His Stanford teams, ill addi·
Maryland from 1990 until being tion to producing nUIIIerous academDa!Ded to lead Obio State's 32·sport. Ic all-Americans, won 27 national
$28 million progr.1111.
championships during bis 11 years
·Noting !bat Geiger was a viable lbere.
candidate for tbe recently-filled
"I expect our athletes to get their

.

•

I

PHONE

461 SOUTH THIRD

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DIED IN BATTtE
IBIS FORD F·ISO SUPERCAB 4X4 XL,.
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stereo radio with disc player, 40-20·40
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seat. air cond., 'Tilt &amp; cruise, PW &amp; PL, 8 ·
foot bed . rear step bumper, trailer lowing
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1994 MERCURY
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1988 OLDS.
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pow. windows &amp; locks,
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trans ., tilt wheel, pow. windows
&amp; pow. locks, air cond., AM/FM
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car, one owner.
WAS $5995

Now'

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NOW

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BONNEVILLE
4 Dr, V-6 eng., PS, PB, auto.
trans ., AM/FM stereo, air

con d ., · tilt &amp; cruise, re'ar
defroster·.
WAS$3,495

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2,495.

8

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1977 OLDS.
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V-6 engine, PS , PB, auto.·
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captain chairs, lilt and cruise,
air cond., good tires. Extra
clean .

2 Dr., V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto.
trans ., air cond., AM/FM
stereo radio, tilt &amp; cruise, pow.
windows and pow. Jock~ . local
one owner: 69,000 miles .

302 V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto.
trans. , air conditioning , 8 foot
bed with bedliner .. rea r step
bumper, ext ra clea n, A· 1
condition.

7

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NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING

att s,,

Bring In your best deal on a New Car or Truck and we
will try to meet or Beat the DeaL
FOR A GOOD DEAL ••
See Jack Roush, VIetor Arms or Bob Ross

OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.·FRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12
---- ··-- - ~MUFPl!Jt$HOP MON•.,fBI. .N; ~-8-1-i- • ~ . _
NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.·FRI. M; SAT. 8-3 P.M.
'

. t State Street
Eas
OhiO

-·-i -t -·---

Athe.OS I_
....___

I
)

593• ..

.., _

'

�•

Outdoors

May28,l99S

Ohio fishing report

for bas~,

d h. h t 8 I . R

•

c~~fish . &amp; !~ nfiS~sc~!~:beneath a1§ber

.: Angling
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) - . bow IJOUt flsbina IJIIIXRmilies are
Here is tbe weekly flslllng report M rated as e&gt;:cellenL
provi,ded by the Dlvlalon or
COWAN~welt Night ftsb·
WlldlifcoftbeObioDe)Wtmentof
.
Natural Resouroes:
log wilb traditiOIIIII baits produces
\SoutiMast
lbe best results wbeo seeldog chan·
BLUE ROCK LAKE - Tbls nel catfish and bull~e"'!s. A few
l.akc was drained and restocked In largemoulb bass weaabmg up to
1988 with sunfish, bluesllls and five ~~,?"S.bave b;J~ ~
largemouth bass. Channel catfisll Fisb wa ... mtnDOW~ ....,....
were stocked in 1990.and 1992 and to 15 feet ~ong pomts and dropoffs

0

::

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C6

fisbed ., deptl!s of t.bree 10 elgbl
feet when seeking cr&amp;{lPies. Usc
surface lures, small spmnen and
plastic worms to take largemoulb
bass. Cbannel catftsb and bullheads
can be taken during evening boors
on traditional catftsb baits such as
chicken livers, cut baits and
nisbt.crawlcrs fiShed along tbe bot·
tom.
,
HARRISON LAKE- Fisbing

BIG DARBY CREEK -The
Bia and Liule l)arby creeks offer
good fish ina opportunities ror
allm ulb bass cb•nnel c:atfisb.

:'llbeJs. rock~ 8Dd carp. FISh

·

·m

aloo tbe boUom with
::4~wra':nit: or ~ftcraws to take
s!J1moulb bass Small worms and
insect larvae
be used to take
k bass and sunfiSh
rocOAKTHORPE . LAKE

can

:F

k Lake

c~kbaits and~~!.

~~U:I:!'c~~~

in ar?scr:;::
y.ollb aqualic vegelallon wben fiSh· and 0:~catlisb, aappies. SUD·
ang for largemouth ..':!~ 0 ~ fiBb and largemoulb, bass. The top
~-~of walle~ound here 'usc bass locations are an the embay·
....._.ormore.are.
·
nearsueamconDucncesand
15 shoreline areas cootaiDing
nlgbtcrawler ngs fished near the :::ad
bottom for best results. The state
b ds Use small jias. min·
record cbaonel ~tfish was taken we;d ~d ~pinners 10 take wblte
. bere In 1992.
s
.
•
CbanTAPPAtfiNsbRESERV8I~~h
LAKE ERIE- Smallmouth
nel ca 1 average
. .~es bass fisbi is a1 its best Ibis time
in lenslb and are abun~t ·~ lbe of ear. ~owly drift soflcraws,

By RACHFL BECK
AP Bub Writer

0:

.

:'ss

10

• b a.,'d ea·g•es thf.J 11J"ng
Oh /0
0

W' 1

fl

LORAIN. Obio (AP)- Fol·
lowing a mild winter, Ohio's bald
eagle population is having a very
productive spring.
Among the state' s 29 nesting
sites, 25 nests have produced a
· record 36 eaglets Ibis spring,
according to lbe state's Division of
Wildlife tally.
There are 30 eaglets wbicb are
now four weeks of age or older.
Wildlife biologists say lbe farst four
weeks following an eaglet's batch
is lbe most critical period for sur·
vival.
During tbe past decade, fwtding
of eagle restoration efforts bas been
•. provided lbrougb contributions to
lbe state's income tax checkoff for
wildlife diversity alid endangered
species management projects.
"It's a tremendous success story
for the nation's symbol bere in
Ohio," said Division of Wildlife
chh:f Richard Pierce. "While our
· previous goal·was to see at least 20
nesting pairs of eagles established
in Ohio by lbe year 2000. we surpassed tbat goal several years

more of lbeir stored fat, wbicb also
is where toxins lbey ingest accu·
mulate. Of the 26 nests in the
Western Basin shoreline of Lake
Erie, only 18 were successful in lbe
1993-94 season.
But the winter of 1994-95 was
relatively mild for eagles, Shield·
castle said.
Wildlife agents were climbing
. trees and checking nests in Erie and
Sandusky counties this week and
banded lbe leg of an eaglet hatched
Ibis spring near a marsb just west
of Sandusky·
Mark Witt, a state wildlife
research technician, climbed about
70 feet 10 lbe upper branches of a
cottonwood tree. The adult eagles
circled overhead, keeping a watch·
Cui eye on lbe proceedings, as Witt
climbed 10 the nest.
· Witt said lbe eaglet bad struggled a&amp; his talons were taped: but
lbe baby bird was calm as Shaeld·
castle took its measurements and
checked for parasites ~ Wildlife
Division officer Bruce Buckingbam took blood samples lbat will
be used to determine the bird's
ago.''
Mark Sbieldcastle of lbe state's family history and cbeck for pesti·
Crane Creek Research Station said cide or pollution contamination.
that in harsh winters, lbe birds use

long with an obscrvati()ll deck In Its
mouth lbat is 4 1/2 siOries above
lbe pool below.
But it's lbe records program.tbat
provides Dzialo wilb an incredible
amount of .work and an equal
amountofpnde. .
.
"I had six applications today m
one category, !alll~moulb bass on
15-pound test line.
.
.
The r~cords syste~ as ~~1que
because at bas ~!it li:ep! and
"catch and release ca~gones.
"Catch and release as good for
the sport." Dzialo says. "Tbe more
big fish lbat arc released lbe bener
fishin~ wUI be for lbe next generations.
To apply for a catcb and release
record, lbe angl_er ~ecds to sen~ a
notarized apphcatao~ form, h~e
sample and confmnalion by. a ~~~ness to lbe catch. A photo 1s mce .
but not necessary.
· ·
· "If somebody wanted 10 sbarp-

was founded by a
group of seven Hayward business
1 in 1960 Its first list of ftsb·
peo':e~ords waS produced in 1974
~n;d the first museum building
opened in 1976.
Toda lbe museUIII, wbicb COY·
ers the 6'isl0ry of angling, includes
four buildings. Dzialo wants 10
start another in 1996.
·
"We've got lbe material for the
displavs. We're runnin~ out of
room .r Dzialo says. "We ve probably got lbe best display of antique
outboard motors in the world..
maybe 350 10 400 of lbem."
"We've got 6,000 various lures
on display, rods. probably 3,000
reels. we· ve got anylbing to do
with fishing. We've got some boats
on display. We want to add at least
part of a building wilb fishing art
and prints," Dzialo sa~s.
.
· The grounds now mclude mne
fish sculptures. Eight arc 15 10 18

.

.,•

· Haskins-Tanner.

If you or a

POMEROY. Soulbem Obio Coal Company's (SOCCo) Meigs
No. 31 mine was awarded lbe "Pacesetter for .Mine Safety" award at
lbe annual West Virginia state council meeting of lbe Holmes Safety Association: The meetina took place May 12 and 13 in Canaan
Valley, W.Va
,.
The award is given 10 !bose mines in Mine Safety and Heallb
·Adminfstration (MSHA) District 3 .having lbe lowest injury incidence rate for the calendar year 1994. District 3 includes all of
Ohio, westem Maryland and lbe nQObem panhandle of West Vir·
ginia
.
·
.
Awards were presented in five categories: underground mines
with less than 50 employees, underground mines witb 50-149
employees, underground mines wilb 150 or more employees, sur.face operations, and surface facilities.
.
.
.
The Meigs No. 31 mine wns lbe "pacesetter" m tbe category for
underground mine wilb 150 or more employees.
Accepting tbe award on behalf of SOCCo were: Jim Lalbam,
Meigs No. 31 mine superintendent, and Karl Paulsen. general maintenance supervisor, overland belts. Also in attentlance were Wind·
sor Coal Company's Mike Roxby, safety and beallb manager; and
Jim Fodor. safety assistant

..

Qualiry Formalwear al
Affordable Prices

• Ohio · 45651

119 Butternut

Coolville firm adils consultant

MORI.AL
A.YBBQ!

COOL VILLE • Linda Sharp of Athens, a design consultant,
recently joined lbe staff of Lee"s Wood·N·Things ai·Coolville.
Sharp is a graduate of Ohio University School of Interior
Design, and has experience in choosing color, mat, and frame
designs. ·
\
·
.
The 'business creates custom picture framing, and also sells
cross-stitch supplies. It was founded in 1978 by Betty Lee.
It currently is owned by Ledra Tanner and her husband, Richard
Kinnear, who bought lbe business in 1990.

..

Dividend announced
MARIETI A- The Board of Direc10rs of Peoples Bancorp Inc.
declared a quarterly dividend of $0.16 per share for common stock.
The dividend will be paid July I.
The corporalion will continue to purchase additional treasury
shares at priceS not more lban $23.50 per share.
Peoples Bancorp Inc. includes Tbe Peoples Banking and Trust
Company wilb offlces in Athens, Belpre, Lowell, Marietta. Middleport. Nelsonville; Reno and Tbe Plains, and the First National Bank
of Southeastern Ohio wilb offices in Caldwell, Chesterhill and
McConnelsville.
· ·

'
•'

$17,988
No Doc Fees Delr.eed'

IS~ve $5000 I
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Qel, ~erE&lt;J·

Black named to committee

ISave $9QOO I··

GALLIPOLIS • Holzer Clinic physical medicine and rehabilitatimi specialist Daniel R. Black, Jr., D.O., was recently elected a
member-ai-large to lbe exe&lt;;.utive committee of lbeOhio State Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Society.
Dr. Black joins four other medical professionals on the committee. "This is an avenue for Holzer Clinic,and Holzer Medical Center
to be involved in legislation at lbe state level 10 communicate lbe
concerns of the medical needs of Appalachia in relation 10 physical
medicine," Black said. He added, ''Our needs are different and we ·
need to be cenain lbatlbe state is made aware of those n~ds ."

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·-•·

GMAC lsi Trne Buyer
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NAMED PRESIDENT •
Dr. Stephen E. Markwood, a
former official at lllo Grande
College, bas been named pres!·
dent or Alderson-Broaddus
l;:ollege In Philippi, W. Va.
I'iarkwood, currently provost
of Ottawa University in
Ottawa, Kansas, and his wife,
Susan, wUI move to Philippi In
July. Markwood served as
director of student develop•
ment/vice president or Rio
Grande College rrom 1977 to
1980. Markwood will become
president or the 900-student lib·
era! arts West Virginia coUege
on July 15.

••

'

•

By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer
Crude futures prices tumbled to
10-week lows Friday on the New
. York Mercantile Exchange amid
indications a Brazilian oi l workers
strike will end soon.
•
The falling crude prices dragged
gasoline ·and ·heating oil futures
down as well.
A labor court agreed wilb a ruling last week that strikes at four of
· Brazil's II refineries are illegal.
The decision punched prices lower
going into the long Memorial Day
holiday.
Distillate futures also fell as
many of the refineries that sh ut
down with a spate of problems ear·
Her Ibis month pr:epared to go back
to full production.
' On other commodity markets,
grain and soybeans futures prices
were ·sharply higher and lumber
future s fell. The Commodity
Res earch Bureau' s index of 2 1
commodities ro se 0.17 point to
235.47.
·unleaded gasoline for June
delivery fell 1.74 cents to 64.07
cents a gallon; June home heating
oil fell 2.53 cents to 48.72 cents a
gallon; July light, sweet crude fell
57 cents to $18.69 a gallon, the
lowest nearby price since March
.
21.
Trading reflected widespre:jd
uncertainty about th e extent to

-Business briefsBAY CITY, Micb , (AP) Plaintiffs in lbe fight over breast
implants won a temporary victory
when a federal bankruptcy judge
refused a request by Dow Coming
Corp. to freeze lawsuits against its
parent companies.
Dow Corning - once the
largest maker of silicone breast
implants - filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection May 15. It
had asked the court to grant a tem·
·poritry restraining order halting
breast implant lawsuits but U.S.
Bankruptcy Judge Anbur J. Spec·
tor denied the motion Fri day after.a
IWO·daY hearing.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Presi·
den t C linto n, pois ed to ex1end
China's favored trading privileges
for another year, is asking U.S.
companies to compl7 with "model
business principles' in China and
elsewhere abroad to encourage
respect for human rights.
· The approach came under
immediate attack Friday by critics
of Clin ton' s China policy.

'

:
•
~
,
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
conserv'ation proposal from the
Senate Agriculture Committee
would target more wildlife habitat
and sources of water pollution,
maintain a popular land-adling program and keep spending wbere it.is
now.
Sen. Richard G. Lugar, R-Ind.,
said bis bill would stress land man,:
agement rather lban taldng,_val~able
•.......: ..•. crop -acres· out· ot-prod,uclion. and
would
four cohservation
a E11v!rnrum:n tal
Tnce:nuvesPrOgram.
Tbe bill, sponsored with Sen .

lbe market is swting to tbink lbe
move will not belp at all."
Also affecting lbe dollar was a
flurry of economic data that
showed tbe economy slowin~ down
faster lban money traders bad antic·
ipated. '
''We've seen Ibis wealc economic data for a montb and lben all of a
sudden lbere is a !luge sell-off on
someahing we already knew,"
Gibnore said. '.'The market built a
bigger story out of the same infor~
. mation we already bad."
On Wednesday . tbe Commerce
Department's durable goods report
showed a large plunge in April.
/hur~day, the Labor Department
sa1d mahal unemployment claims
surged, and lbe National Association of Realtors reported a large
drop in .the sale of pre-owned
homes.
The data also fueled speculation
that the Federal Reserve may cut
interest rates in order 10 avoid tipping the country into a IJiession.
That prospect .unnerv'ed l'!me dollar optimists, since a weak economy and weak currency go band in
band.
"The market is looking for reasons to get things going, whelber
its up or down," Gilmore said.l
''One minute see lbey see lbe glass
half empty and the next minute its
half full . That change in perception
can really change lbings."

Have him consult with a problem
resolutions officer from the IRS, a
CPA or an enrolled agent.

tee ted because he. is giving you
$ 10,000 in cash. The on Iy alterna-

tive is to have your husband refinance the home, but lbe present
DEAR BRUCE: After my lender is unlikely to let you off th~
divorce, I planned 10 buy a )louse hook. They had nothing to do with
with the $10,000 my former bus- the divorce. Then again, it's possiband agreed to pay me for lbe equi- ble that your hu sband wouldn't
ty in the home we shared. No~ his qual ify for refinrncing because
attorney says !hat! have to s1gn a your income was taken into
quit claim deed before I get the accoum when the cunent loan was
money. This lakes my name off lbe consummated.
(Send your questions to:
deed but since it leaves me on the
loan , I doubt 1"11 be able to get · Smart Money, P.O. Box 503,
another loan to buy a bouse. My Elfers, FL 34680. Questions or
attorney wants me to sign. What do . general interest will be answered
you think? - B.W., Cincinnati
in future columns. Owl·n g to th;
DEAR B.W.: Your analysis of volume or mail, personal replies
the situation is completely accu- cannot be provided.)
rate . You will be obligated to the
Bruce Williams is a syndicated ·
lender in lbe evem lbat yout bus- writer for Newspaper Enterprise
band defaults on the loan but you Association . .
will have no interest in the proper·
(For information oil bow to
ty. That's what a quit claim is all communicate electronically with
about.
· this columnist and others, con. Your husband wishes 10 be pr()- tact America Online by calling J.
800·827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.

which the 25-day·old strike will
continue. said analyst Tom Knight
.at FIN A Oil and Chemical Co. in
River Edge, N.J.
"We saw a lot of confusion
today about the strike,"· Knight
sai d. "On the one hand, we hear
lbe strike is all but settled ... on the .
other hand, we still see lbe Brazil·
ians as active buyers of petroleum
products.''
The strike has forced Brazil to
· spend about $250 million import·
ing most of its gas and propane for
cooking from Europe and the United States.
Union leadership said the strike
was likely to continue, but planned
to seek a.vote among the member. ship on whether to return to work.
Analysts said it was unlikely the
60,000-strong \Ilembership, wbo
have been docked pay since the
strike began , could bold out for
much longer - panicularly under .
the lbreat of fuings and fines.
·
The judges voted 12-0 to fine
each of th e 21 union locals
$110,000 pe r day re troactive to
May 9, the day the strike was
declared il legal.
Meanwhile, Petrobas. lbe staterun oil company, said refining had
. increased to 620,000 barrels a day,
about 40 percent of its refining
capacity of 1.556 million barrels a
day.
Wheat futures ·surged to five- .

monlb highs and com futures were
at contract highs on lbe Chicago
Board of Trade as traders bet on
more wet weather in the Midwest
Soybeans futures also advanced .
The nearby July wheat ' futures
con'tract se ttled at $3 .8 5 3/4 a
bu shel, up 8 1/4 cents . The last
time the nearby contract reached
lbat level was Jan. II.
The gains crune on sharp reductions in Spring wheat acreage and
growing signs of disease to the red
winter wheat crop because of
excessive rain. Fanners in Okla·
boma on Friday reported
widespread disease. which added to
the list of reported problems
nationwide.
l'\learby corn futures con tracts
also raced to new highs on th e
pot.e mial for more wet weather,
whtcb could force more farmers .to
switch from corn 10 soybeans planting, said analyst Don Roose at U.S.
Commodities Inc . in West Des ·
Moines. Iowa.
July com rose. 4 cents to $2.71 a
bushel; July oats were I 3/4 cents
higher at $1.56 1/4 a bushel: July
soybeans 1\'ere 8 cents bi·gher at
$6.06 112 a bushel.
Lumber futures prices continued
to unravel on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange amid huge invento·
ries and slow sales of homes, which
about for about 70 percent of the
·
lumber market.

Region trails state in crop planting due to wet wea~her

By EDWARD M . VOLLBOllN
lipalis Locks at the 1.33-incb accuat the $62·$62.25 level. They feel
heads of people, causing fear.
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio corn
mulation level.
that if prices can push above this
They are usually first detected
-.
planting progress as of the week
resistallCe. then the lows arc in ..
by finding large amounts of sawending May 21 stood at the 62 pea·
There are awo trends lbat oper·
dust droppings on the ground
cent completion mark compared 10
ate in the livestock sector: the
Attention Cbaistmas tree grow·
below the area being drilled. These
lbe five-year avenlge of 88 percent.
annual seasonal price pattern and
ers! Shearing demonstrations for
bees attack all species of dlled, sea·
Soybean average planted stood
the longer-tenn cyclical trend. A
Christmas tree growers are being
soned wood, preferring softwoods.
at lbe 26 percent level compared to
seasonal price pattern repeats itself planned by Ed Smith , Extension
Dust insecticide appiicanons are
the 71 percent level for the five·
over periods of 12 monlbs.
natural resource specialist.
usually more residual and effective
year average. Some 97 percent of
Cycles are determined by tbe
The nearest location is the John lban sprays due to lbe nature of lbe
Patrick J. Leahy of Vennont, the Ohio wheat bad reached the jointed size or the cattle herd and lbe long·
Bt.X:k farm in Fairfield County. l'be
gallery construction . Dusts com- .
tenn biological reproduction sys·
Beck: farm is at 190 Rainbow
top Democrat on the committee, stage wilb about 12 percent reportmonly used include Ficam; boric
was introduced late Thursday.
ed bead d
tem of the cow herd . The cattle
Drive, Lancaster (from Route
atd
(Perma-Dust); Carbaryl
" 'D•is bill would make a win ·
Due et~ ·heavy rainfall in early · cycle is considered to average 10
22/Main Street, Lancaster, tum
(Sevin);
or Pyrelbrins (Microcare).
ning partnership of agriculture and Mav Ibis region of lbe state is well years in duration . The mcrease m
norlb onao High Stree~ just beyond
the environment," Lugar said. "It behi'nd tbe rest of Ohio . Major lbe number of cattle placed on feed
lbe Ohio State University Lancaster
Reminder: The Southern Ohio
would not only maintain key con·
b
·
fi
f lbi
b
h t
1 ft
t Ra·nbo
H
ranc • urn e . on o.
•
w
ay and Pasture Day, June 8 atlbe
changes In soil moisture ave come dunng tbe U'St quaner o ·s year
servation provisions, but would
s'tnce ·~e end of Apn"l. The ODNR implies an increase an fed-cattle
Dnve). Tb.e sessaon wall be be_ld OARDC Jackson branch. The p~
allow fanners to farm tbeir best
"'
8
7
"' d tail
·~
acres for increase4 prO\Iuction and
Division of Water monlbly report supplies _this summer.
.
June starling at p.m. ror e s.
gram: bay demonstrations at 2
export potential.'" . ·
for April was _j ust rel~ased. The
That mcrcas.e pf cattle put mto~~ll SDUib at614-732-22~~-- -·~...Jl·!!l:.i. p_~tl!~e .~'!.' at~ l'~''!~.lWl'-···~-1
state
precipitation
avel'llze"81'4.58.-....ofmtlots
·iast~wmaer-warl6:41'CJ'·
,....~-- •·
.
lreyoote speaker at 'i:4S pin
10
inches for April was near nonnal cent. As bad as all of the; numbers
Infestations of carpenter bees · (Edward M. V~llbor~ Is the
k Lugar alsaid, howeti_ver, tbndat.
annu conserva on spe mg
.
I) Tb
k
f
h d
1
· for ·
ateep
$ 2 . 1 blil\ion mOO\\)' _wilLhaYIU!!_ (.07 mcbes above .nonna . . . e loo.: reports rom sue_ !!~!.-~
no t on 1Y_ de_
s!t o Y wood in struc · ... llJlr1c~.Jur~l
extension •Kent
Jie- ~i · e · her - ,least amount llr April prcclplmtl~emlltyncb say-tl!l\T an unponant
tures, 6iit also l'ie~l.! a nuisance GaUia County.)
cu e s w e.
. .
. for Obio was reported at lbe Gi!i· · resistance basis for June features is
when they fl~ enatically around the
..
·

·s I" ntrod uced by SAC.·

1.•

recover from lbat sell-off, spiraling
downward through tbe end oflbe
week.
Ironically, many of the same
influences that initially gave the .
dollar strenglb sent it lower by Fri·
day.
.
At lbe slart of the week, tbe dol·
lar got support from a growing
optimism tbat U.S. sanctions
against Japan would eventually
belp cut the large American trade
defiCit.
Tbe United States has threat·
ened to slap a 100 percent import
duty on $6 billion of Japan's most
popular luxury cars unless Japan
agrees 10 open its auiO market. The
sanctions will lake effect June 28, ·
but arc retroactive to May 20.
Cars and au10 pans account for
almost two-tbirds of Japari's $66
billion trade surplus wilb lbe Unit·
ed States. That imbalance bas
played an important role in the dol~
lar' s valuation vs. t11e yen, because
il funnels a steady flood of dollars
to Japanese exporters wbo must
swap lbem for yen.
But by week's end, the market's
optimism about lbe effeca of lbese
sanctions was laced wilb doubt.
"Japan doesn't seem to be
buckling under to tbe threat of
sanctions," said CbrisiOpber Low,
a senior economist at HS BC Markets, a unit of Hongkong and
Shanghai Banking Corp. "Now,

,Crude futures prices hit 10-week lows

.. Con Se rvat ion pro posa I

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372-2844
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GALLIPOLIS - Zacb Shawver, Gallipolis, and Soulbern Cross
Bidwell, arc ·new members of the American Angus Association.
The AAA, wilb more tban 2,7,000 active adult and junior members, is lbe largest beef cattle registry association in the world. Its
computerized records include detailed infonnation on more than 12
million registered Angus.
·

Fann,

'•

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By Bruce WUliams
My wife and I wrote our wills
wilb our son and daughter as equal
beneficiaries. Now we've learned
that our son owes lbe IRS $40.000.
which he will never be able 10 pay.
How do we protect bim against an
Internal Revenue Service claim on
oor money?- L.B., Animas, N.M.
DEAR L.B.: To lbe best of my
knowledge, you can't. If your son
is the recipient of a legacy, that
money can, and very likely will, be
attached by lbe IRS for his back
taxes. You didn't indicate wby be
owes Ibis much money . If lbe debt
is the result of him not filing 941s
wilb money lhe has withheld from
employee pay, it's very unlikely
that Ibis can be negotiated away .
On the olber band, if it is due 10
not having paid ordinary income
tax and it is clear lbat lbere is no
way he can meet Ibis obligation, it ·
may well be that lle can qualify for
some type of forgiven ess progr.am.

Meigs Mine 31 wins award

You wiJI ha1141 over I 90 •ly!e• of
to choo1e from . We l.ave a
large tele~tion of the larear styles
and complimentary acceuorie1 for
thU &amp;pecial occasion.

.

Sunday, May 28, 1995

Tax man's ax cuts both ways

r---Business briefs---.

l~edo1

· '· good holiday!
·'' . can help.
.., ' with alcohol

Health

.•'
.'

If you are planning a Uledding •
then you s.hould come see us at

and driving
If you drink

... Racine car repair shop .opens ·

~

summer.

Memorial

there arc
of line classes, from ultralight 10
unlimited:
.
Tbe ball recogmzes more than
125 species in tbe "kept divisinn"
and 30 species in lbe "catcb and
release" division. It also keeps
track of state records.
Fisbing is one place where anybody can ~me a world record·
holder, ·Dzialo says.
.

could," Dzialo says. "But we want
10 get the fish released:"
Over lbe years, Dzialo says, lbe
ball has processed "at least 7.000
10 10,000"' record applications. "I
don't really know."
.
Last year the hall qualafied more
than 1 SO records In the "kept.'·
program and mo~~ th!ln 300 m
"catch and release, Dzialo says.

This past week some of th!'lse
factors played iniO trading in tbe
forci,n-excbange 11181'ket.
.
Still, the doUar was able 10 sustain a rally ·for part of the week,
exceeding 87 yen for lbree days.
tbe first time it bit sucb levels in
over seven weeks.
As the dollar surged. some fore,
casters touted this as lbe "new
beginning" for lbe U.S. currency,
predicting tbat it would continue an
upward trend for the immediate
future.
"There was all Ibis talk tbat lbe
dollar was back and stronger lban
before." said David Gilmore, a
panner at Foreign Exchange Analytics in New ·Yolk. "That talk JUSt
kept pushing it higher, but there
was really nolbing new backing •
such a move. It was full of bot
air."
Just as fast as the dollar soared,
it tumbled in value Thu£¥1ay, dropping nearly 3 percent against the
Gennan mark - it's largest one·
day loss in 2 112 years.
"People were buying dollars at
lbe start of lbe.week and then start·
ed to lose confidence in tbe markets ability to stay so strong," said
Amy Smith, a senior currency analyst at IDEA, a financial market
. advis&lt;iry fann. "So the dollar Sell· .
ing began and sent lbe dollar way
down."
The dollar was never able to

NEW YORK - Traders in 1be
foreign exchange llllllket are woo·
derin&amp; wbctber the dollar's erratic
behavior reflects lelllporary insani·
ty a long-term lunacy.
But many agree tbat tbe dollar's
rollercoaster ride this past week
against most major currencies is a
snapshot of bow psychology, or
market attitude, can influence the
U.S. currency more tban anylbing
else.
After showing encouraging
signs of stamina and stability early
in the week, the dollar buckled,
falling 10 a one·moolb low vs. the
Japanese yen and weakening
NEW RACINE BUSINESS • An •utomobUe repair shop opened
against the mark and otber promi,.
recently In Raelne, Here, co-owner• Richard Moore and Ed
nent currencies.
•
Chaney stand In front or tlaelr business AB&amp;T Auto. The Thb'd
"The dramatic ·move Ibis week
Street business Is located In the old Radne Department Store. Cf-S
was not based on new or strong
photo)
fundamentals.'' said Richard Vullo,
vice president at the New York
office of Hypo-Bank, a German
bank. "It was market sentiment
RACINE· A Racine automobile ·day and 8 am.-noon Saturday.
· reJl(lir sbop opened recently.
The company has a computer· tbat brought tbe dollar up and lben
dropped it back down."
· AB&amp;T Auto wiU specialize In ized balancer and will handle four·
Tbe dollat bas endureil a trou'' alignments, brake work and tire wheel aligrunents.
·
blesome
year, tumbling about 17
sales, co-owners Richard Moore
The firm will mount and bal·
percent
against
the yen and 11 per••. and Ed Chaney said.
ance tires. along with performing
.
cent
vs.
lbe
mark.
Much of tbal ero.:
Moore bas 14 years experience oil changes and fix tractor tires.
sion
bas
been
attributed
to the
~; as a mechanic at Pomeroy Home · The business will also repair split
bulging
U
.S.
trade
and
budget
~ : · and Auto, wbile Cbaoey had eight runs and fix 900 and ·I ,000 tract~
deficits, a feared slowdown in lbe
~ · and a half years as a meebanic.
tire wheels.
:•
AB&amp;T- located in the old ·
This represents · Moore and U.S . economy and the financial cri'
:: Racine Department Store on Third · Chaney's first ownership of a pri· sis in Mexico.
-: Street - will be open between 8 vate company. ·
~ a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Fri-

Wat_e~
~~f~l~.~
Haf!~t
~~!
!~~~~~~p~~t~
!~a!?m~u~e
~~il~~!!~c~
prog~
go~te Can

come IOgetbet..
..
1? N
"Di1a~b = 01 f ;~·
says Dz
•
. •
a on
al Fresh Wate! Fasbmg H.all of
Fame. "There was doubt It was

By BO..L SCHULZ
HAYWARD, Wla. (AP) After 35 years and maybe 10,000
record applications, Ted -Dzialo
stiU bas trouble believing it's all

Section D

Where's the dollar headed?

10

Seven see N a t i o n a l . Fresh

~hnes ~ jmtitttl

us1ness

,

F?;bi~~~ti:Oar!5ra~ wh~R~gL~~T. MA~~s ~ge':u~.!r:x~!:r ~ c:;~=~.,!: =~~~~by::. ~a:~~~S:v:t!'~o~~u~:a~o:·~~es~ night.cra: ~~orrce'fs':t :'~~
g~~
s;t~ bask~:=~ ;i~x~~~~~a;~~~~:t:r.~~:·~;J r~~.es f~h2r:rn~~· ~
~~f~
~~.:c;zoi~~be~a~~
2~ni~~~~s
~~~~ es.:~rsin
~~~bass
~/~~":~n~~
. ~~~~~~~ c::r~~et'o~~:U?o~ur:!t
fishing opportunities are found channel catfisb. Crappaes mn~e
ted
a1
n
lbe
can
be
taken
in
areas
with
sub·
Larsemoulb
arc
present
~n
ear Y mWall
fi h"n continues
1
1
~r~~~ove. ~b~ ~i~ ~bait
here, especially bef~rc a beavy ~~~ ~~~ ~~5w~~J! ~:~~~r=f:CCal~ tbe ~e~tern merged s1rudure during morning ~d=e ~~:\:~a2f ::::.
1
abundance o~ vegetaUon emer~.
T fishing wilb plastic worms side of the lake. SunfiSh, carp and hours.
Northeast
Ohio River
shops for tbe best locataons and
Use ,s~l !,";!~~or'o::~~sul: :·livC: bait illong lbe east and west crappie abu~ is rated as good.
LADUE RESERVOIR -Cast
MARKLAND POOL - This lures to use when seeking these
~h~n~el calfisb and golden rain: shores to lake largemouth bass.
CHARL~Sr~i~ LAKE. _ and slowly , retrieve small 55-mile stretch of river in the . game fash.
,
10

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:Page D2 • Jlllllllq . - ...Jejdiml

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

Sunday,.May 28, 1995

Sunday, May 28, 1995

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

-The House of the W e e k : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ''·,,
.....

Elegant Accents Combine in Country-Style

Des~gn

,,

the

PALE, Bosnia-Herzegovinl\
(AP)- Bosnian Serbs living at the
b~art of~ rebellion are reacting
wtth a nuxture or defiant fury and
realism. as they codfront more
determmed U.N . and NATO

A : Tbe chalky substance is a
down is to took at the fan blactes as
they rotate. The blades are installed layer of dead paint pigments along
on a slight angle. If the leadi_ng the bottom edges of the siding. It is
edge of the blade (the edge facmg not -a luminuzp corrosion . Over
the dlrection of rotation) is up, the time, the sidin8' s paint weathers,
airflow will he down. And when developing a dead pigment layer on
the leading edge is down , the air- lbe surface. Particles of dead paint
are wasbed off by rain and accumuflow will be up.
Q: The outside of my ~ome Is late along the siding's bottom
covered with wood-gram lllu- edges.
Wash the siding periodically
;unum slding:In a few areas, the ·
with
a solution of one-third cup
bottom edges of the siding have
detergent,
two-thirds cup tri-phosdeveloped a white chalklike sub·
phate
(such
as Soilax), 1 quart
stance. What is it, can I prevent
it from spreading, and how do I Clorox and 3 quartS of warm waler.
remove It??
·

forces. ·
· "Prepare body bags," said
angry Serb refugee from Sara·
who identified herself onty
ja "We won't sit idle."
.
A soldter m th1s Bos an Serb
' stronghold about 10 miles from the
capital was more realistic.
"They're stronger, they can do
whatever they wan~" said 27-yearold Damir Dragutinovic. ''When I

rr,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ijl
~~i~ei~=:r~~l~~~~~~ ~:~. ~, 1"o Order Study P·ian'~i:, . .~

A: A ceiling fan is not intended
to be used as a whole-bouse fan

• ;'1111! WELCOMING fo&lt;ado ol thla oowu•y- rea._ a romblnadon o l - .,d IMIICco.

•
l'
i

By BRUCE NA'llfAN
AP Newsfeatures

PATIO ·
Translate your desire for coun: · try-style elegance into this one: story design. Featured in this
MORNING
' ·home is a combination of stone
BEDROOM
MASTER
.
3
I and stucco that lends the look of
BEDROOM
,,. Ill ,,.
l· a country cottage..
1 Elliptical windows are topped
LIVING
14". ,,.
with keystones in• the exterior of
, Plan F-50 by HomeStyles
: Designers Network. An elegimt
; bay window has a metal root and
l an arched window is placed ":..
i
DINING .• NTR
IL.
"'
1 above the garage doors. The
u' • n" l
1 excitement of this home's exteri: .or is echo·e d in the interior,
BEDROOM 2
: which encompasses a total of
- 1,790' square feet of living space
GARAGE
:10' • 22 1
and contains features that would
• be on any wish list.
• Guests arrive through an
: arched, side lighted entry that
: features a tiled floor and views to
F-50
: the home's fol'ffiill areas.
~ To the left of the entry, the for. mal dining room is large enough
I for any occasion. It expands into
. . . . ..
: the lavish living room beyond,
: which is the central showcase of
: the home . J;'lenty of drama is
·..
: packed into this space. A fire• place provides the atmosphere
~ for warm conversation. A French
: door and large windows add an
: indoor-outdoor . ambience,
: bathing the room with natural
~ light and providing access to a
• backyard patio. Built-in shelves
, next to the fireplace and a nearby
: powder room are added touches.
; · Jhe galley-style kitchen offer~ a
• raised counter that serves the liv; ing room and the morning room.
· ; A sloped ceiling and a corner
; window in the morning room
~ enhance the entire kitchen.
· . F-50
• Nearby are a handy pantry closet
and a utility room with access to THE OPEN living room is brightened by a wall of glass that
•• the two-car garage. · ·
includes transom win(lows and a French door to a sunny patio. A
: · Country comfort abounds in the fireplace is bordered by built-in shelves and cabinets.
: secluded master suite, featuring
' a ' bay-windowed sitting area that
• steeps the room in sunlight and bedroom has built-in book F-50 stATISTICS
provides a spot for relaxing. The shelyes, while the front bedroom
esign F-50 ' has a dining
• master bath has an oval garden contains the facade's fea,ture bay
room, living room ,
; tub a separate shower and a window.
kitchen
and morning
· dre~sing area with a dual-sink
vanity and a large walk-in closet.
(For a more detailed, scaled plan room, utility room, three b e d : Across the home, the two addi- of this house, including guides to rooms, two full baths and one
tiona! bedrooms feature thought· estimating costs and financing, half-bath, totaling 1,790 square
l:; ful design features such as gener- sent $4toHouse of the Week, P.O. feet of living space. All of the livt: ous walk-in closets and acces~ .o &amp;ix 1562, New Yorli , N.Y 10116- ing areas are expanded by 10•.,. a shared bath with independent' 1562. Be sure to. include the num- fool ceilings. TI1e attached two·
car garage is 438 square feet.
:! dressing vanities. The rear-facing bero/the plat!}.
,.. ·;.

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:... Buying a wet-dry shop vacuum

::; By
READER'S
DIGEST a ho.me shop.
, .
.
If you vacuum mostly dry
__
I··or h ght -tl uty work lor use w1U1 tlebns, a pl eated pape r cartrid ge
- BOOKS
For AP Special Featuros
hantl-held power toots, a 5- l&lt;l 10- . prov1de s more surface area fo.r
A weHiry shop vacuum is an gallon model wiU1 a 1-hiJrsCJXJwcr dusl, reducing the number of filter
invaluable aid around the shop and motor will do. A model with a 12- cte;mings . But U1e pleats arc hard 10
UlelJOusc.
to 16-gallon tank w11t work best cteau when the dust is wei or caked
Wet -tlry vacuums arc usua lt y wiU'. sLMionary power tools.
on. [f you do a lot of wei pi ckup , a
It yo~ want to compare o11c vac- llat paper (or hxun) filt er is bcucr.
, more powerful than h.ouselmld vacuums. With thc'ir large r motors. · uum w11h a11o th er, mulllply the Some vacuums accept both filt e r
tanks, hoses and filters. U1cy gobble vacuum's "scaled pressure" (also t ypes. C le an fillers often and
up sawdust, lar ge chips,_ pa pcr cal ted scaled suctJon . water ltfl, replace them when wom.
scraps, wallboard dust, natls and · ~tatic pre.s.sureor jusi_":iP'_') hy_its
If your vacuum isn't picking up
other shop debris that ca n spe lt
'mrllow wh1ch IS gtven Ill c.l. m. dirt as well as it used to, the hose or
u oublc for ordinary vacuums.
(cubic teet p&lt;:r minute). The result- wand may be clogged. Unplug the
Tbey also can suck up puddles ing Hgurc should be at lca;t 5.000,_ unit, then look through both ends;
of water caused by plumbmg leaks the h1gher ·U1c number U1e bener. 11 if you can ' t .reac h the clog with
• as well as 0 u1er common large and tl1e information is not_ available at your Iumd , us e a yardstick or tile
the store, most mmmlacturers w1ll end of a straightened "!ire cl.othes
• small home and shop spi lls.
.'
Another advantage of a wet-dry send pruduct lact sheets on req uest. hanger.
vacuum is that you can atwch it to · T:onk Hody
.
Attachments
your power tools . For example.
Pl&lt;_lstic is th e most com mon
Most wet-dry vacuums come
.• sawdus t from a Jable power saw matenal lor tank botltes and IS lme with 4"'or 6-foot hoses, typically 2
can be drawn directly into the tank for
mosl
worksiH?P' · It 's 1/2 inches in diameter. S6me uniL•
' _ a useful feature 'when wQrking lighlweight, rust-ptool and dent- also come with a 1 I/2- inch-wide
' indoors where dust m1gh1 create resistant. Rust-resistant epoxy· hose. Tbc large-diam eter hose is
health and cleanup problems .
coated steel, usetl "'' some htgher- handy for picking up sawdu st and
Power and Performance
end models. is durable and less chips, U1e small one for picking up
In evaluating a shop vacuum. prone to damage from heat ·or so l- nails and the heavier particles.
delennining its power IS not easr: VCI~ ts .
.
.
Other CSSClllial attachments are
fo ;wo•d a mess when cmpty111g brush, we i- and dry p1ckup noor
Neither a high ''peak horsepower
nor a gee-wbiz demonstration of your shop vacuum, line the vacuum n.ozzte s, cx t ~nsion wands and
Jifling power is a reliable indicalor tank wit11 a large plastic ~rash bag. crevice wands , to fit sma ll - and
of a unit' s capabilities . Luckily, Fold th e bag over the tan~ nm so large-di,mletcr hoses . Many of t11e
most better known brand-name t.be top holds the bag in place. To vacuums come with an opening to
· units so ld in home center$ and empty th~ vacuum, lake the bag out fit a large-diameter hose. but pro - .
vide a~apters to accept small hoses.
deparunent stores are a~eq uatc for and discard it . Fitter Type

are very effective, and if that's
what you want, you should. use a
fan that is designed for that purpose.
Ceiling fans are designed to circulate air in a "closed" environment and should force air down
during the summer. The downward
airl1ow cools your skin as jt moves
over it. During the winter months.
U1e fan should rotaie so it produces
an upward airflow.
·
During ·thc winter, heated air
rises toward the ceili'n g, and the
cooled air setUes toward the floor.
Depending on the room size and
shape, there could be a 15-degree
difference between the floor and
ceiling. Intuitively, people want the
fan to pull warmer ceiling air down
during the winter and vice versa
during the summer.
.
The fan speed s hould be fast
e nough to break up stagnant air

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Full study plan information on this house Is available in a .$4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets·are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Sen It, Ranch Homes, 24 of the most 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 Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week. The Sunday- Times .Sentinel, P .0 . Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10116-1562,

rv••

Enclosed Is $4 tor plan N o . - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Street
·-------------------·1
Clty _ _...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-'-

· Cakes by Sally- Custom
decorated designs of your choice
lor 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 t~ppers.

••

D.J's Crafts Shop
2390 Jackson Pike Gallipolis

. HOME HEALTH

54 River in Indiana

56 Helper: abbr.
60 The two together
6t• Food flavoring
62 Horse's hair
63 Wood-eating insect
65 Small -piece
66 Backbone
67 Price
66 Ill-mannered
69 Spigot
70" ... man-mouse"

.71 T1me penod
72 Tub event
73 Be victorious
74 Violin name
76 Dog breed
78 Chopped food
79 Ride
80 Fathered
81 Conclusion
82 Stroll

-~

108 Penned
109 Allows
110 "Born-"
1t 1 Earnings
113 Bulb cover
114 French cap
115 Pasture
. 1 I 7 Kimono sash
118 Keep afloat
119 Wreck

1 DriAk
2 Loosen a knot
3 Goldbrick
4 Hot or cold
beverage
. 5 Upperclassmen:
abbr.
6 Store
7leave out
8 Go under water

9 Give power to
10 Fate
11 Empty
12 Fighting against
13 Morally bad
14 Marry
15 looks for
16 "T~e Star Spangled
17 Fuss

18
I9
20
30
31
33
36

Not at all tipsy
Peace goddess
Welshmen, e.g.
Neighbor of Can.
Solemn fear
Had a hankering
Reckless

121 ·Print measures

37 "No -

124 large body of
people
126 Vise
128 Chewed
132 Cui-de- 133 A grain
134 Fly high
135 Throw
1
139 levin or Gershwin
140 Femme fatale
142 Distributes cards
144 Yogi ol baseball
145 Passion
147 Call forth
148 Jargon
149 Amencan Indians
150 Napped leather
151 Passover least
152 Tilts
153 Something valuable
154 ·- Johnny"

buts"
39 High card
40 P.uppet-- string
43 Sword
44 A SpiCe
46 Honest 48 Sweet potato
49 Monastery head
50 Ripple panem
51 Rose oil
53 Cosily fur
54 Cleanse
55 Daring feat

1

ands, or

57 Indian instrument

58-Condition
59 lukewa.rm
61 Swiftness
62 Wool ealer
64 Make confident
66 Con artist
67 Barrel's .cousin
68 Abundant
72 Bundle

73
75
77
78
79
82
83
84
85
86
87
BB
89
90
91
92
93·
96

97
101
102
103
106
107
108
109
112
113
114

CARE

Purplish red color
Wallace or Douglas
Gamblers' haveo

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

~elest

Fat
- o' -the-wisp
Contented sound
Wonderland girl
Ascot
Not as wild
Get up
Black or Va.tenline
Muni or McCartney
Trade
Funny fellow
Mountain ridge
A leavening
Nal King Things to 'eat
Bird enclosure
Punctuation mark
Fight
Moray
Hope or Dylan
Big lies
Singer Horne
Shy
Addition resuh
Receptacle

In most cases the care we
provide to you or your-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

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IIEIIANDWCC&amp;rlllu-.
"'.. _ , _

C.......,..CII_.,__..
....._,= •
1

1121

30 Announcemlnts

-r.olaa -

Klttena ,., gl..

~~' ;:-~~a 10 good - . (8141

LIVE BAIT
Nile crawlers 99e doz.
Meal worms 30 at 59e
Minnows: Crappie 69e doz.
Bass 99¢ doz ., shiners $2.50 doz.
Crawford's Grocery, Henderson, WV

AOOPTION : A decitlon a l - -.30~ 11154lor raur baiJr. Wo llnDw ll ..n 1.;;::::.::.:.:.::.:::.:____
work. W. con pt0¥1de you wllll Long H - Fomolo ~ C.t
~ al - . . . - . 1hot ,.., Gray In CoiOt, I YHr Old, 814IJOIIW ....... ~ 441-1110.

oo::r-'~~~"'!!!'•~r.o-!!"'!!!;·:!PIHH~!!!;col_uo_ll ~~~~~~~;.od-..,;Br;.Hd_Ro_bb_lt-o-To-G-1-ve-o·

-

~40=~..,G,_I1..,~e,..._.,.,...,_:.,'f,.,.,..~

...,,.14--n.

PYpplto ID give - · t/2 colllo,
112 RoiOitllt.r PYppl... 114-378- 814-11112·5440.
.

::21118~--=-~,.,.,..=,.,.,..~~

Two q . .... odult molt, ant ....

=----:- I·========
~~m

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

NEW SHIPMENT
LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $1095
LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon . thru Sal. 9-5 p.m. 446-0322
3 miles out Bulaville Pike

116 Breadwinner

118
120
121
122
123
125
127
129
130
' 131
134
136
137
138

Exclude
"That's disgusting!"
leners for plurals
Artless
Young cod
Military decoration
Eqdures
Broader
Wear away
Challenges
long story
Eye part
Sapling
Aclors and
actresses
14t -out (get with
dilficultv)
143 Before, poetically
144 Actress- Arthur
145 Gigar residue
146 Regret

For Sale
Electric Treadmills Manual
Treadmills &amp; Bolt Skiers
All brand new
614-256-1270

Quail Creek Annual
Yard Sale
June 3rd 8 am - 4

All size clothing, pace
saver handicap cart, avon
collectibles:
Something for everyone.

Chlorine Users
. 251b.
Big 3 inch Pucks
$56.00

Ratliff

P.ool

Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
All Makes
Smith Buick-Pontiac Gallipolis
446-2282
All American Sound Systems
For all your entertainment needs .
Deborah &amp; Pete Peck
Karaoke &amp; D.J . Private Parties.
Wedding Reception , Employee
parties. 614-245-9696

CHICKEN BARBEQUE
Monday, May 29, 11 :30 am
At the Chester Volunteer
Fire Dept.
Serving chicken , ribs , baked
beans, slaw &amp; homemade·
ice cream

Maynards Quilts &amp; Fabric
Sale
·
Buy 1 0 yds of lace
get 2 yds free.
3 mm beads 6 yds for $1 .00
4 mm beads 4 yds for $1 .00
Craft Supply 1 0% off
Sale starts
May 30 thfu .June 6
Open 9-5 Mon-Sat 245-55B2
Located west of Rodney
Control
Extermital Termite
Pest Control
Best prices .&amp; Quickest service
termiles &amp; unwanted pest.

Call 446-2342 · or 992-2156
FOR-MORE INFORMATION.-..

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FLAIR F~RNITURE

675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

Auto Insurance
Low Down

Payment
SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUl • No Prior
Insurance.

All Ages, All Risks
We trY to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-61L11

Gallipolis

Card of Thanks

Thank You

The family of
GERALD T.
WILDERMUTH

Winner of Benefit
870 Shotgun

wishes to express our
heartfelt thanks to the
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad, Veterans Memorial
Emergency Room Staff, Or.
Styer, Pomeroy Uniled
Methodist Women, Ewings
Funeral Home and the
American legion Post 39.
We would also like to
especially thank Pastor
Bob Robinson for his words
of comfort, Joo.nn
Robinson, organist, and all
our friends and relatives
for their calls, cords,
prayers, food, words of
comfort and their presence
during the loss of our
loved one.
Faye Wildermuth
Donna Nibert and Family

. Steve ~lay

The

fam .ily of
K11thryn Matthews
would like to ext fnd
our thanks for all the
pra yers,
lov e,

concern,

ALL-STAR
CHEERLEADERS
Come to Sno Biz
Sat., Sun ., Mon. ·
Noon to

Logue's reenhouse
Plants for Sale
388-9939
$1.00 a dozen
Free Cooking Cla.s s sponsored by
American Diabetes Assoc . &amp;
Senior Citizen Cen1er
Thursday, June 1, 6 pm
at the Senior Citizens Center
Calli-BOO-D IABETES

..

O'Dell Lumber Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Open Sunday
May 28 10 am til4 pm
Monday May 29
10 til4 pm
Pomeroy Location
Open Monday May 29
10 am til4 pm

A specia l thanks to
Pastor Ken S ton e,
Lighthouse A sse mhle
of God·, and Pa stor

Ernie

Sl'wnlly:

5•15•95 WCIS
P~Piee~sant, WVa

Thanks again,
H•zilee Riebel
Card ot Thanks

The family of
Jimmy Dale Caldwell
would like to thank
everyone · for oil the
prayers, love, kindness,
flowers, food, cords, and
visits during· his recent
death.
Aspecial thank you to
Rev. Garland Montgomery,
Waugh-Halley-Wood, Emily
Waugh; Sharon Shafer, and
everyone that volunteered
to help during his death.
Your kindness was
opprecialed more than
words can say. Gad bless
each &amp; every one of you.
The Caldwell Family

a-vo"•

Pt~ r·kin s,

Addison M e thodist
Church, Overbrook
and Holzer Senior
Care Ce nter and
Wi ll i s
F u n era I
Home.
,
Our
h eart felt
1bnnks fo1· · all th e
s upport we rec .c ived

in Our hour of ne ed.
God Bless all of you.

110

110

Help Wanted

. Now accepting
applications '
Supermarket Positions
Experenced , Full and
Part time Positions
Available. Retiree s
welcome, excellent
benelit package. Work
lor a progre ssive,
growing family owned .
busine ss.
Pi ckup applications at
Ohi o Valley
Supermarkets
1134 Jackson Pike.
Gallipolis
An Equal Opportunity Employer

=::.=:,·.= ·

~:_ ~:
~..,.;;·;•;r;Or!IJ~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J;•;;;;;;;;;;~~~~

Thank you, Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, for allowing
On My Own and EFNEP to
· meet in your church. A
heartfelt thanks!
ON MY OWN, Jhe

Displaced Homemalcer Program through Tri ·

County Vocation School Adult Education Center, is supported by :
federal funds of PL 101 -392, the Carl D. Perkins Vocatiorna.l
Education Act of 1990, through the Division of Vocalional and
Career Education, the Ohio De rtment of Education .

Card of Thanks
The family of
Ross Norris
wishes to express its
sincere thanks lo all
our friends and .
neighbors for the
words of sympathy,
prayers, food , flowers ,
donations and the '
ladies of the First
Baptist Ctiurch who
prepared the meal.
We extend our thanks
to Dr. Douglas Hunter,
the fine nurses and
staff of Pomeroy
Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center
during his exte nded
illne ss, Ewing Funeral
Home for their
services, Rev. Aaron
Young, Rev. Charles
Bush, singers Frank
Cleland and Florence
Adams, Pianist Lillian
Hayman.
The Family of Ross

In Memory

In Loving Memory
of
LAURA CIRCLE
on her 80th
birthday May 29th
who left us
Feb. 28th.
Love
Twin Sister
Lizzie
In Memory

flower s~

food , cards, c all s
and vi sits during the
illne ss and g oi11~
home of our loved

one .

Gospel Sing
Rodney Pike Church of God
State Rt. 35 &amp; Corner of
Rodney Pike. June 3rd 7 p .m.
Free Refreshm ents.

"

~

$59.00
$19.95
$99.00
$49.95
$499.00

the Gallipolis

Jackson
286-1553

446-6579

~ SPRING SAVINGS
'

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

Center
Gallipolis

Special for month of May at
Micheal &amp; Friends
1056 Jackson Pike
446-0698

SERTA MATTRESS
·BED FRAMES
RECLINERS
4 Drawer Chest
4/pc,. Bedroom Suite

-·-

Card of Thanks

ACRYLIC NAILS $35.00
REG. $45.00 I

Gllllfa ..
&amp; Vlclnlly

AU. Ylnl SaJeo Mull a. Polcl In ·
Adwinot. DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m.
Ctwio, 8 lllloa the doy !»lore tile ad Ia 10 run

From 1ft. 7, IAalt For Slgnt, 1-3,

Kl-. 10 good ........ only. Will •
dell¥er within Jea~anable dlt-

J::.z:.,

LAYNE FURNITURE

'

- Answer to Puzzler oh. Page C-2 _

.;.;:MJ.~NEW=:::DIII"::::::EU~IE::::-1 -::
1oocr=.":"al:-

:.:_,;;·;;A;;;;;;;;c;;li;;;h,

i It can be awkward to install drywall panel
• By POPULAR MECHANICS
pensive and yields il 'first-rate intefor covering up old wall surfaces.
For AP Special Feature~
rior surface when properly fin up to Uuee-quarters inch, which
.Installing drywalt, atso called
ished.
., appears mostly in commercial situ: wallboard and Sheetrock, is not
The product comes in a variety . alions.
. ~- ; .. ~3!1.Y '!York, The t'yJJical panel '!lea- of sizes and thkknesses. In addi:
For"Consumers, U1e usual choic• sures 4::0v-l.l fel:t;·l&gt;one-balf"'nch · 1t()tHo the lyptcal s1ze. you can-~~are-11rrcC'l:i!lbths, one-half and
. thick, 11 ·•!!hS about 100 pounds usually get. longer panels - in 2llve-e_i~hlhs inches. All can·be used
_, • _!nd ·c.an.J!.! t ~l'g ~wkw~\d to _ . I?Ot.'!!cr~ments up t~ 16 feet - on. yn ceilmgs and wallp as long as u,e
'! maneuver. That s e ad1lews.
Special order. The tliickness ranges
fram uig members are on T6-lnclr
:
The good news is that it's inex- from one-quarter mch, mQstly used
centers.
·
f

001

Public Notice
Public Notice
371-2142 Le.,. ... _ . 11 No 1.111=1e:.,.- - - - - .___.;.;;.;,.;..;..C..:o..:.il..:.nc_II_C-It-rk -m..-t-w-lth_t_h.-P-.r~k~D~I.-trl~ct
60 Lost and Found
M
Boord. Tho m..tlng will be 2yr old molll -·~olio mtx,
f~1,1815
hold at 10:00 a.m. on June - - l ...,._ m goad homo. LOST: Gold Chain 18' Honing·
II, 1IIIII, In tho Audltor'a . ~~-::-:--75~8~15115~=-....,.-....,.-~ bono At Tako 2 Video, Plooao
' Public Notice
Offlco of tho Melge County 8 WHk Old Killona, To Good Col814-3711-21137 REWNIJI
CourlhouH.
Homo, 814-2511-17118.
70
Yard Sale
Molge County Budget ~~....,.........
Commleolon 7 Pupploo. 112 CIIOw 11111112 Col- I'
Pur:~~~C~~n~~ctlon·
NancyParkorCtmpbell lo,TaGaail-l1..__1887·
Gallipolis ·
121.22 ol the Ohio Revlood
Howard Frank . Freo block gorbll with 4 cogoo. 1~=~-:-:&amp;~V,:..Ic::..;;ln;,;,lt'f:;.....,..,,..,..
John Lentil ~304~1111~6:!33~1~1.:..,__ _ _.:.._ I'1360 Bob McCormtcil Rood, s.~
Code, tho Melgo County
ludgot Cammloolon will
(5)28;1TC
-~s 81410-3"·"·-- Su
Whl,.,
827
Raccoon
Road,
0.111·
1,., Pool
FrH Kl-o, Block And Block &amp; wo,
un,Tablt,• Sto&lt;eo.
, Hqu...,ld·

N•m••~--------....,-----------·1

DbwN

Gllllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

2 Mole Pupp1ee, I W-Old. 11 moll! pup. Chaw/.lolookon Huakr
2 ICHollound, 112 Huoky, 814- mix, good •t&lt;:h dogt, 814-iU·

BULLETIN BOARD

•

Enclosed Is $4.95 each tor the booklet(a)1 - - - - - - - - •

83 Glass square .
e4 Make inquiry
85 Tolerate
88 Flying toy
89 Unmixed
90 Toronto baseballer
94 Holiday song
95 Beery drink
96 Greeting or calling
97 Equilable
98 Mine's oulput
99 French friend
100 James -Carter
102 1\cid to lhe taste
103 Compel
104 New Zealand parrot
105 Put aside for later
107 Alexander Graham

Ill~&gt;

palla, 814-W&amp;-811111.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
1 Resigns
6 Cover girl
11 Makes beer
16 Fundamental
21 less than
22 -acid
23 Dike
24 like a lot
25 Book of maps
26 Boll for an l:beam
27 Stage whisper
26 Peace prize name
29 Disapproving cry
30 Say
31 Indigo dye
32 Kith and34 Within: prefix
35 Kind of wheel
:i8 Stares
40 Bone: prefix
41 legal maner
42 From a distance
44 "Three Blind -"
45 Get brown in the
sun
47 Exclaim
49 Accumulate
52 Fill with wonder

"YeSierday, when I saw those
U .N. soldiers chained, I couldn't
bave be~n happi~r. said Sofija, a
woman 111 her late 50s. "It doesn't
matterwhatbappensaftertbis."
She spoke funously about foreign intervention in Bosnia, where
war began with a Serb rebellion in
1992. Three years later, the Serbs
control two-thirds of Bosnia and
continue to battle the Muslim·led
Bosman army. .
She refused. to comment on the
killing of 71 people, most of them
in their teens or early 20s, in retal- .
iatory Serb shelling of the northern
government-held city of Tuzla.

AIHIOUtll.l 1.:1

Ji..U..V Ci!m•-Jimtinel • Page 03

• warran~l~o•~·=====~·~==~=~~~~~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~~=====~~~

,.

uapped in the corners and in the
peaks of sloped and cat.bcdral ceil- · State (ZIP)'· ------'-----------ings, but slow enough so it doesn't .,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
create a draft.
An easy way to determine
whether the fan airflow is up or

ACROSS

run into someone who is weaker, I
take advantage of the situation .
Wben there's someone stronger, 1
just keep quiet."
After two days of NATO
airsuikes against Bosnian Serb
ammunition depots located only
about a mile from the headquarters
of Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic, people in J:&gt;aie continued
their daily routines Saturday.
Noisy NATO reconnaissance
flights buzzed overhead.
Serb soldiers were holding more
than 200 U .N. soldiers around
Sarajevo, including several they
chained to possible NATO targets .

Public Notice
Public Notice
• _ _ _ _ _ _...;..;._ _ . _ _;..;.;~;;.;.;.;;.;.;.;..;._b_
NOnCE FOR BIDS
. Arrongemonto con •
Notice Ia hereby given madt1o lnopoct bockhoe by
that blda will be rocolvad at calling 388-taBB or 388·
P.O. Box 8, VInton, OH ~~ Council ollho Vlllllgl
• 45eae by tho Council of tho
VIllage ol VInton, OH until ol VInton ro..
the right
S:OO p.m., Jun• '8, 1815 lor lo roftct any and all bldlo.th
the aala ole Sotah B,.vor
By Ordinance 0
e
: Backhoe. Tho backhoe will Council ol ·lho VIllage of
•. ba oold "AS IS" with no VInton.
Glv•n
expreu or Implied .181hdoyof ·

•

Clip this order and retum label

Pomeroy e Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, wv

'

Serbs praise detention Of peacekeepers

Questions &amp; Answers on homes
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Projects
Q: We have a two·story con·
tempor.ry home with a ceiling
fan do'WIIStalrs hi the Uvlng room
and another upstairs In the loft
area. In the summer, we open the
windows In the liltr"above the rau
and run both fans 1 ~ tbey blow
air up and out the win.. ~
'"
tbe winter, we run
fans doWb
so they blow the warm air from
the second floor down to the first
ftoor. Recently I was told this Is
not the correct way to use the
rans. L• It?

-

.

-

In Loving Memory
Of My Pa1ents,
MAHLON DOC
EBLEN and
MARY SIS EBLEN,
who bot h passed away
lasl yea r. Now you hoth
dwell in the Hou se of
th e Lord forever . Your
memori es in my .hou se
are still loving and
strong a~d are wi th me
every day of my life. I
miss you and all the
memories, big and little,
we shared.
Pebble

Card of Thanks
We wish to thank all
of
the
neighbors and ra:~~i~l
for
all
of
kindness to us """"''I
the recent loss of our
mother,
Clarabelle
Drummond Brown.
Special thank s to Rev.
Clifford
Holley ;
soloist,
Joan
Wellington and Willis
Fuperal Home.
Her c hildren :
Wanda Speakmore,
Sue Michael ,
. Kenneth Drummond .
and Alan Drummo.nd
In Memory

IN MEMORY Of MY SISitR

RHEA ANN DEEM
ON MEMORIAL DAY.

Time seems to go by
so slowly since you,' ve
been gone. I miss you
so much:
It seemed as tough al
one time in our lives we
though! we
always be around for
one another. But now
you're gone, and the
void !hot's in my life
never be filled. Even
when I visit your aro1re 1
sile, I know you're
there, but I never leave I
without telling you I
love you.
Each day lhat posses,
the pain of losing you
gets worse.
But I know in time,
sisler, we will be
together for eternity.
love you!
Your sister,
flnrit1rln (Buuie) Theiss

In Memory

Help Wanted
In Memory or

HELP WANTED

BYRON
HASKINS SR.

Gallia -Me.igs Community Action Agency JTf'A
Program is accepting applications for the followmg
temporary summer positions:

March 8, 1926 •
May30,1994
In tears we saw you
~inking, we watche-d
you fade away.
Our hearts were almost

Train er II Involves providing remedia1/ennchmen t

educational services, worksite review and
mainlenance, record maintenance, and·other required
activities . Pos ition requires BA Degree in Education.
valid Ohio Teaching Certificate, valid Driver's License,
and reliable transportation .
Positions will require travel in Gallia and Me igs
Counties . Appli cations may be obtained and resumes
submitted allhe CAA Office. 8010 North State Route
7, Cheshire OH 45620-0272. Deadline for submiss1on
is 4;30 p.m. on Friday. June 9, 1995. ·
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYE

110

Help Wanted

PSYCHOLOGISTfTHERAPIST
Preste ra Cen ter lor Mental Health Services, Inc., a
health care provider of mental health and
substance abuse services, seeks a licensed
p~ychologist or therapist to provide clinical
supervision to Mason County programs and to
provide clinical services to adults and c hildren in
outpatient sett ing or with contractual agencies.
Requires Master 's degree in psychology/human
services field plus two years experience and
professional license or license eligibility. Excellent
benefit s. Submit resume including salary
requirem ents to:
PRESTERA CENTER
Human Resources/ .
Mason County Supervisor
P.O. Box 8069
Huntington; WV 25705
EOt;JAA

In Loving Memory ol
CECIL P. RIFFLE
passed away
· May 29. 1994
You would si1 in your
chair and read your
Btble almost every day.
And in Silence bow
your head and pray.
Sometimes lh!l . days
seemed long. Then
one day Jesus spoke
and sard its time to
take you home. We
are thankful to God lor
th e years He gave
us the years we
shared with you.
We miss your smile,
your love, and your
compassion for us and
olhers who knew you.
We will always love
you and never forget
you .

Tess, Butch, Dwight,
·c_!!rolyn &amp; lenni

'

'

broken.

You foughl so hard to
stay.
Our hearts still ache
with sad ness .
Secret tears stillllow.
What it meant to loose
you no one will ever
know.
In life we loved you
dearly.
In death we love you
Sl ill.
For in our hearts you
hold a part. no one will
ever fill
It broke our hearts to
_lose you.
But you did not go
.
alone. For parts of us
went With you lhe day .
God took Y';lU home.

'·

�.-

-

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Gallpolll
A VIcinity

CUI.,..... YMI ~ . _ . WI• ........... 11W -tor
n. a.. c..,. ..... 01 Ulll ._,.,_1.0173.
... - · . , .... Hell-

•••

~P)·-lchoiiiiiJIIIoo
-·~~·-·
-..
IIIMIIillo llldivldU· 'Mr4
WI-I ...
Wo-

"""'* ...._...,.
..,_._0W~

111 10

Urltlg

--All ... Au·
lal In Chorw .......... KHJII!It
o\flpolnl-111 Errwnd Mala·

C\..,~llo=:::r..~

PDtneroy,

I'WI·IImt- ~aldan­

MlddJepon

- .. 7,1114)............... Cllelhft
.,
Gulllra CIMIIN U... l lllullntl. WI. - - . .,._ 114Conomlrloll, Aoololoinllod, - · ....,11 • .,. . . . . .
.,........1111.
::---::-:-:-:-::--::-:-: LIU To WaiOII loholl
GlotOM - · -~ Aol ~ Durlnt Tho luiii=~
juatlll

...... =·= . . . ,.,._,,.

_,.,.,, Acllwlllea All """""' Homo Cltonlnt, -~ly or bl·
•looallllni&lt;AIIPU-- -._Etc. M4 Ollor M De- _ . , . . . _ _ 1 1 4 Including Saturday mornlnga

• VIcinity
All 'l'lrd Bt ..l IIUII Bt ...ld In
A - Doadlna· 1 GGpm 1ho
,., btlort , . ad II 10 run. Sundol' tdldon- 1 :aopm Frlclty, llan--IG:aoa.m.Salurdly.

llu11 lie lllgh achaal .,...,,.. or
equlnitnl educadon Clall .,.,..
...... _ _ ........... Send

-IIOP0801114PIWV2111G.

Pert on

to clean hou u 1day 1

- . Cd ..._
11413

8-3. 814-256-

_.,...,_,_A-·Orl¥·

.

... u..n.. M4 I'Mtlbiy-

......, ..

Trjf':Lan To a-m. A , ·n::::--:"'"~~:-:-:--::--::;:;-::-~:-::
........~
•
00 fPer Hour for 11orw 1ft. IIIU'I Lawncort, will do WOrd
lonntllon, l'llltt Coli 11+317·
7:114El18
114-37M111 Allllorllllot.

Wl.lli.FE~
011111

POSTAL JOBS
112.21111&lt; To Slar1 PIUI Btnafto..

w..-, Stell~~• ...,_

"'
...nee. EtD. No EIPo NUIIII'J.

Now Hlrlnt. For lnlo Coil (218)
Carrltfl, Sonora, Clorka, lloln- 184-0010 &amp;t. 11017, 8 A.lol To 11
tenanco For An Appllcallonl a P.ll. 7 0..0.
....... 1-3- Hitty Holtlr illldt E1orn lnlo Call 1-100-llg·5111
WUli.F£ .c:cNSERVAilON
32117 Pine Or- Rd , Rlclne &amp;t. 3Z, • A.ll .. P.ll 7 0.,0.
~-JOBS..... " ....
Samtzn'l-.F*'._
Gamt ,_..,
nty, _,_
Need Reaponaltwe People To
Pick Slra!OioorMI, AplllJ In Ptr· 1tnanct, ElL No Elop. N _ , .
Junt
1-3,
-~~.
llin1l
tabM, upholaltrad ehllr, loll ol ton 1-12 Salurd1y llay 27th Now Hlrlnt. For Info Ctll (218)
&amp;t. 1710, ' A.ll To 11
nloc. Flralhoutt palllltlhodlll Toylora lllrry .,.ICh, 2114 Korr 184-0010
P.ll. 7 0.,0.
Cluchln~

Wa

-.-.at

'l'lrd ..... 548 H11dloy SlrHI,
NOW HIRING
IIIII I ot Olio, Junt 111. 2nd. a Wt Art A Growing Compenr
3nl. miRY dllorlnlSetlclna A lloli¥11td Ptrton For
'l'lrd lilt- 1&amp;1 Walnul, lllddlt· Advtrllalng Salta You 11u11
Good Comnunlc:allon Skllla,
port Saturday only, rurnlturl, omolllllml and clolhlng lam Rtlloblt Toanoporlellon And A

180 WanlldTo Do

!.'l:'n:!:=

ProloaiHinll T- ..,_,eonplete Tree Caro, Bucu1 Truck
--60
F l - . -.,flo.
moval, FrM Etdma..t( In·
.......... Z4 HI ~ICY .8tfy.
let .Call And Savel No Tr11 Toe
111g Or Toe -1114 381 8143,
114o317-7G10

-=-... .-:...~,:-E::-,-..
lndng. Complete Lawn Cort

I :Rao~...
~-=
... ~~:-

7""
..

&amp; Vlclnhy

OH 4!640

Bullneu

210

Opportunity
INOriCEI

OHIO VAlLEY PUIILISHING CO
rtcOmmtnda .,., you lie bull·
ntll with peoplo you - · and
NOT 10 ttnd lllroudl ...
Fll undl you lwvlt 1-llgalad

..-..

'"*'I llol., Gtllpolls. CH 48131.

m

1\L

r',rl\r l

:.t-:Jzi:''14G'

iaiia;;,~~...
;m;;;..~2iillalht.iid;~l~~~~~;;.......,;;;;:

==·~::: ~~;.

I

7217

~~~ :1-F=~-~
2·K, Young Scholl A~urTng
s...... 3 Dora ,.,
lllnf.

84.1.0
W.Y PHCHE ROUTE
IG Local And Eallbll- Slroa.
Earn $1,100 Wttkly, Opon 24

Brfclt Ronah,
l l -...
2blthlo '
dining
a living' Iroom,
In tround

1

mume11 440 3D57

····=

Hou,._ Cll1400 1118 15M

53111 pm.

So-·

Saturday June 3, 199510:00 am

GEORGE E. WOODWARD JR. •
AUCTIONEER

171-3431

co~

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
JUNE 2 &amp; 3, 1995
9:30A.M.

Wanted Lillie Tykea Ouldoor
C•alle In Good CondWon, 61 ..

Located at the Auction Center on Rt 33 In Mason, WV. will be selling
Estate of Catherine Hurst of Coal Grove, Ohio. The Estate has
EMPLOYMENT
moved to the Auction Center In Mason, WV.
SERV ICES
Mrs Hurst was a doll collector for 40 years as well as a doll artist
An Outstandmg Auction!!
110 Help Wanted
... ,,Y doll related Items &amp; dolls will be sold on Friday with remaining
~A-::u~n-:p::1-:p::,,::.=::••::n::,~P;;:o::,::,.:;-,'Dpo:::,:;:, Items selling Saturday.
'

2ol5-5887

UOna aYBIIable Pamanent f\.tiiDme
far clerkllaorlera Full benefits
:"'
""" For exam date, application and

"

~-

oalary lnlo 7os 28 4 1800 ext
3670 8lm "'8pm.

~ AVON I All Areas I Shrrl•1
"' Spoata. 30H7S-t 429
~ AVONSELLSATWOAKHOME
• Noed Additionallncome?
;: AYe&lt;aga 118-1 15/Hr llonefiiJI
~ i:"J.~~ lndlre!&gt;

:t
{

.

AVON"' bur or MI. llaru,n. ,,.
882 2t4&amp; or
~ 1.eoo-IG2.a368
~ Babyolnor a&gt;r 8 yo~~ old ,...., be
:: alllt"' """"'al• be II_. or
" older Call 814 441 •1818 ohor

.f

clt~ntrop 3Q.4

':

4pm.
Donal Aaal-

J

Currenllf Accepting R.. umea

~

I For Pltt-Timo And /Or Full Tlmt
'\ Poolrlon Hopotido Immunization
" And Rodlotogy E•lltflonct HtiJ&gt;~ 1111 Sand Rtapontt To CLA 354
cJo Gllllpollo Dallr Trlbunt 825
~ Third Avonuo, Galllpolla, OH
:: 45831
,
' Eaor Workl E•cononl Pori AI
,!

temblt Producll At Hom. Call
Toll Free, 1 800 &lt;407·55&amp;0, Ext

DOLLS

puppets 1295 FS&amp;C Shrrley look alike, 22 Bubbles Compo, Celluloid Nancy
Brsque P.ln cushron H&amp;K 250 lg chrna 1909 S&amp;H, By La Gebreder &amp;
Heuback (head) pnmabve clown Mrckey Mouse waxhead (.n egg) Effanbee
Ideal Patty Play Pal Shtrley Betsy McCall Gerber, Cabbage Patch collectron
IC:arrrelcrt. Vogue Bnckette Nrcole Gmnys 10 G WTW Dolls artrst scale 5 1/2
L &amp; TTL all ong , 18 8 Ma Alex MIB, FAO Samantha 200 plus art1st dolls, 5 It
Santa large troll bears-Dakrn Bach1ngham Snuggable, Russ Gund Annette
Fumcello 25th Anmversary Barbre drshes wrcker buggy and strollers doll clothes,
doll houses doll books doll bed, paper mache doll house Vrct walnut cradle
l"•alnut doll bed &amp; more
FURNITURE
Beautrful tall walnut V1ct bed walnut marble top washstand chrfforobe chests
oak cupboard base foldrng hr cha1&lt; pressback hr charr (horse), small wooden
cabrnet krtchen table and four charrs chrld s oak rocker Coca Cola-RC Cola·
Peps1 Cola trunks, recliners metal desk metal cabrnet metal fold1ng cha11s oak
mrn sewrng machrne t2 &amp; 20 drawer storage cabrnets 4 It showcase 2 large
showcases 5 modern bookcases GE refngerator, Kenmore washer and dryer
(like new)
GLASSWARE
Ruby glass coball glasses, Green Depression Spamsh frgunnes blue frwt Jars, 4
pc set Cornrngware lead and slag glass lampshade lead and slag glass
chandelier German lamp
TOYS
Old games two old wooden toy pranos, toy crane, toy sewrng machrne collection
of McDonald s
and others

3• 313

money clock bank dated 1885 old metal doll house furnrture old m1n
GOVl POSTAL JOBS
metal doll buggy wrth carousel and others child s wrcker set two childs rce cream
~ s10 r1 123 eaa /$34 800 Yr Call
charrs 3 wrcker buggres chrldren blue willow drshes chrld s punch bowl baskets
,. For Emplo,monl lnlormodon And lwick•er sewmg basket collection of rollmg prns coffee gnnder meat grinder
"' Appl«olian, r-atll-&amp;oe-53&amp;4 E•l carousel horse qurlts collectron of thrmbles , costume jewelry, blue &amp; whrle
~ 114
chamber pot Kraft rtems, matenal kitchen ttems , old hobby horse, linens, table
~ HIGH·SCHOOL SENIORS AND
dolhes Chnstmas decorations protures rug beaters pots pans mrn cast
GRAbUATES· Do you nood 10 rron stove lg collectiOn of stuffed anrmals starnless steel tea set wooden crates,
••rn money while you re In
ochool? Poll rim• jobo In 1ho large wooden bananas box rron kettle, rron pots stone pllchers, stone jars jugs

~

Well

Vlrglnl• Army N1tlonal

Guwd can ~ you • IDr of •r.

mtn

IrOn

and more

"::

=~ 111!'!~~
tools Craftsman J•g saw, Ram 3/8 dnll, Cummrns Mack drill press, bench
aummor whtn 1ou are ou1 of I arin1jer. Weller electric solder gun table top vrse pipe threader prpe cutters
achOol A caroor In lilt Guard
yard tools one sec11on of pnvacy fence electnc weedeater, Craftsman
oould be tho boa1nn1nD of_.,.
HP lawn edger s1epladder and lnore
lng proll lor ,.. E•n ....,. lhan
A t
d ct d b
&amp;I ,., hour lor ont w•okend 1
uc ron con u e y
mon11r. n.....,..,.. ..~.~..,.
eoonet you will recalve your ftr1r
po1cl!tckl Coil »4-875-5837 or
Mason, W (304) 773·5785 or 773·5447
1 1100 842-3118
Lunch
Auctroneers Rrck Pearson #66 tSevtn Meadows #1191
Co Executors Sue Whe~ei &amp; Paula Conley
~ T-erms .Cash or Chec~ wrth JQ,.0ut'Of-Stat&lt;Hluy9lS must lJ.av~ current
bank letter ol credit unless known to Auctron Co
Not responsrblil for accrden_ts or Joss of prope"X: ,_L
-------ticensed &amp; bonded rn Ohto, Kentuck¥ and West Vrr:ymra

Rick Pearson Auction Co.

100,000 BTU HI EftleiiM1
au Furntot - IIIII " - "
Vtry RtottnllriJ PrloH, 0no
Ulad 21KW EIHiflc Furnace,
Connl Nt~.- ~
Plitt, 1.1Q0·217- Or fi4-

21Win

liz• ...,..., 11 ...- · l;;u:..:••::3CI:;:"~:-::~~::-:-:::::-

1301. 1-IGWI740111 Ull ~• ., ..
2 WindoW Nt ~ 114- Slii-272DAFTERIP.II.

-11.

""'""""'!d.

Eurllrll T-,
llltiiFI _......, aiHpo I, 1482 ... , _ 1212 ... 114-4410810.

0000

Appl-.

· · drJMI, relrigoraiDn,
....... SlraiiGI
71

•

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

USED APPLIANCES

....... Coil t14-441-71111,

-

Ntw llalltrcrof1 11 112" acroll
- · - 1300. ttll lor 1110 or

....,_,.,._,.,.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, June 3, 10:00 a.m.

RICK PEARSON AUOION CO

DIRECTIONS Approx 95 ml SE of Cols Oh From,
Cols take 23 S to Chillicothe, 35 E to Rio Grande
turn left on 325 N to Vrnton OH Turn nght on 160
Go approx 3 blocks to sale, across from Cltgo
Estate of Oty Stewart· Executrix Opal Payne· and
belongings of Ella Payne who IS 98 years old and rn a
nursmg home
ANTIQUE AND COLLECTIBLES
Treadle sewrng machme, wood floor lamp oak library
table d1mng room table w/6 chairs chma closet 4
wood cha~rs, 2 metal floor lamps rush btm ladder
back cha11 srde board cup board expandmg clothes
rack, 4 It porch sw•ng, oak dresser w/swlvel m1rror, 3
oak pressed back cha~rs, dbl metal p1pe bed ladder
back rocker, late 1800's Lowboy 3 drawer chest
Duncan Phyffe chair, smoker's stand w/Hull
contarners cedar chest trunk, 2 strarght razors sljbe
last, Dretz #2 lantern, chicken rncuba1ors. Sears
wnnger washer WWJ + WWII mll1tary unrforms, camel
saddle footstool kraut cutter, White Mnt apple peeler,
umversal gnnder, dollies. feather prllows, brass bugle,
old cook books Wagner Magnalite + No 8 cast Iron
chicken fryer, cast rron kettle, AL teakettle
Depfessron condrment shakers cast rron + Gnswold
skrllets wooden handle krtchen utensils crock bowl,
McCoy planter Frrek1ng bowl and pre plates grantte
pan old National Geographic magazmes green·
glass-grape center ptece and Rogers Bro srlverware
In case
FURNITURE
Table w/6 cha.rs coffee table+ 2 end tables, Lane
rechner, prne rocker desk lg wall mrrror, G E elect
range + washer &amp; dryer bar stools, rronrng board,
upnght freezer cha1se lounge, hide-a-bed RCA b+\'1
1V pole towel rack, pole shelves wall mounted
hangrng lamp, pole lamp, hall tree stool, bath stool,
sm table utrhty cart TIT trays, what not shelves,
Kirby sweeper (used 3 trmes), cast rron ash tray
stand umbrella stand + waste basket 12 volt Krrby
sweeper, several stand tables vamty lamps Tappan
frost free refng prcmc table table w/4 charrs, foldrng
table warm mornrng coal slave, box spnngs &amp;
mattress 3 charrs sectional couch metal shelf lamp,
floor buffer hampers wooden stool, bedroom set
w/dresser chest of drawers + bookcase headboard
upholstered charrs + rockers wall m1rror ZenHh color
TV, Suburban LP gas space heater elect heaters,
walnut bookcase, step slool Maytag Auto washer
Kelv1nator range G E refng , 4 drawer kitchen
cabmet, utrlity cart k1tchen cab1net w/drawer + door,
glider, rockrng lawn chair metal bed maple bed +
chest drmng room table baby cradle vamty
magazme rack plywood box Electrux &amp; G E
sweepers elect mantle clock, gun rack chrld safety
gate basket, table lamps cot, plus other
MISC
Elect razors newspaper roller smoke alarm, brrd
feeder, lots canmng Jars, orl lamp wall bracket
Grngerbread house rnsulators, barometer bottle
cutter k1t, mop buckets w/wnngers 2 row plant
dusters elect timer porch blrnd, thermometers, rifle
scope books, frreplace tools boat seat, boat cushron,
terranum wallpaper paste brush blankets spreads
Tupperware elect appl (kmfe skrllet bro1ier oven
coffee pot, mrxers hand and stand corn popper 2
slice toaster + ~ron), Presto pressure cooker canrster
set starnlj1ss flatware, food processqr, Veg-o-matrc,
egg ~eater Japan creamer several prlchers retr1g
d1sh, cake plate 44 pes Whrte Mrst chrna, Revere
Ware pans &amp; canrsters krlchen utensilS, chrcken on
nest, bath scales, Prth helmet, hair dryer magazmes
bread box wash tubs charcoal gnll, blue Chnstmas
lights lelephone w/lntercom CB radios luggage
record player calculator desk set linens recrpe
books mvalid supplies, fur mutt &amp; stole, tres belts
flower arrangements, table cloths AT&amp;T cordless
phone, cassette recorder dommoes, brrd houses
stoneware grease 1ar w/s + p, green + orange
decanters fold up walker, Drrt Devrl, ram gear, plus
much more
TOOLS
1/4 + 3/8 B + W elect dnlls tire pump, grease gun
jumper cables parnl roller ext handle battery charger
router table 1rash can garden cart, rubber t11e wheel
barrow ladder Jacks lawn sweeper, 6 awmngs, fert
spreader 12V sprayer, wrre cage, car ramps gas
cans 100 ext cord, workbench w/v1ce, lawn mower
.wheels, pressure • sprayer hyd jack, 12V arr
compressor soldenng gun Craftsman tool box
hedge tnmmer gnnder propane torches garden
tools, posl hole drggers hand tools, Jap beetle trap,
elect weedeater, plant duster, Cub Cadet gas edger,
gas edger w/b + S engme, Workmate tool bench,
MTD 3 hp mower, 2 7 x 8 garage doors (complete)
5' step ladder, )tg saw, glue gun, True temper + Zebco
fishing rods Plano rod case, landrng net, 2 hie vests,
14 Uncle Bucks crappre catcher, 12 It V t:&gt;ottom boat
and Lri Rascal elect scooter w/crane for trunk of car
Thrs rs only a partral listrng There rs a very large
assortment of modern day rtems and other Items m
boxes yet to be sorted If you don t fi•d what you want
at th1s sacle we will ba holdrng our regular antique +
collectrble sale at 7 00 p m the same day, plus, you
can shop at litoland s Antique Shop between the
sales Plan to spend the ent~re day and evenrng rn
Vinton Ohro where fllends are easy to make and
antiques are easy to find

Sale Location: Intersection ot Rt. 160 &amp; 124
In Wilkesville, Ohio
Antlqu• &amp; Collectibles: 48' round oak table, oval
library table, Gilbert mantle clock (walnut),
Sessl&lt;ons manlle clock (very ornate), oak rocker,

~::~~~~:;~~~)~~buffet, ktdney-shape !able

1920's
books (late 1BOO's), 3 steamer trunks
Baker), rron skillets, lnct1on lays, old Homer
Laugrnuln drshes, wooden adv boxes, pnmrtrve oak
depression glass (sev patterns), brass spittoon,
.,
..
___
pattern
&amp; pressed glass, some carntval glass,
1
Barbie Doll more m1sc
Household &amp; mise· portable dishwasher, chest
type freezer, desk charrs, hie C!lblnet, m1sc small
!abies, stands &amp; shelves, baskets, stuffed toys, craft
1tems, small appliances, Chnstmas decoratrons,
hammock &amp; lawn furniture. maple chest coffee I~U'"· I
sev boxes of toys, moped table saw, 1981 ""''•·•
Cltat•on (106,000 miles), more Items not listed
n

Owner: Phyllis Mulholand

Auctioneer:

Leslie Lemley

614-446-6241
Licensed &amp; Bonded in St. of Ohio
Lunch served by No-Fear 4-H Club
Cash/ Approved Check

Not Responsible for Accidents or Lost Property

Pu6fic JLuction
June 3, 1995 At 9:00A.M.
From Gallipolis, take Route 160 West approx 2
miles, tum right onto Bulavllle Pike. Approx 9
miles. Watch for signs.
OWNER MOVING TO FLORIDA
HOUSEHOLD Maple Single bed, Jenny Lynn bed
ash dresser, 3 drawer pme desk &amp; charr, maple
gun cabrnet • holds 1oguns 2 glass display cases
maple drop·leaf table round coffee table linens
prctures. lamps maple china hutch, electnc fans
cold packet, canmng Jars electnc bug zapper golf
clubs, m1sc drshes gun books charrs, lawn cha11s
filing cab1nets, replica sprnmng wheel, stand table
round end table, chest of drawers bookcase, coat
upholstered cha1r mtsc glassware, what-nots
Sears dryer. small refrigerator
GUNS· Wrnchester 22 mag semr automatrc, 550
Remrngton 22 650 Mac sholg~n leader, Pacrfrc
power press Turb Lyman reloadrng press, 357
01es, 30 06 D1es 32·20 Dtes 222 D1es 22 Hornet
30·30 Ores, 22·250 Ores, 264 mag 6 5 D1e
FARM EQUIP 8 N Ford tractor 3 pt h1tch 3 It
blade Dearborne #12 plows 4ft King Kul brush
hog p1g pole 5 It drag dtsc
CAR t981 Cutlass Supreme Olds 2-8 It Chev
truck beds
ANTIQUES
Stone 1ars
kerosene lamps
Westclock alarm clock buffet oak 3 drawer dress·
er w1th high back mrrror, Donaghho stone #14 1ar
30 gal stone JUg, #3, 5 &amp; 14 stone 1ar Forest
Festival whiskey decanter, money banks, Eng
Mad Dock creamer m1ik can, school desk mrsc
dishes, brown JUg
TOOLS Elec B&amp;D mrtre saw Craftsman 6" JOinter
w/stand, Craftsman 10' radral saw
2 75 hp
w/table, Chrcago elec t 0' 1 h hp table saw BICO
12 speed heavy duty dnll press Craftsman elec
scroll saw, B&amp;D sander, Skill 6' bench gnnder, Skill
belt sa'n~er acetylene torch wNtctor gauges &amp;
hoses, creeper Craftsman m1tre hand saw 220
volt Champion arr compressor w/80 gal tank • 300
lbs pressure AC or DC Craftsman 250 amps, 220
V welder ChiCago elec 120 V m1g welder, 12 It
work bench 4 ton floor jack • long frame, 2Y. ton
lloor jack Jack stands wet/dry vac , dnll b•t sharp·
ener, engrne stand log chains. Poulan chain saw
McCullough cha•n saw lots of hand tools gasoline
(\l'Welld eater, tool boxes, new tool boxes for small
p1ckup truck, 100 ft cutting hose reel, power cut off
tool control valve • tank &amp; pump for log spliHer
MISC Elec trarn set, wash tub C 8 radto, p1ng
pong table 4 Webster 11' nms for Chev , Sears 4
new t~res 225 75x15 radial tubeless, Y.' steel
beams firewood, alum w1ndows, barrel, porch
sw•ng angle rron, truck trres 10·00·20 9-00·20,
p1cmc tables, dog houses, Myers deep well pump
and tank lots lots more not IIS!ed
THIS IS A GOOD CLEAN SALE
OWNER, JERRY DARST
Eats
Cash
Positive' I D.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER Lie. 3615
614·379-2720
NOt Raeponelble for Accident or Loa.-of Pf~perty;' •
Lie and Bonded In Stale of Ohio

__

COME.AND.!L~N

STAY

Two I,GOOBTU riDitlolr condl
llontrl t:IOOIIrolll, ulad 2moa
JIM.m2311.

--

- - 1oun1r btcL u lro1IDm.
. , ... Comta - "'llmoy" ...
.... ollor, Ol...lenl COM&lt;IIon,
114-882-31Morll4-11247111
WHITE'SIIETAI.DETECTORS

--. ............
Ron-. ~1210
11
:::.Gallopllt, Olio, -

BUlldlnQ

550

Go.--

Suppllel

Raolng w
Sldlno, Cut To Link 814·3&amp;11314
111 Slttllk!Mdlr\g aa.. 3G To 10

a

OWl,

llnllllo tie Cltudo Win-

Rio Orondo, OH Colll14 245·
5121

AKC Rtalaltfad Ftmtlo IIIUttt
_ , . . 1 Year Old Duo To Como
In HHI. ComH With Her Own

•s•1• Pon AM DoghouM 1250
114-3117AKC roglaltrad .,.klnotao, 1
malt, 1 llmtlt. 814-1182-4508.
Amorlcon Coeur Spenltl Pup.
pita, AKC Rtglortrad, Clilmplon
.. 114-3711-2721.
llild1, lguana1o Toronluila, mlct
Flah Tonk &amp; Pel Shop, 2413
Jackaon Ave Point Pltuant,
304-675-1!083.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Thur. Eve. June 1st 1995
6:00pm
1

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday June 3, 1995 10:00 am.
Located 15 m1les South of Gallipolis on Old State
Route 7

I

7511

Terms Cash

2 bodrocm
Manor lnd
In lllddleCall114Oppor·

'

Nlct 2bocln&gt;om Wid hookup. Ref
AU real estate advertiSing In
thiS newspaper is subjeCito
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advert1se ~any preference
limitation or d1scnmlflat10n
based on race color religion
S8)( fam 11a1 status or nafional
origin or anv intention to
make any such preference
hm1talion or dlscnmlnatlon •
Th1s newspaper will not
knowtlngly accept
actvenisements for real estate
wntch IS •n violatiOn of the law

Our readers are hereby
Informed that 811 dWellingS
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opporeunlty basis

erences OeposiL No pall 304

ll$-5112.
One bedroom apartment In Pt
Pleillll1~ furnllhod, cleon &amp; - ·
no poll. Phone 304-675-13&amp;1

meror 814 882 2432 or 114-882·

Twm Rivera Tower rraw acc.ptlng
application• lor 1br HUD auboldize,:t~t for elderly and handl

co

Bernrce V Rose Owner

After 72 yrs rn busrness Oscar s Restaurant Located
at 57·59 Court St Gallipolrs Ohro has closed and wrll
oHer at Publrc Auct1on
"EQUIPMENT
4' starnless steel work table five chest deep freezers,
6'x8' walk rn cooler Hobart S S meat slicer S S
cubber S S gnnder, commercial m1xer, S S
refngerator, S S deep fryer Valcan borler uprrte deep
freezers, S S. 3 compartment srnk, refrigerators
servmg cabrnet glass door storage cabrnet F F
cutter, wooden storage shelf, Magrc Chef mrcrowaves
small wet bar S S servrng cabrnet Vrctor cash
regrster bar approx 30 w/coolers &amp; srnk 11 padded
bar stools, 11 wooden charrs 8 booths buy one of
Oscar s ongrnal booths 7 srngle &amp; 1 double drv1ders
rce machrne back bar 17 glass top tables 45" x 27"
38 gray charrs 11 brown cha11s 2 wooden htgh charrs
wooden servrng cart 10 tray stands 12 square tables
plus more
UTENSELS
\
Approx 1o dz tableware glasses coffee cups &amp;
sausers plates bowls S S pans &amp; contarners S S
cookware butter warmer S S creamers large tron
sk11iets, rn1sc krtchen ware butcher block !able hot
plates, S &amp; P sets ash trays 50 small cocktarl drshes
ANTIQUE &amp; ECT
Paper roller, Gallia Food Co Thermomeler Seth
Thomas elec clock 7 mrsc srze m~rrors wooden pop
~rates RCA 1V Bulletin Board, mne red electnc lrghts
candle holders addrng machrne m1sc lrnens napkrns
table clolhs &amp; table skrrtrng 4 door lrle cabrnet large
safe chrlds booster seats plus lots lots more
OWNER • Evelyn Brady

Reg. ..... ,. ................

Hall - · holl I'll Bull pupploo. oro bollbtcl. - . a - s - . -.JS. -114-112·1711.

P10-l

0oa GroominG Vln-

and

=-~':':':~~::::"'::-:::=
poln
~-"'-.. - - . 1200 Wlpa.

.., a Alo Grondo! Area, 20'foar1 pora, 1100 wlfwul cal114-tl2·
E•petlenct For Appointment,
814-201-11014.
2107
Prolltalonal Pol Groemlng. All 570
MUSical
llrMclt, RoiM. Gulf
InStrUments

car-t--

anlHd latltfactlon, Your Pets
s-.1 Btol frltnd LHvo Me• K.Ill
•eo
I I Canl Go1 To Phone 0t Whllo llorltl KG ·20 RolaN
Coil Allor 8 P.ll Call Anw""' For 114700 Will StU For Ltll TI'IM

~~rr~·...-~"'~":.!'~14-~26U~=ss5o~==E'I2=1'11co.=:•:•......_.:111.

~
' -

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

ANTIQUE OR COLLECTIBLE SALE
VINTON, OHIO
SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1995, 7:00P.M.
Drrectlons Approx 95 mr SE of Cols , Oh Take 23
S to Chrllicothe, 35 E to Rro Grande Turn left on 325
N to Vinton, Oh
FURNITURE Vrctonan charr Old Man of the
Mountam pressed back oak rocker, wardrobe 4
drawer chest 1nlard oak fern stand walnut fimsh table
w/drawer 2 prpe day beds table w/3 chairs &amp; buffet,
mrrrors ball &amp; claw p1ano stool sm. Duncan Phyffe
table, brass oval p1cture trame plus more
TOYS AMF Frre Dpt pedal car. Murray 3 wheeler,
chalk blk boy frsh•ng, 60s Barb•es Davy Crocket
(approx 3) 50s Magnas accordron 4 Lionel cars 2
Dmky toy buses, Tootsre Toys.. -231 + -239 cars, 2
40 s state trks , 40 s pop trk 30 s trk w/srde dump
tra•ler 2 frre trks + cannon, 3 40 s rubber cars, 3
40's cast rton trks , London Toy #57. 30 s Fageal cast
bus, 40 s Ideal piastre Ford trk plus other sm
metal toys
GLASS &amp; POTTERY Approx 25 crocks &amp; jugs· A P
1Jonaghho (1 +2 gal) Wrlliams &amp; Reppert (2 gal),
glass butter mold Hamrlton &amp; Jones (cracked) butter
paddles wood comb box, wooden chalk &amp; c1gar bxs
Keen Cutter chrsel box 4 7 pes Jns &amp; Herrrngbone
108 pes Curner &amp; lves 43 pes Royal Rose (Japan)
6 Ruby cups Fenton green Depressm DepressiOn
carnrval orl lamps plus much more
MISC Wagner Gnswold Enterpnse cherry prtter
several sad rrons &amp; handles shoe last Indian
Artrfacts ·6 1/4" knrfe '5 arrow heads 44 pes mrsc
artifacts, shoe hook square nalls AR trme table &amp;
tokens copper bo1ier 1937 Darly Tnbune (Pomeroy,
Oh) costume 1ewelry (From estate) Banner churn,
plus much more
I
ADVERT Putnam dye &amp; Brach s candy racks,
Cookie box lids Tee Cee syrup bottles Hopalong
Cassrdy glass cement Mrckey &amp; Mrnnre fig Coke
tray 1956 "Ike" button 50s 70s Elvrs records baking
powder cans Polack Wheeling therm Mother
Hubbard flour scoop plus other m1sc

AUCTIONEER FINIS uiKE" ISUC
PHONE· 614-388-9370 and 388 8880
Lrcensed and bonded Ohro -3728
Terms Cash or approved check
Not responsrble for accrdents or lost ~ems
WE! HAVE AN ESTATE SALE AT 10 00 AM
THE SAME DAY IN VINTON, LOOK FOR
AD IN THtS PAPER
STATEMENTS MADE DAY OF SALE HAS
PRECEDENCE OVER PAINTED MATERIALS
Real Estate General

Uood Realty,

Inc.

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446.1066
Allen C Wood Realtor/Broker 446·4523
Ken Morgan Realtor/Broker 446 0971
Mose Canterbury Realtor 446 3408
Jeanette Moore Realtor· 256·1745
Tim Watson Realtor-446 2027

DAN SMITH - Racine, 0.

EOH _.75-88711

Auctioneer

Upatalra, 3 Roomo &amp; Bath (1 Bed-

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER'

room), Fum1shed Clean, Reier

once and Oepooll Required, No
PalO 814-44&amp;-1518

Crown Crty' Oh1o
Phone 256 6740

Dhro #1344 W Va #515
Posrtrve 10
NO EATS
Cash
"Not responsrble for accrdents or loss of property

'

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

NEED MORE BEDROOMS??
Th rs one has 4/5
bedrooms 1 batH' localed on one acre COME SEE
THIS NOWII PRICED RIGHT!!
NEW 1994 MORRIS LEXINGTON mobrle home located
rn Quarl Creek park 14 x 70 MUST SEE CALl: FOR
APPOINTMENT

"64" Convertible
Juke Box

HOME WITH 3 BEDROOMS 1 car attached garage 2
car

unattach~d

~ /2

garage on 2

acres more or less

CALL FOR APPOINTMENTII!

Public:. Sale
&amp; Auction
Summer Sav1ngs Sale
2 days only June 9th &amp; 1Oth
Special Store Hours B 00 am • 8 00 pm
1 33 x 22 stainless steel srnk 8" deep Reg $69 95
NOW $4995
5 1/2' deep stainless sleelsrnk Reg $34 95
NOW$2495
8" deep polished finrsh starnless steel srnk Reg '79 95
NOW '59 95
B·grade counler lops Reg $5 00 ft NOW $4 QO It
Allrn stock utrlity cabrnel 20% 10 50% off
''.
Assorted wall cabrnets 20% on
Unfinrshed oak cabrnet doors Reg $6 00 NOW $3 00
36" pantry Reg $459 95 NOW $299 95
Good selection lrte oak flat panel krtchen cabrnets In
stock
10 24X26 oak medrcrne cabrnets $59 95
11 30X30 oak medrcrne cabrnet $79 95
12 36X30 oak medrcrne cabinet $89 95
13 19" oval drop rn lavatory bowls 30% off good colors
14 Blue pedrstal srnk Reg $69 95 NOW $39 95
15 25x19 oak vanity base &amp; marble top $129 951o
$144 95
16 31X19 oak vanrty base &amp; marble top $159 951o
$t64 95
, 17 .37X19 oak vamty base &amp; marble top $169 95 to
'
$189 95
1 18 49X 19 oak vanrty base &amp; marble top $204 95 to $
25995
19 5 &amp; 6 counter tops wrth m1ter $1 0 00 each
20 Large selectron kitchen &amp; vanity faucets
CASH &amp; CARRY ONLY NOTHING HELD NO RETURNS
CABINET WAf!EHOUSE
BOll 2232 Honeyauckle Ln. _
Wellatona, Oh 45682
1114-3114-4115

I

AUCTIONEER FINIS "IKE! ISAAC
Pl)one. 614-3118-9370 and 3118-8880
L•censed and Bonded Ohro #3728
Terms Cash or approved check
Not responsible for accrdentsJ)r JDSI rtems
Food and Drrnkswrll be available
~~~~\~~~~~!~, made day of sale has precedence over
matenals
~ ~

One bedroom Ul~dleport, one
and two bedroom, New Haven,
three bedrooms downtown Po

Due to the death of my husband Lee Rose, the
lollowtng will be sold
2 flat bed wagons (14 x16 ), MF mowmg machine,
JD corn planter, potato planter, Ferguson 2 bottom
plow, boom pole, tobacco setter manure spreader,
pull type disc 3 pt post hole d1gger, hay rake on
steel, JD 10 lime &amp; fertilizer spreader w/grarn
augers. JD 820014 7 gra1n dnll JD 3 16 plows, bar
harrow for d1sc (3 sections), one lot tobacco st1cks,
heat hous•ng for tractor. 3 pt blade, 5 supenor
grarn dnll drag harrow, 3 pi seed sower scales,
Homehte and McCulloch cham saw, one lot of
tobacco st1cks, H D sled H D plows, H D wagon
bed, sled, one row cultivator, two row cultivator, cut
off saw, Chicken coop coal stove, cross cut saw,
wagon seat, log chams, some household ttems,
and many other mtscellaneous rtems

For ult I full blocdH .OoHio 1 olil. llw-. - - . •
pupo, I moltl 2 ltmllt, tiGG ~~~
...., 814-742 1111i0.

Wkll,
20 Fl a 25 Fllllrl 114 ~-----...:========::..----,
-14
.,
Bloclr, brick, _ , pipet, wind

1-.G . . , . .

VINTON, OHIO
SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 199510:00A.M.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

eatalaa Oaby Martin. e 1-4
882 7441

,.. . . . . . . lOW

ISAAC'S AUCTION SERVICE

Not responsrble for accrdents or loss of property

~ete

I

~

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

379-2844

ESTATE AUC.T ION

I

.....

'----------~--------­

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

EVELYN S. COX· OWNER
245-9574
•

.,.. Will buy one pleee or

_ __ __

Rtg. _......,...-,...,..,

llull Sell E141C1rlc ....,_,
Uatd IWfct,
cond..

773·5447 MASON W V n3·5785
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON 1166
AUCTIONEER KEVIN MEADOWS 111191
TEAMS CASH OR CHECK WITH I D
Nol ruponelblo tor accldenta or 1- of property

31udrocm Ron&lt;h. 2111111a,

poOl, ..,. lo~ nlct Call
.... Rtolty 304-175-30:10 "' 304-

. ....-.z.:.w;;:e

..

•

05

..... tor ....

8110

-· HI·
Located el the Mason County Felrgrounda 4
2•1..,y von Bupt~morUI, toouom ftoor mil• .outh of Point P'-nt, WV.
complolllr r-ed. 2 .,.,,
Taking con1lgnmanta on Mon. &amp; TuM. Mly 28th
llronl .,., 40'121', rtor .,., &amp; 30th from 1:00 am to 5:00 pm. Also till 1:00 em
1o~ 111,1100 Auction Day.

r.:l
:;::p·~=t.:r-~~75-

From R1o Grande, Oh1o lake State Route 325
South 2 9 miles to Centerpomt Road
Centerpoint Road 2 4 m1les to the farm Watch
for s1gns
1993 Playtime 24' Watercraft, 1988 50 hp Force
motor
Near New· Vemeer 504 Super I Round baler
(baled only 130 bales), two row New Idea
CornpiCker, New Holland 7' haybme, Massey
Ferguson hayrake, Kuhn hay tedder, John
Deere manure spreader, 9 wheel d1sk, Balt1c 3
pt fertilizer spreader, New Idea lime spreader,
Freeman 2000 loader, 6' tractor rotot•ller,
Massey Ferguson 7' mowing machme 6'
brushhog, cultivators, Oliver plows, hay wagons,
ant1que horse drawn corn planter, 3 pt d1rt
scoop, round bale hay movers, creepfeeder,
round bale feeders head gate, new yard roller,
lawn, garden and shop equ1pment too numerous
to menlion
Terms Cash or Checks w1th pos111ve I D

Wtnltd 1&lt;1 bur ondqut and uoed
fumllure. no item 100 "-rge or too

~ 11a..-~1· Page

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

WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1995
10:00 A.M.

...
..... 1 &amp; Docka, Odd Jolla, Frll
Eallmtlel, GuoroniiH Workl
114-441413Z, 11-1-111113.

PUBLIC AUCTION

Public Sale
and AuctiOn

.
.
.
------,
1M
FA
MACHINERY
AUCTION

........... ~ .. cw.
.... .,.., ....... cu aa. 121

EQUIPMENT LEASING, START
YOUR OWN BUSINESS Com·
plolt Tralnlna-Hiah lncont Tolal
Coli I781G.llr. Porioor, -ER
LEASING IERYICE 1·100-4&amp;1·

-llcloki,OIC.

80

CUllOm llaughltf
-~•Cioollhl
A
GrMI ~For The Rlallli-~-------

310 Holnla for Slle

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Big Big 'l'lrd Sa.. Frl, Sat Sun
on North 2. Allllqutl, hard

For Rent

f 1111\t JC1!1L

Plus Cammlaaion Full Or Part
Time Send Roaunt To Tho Ad·
verdatf, P.O Bo1 254, Jockaon,

Pl. Pleasant

I•

l:5~$~5i5~

Wllllngn111 To SuccMCI 8a11

4jlm

Public Ball
&amp; Auction

I __J1!!!!~!_-

-·2111 If .. · · - · · · - ·

=:J,:o:

May28, 1995

-~

180 Wlnled To Do

180 W8lacl To Do

110

•
Sundly, May 21, 1985

•

I;

JUNE 1, 1~95
THURSDAY
6:30PM
Located at the residence of E Frank &amp; Johna
Crump, 3409 Franklin Ave , Pt Pleasant, WV
North end of town near Bellemead Church. Watch
for 11gns
HOUSEHOLD
Zenrth 19" color TV, 13" Contect color TV daybed &amp;
chatr, couch &amp; chatr, wntmg desk d1nette set, G E
cab1net sew1ng machme, Kenmore mrcrowave &amp;
stand Chef's cutlery, metal krtchen cabrnet , W M
Rogers &amp; Son srlverware, wooden tea cart, elec
typewnter, set of lamps utility counter kitchen mrsc
glassware, etc
SPORTING GOODS
Fu11 10 sp b1ke, Snark sarlboal 12' boat oars Nrke
soccer cleats 11 Y., gun rack, Lowsv11ie slugger ball
bat, golf shoes , and m•sc Also glass mrnnow jug
MISC
Metal storage shelves portable roller tool chest
wood lathe tools, hedge tnmmer ,alec weedeater,
alec carpet seam toot snap on wrde vrew mirrors,
plywood shadow man &amp; dog, 3 store mannequin·
AM/FM casseHe car radto, porcelain baby tube elec
1•gsaw and many more rtems
AUCTIONEER: Oscar E Click
Lie. 754 &amp; bonded In WV
.OWNERS: E Frank A Johne Crump
Payment day of sale wrth cash or check and prop ID
Noj respons•ble for acc1dents or loss of property
- - - Refresbments

Sat June 3rd 1995, 9 00 am.
Located at 926 E Marn St Oak Hrll Ohro
The late Mrlton Cheatwood was rn busrness here f~ r
72 yrs he was a Studebaker dealer and garage
operater Owner Marcella Cheatwood wrll oHer lhe
followrng for sale 1964 Comet Caliente Convertrble 4
speed V8 82 000 mrles reserve brd $2000 47
porcelone Studebaker s•gn wrth mounting bracket &amp;
lights Reserve brd $1000 Car and srgn wrll sell at
12 00 noon All other 1tems will sell without reserve
Hastrngs prstons clock, Nu Grape soda clock 2 RC
Cola soda pop chests Pepsr pop chest several old
pop s•gns, crgareHe machrne, thermomelers old
Sohro hat, porcelarn Soh10 motor 011 sign Coca Cola
rack, 2 renown gas globes (glass only) 2 gasoline
pumps (late 60's) Schrader t11e gauge dtspenser
Everready drsplay Z1p Zap c1gareHe paper drspenser
Vrctor gaskets drsplay Baby Aulh soft pops many
addltronal ad rtems Wurlitzer Srmplex multr selector
phonograph model 616 (Veneer needs reparred) old
gasoline pnce cards mrsc auto parts lg anvrl 11 "
vrce metal lathe gnnder, oil cans value gurde auto
accessones many old hand tools, Studebake
m;~nuels and ads Floor 1ack, wall mounted dnll
press mechanrcal press 1 air compressor, 2·battery
charger, chams, old fan scales, records, wooden
beverage cases, wrenches, old dentist chatr, scooter,
baby dresser, dolls doll toys piety k~chen toys,
Wyandot ducky glass candy toys a11plane games,
Playola record player wrnd up lrarn trns stone Jars
bicycles, oak pedestal table, old bookcase secretary
(as ts) m~rror desk &amp; chart, work table, granrte lunch
pale, old mrners lunch pale chest of drawers wash
stand, much more w1il be sold by the box
Terms Cash Certtfred Check or Ohro checks wrth I D

Auctioneer: Terry L Lloyd
(614) 286-1229
Lunch served Not
Note Th iS Is an all day sale

I

for loss or accrdents
your lawn charrs
OhiO

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME • C~ LAKE DRIVE
located on appro x-~7b1Q,~n room hot tub
and sky hghl"'l'\~~~
FARM FOR SALE Bnck home barn 2 sheds and pond
on 49 acres more or less City Schools Call to see
LOCATED IN WALNUT TOWNSHIP

Mobile home

wnh 2 bedroom on one acre more or less w.th county

water satellrte CALL TO SEEI!!
HOMES AND APARTMENTS FOR RENT ·
REALTOR OWNED
LOTS OF POSSIBIUTY
comm erctal space

Concrete burldlng wllh

dow nsta ~r s

3 room apart upstatrs

also lwo bedroom mobrle home al rear JUST WHAT
YOU ARE LOOKING FOR
VACANT LAND Appro• 7 3 acres tn Green Twp Clly
water available PRICED RIGHT
HOME FOR SALE 3 bedroom balh llvmg 100m family
rqom kitchen fenced &lt;nback yard REALTOR OWNED
PRICED AT $4 5 000 00
NEW LISTING 2 homes localed on approxrmalely 1 1/2
acres One home has 8 rooms 3 bedrooms 1 1/2 balhs
ltvtng room d•mng room famtty k1tch"n One home has
B rooms 4 bedrooms , 2 baths llvmg room kitchen
famrly room Both have rural water LP gas Furnace and
more Call for appomtment to see

FOUR LOTS Each lol conlarns approx 20 acres Two
lots have frontage on St At 21 8 and 2 have ~ontage on
Cox M~rcerv~lle Rd CHECK ON THIS ONE
~

.~

t...o••

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OURTOLLFRE(NUMaER
1-8()0..894..1066

'

�5

sunday, May 2a, 1995
;~·ge~·~oe~·~~~G:~u...-~~~~·..ti~nt~I~~=~~P~o~m~e~ro~y~·~M:Id1~ct~'l•po~it~·~G~a~n~lpo~II•E·~o~H~·1·P~o~ln~t~P~,·~·~&amp;a~n~t~,wv§~CS~~~~=rn~ Auto~l~for~SI~II~=f~71=0$Au=II=OI~
.~for~8111~;;:_
S70

830

MuiiCII

lnllrunllnll
Splnor-conao141 plano. wanr roaaonalble party 10 make low
on~•no. SM
-,.
1100 211 . L

=t:'....,.

Will 11168 "-•rl Elparl SOrloa

r

"""" 001 w/paiiiO 20" ride 1 1
croah lor gulllllor • ..., 01 oquol

.-...II4.QII2-ilolll.

sao

Frubs.

UVHtOCII

830

1 Quarlor HorN "-rlec! For
T.. m Work And For Aldlnt

Horoo11...-.r1to.

~~-~~~ okl plgt, 125; 114-

1.1Yt8tocll

Rod &amp; W11110- poa1&gt; pia'"'
114-1C2·222Dorl1c-7cz-2m

030

1 ...... 01&lt;1- Flly, RoM &amp; REGISTERED ANGUS And Chf.
llad&lt;, 114 111 e&amp;ll
· •~ua 1141111 And Hel~
•
-..
- · 1710
a. I It lllo11••-'· 11 ... poled
Ea..u..rlloodU-. Slate
liul, aonk:IOU7NDI.
~ Fll1nl, '1114-211-11311 . - .

• JarMy Holler II Monili Jor11y
,_,
10rr old Apf.aloo•• ,...d 1
Hollor . . - - . . . - &amp; llooi e1111 ,000, •rr o d point gelding, W-0110.
l1.000.:10+t7HII:t
· .··-Umoualnliul•roaltiOrodY-1~-~-..- ~·-·~
. . ' - 2 ,_ okl. Sl4 Untoualn
- " " " liula. 111• Umouoin holt·

no

Llvelloc:ll

030

Llveltoc:ll

~- Polod Slnwnonlll Bull,
S ""Old, p,_, Hotd Biro,

Dark Rod I WhiiO, AHdy For
s.vi01114-378-21S.

lrioo:

&amp;40

'lloo ,..,.,. poled Hoioloid hill., ..lvaa. con 814·882-2070 or
ll~201l.

Hoy-ilrgo round bol... ItO. H
-· "
3114-a75-l:lil0.

u ... &amp;

1810 Corvette Good Condlllon,
1808 Comoro 400 Small Block 1.8wllioogo,I1&lt;H42-22k
Now "-int, Porche Rod; 1878 1---.....:.~:.;:.......:..;;;.;;::;;;..;;___
C11o¥r Truck, 8 CJlndor, 114-311- 1ga1 ChoY. Corvellt,I·...... ·CD

Allar 3P.II.II........714L
• _1111 Ford G..... Or•l lnllll- 17 T.,.. _.., homo, 11e - ·
·,~ .. orl And E11ertor, Low Mtleage,
1000 - ; 1111 Ford LTD ••·

......_
~·~,~
....
,... ·
· - _ _., ,... --·

Srop BY &amp; PICK UP

. ' 114-2lle-1012.

QUALITY

Real

Eltate General

3010.

720 1I'Uckl for 8118
IIIII F1IO,Itdlllod. S10 llcyl. oc.
78,000 101 nth&amp;, . _ rlroa,

. . = -n,

•·

whoolo, .......... pain~ ahorp.
....IOO.:IIWJ'I.lllltll-lpn.
1111 ......., AX7, llmllld
-~:;.:••d condldon
" .
Y
- · 814-t&amp;2-711g.
·
•
188C QIIC Slorro 1121on

ID.

Farm Equipment

RUSSEll D. WOOD, BROKER.446-4618
Judy DeWiu .................................. 441-0262
J. Merrill Carter ..................: .. .... .. .. 379-26S I
Ruth Barr ....................................... 446-0722

720 Clark Bobcol U.OOO. 304·
18!&gt;3ole7.

AC no

ug corn planter,

-

l-800-585,. 7101 or 446-7101

Ho~

land r hay barn. Gehl grinder/
""-· good oond 304-273-12.15.
Ford 500

Fergu10n

a

plckut

•• .•. ·-· -r·· -.-...
10 • 1•- """' 1•• -~

be~lt r : r , .rod ahopo,

Tammie DeWiit... .......................... 24S-0022
Martha Sm ith ........ ......... ... , .......... 379-2651
Cindy Drongowski.. :.. ..............., ... 245-9697
Cheryl Lemly ..... ........................ .. . 742-3171

21-

~U.~~-IO~I~~22~~-:--:--:-1
1811 Now Style oxtondod cab
Ch1¥rolol,
drlvt. V•l,
200,000 mlloa, good condWon,

VfKY me. 3 ~ holM IOeMtd In !amity ntllt'lbofhood Of'l
bath; t.oing room; e.t~..., lfitehen; utility r001n; 1
I carpon: htll pump: ICfditlonal t&gt;uitcllng ; tmmHlalt
I
AEDUCEOUI MMe 14 an offer.
1 floor plan home wltn 3 bedrooma. 2 blthl. living room. dil)lng
room, kkct-..n w/appllanc:ft, utility room , oentra!U, TP wa.r, ..,-.tQr, vtnylaldlng .
On 13.123 acrn m/1 wi1h ovtr 300 Jl'ne tren, some rrujt trHI, CrHk, good
tluoting, Iota of privacy! Almot1t n.w-Pnc.d right.
POMlROY- Beautiful 111ecutlve-type home with 4 bedrooms (one It Mastel SA
wfdreuing room, walk -in cloa.t, private bath) , 2 112 bethl , living room wtth FP,

SWEEID§Ab
On a Mobile Home wnh Two (2) E&gt;&lt;tra Rooms bultt on
Plus a back porch screened ln. It has 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 8 rms. Iota!. Well kept up. located on 3.75 acres
whh several trun trees . Nice counlry locailon. Ph. tor
appointment..
735

national 434
14885, 84 Clan
114-288-e5tt

room w/FP, format dining room , liltchen w/a.ppllar.:;n and '-rg• a.t-ln
2 car atteched garage, lull baum.nt . Patio off dining area .
:~,:;:~,:ooo::i. ':,A:ddftiOnal building a lor alarage. TP waier; 11ptle
privata bfaclctop driveway that Made to circular drive In
thlt on 1 aeJII .
II"'DDI.Ef''ORT· Completely remodeled nome in good tamlly netghbomood. THb 1
II. :.-.-~ , home has 2 BR up and 1 BR down, 1 bath, living room, dining
cablnera and retrlg. &amp; range. new caroet . 1torm ..,....., &amp;
, blown-in Insulation. CorneJ lot E•c.llllt'll: Buy.
I

II
II

·

'"'"'""·I

.PHONE 446·7699

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

lovely Older home located on corner lot (totel 3 loti) offr~

112 batht, living room, dining room or famll~ room. tiHn
BeiUiifiJII.Irge
window. Big Shady front porch. Patio off kitchen.
I
Underpriced but make Ulan offtt.
Very I
located within wetklng distanc. or ,.,,.,.~..,,
will find 3
, 1 1f2 bllht 1large living room, eat-in kitchen with

ba,-

SITTING PAETTYI
NI c e
brick/alum. sided 4 bedroom, 1
1/2 story home, 2 baths, 1ayer,
living room, dining room , fully
equipped kitchen, basement,

ENJOY BOATING &amp; FISHING?
How about havirig your own dock
along the Ohio River? Choice of
two spacious lots wllh frontage
on SR 7 &amp; the Ohio River. Great
recreational land.

li

deracl"'ed 2 car garage. 8 Acre·
more or less, pretty view of the

1756 .,.11~~:~~.~~

Ohio River.

. One car anacMd gar•g•. a..t buy In town at &amp;34 ,900.
LISTING· Tuppert Plains- Thlt 2 bedroom home Is loc8ted ,... tltmentarw

school on a comer lol th•t Is 1.15 ecrss" m!l. Thera Is 1 bath, ~\ling room, dining
room , 8at·ln ~itehen , U111ity rm., 1 car atta~::hed garage. eleclrlc butbo1rd heal, TP
, aeptic svstam {will be dy Hwage soon.) Prief"d lor quick tale
629 N. SACond St.· You tollld get thu home • a relllly good price
with alinle WOI"k it would make 1 good ren111 Of a go.."'d home. 4 BR , 1 Mth, LA,
\~II N

building converts to a home. 4 to 5
office or bedrooms, 2 baths. Single
car garage, heat pump, lg . dec k
across
the
back . Private.
REDUCED TO $66,000.

bedrooms
Maintemlnce
free. Both apts. rented with good
income . Good
Investment
property. Call for more details.
Looking far the perfect home
site. Give us a call. We have ill
.
T01.75ACRES 1

5.66 ACRES - Excellent location .
Wooded. ·
•

NEW LISnNGI
$$$3UOO.OO$S$ Approx. 2.850
acre s come s with this 3
bedroom , 1 H2 bath home,
dining room , kitchen, laul)dry,
central air con ditioning. L~rge
detached divided garage with
extra high door for trucks . Lots
morel 11770

CITY LOCATED! 1737 112
CHATHAM
AVENUE!
3
b~droom raised 'ranch home.
living room , rec. room , dining
room, kitcheri, attached garage.
FA gas furnace . Nice home. Call
today for an appointment.
AFFORDABLE $~ 6 , 000. 00 N729

OFFICE 992·2886

---~~ S- 0 4 c ft 111o
18115 - · - 1 • 1 • 0
rood IUipantlon, lillck. 300.075-

:.-

#502

We love you, Leah.
Iretta, Lily, Shirley &amp;
Jack, Wes &amp; Nora, &amp;

44 1- 1111

30 AMouncements

11184 ConiiiO body, good ...., no
moiO~.lood cond. •1.100. 304075.

187• Tlllln motorhoma, 28h. 100
Dadgo engine, awning, root olr,
lorga -lOr, 18.500. 30ot:fi75:!MI.
1078' Coleman pap-up c:amper,
alnk, ttave, 1leepa e. new tirn,

$850. 304-518-2888 afllr Bpm.

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250, t814 LINI buaboor &amp; troller, 1811 Coleman Pop-Up Camper
72,000 Mlfoo, $6,000, Can Be 115hp llorcurymoiOr. Coli 304· E1cellont ,Condtlon, 12.000, 814- t S Anor 5:30.
sean Ac: Galllpolla Dally Tribune, 882·2252.
·
825 Third Avonuo, Galllpollt
Ohio.
Happy
1 e0.1 Chey~ Aatro Ext. Conver1 •~ L dad ••K 1 10 900
••• •• n.8380,111116
•• · - 31118.
• • .,I~----------.!----------.,
811111

Ads

Happy Ads

Then

&amp;

Now

Established Body Shop Business and
home on same site . The property offers a
large b ody shop with a 12 x 18 office
space and t 0 x 30 storage area, all
contained on t
acre. The ranch style
home offers 3 bedrooms, t t /2 bath s and
a very large living room. There is a
detached garage, all located 5 miles ·from
SA 7 imd 5 miles from SA t 62.
$59,900 .00.

NEW LISTING , 1 YR. OLD LOG
HOME - Sports approx . 2700 sq. fl of
living area; solid wood walls, floors &amp;
ceilings; extra large rooms : wrap-around
deck; part basement; attached garage &amp;
2 barns, located at gage on a sprawling
4.2 acre tract. ~

J;;;;=:

in kitche n, LR , DR , partial
basement $48,000 N600

113 Acres m/1 CLAY TOWNSHIP 2400
pound totl ~cco base , 4 room house, oi l
.heat,OO acres wooded. $75,000
1453 • OHIO RIVER PROPER~ .
located at end of White Avenue' .off
Gartield. Several lots $20.000.

. tfie 'B(q 30!!

20

Happy Ads

$31 ,500 84 acres. Morgan Twp., vacant
lan d . Possi ble far m ing lan d or
recreational land.

229 Carman Drive -· Grand
colonial offe1s 3 BAs . 2 112
baths, formal DR and 2 car
garage . Deck. $t t9 ,500 N510

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446,3644
DAVID
BROKER -

@

...·-.

. &lt;;:arolyn Wasch . 441·1007
Gam~s..,. 446.:2.7.117

64 Acres - m/1, corner of W oods Mill &amp;
SA 554, has a really nice homesite old
barn , lots of privacy yet close to school
and other act1vities.

$16,800 47 AC RES m/1, Harrison Twp.,
Elliott Road .
.

NEAR RODNEY PIKE EXIT: On new 4
lane US 35, 48 1/2 apres rn/1 approx. t/2
clear and 1/2 woods . Bui ld your new
home here. $45,900.
·

ATT E NTION D E V E LOP ER S A ND
INVESTORS, EXTRA NICE PIECE OF
PROPERTY LO CATED NEAR PORTER
- Large lake with lake fronr sites, mobile
home on property at present time,
county water, entire tract consists of 77
acres, m~ .

33 ACRES · M/L corn er of SA 325 and
Woods Mill Road , recreational land only
$ t 6,500.
1419 • JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD Ad dison Twp, 386 acre fa rm, 3 ponds,
tobacco base 44 x t 00 barn wilh
concrete floors. May consider split. (578)
RACCOON CREEK CAMPS
&amp;
GARDENS located at Ewington. Short
or long term leases. Cheaper 1han
owning.

IE NEED LISTINGS

t·-------~~~g~~~~~~~~------~-1

lllrnoll't Homo lmgo.v.monta:
Room Addldona -Decka, And
......... E-llr-. FriO E. .

lnllll..l1ttsew·

C&amp;C Gonorol Homo Molnronence- Polndr~~~. •lnrl oldlnt~.
carpentry, - . , _ , bolhl,

homo '"""" ond ...... For
kM ..- .. col Chat, 814-0112·

II3ZI.

'

Joe'1 Home Maintenance, wiRyl
lidlnt~. •ooflng, .. torior poiniiOG.

power ••hing, ''" ntlmat••·

814-8112-4451.

Ron'o TV Sorvlco, ~lzlng In
Zonllh aloo oorvlclnt mool oihor
brondt. Hou•• colla. 1-800-7870015. WV304-5l'l-2388.

820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Memorial Day Services

Memorial Day Services

May 29th - ~ ~ · -:co .

May, 29th- 10:30 .

Middleport Pos1

Middleport Post

American Legion 128 .

American Legion 128.

Specia l Spe ake r:

Special Speaker:

POMEROY - E. Main Srr eet - E. Mai n Street · A 2 story
home with 3 ·bedrooms and one bath. Front and Rear
porches .
$26,900

James Sands - Tribun ~

James Sands - Tribune

Correspondent.

Corres pondent.

MIODLEPOAT- Lincol n Srreet· needing rental property or.
upper? Here it is a 3 bedroorri ·2 story ~orne with a ·
fenced lor, and a storage bu ilding.
$14,000

Everyone Welc om e.

Everyone Welcome . .

'.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Exceptionally nice 27
x 53 Mariufaclured Ranch Style Home.
New Doors , Paint on interior, 3 bedrooms.
2 full baths, garden tub, fireplace , bar,
electric Heat Pump/CA 36 x 8 Deck.
Approx . 1.5+ acre. Beauliful yard ,located
on Rice Run Road . IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!! ASKING $39 ,500.00

SYRACUSE - GREAT PLACE!' GREAT
LOCATION!! This Home S1ts on a nice
quiet Street. This home has 4 bedrooms , 2
baths , large living roOm, equipped kitc hen,
dining room . Refrigerator &amp; Ra nge less
than I yr. Old. Also there's a dishwasher.
Utility room with newer washer and d ryer.
Front Porch, side deck , large 3/4 acre loi
with lots of flow ers , trees and some
fencing . Call fo r Your Appt. ASKING
.
$59,500.00 •

840 EleCtrical and
Relrlgeratlon
lawrence Enterprlatl T.W. La·
.......,, U.. Goa Furnocoa. L-P

I Nat Hoor Pumpo I Eloc.,lc
FurnocOL FrM Etdnatea. If lllu
Pori'! Coli Ul Wo Bolh I.DNI614•..a-e301, 1-800·287-11308, wv

002841.

now-

-1111 ,. coi111!101C1al wiring,
or i9Palr1- Matilr 1.1cenaed electrician. Rldenaur
Elocllicol, WV000301. 30C·8751781.
Real Eatate General

JUST OUT OF P OMEROY · Great
Business Opportunity · Large 2 car bay
metal garage on SR. 33. Some ut•lihes,
cement floor, access &amp; traflic flow. I+ acre.
Partially fenced. Asking $25,500.00 MAKE
AN OFFER!!
'

LOG HOMES

In the

or write for more I

lnl'omadon.

·

VACANT GROUND - SA 338 • 23.88+
Acres , Approx . 6 m iles fro m lh e
Ravenswood Bridge . Great bu ilding site.
. Once had some dozer work .and driveway
prepared. ASKING $t7,500.00 (OWNER S
WILL CONS I DER
REASONABL E
OFFER !! )

Inc.
Dept. GDT,
P.O. ~ox614
Ripley, wv 25271

SHARON · HOL LOW ROAO · VACANT
GRO UND -·Approx . 84+ acres. Small Gas
Royalities , electric on site , should have
fre e gas l or t d w elling . IM MEDIATE
POSSESSION!! ASKIN G $29.540.00

VIRG!NtA SMITH, 8ROKER " " """"""'""' J8U826
WILMA WIWAMSON ................................ .28&amp;-003&amp;

10, 19.95
Wh ere: 0 .0 . Mcintyre
Sheller H o use #1
Wh en : June

EUNICE NIEHM................................: ..............1197

T ime: 4:00 p.m .- D ark

All friends

COLD RIDGE RO AD · POMEROY - 8+
Acres of level/sloping ground with a scenic
view o n Gold Rid ge Rd . TPC water an d
· ele c t r~c is ava il able Si te recenlly
surve yed ... Just minu1es from SA 33 off
68t . ASKIN G $12 ,000 .00

Real Estate General

l-800-458-9990

SANDY COMER
BAISDEN

ENTERPRISE ROAD · t t /2 Story Frame
Home with 4 bed room s, I bath , living room
with fireplace , kitchen . Home has appro x.
I+ a cre s. nice big front yard partial ly
fe nced . I car garage. Home need s some
work but has lots o f potentia l for Only
$24 ,900 .00 MAKE AN OFFER!!

ATIENTJON!!! PROPERTY OWNERS ...WE HAVE BUYERS
SEEKING ACREAGE AND SMALL FARMS IN THE ME IGS I
COUNTY AREA. WE ALSO HAVE REQUESTS FOR
MIDDLEPORT/SYRACUSE AREA. IF YOU WANT TO SELL ...
NOW IS THE TIME!!! CALL US TODAY FOR 1DE'f AILS!!

Appalachian Log

!$ IT !Hi TI' IEJ liD A lf JFl A !Hi
FOR '50'.YEAR OLD

CREW ROAD - Nice Spill Foyer Home
with 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths. equipped
kitc hen, n ic e large fam il y room with
woodburner hook-up, dining room, Elec.
B .B . Heal, back porch . All on
approx imate ly t .'26 + acres . Nic e
neighborhood: REDUCED TO $51 ,500.00
Three Lots with Older Home Located
Behind the Recently Con stru cted Auto
·Zone. Home in need of much repair, but at
this l'lecluced Price Fixing Up or Tearing
Down should be "No Problem". PRICE TO
SELL AT $4,500.00

Structures,

Gravel Hill Cemetery

MOM &amp; POP OPERATION W ITH A GOOD
SJ'J;:ADY INCOME !! Newer constructe d
convenience/ gas store localed on corner
lot of SAt24 . Additional, trailer lol with all
hookups available in rear, additional brick
build ing with local Post Office (monthly
rent income) stock, fixtures, everything you
need to be your own boss !! CALL US
TODAY LET US TE LL YDU HOW YOU
CAN BE APART OF THE OPERATION !!

c.-.

CaD

Lif'Man.
Steve '£. (james

Gravel Hill Cemetery

QUIET - COZV - COMFORTABLE - This
best describes the One Story Frame Home
located in LongBottom. Maintenance Free
Siding, well maintained interior. 3
bedrooms, Patio , full basemen!, attic
space. 2 car attached garage, seperate I
car garage with workshop . Nice setting
porch, level lot, TPC water. Eastern School
District. COME SEE THIS ONE!! ASKING
$43,500.00

FI'Hilllll'o Hoolino And Coollnt~.
lriolllllollon And Sarvlco. EPA
Roticllnilll, Coimwdal.
014-2!1&amp;-1811.

models or we'll custoa•l
design one ror you.

....... 0/f~~~:• · ~

,.,..,fJfJUr..JU-"1'
,,q u-t Cllytl U .

ar e w e lcome to

lJ ' -•1151.

M630 INVESTMENT Seven Unit Apts Pnme
location. Ca11for more intormat1on

N849 A TOUCH OF ClASS · The remarkable
spacious home with view of the county. Italian
tile foyer, cathedral ceiling with balcony, 3 ~A .
2 1(2 baths, living room with wood burmn g
fireplace , equip. kitchen, brea~1ast room has a
lg . window, stereo throug hOut, brass light
fixtures ana much more. 2 car attached
garage, attic storage . 2 acres mtl. ThiS hOuse
is maintenance tree of best quality. Make your
appointment and s8e if you don't agree

Real Estate General

LYNDA FRALEY......................................... 446-1106
PATRK:IA ROSS ...................................., .... 245-51575

PAmtCIA HAYS ......................... ................. 446-3814

4$u r

~I,Oti! IJ'U

Real Estate General

EXECUTIVE BUILDING LOTS · 5
minutes tram Holzer, all 5 acres or more .

Ace Vinyl
Off SolO,
Vln,l
SidingSldiOG20
IAopl c .."*"Windowo, Rooting, 25 Y10r1 Exporolnoo.81-7-GIIS.
.

over

•7fapp!J20tft 'lJirtfufa!J

1998 NEW LISTING 20 ACRES &amp; FARM
HO~E; located iri the country w/4 BR's, 2
baths, new ca rpe &amp; new root. Price reduced
IO$85,000.

N1020 COUNTR Y C HARM ER .J ust a great
neat &amp; clean place tor a family Oak ca01nf'&gt;ls
1n the k1t Rang ~ . refr1g ,DW. white carpel in
LR.Garden Tu b &amp; ShOWOT balti 24~24
detached garage Above ground pool 2 Ac

1999 GREAT RETIRE MENT or slarler home
2 SR. kitchen &amp; OR. 1 acre m/1 Super buy
$34,900.

m/1

lt001 tMMACULATEJAFPOROABLE col'y 3
bedroom, Green Twp., LA w/ fire place, lull

bsmt ,new wtndows, cabinets . Jean Air range,
ret ., dish washer Lpvely treed yard

N873 REDUCED PRICE · t t 7 acres Close to
new freeway, hospital , shopping ctr. Water,
gas. ~ewer. Adjoining Pinecrest Nursing Home

WILL HILL ROAD· A small home that has cathedral :
ceiling, large living roo m, di ning area. kitchen , one •
1 bedroom, utility area, jleat pump. Sitting on approW;. 1 acre ~
ground.
.
.
$33,900.00 ·
WILLS HILL ROAD- 2 acres with a larg e pond overlo oking :
the 'golf course , water and electric abailable. Beautiful,
must see.
$13,500

N1004 RIO GRANO S COMMERC IAL
BUILDING 1850 50 FT 3 rmS . for office
space . Large storage rm . also parts rm
N674 CHESHIRE 3 bedroom ran ch, 2 ·Located on a cocner lot on a state route
fireplaces, full base ment, comfortable hv1ng
room, 2 car garag~ . Rental home also.
' LISTLNG 10 acres m/1 on Kelion
fi 1007 NEW
Rd.
close
lo
town H11ttop v1ew w/lots of trees
* 894 READY FOR S ~MM ER CHANGE. thai Is
Very
secluded.
affordable, call Wilma on lh!s 4 BR home thai
has ·lois ot space for everyone and a nice large
fi1009 NEW LISTING BRICK RANCH located
lot

••
•

1n Addison • 3 bedrm , LA . WI to 11etv carpet,

'

~933

BUY THIS. DOUBLE HOME lor an
investment. or live ln. 1/2 &amp; let the rent help
withe paymenls. Located in mce little town
close to Gallipolis.

equipped kitchen. full basem ent, coverec
patio, atta,ched garage 2 car barn butldmg
3/4 ac m/1
N101t ACREAGE, ACREAGE, 100 in au and
If sec lus~Q:n tS what you want then th1s Is it. 4
beelroom farm MU$8 that is In good conditiQn,
ready to move into conditJon, call Wilma and
make that appoln1ment tOday to take e peak

MIDDLEPORT- N. Second Sireet· A 2 story building on the
Main Street in Middleport. Just right fo r a small business .
$18,000

1938 FOR THE FARM MINDED PERSON this
50 acres is prime paslure land, also a 4
bedroom farmhouse that needs a linle TLC.
can Wilma tor details.

FLATWOODS RD-. Appro&gt;~mately 4 1/2 acres with a grea!
lay1ng bu1ld1ng s1te. TPC water avai lable &amp; electric
available. Almost ready to go, just ne~ds you.
$13,500

1945 LAND CONTRACT · $38,000 price. ·
$5,000 down, $33,000 balance 9% APR 1101 2 NEW UST.ING - lovely 4 bedroom w1th
$334 .71 P&amp;l !Or 1s·yrs Close in · 3 Bedroom basement on n1ce secluded lot close to 1own,
call Wilma 10J all the details
ranch .

POMEROY- Commercial Property formeily 1h e Excelsior
Sa lt Wmks. A very large build ing with over 20,000 sq. ft . ,
of work space . Lot§ of P'!.rk1ng space with this property.
Included 1s a 2 bedroom home and approx . 3 acres or.
.
$300,000
land.
HYSELL RUN AD . ' Approx . one acre wilh 2 bedroom'
an~ ~ path home- ~ery p~ivate cou ntry seHinQ. Storage •·
bUIIdmg and a beautiful anttque heating sto.ve.
$14,900 :
POMEROY- Mulberry Ave. a 3 bedroom dou~le trailer with ·
living room lots of storage. room:
and beautlul ftowers.
ONLY $27 500 '

a shingled roof. Has large
DOTTIE TURN

Broker ............ ..

SPRADLING

. .

.
•

•

• · VERY EXCLUSIVE HOME • With a bil of
• woodland . Huge 4' bedroom, 2 story with 2 1/2
·' baths, formal living rm . &amp; dining rm., 15' x 23'
family, Loads of cabinets in an equipped kitchen
with breakfast nook, large utility room serves as
• an office, partial basement Heated pool room
3 1• x 53' with a lovely 18' x 36' pool, attached
garage 25' x 29'. Home can· be bought with
small acreage or all 115 ac. m/1. The land is
... 1-beatJitifu l~ro. lllillg &amp; treed with trails thrclugriOut,.-1
Owner planted approx. 25, 000 pine trees.
• Wildlif~bundant. VJrginia LJrni.tb 388
8826/446·6806.

•

M: Cleland 992-6191

Office .................... ~ .....992·2259

. \.

:Jlappy q;irtfufay ,
Can you
wfw tofi?

POMEROY- Wills Hill Road · One acre parcels with electric .
and water available.
$4,500·per acre

NEW LISTING III I I .• 30 ac res m/1
$28,500.00 24 • 30 barn, 24 acres
pastwe mobile home site, located at
Ewington, Ohio .

Kathleen

Appalachian
Structures has been

a fi xer

CHAROLAIS HILLS SUBDIVISION
Ru stic log home on the I
..
i
built 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath , 2 car garage
home offers country livi ng and peace &amp;
quite all located 5 minutes l rom Holzer
Medical Center.· This home offers t 824
square feet of living space w1th a great
room and spettacular views. QUIET
NEIGHBORHOOD.
.

Henry E. Cleland III 992-6191

leailer

SWE'E'T.ltS 7fO'N_'E')'%'J £I'l'T.t.'E 'lJO'J
·IS ?{,O'W

Cheshire

MIDDLEPORT- S. Third a 3 bedroom , 1 1/2 bath , 2 story
home with family room , newer shingles, and fire place with
buck stove inside.
WAS $45,000 NOW $41 ,000

lmplovementa

Comfort, convenlenc•~•l

Can't 6efieve you're

· 30 Announcements

Brinager ...... 949,Z439

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-235.7

el!ergy
dunbUity
OeldbUity In deslgu
a rew fll the reasons I
why 20,00 ramBles will
buDd a loa home
yearI

Cheshire

t2

..

A. -aorlu

I.,,-,..:~-~~~:!.-­

e-.,

J4i4-iia'2: - -

Happy Birthday
Wishes to
Ethel Arbaugh of
Tuppers Plains, OH.
She will celebrate
90th birthday on
May 28th .

PO&gt;MioACJY· East Main relax on the front porch and enjoy
the view of the River in this t 1/2 story 3 bedroom home :
with equipped kitchen vinyl siding and Anderson windows..
WAS $27,500 NOW $26,000

with the
conv enience of city living. Located 5
minutes from Holzer Medical Center, this
spacious • home rests on 6.25 roll ing
acre&amp; and offers 5 bedrooms, 2 kitchens,
and 4 bathrooms, with many oth er
custom feath ers. This home' would be
great for !he professional family or a twofamily duplex.

\

760 Auto PlrtS &amp;

Grandchildren

-

.

r;l:;l::!ii::·,:Cd:,:SIU::;::J'I.:;,:l;::
..~1 ;.·~-­

dw-.

1811 Yamalja Vlrogo, IIOOcc
gokl
lrim, e•c cond, 12.800. 300.0752074•
11111 HoriOy O&amp;vldaon SportiiOr
t200 2 Tono Blue 1 Aqua, Exlrl
Chr- Bet! Drlvl, Good Condldon, Mut! Soil, let! Offer, Coil
114-4411-8142.

'l(g.tfty !McComas 'Baifantyne

~ 5 14 Sec~nd Ave . , GaUipolis, Oh . 4563 1

-

Loretta McDade- 446-7729

lllu--2-

Happy Ads

•

!H.

i ....

378-:2120.

Mom , Pal, Jeff, Danielle &amp;
Shanlclle ; Kim, Randy,
Brockie &amp; Tyler and alllhe
rest of your £am qy &amp; £rie.nds.

LOOKING FOR. A A COMMERCIAL LOT? Just off th e
Main Street. You really need to check th is one out. Located
$10,000
on 3rd Slreet , Middleport .

aff ordable in- town property.
Vinyl siding, 3 BAs, balh, eat·

,.
U..-._

We Love -You!!

BLACKBURN REALTY

-

1021 Second Avenue - Nice.

-.aid

Happy 24th
Birthday, Chris

MIDDLEPORT- Rutland St. A 2 story house with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, front porch with a river
view anQ a heat pump . Has full basement.

Home

810

oaon

....uont

- 1882 Chryalor Flldt Avonuo, Ukl
• -Gray, l'tuoh ,lnrorlor, Loadod.
~ Excollem Condition. 74,000 111111,
;_;Aflor.;;:,-,4;.P.;_;II;..6;.1,..;1_1_t6~67~5ol,..;.'"":::-'7l
1881 lllldi Skyllri&lt; 2 Toni Bluo &amp;
.: Gray, 4 Dr., low MIIM, ExceiiMU
Condilon, S.riouo lnquirl01 Only,
• ....1·•
-~-· ~~
~·naa e1~
-

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

131 Oak Drtvo · Approx. 1892
sq. ft . home in good condition.
Nice oak kit chen. 3 BAs, 2
balh s, full basement , pjus
lovely deck &amp;palio. $98,500
#211

~·1~c;tl82~·;·7;;m;;i.;ii;;;;-;;;;:;N;;I18111r

1888 Goo Tractor, •wd,
oftar!ipm.
750 Boats&amp; Motors
, Good- Wrant~lor Radlolt,
1988 PlyntOUih \lorilgor minivan.
for Sale
,doftociOr, olr I elc, oxlrl eloon, gr11! lh..,., nooda nolhiOG. uk. ·ssooo.ol..-·7574.
!ngt588$0110,11H42-302&lt;'
IC fL aluminum boalond lrlllor
·. .;.;.~.:.;:.-~-----:----:--:wllh now 8.8 HP !rolling motor,
·! •(8811!lllricl
oleyl, ..,.tn 1818 Sublni XT 4 ~oil:"
ou can. onchor, g1o
·,..._. ••ana, air, 4dr, ••c cond., power option .. $4,000.
VHI. etc. Call 016-2..5-5808 after
...:ts.500.3JIB82-252111ftoropm.
2••
•:30
11850
-1 .
u
pm.
•

JD Ranny B lackburn , Broker , Ph onr: (1\1 4) 44?·0008
3668
Neighborhood
Road - 3 BRs , ·1 1/2
baths, FA, lull basement,
10 x 12 storage building ,
.479 acre. m /1$69,900

1111 ' - II' a1u-.. liou
- . .. hp. • rtm EWW)Idi1872 Hor141Y Devtci10n Sprlnl. ... o1 a
o'-leo,IIIOO 114-7C~
cellon! condlllon, . _ llroa, 101L '
'
brakot, ballory, point and ""~
.... .........
FourWincll
.,....,....... ss bow
pro1811·
Borocl fiMir- ,-,col 11..-,ZI4L
·
.,, 2WO, liB, (81C) 802-5180.
Cobra FIINng ' Slilno, iW2
1817 Outdlllll IOOA Four
luii:Jn AIHiil Cll,
WhMior Enalno Juat Robulil BuH~In Floh F - . Trollnt lloAIIF Alclnti Plpo 10f*111,750. ..,, 111"'*'8- 1101t.p. Oul·
0110,11-7-71311.
boord. Lolli of EnuiSOOO 814x4
SIO
12.'700,
Ill~2!111~1~C81~__:
_ _ _ _ __
•
1
4

Tracy L.

S f 11'11( f c;

llotorcyclls

740

*

.•

A ssw· in tt~

Plrmoulh ....,_ i!ilftl """· 1111 Winn• ........... 110hp

Henry E. ClelandJr ..992-6191

80- lockt, crulll, !llr whMI, ......., . , - . l2-I4V -.g
_ .. 7. V-1, 112,000. 814·247- - · 2 ... - . In1872.
-IUQO.IOI-I,...._

·: wlfirn.

·'

Joe Monrf',

n

Bud811 Tronomltolont, Uud I
AtbUII~ AU Typot, A... oalble To
ChoYrolol Sllvlrodo, 35,000 1884 Suzuki OSX'ISOA 11,000. O.or 10,000 Tronomltolon, Alao
loll ole..... 114,000 .014- 1881 Hondo CR500 12,000. 304- Porll, 814-3711-3135.
Pontiac Grand Prix. '3200 ,.!!~~~-=~;;;;.~ B71-:D28.
New ga1 tanks, one ton truck
(IIC)88HI80.
18851fonda CAI25, like now, ~ .......... liocl' . .ll,oiC.
·: . "1888 Z24 Covollor
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDI
m,nr lllrol. r11dy 10 roco. D·l R AuiO. Ripley. wv. 304-372. · 51,200 Mlloo All-.
, 883 Ford Econollne van; ••r 113.500.301 t&amp;:/,3382
31133orHI00·2~
::, lc, te,SOO, IIC 118 0003.
nice, 12000; hand loola, po- leGS vamaho YZ250, lttl ililn Wanllld To Bur: Parlo for 1870
: •1gag Eocorl GT. lir, am-fm coo- 10011. olt. ilddor, QUM, 814-882- 51irt on lilko, only 2mot old, ·loco Old&amp; Cudaoa, 2 Door Or 4 Door
814-440-1818 If- IZIZ
of occ-hla. 14,000 firm. 304- Hardl&gt;p, 111140 0863
1810 JHP Camoncllo ~kup 773-52llofilr3pm.
790 Clmpers &amp;
·Ford Fearlvo LX s,IOO ii'Uck, """"' drlw. 4apd., aoo. lluor Sotl TAX 250X Four·
Motor Homes
Elicolilnl Condldon, GrOll 301 458 18l'l.
. Whoolor, GoroOI iiiPl Excallonl
Cor, 12.500 080 1811 ChoYJ Scottldalo 414, 350 Condldon 114·251-1838 Coil Af- 1872 COntinonlll RV, 211h. 13,000.
auto, Ill oc. crulao. 304-773-5070
l:30pnt.
304-518-2&lt;140.

53De.

Happy Ads

NEW LISTING! LOOKING FOR
A L 0 T
W 1. T H
IMPROVEMENTS? Here it is!
Cleared approx. 1/2 ac re lot
complete wijh Septic, electric and
water. Raccoon Twp. Affordable !
lt769

·..

-

NEW LISTING! 100 ACRES
MIL • Spruce Street! Call fo r
more details! lt768

EASY ACCESS TO THE
OHIO RIVER! 2 Nice lots
along Raccoon , Creek . Nice
camping sites.
· #706

Real Estate General

IIIII Ford F-150 XLT l.orill Fully

Reel Estlle General

,:a:

Zl&amp;--.

1w1n engine, loll of

Loodod. AC. Excotlon! Condldonl
~- lllloo. Afllr 1:00, .,.......,._

Ant,""""

'I'd Ll' I ill&lt;' II \,y,. !l.rl' r~1l VII\!) f~, I" 11,
&lt;\nti N11 •rl \1,1 l' to St11 •~&lt;'
~_2 ;"lcl()l q~L1 2 7 BU

Real Estate General

35 AREA -As good as new.

wt-. 814-25e-1887. ·

partly t.need; 1

START THINKING ABOUT SPRING I SUMMER 1tlt5Fishing, Boatlng,Hunting, or Jusl Relaxing In your own
Camper &amp; Campsite approx. 7 miles from Gallipolis,
overlooking Blue Lake &amp; Raccoon Creek. WE ARE NOW
GOING TO SELL THIS CAMPSITE &amp; CAMPER . BUY IT
NOW AND BE PREPARED FOR SPRING 1995. SEE IT
1584
NOW. PHONE TODAY!

KENNETH AMSBARY, PH. 245-5855
CLAUDE DANIELS, PH. 441-7609
ETTA SPENCE, PH. 446-&amp;426
WILLIS LEA.DINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-9539

831500,11--4111.
1880' Short Bod Chilly Aluml'"""

Clmperll
llotoi'Homll

Page 07

-tlaM boal,..lh

lion- '-.-go; 11...-.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

~

610

111411FG

" -·
hp., ll!lec•lc
18114 Choirrelet ••• 811-.do. - . ond . _ , ...... ~Cab.--- 814- trellng - · ,.._ (814)I1C.211
'
741Z.

FARr,1 SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVESTOCK

1M3 Bluer LT Tahoe ••• •

$&amp;mhoJ; Glim2•·~1lfuttl •

Door, lloililr ln•lor, Loodod, oonaolo llllrlill, liN-~.~~-

:~=,=,:::;.:,.ll::1ivor=•::•::::.o.=11,:_000_,_N_,_ooo,-l......,= ~lll.:."''horn,l-,:.,•

TODAY! SEE HOMES IN COLOR!!

Real Estate General

710

,far Sill

Enn- E - - -Coli

1873 Road Runner 311, ou10, nooda palnlld, II.IOO. :104-f757
1001
2C,OOO
mllaa
12,000,
IU-882558
oflor
5pm
or
loovo
•
•111.
-

,r-•r!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~ii,--,

730

- - , ; 11111 For4 llualllnt vorr .Low
IIIIM. Mini Condlll.,., ~lou

ooog_
Real Esta1e General

---------:-::::-J._=;;:::::::::::==='

710 Autoa for

i::"

f::,~Ti~~~~~~CIJ2,~ '""1!1!!1~,500~.~~~~~~~~U!,~S- - -

"'

'*

"meroy • Middleport • ~alllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

-sunday, May 28, 1995

'&amp;&amp; Dodae I l l y - Good c.dlon H.cfoo Mloa 12800 11oH411· 1877 i:-11e, ,...,., ,_ troa
:11171orlu til ilol71.
11,000. 1e&amp;l Cltdlloc. o~~eolhlnt
body,
moror, , _ draa.

=

GJ'I'-

'-r

;

..

710

.;....;..._.;;;_..;.;.;....;..;._ _ I ___.;;;..:.:..;;;.:.:.:.;.__
"'""" black &amp; while 1101 hollor
Realatorltd Pure lltod Umoutln
111« Rod I llladl. 12-20 llonlha caw wlrh call. 1575. IH-441 •
Old Paled, llol-387-7800 E-- 4053.

ll:'

ora I con wii/C Llmouoln
-.81..-.2785.

Vegetables

1130

---·~
~· ~

47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD I Alumi num sided 1 1/2
story hom e, living room . kitch en, ov 11r siz~ d detached
2 car garage. FA electric fu rnace. AdditiOnal mobil e
home hoo k-up. Must call today for a n a ppointmentl
IS~

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY1 F or this 1 1/2 story
h ome, 3 bed roo ms, livi ng roo m, dining room , kitch e n
comp lete w / refrigerato r &amp; range . 3 0'x32' garage
situ ated at College Avenue. $20's.
1746
451 LIACOLN STREET ! 2 Story alum . sided home,
living room. d ining ro om .with bu ilt-in china/buffet ,
kitchen, d ~f\..2 Jlath&amp;,-eentret·air·-&amp;-motel· -.. -f751 MULBERRY HEIGHTS! Convenient ranch , 2 or 3
bedroo m h ome w ith--attached..garage, X-tra--nlce loti
Priced at $58 ,000.
1758

N953 NEW U STING~thls 4 ,bedroom bl ·level
has been completely remodeled inside ano
out, In a secludeel s.pot that ybu will .simply

love,'- must see. call Wilma.

·

*959 COMMERCIAL BUILDING In cliy. 30&gt;llD
block f:lktg. w/approx 3.900 sq ft. no A 220
elect . 16' doof. $45,000 VL Smttn 388·8826 or
« 6·6806
11964 OUTSTANDING 5 ACRES TRACK bulle
your masterpiece on one ol"the la51 lots In
LAKEVIEW EST. 5 acres $33,000 2 348 acres
$25,900. 4 lots on White Ad Subject to
restrictive covenants
1995 REOUCE,D, REDUCED . ntce commercial
lot ready to bulfd on. call Wilma tot more into
--~~

-~--,.,..·~"""" ·····~

-··

11015 BEAUTIFUL NEW BRICK RANCH on
Cora Mill Rd. 3 bedrooms , 2 full batl1s, gas
heat, centra f a1r, large kitchen wu h plenty of
cabinet space, 2 car enacnod garage + a 2nd
garage with workshop area that w1t1 /'lolct 2 to
5 more cars . 1.063 acres Vou deserve t ~
very best. don't let this one pass you byl Call
Patty HaVJ fOJ deteas 446·3884
11016 GREEN TWP 11 ACRES MIL. large
barn, pond, tenet '6 goOd road tronta ge
Level to rol ling. mostty pasture. some woods
$35.000

~1 021 REMAR KABLY SPACIOUS 4/5 BR
home deSigned for pres t1g1ous lrv~ng GrE'!at

room w(GiHhedrat ce1hng and wo od burnmg
t1rep1ace. _plant em knchen nas .many
oab1nets &amp; an island wort.; area. breakfast
nook ovenooks a pond format dtmng mfl.
call V1rg•n1a 388·88 26
~ 1022 ENJOY A WONDERFUL All BRICK
RANCH 2 BR s great home . very neat

kitchen; utility rm • extra storage tm 2 car
attached garage Also a rental home
w/garage. Just nghttor .! he motnenn-law

* 1024 NEW LISTING 116 acre farm With
pnrne pasture land and 50 acres ol woods,
tor the farmer or the hurilef With a 4 bedroom
tarmho use that has been remodeiM w1th
new ca rpet, central a 1r. a lot ot spac:e. m th1s
hOme, clOse to town, call Wilma for a peek

Mt025 1661 McCormtck Ad A Rare Jewel
close to lawn 3 BR 's, 3 baths, cathedral
ceiling, eat in. kitchen. formal dln rm huge
living room, ulihty, back &amp; front RQrch Bldg 4
AC m/1 Secluded Paradise
1111026 NF.:W LIS TING You wtfl want to see
this well k:ept 4 bedroom w1th 1/2 acre lot
close to 35 bvpas s. 1s "pnced to sen so bencr
hurry on thts one Call W1lma

•1
Great commercial bulldmgs

027 58 &amp; 62 Ohve St - Corner of 3rd

separate Call tor tntormation

Can

tie

sold

LOCATE D IN CITY OF GALLIPOLIS
E~ant Brick Beauty • Located tn the Clt\1 2
stof)', full ba sement &amp; garage Oes1gnoo tor.
great ltvlng · Fir'$ ! floo r has a formal entry
w/LR &amp; torma t OR Cherry cabtnms rn the
kitchen Breakfa st &amp; powd er room Second
1loor oNers 4 rooms, BR, FR w/ lireplace.

laundry room, storage room New furnece

w/C/A Very much morel C£111 Virgtnta L
Smith 388-8826/,.46-6806
- 102&amp; NEW LIST ING , looking for

eKtra

1ncome then this IS it. li..-e m one and reni the
othe!l. 3 bedroom 2 story, 2 bedroom dupkn:
lf1017 NEW LISTING 9 a ~res tor the hOlM an(t another ranch 2 beclroom an in one
builder or to pU1 a mobile home on Call package and priced at an unbek»..-able price
Wilma
-. .._,. ·---.-~ _...~o..!...~.~.:.~_oo._ ~~~~ W~ma t~~~~~~~~.... -

•·--~

1996 HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL · La~ge 1 110t8 NEW LISTING . owner ... setl or uade NI028 ~EW LISTING, 3 bedroom ronch on
room, 2 story hQme. 3 -BR . large kit(;hen. OR, tor a mobile home th is 2 bedroom ranch with Rectgewood Dnve, thiS one will not last
forced alr~ac.e.._.Bsautifli.lreed lot. Some. nn""8crat Galf W~ma,.....1.. ..!i-&lt;--M Qille Wilma a ~IL . l®tO¥-.J~L.lhat_ l
a~ntmenl. ·
outbldQs.
te, ,_. Hook-up. $35,000.

•

�.... - -

....,....

----

~,

· Sunday, May 28, 1995

Pomeroy.• Middleport • G&amp;IIII)OIII;,OH • Point Pleasant, WV
-

.

Scientists test revolutionary
~~rming techniques in Geo.rgia

Power of flash
floods·-'awesome'
ByHALKNEEN

(American dog tick is the vector)
POMEROY - If you haven't and Lyme Disease (where lbe vectaken a ride around Meigs County tor is the Black-legged tick).
to view the effects of the flOQdwa- According to Dr. Robert Restifo,
ters and heavy raiDs, you need to. medical entomoloaist for the Ohio
The power of CU(!ading streains Department of lfealth', cases of
upon our hillsides is "awesome." both Spotted Fever (6S9 since
The effects of erosion and 1954) and Lyme Disease (429
washouts can be
e\'CI)'Where. ·since 1984) have been reported in
On a brighter side, your journey Ohio. However, the bacterium
will expose you to the beauty of causing Lyme Disease has never
our county. Discover the hundreds been isolated or identified fnm any
of acres of cultivated tomato, pep- Ohio resident, aoimal or .ticks.
.
per and cabbage fields, the newlyA good aeuon '
planted flower displays in the front
Having ·spoken to many of the'
yards, lush bayfields spotted with Meigs County growers, the local
cows ~r deer ~ our vast wood- floricultlll'l: industry expects ~ fin·
PROMOTED· Dennis J,
lands JUSt newly cloehed in hues of ish the spring season with empty
Miller,
of the Ohio VaHey Elec·
green.
growing houses, smiles on their trlc Company's Kyger Creek
In retrospect, each of us needs to customers faces and anticipation of
plant, Cheshire, has been probecome more aware of our respon- a be:ter spring '96 season.
moted·
to assistant cblef
sibility in caring for this county.
The Agricultural Statistic Serchemist.
The promotion was
Are you clearing hillsides without vice just published the results of a
effective
May
ll. MOler joined
taldng ·the precautions to control 1994 USDA questionnaire which
OVEC
in
1979
u a guard In the
possible erosion?
lists $3 million of floricultural
penonnel
department.
In 1989;
Are you planning to help In the crops grown in Mei~s County. Our
he
transferred
to
the
chemical
Ohio River Sweep on June 17, 1995 spring producuon promises to
sponsored by the Meigs County increase our sales value over this department as ·an associate
chemist. In 1991, he was proLitter and Recycling Board? Where · figure.
moted to assistant chemist and
did you toss that last pop can, sandStatewide, more than $154 milIn
1993, to chemist. He IS a
wich wrapper or tire? Ea,ch of our lion of floricultural crops were
graduate
of the University of
actions can become a force in pro- grown in 1994 which belped Ohio
Rio
Grande
with a BS degree In
viding a better environment for us ; maintain its fifth place ranking in
biology.
MOler
resides In Galand the next generation. Let's 10ta1 sales behind California, FlorilipoliS
and
IB
the
parent of one
count on each other to do his or her da, Texas and Michigan. Although
daughter
and
one
son.
.
share.
the '95 spring season i.s winding
Tick Inquiries
down, many growers have started .·
Homeowners are inquiring their fall crops and have ordered
about control measures for ticks, as stock (mother) plants for the 1996
. more are being found on children season.
and adults as they worlc and play
As in many businesses, trade
outdoors in these warmer days.
shows provide the opportunities to
Ticks are not insects, but belong learn about new varieties, producthe Class Arachnida (four pairs of tion methods, management and
legs), Order Acarina (mites and new equipment. The Ohio Floriculticks). According to Dr. William ture industry is grateful to be able
Lyons, Ohio State University to host one of the premier trade
Extension spe(:ialist, the most com- shows each summer. .
mon tick in Obio is the American
This summer, the 1995 Ohio
dog tick, Dennacentor variabilis. · International Floral Short Course is
Adult American dog ticks are most being held July 8;12 in Cincinnati.
abundant from mid-April to mid- If you are interested in attending
July.
one or more of the days, stop by
They prefer overgrown vacant the office for registration material.
lots, waste farm fields, we¢y roadOn the lookout
side and the edges of paths and bikHome and commercial veg· ·
ing trails. They wait on grass and etable growers keep scouting for
weeds for a suitable host to brush insects add diseases. As the weathagainst the vegetation. Once on the er reverts back to "nonnal," insect
bost, they crawl upward, seeking a populations and diseases can quickHONORED • George
place to attach and take a .blood ly run rampant over the crops.
Paulsen,
a fol'mer Pomeroy resmeal.
Potato beetles have been sighted on
Ident,
has
been honored for 35
Control around the home starts . tomato plants, aphids on peppers
years
service
. w,i th Columbia
with keeping your grass mown and and cabbage loopers on cabbage.
Gas
Transmission
Corp.
keeping your weeds cut down .. Most times it is easier to control a
Paulsen
is
an
operations
superTicks need high humidity .in order small/young infestation then one
visor at the Pavonla Compresto survive, thus depriving ticks of allowed to {Cproduce unchecked.
sor
Station In Mansfield. In
prime habitat will reduce their
Once again, Meigs County bas
1959,
Paulsen began working
numbers. Limit your access and been chosen by Ohio State Univerfor
the
Columbia Gas System,
·your dog's access to potential tick sity and funded by the Vegetable
at
Pavonia
Compressor Station
infested habitats. Check your child · and Small Fruit Research Board to
an
oper3tor
A. In 1969, he
as
twice a day and your dog at least run
Was
named
station
engineer. In
~once a day for ticks.
an experiment in tracking the
·
1970,
Paulsen
was
promoted
to
Chemical sprays are available to . we!ither conditions necessaty for
·
station
engineer
In
charge.
In
belp combat ticks if cleaning up the tomato disease occurrence in the
ticks' habitat doesn't work. Call prospects to minimize fungicide 1982, he began work as operations supervisor. Paulsen Is a
'our office and ask for Extension applications. ·
In addition, the extension office member of First Cbrlstlan
.Fact Sheet 2073-93 : Repellents,
Church In Ashland. He is marcontaining N, N-diethylmeta-tolu- will be tracking the presence of the ried to the former Ruth A.
amide (Deet) or especially perme- variegated cutwonn on tomatoes, Frost.
thrin (Pennanone) applied to the European Com Borer on com and
I
com earwonn on sweet com.
socks and pant legs are useful.
it~ms
(Hal Kneen Is the agricultural
Remember that some tick
species can transmit diseases. The extension agent for Meigs Coun' .
best known are Spotted Fever ty.)

seen

New
would
be allowed under
USDA proposal

USDA broadens crop
'insur·ance benefits

WASHINGTON (AP) Papaya from Belize, cantaloupe
from Brazil, grapes from India and
chives from Israel would be added
By LISA MEADOWS
lhe local CFSA office within 15 to America's food basket under an
. GALl.JPOLIS - The U.S. days of the occurrence. When Agriculture Dep3rtmeot proposal to
Department of Agriculture activat- these conditions are met, payments · make import rules more lenient
ed the last link in its crop insurance will be at 60 percent of the average
USDA is proposing to allow
program with the publication of the market price for crop losses in importation of more than a dozen
regulations on the Non-insured · excess of 50 'p ercent of the fruits and vegetables that cannot
Crop Disaster Assistance Pr.ogram approved yields.
.
now be shipped into the United
(NAP).
REMEMBER - To be eligible States because of fears they would
This program provides assis - in the event of disaster, farmers introduce crop-damaging insects.
tance on crops for which federal must report their crop acreages by
However, the produce would
crop insurance is unavailable. Eli- the. crop reporting date of July have to be inspected before it is
gible crops include commercially 15th.
allowed into the country.
grown crops produced for food or
Lisa Meadows is the County
On. the list of fruits and vegetafiber (such.as wheat, rye, hay, pep- Executive Director of the Gallla
bles that would be .allowed in are:
pers, etc.) and products such as Consolidated Farm Service basil from Ecuador and El Salfloricultural and ornamental nurs- Agency.
vador, chives and dill from Israel.
,.-_:·.;-·.:..·.:..·:;---;r-----...:....;-----------,
cry crops, Christmas trees, turfgrass, industrial crops, and aqua~ ~"!.,
ULTRA HIGH EFFICIENCY
cultural species.
~·c~/
To. be eligible for NAP protec.. ~~:./;··.
HEAT PUMP SYSTEM
tion, a producer must report the
+"'.y/
acreage of a crop to -the local Con-~; "~ The Most Efffcient Pump in the
solidated Farm Service Agency
(fonnerly ASCS). A producer who
Manufactured .· Housing industry
fail s to report will be ineligible for
NAP payments, NAP will provide
12 S.E.E.R.
protection against crop loss at a
I0 Year limited Worronty
level similar to that provided by
ca.tastrophic crop insurance, which
Fe&lt;jtures:
provides insurance coverage for
com, soybeans, and tobacco in Gal•1 0 yr. limited warranty
lia County.
&amp; Copeland scroll
For NAP payments to become
r:ompressor
available, two conditions must be
•12 S.E.E.R. efficiency
satisfied. First, the area in which
. •oesigned for your
the crop ·is grown must suffer a 35 .
·percent loss in prc:x:Juction. Second,
Coleman. lntertherm &amp;
the individual farmer must have
Miller Furnace .
lost at least 50 percent of his or her
*Free estimate$
approved crop yield.
•Financing available fqr
. When a disaster, such as the
everyone no matter
recent flooding, occurs the producer must report the damage or loss at
what utility company
Sine. 1934
iiTrQTUr:DIM
you are on.
T10C H• .t
Pump ·
"1
1n~:n,.
8En£R BY DESIGN
•vf!_ry affordable

ARLINGTON, Ga (AP) -The that applies precise amounts based harvesters or tractors give f~
technology of war has found a on the needs of specific parts of the their location to within aboutlhnlopeaceful purpose in the cotton, field. It, too, relies on computers feet. That information, stored in :
peanut and canota fields of south and signals from the Defense on-board computers, is transferred .
Georgia
Department's fleet of s;ltellites.
to home computers equipped Willi .
Instead of guiding missiles to
"With this and with biotecbnol- special software to draw detailc:d ·
their targets, the technology pro- · ogy, we're on the ver~e of a new maps of fields. The maps show.·
· duces computer-generated maps agricultural revolution, ' said Craig variations in moisture, pests, ferdli~
resembli~g psychedelic art and . Kvien, director of-the University of ty, soil,and other conditions.
•·~
satellite signals that help farmers Georgia's National El)vironmenta1 7
This technology allows farmers '
improve crop yields and reduce ly Sound Production Agriculture · to monitor and control precise))'.
pesticide use.
·
. Laborluory in Tifton. "That's small areas of lheir fields. Instead
The technology - known as probably equal to (the development of spraying the same amount of fer.
precision fanning - is being used of) the tractor and chemicals for tilizers or pesticides on the entireon the huge farms of the Midwest pesticide control and fertilization."
field, they can adjust the rate to:
University scientists will test meet the needs of areas as small as
and now is being adapted for use in
the South, where ftelds are smiiller precision farming equipment 50 square feet.
and crop varieties are greater.
·
throughout south Georgia this year
Some of the freld maps look like
Earlier this week, the technolo- in wheat, rye, canola. cotton and psychedelic art of red, orange,l'yelgy was inaugurated in Georgia with peanut fields. Equipment' designed low and blue bloJ&gt;s. Some resemble
the harvest of a canola field.
for the smaller fields of the South three-dimensional drawings of a
A computer mounted in a bar- should be commercially available mountain range with pealcs for the
vester stored yield data and satellite in a few years.
most fertile areas and valleys for
"We know we're beaded less fertile areas.
.
.
signals that gave the machine's
.precise position on the globe. With toward a more economically sound
"There's a cost-saving for the
that infonnation, the fanner can agriculture and this is one of the grower," said Will Harris III, manfigure out bow yields differ in vari- vehicles to get us there," said Cal- ager of the Gold-Kist Inc. farui
ous parts of their fields, and then boun County farmer Mike Newber- complex in Arlington, about ·js
possibly boost low-yield areas by ry, who !)as 39 acres of cotton that miles southwest of Albany. "ICs.
adjusting applications of fertilizer 'will be fertilized and harvested also ecologically beneficial. You
or pesticides.
with precision farming equipment.
don't spray areas that don't need
Backers of the technology also
Satellite receivers mounted on it."
. • ··
demonstrated a fertilizer sprayer
.
. '.
oi ...~

Backyard chefs choose beef
WASHINGTON (AP) holiday will be a hefty 61.1 million
Where's the beef!
pounds-. 25 •percent more than the
It's on the grill, according to a average daily consumption.
poll conducted for the National
And this year, the main course
Cattlemen's Association, which of the Memorial Day cookout may
Jound, not surprisingly, that beef is cost less than .it did last year, the
tbe nation's favorite cookout food.
association said.
The poll, conducted by the .
Prices of beef, as well as other
McLean, Va.-based Wirthlln meats, have been declining because
Group, found that two out of three increased production bas kept
Americans plan to fire up their ample supplies on the market.
grills during the upcoming Memo- These conditions are expected to
rial Day weekend, and that 73 per• · continue in the months and proba·
cent of them will be cooking beef.
bl y years ahead. .
Chicken was second, at 27 per- . Beef production rose 2 percent
cent, followed by pork, 6 percent; during the f11st three months of this
turkey, 3 percent; and fish 2 per- year, compared with a 6 percent
cent.
increase last year from 1993, the
Hamburgers are the most pre- association said. It's expected that
ferred grilled-beef dish, at 44 per- production during the f11st half of
cent, but steaks are a close second, this year will be the largest since
39 percent.
1977.
More beef is eaten on Memorial
Poultry output is expected to be
Day than on any other day of the S percent higher this year than last
year. The cattlemen's group esti- year, when it was 6 percent higher
mates that the total on this year's than 1993.

l

Business briefs

W ASHI~GTON (AP) - Tbe '
senior Democrat on the congressional Joint Economic Committee
asserted that unless the Federal
Reserve lowers interest rates, the
nation's economy faces an imminent r,ecession.
"The warning signs of an economic crash are everywhere,'' Rep.
Pete Stark of California said in a
letter to Fed Chairman Alan
Greenspan Friday. He noted a
· weakening job market, slack factory orders, shrinking retail sales and
falling home sales.

~apllllm-mad'eTronCsea~itlelt buck~

les in about 282,000 Festivas buUt
from 1988 to 1991.

1:n

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME

HE'AnN'O~ooMI'{G---·~...........25\ML-' ~..

(614) .446-9416 or 1·800;872·5967
SpKiaHots in monufaciU&lt;od housing hooting &amp;

-

.,.;,ling oyot"""

-.. ·--,·-trtt--J&gt;ano-and.....w:.---11-vp
.

1"6V1

COMFOIIT ASSURED~

t3et S•llord School Rd., Gompotts, Ohio

WV 00162 CTR lJ&lt;;.

·WV 010212 M H Uc

,,

•

·

""

~

.

..'-.·..'
..;

.

~

~·

'

• Pork production is projected: uj::
be 2 percent higher this year.
··
With ample supplies on the mar- .
ket, competition for consumers •
meat dollars is expected to contin- ·
ue.
.
Though beef enjoys the spot~:
light on Memorial Day - the tradl· ;
tiona! start of summer and thecookout season - backyard chefS:
pick beef as the entree less often at'
other times, but it is still the clearfavorite.
:
The poll shows that during the-·
summer months - when 70 percent of Americans grill at least two
or three times a month -. 62 per- ·
cent choose be!!f, 25 select chickeQ,:.
4 percent want pork, 1 percent go:
for turkey. and 1 percent choose-fish.
::
The survey of 1,000 adults was
conducted April 17-20. Its margin:"
of error is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

~

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) . General Motors Corp. officers held
the company's smallest, cheapest
and shortest annual meeting in
decades.
But not everyone was happy
with .the streamlining Friday. "This
is 11tter nonsense," said John J.
Gilbert of New York, one of three
shareholders whose oomments and
questions ·at last year's meeting
helped stretch the session to more
than four hours.

&lt;W.L

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ford
Motor Co. joined"'DC\Jf1he..Jarsest
voluntary recalls in biswry in
• agn!eing to replace or repair

~:~

--------Business b r i e f s - - - - - - -

,

--

-.---

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
Clinton administration rejected a
Japanese request for urgent talks on
the . contentious auto trade dispute,
saying it would prefer to wait untU
about a week before America's

punitive tariffs take effect.
U.S. Trade Representative
Mickey Kantor suggested in a letter
Friday to the Japanese that both
sides meet beginning June 20 in
Washington. The punitive t&lt;Uifis of
100 percent on $5.9 billion worth
of Japanese &lt;luxury auios are scheduled to take effect June 28.
ATI..ANTA (AP) - In a letter
to 900 advertising and public relations fmns, the head of the Atlanta

The

Olympics appealed to th.e companies' patriotism to refrain from .·
"ambush" marketing._
· Olympic officials have in some
cases taken legal action to thwart
unauthorized ads that claim ties to
the Games. But the letter Friday
from Billy Payne, president of the
Atlanta Committee for the Olympic
Games, said if the value of the
sponsorships is diminished by
ambush ads, corporate support
could dty up and hurt athletes.

1990 Ford Bronco 4x4

Bibbee
MOTOR COMPANY
See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Just 20 Minutes Drive Straight Up
Rt. 7 North Thru Tuppers Plains

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

614 667-3350

, 351 V8, Auto, PS; PB, Air, PW,
Tilt, Cruise, 2 tone, one owner,
boat towing vehicle

$9,90Q.OO

Our
Lot Is
0

Full

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