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                  <text>'Tecumseh' -the
life of a Shawnee

Powell and politics

-page Aa

Hi: 80s
Low: 60s

·Featured on page 81

•

Pair shares British
Open
lead
page C1
'

•

tmts
Aristide may back invasion
Deposed Haitian
leader backs off
past opposition
From combined AP reports
WASHINGTON - Depos ed
Haitian Pre sid ent Jean · Il cnrand
Ari stidc is retrcming from categori cal opposilion 10 usc of mili lary
force to r es tore conslitutional rule

10 hi s homeland.
"It' s up to the ~nt e rnalional
communlly to do whal they have 10
do 10 restore democracy ," Arislidc
said 1\'hen asked his views on mili·
tary intervention .

He made the comment during an
&lt;lppcarancc on CNN's Both Sides
wah Jesse Jackson.

FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1994

Fruth Phannacys

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Age: 9 Montha ·
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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786 N. Second
Middleport, Ohio
Travla Ray Eblin- 4 Veara
Krlaten RtnH Eblin- 2 % Vea~rall
Ronnie and Danna Eblin
Pomeroy, O"lo
"' .;

..

'

992-6491

Heaven LaeAnn Wtatflll
Age: 4V•r•
Roger &amp; Shalla We81fall
Readavllle, Ohio

Hours
M-F 8-9, Sat. 9-9
11-7
''

o '

I

I

.

.

In a sc pJr&lt;HC rcc ortkd message
R;mda ll Rub in son , an Ari strdc
broad cast by U.S. mililar y pl ane' all y ami direc tor of th e Tr&lt;.:~n sA fri c a

/l ying o ver Haiti , Aristidc vo wed to
hi s country men Fri day: " Th e day
or m v rctl!fll I ~ not far o ff. ,. But he
dich/t say how h ~ would return .
A ri ~ ri dc had said J ~nc b st month
that he wo uld ' 'n e ve r . n eve r ,
r1 cvcr " agree to the restoration of

democ racy lhrough military inter·
ve nt ion

Thai s1a1emen1 mit&lt;ll cd· so me
supponcrs who believe he will
never be reinsUlled without mililary
int er ve nti o n . He mad e th e new
c omm ent s aft er co ming und er

heavy press ure from those backers.
Tile Clinton adminislration' s posi ·
tion is lhm such action is an option
bul thai , for ~1 c lime being , it will
rely on economi c pressure to forc e
the surrender of the HaiLian regim e.

lohhyii tg group, said th e in vasion
rssue is nm i.l rl easy one for A n strdc
hc c;Hr se o f m ~~rr y 1-bit iom s' sour
mconori cs of the 1 ~ 1 5·34 U. S. moll ·

tary occt rp:nio n uf 1-biti .
Rob on son saod he be lieves thai
much nr the conl!oversy wo uld be
removed of U.S. forces were 10 be
acco111pani ed by 1roops from other
cou nlrics 111 lh e hemi sph ere and if
th ere we re guar antees o f an early

depCirturc by the invaders.
Before Ari s tidc taped hi s CNN
appearance Thursda y, he appcmed
10 r e tr eat rr o m hi ~ unalt erabl e
oppos tti on to military interv ention
i n ;t st&lt;lt c mcm call i ng for ' ' .s w ift

anti tl c lermin c cl ac lion" by the
intcrn ation:tl communit y tO rcsol\·c

tlt c cri sis.

He slopped short uf a dtrCCI ca ll
fo r mil i tar y acti o n, say1ng he is
b~ trr c d hy the Hai tian consti tuti on,

under penalt y of imp cac hm cnl ,
f ro m ~tdvoc ating any suc h step.
M eanwhile, the adm rnr .s tn.H ion
sllll hopes Haili 's mil owry lead ers
wollleavc voluntarily rJthcr than as
a COn SC lJUCn CC Of U.S . for ce .
Dcpul y Secrewry of S1:o 1c S1roilc
Talho11 said S:ll urtb y.
"The end ol. lh c day '' :o ppm:tch·
ill g," T~llbo tt s:t id Dfl CNN's [ vuns
arui Novak , adding that " we ce r tainl y r an't wait f orever."
Ta l bott re affirm ed th e udmin ~ lrati o n '.s hopes that HJitian mili -

lary lead ers will res pond

10

th e

pressure of economic sanclions and

leave volunlarily.

BACK HOME IIY CHOICE- Sneral of Ihe 21 7 !tailians
replllriated to their counlrJ await processing :11 ~~ doeks ide t't'nh'r
in Porl·au-Prinr~ after bl•inJ.l n•turm•d h)' th~ U.S. Coast (;uanl
rutter Spencer on Friday. Tht· rcfu~n.'i, "ho had fl ed to the U.S. in
makeshift boat' and had been held al f;uanl :tnanw Hay in C uba,
nJiunll't:rl'd to nturn to 1-laiti ol' their tmn fret· will . (AP)

Pair not hurt when aircraft
touches down minus wheels
lly KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Stall'
GALLIPOLIS - A pilot and
his passenger had 10 end their night
lo 1he Gallia-Mcigs Regional Airport lhc hard way - withoUI land. mg gear.
Due 10 an apparent failure of
both the clecuical and hand-operated mechanism Friday. a Cessna
C3101 five· sealer landed on its bottom at the airport at6:40 p.m.
Bu1 pilot Christopher S. Norgiel,
·31 , Amanda, Mich., and Paul E.
Lamarche. no age available, Plymoulh, Mich., his passenger,
walked away unscathed and con lactcd authorities from the pay
phone outside 1hc airport's main
building.
"We were preuy damned
lucky," Lamarche commented

lalcr. "We could have ended up in a from the G-M aJCport, Norgicl sa id
mess over there," he added, point- he tried 10 lower 1he landing gear
ing 10 the grassy area beyond the wilh con1rol s btll failed . He
runway and highlighting the fa ct attempt ed to usc lh c hand crank
Norgiel had kept the plane from
thai opcralcs the gear, but il sluck ,
s kidding oul of control after it he said.
made comact.
Hoping that the gear might have
Norgiel, who told investigating depressed ilscl f, Norg icl piloted the
officers he had between 30 and 50 plan e , own ed by Ul timaiC Air,
hours of e&gt;perience piloting the Livonia . Mi ch., toward the runplane, and Lamarche said they had way 's nonlleasl edge and skidded
never been involved in any pasl air approximat e ly 7 30 fe el un\11 it
incidents. Officials at the sc ene cam e 10 a Slo p ncar the runway's
agreed wilh Lamarche's sentimems mid section.
that luck was 'with the pair.
Norgicl "did a good JOb of keep ·
Norgicl IOid troopers from th e ing it strai ght" .and preventing the
Galloa -Mcigs Pos t of the State pl:me from sliding off lhc runway,
Highway Pa1rol, which invcstigales lroopcrs com mcmcd.
aviation accidents, lhat he and
Aflcr exi ting 1hc plane, Norgiel
Lamarche were enroute to Gallipo- t~ml LlmMchc comacted .authorirics
li s from Willow Run Airpon in by phone. The mrporl's main office
Dc1roit. Approximately five moles
(Conlinued nn A2)

Movers of old mill to Racine play numbers game

'

•

'

Meigs Regional Airporl when ils landing gear
failed. Rolh lhe pilot and his passenger were
uninjured in the inddl1nt

Managing Rutland's budget: all
a matter of getting by with less

New home for landmark
By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Senlinel SiaiT
RACINE - How do you
move a building lhal is more
than 150 years old?
Very carefully lhal is .. . by
the numbers, to be more exact.
Workers dismamling the old
Cross Mill building in Pomeroy,
which slands along Condor
Street on lhc former Farm
Bureau properly, arc labeling
every rafter and board prcparong
10 move the old slruclurc, piece
by numbered piece, 10 Racine's
S1ar Mill Park.
There it will be reconstructed, explained project coordina.
lor Dale Hart of Racine.
Once rcconstruciCd, the
building will serve as a museum
and model gris1 mill.
The mill - built on 1836 and
originally locmcd ncar Racine
by lhe junction of Oak Grove
and Bowman's Run roads,
where portions of the old mill
arc still visible at the site . serves as a prime example of
early 1800s mill archiiCCture.
The mill was moved to
Pomeroy in 1937 after the Ohio
River backed up in10 Bowman's
Run and shifted the building off
iiS foundation. The building was
last used as a mill in 1917.
The mill is made almos1
entirely of sturdy oak planks,
beams and posts. Its massive
beams and posts, of a size and
lcnglh unheard of today, arc all
original and clearly display
milling marks dating to lhe
mill's original cons1Iuc1ion.
Instead of using nails, the
original contractors cutlhe posts
and beams to interlock, drilled
holes and locked the pieces
together with large pins, also of
oak.
Despite its age and the
actions of vandals who have
broken most of its windows, the
mill is incredibly strong and
able to withstand the move, said
Hart.
Four workers have been
hired on a temporary full-time
basis to take the building apart
and to put it back togelher, Hart
said.
Hart said the authentic"mill
parts will be used inside the
(Continued on A2)

CHECKING FOR DAMAGE- Siale llighwa)' Patrol Trooper Shawn Cunninj.!ham fakt.·s a
look al potenlial damage lo lhe Ct'." "" C3HII
lhal made a rough landing Friday al lhr Gallia-

lly GEORGE AllATE
Times-Sentinel SlafT
RUTLAND - Running Rut ·
land government is like walking a
lighlrope, prompling a close wmch
on every cem to ensure the bills arc
paid, village officials said recently.
Rutland rccenlly approved its
1995 estimated budgc1 totalling
5215,000, said Sandy Smith, the
village 's clerk-treasurer. Bul, this
sum docs nol represent how close
the village comes to ending each
year in the red and how much
spending is already locked in, she
said.
At the end of 1995 the village is
anticipated 10 have only about $200
remaining in operating funds ,
Smith said.
"I don't want people to think
we're aboul 10 fall apart or go
bankrupt," Smilh said. "We don '1
waste money. We don't have it to
waste. There arc some things we
need , nol want, thai the money is
no I IM'rc for."
Mayur JoAnn Eads gave the village a " B" grade for managing its
money.

"We rea lly don't was1c money,"
Eads said. "We do what we have 10
wilh the loUie bit we have. We're

very small."
Mo st of 1hc mone y "com es on
and goes oul," such as the hand long
of bills for lhc newly-conSiruclcd
sewer and w;ttcr lines, Eads added.
Smilh said lhal while she undcrslands Ihal 80 pcrcc m of Ihe vo/ .
lagc ' s res id ent s arc considered to

be in lhc low-income bracket, th e
villag e needs more revenue.
P~ tn

of thi s 600-rcsid cnt

l"l )l ll -

munit y' .-; wo es li es in th ~ I ~JCI Lh ~
vill e~gc opcre~lecl on f&gt;mill s of la.&lt;a·
lion a few years ago, bul lhc mil lage h:os dropped 10 2. As a resull ,
the vollagc was forced 10 tum olf iiS
SIICC!Ioglu s las\ rail.
" There was Loa much talk on th e

streets that money was going into

REMOVING ROOF - Workers preparing to move tbe old
Cross Mill rrom Pomeroy to Racine began dismantling the
building last week. Here workers move boards from tbe r?or
during the earlier stages or the move. lluilding parts are bemg
numbered to assist In reconstruction (inset).

Smith .s~1 id undcrSlands rcsidcnLr.;

get impatient w1th the village.
" llut when you don't ha ve the
equipm ent . th e manpower and the
mone y, hm1· can you do it?" Smith
S~l i l f.

The vil lage IIO IIIrl lik e 10 buy a
salaries anti 11 wasn'l," Smnh saio!. good hac k!H ~ or utility truck since
"There arc so many hidden COSIS ."
emplo yee .\ drive th e ir own ve hi Some costs oneludc more lhan cles. sh.: ~t (h kd.
55.000 annually spcnl on worker's
The I IJ~..f r~ vl" IIU C.:i c .~ pludcd to
compensation and at least $5 ,000 more lhan 5"5 0,000 be c ause of
on liability insurance, she added . grants. while thi s yc:1r income was
Federal and s1a1c cnvironmcnlal unly abou1 $50,000 from all Wxcs
requirements have been expen sive and fin es, Smi th said.
to ndminislcr.
''This is a just-gelling-by budRutland's cxpendiiUrcs for gel, " Smith said. "We can get along
salaries for rour employees arc just with the way things arc but we
minimal, she added . The marshal can '1 improve. Right now we don't
earns about $13 ,000 a year, th e
(Conlinued on Al)
maimenan cc supcrvt sor 519,000,

AKZO report finds extent
of leak more than believed
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va .
- A leak of toxic chemicals rrom
a Mason County plant may have
hecn 90 limes larger than originally
estimated and could have lasted
longer than officials lhougbt , a
company report said.
AKZO Chemical Inc. filed the
report last week with the West Virginia Division of Environmental
Pro tee lion.
The report said the leak July 5
released 722 pounds of ethylene
oxide imo the air and more than
1,050 pounds into s plant wastewater lrcatmcnl facility.
Plant Manager Bill Brady had
es1imated at first 1hat only 20
pounds or the chcm ical escaped.
Brady said the larger amount is
the mostth~l could have escaped.
AKZO uses about 140,000
pounds or the chemical every
month 10 make flamc-rcwrdant
material s.
The plant manager blamed the
leak on the failure of a two-inch-

the maimcnancc employee $16,000
and lhc clerkS II ,000, Smilh saod.
"We dun'1 expccl 10 reu se lhe
(water or sewer) r&lt;llcs," Smi1h said.
"That was a big debt to pul on a
village lhi1&lt;size bul we had 1o."
Th e vi llage sewer debl 523,000 every SIX momhs for 1he
ncxl 30 years - was a burden 10
place on UJC VIllagers, but lhc utili ly sySiems will laS! well inlo 1hc
nex t ce mury, she added.

GOOD MORNING

wrdc gaske t on a bleeder valve on a

Today's Times-Sentinel

pipe lhat carries clhylenc ox ode

16 St&gt;ctions- 154 Pages

from a storage Lank to a produc tion

unll
According 10 a slory in lhe
Charlcs10n Gazelle, Brady said the
bleeder valve is used lo reliev e
pressure when the pipe, whi ch car·
rics e1hylcnc oxide about 180 yard s
from lhc s1oragc tank to lhe produclion unil, is being cleaned.
Originally, Brady said plant
workers noticed 1hc leak immcdi·
atcly after it occurred at about ~
a.m. and had i1 conlrol within 15
minuiCs. The company's rcpon 10
DEP said AKZO officials do not
really know when Ihe leak began .
Brady said the bleeder valve
was las1 checked at 6 a.m., the
Gazelle said. Workers discovered
the leak at 7:45 a.m., the report to
DEP said.
Brady said 1he larger release
amount noted on the report is the
most 1hat could have escaped dur(Continued on A2)

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Columns
Fw! Crow
Bob HoeDicb
Jim Sands
Chuck Stope

. I

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01
B2&amp;5
03-7
Insert
A4

A3
A6
Cl -8
Bl
A2

�Page-A2-Sunday Times--Sentinel

Weather
OHIO Weather
Sunday, July~l7
Accu-Wealhe~

forecast for

conditions and high temperatures

MICH

IToledo ls4' I
Youngstown

INO

~
~

.4_.

· ,· ,,,,~ .~ ··.·.··
Showers T-srorms Ram

Rumes

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
C199o4 Accu-Wealher, Inc

Slight chance of storms
haunts ~~ei!ItYd~e~kend
A stationary from will push back
nonhimoOhiotoday,bringingwilh
it a chance far showers or lhunderstorms.
Still, partly sunny skies should
be !he rule.
Highs today wtll reach !he
middle 80s.
The record high temperature
for Saturday was 100, set in 1988.
Therecordlowwas52,setin 1957.
Sunrise today was at 6:17am.
SWJset is at 8:59p.m.
Southern Obio
Today ... Partly cloudy. A 20
peccent chance of aflernoon thunderstorms. High in the middle 80s.
Extended forecast
Monday .. .A chance of showers
or thunderstonms. Lows in the 60s
and highs mainly in !he middle 80s.
Tuesday .. .Fair. Lows in the 60s
and highs in the lower to middle
80s.
Wednesday ..
chance of
showers or thunderstonns. Lows in
lhe 60s and highs in the 80s.
Arouad tbe nation
A blanket of hazy, hot and
humid air covered much of the East
Saturday and rain pelted !he Midwest
Showers were expected in the

:A

nonhern Plains and from the Middle
Atlantic to the Tennessee Valley.
Temperatures were lilcely in lhe 80s.
Fanher soulh. aflernoon lhWJderstorms were expected from !he soulhem Plains to !he Soulheast coast, wilh
temperatures in !he 90s.
Cooler, less humid air was expeeled to filter mto !he interior Norlheast, with only a few isolated showers
and temperatures in the 80s. Strong
thunderstorms were likely in the humidairofVirginiaandNorlhCarolina.
Searing heat and sunshine were
expected in the southern Plains, with
temperatures in the 90s. Strong thWI·
derstorms were expected from Nebraska to eastern Kansas.
In !he eastern Great Lakes, SWIshine was expected, with a few showers m western areas. Partly sunny,
seasonable weather was likely in the
Dakotas and Minnesota, with temperalures in !he 70s.
Thunderstorms were likely in the
Rockies and in deserts near the Mexican border. Temperatures in lhe West
were expected to range from the 60s in
lhe Nonhwest Coast to 110 in the
Southwestern deserts.
The hot spot in the nation .Friday
was l..alte Havasu City, Ariz., with an
afternoon high of 116 degrees.

Greenspan: deficit cutback
vital to continued growth
WASH!NGTON (AP) - The
economy is "experiencing the ideal
combination of rising activity,
falling unemployment and slowing
Inflation" but that won 'tlast unless
Congress and the pres ident truly
cu rb the budget deficit, Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
warns.

Although the wors t defi Cit
Increases ·won ' t occur until after
20 I0 when the Baby Boom generation starts 10 rcure, the expectation
of a ns1ng sea of red mk already
ha s exacted an economtc toll,
Greenspan told a commission of
top government a·nd private leaders

" Fman, Ial markets have a way
of bnn gmg future problems 1010
the present." he said. "Long-term
Interest rates arc higher now
beca use markets are anticipating
ri sing dciiCils 10 the next century.
. We arc already paying for our
f:ulurc to come full y_to grips with

Microsoft agrees
to federal terms
in antitrust action
opcr.wn g system Tho se program s
run 1hc baSic fun cuon s of a computer, such as stonng a fil e.
Microsoft's MS-DOS prog ram
"'"'c hose n for the firSt IBM pe rsonal com puter, wh 1ch went on sale
1n 198 1 As ot her co mpani es
dcs1gncd s1milar machmcs La compete w11h IBM, the Microsoft prog r~m b8came a de fac to sta ndard
.111d arc' no\\ on .Ibout HO percent ol
the w01 ld 's more th,IO 150 million
compu lers
Over tim e. th e co mpany began
reqwnng PC makers lo pay 11 a fcc
fo r eve ry com put er il prod uced.
Icg ardlc ss of wheth er it had the
\1Icrosoh operaung progra m.
\Vhcn compctllors such as Novell Inc :md IB M lalcr ca me al ong
wit lt produc ts that competed w1 1h
'v!S-DOS PC ma kers ha d litt le
1ncenl!VC to usc those prog ram :-;
"nee they would ha ve 10 pay a fcc
10 1he nval pmgram and M1croso f1
· '~!, crosofl used '" monopol y
power 10 levy a tax on PC manu l'acturers who would otherwise like
to oflcr an alt ern a11 ve system,"
sa id Ann e Bingaman, ass1stant
attorn ey ge neral in charge of the

ll v DARLENE SUPERVILLE
. \ ~!-i(X' iah•d Press \Vriter

IMansfield lao' I•

WAS HINGTON - Mt crosofl
Corp must end monopo lisuc pracIJCl:S t..hJt. have shut out ot.her computer software co mpanieS and
hJOLked lllnO\' cli!Oll , ~l CC OrdJn g tO
,111 agrc cniCIII ~&gt; llh U.S . and EuropCJll
au th o n t lCS
that was
.1nnounccd Sa t urda~.
I he agreement end s one of Ihe
highest profil e antitrust IIIVCSI Igatwns by th e U.S Ju su ce Department s1ncc th e breakup of the Be ll
System 10 IY84
Mic rosofl. the largest mak er of
pcrso n.t l compute r so ft ware, will
change excl usiOnary co ntracls 11
, h;~s wllh PC manufactur ers and
cl~rnmatc some rcs UICll ons 1t has
unposed on other so ftware makers.
The conse nt dec ree that
Micro so ft agreed to late Friday
"will proh1 bll the compan y !rom
con1mumg to engage '" mnnopoli suc pracuccs in the future." Attorney General Janel Reno s.ud.
"W hile ~1 e company fairl y and
lawfull y c lim bed to th e top ol
mdustry ladder, il used unf.m ami
ill ega l pracuc cs to malllt i.lln Jts
dommant poSIII on," Reno sa 1d .
The Red mon d, Wa sh.- ba se d
company's busmcss pracuces ha ve
hcc n under rcv tew by U.S agen ctes for four years. Co mpet ition
e nforce me nt autho rtli CS of 1h e
European CommiSSion began prob
1n g Micro so ft a yea r ago and
reach ed a sunilar agreement w1 th
the company.
Willi am Neukam, se nio.r vice
pres ident of law and corporate
aff airs lor M1crosofl , sa 1d lhe com pany agreed 10 1hc sculcments to
avmd protracted court ba ul cs
"W c believe the terms me reasonable and il IS a sensible time to
put thi s bcl11nd us and move for wa rd ," Ncukom sa id
He sa1d Microsoft continues to
believe 11 has done nothing wrong.
''As we hav e sa id fr om th e
beg inning of the mvcsuga uon ...
Mi c ro so ft believe s that 11 ha s
always conducted its bus1ncss 1n a
perfectly legal fa shi on," Neukam
sa1d.
The most 1mportant change for
the company IS m the kmd of contract it can make with PC makers
like Compaq, Dell or Gateway to
install Its MS-DOS and Windows

a nlltrUSl

Lottery numbers
IIJ· Th&lt; Assuciated Press
Th e fo ll ow mg numbers were
se lec ted In F11day's OhiO and West
V1rgm ta loucncs·

OHIO
P1 ck 3: H-1-0
P1ck 4: 6-4 -4-4
BuckeyeS: 5-10-!2-14-IH
our long-term budget problem."
There was one tiCket sold nam Greenspan was first to testify Ing ,Ill !lvc numbers drawn 10 Fn Fnday before the 32-member da y ni ght 's Buckeye 5 dr:~wmg ,
B1parllsan CommiSSIOn on Entitle- .md It 's wonh SIOO.OOO, the Oh1o
ment and Tax Reform, which Lollcry so:11 d.
began meeting last month and aims
The wmnmg II CkCI was sold &lt;11
by December to offer a no-non- the S&amp;G C !frynu t 10 Grove Clly
sense plan for reining m the deficit.
There were 232 Buckeye 5 lick "Ttmc IS no longer on our side. cts w1 th lour nf the numbers, ;. Jnd
Any presumption that the deficit is e.1ch "worth 5250 The h,XXX tiCk bcn tgn is clearly false," Greenspan Ch -., hov.'ln g three of th e numbers
sa1d. "Demographic trends imply M C e.1ch wonh S 10. and the 6l46'l
an mexorable upward path for gov- t1 ckcls shmvmg two ol the numbers
ernment expenditures as the next arc each wonh S l
century unfolds .... The longer we
Th e Jackp ot lor S.llur lLiy's
wait, the more Draconian the reme- Surer Louo was wonh S 1(,million.
dies will have to bo."
The Oh 1o Loucry Will pay oul
The deficit peaked 10 1992 at Sl,I6H,I I3 50 to w1nncrs 111 Fll 51290 billion and is expected to fall day's P1ck 3 Numbers dall y game.
below $200 billion in both 1995 Sal es 10 P1ck 3 Numbers totaled
and 1996 as a result of spending s 1.470.H02
caps approved by Congress last
In the o1her dail y g;une. P1ck 4
summer, according to Congression- Num hcr.. ;
pla r c r"
Wd~c1c t1
al Budget Offt ce Director Raben ':&gt; 12~.' 71 and wd I , hare sr,_
),(;2X
D. Rci sc haucr , who follo we d
S"ks In Ru , kcye 'i loi.Ii cd
Greenspan to the wnness table
\) I i.ll Ill
WI·:Sr VIIH;INIA
D,ul y 1 )-7-6
fl.IIi y 4 4-4.1 -X
landing.
C'.ISh
21 1-J-5- (l-23 -25
Federal Av,auon Admmi siiaUon

AKZO report
(Continued from AI)
mg the period from 6 to 8 a.m., and
later when the plant workers
flushed the pipe.
The Gazelle reported Brady said
his company docs not have monitors- elaborate sensors that detect
chemical leaks - on the ethylene
oxide tran sfer pipe. Because !here
arc no monit.ors, he satd, AKW 1s
not sure when the leak started
"You don't put monitors on a
gasket," Brady told the Gazelle Friday. "You just don 'I do that."
No one was injured in the acctdcnl at the 400-acre plant south of
Pomt Pleasant.

official s were expected be at the
mrport Saturday to mspect the
plane, troopers sa1d.
The landmg was the 36th avialion-related accident invesugated to
date by the patrol post lromcally,
the InCident came on the anniversary of the first-ever atr crash handied by the post Two people were
Injured in the crash of a sma ll plane
ncar Pomeroy on July 15, 1950.

Air show crash kills 4
TREMONT CITY (AP) - A
single-engine Cessna !72 carrymg
skydivers taking part in an air show
crashed Saturday, killing all four
occupants, the State Highway
Patrol said.
Wttnesses · satd the plane
appeared to have trouble gainmg
altitude after taking off shortly
after 10 a.m.

(Continued from Al)
building. The mill will bo powered by water, he said.
The projects still needs local
financial suppon. said Hart.
More than 50 businesses,
organizations and indviduals
have donated about $20,000 to
the project to date, Hart noted.
People wanting to the donate
to the project can make donalions
to
the
Racine
Museum/Cross Mill fund at
Racine Home National Bank,
Hart commented.
Those making contributions
of $100 or more will have their
name placed on a bronze plaque
to be located at the mill's new
home, said Hart.

1992

Bud~ets

,..,-

...

1994

1993

1995

Regional

July 17, 1994

,__Tri-County Briefs:_
Man jailed by deputies
CiAI Lli'OL IS - l, ony G Ki11I gh 1111lh, :' 6 Culumllu s w.1s
.lm.'stcd l·nd.ty n1ght &lt;]O a commtlll pic.\\ hc n&lt;_ h ,~.LII.t!ll for a p.roh.! IIUil \'lol,I!IO!l, the Gal It a Coun ty Shndl 's fkp.!rtllll.' ll t rqxntc.,; d

GVFD responds to truck .fire
21,000

lnsuraDce

8,000

rcponnl

Th e IHL w,1s ptH ou1 \V!! h cx tm ~u t s l h'rs bl·lon· the ckp,trtrn c rll
:~1 11\ L' d 11 tl h' p. uk11lg hH o! Ho L-:~r Cli!ll\. .1 (i\TU '- Pd~C" l ll.Hl -..I HI
h ~.,. tr lH. k 1s o&gt;v ncd hv C!!I lord Grc~ r 1·I \\\ 11 -,ttlf l

Capital oull.ay

'[\.,l'h ~· llrl..'lrght cfs IC..,por! ,kd \\till

tllll.'

JI0 \!1 1il iJIL' } C. !r

&lt;12&gt;

278

&lt;344&gt;

&lt;156&gt;

483

472

750

406

750

C ~\I . UPOUS - J csscL Joh'""''·" 7 1 1-l,Si.Iicl&lt;c~ ol e7,c,,"

!I t'd

Fnd.J ~'

lor pos-.;c:-;s •on of an open

lO fll. tlll L~ r

ol .d cohol, tlw (; ;tl -

hpo]p., PoliCe De p.! r lm c nt reponed

205

406

'"·l" tilL'

Ma11 cited by police
t

474

tr ti L~ lh i2 L.tll

Vending machine stolen
GALLIPOLIS - A $2,000 7-U p IC' IIlii ii g llldcillrtC W,IS Slllic-11
lrorn .1 Gall1po il s bus1ncss. th e Ga lli '-! CtHJnt y Sll L·nlJ's DL'p.trt rn clll
fL' IXli\ L' d
i\l.ir\'111 Roh1 c of l&lt; ohi e's Auto S.Ib , o)h1 Si.IIc f&lt;nul c liJO,iold
dcputH.:"i the ll i..JL hHlC w.1s stolen OVC illl ):!.l Jt Fwl;1y.

City commi.u ion to meet Tuesday
C \LLIPOI .IS - The C.llll pol l" l'1 !\ Cnrn rll iS'&gt; i\lll will lll\.' &gt;2 1 Ill
-.css lllll 5 p m lu csdJy 111 till ( 1.t ll1[1 ol1s f\ 1tJI11L1 p,il LOl li\ ·

' ]X'l 1.1 1

n lOill

Managing Rutland's budget
(Continued from A I)
ha ve any debts hut that 's becau se

we don ' t IMvc any money and we
t:~lll ' t sp~ n u

11 "

t

Rio zoning board to meet

Panel ponders split views
on Breyer as hearings end
WASHINGTON (AP)
Supreme Court nom 111cc Steph en
(j. llr eye r wa s pra1 se d by th e
Amcr1can Bar Assoc1aUon bul
ca lled an msc ns1Uv c cx trcm1 st by
consumer acuvi st Ralph Nader &lt;h
ill S conrmnatiDn hcanng drew tO a
close Fnday.
Twemy-onc witnesses tcsu f1ed
for or against Breyer's nommauon
dunng a day 10 wh1ch OIOSl of the
Sc na1e J udiciary Com millcc's I~
members spent lillie ume tn th e
heanng room.
A committee vote to approve
Breyer see med certa in after he
completed three days of tcstnnony
Thursday, and nothmg tran spired
F11day to alter !hat assessment.
"He's in good shape," sa1d a
smdmg Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah.
Chmrman Joseph Biden. D-Del .
sa1d the committee will vote on the
nom1nauon as early as Tuesday and
no later ~tan Thursday.
If the comm1llec vole IS Tucsd :~y, B1d cn sa id, the fu ll Senate
could vme on Breyer by late next
week, or early the fo llowing week.
The ABA gave Breyer its highcs.l rating of "we ll qualified."
Wa s hington lawyer Robert
Watkins said the association's ISmember committee on the federal
judiciary unanimously accorded to
Breyer the rating "reserved for the
top of the legal profcsston ..
Breyer, for the las l !4 years a
federal appcllalc Judge in Boston.
was called by Stanford University

Cop1 ,., uf tile ,1gcnd.1 ,u c d\.tll.d~ Jc lu1 1n IC\\ ,il tlh' C1 1\ Htllld ') JX S(( ond 1\vc, 0 1 !he Dr S,IIHt l\' 1 l H~1~-.,, ud 1\ktll\l!l II
I. Ih" Ir)'. 7 Spruce S1
t!l~

law profe,sor Kathleen Sullivan ",1
rn.1n of great cvc n-hancl cdncss a'\
we ll as open-m1mledness."
Nader d1 s.tg rccd, calling th e
1udgc "ex 1raord m:ui Iy one -Sided"
'" favor of b1g busmess 111 cases
In volvmg compctili on and healih,lllrl·safely regulauon.
Nader saiCL Breyer' s approach 10
heal th-and-safe ty cases "beliitl es
h:vard s and ri sks and exaggerates
cosls" He call ed th e Judge's ru lmgs 1n such cases "simplisuc.
superficial and nddl cd wilh fanta sy," and cal led him an extremist
" In se nSIII Ve ... [0 the needs" Of
Arn C'nGm workers
S1dney Wolfe. a Nader associ "Ic, added, "For me, and for many
mhcrs concerned about occurauon al and env~ronmen1al health and
lood s.Ifety, 11 ts extremely di sa ppomung that President Clinton was
unabl e, or unwilling, to nominate
someone w11h a more enlightened
attllude to wa rd th e sol uuon of
these serious problems "
Paige Comstock Cunnmgham ,
president of Americans United for
Life. said Breyer, by vtrtuc of
bc1ng p1cked by Clmton, has "one
naw wh 1ch we believe to be fatal."
"A nominee for the Supreme
Court must now pass a litmus test
- •. n abortion litmus test ... which
other president s were wrongly
accused of apply mg." she sa1d.
" We must assume that Judge Breyer has passed President Clinton's
abortion litmu s test."

RIO GRANDE - The R1o Gr,lfll lc 7mlln g Ro.Irtl will rn ce1 7
p "' Tu c •, do~ y .11 th e Rw Grande Mu ni Cipal Buiidlll g 10 hear a
rcqucsllrom th e Un 1vcr:-;lly of R1o Gr.mdc lord tOn ing pcr rnJt lor
prope rl y located .11 the w rn cr of P1n e .1nd R" hards s~rcct s. The
p1DJl~fly 1s prcsc n1l y ;oncd cducat1o n:! l

County board slates special meeting
GALLI POLI S -- The Gaii~&lt;I County Local Board ot Educat1on
will mee t 111 spec ial sess ion 7 p.m . Mnn d.Iy m 1he .Idmutistr.II II'C
oil Icc, :'30 Sh:t wnc·c l_ane.
The onl y ,Jgc nd:i !!em 1:\ .1n cxCC llll \ c -.css iun to dt sc u"" ncgo ll.! lllll1s, legal 1114.11 1 Cr~. CllljliO)'IllCnl &lt;.!lld lil lllPL'I! S,\110!1 llf st hoo l dl 'i ·
tncLpersonnel

Hours extended for TR testing
GALLIPOLIS - Ex tended hours lor 1uberculos1s tesll ng have
been set fo r 4 10 6 p m Tues day and July 26, the Galh,t Coum y
Health De partm ent an noun ced. The tes un g wil l be do ne 111 th e
lobby of lhc cou rthouse.
Res idems arc rcm mdcd that an}one '" Gallia Count y who han dl es or serve s food IS re qu~rc d 10 have a current food handl er' s card.
For morc. infonnatiOO, call446-4o i2, CX ICOSIOO292.

Health unit slates booth for fair
GAL LIPOLI S - Blood pre" mc chec ks. iubcreuloSIS tes ung
and l'rcc 1mmun1taii OII S will be provl( lcd hy th e G.IIII&lt;I Counl y
Hcdlt h Dcp.trtmcnt 1n lh 1nfnrm.III O!l hooth .t l thl: Gn ll1a Co un ty
Junior Fat r Aug. I 1hrough 5.
The ser vices wil l he ollcred Irom 6 10 K p 111 on Ihose da ys Ch il dren nccdmg nnrnunr zaunn ~ should hn ng ,1 current silo! record and
.1 p.a rcnt

20°/o to 1IJ off 20o/o to 1IJ off

Men's Summer
Dress Shirts
Reg.$25
NOW
Reg. $32
NOW

Men's Summer Sport
Shirts &amp;Knit Shirts
Reg. $20
NOW SJ6.00
NOWS24.00

20°/o lf2

Men's Suits

(USPS 5U -80f)

s Sport

GALLI POLIS - Two Gaiiia County volunteer fire departments
hdve been awarded grant money authori zed by state lcg islallon.
The Guyan Township dcp.trtmenl will ge t Sl,600 and VIIIIon's
"'lunlce r unll will he awarded $7,200.
The gr,ull money wil l provide f11cf ightcr protec tiVe clotlllng, 01
se i! -COill&lt;llned breathing arr.Iratu ses lor the dcpanm cnt s
The money w;ts made avmlabl c though House Bill 152. wh1cli
gives th e Sidle 1'11 e marSildl the authOIIIY 10 diSillbut e $500,00()
.umuall y m grant s.

Gi\LLIPOLIS - A Mason Count y, W.Va ., 1ccnager suffered
mmor IOJUry 1n a Lwo-car acCident Fnday on Swte Rou te 7 ncar Gal lipolis. the Galha-Mc1gs Post of the Swtc Hi ghway P&lt;Itro l said.
Leslie B. Kearns, 16, Mason, was not trc.llcd at the scene, the
patrol said .
Troopers sa id Kearn s w,ts nonhbou nd at 2· 13 p.m . wh en she
slOpped abruptly lor tralf1c and was struck /rom behmd hy another
northbound ca r dnven by Jared A. Moore. 21. 196 Main St.. Vmton.
who was unable 10 stop 111 umc .
Damage was modermc to Kearns' car and slight to the Moore
vehicle. Moore was Cited for assured clear disk1nce.

Two treated for injury in accident
GALLIPOLIS - Two Crown Cny residents were treated and
re leased Thursday from Ho lzer Medical Center for injuncs suffered
1n a two-vehicle accident on Cargo Road in Clay Township, the
Gall1a-Mcigs Post of the State Htghway Pa1rol sa1d.
Dreama $. McGuire, 37, and Jeremiah S. McG Uire, 12, both of
3332 Teens Run Road, were L.1kcn to HMC by the Gallia County
Emergency Medical Service and treated for contusions. a hosp ital
spokesperson said.
Troopers said Drcama McGuire was southbound , one mil e south
of Teens Run Road at 6:26 p.m. when both she and a northbound
p1 ckup truck d11ven by Ross H. McPherson. 24, 4404 S~uc Route
21X. Gallipolis. c:tch went left of center and colhclccl.
Troopers said McPherson was also Injured, bui ihe ho sp1Lal hdd
no rct:onl ol trea tment
Damage 10 both vehicles was moderate, ~1 c pmrol sm d.

Walk Shorts &amp;
Dress &amp;Casual Slacks
Swim Wear
Reg. $24
NOW SJ
to off
NOW ,._,,,V\1' I

Coolville man ticketed by patrol

Inc. Second class post-

age patd 11 OaJ lipoli&amp; , Ohio •S631. Elltered u
leCOIId clau !mii iDI matter at Pomuoy, Ohio,

POMEROY - The Gal!ia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol Cllcd Paul E. Brooks, 7!, Coolville, for failure to yie ld 10 a
1wo-car accident Friday at the intersection of Pomeroy Pike and
Flatwoods Road 10 Salisbury Township.
Troopers said Brooks was northbound on Pomeroy Pike when he
aucrnpted to cross Flatwoods at 12:55 p.m . and collided with a c;u
dnvcn by Brad E. Haggy, 18,35238 Wolf Pen Road, Pomeroy, that
wa s westbound on Flatwoods. H:~ggy's car came 10 rest m a d11ch
Damage to bOLh cars was modcrmc, troopers said.

POIIOmce.
Member: The Associated Press, and the Otno
New~papc:r Asaotlation, National Advertiling

Lev•·s

731 llurd Avenue, New York., New Yclrk.

10017.

JIANI

SUNDAYONLV

-14 oz. Unwashed
St. Leg &amp; Boot

SUIISCRIYnON RATES

By C•rier « Mocor Roule
One Weel.
, .. .... ...... .. .. .. oo~
One Year ... ..... ,. .... .
_ .. $46.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICK
_ _ _ $1.00
Sunday .

No aubacnpllolll by ma11pernuued In areaa
where motor C81Tiet service is ava•Jible.
The Sunday 'lirnes-Sentmel Will not be responsible for advance payments made l(. carrim.

Reg.
'28.99

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Su11d.,. Only

JIMJ

14 oz. Pre·washed

Reg. $30.99

.IIAIII

•

All Fashion S\yles
Vol. To S47 .SO

Edilur's nnte: Names, a~es and addresses are prinled as the
appear nn niTicial reports. All newswnrlhy at'linns will he published withnul exceptinn .

$2399 NOW $25 99 NOW$35 99

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Disch.arges July 14 - Gary
Jarvis , Mrs. William Thomas and
twin son and daughter, Mrs. Daniel
Bowling and daughter, Glenn a
Williams, Larry Wallace. Mrs.
Joseph Saund~rs and son, Mrs.
Curtis Zion an,d daughter, Tina
Blevins, Mary Nelson, Mrs. Jeffrey
Rocchi and daughter.
!Jirth - Mr. and Mrs. James
Rainey, daughter, Crown City.
(Publisjled with permission)

Daily and Suncby

Open Mon.-Fri.
tll8 pm
Tue.·Wtd.·Thur.Sat. til 5 pm

,For Long Distance
Call Us At
1-800-560-LEVI

•

•

En gtn~c r Robert E.\son an &lt;l H tg h·

'"'·'Y Departm e nt o!f1 C1al s D~t VL'
Spcnccr,mdMann lng Roush,O IIvc
ro\\'llshl p Tru -. : tces I3 tll K:lrr :lll d
Br ))I l'v1.HCi nku. and Riggs C·res t
Rudd rc srdcnt Dcryl Well, tu d1 sCU'i' rrobkm s With the roud
The road's 22- month -old sur la CC h:.JS deve lope d c; raCkS and
large l10ks. ex pla1n cd We ll . Well
.rskcd whdt could be done to preven t furth er de teno rat ion of the
ro.H I &lt;;;u rfacc
'fh c road w:..1s one of thr ee
Or.11tgt.: To wnship roads p~1 vcd hy
till' f\k1g:-; ll• ghway DcpM tmcnl,
Spl·ncc r cx pla 1ncd The township
w," to prepa re th e ro:~d s for
p,l\lllJ;,IIcaddcd
The JliOU icln I S til.J t th e road s

I

m &lt;i n s u r a n c e
qm~ -., [IDil s ,ll ld [lfdh k' llh lll\ O]VIll g
Co mmi sSIOn ers, ac t 111 g on
Til( ~Hill' u ! th e Lu rr cnl pl ,tn
snJ. !l! l.!!l\L'rnm cn h
Edso n's rccomrn cndatlOil, agreed OIIC'rl'd by C',l!l.!d. l t li e wil l n.:llldlll
• \i~.: t wnh d o~: \ ,:,m iL· n Hill !J y~.·
thdt Lh c best course o f ~lC\1011 wo ulcl llllLh.lll!:L'd .u ~:\11.6 17, t H Lt lii!IIJI' · to dt ,L tJ"is pr oh krn ' \ \1111 til( do ~
h t~ for th ~;' tr us1ecs to \\'Or k With th e
, 1oncr' L ~ In o pt fo r a pl.! II 1,.,. !lh· I 11HII Id I lie puund ntuh .Jdd l!lol\, 11
h1ghwaydcp.uuncnt to .stop !urth~ r ln •&gt;tlr. tnLl' ( nmp .tll ) tll '\ ti rth llllh ll tkiJorJ ,~.ur J. . ,111d 1-.. pl.t )'t h· d
ri·IItl
1 t 1l~ lh. , ,ltd 1)\ l ' c· 1ll lll! II S\I III!
• agc to tl lC rO~lC1
·\lll L' rl (. ,t lor ,1n .lll!lll,tl P• L' II tlt 1111111
~lll
'
In dcldllton. co mrn 1si;JO!l l' r s ~( 1 1~hll
-,..,,
11
1,J tl h&gt; \\ !ll iltl•. t-..itl ll ~· p, 1111 1 d
,I(CCj Hl!d [\\() l)dV lll ."tl IJitls- lr&lt;JI II til e
II ll' \, {llllll\1 ~~ !\111 t.ll l,l , l d,,, lh
I I•·~ '\•"· I,
She lly Co, 1 horn v il le, for pd VIIH.; . , 1\ ,ll 11 1 1n ~ ul.JII ll JHOJl ll \,l l, u 11 1,1
• I' lhl bt 1\ (d \ i ~ \ :\'1 t, J LI' TI
Y11-.t ,rnd O.tk Gro' c ro.)tb 111 Su[ 11 ~·\ t f 11 1J.
~ l s t t rll' ,,1 ~1 11 ~ 11111 l-.,
1 11 ,. ,. 1111 ~
[(ll l Tow nship "lli l' ]HOJ Cl !S Uh l
lllilllll'l lll.l tk· rs lUilli ll l\ '1• I ,..,
. t\]1]11\l\ ',J ,\ li .Hhkl (11 \7 .()( l{)
5211.659 'O "nd SM,290.Kil. res pn· ·
• \kt \III II llii.IIlbl '"' '' · ·' "
'" I" ' '"'11 11'' &lt;kj\UiniCIII Io II : Ip
ll'.l'l)
\ \' 1 \ 1,111 ~ ll jl l'\l'l lt,i!l 1 l,\ Ii i ,j1 ell "
hllU 'il' p1htl ll ll
Spc nl('r s.r1 d v.·urk on th ~ two th e ,t\._lil,lhi1 1t, nllu 11111 , ,, .'l\'ll
I'I l'"~,' nt '' '- r, ( ,,ltl!ll! s-., lon Pr ~,;sl ·
ro.Hh liLl y hcg rn as c. 1rl y ,Is the l.nhll! l'.tr \;\·tcr,Hb J\kr 1h 111 ,1t 11 ,,..
dent l fL'd llrdlnl.ll!, V1t c Pr c-.H knt
liJSI wc~ k ol August
ptt :il C t)!IIIHI\-.Illncr -. s,ll d th ,· )
J.HI U 1! 11\\,trd l.tlkc lt . Co l\11111\
Com mt .')S ton cr:-l .II ~o ll l l' l wllll ,1 \\{ltt]d IIICI..' t \t.l!ll til e [),\\' r .- pr ~,·.
"lll ll l' r 1{\,h, lt l !. irt cn h:-~ c h :tnd
fC[lfl:sent atl \'C ol Mcd 1c,!l (' 1. 11111 .., -,~.·tr t ~tl •\C 'i , 1 ~~. 1111 J 1 ~ 1lowt !l" .I C k• k~· l &lt; •JH II\1 ,-.. tn tiC iunaKiul; \
Scn ·tcc o/ Colu 111 hu\, thl' orc.m11 ;1. pla 1111 cd 1.1 nd Lh l .., 111 11 \ !J , ' 111 l.
t10 n admrnt slr'rmg th e co~ll ll l ) ·.., Hu Lkc yc J/ Jli\ /JI 11 l ktll!,: \'.til ,· ,
Royer Ward &amp; Anorney JamPs
\L'I l-lllsurl'd lnt dtc tl 111 \ urall t\' pro. J&lt; ~·~' llllt,tl DL\l'h lJlllli 'fH ]) ;._ 111 ~ 1 Elo
ulqer Will be holrJ1ng a
.-~ r,un
\ [l [HO\ t:1 1 1( 0!1(T.hi\\I [ J
•
mecl1nq
July 20 1994 a1 7 p rn
Commhs1oncr'i c:o&lt;~llllllll: d tno
l,~ll l .'i (t)lt \lllil nt.: .llhl FL...,L .II , II
10
2nd
fl
oo
r meeting room of lil c
Jrl\ur,tn cc opt 1ons. both ul \\hl l h 1 ,1 \~ -..f)ll IL' \\, J.., "]h'L I.ti 1;l' " 111
courthouse. concern1ng leases
ease·nents &amp; the property lh at
the rail road had purchased
Anyon e concerned aboul th e ir
prope rty are welcomed to all e nd
lh1s meetmg Thi s mee ti ng ,5
about the Hike &amp; B1ke path thai
Work IS expeeled 10 begin shon- ]l(l!l to tiJ ,· lO!llS l! ) li JI!l.l l (Ill ~ ,HI\
Mcintyre Park IS pullm g 1n
1&gt; .Ill er lh c M.1son Count y Fair. sci lll l' !llh\' r !II th e r cch!llt il HCVIl',\
wh ere the railroad IS
lo1 Aug. Y-13, amlto be co mpleted Cut!ll lll !tc l·
ill' Ihe end of the yc&lt;lf A flc r Ihe
huddmt!S have been removed the
Low
.l rC. l \\ rT! ltc graded ami seeded '
for
Low
Til e Age ncy for ToXI c Sub Price
st.tnt:c.) ami 01scasc Rcg1 slr y wrll
dJScuss the health ~!Ci v 1 &lt;~ 0ry r ~s u c d
RECLINERS
01 cr tile asbc, los problem du fln g
two puhil c mcctm s' ~c h cdukd lor
Tues d.1 y 1r1 111 e Mason County
Comm1ss1on 1Tl CC t1n g room . Th e
lrrst scso.; Jon JS 11 ·30 a m. 11nd th e
second"' 6 'lO p.m.
O th er ; a fety ha za rd s. s uch '"
ore n pn s and deteriorated m.In ·
holes , will be fill ed as p.trl of 1hc
jlrOJeC I.
The corps IS aware of abo ut ISO
plls and and man ho les on ih e
WVOW site. These holes arc dan ge rou s s mce peopl e or an imal s
could fall into th em. The pits and
manholes wtl l be bulldo ze d '"
ami/or filled with gravel. The corps
hopes to have all pits and manholes
fil led by the end of Augu s1.
The corps is aw;uc that pits may
eXIst that the corps docs not have
chan ed on Its maps. In an effort 10
locale all pits, the corps will have
mars of SIIC at the fair.
Residents who know th e locall on of p1t s or mjlnholcs arc asked
to stop by the Corps' di splay hooih
and discuss p11 locati ons with corps
re presentati ves. ReSidents unable to
.lllcnd the fa11 can get th is informa ·
J llll~·\

1

\

POI NT PLEAS AN r. W Va rwo rorlllcr ste am pow c rhou ~cs
'" eli In TNT produ c tion at the
West V1rg mra Ordnance Works si te
ncar Ponlt Pl c a s~tnt will be torn
down
Dcmo ll[l on plan s were out l1ncd
1n a ICllcr to Lhe Huntin gton District
of the U.S. Arm y Corps of Enginee rs fr o m Lewi s Walkcr ,' th e
Army's depu ty assistant sec retary
for env u onm ent , safety and occ u]ldtl o na l hea lth .
Th e buildings, loca ted ncar the
Md son Co unt y Fa ~rgro und s . have
been vac:mt smcc the end of Worlcl
War II. Although machmcry was
re move d soo n after the war,
ashcs los used for In sulati on
rema10s on the fl oo r and around
dcbns rcmammg in the buildings
Although asbestos is a carCino gen, 11 IS not a threat unl ess direct
contact IS made. The corps has cau uoncd aga1nst residents entcnn g
the huild1n gs.
To protec t fairgoers from accidental exposure 10 asbestos. fir st
lloor opcnmgs will be hoarded up,
:md a fence will be erected around
tlt c buildin gs prior to th e fair .
Asbestos wil I be removed pn or to
1hc demol1110n of the bUildmgs.
The aCllon was recom mend ed
hy I he Age ncy for T ox iC S ub slanccs and Dt sease Regi stry , an
unit of the U.S. Pu blic Hea lth Scr-

Candidate
addresses
job needs
for area

RIO GRANDE - "We need to
work 10 creme more 1nd ustnal sncs.
pre ferably with bui ldings," th e
Republica n candidate for the 94th
House Dt SIIICl scat told a group ol
supporlcrs Saturday.
John A. Carey Jr. outlined his
go.tls for Improving the area's ceonomic and employment picture at a
bre.Iklast rccepuon aL the Umverstty of R1o Grande.
Carey, currently serving his second term as mayor of Wellston,
cited the example of the form er
McNally -PIU Sburg pl an! 10 Well siO n 111at was vacanl for seve ral
yc.trs and 1h cn mark e icd by th e
City. The SIIC was eventua lly leased
10 tour tenants :uul led to the ne ·
auon ol 40 JO bs
" It "al so vll;I ily 1mponam to
ha ve the tool s 10 place 10 assiSt
cxisung bu sin esses to kee p JOb s
here and enabl e ex pan siOn," s~ud
Carey.
Carey satd he has worked with
Pil lsbury Corp. 10 Well ston to help
bring more than S100 million 10
investments and hundreds of JObs
10 ihc community.
The candidate al so di scussed the
creation of job opportunities and
incentives to work for those who
arc on welfare as well as protecting
what he called " the constitutional
rights for honest ciuzcns to own
guns."
Carey was elected to hi s f1rs1
term as mayor in 1987 and won ree lcc uon four years later. Prmr 10
th&lt;ll. he worked for U.S. Rep.
Clarence Miller for seven years.
Carey is opposing incumbent
State Rep. Mark A. Ma lone, DSouth Point The 94th District covers Gallia, Meigs and Jackson
counties, and eastern Lawrence
County.

2

July l9, 1994
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Army says building demolition
at TNT site to begin after fair

Hospital news

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lnshle Counly
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26Weeu.
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dh LLJ~S lon at Fr1da y's mcetm g o f
the ~elgS Count y noMe! of Com ml s~ ton c r s

vtce.

Gallia VFDs receive state grants

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A3

.~~'~'-~:~:~~ iS~volC' jrleC ~rOS,.'I ed.tc.k~'~' ' ~'~ ~.~ "'~~.P~.i,~~
T he com nl! Ss tonc rs me t w1th

(,All IPOLIS - A 1970 Fo rd pi ckup tru ' k susl .llflc&lt;i heavy
d.un .Igc- 1 nday :I II ernoon when an app,Ircnl illc' l le.Ik Ignited 111 th e
c n gtn~ t lllnpartrn cnt, th e Gall1p01 1s Volunteer F11 c D&lt;..'j)itrtment

21,000
10,000

Celebrating 128 years of Quality Clothing Sales•••• 1866·1994

Representative, Branham Newspaper Salta.

New home

Rutland

Minor injury reported in accident

Pubh&amp;hed each Sunday, 825 Thnd Ave.,
Galhpohs, Ohi&lt;l, by the Oh1o Valley Publishing
Compan~IMultiflle(1 1 a.

diVI SIOn .

"Once Microsoft can no longer
lock out oth er vendors, that will
open the doors for IBM' s DOS and
Digll&lt;Ii Rcsearch- DOS from Novell," sn1d Wtlliam Zac hmann , presIden t o f Ca nopu s Re search, an
mdusiiy research f1r1n 10 Duxbury,
Mass.
Th e govern men t ;.!l so forced
Microsoft 10 loosen rcSIIicuons that
IIll pcdcd so ft ware compan 1es Irom
developing programs such as word
rrocess or s or sp rca clshec ts thai
work wllh opc1 atm g systems other
1han MS -DOS or Wmdows.
Those rcsln cii ons were part of
conlldenua ii ty agreements required
for co mp anies 10 ge t access to
Mtcro soft tec hnolog y when they
create products that run on MSDOS or Windows.
The Ju suce Depa rtment' s
antitrii SI divisiOn opened lis in ves tigation of Mi crosoft a year ago.
It followed a thrcc-ye:u mves ti gauon of the company by the Fcd er.II Tr:1dc CommiSSion. AfiCr two
l.11lert at1em1m 10 fil e comp l:11n1s
ag.un st M1croso lt in 1993. tlte FfC
closed lis probe last August.
Microso ft chief exec uti ve Bill
G.11es was not avatlablc for comment Saturday. The company temali vc ly schedul ed a news conference
wnh Gmes for Monday.

Pair not hurt in rough landing
IConlinutd from A I)
was closed at the time. Outward
damage to the plane was seen in 11s
propellers, bent partially backwards
by the 1mpac1.
The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Dcpartmcnt was called to !he scene
and put down a foam blanket so the
plane could be dragged from the
runway by Roberts Brothers
Wrecker Service of Gallipolis. The
foam was to ore vent Ihe olane' s
bollom from causing fri ctton wllh
the asphalt surface and 10 decrease
the chance of a fue
Norg1el told 1roopcrs he shut ol f
the plane' s fuel supply pr1or to

July 17, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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We are open:
Mon.-Titurs.: 11:00 a.m. lo 10:00 p.m.
Fri. &amp; Sat.: 11:00 a.m. lo 11:00 p.m.
Sunday: 12:00 Noon lo 10:00 p.m.

�f

'

Commentary·

July 17, 1994

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A4
July 17, 1994

Panetta needed to impose order on chaos
A Dlvl51on of

~MU.TIMEDIA, INC
825 Third Ave.,

Gallipolis, Ohio

(6 1 ~) H6-2J~Z

111 Court St., l)omeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

IWB EIH L. WING ETT
~uhllsher

HOBART WILSON JR
Executive Ed1 tor

MAR GAR ET LEHEW
C ontroller

A MEM BE H of rh c Assoc tate d Press, Inl and Daily Press

AssocaalJon and the Amcm:an Newspape r Publishe rs Assonat10n

LETfE RS OF OPINION Me welcome They should be less th an
300 word s long All le tt ers are suhJeC t lO edJ Ung and musl tlc s1g ned Wilh
name, address and tclcphont: num ber No uns agncd le ite rs w ill be
pubhsbed Le tters sho uld be m good ta ste. address m g 1ss ues no l

personahues

The cordial job
interview for
Stephen Breyer
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
wASHINGTON - Fmally, a Supreme Court nommee who could
have been sent to hiS confumation hearmgs by central castmg. Stephen
G. Breyer fit the part, a nominee wtlh the nght touch and the nght
answers.
He should be. He used to wnte the quest1ons
.
While the process tsn"t over, there' s no s1gn of mcanmgful d1ssent
10 confmnatton of Breyer as the 108th ju s~ce to serve on the Supreme
Court.
Prcs 1dcm Clinton chose the federal appeals Judge from Boston after
bypassing hun once, m favor of Jusuce Ruth Bader Gmsburg. Cltnton
111med to Breyer for thts second vacancy to av01d the conftrmauon has·
sic hts imoally preferred candidate might have stirred.
It was a pragmatic selectton , of a centrtsl, pragmal.Jc JUnsl wuh Senate 11es of his own. Breyer needed no cram course m dealmg wtlh the
Senate Judiciary Comm111ee. He worked there, m 1969 and 1970. " It
was a pleasure to serve with you when you were the staff director and
the chtef counsel ," Sen. Howell Hellm, D-Ala. , told htm . "You were a
great consensus bmlder."
That was the mood from the begmnmg. The rank10g Republican on
the panel effustvely endorsed Breyer. With that, Sen. Joseph R. Btden
Jr. , D-Del., the chairman, banged the gavel and Jolccd that the heanng
could adjourn.
.
But there were long hours of questioning to go, all of 1t collegml,
none of 11 surpnsing. Senaton; do hlce to talk. Breyer accommodated
that too. Hts answers dtdn't take nearly as long as thetr quesuons.
.:You strike me as an individual who not only ts a legal scholar b~t
combines with it the trait that I find somewhat unu.~ual, and that ts
something of a scienufic approach to e•arnmmg facts, satd Sen. Hank
Brown, R-Colo. "And I sense in you a willingness to go beyond stmply doctrinaire poliucal phtlosophy and look at facts 10 malcmg up your
mmd.
" Is that a farr judgment?"
"Goodness, I hope so," satd Breyer. " I'm a ltttle bmsed. l hope so.
Thank you "
,
All the questions weren 't compliments, but they weren l confrontational, etther, even on the confltct of mterest tssue cnucs Uled to ra1se
against Breyer for ruling on toxic waste cases while holding 10surance
investments m Lloyd's of London. Breyer said he'd seen no connection, but aclcnowledged it was possibly imprudent to hold the mvestments as a Judge, and satd he would end them as soon~~ poSSible. .
Breyer sa•d he'd tried to show ''extreme sensmvny . w1th screenmg
and full disclosure of his mvestrnenlS - hts net worth •s hsted at $6.5
million -but ackn&lt;;lwlcdged, lyptcaUy, that reasonable people could
disagree with htm, and some do.
That's Breyer the consensus builder.
.
.
.
He said judges shouldn 't legislate, mustc to conservattves. He satd
the Ia~ has to have a heart, not only a head, lest it become "a stenle
set of rules removed from human problems." That fits hberal vtewpoints.
·
"C
"Consensus is important," he told the comnmtee .. onsensus
tends to play down the individual ego of the mdtvtdual Judge . .. And
consensus helps produce the simplicity that will enable the law to be
effective."
.
Not for htm the confrontauon of a Robert Bark, the stlence of a
Davtd H. Souter, the controversy of a Clarence Thomas. The latter two
were confirmed, Thomas by the narrowest Senate margm of any 20th
century Justice; Bork was rejected.
.
.
.
Those were Republican nom10ees; Jus lice Gmsburg m 1993 was _the
first Democratic chOice m 2h years. She was confumed after four days
of plaod hearings. Even those proceedings weren't as collegtal as

th~;eyer's background certamly is one

reason. Another may be that
the court no longer seems to be at the poml of allenng, even reversmg,
IS nJlilfgS on such matters as abortion rights and the consuruuonahiy
~I the death penalty. Breyer said both are matters of sell led law,
.
although there still are unsettled quesuons related to them.
So went the JOb mtervtew, the last on the way to a hfetune appomlment.
..
Breyer said he writes his own opmtons - there have been more
than 600 as an appeals judge- with research help from hts clerics. He
said 1t rarely took him fewer than three drafts, usually a half-dozen or
so before he was comfortable wtth every word.
'He sa1d that kept him at the word processor, most of every work

da~.'l've teamed the life of a senator is different, and I've learned some
of the pressures that you are under," he satd. "That's not the hfe of a
judge."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice preside~! and
columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Wasbmgton
and national politics for more than 30 years.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, July 17, the !98th day of 1994. There are 167 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On July 17, 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Spain surrendered to the United States at Santiago, Cuba.
On this date:
In 1821, Spain ceded Florida to the Umled States.
In 1841 , the British hum(J" magazine "Punch" was first published.
In 1917, the Brillsh royal family adopted the name Windsor.
In 1938, aviator Douglas Corrigan took off from New Yorlc, saymg he
· was headed for Califomta; he ended up in Ireland, earning himself the
nickname "Wrong.Way Corrigan."
In 1944, 50 years ago, 322 people were killed when a pair of ammunition ships exploded in Port Chicago, Calif.
In 1945, President Truman, Soviet Premier Josef Stalin and Briush
Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill began meeting at Potsdam in the
final Allied summit of World War II.
In 1948, southern Democrats opposed to the nomination of President
Truman met in Binningharn, Ala., to endorse South Carolina Gov. Strmn
Thurmood.

WASHINGTON - Pres1dent
Clmton 's former chtef of staff had
the momkcr of "Mack the Ntce,"
but th e new WhilC Hou se boss
would l1 kc to be labeled ""Leo n the
· SOB "
L•ttlc about Leon Panetta's per·
sonal•ty JU!Uftcs fear and loathmg.
The former budget chtef - who
was appOi nt ed last mon th to
replace Thomas " Mack" McLarty
- has an casygomg manner and an
exp los" c laugh But beneath the
smile; ltes a tough taskmaster who
has the cxpc ncncc and temperamen t lD bnng order to an often chaotic Wh1te House.
Cllnton clearl y needs someone
to msull fear tn a staff that ranges
from undJSCtphned 10 mcompetem.
Panetta told us las t year that there
arc Urnes when he thmks a " benevolent monarchy "" wou ldn "t be a
bad model by whtch to run Washmgton
Few Washm gton ft gurcs hav e
sharper radar for scnsmg polittcal
trouble - and wa rntn g abou t 11
loudly - than Leon Panetta. We
d1scovered this during two lengthy
10terv1ew s wtth Panetta dunng his
18 month s as the dtrec tor of the
Office of Management and Budget.
The frankness and candor of both
mtervtcws landed h1m m hot water
wtth the Whtte House and hts Cabtnct colleagues. On loptcs rangmg
from Prestdent Clinton's govemmg
style 10 health care and the budget
dcftct l, Pan etta tackled our questiOns forthri ghtl y.
Panella wrote part of ht s own
JOb descnption during the presidential tranSili on Cutung the defictt
require s pamful cho tccs, Panella
msistcd, so he warned Cltnton to
brace htmself for howls of protest.
"! told the president that 10 some

ways, 10 do th1 s JOb nght. I've got
to be your SOB," Panetta told us
"I've got to be able to say no, and
yo u may not wan t to say no .

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
They (Cab1 nct members) don' t
want to be told th ey ca n't spend
ll.. '

Although ca ndtd ate Cltnton
prom tsed to revtve the economy, it
was clear that Prcs tdent Chnt on
had little mldtn g of how the lcgislatt ve process works. Panella
exp lamed how he was called for a
meet mg m Lillie Rock wllh the
prestdent-elect, only to reahze later
that 1t was a Job mterv tew "'It was
one-on-one - no sta ff perso n
th ere,"" sa1d Panella. "We went
mlo a ltbrary m the gove rnor 's

mansiOn. He basically sa1d . 'How
do I put toge th er an eco nom1c
p lan ~ How do I gel 11 passcd'l What
do yo u thtnk?' And l bas Jcally
shared w1th htm what I thought the
process ought to be ..
Cltnion ra tsed Ihe OM B pos l
dunng the last I 5 mtnulcs of ihCIT
two- hour sessm n. a nd Pan e11.1
accepted on the spot.
Months later, we fou nd Pan etta
vtstbly frustrated by '-"Orktng for a
prestdcnt who was still m a campatgn mode, fatlmg 10 face up to
th e realiucs of govcmmg. Panell.t
explamed: " The toughcsttranstuon
for a newly elected prestdcnl ts the
transitiOn from the lcmd of day-today carnpatgn when you're runn111g
for the office - and the kmd of PR
operatiOn you have - and th en
laking the leadcrslup of runmn g the
country , and havmg to malce dCCI swns... He's (Ch nton) tn the pro·
cess now m thattran st uon "
It ofte n fell to Panella to tell
Clinton when he was vccnng off on

rT:&gt; THe CJBLe

GoM P3NY r:u We WaNT
10 JDD THe o.J SiMP;cN
CHaNNeL FoR oNLY
$9.95 f'eR MoNTH

c

the wrong course. As budget chtef,
Panella rebelled last year against
some Whtlc Hou se advtscrs who
w.tn tcd C!Jnton lO e mbrac e the
poi 1ucal g1m mt ck ry of the Bal anced Budgrl Amendment. Panetta
pulled an end-run , phonmg h1s former colleagues tn Congress an d
urg111g them to lobby the Wh 1te
House agamsl the 1dea. After fltrt1ng wtlh supporlmg th e amendment, Clm wn soon changed ht s
mmd.
On health care, Panetta found
h1msclf locked m dtspute with first
lady H11lary Rodharn Clmton , who
wa ntr&lt;l a gold-plated, budgct-bust1ng proposal. In an inlervtew last
January, Panella cast doubt on the
plan, hmun g that 11 was based on
untrustworthy numb ers Asked
abou t the rellabtillY._Of th e health
care hud gcl csum¥cs, hts answe r
bordered on heresy:
" 1 can say we have the best esu.
mates m the bus1 ness only because
we have the only esumates 10 the
bu slllc ss," Panella sat d. "Yo u
bnng 30 mtllton to 40 mill1on
Amcncans onto th e health care
roll s - who knows .. what ihc
tmpact will be " Pane lla neve r
shied away from the touchy subject
of spend1ng "'ca ps " and health
care raoonmg , wh1ch have congressiOnal Democrats runmng for cover
today He suggested that 1f spend·
mg c•cecded the caps, poliltctans
would ratse taxes before impos1ng
rauomng.
In the end , Panetta may wtsh he
heeded his tmm1grant paren ts "
adv1se to avoid politics 10 favor of
becommg a "doctor or dentist or
somcthmg with a secure life."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writ~rs ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Early day shopping
lbere are not many of us around
today who can remember when a
great number or homes purchased
their fruits, vegetables or ice from
businessmen who delivered their
goods to the home.
As a small boy, I remember
T.H. Davis who operated the Davis
Ice Plant in Pomeroy. Drivers
would place large calces of ice in
the horse drawn vehicles and
would deliver the product to the
homes. The horse drawn veh1cle
would be covered in order to keep
the ice from melting.
A person wanting icc would
have a little numbered placard
allaehed to the home indicating the
amount of ice desired. The driver
would get out of his wagon and
proceed to chip 25, 50 and in some
mstances I 00 pounds blocks of ice
to fit the old wooden ice boxes
located therein. The driver would
take his tongs and deliver the ice to
the house. This ice would last sev·
era! days after which the home
owner would have to replenish it.
As a kid some of us would follow
the wagon to get some of the
chipped ice. The T. H. Davis ice
plant was located in Coal Pat near
where the Foodland business i9
now located. It serviced both Middleport and Pomeroy with ice.
T. H. Davis also operated meat
markets. One of was located near
where Mick Williams' barber shop
is now located. Later Aoyd Mees
operated a grocery store called the
Sanitary Grocery Company at that
location.
lben there was the horse drawn
wagon owned and operated by
Colombo Pierotti who was better
known as Steeplejack. Steeplejack
delivered and sold fruits and vegelables and later ice cream from his
wagon . He was a very popular
man. He was the father of Gino,
Olga, Bruno, and Licia Ebersbach.
Bruno and Gino were star athletes
at Pomeroy High School.
Many of the fruits, vegetables,
etc. were sold in the area where the
purchaser lived. For example, in
the Kerr's Run area, the Schweg-

man-Roedel store was 10 business
for a great number of years. The
grocery business ceased when John
Oscar Roedel died . This butldmg

Fred W. Crow
was a landmark when it was torn
down for highway proposes. In
Pomeroy's "bloody" Second Ward,
there was Epple's grocery.
Many of the residents of Condor
Street and Wyllis Hill, and east of
Spring and Main Streets, traded
there. In the Monkey Run area,
there was the Meinhart grocery
store which, like the others, catered
to that locality. In the Sugar Run
area the Fugate store was operated
by both Frank Fugate and his
father. Also, William "Dude"
Gibbs and his popular wife, Sarah,
operated the Gibbs's Grocery in
Sugar Run for many years. There
were oihers, of course, but the writer, due to lack of time, is unable to
get all this information for you.
Throu~hout the years there were
many dnvers who peddled milk,
buuer and eggs to the citizens of
Pomeroy. Two of them were Herman Hoffner and B. H. Sanborn.
Probably the largest business
disuibuting of meats in Pomeroy
was owned and operated by the
Meier family. Like the others, the
meats were sold from the wagon.
We asked Loretta Meier to give us
some history on the Meier family
and she writes as follows:
"George Meier was born in
Dannsladt, Germany in 1842, and
came to
America with his parents in 1845 at
the age of three. He resided in
Pomeroy and married Mary
Strauss, daughter of Johann
Strauss, who was from Baden, Germany.
George had a successful meat
business on front street in Pomeroy
where the Hartl~ and Bennet shoe
store was Joe
in laler years. He
was at that location for fourteen
years, then with the Gloeckner's
for fourteen more years.

George and Mary had seven
children, namely, Eli, George, Barbara. Peter, Philip, Mary and John.
George died on November 30,
1898 and is buned in the Sacred
Heart Cemetery in Pomeroy.
George's sons carried on the meat
business after his death.
Eli married and had one daughter, Nellie. George had tlrree sons,
George, Jo~ and Edwin. Joseph
moved to Mtchigan and had three
sons and two daughters. Edwin and
George both moved to Toledo and
neither had any children. Barbara
married a Sauer and moved to
Huntington, WV. They had three
daughters and two sons. Mllry married a Quillen from Syracuse. Peter
had one daughter, and John (Jimmie) never married. He worlced in
the meat market with Peter. Philip
married Sophia Graber, whose parents were Anthony and Philomena
Schuler Graber from Bavaria, Germany and they had nine children.
They are: Frances, who married
Charles Gloeckner and their children were Joseph, Mary Louise,
Lillian, Dorothy, Emma. Catherine
(Katie) who married Elmer
Killinger. Catherine and Elmer's
children were Philip Edward and
Philomena. Phili~ Edward died in
the Philippines m World War II
during the notorious Bataan death
march. Joseph died young. Lillian
married Frank Gress and their children were, Frank Edward, Betty,
Richard and Patricia. Elizabeth
married Franklin Hepp and they
had one daughter, Vera.
Philip married Bernadine Souders and their four daughter.; were
Patricia, Mary Teresa, Phyllis and
Carolyn and one son , Robert
Phillip, (Butch). Willard married
Helen West and they had one son
and two daughters. Loreua married
Theodore Beegle and their children
are Shirley Ann Huston, Rila Fisher, and Ted Meier Beegle, Jr.
Loretla's father, Philip, carried
oo the meat business until 1927. He
used to peddle meat in a horse
drawn wagon all over Pomeroy. He
had his own slaughter howte back.

Sunday Times-Sentinel /AS

Astrologers fret----

Suit against gun
show promoter
survives appeal

something's got to give
when comet hits
Jupiter
p.: ncr!J n tile age of til e telescope ..

I h e AsstK"ialtd I'ress
Ohw astrologers and sc Jcnu sts
""''grcc on wh.tl wtll happe n when
By

'.

Plt~ nctM IUm s

111 Oh 1o arc opcn-

mg th c1r door&gt; so th e pub lic c.Jn
sec tile crash.
p.Jn:-; ol a comet crash 1nto Jup1tcr
Prolcssors at Dcmson Un1vcrst·
th iS 1\Cekcnd
Aq ro logers - peop le who ty m Granvil le will be avatlablc to
be li eve li ves arc ltnkcd to the stars dJJswcr questions Irum VISitors who
usc th e telescopes at th e sc hoo l's
.n1d Jup11cr I' the pl.1net of luck Swasey
Observatory
l c.tr d cclcs tt&lt;.d dp0Cd l ypsc
Snnil
ar events arc plann ed .tithe
"Anyllmc you ldkC a potshot at
the pl.m ct wll!Ch hnn gs lu ck, n "s lJn Jvcrs Jt y of Tol edo and D.1yto n
Muse um of Htstory.
mll go&lt;'d ... s,ud George Thompso n.
"We wan t peop le 10 learn as
.1 To ledo .Jstrologcr
" It 's concc•vablc th.ll 11 cou ld mu ch as th ey can," sa1d Wade
All en, the Da yton's mus e um' s
Ln ntnhutc to d hurr1 ca n c, t11 gh
udcs." he sa1d "'B ut you won' t set astrono my dtrec tor
Sc tcnlt sts should be abl e to
11 nght &lt;W•'4'Y llmay develop slow·
lc.1rn a lott hcmsclves, he s.tl(l
ly ..
" ThiS 1s the f1rs1 u mc we've
A~ t r&lt;morn c r \ - suc nt1-;ts who
stu d y th e stMs - S~I Y thdt 's non- be en able to ca1c h a co met bel ore 11
.tllu.tlly co il •dc d wtth ano1h cr
se nse
"'Absolute ly noth•n g IS go mg to horl y."" Allen s.t td
The cr.ts h 1S cs pcc J.tll y LJsc nJal·
h.lpJ1L' n to ,Jn yn nc,·· S llHl A l ex
M.tk. ass Jst.mt dtrcctot o l the Rtllcr mg beca use such an event - per·
Pl,tn ctanu m dml Drook s Obsc rva - h;1ps on" larger scale - IS th ough t
to ha ve led to th e ex tm c tJ on of
I&lt;H Y.t tth c Un tvc•s• ty ol Toledo
" In the long run . 1h1 s IS lt kc d1nosa nrs 65 milli on yea rs ago
A co met frdgmcnt Sl1uck Edith
tlropp1ng a bu cket of wa ter n• til e
1n 190R . idnd111 g 111 StbCri.J and
&lt;KCd ll It \\- Ill CdUSC ,1 few npplcs,
,md th en 11 \\ Ill JU St go lmck lO nor - killing wild id e, Allen sa•d
m ,II ," he s~11 d
Althoug h no hu ma ns dt cd 1n
The b• ggcsl h,Jsh '" 1hc heavens thai colllswn , man y people are ner1s n pcu.:d 10 bcgtn today dlltl last vous th1 s ttmc around , he sa td
" ! got a pantcked phone ca ll
lt ve&lt;I.Jys
A comet thai has broken 1010 2 1 about a month ago . Someone reall y
JliCCCS wdJ Slrlk C JupllC r Wilh the thought this wa s an end of th e
Ioree ol lOll megaton s of dyna mllc world SllU:t lJ On. And I'm f•ndtn g
- "' cqn .1 1 10 .til th e nucle ar throu gh ot her astron omers Jmuncl
i'Jllnils on E.JT 1h put toge th e r 1he wor ld th;n tim 1s becu mtttg the
Jurttcr t s 39 1 mti i1 &lt;H1 rnd cs lro rn occurrence," Allen sat d.
Em th
"So me peo pl e arc tl11nk•n g
"You're talk1n g "lltlttl an Jupit er rs go•ng to ex pl ode and
IOCTCf11hi c SC ICnl titC CVCni ."" Sat() pt cccs ot the pl anet arc gomg to hll
B l'nli C Bopp , .Jn dSLrono m y rrofcsth e Earth People arc not gc tun g
sor at th e UnJ vcrs JI Y of To ledo . the fu i!JnfOi malion," he &gt;a •d

\
l\ HII ,kll\1\llll :l'.lllll~ til \\ I\ ltll
, I l ,l\\..., 1111 (1\Cr .1 '-l11k'1l h,lrtdl!tttl
ilt.lt \\,IS LISL',j I l \\illllh l l ,\11 l;l lll
, hcn tld be ..t \\.trnll t: lt l jh. 1pk !tJ
"''lu re th c tr \\l\ll"'lOJh. 1 \!tll l lt l tl\t()l
,1(\\l)l,\(C S.lld

111 "''UifC

ttlltlll,lh'l~

PLANE I \\'\ 'I C ll - C l·ntel ol Sl ienle .10d lndu str~ tm i)IO Hl
(;l·olt Hrm.,n, top kit, in~ t r uds a group of students on ''h l' l t' to
look for tllf planet .Jupiter in th e night lik) rhur sd,ty ~ oulstd~· flu.·

buildmg

in Co lumhu'-1. I Ill' ltrfo\1 lr.tgnwnl o! ( ttlllt.'t Shol'1 evi 9 - \\&lt;IS l'xpefll'd 10 impall thl' sol:.11 S)'-l lt' m's
ph1n cl Saturd.t) night. lr\P 1

u . nt er's

nwkt'r lt~r)!tSI

"Th1 s 1s the f trsl t11n c th 1s has han-

in Naylors Run and made all his
own bologna, head cheese, hver
pudding, sausage, smoked sausage
and blood pudding. I remember
turning the sausage press by hand
filling the casings. I would go to
Vinton on the train where he
bought most of his cattle. They
would drive them through on foot
We had a corral at the slaughter
howte where he kept 30 to 40 head
of cattle which they butchered
when needed. After the 1913 flood
my father had his meat market on
Second Street in three rooms under
the old opera howte.
My brother, Phillip, was also
involved in the meat business.
They were in existence from 1899
until Philip (Butch) (the Golden
Thumb) died. He was a very popular man. My brother's business was
located on Lynn Street directly
across from the old New York
Clothing House."
In mentioning old businesses,
we would like to point out that the
Gloeckner's Bar and Grill was
operated by Peter Gloeckner, his
son Charles, his grandson Joe and ·
great grand son, Sonny. Sonny still
operates a fine business at that
location which has been in business
by the Gloeckner family since
1875.
l want to apologize to William
Bengal Downie, Frog Wayland,
Mike Custer. Vernon Weber,
Nancy Bean Reed, Ed Slater, and
many more who assisted us in the
frog jumps. These men all contributed greatly in making this
event successful.
It has been reported that Louise
Stansbury pW"Chased the first automobile in Pomeroy in 19I2. It was
an open touring car.
Editor's note - Long-time
Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the
contributor or a weekly column
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Readers wishing to applaud, crit·
icize or comment on any subject
(except religion or politics) are
encouraged to write to Mr.
Crow,ln care or this newspaper.

IRS nixes on 10-year lease
CINC INNAT I (APJ - T he
lntcrn.JI Reve nue Sc rv•cc 1n Oclo·
her will hcg •n USin g two ul the
three ll oors ol an oil•cc buil cling 11
rcnt cc1t wo yc.1r s .tgo. tl gove rnm en t
\ jJOk C'i illdll 'idld

Th e ofl• ces hav e bee n empt y
bcc.Jusc the IR S dcc Jdcd al1 cr " gn·
•n g the Sl milli on-a-yea r lease th,Jl
1he space wasn't nccdccl, GcncJa l
Sc rv1 ces
AdmtnJ Stralton
spokes man Da v1d Wtlkinson satd
Fnd:~y.

Now the governm ent ca n' l get
om of the 10-year lease and IS trymg 10 ftnd other federal agencies
wtll1ng to move 10, Wtlk10son said.
The bill for the vacant space, as
ol July 30, wtll be $1 I million
Wtlktnson sa td the IRS ha s
.tgrccd to move 10 some lawyers
.tnd .~ppe.li s opera lions Oct. I
The GSA, as the government's

housekeeptng agency. took out the
Jc,JSc 1n Oc10bcJ 1992 at the IRS'
request. The IRS changed tts mtnd
about nccdtng the space afte r reorgan11.1ng tts nattOnal opera uons tn
February 1993. Wtlkin so n smcl.
The lease wnh DukcR1ght Lid.
Partnership 1s for 22,000 sq uare
fee t per noor Ill the 25-s tory office
tower Th e IR S had pl an ned to
mo ve 1n a 350-pcrson rcg to nal
offtcc, Wtlktnson satd.
IRS s pokeswo man J ohnc ll
Hunte r refe rred co mm ent lO the
GSA
Rep Dav td Mann , D-Ohto. sent
lcucrs Thursday to the IRS anti 1he
GSA dcmandmg to be told how 1hc
tnJstak c occurred and wheth er the
government was try1ng to subl et
the space to redu ce the expense to
taxpayers.
Mann satd Fnday he wonders

why the governmen t dtd not get an
escape clause so 11 could ge t out of
the lease •f there were pro blems.
\Vilk1n son s.ucl one lh rrd or oncll.ill ol gU\C i rllllC ill fc, \1\Co.; llJ \L'

CSC ,!JlC Ci.JIISCS. !Jill liltS typ tC&lt;JIJ )
lll .... rcds cs the t c tlldl J.ltcs S2 lo 55
r cr squ..trc foot

" In tillS c,ISc, !h ere appc.Jrccl tn
be no reason l o r an csc;_lpc CI.\U sc:·
he 'i.ilcl

The GSA dcwlccl llh lcml 10 tr)
10 1ntcrcs t o1hcr I edcra I agc nCIC'
tnto us mg t t1c sp (ICC, rath er t h .1n
co mpete w 1th p n v at c-scc tOJ com
m c rc 1al IC,ISHl!:!, agen ts, \Vilk u1son
S&lt;i tc\

The SoCJ,Ji Sec uru y ,\clm•n Jstr.J·
uon ma y usc 12.0011 squ .Jrc feet on
1hc remam •ng, tlllTd noor early nex t
vear for a hear1n gs ancl &lt;ip pc.Ji s
(Jiftce, Wdktnson sa tcl

Health plan includes abortion clinics
LORAIN , Ohio (AP) - PreSIdent Clinton' s health care proposal
wou ld call for open10g abo rLton
cl •m cs m areas constdercd underse rve d lor such procedur es, The
Morn mg Journal of Lorain reponed
Fnday
The p.1pcr S&lt;ud the Wh11e Hou se
proposal wou ld ca ll for opcnmg
&lt;Jhort1on clin iCS 10 such areas con Sidered undcrscrvccl as Loram , Enc
&lt;llld Httron counucs. Most women
from those counucs rely on ClcvcJ,tnd .Jboruon chmcs.
The proposal and two simtlar
ones 1n pcnd1ng legtSiatton 1n
Congress were cmic tzcd by aboruon opponents.
" The pro -abortiOn groups arc
trytng to mandme through heallh
care reform that every Amcncan
mu st not only p.ty for every abor-

hospn.lis, clin ics, doctors .Jncl pro·
clHlJ
CC groups such as Plann ccl Par·
es tab lish ,10 dhortion clime 1n thc1 r
enthood
10 dctcnnt ned where abor·
l:Ommuntt tcs," saut John Delaat ,
[
IOOS
wCn.:
tiVi.lll.lhlc.
prcs ulent ol Lonun Count y R1 gh1
L.Jsl
momh
the tnslltutc released
To L1fc
,
l•sl
of
105
"
undcrscrvcd" CillCS
1
Pro-chotec groups satd the pro nauon wJclc, and Lora m IS on th e
v t slon wo n ' L ncccssanly 1n cr c asc
the number of aboruon s but would !Jsl. Othe r " unclerscrv cd" Oh1o
c 1ues tn cluclc Ca nton, Hamilton ,
mak e climes more acccss tblc.
"riley should have the nght to Ltmd, M.Jn sf1cid and Steubenville,
choose." satd Carol Westfall, th e paper swd .
Rep Sherrod IJmwn. D-O h1 o.
clircctor of the Cleveland SurgJhe h.1sn"t maclc up h1 s mtncl on
sa•d
Cemcr :~bonion chmc. "People on
McdtcaJd shouldn ' t he havtng he&lt;li lh ca re hill s whtcll cont.Jrn pro·
habtcs to keep ratstng the amounts VISIOO S l \M l fC4Uirl: ,\bOr\ 10 11 C\llli CS
of thetr checks. There should be 111 '' unclcrsc rvcd'' .nc.Js
Bro\vn sd td he h.ts kn own ahmtt
some opuon avaJ!ablc.'' ·
th
e
,tho rtton clt n 1c prm·1s 1011 Ill th e
The proposals call on the Alan
Clinton
hea lth c.J rc bill "nee .JI
Guumachcr Inslttute 111 New York
least
Marc
h 10 , when he wrote ,J
to dcftne whtch ci ties with more
lcuc
r
to
,
.ult
J-ahortt on co nswuc nt
111
than 50.000 residents arc " underserved." The tn stitule surveyed who had q uest ioned hllll on !he
sub1 t
uon. hu t eve ry Amcnc,tn Pd Y to

ence last week, Gray announced a
fourth policy shift on Haiti. The
shifty nature of the policy was still
intact, but now a black face was the

Chuck Stone
mlerlocutor.
No mtlttary mvas1on was discussed, but a military actwn was
"on the table."
In further pursuit of Bush's
Haitian policy, Gray declared that
Haitian refugees (unlike Cuban
refugees) would be turned back and
sent to "safe havens."
As George Bush, Bill Clinton
and Clinton's Haitian policy puppet
prove, "devilish slyness" is both
bipartisan and bimetal.
But ~"talld by for more. The very
ne~t day "the Clinton administration" (not Gray) retreated from its
"safe havens" policy based on
proof by announcmg that ijaitians
need only declare they fear persecution to be eligible for the havens.
By the time you read this, we
may already have invaded Haiti
and be gearing up to take on North
Korea . In the meantime, Gray
could end up being another black
fall guy forcClinton in the tradition

of. scuttled Lam G u inier and mg all of his bme to Haiti's probClifton R. Wharton, Jr.
!ems. So much for this avaricious
. But Gray's case is dtffcrent He politician's "very big impact on
IS greedy. One of Arnencan htstothe education of black people
ry 's most successful and conniving throughout this decade."
Black colleges are struggling
black elected officials, Gray, as the
majority whip , was on the fast under an economic hammer.
track to becoming the first black Aggravating their plight is the
speaker of the House. Une~pected- recent Supreme Court decision
ly, he announced on June 20, 1991, holding that Mississippi's dual
his intentton to resign from public higher education syslem is
Congress in September.
funded on a separate and unequal
Even Congressional Quarterly basis.
reported that it was "rare for a
The state legislature and educamember to leave at midterm." But lion department responded by ,
like Clinton, Gray had so many offering a plan to merge black col-·
financial problems, gosstp about leges into white colleges and, in :
his personal conduct and Jusuce e[fect, diminish the existence o(
Department investigauons swirling black public colleges.
.
around his staff that he opted to cut
Meanwhile, back at Bill Clin-·:
his potential losses by qmtting.
ton's plantation, Bill Gray preens&gt;
When Gmy resigned, he left his like a peacock at press conferences. :
$125,000 congressional salary for a Like 0 .J · dashing through those :
whopping $175,000 as president of airports, Gmy looks fantastic. And&gt;
the United Negro College Fund. he is just as phony.
·
•'I'm giving u~ political power,"
~huck Stone is a syndicated :
he declared wllh a straight face, wnter for Newspaper Enterprise ·
Associatioa,
"to have a very big impact on the
(For information on how to
education of black people throughout this decade." UNCF' s cam- communicate electronically with
paign goal that year was $250 mil- this columnist and others, COD·
li 0
tact America OnUne by calllltgl·
l.hree years later, Gray is devot- 800-827-()364, ext 8317.)

$1 million in
heroin seized
at Cincy airport

gu ns .lg,lllh\ J!t, ll liH J ]~]

&lt;.,,\\('. l t\'C'&gt;." ,,ti d j)l lllll ...
lknt[! .tn, d tr cctoJ 11! tlh' 1 -: l.!,.tl
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I\ ,t]Ji!tdll'(\ \\l{h JJ.u u \~1111 (.llllll id
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u' L!llll .,c\k·r.., 111 prl' •l'll t tlt~..· lt lll l l
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L.h~.' ''l' l i' IHl\ re turned
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\ hot Ill J.l!l ll~lf~ I 992 wh L'Il th ey
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Ill, I
I ll lt\\'-. 11 11 '\I '- I I' rl Ill "i\, rll
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hi..l.ltt· .. lltl\ l tll ~tl !ll l \ttk t tll'tN
jl!ll\ L' I t ~ \1.,\'&gt; \'.tll!u ll;. tlL'!.! I ts ~.· nt
\ IJ.t\ ltdlflg '.\,\~ U\~,.;r\lll!il.d Ill
I c h r tt.ll\ when the 5th Dtslrt c l
U l 1ro Cmut of Appl'.lls Julcd tl t.t l
W.ll ll'r -. lu utd b~ lh· ht l t,t\ 1\c.
-lit ~ Oh 1u StljH l' lllC Court
r~lllmd l the l.ht k ~.1 l o lb l :llk to
trt ,tl \\\· dnC's(IJy wlt L'I t It Jcfu ..,o.:d 111
.t ~~ ruli n g to llc.tr \\.tll L' f\ .qlJh'. li
o! 1h 1..· dt\\ltlllO Url '\ th l.. t\1 \lll
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1L
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dU\\ \1) t\JC ~CI I ( Id] pubill. \Jl ,,11 \1
j.rtdd)
:\nd. DI LO Uf...,l .\1. hc l tl\l'
ht' do..:,n 'l'

,IJtl\~ ,tlilll' C,lll iOilMI' IItoHI.ll C~ v t c

Clts:C its:NA I I (Al'1 -- A Call In ! nit~ m an .1rrt v1ng o n an lnlc rna tlon. d !l1 ght .tt C'1ncmnat t/No nh c rn

Ke ntu cky

Jn tc m.JIIO illi

wor th o f h cr0 111 Ill h1 s s ull CdSC,
,l lfthonuc~ s~ud

U S. Cus tom s ServJCC ol f1cc rs
on Th ursday arrested Sy lves te r
Atll gw u. 36, of Pdsadcn,l dftcr off•cc" ro und 72 pcllcb of wlutc ilcro·
1n stuffed ulSidc soc ks pac ked m
h" suJ IC.Jsc. '""' John Sluy.
Ctnct nnat t port &lt;itrCclor for 1l1e customs SC f VICC, on f.rtdJy
The sc1zu rc ol I 79 pounds of
hcrom 1s one of the largcs l :11 1ilc
;urpon. Shay sa1d
The hcrmn was al so of ht ghcr
l[Uclllty than ofJJCidis h11v c ::~c c n at

til e ,11rpOrt It was Chtna whnc, not
1hc more familt ar .md lowcr-gr.Jclc
Sou thc.Jsl As 1:1 hr0\\1 \l or M cx 1cJ n
hnhUI, o ll lC !JI S Sai d

Acl •g" u h.1cl JUSI gnne n o l f .1
Ik lt ,l r\tr L tncs tl1 g ht fro m Fr.lll ~ ­
lurt. Gcrm.tny. \&lt;.,. hi,; n the .1rrl'" t took

pl.tt c. o!tiu.tl s s.nd

BOWMAN'S

Aupolt \&lt;.,.".ts

fou nd will! more tl! .Jtt Sl mlilt on

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-Home Oxygen Program
-Serving Southeastern Ohio &amp; W. Va .

I HOME OWNED AND OPERATED I
"Celebrating Our Tenth Anniversary"

~

Toll Free

li e \\ ,h drr,ug nc d Fnd ._Jy Ill Covmglon. Ky. ch.1 rgcd w11h pu sses·
' 1n n of hcro m w 1th m tc nl t o dJ s-

tnhut c ConvJct•on on th e ch.1rgc
&lt;..

:1 rn cs a mandat o r y se ntence o f

ll\c ye ars 111 pn sn n

HOLZER
CLINIC
OFFERS ...
James W Young, D. 0.

Clinton gets a front man on Haiti
A hnc from Charles Dtckens'
"Dombey and Son" exquisitely
sums up both O.J . Simpson as a
nauonal hero and President Chnton
as a formulator of Hai!ian policy:
"He's tough, ma'am, tough ... and
devilish sly "
If one quality epitomizes Btll
Clinton's first 18 months in office,
1t's toughness. Standing tall with
almost regal gnttmess, he has survived trial by media fire, weathered
persecution by right-wing zealots,
and kept one step ahead of his foreign policy cretins. That's toughness.
It's also imitative. Most successful politicians have rerfected
the art of being sly. Bil Clinton
takes that art one step further to
''devthsh sly." How else to
describe the appointment of Bill
Gray as his Haitian special adviser,
a political survivor who matches
Clinton in toughness, but surpasses
htm m devilish slyness?
Clinton appointed Gmy for only
two reasons: I) Gray is black (as
arc Haitians) and 2) to talce the heat
off of his failed policy that Randall
Robinson's fast had exposed.
At a White House press confer-

'

. \llo.~lng .1 ~un v·lk r !11
pttlL'IllL.tlhb~.:tiL\d\uhkltlll.lllln~

I

DERMATOLOGY
Dr. Jim Young, Board Certified Dermatologist,
is f,lOW Practicing at Holzer Clinic.
Dermatology is the medical science of skin/unction, structure arul disease .
Dr. Young is honored to offer afuU range of skin care. Services available
include, but are not limited to: skin cancer diagnosis arul treatment, acne
(inclruling Accutane~) warts , psoriasis, moles, growths arul tumors, ec:r.~ma,
seborrhea, hair arul nail problems, arul sclerotherapy of some leg vem
problems. AU ages are welconw. To schedule appointnwnts, call
Hober Clinic'• Dermatology Department at 446-5513.

Holzer Clinic
-Joseph Schemrich, 12, is surrounded by road sij:ns as he walks through the
Franklin County fmrgrnunds In Hilliard Friday.

..

Schemrich, a 4-H member, will be showing hogs
during the fair, which runs thruugh Saturday.

Big City Medicine Ri

(AP)

•

q

I

•••

t-Here At Home!

�\ '-....
Page

A6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 17, 1994 •

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

- -Area deaths-- Lunar landing's
Nancy J. Houck
\; ,\1 .1 li'Ul .IS -

1\:llll\

J. lluuch , 7:. 210 K1nco n Dmc, G:li lipolis,

. ',\I htd ~ IY.J li iV ! 5, Jl)lJ..! ~!lhl•rrco.:ltk'!ll' C.
1\"rn lic·c .!, llJ c 1 ,, c;:dlipuliS . daugh ter of ill c late Dar lene "B ucky"
,q1l·r :tnd Clh:·it~ r L L'J pn . ..;ltc wJ s a rn_c mbcr o ~· th ~ G race Un 1tcd
· '· th11d, -, LClwrrh, ~md a durtcr llll' mhcr o f the G~lll1poil s Emb lem Club

·l thl' Al li Cfl t': lll Ll' \.!,1011 :\U\Iil :lf \'
SIK' w; 1.., :l l\n Jlll'l·Clkd tlltk:~ t l l b,· her hu.. , hand. John E. Houc k, a vct,_,Jn nl \\'\1rld

\V;~r

II .

Ill\..! ,til.' :1 '-llll :1nd d.tt 11: 1lt~-r-n1 - l : nv. J!lhn ''Ftldt L" ~Intl Dnttl l'.
I !II!/, k . . I d.;lldlkr :lll d '-(1Jl-!ll-Li\\. \(1&lt; 111 :llltl 1\tlgcr V ~ t llUl. ri\ C g .r;llld ' IJtl l lr ~· rl . Rtl L:~-r .111d ;\;;trk\ \'.tlh 11 .1nd Job). Clm" :1nd .lonathan r ylcr
\ 11 1,

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111\lllk . , 1 . , 1 ~ kr , lktk l~ \ ·:d (\1 (:.tl lr]'llll&lt; a '-l'- l l'r ~rn d hrnthl·r- rn -bw.
i \·~.,: 1 ~·. JrHl t· :rtl \\'!II " 11 1 \ .Ltr·rt' ll.l: ,rrh l ,r 11nl! IK'f ;nld \ 1'-,l l'f- r' l -law . Jr n1 ;md

crew not present
for NASA party
By MARCIA DUNN

Aerospace Writer
CA PE CANAVERA L, Fla. NASA ce lebrated the 25 ill anni ve r""Yof Apo ll o II 's liftoff on Saturday with a co untdown repla y, with
th e launc h of four model rocke ts,
A-P

and wr thout the crew .

Apo ll o I I astronauts declined 10
allcnd
the morning ceremony and
Ill th l' :\kCuy-J\ loorc hmc r;d Hom e
;cnl
regrets
for a comm emorative
llc·llic'; ll\&gt;il l 'li:qlc' i, li:d li ['Ol h . .\l illill c 1\n. Lc· i:l!ld llrl' ll n OIIICI;II!Ilg
dmner.
(All
three
aucnded the 20th
Hu r1JI \\ 1!l l'l' 111 M u uml Hill Cl·rrr,: to~ . Fr1cnds 111&lt;.1 ) r&lt;dl :ll th e ch.rpcl
anniversary
launch
ceremony.)
1
'\wh l:t\' Jro rn f 1- &gt; p.m .
_
So
in
stead
of
the
first two men
l': dill~·: rr\' r s will he Juhn Huul k. ~ ~ '~n V;mco Jr. . Chrr-; Houck. Hngn
to
walk
on
the
moon
- Neil Arm \", til l\) , J) ;[\' Hl T J \\'Ih.::y ;!lld Gi ll f\l lCI\'L'lly.
.
strong
and
Buzz
Aldrin
- and
llunor;~rv p:illhcarcrs wdl tx· lh}\1 ''ard Thrvcncr and Syl\'an Gardner_
their
fellow
crewman
Michael
,\krnon~; l cr m t nbutrons nu y tk' m ~rdc tn til e J\mcn Lan C .lll('Cr Soc rety.
Co llin s, the National Aeronautics
I' 11 II"' X 1.\ G:~lli lllliJS. Olu n -l\(&gt;11 .
and Space Admi ni stration se ul ed
fo r the last man on the moon and
one who lost hi s chance 10 walk on
rh c lunar surfa ce beca use of an
!.,'. rp,·r 1\ I ( ';II rJ Ill Ill.!
Sl"l \ [r,l"' will bl' \( I il . lll . .\lOIIlLi\

\I ;!;

Jacob Melvan

Bobbi Jo Richards
R,\ IT\JSWOOD. W Va. - llohlll Jo R1chard\. 1.\ Sherman . W.Va ..
.'h',l F11d.l\ , July 15. 199-l 1n Jacbun Gc11cral Hv,pi!ii l. R1plcy, W.Va. .
1\urn ,\lay 24, 1079 111 P a r kcrshu r ~. W.Va ., the· daug hter of DenZi l
i\ll lwd s ;111d Twyl1a Wes t, she was an eigh th g r&lt;~dcr at Ra venswood H1gh
S, l&gt;&lt;x&gt; l :11111 was ac11vc in youth fellowship.
·
Sire is surv ived by her parents; brother, Clayton Richard s of Sherman :
~r . 1 rH ip ;1r l' nts, Fnmk and Clara West of Ra ven swood., :1n.d Hubcn and
'''"let [&lt; , c h;~rd s of Sandyvi ll e. W. Va.: and grcat- grand lather. Mason
\\'111Uk cr of Waverly.
5c· rs ll·cs will be 10:30 a.m. Monday in the Strai ght-Tucker &amp; Roush
l'unc·r:rl llu lllc, Rav enswood, wi th the Rev All en Stewart officiating.
llun:~l "'II be mthe Ravenswood Cemetery. Fri end s may call between 2-l ;. 1nd 7- 1J ) l.l ll . Sundl.l)' m the fun eral horne.

Lois Irene Sullivan
GAI_LI POL IS - Lois Irene Sulliv an, 63, G;r lli pol is, form erl y of
(ia hanna , d1ed Thursda y, July 14, 1994 in R1vcrside Method ist Hospital ,
Co lu rni ~ LI-" .

" Born Ju ly 30, 1930 in Co lumbu s, daughter of Peter P and Pearl L.
Strait Dague. she was preceded in death by her hu sband. Leonard Lcgg.
- Sumv mg arc three sons, Leonard Lcgg of New Haven, W.Va .. and
L·;rrry Sulli van Jr. and Marvin Sulliv;m, both of Ga llipoli s: a daughter,
Irene Lcgg Bosley of Ga llipoli s: two grandchildren: c1ght sisters, Julia
Roscnth:il , Lorena Holonbaugh, Ze lda Bryant. Viol et Grim, Haze l Munrz,
Helen May. Norma Leg g and Viola Lcgg: and num erous nieces. nephews

acc ident en route.

" It' s their dec ision. I respect it.
But I wis h th ey we re here," said
Bre nt Wynn , who helped laun ch
the model rockcLs.
" After 25 years of consta ntl y
being hounded for autographs. th ey
pro bably want 10 kick back,"
Wynn sa id _ He quickly noted: "I
brought stuff for them to autograph
in case they spontaneously show
up."
More than 500 people gathered
for th e laun c h ceremony at

Kennedy Space Center. JU St three
miles from where Apollo I I blasted off ai9:32 a.m . EDT on July 16,
19&amp;9. Four days later, Arm strong
and Aldrin became the first humans
to wa lk on the moon_
Many of th e ce lebrators had
worked on Apollo II and arc now
retired or in different professions.
Apollo II launch comm entator
Jack Kin g, now a public relat ions
man in Wa shington, noted that
more than 5.6 million parts were in
the rocket and spacecraft - "any
one of which could go wrong ."
"Wi th 99.9 percent success,
5,000 things still could happen,"
King sa id. "When you look back at
it fro m th at point of vi e w. it's
rather an awesome concept to contem plate."
King timed his remarks to end at
9:30a.m. , just in time for a replay
of hi s la unch commcnwry starting
al th e two -m inut e mark . He ran a
lrul c over. As a re sult, his pro nounce ment of "Liftoff! We have
a liftoff 1 Thirty- two minutes past
th e hour' Liftoff of Apollo 11 1"
came at 9:33a.m .
No one cared. All eyes were on
four model Saturn rockets whooshing 200 feet into the air and then
noating down gently with red and
white parachutes.
"Sec. By goodness, we've still

a noon newscast. " We now have
reason 10 believe that we made a
mistake in one of our reports."
The di stri ct auorn ey' s offic e
praised the retraction as a "responsible action."
The report had raised questions
abo ut the lega lity of the searc h at
Simpson' s estate the day after his
ex-w ife, Nicole Brown Simpson,
and her fri end Ronald Goldman
were stabbed to death outside Ms.
Simpson's condo.
If the prosecutor, Marcia Clark,
was present berore the warrant was
issued, it could help the defense

By JOHN DIAMOND
take place if other nuclear powers,
especiall y Russia, go along.
Associated Press Writer
WAS HI NGTON (AI') - Th e
Still , the co mments from one of
United States should elimin ate all the mi litar y's most senior officers
'" nucl ear weapon s. a lop Air run counter to ille Clin ton ad minisForce general said Friday in a sharp trati o n view that the nucl ea r
hr.eak from Pentagon orillodoxy .
WCi.lpo ns arse nal cun be reduced ,
Gen. Charles A. Horner, head of but not cllmmatcd enurcly.
the U.S. Space Command, said illc
Horner, as head of one of the
nat io n wou.)d sec ur e " th e hi gh military' s nin e " unified co mmoral gro und " worldw ide whi le mands," reports directly to the seclosi ng litt le militarily by eliminat- retory of defense. Hi s co mmand
Ing its nuclear arsenaL
covers military satell ite operations
"The nuclear weapon is obso- and balli stic missil e defense
lete," Horner sa id at a brea kfa st efforts, among other illings.
meetin g with defen se reporters. "I
In "ddition to heading th e U.S.
wa nt to ge t rid of ill cm aiL"
Space Command , Horner al so leads
Horn er made c lea r he was the North American Ae rospace
" talkin g long- term " and sa id Defe nse Co mmand , whi ch 1s
nucl ear disarmament should on ly responsib le for defending the United States and Canada from a nuclcANNIVERSARY OF A LAUNCH- Rocco Patrone, the launc h
director for the Apollo It, clapped as several model Sal urn mckcts •
were launched Saturday at the Kennedy Space Center. NASA cl'lebrated the 25th anniversary of ApoUo It's liftoff Saturday. (AI' I

got it," King said.
AI the same time in space, the
crew of shulll e Co lumbia was
informed by Mi ss ion Conuol of the
histor ic moment. The co mmand
module of Apoll o II al sc: was
named Columbi a.
"Colu mbia' s journey toda y, as
her nam esake did back th en, is
pu sh mg the frontiers of knowledge
and science for all mankin d. and

Deaths elsewhere
Walter A. Fairservis Jr.
SHARON, Conn. (AP) - Pio"ec ring archaeologist Dr. Waller A.
l'airscrvi s Jr. died at home Tues day. He was 73.
• Fai rscrvrs joined the American
Muse um of Natural History io New
York in 1941. After World War II
he we nt on 10 bec om e a staff
archaeologist at the museum, bui ldin g a reputation for locating and
exp loring lost cities - some previously known only through legend.
In 1949, Fairservis led the first
American archaeological expedition to Afghanistan, where he and
two colleagues found the ruins of a
long -forgouen imperial city.
He led a tea m to Pakistan in
lQ60 and discovered a ceremonial
complex that shed light on the pre historic mhabitants of the region.
Fairscrvis retired last year from
Vassar College, where he was a
professo r of a nthropology and
director of As 1an stud 1cs. He came
to the sc hool in 191i9 to head its
new anthropology depart ment.
Surv1vors include hi s w rfc , bnc

Bell

Fa~r ,c r v i s,

and fo ur daughters.
Franklin l'allerson
: FR AM ING HAM , Ma ss . (A P)
- F rank lin Pauerson, the first
preside nt of Hampshi re College, a
liher:~l art s sc hool thai sought to
rcd d in c ed ucation during the
1960s hy aboli shing grades and uaditional departments, died Wednesday . He was 77.
P;l!t crson was president of the
western ~lassach u sc lls college just
out s1 &lt;l \' Amh e rst from 1966 to

197 1. He was chairman of the
board of tru stees from 1971 10
1976.
Conceived in the experimental
1960s, the I, I00-s tudent co ll ege
abandon ed grades and traditional
acad cm1 c di sc iplines in favor of
fou r broad areas of study . Students
work on "contracts" with faculty
commiuccs that involve a combination of classes, projects, community service and research.
Rosalind Shand
LONDON (AP) - Rosalind
Shand, mother of Prince Charles'
much -publicized fri end Camilla
Parker Bowles, died Thursday after
a long illness. She was 74 .
Allegations that Mrs. Parker
Bowles had an affair with the
prince after his 1981 marriage to
Princess Diana have regularly
appeared in newspapers for the past
two years.
Cesar Tovar
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Cesar
Tovar , one of only two major
leag ue baseball players to play all
nine positions in a game, died of
pancreatic cancer Thursday in
Venezuela. He was 54 .
The oulfielder played with Minnesota, Philadelphia, Texas, Oakland and the New York Yankees in
hi s 12-year career.
On Sept. 22, 1968. Tovar played
one inning at every position in
Minnesota's 2-1 victory over Oakland . He JOined Bert Campaneris,
who did it in a 13-inning loss for
the Kansas City Athletics on Sept
8, 1965.

Discharged river captain
sues Ashland, contractor
:. CINCINNAT I (AP)- A for - and how long it was discharged,"
mer capUlin at an Ohio River tow- Jeanne lson, of the Ohio River Valwg company says he saw oil prod- Icy Water Sanitation Commission,
Q'I:l S reg ularly dumped from its
said Friday.
boats mto the river while the tugs
The agency works with eight
.O.or.kcd for a federal govemmcnt- Ohio Valley states to police water
~ntractcd company.
quality in the river, a drink:in,g
Darrell E. Stevens said in his water source for many communth.wsuit against McGinnis Inc. and ties including Cincinnati.
Ashland Oil In c. that the spills
Stevens . employed for nine
\IICre never cleaned up or reported.
years at McGinnis, Inc., sued under
· Ashland Oil oflen used McGin- the False Claims Act, which allows
nis' tugs in the course of delivering citizens to sue in the government's
fiarges carrying jet fuel to a govem- behalf 10 expose fraud .
111ent doc k in Cincinnati. The jet
Stevens could get 25 10 30 perfuel was piped to Wright-Patterson cent of any money recovered from
his lawsuit, with the rest going to
Air Force base from the dock.
· "It would be difficult for us 10 the government. He has asked U.S.
say what impact the ?il and bilge District Judge Herman Weber to
would have on the nver wtthout dcterm inc the amount to be recovknowing how much was dtscharged ered.

now an aerospace com pan y exec uti ve, stood in fo r Arrn sl.fong, ldnn

and Collins on Saturday jusl IS Ir e
did in 1969 as part uf the Apolo !.,.,_ __
ba c kup crew. An o., ygc n Ia k
c.x plosion on his way to th ~ moon
10

show that police knowingly seized
evidence illegally and that it should
be excluded from triaL
A source close to the investigation told The Associated Press illat
Clark got to the mansion at 12:30
p.m. and stayed about an hour to
watc h the search, which already
had turned up bloodstains and a
bloody glove.
Neither the video nor the box
that contained it indicated whether
the time, 10:28, was a.m . or p.m.
KCBS said 10: 28 could simply be
the time at night dmt the video was
uansmiucd from a uuck 10 the sta-·

County Court fines posted
POMEROY - The following
cases were resolved Wednesday in
the Meigs County Coun of Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Charles M. Smith,
Rulland, failure 10 yield, $20 plus
costs; Marlt: A. Qesterle, Alpharetta, Ga., speed, $30 plus costs;
Steven S. Powell, Middleport, seatbelt, $25 plus costs; Sharon Cummings, Ravenswood, W.Va., seatbell. $15 plus cosiS; Frank: A. Martin, Middleport, $30 plus costs;
James Reynolds Wyna, Charlotte,
N.C .. speed, $30 plus cosiS; Patticia J. Dent, Pomeroy, speed, $30
plus costs; Ardley F. Satterfield,
Mansfield, seatbelt, $25 plus costs;
Cletis Miller, Morgantown, W.Va.;
speed, $30 plus cosiS;
Lawrence R. Will, Middleport,
fishing without a license, $30 plus
costs; Michael Irwin Price, Manapalis, Md., speed, $30 plus costs;
Larry E. Klein, Rutland, sealbell,
$15 plus costs; Kathryn D. Johnson, Middleport, speed, $30 plus
costs; David L. Carnahan,
Reedsville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Kimberly Arnold, Pomeroy, sealbelt, $25 plus costs; Michael W.
Arthur, Chillicothe, seatbelt, $25
plus costs; Jimmie L. Freeman,
Racine, speed, $30 plus cosiS; Rose
Ousley, McArthur, speed, $30 plus
costs; Robert Coleman, McArthur,
seatbelt. $30 plus costs;
Dick Shadd, Cincinnati, ~·
$30 plus costs; Patriclc Smder,
Racine, domestic violence, $100
plus costs, 30 days jail suspended

to 18 days, two years probation;
Catherine L. Wilson, Cincinnati,
speed, $30 plus costs; William
Spurloclc, Coolville, safety belt
installation, $15 plus costs;
Stephen B. Houchins, Middleport,
speed, $30 plus costs; Aleslca M.
Row ley, Pomeroy, seatbelt, $25
plus costs; James A. Duncan,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
Janice Glandon, McArthur, speed,
$30 plus costs; Bettie J. lfoffman,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
John M. Haggy, Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus costs; Barbara A.
Caruthers, Pomeroy, seatbelt, $25
plus costs; Johnny C. Sheets,
Reedsville, seatbelt. $25 plus costs;
Brian Bailey, Reedsville, failure to
display valid regiscration, $20 plus
costs; John Clinzennan, Fannmgtoo Hills, Mich., speed, $30 plus
costs; Lenard Sides, Gallipolis,
speed, $30 plus costs; Glenn Stabner, Groveport, speed, $30 plus
costs; Malena M. Stone, Pomeroy,
wrongful entrustment, $100 fine
suspended, costs; Michael VanMeter, Syracuse, theft, $250 plus
costs, six months jail suspended,
two years probation, restitution; .
Donald Riffle Jr., Racine,
stream littering, $40 plus costs·;
Jeremy Roush, Racine, stream littering, $40 plus costs; Marcia S.
Morris, Lorain, speed, $30 plus
costs; Kenneth L Bonlcamp,
Janesville, Wis., speed, $30 plus
costs; Larry W. Porter, Alb~y.
speed $30 plus costs; Lovell Tnmble, Pon Washington, speed, $30

EMS units record 8 runs
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reported eight calls for
assistance Friday. Units responding
included:
POMEROY
I :08 p.m. Pomeroy and Chester
for motor vehicle accident at Hatwoods Road and Pomeroy Pike for
Paul Brooks and Brad Haggy who
refused treatment; 11:41 p.m.
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Pike for a
motor vehicle accident for Colton
Drummond who refused treatment
and Amber Wells who was transPorted 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital;
MIDDLEPORT
I: 19 p.m. Middleport to North
Front Street for Melvm Roach who
was transported 10 Hplzer Medical
. Center;
CHESTER
1:31 p.m. Chester and Pomeroy
to Riebel Road for a motor vehicle
accident with Judy Guinther who
was transported 10 VMH;
RACINE
3:43p.m. Racine 10 Station 2 for
Paul Powell who was transported
toVMH;
RUTLAND
7:49 p.m. Rutland to Leading
Creek: Road for Greta Triplett who
was transported to VMH;

SYRACUSE
,
11:12 p.m . Syracuse to State
Route 124 for an auto fire of John
Demoss who was transported to
VMH; and 11 :46 p.m. Srracuse to
Station 3 for Brian Dieh who was
transported to VMH.

plus costs; Sherrie D. Stover,
Racine, failure to conb'OI, $30 plus
costs: John F. Aeilcer Jr., Albany,
no operator's license, $100 plus
costs, 30 days jail suspended 10 10
days, jail suspended if valid OL
presenled within 60 days;
Terry L. Johnson II, Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus costs; Keith T.
Herdman, Middleport, leaving
scene of an accident, $75 plus
costs, three days jail suspended,
one year probation; failure to conb'OI, $25 plus costs; use of unauthorized plates, $25 plus costs; Lillie
E. Lambert, Middleport, left of
center, $30 plus costs; Neil Barber,
Portland, failure to control, $25
plus costs; Sandra A. Holcomb,
Albany, left of center, $25 fine suspended, costs; Karen Saltsman,
Racine. malcing false alanns, lhree
days jail suspended, costs only;
Rodney Neigler, Racine,
asswed clear disll!nce, $20 plus
costs; VIncent D. Gray Sr., Portland, assault, $250 plus costs, one
year probation, 30 days jail sus pended 10 10 days; menacing, 10
days jail suspended, costs; Faron L.
Spielman, Long Bottom, speed,
$20 plus costs; Jackie R. Barber,
Middleport, DUI, $750 plus costs,
30 days jail suspended 10 10 days,
one year OL suspension, one year
probation, 90 day vehicle immobilization.
Forfeiting bonds were: Fran
Mason Jr., Albrightsville, Pa.,
speed, $70; Dirk Shadd. Cincinnati,
seatbelt, $45; Rose Ousley,
McArthur, seatbelt, $45; James
Duncan, Pomeroy, seatbelt, $45;
William Spurlock, Coolville, operating with plates of former owner,
$70; failure 10 conbol, $70; James
Biggs, Pomeroy, seatbclt, $45; Janicc Glandon, McArthw, sealbelt,
$45; Kenneth Miller, Ravenswood,
possessioo, $13S; Caroll Clelland,
Pomeroy, passing bad checks, $90.

w lk on

the lunar surface.

lion.
Prosecutors were granted two . ·
more weeks Fr id~ y to dec id e
wh eth e r 10 c harge AI " A.C."
Cow lings with helpi ng hi s fri end
llcc during their 60-milc nationall y
telev ised freeway chase June 17.
Municipal Judge Jeffrey Wiall
ordered..Cow lings to return 10 court
Jul y29.
During ille chase, Cow lings was
at the wheel or hi s white Ford
Bronco, and Simpson was in the
bac k, allegedly with a gun to hi s
head. The chase ended with CowlIngs pulling into th e driveway of
Simpson's home and Simpson surrenderin g.
Cowlings' lawyer, Donald M.
Rc, said hi s client Ullked Simpson
out of shooting himself and should
be considered a hero_
"A. C. was in the position where
he had a choice: lie either could let
OJ. go off and kill him sel f, or stay
with OJ. and talk him out or it ,"
Retold the AP afiCr a brief hearing .
" He did wha t any good fri end
should do. He stayed wi th him and
talked him out of it. "
Rc sard Cow lin gs didn't know
about the passpo rt or the S I0,000
in cash that investigators reportedly
seized from the Bronco. The di s- ··,
covcry raised suspicion s that Simp son may have intended 10 leave il1c
counuy.
Cowlings re main s fr ee on
$25 0,000 bail. He has made no ·
public statcmcrts since his ~c le asc. ·•

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VINTON

"·
' '
,,

'

.....

Gallla Counly tll•f-l•y Ywd
155 Main SL
.i"Y I ~oe Mooto, Ma.11gora
386-8603

Horner fi rst rai sed th e id ea of
clirn innting the nuclear arsenal last
ye:Jr , but on ly as som ethin g the

Penwgon should consider in ''w hat
if" studies . Hi s comm ents Friday
marked a rare instance of an activcliuty offi ce r criticizing one of the
fundamc-nwl pil lars of U.S. defense
throug hout the Cold War.
" I w:~nt to go 10 zero and I' ll
tell yo u why: ,r we and the Rus-.; l nns c an £0 to 1.cro nu c le ar
we apon s, th en ltlin k w llal tll i:ll docs

for us in our cl'forLI to counter tile
new war,'' Horn er said .

The new military threa t. unlike
th e surcrpowcr tensions of the past,
co mes f rom small er , l es s swbl c
c ou ntr ies th &lt;ll u bt ~11n we apons o f

mass dest ruction. Horner said .

"T hink of th e l11gh moral
we sec ur e by having
none," said Horn er. who plans 10
retire soon. "I t's kind of hard lor
us 10 say to North Korea, 'Yo u :1re
terr ible people, yo u' re d eve l op ing~

groun~

nuclear weapon," ' when the U nit -

ed States has thousamls of them.
The Clinton adm inistration, '" a
rev iew of its nuc lei.tr posture, i s not
end orsing tota l nu c lear disarma ment. But wi Jh the annu ;ll cos t ol
lll&lt;tint&lt;.linin g the U.S . nu clear ar \C -

nal esliln ated HI about 520 bilill ln
ac!minrstration offi c i::1l s arc look ing

at ways to red uce th e stoc kpil e
sharpl y.
Current arm ~ rcdul: tion treaties
wo uld br~ n g th e U.S. :rncl Ru sSian
nu c lea r arsena ls duwn to about

''

Hy LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress ional Whit ew ater hearings
wil l be res tri cted furth er at th e
request of special counsel Robert
B. Fiske Jr. , la wmakers sa id Friday.
Fiske told Ho use and Se nate
ban king committee leaders that he
will not fini sh investi gating, prior
to cong ressiona l hearing s, the
removal of fil es from the White
Hou se offiCe of Vin cen t Fos ter.
Fiske and lawmakers had agreed
car l icr that Congre ss would not
hold hcann gs on subject s that
remain pan of the criminal investi gation .

The top Repub licans on the
committees, Rep. Jim Leach of
Iowa and Sen. Alfonse D' Amato of
New York . said the commiuees
wo uld not question witnesses on
the re mova l of document s, but
would sec k a new round of hcarmgs on the subject after Fiske compl etes thai pan of the probe.
" If it 's (fini shed) in August, the
hearings would appropriately be in
September," Leach said. D' Amato
said he ex pee ted another round of
hearings on the subject.
Removal of the documents was
to have been a significant topic for
this month 's hearing s.
The files , including Wh itewater
docum ents, were taken by White
Hou se offi cials after Foster commined sui cide last July 20. Fiske
carl ier said that part of the probe
wo uld be comp leted befor e hearings begin - July 26 in illc House
Banking Commiuee and by July 29
in the Senate Banking Commiucc.
Lawmakers already have agreed
to ;1void questions on Pres ident
Clinton's former investment in the
Whitewater Deve lopment Corp. es peci a ll y whether Whitewater
contributed to the fa1lure of Mmltson Guaranty Savings and Loan .
Mad ison was owned by Clinton's
Whitewater business partner, James
McDougaL
Fiske raised no objection to testimony from a key banking regulator about her contention that Washington officials tried to influence
he r investigation of Clinton's
Arkansas land venture.
Fiske mel Friday with Leach
and then with D' Amato and Sen.
Donald W. R1egle Jr., chairman of
the Senate panel.
Leach said afterwards, "Mr.
Fiske has indicated that the principal witness" among Kansas Citybased regulators, Jean Lewis, could
be call ed to testify about her discussions with an official in Washington .
In one memo to her own file,
Lewis related how the lawyer with
the Federal De posit Insurance
Corp_ in Washington, April Breslaw , had told her "the people at the
top" wanted to say that Whitewater did not cause a loss to Madison_
Lewis wrote that Brcslaw said
the superiors wanted an "honest

Japan
outlaws trade
in sea turtles
TOKYO (AP)- Japan decided
on Friday to end its trade in endangered sea turtles within two weeks.
Japan imported about 35 tons of
the hawksbill sea turtle last year, m
defiance of international treaties
protecting the species.
The shells arc used in tortoiseshell ornaments and eyeglass
frames. Japan claimed illat because
these are traditional crafts, it was
exempt from treaty obli$ations to
protect the endangered am maL
Japan controls about 90 percent
of the world's trade in sea turtles.
"The ban will certain ly improve
the hawk:sbill turtle's chances for
survival," said Akiko Ishihara of
the Worldwide Fund for Natwe.
Friday's decision to outlaw all
trafficking in the species was made
at !he Cabinet level. It will for)lid
commercial exchanges in both earcasses and living hawk:sbill tunics,
effective July 29.

answer" but would be "happie r
about ce rtain an swers that would
get illem off the hook "
.
Lew is wrote that she re itera ted
to Brc sla w th;ll her be li ef thai
Whucwat cr had ca used losses to
Madison .
In an interview last March with
The New York Times, Brcslaw dispuled Lew is' asse rtion and criti cized the quality of her mvcsuga tion .

m'll cd 45 ,0lXl nm' on lr;urd .
Horner is far from a p : ~erfi !\ t. I k
led coalition :trr lmll'-"' dtrnng ilk'
P~ r:; r~11 1 Gu lf \Var ami h. : ~\t H n t'.'­
that th e na t i on's co n,·\· n tr on -11

fo rces ;trc hci n ~ cut too thxpl ~ ll·r,
co ncern o,·cr nul-k ;u· Wl'Jfloll.., "'
pr:h.:tr c: tl one.
" I Jlh[ d\Jil ' t tll rr1l rru l· l l-; 11
wea pons· M e LJSiibk- .· · I hHilL' I" \, lrd
"l'rn not saying th at \\l' nlrl rt.IIJI\

di sMrn, I' m sayin g tli:tl 1 kn ·~· ~ ~
nu clear we apun, and vo u'n: North

Korea and you hav ~ ,J nta.: l car
wcJpon. You can usc yu rJr;-; . ! can't

u.sc lll1nr. \Vhat arn I goitH~ t&lt;l ll '~' 1t
on '! \V_ h ~n i:lfC nu c ll~ &lt;tr ·w~~ljhJ Jl S
good lor? Bu s l1 n~ c iti l''-'. \\'h~ 1 t

pres ident of the United St:il c's is
go ing to Utkc out Pyongy.rng·&gt;· ·

3.500 wea pons apiece from an est1-

WHEN YOUR BOAT NEEDS SERVICED•••

Lawmakers delay
hearings on Foster's files

we thank you," Miss ion Co rHml
told ill c seve n shuttle astro nau ·
Apollo 13 astronaut Fred -laisc.

in 1970 stole his chance

ar attack.

Whitewater:

.•

and other rclmivcs.

Se rvices will he II a.m. Tu esda y 111 th e Schocdingc r-Margarum
Cha pel. 335 W. John stown Road . Gahanna. with Pa stor Cu rti s B&lt;Xllh olfi ctuing . Bur~:rl will he m the M1fflin Tow nsh1 p Ce metery, Gahann ;r.
Fn cnd ; m:~ y c: dl at the ch:rpel Montb y from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A 7

U.S. commander urges elimination of all nuclear weapons

TV station recants O.J. prosecutor stor
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A TV
station Friday re tracted a story
asserting a prosecutor was at OJ.
Simpson's estate before a se arch
warrant had been issued.
The KCBS repo rt ear li er thi s
week was based on a videotape illc
station sa id was automatically
stamped 10:28 on June 13, or 17
minutes before th e warrant wa s
issued by a judge.
On Friday, KCBS said it could
no longer be certain the tape was
made illen.
'' We want to apologize,''
reporter Harvey Levin sa id during

Nation/World

1u1y 17, 1994

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lpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

nmes-Sentlnel ·

Is
politi.
c
s
in
Colin
Powell's
future?
Gone but hardly
Powe ll

'

forgotten, former
·
• • ·
a d V/Ser IS giVIng
out very few clues
J Oli N "" &lt;;

1\1

I,,,.,

II' l'lli llll.tl \1
,\110.'&lt;1 c\J'()lJ\

(\&gt;1111 1\l\\
. . 11 1-. t.dktn g .tho ut th l· lc . . -.lHl'&gt; o l
dt ~·

( old \Vo~r .tnd 1) tlhl'\ l nr .1
In k'l ndnuc Hl "o ur In end Ron.dd
LILJC', p~_· rh.tps

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s.1 y1ng he wont pl.m the

llC'o\ t 'l l.lgC o llit "i Ir k llll lt i he fln l\11
th~..: hon~. \\h l( h \\tl]lll\Lr JJ 1..,
Ide lrorn h!!th I ll th e Souill nr(\/11,
\(l hl 'i rcttrctn-:nl .dll'r ''"~ \l'H' 111

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Ullmtr) 111 :-.o ntCL.IJl.t... ll } ·

In .lpp o lntcd o ll lLC' !:ICtlL'd
tlt(.L''
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11
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t.....tl dii~'L tOr , rll.Jlh .t t ~.. IC\hu I
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\\'.tr lllL' I.Hc l ~ntl lu!h, th~..rtth~..·

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1011

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\ t l.t t C.~ l 'l

-

, topp~l I

\\or!-. tnt..: to w.Jilh
It till' gu) ts . 1
"
Rcpu bltc.trt , wc'\ L' t!OI .1 sorO U'i

'llllll" ""'"'' h, "e ll"'"" tl

Lu, hlon So poll sters nm' of1 cn put
Pm~ c ll nn the !I S[ \\hen th e~ t csl

llt1. "Jlll.l.tll i lll ll '-l i ' \\h llL'W.I l c l

lllth ii LO ]l l lll\ lll OI IL'. ttl lT \
t\nd hl. Hlll[ l llC' IJ \hill('\
Fm .t l ltiJ t, .ltLI.nrn, tu)\1,(.\&lt;..:r
no 0111.. knows Il l \ p o..., t \l () fl \ o n
.Iho r t1o11, \thou I prayl: r, t.txL:s and

\~,t,dotllg,tgnodJ"b

After .1 Sj)(L'C ii 10 th e consc rvall\l' Sh.tv.mo lnsllt t ll ~ c.tr lt er th 1:-;
\t\tr some Rcpub l1c.ms

F'n\vc ll w.!S
ucdcnt i .I Is

suggested

tr y1ng lO bUi ld GOP
Yet he p op p e d up

convcn t1on
Fccle r ~llt on o l

rL'LCntl) Jt the .Htnu.l l

ol the r\m c rt c.tn
Still' C't' un t~ .tnd M untC lp.t l

E111J""ll11)",,

,1 l dK' r,ll Ull H)n .1nd .t

m. ltllr p ll\i.r llll k lllnlr.l ll .. P.trt )

pt&gt;i ll rcs
lrr Ill,· ,\rill ) orrc of l'o« c ll s
l'lh'

\\,h I t&gt;

ll Hl tt \,llC h1 &lt;.&gt; tr( •OP'

In

rc t rr~· nh. ll t l1c now s ll .~rcs those
skrl ]..., '\ tt lt lo lks 1ryrr101l to "l'l J leg
b
m the hus1ncss wodd
A rec ent rno trv ..lll o n:tl sctn ln ,Ir
tn rv1J nnc.! pU IJs, une o l scvcr:J l he

"f'

h ds done for the Peter Lowe Inter-

problem Tu ll y s.r'li
Po'~ ell Wtl S d r~. g l ~ t ~.·ru..l mdc
1
p c n dcn l thro ug hout h 1' 1111 !I.Hy

n.ll ron.rl busrrrcss consul rrrrg frrrn .
w.rs sllon on pll lrlrcs hut lrrl l ol
c n tcrl. ulll ne. ,mccdotcs
And when Powe ll turn ed se n
o us ;J IHt sh we nt over 1h c ..IUd ttorr -

f\J\\1..' 11 '-''Jlpcd d0\1.11 ,t'i dwrr n .Jn
1!1 tile Jn1nt C h tch 11 1 SLdf .JIH1
-.. 11 ~.- d I ~ IL 111 1.: 11 111 cd 1 t ]' l lli J! ~., hl

N\w Yor k ,Pi h1 s ll iii Lit i l t' 'd~.·nc...:
N(l\~ he 1, l&lt;lflslrkr~.d 1 \ r L! Hll ,l
r...:-.; Jd cnt hut l l1d no t \tlll 11 1 I.I o..; J

u rn ..trr d 10 •111 Y ied ncd l or w..nd to
hl'J r hr s th o ug ht s about cr1 scs 111
So m.tlu , R w,Jnd .l, HatlJ , Bos nt a

-. 11 111\ '- d Ill \Vc~'i hlli L: I OII ,\'1 .1Lhi '1C f

tn olll !l , )HII ti,H\

Ck.HI\

he "' c nt o\lllg

r~.·trr~.·

lliLil [

,tlld kl'Lptng 1.~\l.~ f\\Hl l:

,.,:t ll'\"l !l !.!

thou\ hi ~ roltll l tl nnht -

l lt llh

It

,11
1

ILl \

hLLil

J() ll l\l!llh\ &gt;,J il L-.:

th·,. pr1.''ildC' nt .tnt'! till' .tu tll,mt.l
r ,•.t,o..;urlll~
\ 111~.- 1. \\ ho

\,

\ j'l.llflld

US m il rl. lf\

ll[ll.r.ll i&lt;Hl'-

ll,lll\HI

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( I11111Hl t dll-.. lrPtll tu nc to

l

11111 ~·

-..\.._ ~!11:.! ,H hH. C OJl ll llli ldl )

,md lor
rltt\ "p rmg .11.
,I \h,iJ...Cup In IJ t \

~..·1~11 ]'O ll t \

And
( lll ll illllllll'\ Hic i Ld
IIHI.I!.;,!l polll \ l1.' ,l!l1 "L'IliOr ,]( ]Ill Ill
1\lr.ll lnll n ll1 1.1 Ji..., illlorrn,ll ly LOn

1.11.IUI Ptm~.ll .d1&lt;) tll ht-. ,Jil.tt l.t h dH \
Jnr \L L rll. il\ o l \ t,ll ...:, .lLLOfdiiH~ IO

tl l l tl l.t! " 1,\l lltl t.tr u !lh th.:'L O!ll.l: ls

J&gt;"" e ll Io ld rlr c rn he w.r s
rnt r tl!, UC' d hut LO rnrnut ed to work ·
tng t;n Ill :-. ,ltJ tOh logr.lph y, \~ l11ch he

pl.11" ro 111rrs h h) lhc end of th e
puhl tL,llt On tn lll lll- 1995
Jusl rn l1111C lor a 19% Rc publr
' ·"' prCSI&lt;Icn rt .rl run '' Or rnaybc a
( Irn lorr C.rhrrrel JOh'
~C,Jr, \V Il h

c.trecr

v. hc n l1 c kept lw; rtJ I J\C

~L~)• t l:.. til ~ lll \'i

'' " ·"" '

h,t \1. 1 111 '- 1 '- r ~ l l lL'
ol
Ulllr ,c
1\~,.p u blr,.lll N.tlro n,ll
C li .I Irrn .Jn J/ 11L \ n.trbou r ,,1y'i
•

1

\\ hen ,t'ik . . d \~ h ~.'I It ~. · r he think :-.
Powe l l wtll cnlt~ l wt lli one o l th e
o r!t ee

rn .lJUr p.trtl ...:' .1Jld run l o r
'' Bul J don h.t\C .my ttl sl de m fo r

t

m.ll tun

Powell rsn ·1t.rlk rng
A' he \I.Orks on ht s boo k , Pow

ell 1, tr.n clll1g •1 d.1y or tw o a w eek
for speec hes All bur a lew. howcv cr, arc closctlru the mcdra at Pow ell' s rcqucsl In rhose rh,ll arc publr c, Powell Iu s pro ve n a cornpcllrng
spc.tk cr. hu t shed s ltlll c lrght on hr s
rrl ltlk ctl

\ l l'\~\

.S p.:-. 1k 111 s Ill n. . \~ -.. p . t pc r cdnor s
til April lt c tk \l.f!hcd lllln sdl ,\ ,
h.n 111 _:.: hl UI ,I ]lHllH I lllllll bl: r o! th l'

( j 11111111 1dn 11 n 1, 1r 1111 m ,llld

s,wl th ~·

.rncl Nortil Korea
" We '"" h.tvc 10 1&gt;~ p.tlr cnr
\Vtt h our n..Il! On,JII cddc rs, " Powell
s.Jys ' ,l s tli cy wo l k th rough c ..Kh
&lt;1r 1d every o ne o f th ese 10 sec how
to h.tn cll c them Dec.:.t u:-;c yo u c.t n
no lo nger h.mdlc the m .ts .m E.1st

\\. C\l Cfi\IS

Cl tn tnn '" no dou bt t..: r.IILiu l lm
Powell ':-. wo nh Rut m~~ht
... he "cc
ht , lmm cr .tdv r,c r .1..; dll ,tdvcrs.I ry
! HH Ltr dow n the rudd &gt;
Pc rh .1p :-., hut don' t be l nn tl
One longronc lrrc rrd .rnd .tssoc r.ric clcsc rrlletl Pclll ell .ls rrll ensc l)
JlfOICCII Vc of hrs l.rrnrly .mel us prrv.rcy .•lllli unlrkcly IO subJ eC I thcrn
lo lll C'dr.r sc rrrlrn y ,rnd or her rr gnrs
old (d lllp . u g n
No ne th eless, Po we ll hns no t
rul ed out .I secon d e.trec r tn poh Ills ,Ind lll ,lll y YICW ht S lh \ VC )S On
th e spct~ krn c CJrt:tnt .ls tcs tm g the

"~""'- i,tll'd Pr t:ss Writ~r

SEOUl South Korc.t -

'- 112 11 '

L' r'"

Arrll(l

111.11 '\o rth KorG,l '-. new lcdd
pttr ~ lll g polltKdi ri VdiS, th e

\\, l\

,~LJ~.,;Il\t: Lo mrnuntst st.llc

S&lt;Jturcl.t y
.rhruprl y poslponctl tire sl,rle funeral
u l tts lfmgtt lllL prcstdcn t
Norrh Korea s.rrd Ktm II Sung's
1un cr.tl ~ .ts dcl.rycct Irom Sund.1 y
to T UC \ d,l) bcuw sc or th e cnor ·
mou" L ru"h

{l f m ourne r~

wantmg to

p.ry r,·spcc ls A mass r.r lly w.rs sci
lor \1\'dncsd.ry
Kr nr who do mrnatcd No rth
Kor,·.t lor rnorc than four decades.
tl r,·d J ul &gt; X.11 age 82.
T ire No rrh 's announcement
cdlll C , l 'i

llldi C,l\IOn S

grew that K1m

Jo nc II rh c eld er Krm's son and
Jr .rn lpr ckc tl he rr , was movrng to
c l11 11 111 dlC p&lt;Hcnl1,tl nvals
I n o llt c J,tl

tc lc vt sron

he .r brei 10 rurthcr r.rlly puhlrc
' "J1J10rl hc hrnclrhc ) Oungcr Krm

111

loow gc

1rorn ril e No nh . sce nes ol K 1111
Son~ ,\c. tir e l.rtc Jc,lclcr' s .second
"de .t nd the younge r Krm s stepmoth er. we re edrl cd o ur. Nonh
Korc.r w.llchers sard Also removed
frorn pr crurcs was Krm Pyong II,
Krrn Jong II' s half-brother
Krrn Jo ng ll's stepmother rs
consrlicrccl one of h1s main polrucal
rl \,d"
Bur Lee Hong-koo . South
&lt;lnd
untfll.:dl!On mm1 stcr, told reporters
K o r Cd s VI CC prune ffilnlSlCf

th e rile South bc lre vcd Krm long II
\&lt;.t s sui I rn ch.trgc He s.rrd clr.rwrng
out rlr c rnournrn g pcrrotl appe.Jred

Finance report
fJives Hyatt edge
m war chest, debt
WAS HI NGTON (AP) - Ohro
Se n.ll c cJrrd rclatc Joel Hyall had
more c.rrnpargn cash rn lhe krtly
th,rn opp onent Mrkc DeWrnc as
Jul y bcg,rn, but he al so owed more
to u cclltors
S r.rtcrncnls scm to Ihe Federal
Elcc rron Commrsston by both carnpar gns Frrcla y showed Rcpublrcan
Dc Wr nc rar sed more money thao
Dcrnoc r.ll Hya tt ov er the mo st
rcccnl 10-wcc k rcportrng pcrrod
From mrd -Aprrl unul the end of
June. DcW•nc pulled m Sl 17 mtl lton ro Hya tt 's 5966.715
Bur De Wrnc had less muncy 10
start wrlh, and hr s camprugn's bank
balance lagged at $169,904, cornpared wllh $421.331 for the Hyau
campargn
That cas h edge wrll come rn
handy when brlls come due
Nor co unrrng personal loans
Jrom the candrdates 10 Lhe•r own
campargn s, Hyatt had $92.222 rn
debts, compared wrth $50.155 for
, rhe DeWrnc comrnrucc
Prcdrctably, DcWrnc emphasized hrs campargn 's hrgh rncome.
"I have ourrarscd Joel Hyatt rn
e very reponrng_lle rrod s mce I
aMounccd for the~ S Senate," he
sard.
Hyall 's campa1gn pomted out
that nearly two-thlfdS of 11S money
was raised after Hyall barely surv1vcd the Democratic pnmary, and
called thai "proof posili ve that the
Hyall campaign rs b?fk on track
and comrng on suong.

South Korc.tn o ffiCI,tl s met tn
c m c rgc m: y scss ro n S~llurdc~ y Ln
.t sscss rhc lun cral tlcl .•y In Com rnunr sl counrrr cs lrk e rhc Nonlr.
arrdn gcmcnL'\ fo r ccrcmom,11 cvcnlS
lik e luneral s oltcn srgn.1l change s
rn rhc polrtrcal hrcrarch y
If the state funeral had been hclcl
.rs schedu led Sunday, rt would have
com e nrn c da ys af rcr rh c eld er

Ktm s dc,.J th S tn cc K orean tr.ldt -

lron c.rll s lor bum! wrthrn three 10
ltvc cl.ry s rh c I unlrc r delay w.r s
consr&lt;icrccllr tghly unusu.rl
No unu su:rl No rrhcrn rroop
rnnvcmcnL' wctc re ported , and the
Sourh 's rnrii!My drcl nm rrnpose a
ht ~ h e r s l.tl C o l al c rr
Bul th e
o Crcnse Mtm str y S,lll1 I[ W.I S C.lrCIul ly montronn g the hc.rvrl y fonr
I ted border
A tlrsp.llcll by rile Nonh 's oflr

July

B

17, 1994

(}!her t\~u~s c;.rp&lt;~bk ol dcrd rl lng
L \l'll tile rno 'i t prdLI ICCd o f c~nd1
d,ll C\

He dill wc1g h 111 d un ng t he
No rth Amcn c.m FrceTr.tdc Agree

Tecumseh!

11\ C' Ilt ctr h.uc, sc1y 111 g he suppo rt ed
th e co n tro\C r ~ t , \1 ~ q;rcc m c nt O n
dc knsc matter s, he w.Jr.; d l oy~li so lt.11 cr , ~ up po ntn g Lh c Rc Jgan

defense hurldup bu l .1lso aeknov.l cdg rn g lh c cod of lh c Co ld W.u
rn c,In l th e mllt!J ry nee ded 10 he
1
1h
trtrni11C( - .1 t ough he urges Cltn ·
t on .1nd Con gress not to cut t oo
dc~.p

Sornc prclii U Powe ll 's \ tCws

\\OUidn I lll.ttlcr - th.lt Ill s lcddcr
1 J1 trCl1cnt ta 1s \VOU I(I ca rr y hun
'lt

rlrrough .r ny srnglc-rssrr c contro vc r')
"We• rnrghl be l()(lkr ng .rr anolh
cr Ersc nlrowcr,' s.rys Pal Robert
son. rile rclrgrous broadcastn who
so ugh! th e Rcpub lrca n prcsrdcntral
nomrn.rtr on rn 1988 "Tile qucs uon
rs - whrch party gets hrrn°"
Th e few clu es .rboul Powell' s
polrlrc s arc rocooc lu srvc
He w.rs a Whrlc House fellow rn
the N1xon ::ltilmnJ strau on, ancl rose

to prorn tn cncc rn the mdll.uy unde r
P r c:-. 1d rnh R c~J g,Jn :1nd Bu sh A
-..o n ,Htorn cy Mtkc Powe ll , work ed
on lnrcg n polr cy ttrHI dclcnsc ISs ues
lor lire Rcpuhlrc .rn P.r rr ) .11 rls 10n
LOn\ COli Oil

Brrl Powell mrght h.rvc cl rmhcct
th roug h the r,mk s

JUs t

as sutccss

KEEPING THEM GUESSING- Joints Chier Chairman Gen.
Cnlrn Powtll discussed the future of the military at the Penta~nn in
ll11s hb 13, 1993 trle photo:., hcse days , hm1evcr, Po\\ ell is enJoyIll~ retrrenrenl -and kccprn~ everyone guessing about his future
polilrcal ambitions - and indinalrons. (AP)

lull ) under De moc ralr c .Himmrstr.r 1ron -..

Dc mocr.ll s dl so not e llld l

there Men'! roo m,my Rcpublr cans
o l J.rrn.rrc.rn hcrrtag c I rom the
Sourh Bronx And Powe ll somerrm cs rcll s a s tory about be rng
pu lled ov er for spce drn g rn ril e
Sourh by a wh rlc polrcc olfrccr rn
rh c mrclcll c of Ihe CIVIl rrghls struggle . makrng note that hr s rr ckely
car had an LBJ bumper sucker

And rl 11 e was a Kcpubl rcan,
would Powell have rn cclcl lcd rn Vrr
grnra polrllc s by s.1yrn g he could
never suppon form er \!1 .1rroc Ll
Col OJ rver Nonh. Ihe GOP Sen.nc
nom tncc

111

the stdl C Po w e ll

flO\\

c.rlls ho rn e ' Po" e ll .rlso g.rvc
S 1,11110 lo M.rrsh.rll Colc m.rn .r Ior·
mer GO P sr.rr c .ru orn ey gcrrn.rl
who l'\ run ntng ,tg .tHlst f'.! mth ·"' ,\11

uukpc nd cnt
Cl1nton g&lt;~ vc

1\)v.cll d ch,tncc to
dcc l,rrc hrs p.rny loy.rlty two yc.rrs
.rgo. c.rrly rn hrs se.\rclr i&lt;H .1 runnrrrg rn .tlc Bui Powell, rile c.rr ly
favorrt c. asked not to be con srll crccl , s.ryrng he would be uncom fon.rblc runnrng .rg,rrn sl hr s corn rnantl cr rn chrcf - lhcn-Prcs rdcnt
Bush

N. Korea delays Kim's funeral as signs of purge surface
II\ SA:-.(,-II UN CHOE

Section

".I ICrs willi e burlllrrr g d lrnan cra l

\~ C ~~~w i d lll"l Ill Prn Hk Ill Cl rn !Oil ..:o .d~OI Il Ill\ hll'lllli."'' du n ng

111\L\lq;. !11111 Hltl li e dcLI Ill Cd t o
~.l) \\ hLlh l r h..: thllttght Clrn lon

~imts - ~tntin.el

cr .rl Korc,rn Central News Agency
s:rrd Ihe dCia) rcncc rcd lh c ";rrdenr
lee lrngs .rrrd tl cm:rncl of rile peopl e" lCI p.ry rcspccls at Krrn' s nowcr-bedcc kcd casket.
"The number of mourners 1s
ever rncreasrng," the dr sparcl1 sard.
011 reral s rn South Korea sug ges tcll the Nonh was scck•n~ to
ex plort tensrons rn the Sourh over
how 10 respond 10 Krrn 's death
So uth K51rcan polt cc S.Hurda y

.trres ted .t LIHI Sitdn ll1 11lt stc r who
hc.rdccl nonh. s.l yrn g he &lt;~ . rnrc d It&gt;
.r11cnd rh c Iun cr.rl Tir e Nonlr lr.rd
rnvrrcd Southerners 10 rhc luner.JI
hul rhc Sourh . whr ch r.trcly .rl ltlw s
Ul11cn s lO trc~vcl north , dcnount cd
the mvttau on Js prop.lg.tmLl

Polrcc ha ve also cracked clown
on South Korcdn stude nt .lc lt v tsts

who have expre ssed sympa rhy for
North ern rdeol ogy, rn vro l.u ron of
the South's strrct sccurrty l,tws

Al a r.Jily Saturday rn Seoul ,
aboul 3,000 people, many orrgrnal ly from northern Korc.t, burned an
ell rgy of the late Nonh Korean
lc.Hicr and call ecl hrrn a war crrmrn.li Krrn srartcJ rhe 1950-53 Kore an War. whrch krllcd more liMn 2.5
rn rII ron people on borh srclcs
Th e Ko re.m pcnm ~ uld w.1 s .sc~M ·
r.llcd rnro rhc cornrnunrst Nonh .Jnd
pro -We srcrn Sourlr .rfrc r World
War II

CHILLICOIH E- On 1
green fo rcslcd slopes of Sugarloaf
\1ounlarn early Ohro hrslory lrvc s
agarn II rs lhe lrmc of flrnllock and
!omaha wk. of broken lrvcs and
broken lrcalrcs, of love and peace
and of haired and war
II rs lhe Ohro counrry ol Ihe
1800 's II rs rhe epr c ouldoor
hrstoncal dram,t, "Tcc um seh 1 "
Through Ihe effor ls of lhe
Scrolo Soc rely . Inc and lhe wnung
of f1ve tunc Puhtzcr Pn ze nomwce
Allan W Ecker!, lhrs hr slory has
bee n searched oul and broughllo
lrfc lhrough a communal effort !hal
has been expcrrcnccd by over one
mrlhon speclalors
I he $1 ,100,000 drsh -shdped
amph rthealcr al Sugarloaf Muunlarrr
rs nestled amrdsl hardwood lrces
The rrdges of the sellrng arc
dcprcled on lhe Great Seal of the
Slalc of Ohru and were once the
roammg grounds for Ihe Shawnees

•nd Wyanriols
once 1oamed
The amphrlhe
ater I S loca ted m

the curve of rhe
Sc rota Rrver
where once slood lhousands of
Shawnee lodges whrch cumprrsed
Ihe vrll agc of Chalahgawlha, sa nd
from wh rch Ihe crly of Chrllrcolhe
drew tts name
N; the audrence rs scaled,
lnd1an musrc plays sofrl y The
twrhghl deepens. a group of
lndrans glrde rhrough rhe darkenrng woods and scls up an ambush
near the wate r's edge
S ooh a group of frunlr crsmen
lrudges do\l'n ,, forcsl Irati 10 Ihe
water, argumg whether or not to
camp Ihere for rhc cvcnmg Wrlh
screams .md rhc cr.rslr uf gunlrrc .
th e ambush 1s sprun g (md &lt;1 b.Htlc
explodes .tcru ss th e st,tgc
The .tu cllcncc IIi no longer tn
lhc rwc nlrelh cerrlur y flr ey .rrc v.rlh
C lnk &lt;&gt; tk tt. th e Sh.twnc c w;uno r . .1s
he leads hiS younge r brolhcr
Tec umse h rnlo lrrs frrsl bailie
Fur lir e ncx l lwo hours. Ihe
lu gh monl agc of tr;Ig JC dram .t
uololds around lh c .111drence as rhey
cxperrence Ihe lr fc Jn d dealh of Ihe
gre.tl Shaw nee lc.1der, Tecumseh
Th ey beco me an eyewrlness In lhe
slruggle bclween Ihe Rrrlrsh lhc
lndJdns ,1nd the Amcn c,ms tor
supremacy rn lhc Nunhwes l
Tcrrrlory of rhc IXOO's
The young Shawnee Tec um seh
stnvc s tu b.llld dll the lndtan trtbcs
loge!her rn a confederacy In

co nfronllhe 17 Unrlcd Siales wllh
an eq ual power Be drd nul wanI
war He wanred lhe Shawnee land
wcsl of Ihe Ohro Rl\ cr relurned lo
h1s people He fcillhc only way he
could stem the rrsrrrg rrclc of whiles
was tu b&lt;~r ga10 f rom a PJS itJun uf
slrenglh 50,000 moun red warrrors
Tec um seh 's tlmm g was exce ll ent
Those 17 slal cs were embrorlcd
wrlh Greal Brrl arn rn lhc brller War
of 1812 The Amerrca ns had been
bealen IO Iherr knees W,tShrnglnn
wou ld burn tt nd J young L otpi iVC by
the name of Francts Sctlll Key
wou ld s t ~md o n th e deck ul ,1 Hrt tt ~ h
g unhoar off Fun Mcll cnry .r nd nnlc
by Ihe roc kers red giMc .r nd Ihe
bnmhs hu rs t1n g m .ur th.1t th e st ~ r
sp.rnglcd banner "'"s sir II w,1vrn g
over the fort
rc r umsch W cii1!Cd onl y Whdt
v..ts h1s Under the Clrc um stctn ces
lire Amcrr cans found lhcrnsc lves. rl
50 ,000 h,td been unl c.t shcclon Ihe
"es lern fro nl. !hey coul d we ll h.tvc
cr umbled unde r lhe onslaughl. ,rnd
lhrs could ha ve hecn an lndran
conttncn1
Only one whrlc m.rn rn a
posrllun ol aulhorrly really understood the scnousncss of the Situalron From hrs hc.tdquaners al
Vrncenncs. Wrllram Henry
Harrrson. governor of lhe Ind•an
Terrrlory, under slrrcl orders from
Ihe Presrdenl of Ihe Unrted Slates
nor 10 anack lhe lndrans under any
crrcumslanccs. watched lhc galhcr rng lrrbes along Ihe Trppeeanoe
Rrver. and wondered whal he could
do

OUTDOOR DRAMA - Tecumseh' IS perromed at the Sugarloar Amphitheatre in Chillicothe.
The perrormance rs s1:1ged nightly untrl Sept. 3 cxrept Sunday. The two hour outdoor drama recounts
the lire orthe Shawnee lndran Tecumseh. Over one nrrlhon people have attended the play.
"Tecumseh' ' 1s not a thc,1tnca l
rcndrlron of wars ,md haired II rs a
porlrayal of lhc lo ve uf a nran for
hr s land people, hts god Monelo
and for Rebecca Gall oway, daughler of an Ohru sclll er
II rs a slory ol a people coprng
wrlh elernallrulh s slru gglrng wrlfl
problems Ihat have earned down lo
rhr s very day. probl ems of race .
rclrgron clhnr c urr grn ,md cullural
drfferences

In the amphtl ltc.ltc r the
.tudJcnce I S surrounded on three
sJdc" by c1 ght se p,lr.ttc st&lt;tgcs w htc h

.rre blended rnlo ruggccl l,mdsca pe
As lh c dr.rm1 unfolds. rhc .nrdr encc
WJin e.., scs L.tnoes .md bu.tf '&gt; gltLllng
thmu gh w,Jlcrs before th em lncllt~ns

.rnd "hiles rrdrn g horses 1hruugl1 lhc
Wllodl,inds and across th e st.1gcs,
and -:om bat 1nvolv1ng tlmtl oc ks,
!Om,th,twks W;tr cl ubs, klli VCS rin d
.rrlrllcr y pr cc cs "hr ch lrrc from lhc

Outdoor drama
holds true to
Shawnee culture
C HILLI CO TH E- A m.rl c
dtild bo rn to a Sh.1w ncc wd s
g•vcn d n,rrnc wllhrn 10 ct.rys A
k rr r,rl c chrl cl w,rs n.rrncd w11hrrr
12 dd ys Th e ndmc was e 1thcr
hes ro wc cl hy a par e nt , or by
som e !rusted frr cml of the farnr ly. c.rll cd " conferrer
An wn soma, or socwl ci~L~ SI
I rcalton usuall y dctc rmrncct by
the ddn ltllO win c h on e

Wds

horn or adopted. was a ehrcf
consrdcnron wh en rhe c hrld was
n.rm crl
T cc um~ c h s mother, l or
mslam:c , w,ts n.m1 cd Melhol.ts.t
(A -Trrnl c- L.ry rn g- Her-Eggs-rn
rh c- S.rnd ) M.tn y gc nc r.rill&gt;ll s
l.tlcr, rile l.r1c Arthur Ro lcll c."
tlrrcn dcscc ndanl 11 .rd rh c
Shdwncc nMn c Lt y· qut~ y- hc .l
skrrk (A-Tun lc- Makrng Wa ves
Ill - W~llcr) No surn.unc was used
.rrnong lir e Sil.1wn ccs. and lor
convcnrcncc !hey olrc n shonencd a g1ven name for common
us,rge Uust .IS WC wou ld shorlcn
rh c narnc Jeffrey lo Jeff, so ,1
Shawnee would short en the
name Gay -nwaw-prah -sr ka ljJ
G.ry-nw.rw)
Slr .rwncc mothers CMrrcd
rh c rr young on a back board.
called a lkrlhoway Thrs prac11cc
ol c.rrryrng rhc b.rby on rhc
nwlher's lM&lt;.:k wc~ s prm.: lical lor
seve r.rl reasons 11 protccrcd rh c
b.rhy from wrlcl anrrn.rl s. rl Ireed
rhe mother' s hands for her darl y
l.1bors and rl assrsrcd lhe chrld ro
have a stnrrghr back The hahy' s
hcml w.rs strapped 10 rhc board
m order to form a nat surface .n
rhe hack ol the skull where a
pl:llc rhat would mount eagle
fcdthcrs or other orn,lmcnl.HJOn
could be easrly affrxed wr lh a
head b.rnd
Shawnee ch rlclrcn grew up .rs
tree .ts the ,m11nal s th,H ro.uncd
rhc forests around them . Young
hoys were encouraged hy elders
to cng.rge rn sporls of runnmg.
swunmmg ltnd Jumpmg 1n order
to strengthen rnrr sclcs and hu rld
"il,tmtn,t.

and to pr.Kuce drc hcr y

_to develop rhcrr skrll as hunrcrs
warnors

Sh.rwncc boys never p1.1yct1
w11h g rrls The tncl rn.rlton
rowarcl such an .ret suhJCCICclrhc

\\ ,Ifii Or s

The \\(Jlll cn ol Lh c

lflhc drd rh c dorn es rr c l.rbor.
They butll rh c lodges. dressed
I he g.rrn e. cook ed. pl.tmed .rnd
cullrv.lled rh e g.rrde ns, sc raped
and l,mncd hrdcs. rn.rdc c lmhrng
ancl hl .rnkcrs. wm c ba ske Ls .rncl
made vessels of clay It w.1s a
g rc.ll event whe n .t wnrnor hu s
h.md re turned from a ra1d wuh
.rn rron keulc err camp skr llct
The woman .rlso cared for the
•rrlm cols wrrh rn rhc rrrbc. and
1\ Crc skrl llrrl .11 rnrxrng he rb s
.rnd sc llrng fr.r clured bones
The Sh.t~n ccs he lt cvc d rn
i\lon c lo , .1 supreme hc 1n g who
111kd lh '..: l: illlrC lllli YCr"c (L.JIIcd
y.tl.rkuqu.rkum g rg r ) .rnd drs I!JIHitC(I hiC-."i lll gs upon .ti l \\hO
c.un cd 111 , I,I VOI ,nHI d cs pc rdLC

... or row upon those \\ ho mcr11cd
h t~

dt :-. 1,1\or

Th e Grcal Sprr11 ol rhc
Sh.JwnCC !:i w,t :s "grandmother
who rul ed rhc dcslrnres of her
chrlclrcn Sh e crernall y wove a
gre.u ncr (c.r llcd a skcrnolah )
whrch, when frnr shcd, would be
dropped over the world She
would then dr,rw the net uack up
to ihc heavens Those who had
proven th emselves worthy
would IJc c.ru ghl up rn the ncr
.rrrd l.rk cn 10 .r oCilcr hfc, whrlc
rlrusc "ho Ic II o,l( k rhrough rile
nel ~&lt;nrr ld sull cr .rn urhJX'. rk:rhlc
1.11c .r s Ihe "orl&lt;l carn e 10 .rn

end
Ear.: h Sh.Iwncc w as JUd ge of
h ts o wn c onduct ..tnd w.1s held

.rccountab lc lor tl They hvctl by
rh e rr own sr,rndtrrds , and
shrugged olf va lue JUclgcrn cnls
pl&lt;rcell upon rh crn by person s
orllsrcle of thcrr trrbc. The Gold
en Ru le ol th e Shawnees w,rs
prese rved for us vcrba111n by
Joseph W1l&lt;icat Alford. ancl

,\ tta ck H.trnson s army

A produclron c.tsl of 70 acrors
cwd actresses IS drawn from Equtty ,
fhc Screen Aclor' s Gurld, lhe
Amcrtcan Fcdcrallon nf 1 elev! slon
,r od Radru Aclurs, unrverslly
sludenls and professors and Ihe
local communrly

Tecumseh1
facts

youn gs rc r 10 g rc. rt rrdr c ul c
J"rorn rhc morn cnl th ey leMned
lo 11,tlk . m,rl c chr ldrcn clcvc l
orw cl ,I \C il"iC ol surc nortl y even
ove r llll' tr s1s1c rs The g11ls tlid
" "' m rnd Til ey hu src d rh cm..,c lvcs .Is )' Oung g1r h do today
playrn g horr sc. rrn11.r 1rn g !he rr
mothers, mak1ng mud ptcs dnd
p.rrrr u rl.rrl y cl cvclo prn g rh c rr
, lfl l:, 1n tnnldtng \t..&gt;;scl:-. o l c l .1y
Sh.tv..n cc 111 cn we re hunters
dltd

woodlands. wrlh shells expl odrng rn
1hc Shawnee vrll.rgc Flrghls of
ar row s spl111he atr as the lnd1an s

IJc.rrs rnuch rcscrnhlnnce 10 rh c
Chmo.rn cocl c. Do nor krll or
1n1urc y our nc tghhor, for ll IS
not h1m th .ll y ou lrlJltr C, you
tnrrrrc )Ourscll Do rrr g gocrcl In
lorn . rlr crclorc .rd,lro hrs d.t ys ol
ll.tpp rn css .rs ) Oil .1&lt;ld lc&gt; your

nnl wron g m h.!le J tlUr
llCt t: hhor, f01 II 1:-. !lilt h1tll th.Il
you wrong, you wron g your se lf
11nt Jove hun , lor :\ 1onc lo lo ve"

own Do

hrrn .rlso .rs Ire lo ves ) CIU Tlr rs
rul e .rpplrcd o nly 10 detrlrn gs
wr lh olhcr Sh.rwnccs . .rnd wh,ll
.r warrror cl rd 10 a rn c rnbc r of
.1 no th e r tnhc o r rc~ cc wds an
cnurcly drffcrent maucr
Trarnrng rn hrsrory . codes of
conduct, nnd tnHIIImns were c.rrrrcd nn by the elders. who rncrnoruecl lhc creeds ancl p.r sscd
lhcm on !rom gcncr.ltlonto gr n t r .lllon Addtt ron,\11) n cr)
Lllhcr w. ts ,l lc.Hkr ol llt s \ lllls

E1 ery rnorlrcr 1.ruglr1 her ci.IIJJ;h te rs Children were sd dom pun ~
rshcd but :-. tn c t ohcthcncc tn the
l.nvs dnd L ustom s w,J'i un sw c rv ·
rn gly cnlorcc d lmnr therr car lr esl days
On e of lhc mo st sacred rrtes
observed by rhe Sil.rwncc' w.rs
Taku '' ha w n,lg,1w.1y - th e
Bread Dance
Becau se of ril e secrecy and
srgn rfr cancc ol thrs observance ,

I slidl l rclt~t c on ly tli.tt wltr ch hds
.tlrc,td; been prnlled concernm g
th e oh... c r v, Jn u~
J\lu ch 1! , 1, 11 ~ L' ll tll.H k ol rlw
J .t l ~ (l j &lt;..'\ fHl \'- H lll lljhlll tl k

p.tfl

olth c \rl ll ll l.tflltldltll S ~. ll
LOntrol \1,1 -.. .nt ltn]llll\,111\ I.! L ior
Ill ihli! 11\L\ .Jild Ill ill \ ,1 hl.l\ l
:-.t.tr u l tlllJl.h" l \i.h .!11 ~,, td \\ l11k
ht s L IH' Jllh -.. l ll i, ll ll' lk·, l! lr o m
h1 ' lwdy 11H I tll ,tn ; .t ~ r1 ~. 1
s tn c k ~ n p cr~o n Wl'uld ,, , II~ tn
th e new g r ,I\L' ol .1 lo vul on ~.:
w11h out .1 tc.1 r th o ug/1 t h ~ rr
e nllrC hOd )' SL IG.tlllCd v Ill lJIIIL' I
.lll g UJ ~ h But ,tLiu.tll y th ~y v.crl

a happ y .rrHI socr:rhl c r .r ce ot
peopl e.
Bccduse there were no ne ol
th e lc lsHre· ttrnc cl 1vc r-.; tnn -.; w e
know tod.ry rn tir e lor cs rs ol
fron11 c r Amcnc.t, ,tnd no nc wsp.IJK' rs or

olh ~_: r

Sll,\\\llL'C\

\J :-. tltrt t.: At

ho qc,~

m,t \"i IH L( h,t, th e

\\Lf {' !lllttll ~ l \C il \(\

ttm ~.;s

ltk1.

lh l-..1.

rh c

hmu g ht o ut lh' r \\\'CC L"
t~nd dc llc,tctc' l m til e tH. t.Iston

hut I he ' rsn o r norm .III y co n -

Lr1111ltcd . t pt . . ce ol g.1mc or other
food .1:-. hts ,1nswcr [O lliC cxrcn
c!l hos pllla l rt y Th e rn c n
enJoyed comnHwdl hunts g rcd t
ly
These were trs o.rll y loll owcd
hy lon g .rn cl lrr cncll y r.rlk s
dround the g lo w ull.!. embers ol .1

cdmpl~r c

Th e

tdlk "

lO\i..iC' d

cvcry tllln g l rom n.lt• on.d h1 , 1or y
:mel current cvc nLo..; ID till' lt ~ l l!L' r

Wll ol IJ.trll c rllt l. ! .tllllul '\t Hl l...on c 's um s orn , 1 ~1Jr 1 l ,td , ll l l\
tdk c n durrn g th l ltrtlll lit
1

women ,Hld Lllt ldr cll ...,, ll l]llli.. ll )

.md rcs pcL tlull ) ll l',Hh )

lt 'l l1. 11

lll!Cillly [()t il\' l OI1\ ..,: I -..,il Hll
An lndtdn lnl )( U Hh t'l l u l rl ! tltl
cn11rc hod y ol .t n,liHHl / \ ~.. l.rrl
rrprC''iCiltCd ,1 group wr tlttn th r
lllg

lirbc
Th e prr nc rp.r I c h rei ol rir c
Sh.r wnces co uld he corrrp .rrcd
wtlh th e Pn.:,Hknt o / th e Unt tcd
wnll 1h c c l.n 1 c hi Lls .l'i
g(n crnor :-; In o ur pld }, whe n

St.tt C'i

rc Jcrs to th e wOIHHh.:d
lndr.ro .rs m.r y- krr -r.r y. he rs
n:krrtn g to li1 s c i.Irt wrthtn til e
K enlon

Sh.Jwn ee Ndi iOil

Wilen fl l.rck Hool .rdrnonrsircs Tcc urn sc ir lor lrr s rcquesl Ill
hcLn m c pnnc 1p.d (. hrcl , stdtrn g
rh.tl he " Krsp o k" lh.r, he rs
rc l cmn g to Tcc unHch's cl.1n
01 th e orrgrrr.r l 12 cl.rn s ol
rirc Sh,twnee trrbc irr slory fmd s
the m wtl h onl y l1 vc c lt~n s lcltm
cx rstc nce lire Thawe~ rla . Pcckll we .1nd Kr spokolh.l, who gc ncr,rll y s10od rogc rhcr on rrrbal
m.111 crs ,rnd lh e Ch.r lahg.rw lh,r
.rnd ~ ! . r y kuJ.r y, who were ltk cWi se t lo sc ly re id ted 1n lh ct r

Tecumseh plays June 10
through Sept. 3 nightly except
Sunday. The overture starts at
7:25p.m. Curtain is 8 p.m The
performance ends at approximately I 0:45 p.m.
Discount group rates are
available for 25 or more people.
The lOpercenldrscount ISavarlable Montday through Thursday only. Group ltckels must be
pard 48 hours m advance of lhe
reserved performance date .
Senior crtizens recievc a 10
percent drscounl every nrght.
AA.t-1. cardholders receive a 50
cent discounl for upl to six persons per card every night. Discounts do not apply to bleacher
seating or standing room only.
All seats are reserved. There IS
no general admrssion seating.
Advance reservalions are highly
recommended particularly for
weekends .
T1ckets reserved wilhout
payment will be held until 7
p m. the evenmg of the performance at which lime they will
be released for sale lo the general pubhc.
Prepard reservatron s, re funds and cancellat10n musl be
made pnor to 6 p.m on lhe date
at the performance.
In addthon to the performance there are bchmd-the scenc tours available and free
admrssron lndtan museum al
the amphithealre
Tecumseh! rs performed at
lhe Sugarloaf Mountarn
Amphilheatre, whtch is localed
approx1matcly 6 1/2 miles
northeasl of Chillicothe and 1
1/2 miles east of SR 159 on
Delano Road.
More informallon may be
obtained by callrng (614)775-

0700.

,\L\I VIIJCI.;

TECUMSEH! score pays living tribute to American Indian
CHILLICOTHE - Amenean
lnd1'\n composer Carl T. Fischer drd
not live long enough to hear h1s
tone poem, "Reflections on an
lnd1an Boy" m fully orchestrated
form.
His composition, in lribute to
him, has become the theme score
for the outdoor historical drama,
"TECUMSEH!" wh1ch is playing
this summer at Sugarloaf Mountain
Adlphitheater near Cbillicothe.

Carl T. Frscher was born m
California in l 912 to parents of
Cherokee hneage Desp1te thw
poverty, his mother and father
managed to save enough money to
provide his musical training. He
studred violin, accordion and p1ano
At the age of 32, he joined a
band that went on the road playing
at vanous stops across the country.
It was then he began working on his
symphonic-like score, and began h1s

bnef career as a song-writer. Two
songs: "It started All Over Agam"
and "Wbo Wouldn't Love You,"
enJoyed wide popularity.
It was also at this time that
Fischer began a long association as
Frankie Larne 's accompa~st. Larne
encouraged Fischer to complete his
suite, and urged maestro Y)c~r
Young to orchestrate the ~re.
However, before final arrangements
of the music were completed,

Fischer d1ed rn March of 1954. F1ve
months later, Frank1e Larne
appeared w11h the Ocveland
Symphony Orchestra, w1th Vrctor
Young conduchng the f~rsl performance of fischer's life's work
The musrc recounts 111 musical
tenns, lndran hfe m the plams and
canyons It IS lnd1an musrc wntten
by an lnd1an, With each of the nme
sectrons based on lrrballore.

FoPexample. one pari enruled
"Allhe Pool," tells of an lndran
marden who belrevcd that rf she
tossed a pebble rnlo lhe pool her 1\
warnor lover would appear 10 clarm
her. The gentle npplrng of lhe
waves can be heard rn the woodwrnds
The Scrolo Socrcly rece1ved
pennrss1on from Frankre Larnc,
who had the nghts Ia the score, to

use 11 for rhe ded1eatron of
Sugarloaf Moun tam Amphrtheater
on September 9. 1972 The Cmcrnnalr Symphony played three
movements to a packed house
dunng the ded1catron ceremoOies
The London Symphony. und~r
lhe directron of Erich Kunze!,
recorded the score on four-track
stereo tape for background music of
lhe drama.
'

�'

July 17, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei- Page-83

Ohio river brought
commerce to Gallipolis
I

MARY BURNETIE AND RICHARD DOTSON

Burnette-Dotson
GALLIPOLIS - Mary Jolene
Burnette and Richard Daniel Dotson announce their engagement and
forthcoming marriage.
Burnette is a 1979 graduate of
Southwestern High School and a
1989 graduate of Rio Grande College. She is an Associate at Children's Residential treatment pro-

gram.
Dotson is a 1971 graduate of
Mountain State Baptist High
School and attended Baptist Bible
College. He is a contr.lct carpenter
for Buckeye Rural Electric.
The open church wedding will
be 7 p.m. July 22 at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church.

~ Ir s.

f&lt;,,~Jrr~,.·\

Ga ul of VmL r nt &lt;r nnotllll" (
tlr, . : r~ ~~~ ~cmc nt u! th ctr d&lt;llr ghtcr .
\. rr.r Ell en. to R n~ 1 n P;Hrr ck Mrl h .
-. 1'1 1 1li \ l r ;tn d tvlr\ W 1lkrrn A
\ 111 h. v (' [()
·111,: hr1d c-.;kc t t-. a 1 9~)[ gr:tdtJ ·
.l ll' ol W:1rrcn Hr gh Sc hool &lt;.md '" "
"L' lii ! H lcl!&lt;rl u un muni c;lli nn m.r.1 m
.rl () lrro C; nl vc r, tt y. A l11cm She r ~
~..· r11J1I1 1~.L'tl h y O ht o Un r v~ r s rt y''
r&gt;..· p~r!!llh.'rl \ o r Rc"i tcl c nlC Lrl c.
"!Ill' prospclt tvc bmJcgroom '" a
[l!X 'J &lt;! radu at e of W;m cn Hi gh
~ , h"i and a 19'!4 graduate or the
li tnvcr:-. 11)' o f Daywn wi th a deg ree

1n

1\ ,\C l:\F -

c1cc u onl t: cng rnccrrn g tech nolo-

gy. He i, employed by AT&amp;T or
De~y t ll n

us" tec hnology consu lwnt.
The lmd e·c lec t IS th e grand dr11r gh1 er ol Mr . rmd Mrs. Rus;c ll

til L

g r ~rnd so n

J()t)-l

L:r;H lu:HC nl M an ~ tt a Co llege

trttt l htUl ttlll! ttl: t rn:t~~.· 111

~l r~.· n .

~.:. u ~.·~.·r 111 the I all.

-\l t-...t

1&lt;. ~.-·th: . .·

I\ L' ill r1lr l)L' iJ ,h ~ ~ llll_'cli(':Ji J \\ l -., 1,111 1

lr&gt;r Dr. Do u ~ l ." Huo rc·r.

H ;~u n c

Th e open cllurcll

w~· d din!;

MARTHA MORRISON AND ALEX VARIAN

Morrison-Varian

wil l

,,l. lui \ ~"- l 1Jl)..l :ll th1.· Ril lllH'
l ' rlll l'\j \l ~_· th n d t" t Ch urc h' wt th

Mr. and Mrs. John D. Morrison
of New Haven are announcing the
forthcoming wedding of their
daughter, Martha Anne, to Alex
Varian, son of Raymond and Garnet
Varian of Mason and Helga and
Max Moreno of Berlin, Gcnnuny.
Both arc 1991 graduates of
Waharna High School. She is cur·
rently attendinl( West Virginia

nltl'-'l h~·~ tlllltrl l.! :11 ~ p . m. ,\n tqx:n
r~.··.V [ l\tllll. \\Il l l~ll l tl\~ 1111.· ll' n,:mnny
.11 (', 1t k l ll l1 S~IHHII 111 Syr.H. II'&gt;l'

Ht• r l r&lt;HH:C 1"-' ;r J ()S~ g r:1 th :.lk' nl

Wedding policy

or Sumner.

T he prospcc tr ve hrideg room

~tlllt h un llt ~ll \dl()n l ~1n d 1.., ~~

\~ tlh ,; t h.·~ rcc 111 L' k lliL' Ill&lt;lf Y cducaltoll 1[ .._-~\\dll, q:i n a tc ;tching

.~1 oo rc o f Pomero y, ~ rnd Mrs. Baril&lt;~ ril Sarge nt iind th e lat e Ce cil

CJ. rul

\lr. ,111d \lr,. Ci,tr1

tlh:t r r hil
\\'dllor,l.rrHI kllr~..·~ Todd C.rlti \\ , .' JI .
.-\l1 •...:r I \ :1 IIJ 1J tl ~r~l d ll&lt;il l' ol
Sr1ut lh.'fll I l 1~1i SdHHll .Iilli ,1 !')') ~
~ r. r drr&lt;rh.: o l TIIH.: h11l g Colk'~~,.·_ Sill'

Gaul-Mills
\l r. anti

Willford-Caldwell
\\'tlll tl rd :tnd f\ l r :tnd ,\ lr " . .l tm
( : dd'.\ ~.· 11 !ll r~:K t l h' , tll lltll t ll U' t i ll'

SARA GAUL AND BRIAN MILLS

I 1'-CEI\ T

ALISA WILLFORD AND JEFFREY CALDWELL

IS

Th e Sunda y 'fiii1CS·Scn un c/
rcgrlf&lt;l s wcdd111gs of Gallia . Meigs

o l Lu c rll c \.1 cV rc rr

dlHI ih c lrll C l&lt; usse ll McV icar o r
Vmce nt 11 nd E&gt;t hcr Mill s and the
late Will~:1 m Mil ls of Altoona. Pa.
Th e we&lt;1tlin g is pl a nn ed lor
Scptcmher. 1995.

;md Mason COlrnt ics

har rY to puh li sh

a ~o.

nc\vs and

~ c &lt;l&lt;li ng

1,..;

st or ies

.: 111d pho tograp hs wi tho ut chttrgc.
Ho \\'cvr r . wl· dding nc,,·..; mu st
llh.:~ l gcncr&lt;t l '\land &lt;rrds or t imeli ness. T he ll C\vSpdpCr p re fer~ to
puh l rsh au :o unt s o f wedd ing'&gt; as
soon ;p; p(h"i lblc afl cr the eve nt.

To he puhl " hcd " ' th e Sumlr1 v

TINA TURNER AND BASIL CREWS

Turner-Crews
RODNEY - Mr. and Mrs .
Robert W. Turner of Rodney
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Tina L- Turner to Basil
D. Crews, son of Mr_ and MrsBasil E- Crews of Centerville.
The open church wedding will ·
be held 6:30p.m. Satunjay, Aug. 6
with music beginning at 3 p.m_ at

the Finst Church of the Nazarene in
Point Pleasant, W.Va The reception will follow in the fellowship
hall of the church.

Th ose not maki ng til e (&gt;U da y
derHIIinc will he publi shed during
1hc da &lt;l y p;~ pcr '"space all ows.
Phowgraphs of either the bride
or 1he brid e and groo m ma y be

shms or in stant· cl cvc loping photos

arc not or acceptab le quality.
All material submitted for publi ·
crliH&gt;n IS subject to editing.
Ques tion s ma y he direc ted to
th e ''diloflal departm ent from 1-5
p.m. Mo nda y th roug h Friday at

worch in length . Mcllerial for

ll y th e cclitorial departm e nt hy
Thu rscl11y, 4 p.m . pflor to th e date
of publi Cilli on.

GALLIPOLIS . The Gallia
County Fam1 Bureau Talent Show
will be held at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds on Saturday,
August 6. Registration begins at 10
a.m . The contest will begin at
10:30 a.m .
The show will be divided into
three classes. A. Individuals 12
years and under. B. Individuals 1319 years. C. Groups. mixed ages.
Entries arc open to residents of
Gallia county. Basis for judging
will be on originality , ability,
showmanship, poise, and appearance. Out of county judges will be
named to select the winners. All
decisions of the judges will be final
Entries may include musical,
skit, pantomim e , and baton

44 6 -2142

Au It-Shank
POM EROY - Christopher
Shank and Carol Ault announce

Roofing nails
dropped where
police hide

thcrr I orth com ing mHrriagc. The 1

open church wcdct1ng will be held 1
on Saturda y, July 23, m 1:30 p.m.
at the First Baptist Church of Middleport.

Hutch ins-Caldwe II
GALLIPOLIS -Mr. and Mrs.
Ron Hutchins of Gallipolis
announce the engagement of their
daughter Kim Hutchins to Scou
Caldwell, sm of Mr_ Gilben CaldweU of South Point and Dana CaldweU of Gallipolis-

The open chureh wedding will
be Saturday, Aug . 3- Music will
begin 4 p.m_ at 4:30 p.m. at the
Gallipohs Christian Church. A
reception will immediately follow
in the fellowship hall.

U.S. Muslims demonstrate
against movie 'True Lies'
llr &lt;;EM: KRAMER
A\soda ted Pr~ss Writ~r
WASH INCiTON (AP) - Amcr·
1can Mu s lim groups launched a
c;unp;11gn Fr~day to tell mov1~gocrs
1hat Arnold Schw11rzenegger s new
hlockhustcr motion picture unfairl y
·\ lcrco types Arabs, Muslims and
women.

" True
Lies,"
starring
Scilwart.enegger and described li S
Hollywood's first$100 million
film, opened in maJor U.S. CillCs.
Its Washington maunec prcm1er
wa s greeted by two dn&gt;.en mareh mg protestors ':':ith placards ec~~ :
1ng line.s from the Termmator s
.
past pictures.
··open Your Eyes and Tcrm1·
nate the Lies. " "Hasta La V1sta
F;lirncss," " Not All Arabs arc Terrori st,, Not All Terrori sts arc
Arab s ," "Arnold, Think Before
You Act." and "Reel Arabs arc
not Real Arabs" were among the
messages.
The Council on AmericanIslamic Relations said similar
' 'educational" demonstrations
were planned in at least 10 other
ci1i es. They arc San D•cgo, Los
.Angeles . San Franc•sco, Ch 1 cil .~o .

Houswn, Dallas, M lnnctl pulr .... New

York . Newark and Dc11rhorn . Mich.
In '" True L1es.·· "'urcr-spy and
hi s w1re. playc&lt;l hy Sc li wart.eneg·
c..:r and Jami e Lc( C urt1 s, halli e

l'i ctional Arah-s pc ;~k i n g " Middl e
E:1 ..; t

t e rrori s t ~··

Rcv rcw cr s we re

imr resscd by the pi cture's costl y
and compelling iK t1on sctjucn cc s.

Som e described other epis&lt;xlcs and
the plot as runny or sill y
A Wa shingt o n Po st review
referred to the terrori sLs as "a pack
or Islamic fruitcak es.'"
'"'True Lies' unfairly stereotypes not only Mu slims but also
women . relegatm g them to the sta·
tu s ol' 'airh eads ;nHI himhos',' "
Alhen Mokhiher, president of the .
A rah -Am cn c an Anti - Di scrimina -

tion Cornmincc. said at the end or
arl orderly half-ho ur dcmonsLiation
ouL'&gt; IdC a Wa shington cincm &lt;.L
D emon stration spon sor s said

tl1cy were not seeking u film hoy ·
colt or censorship. One purpose
was to get filmgoers to he aware of
stereotyping and ""try to think of
how you would feel if your ethnic
or religious group" were so por·
trayed, said one of their lea net~ .

,
GALLIPOLIS · Alisa Dawn
·· Cremeens and Richard Franklin
:. Owens announce their engagement
: and forthcoming wedding.
: Cremeens is the daughter of Mr.
·: and Mrs. Edward Lyle Haas of
• Seousboro, Ala. and Mr. Thomas
: Earl Cremeens of Gallipolis. She is
~ the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
~ Forre s t Davis and Mrs . Stanford
•• Cremeens, and the late Mr. Stan~ ford Cremeens, all of Gallipolis.
:
She is a graduate of Scottsboro
~ High School and received a B.S.
• degree in Accounting from the
~ University of North Alabama. She
~ is employed as an accountant at
:. Polymer Products, Inc. in Dalton,

BASH AN - Special church
serv ices. Red Bru s h Church of
Chri S!. Saturda y, 7 p.m. ; Sunday,
Ill a.m. and(\ p.m. Denver Hill,

w.

Vii. . speaker.

MONJ)AY
ROCK SPRINGS - Big Bend
F11rm Antique Club meeting R p.m.
Monday &lt;rt lhc fairground sccrc~
lary "s office.
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township trustees, Monday, 7 p.m.
illlh COil ICe huiltllllg.
LET ART FALLS - Letart
Township Board of Trustees meet·
in g 7 p.m. Mnnday m the townshir
ol lice building.

~ Ga.

RA C INE -

Racine Village

Counc il meeting in recessed scs-

""n Monday

m 7 r .m. m Star Mill

Park .

MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Rihle sc hool ror age s J.l 1 at Victory Bapti sl Church from 6: I'i -X:4'i •
p.m. 1hrough July 22.
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town·
ship Trustees, special meting, Monda y. H:30 p.m. at Bill Osborne's
home on Route 6H I . Personnel and
hudgct approval hemin g.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Fraternal Or&lt;ler
niEagles Auxiliary 2171. Tuesday,
7JOr .m.

BOAT MADF: AT RACC OON ISLAND- This 1859 picture of
The Virginia Home at lluffalo, Virg in ia (now Wes t Virginia) is
probably the oldest picture or any boat with connections to Gallia
County as the boat was made at Raccoon Island in IKSH.
for compensation and was awarded
$32,&lt;XKJ, whichhe forwarded to President Lincoln with instructions to use

Supplies by steamboat
In 1855 the James Raymond
steamboatunloaded the following
supplies in Gallipolis:
•500 pounds of mac lerel
• fi vc barrels of shad
•70 boxes of herring
•one cash of codfis h
•500 pounds of dried beef
•20 dozen tubs of fish
•20 barrels of crackers
•20 kegs of gunpowder
•three barrels of hominy
•two barrels of potash
•100 pounds of pearl barley
• 5 kegs of shot
•50 vols. of lead
•40 nests of wooden bow Is
•50 dozen extr.lets of coffee
'two barrels of fi sh oil
• two barrels of lard
•500 pounds of buckwheat.

the money to aid wounded soldiers
and their famili es.
It was estimated that Rice made
three fortunes in his li fetime but had
lost or given them all away.
James Sand~ is a special correspondent of the Sunday Times-Sentinel- His address is: 65 Willow
Dri.e, Springboro OH 45066_

CORRECTION
In JOHNSON'S
SUPERMARKET
INSERT TODAY.
RIB EYE STEAK

$1.39tb_
Should have read
USDA
Whole Rib Eyes

ENROll NOW

twirling . All first and second place
winners will receive a plaque. All
performances arc limited to five
minutes. All entries will be accept·
ed on a first come, first serve bas1s.
Anyone not registered by 10:30
a.m. , the day of the show will be
disqualified from competiuon.
To enter, send your name,
address, age, and type of talent to :
Gallia County Farm Bureau. 21 2
Pearl St., Suite A, Jack son, Ohio,
45640, Phone 1-800-777-9226. All
entries must be in by Saturday July
30. No late entries will be accepted.

$3.29 lb.

For Classes Starting
July 19, 1994
• Financial Aid Available
To Those Who Qualify

:/!J

Rib Eye Steaks

$4.491b.

c,,
c"'"'"''""
1-614-373·3617
Valley Beauty
School

252 Fronl St.
Marietta, OH 45750 373-3617

Johnson's
Supermarket
Vi ne Street

Gallipolrs

Second Ave.

There CAN Be A Medical Reason
Why Your Child Won't Eat!!

~-··················································~

I•• CD SPECIAL i••

EXTRA FIRM
t&gt; Extra Support

•

PERFECT SLEEPER
t&gt; Super Firm Support
t&gt; 15 Yerr Non Pro Warranty

~

..........•........................................~

17MONTH

POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antiqu e Club, Montl&lt;ty, X p.m.,
sl..':c rct.ary 's office on fairgrounds .

Colonel Stockton. The reward was
never paid.
From 1858to 1859,llle Virginia
Home ran between Gallipolis and
Charleston, W.Va ., piloted by Gallipolitan J .B . Coffman. Charles Regnier of Gallipolis as clerk:. The boat
sank: in 1860 near Cincinnati.
The river queens deliver not only
goods to Gallipolis, but also entertainment In the 1850s, tr.lveling
shows such as Van Am burgh's
Menagerie, the Dan Rice Cin:us and
llle Hippodrome Menagerie entertained in Gallipolis.
The shows featured Indians, alligators, wild men from Ceylon, bears ,
leopards and ?wan Yeko, a Chinaman with 2 I/2-inch long feel
Showman Dan Rice was often
referred to in Gallipolis as the "late"
Dan Rice because bad luck always
seemed to strike before a scheduled
performance in the river city.
In 1853, creditors foreclosed on
his show during a performance in
Burlington. He canceled the Gallipolis show, but word of his "no show"
did not reach Gallipolis until the day
after the performance date.
Rice later gave a show and donated all the proceeds to Gallia Academy.
The show 's most noted perfonner
was a horse named Excelsior which
lived to the age of 28. Rice inlroduced the flfSt rhinoceros and Burmese cattle to the show ring.
An innovative clown, Rice introduced a lot of skits that later became
popular in burlesque and vaudeville.
He also gave lectures - one of his
most famous, on llle subject of patriotism, was given in Mason, W.Va.
Rice also owned the James Raymond, which was seized by General
Fremont during the Civil War and
put into service.
Rice petitioned the government

Cremeens-Owens

SUNDAY
RA CI NE 21st annu11l
Charles rmd Alma Himman Snyder
icunwn . Star Mill P11rk , Sun&lt;lay.
Lunch at 12:30 r .m.

Fo,tcr.

JAC KSO NVILL E, Fla . (AP) Som eone has been dumping th ousands or roofing nails in grassy
areas al ong hi ghways where rol icc
hulc w1th radar to catch speeders.
Owens is the son of Mr. and
At least 60 $ 100 tires have hec n
Mrs. Charles Franklin Owens of dr11nagcd on cars from the Sheriff's
Chattanooga, Tenn . He is the · Oll ~e-c anti Florida Highway Patrol
grandson of Dr. and Mrs. Leonard 111 tilL Llcksonvill c area.
Doughty of PortsmOuth of Va. and
Po lice imcrccptcct citi zens hand
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owens of radio transmis sron Wednesday in
Richmond of Va.
whi ch an unidentified person said
He is a graduate of Oswego he was angry wi th ticket-writing
High School and received his B.S.
orf&lt; cc rs and mention ed dumping
degree in Mechanical Engineering more nai ls.
from Virginia Military Institute. He
Pol ice arc worri ed th e vandal is employed as a mechanical engi· i.-., m could lead to acc idc nL'i.
neer at Stone and Webster Engi·
"' If an offi ce r tr ies to cat c h
neering in Chattanooga, Tenn.
:-.om cn nc speeding on the h 1 g h w&lt;.~ y
The wedding is planned for· Sat- and has a flat tire, it can he fatal .""
urday, September 17 at Jackson sheriff 's Lt. John Hartl ey said .
Memorial Hall on the campus of
Po lr cc used a l.arg c m:.1 gnc t to
Virginia Military Institute in Lex· p1 ck up th e nail s.
ington, Va.

ALISA CREMEENS AND RICHARD OWENS

Meigs
community
calendar
KIM HUTCHINS AND SCOTT CALDWELL

Before the railroad reached Gal·
. lipolis in 1880, the river was the
area's primary source of tr.lnsJ&gt;Ma·
lion. Businessmen and residents re·
lied on riverboats
suchasllleJamts
Raymond to
bring shipments
of coffee, molasses, sorghum,
candles, tea and
other household
items to the Old
French City.
Some items came by wagon from
Portland (now Oak Hill), but most
tr.lveled the Ohio River to get to
Gallipolis.
An 1850s advertisement from the
S.T. &amp; R. Langley store in Gallipolis
announced the steamboatLindeh had
delivered "bacon sides, shoulders,
ham, sugar, coffee, molasses, whitefish, shad (a type of fish) and a general assortment of seasonable goods,
wholesale and retail."
The Linden was one of several
steamboats built at Gallia County's
Raccoon Island in the 1850s. The
boat was 137 feet long by 22.5 feet
wide.
Built in 1853, the Linden called
Wheeling, W.Va., home; later, the
boat operated out of New Orleans.
Also built at Raccoon Island was the
James Mclaughlin , the Grand Prairie and the Virginia Home .
The Virginia Home, built in 1858
by John Viney, was designed for the
Kanawha River trade and named to
honor the home place of its captain,
W.F. Gregory, who hailed from
Richmond, Va.
According to "Way's Packet Directory", the Virginia Home was the
first steamboat to go to the Kanawha
Falls. Gregory tr.lvelcd to the falls

after being offered a $500 prize by

Gallia Farm Bureau talent
to be ·held show Aug. 6

dcwcd. Photogq lhs may he e1 thcr
hlac k an d white or goo d qua lity
color. bi llfold site or larger.
Poor qurilit y r hotog raph s wil l
not l&gt;c accepted. Generall y. snap -

uk cn pl;r cc wrt lun 60 da y'\ pnnr tn
1hc publi Cilll On, ami may he up to
A lon g th e Rt vc r rnu st be ·rece ived

University at Pafkcrsburg majoring
in acounting. He is currently
employed by Vaughan 's Cardinal
Market in Middleport, Ohio.
The wedding will take place on
September 3, at 12:30 p.m. at the
Faith Baptist Church, Mam Street,
Mason. The gracious custom of an
open church wedding is being observed.

puh l rshrd \\.' it h we ddin g stori es is

editi o n , th e we ddin g mu st ha vC

(,()1)

. ,.

by Jim Sands
Special Correspoodent

LUXURY PLUSH
t&gt; Super Comfort
t&gt; 15 Year Warranty

•

PILLOWTOP
t&gt; LUXUI'( comfon
t&gt; 15Vear Non Pro Warranty

'

l-800-462-5255

PERFECT SLEEPER
1&gt;-

t&gt;

CALL THE HOLZER HEALTH tiOTLINE
to help you determine
why she doesn't want to eat ....
especially when she has always
been such. a good eater!

Ultra Premium nrm or p1ust1

15 Year Non Pro WaJTIIlty

OPEN 8 AM-11 PM- 11 PM

"To Insure proper support these mattresses sold In sets only. Flnanci~g requires credit approval and minimum purchase.
Prices Indicate each p~aca • sold in sets only. King set m three pieces. Sea store lor details.

Minimum deposit: $2,500.00. This CD is automatically renewable.
Penalty
early withdrawal. This offer expires 7/22/94

ror

Ohio Valley Banli_,.~

7 DAYS A WEEK

SPECIAUY TRAINED R.N. ON DUTY!!

�July 17, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

13-year-old girl unsure of molestatio-n
Dear Ann Landers: I was
widowed after 4 I years of marriage.
1recently met a wonderful man who
lost his wife after 40 years of
marriage. Sound ideal? WeU . not
really.
' "

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 13- we both like what we are doing?
year-old girl and have just learned Could he go to jai I f&lt;X' what I swted?
through my sex education class at I would feel awful if I got him in
school that my mother's boyfriend lrollble. He really can't help himself
may be molesting me. But I'm 1101 when I tease him and come on
sure because I have sort of strong.
encouraged him.
Please answer in tbe paper since I
I have had a crush on Gary (not don't want Mom to find out what 1s
his real name) from tbe fU'St bme going on. -- D.R.
we met. He is very good-looking,
DEAR D.R.: Even tbough you
and we get along greaL At first, the admit to coming on to Gary and
three of us did tbings together, and initiating the sexual play, he would
Gary and I horsed around a lot. Gary be found guilty in a court of Jaw of
was trymg to be friend! y, and I'm contributing to the delinquency of a
sure he didn't realize that I was minor. H you have sex with him, he
getting stuck on him.
could be convicted of stahJIOry rape.
Mom is a nurse and works tbe Allbaugh you foel tbat you are at
second and third shift a lot, so Gary fault, let me assure you that Ibis is
began taking me everywhere. We not the case.
became pretty close, and it was easy
You are I 3. Gary knew Ibis when
to flirt witb him. I was the one who you $tarted to tease and tempt him .
initiated our fir st kiss . which He should have told you to stop the
surprised and embarrassed him. We nirting and behave yourself. The
are now into some serious petting burden of keeping the relationship
and fondling. We both get very in !J.le proper perspecbve is on the
aroused when we are together, and I adult
just know we are going to end up in
Gary could be in big legal trouble
bed together.
if this Situation becomes known. It
Ann, I'm very confused. Is Gary could also break your mother's
molesting me if I encouraged it and hean. Stop it at once.

Newspaper
marks 140th
anniversary

Ann
Landers

•

1994 Los Angele&amp;
Times Synd1ca 1e and
Crealors Synd1cate"

C INC IN NAT I (AP) - The
Ame n ca n Israe lite, fo un ded 1n
Cmcmnati as a nauonal newspaper
rn 1854, marked liS !40th annive rsary Fnday.
Rab br Isaac M. W1sc founded
the newspape r on Jul y 15. IX54.
shortl y afte r he came to C&lt;nc rnnatr
to lead Congregatr on B'n ar Ycs hu -

"Ars" si ster -in -law, "Louise,

decided he shouldn't have a lady
friend and began to lecture him
about tbe hazards of AIDS. Louise
then started to write h1m nastY
letters calhng me a tramp. (I am 64
years old .) Apparentl y, Louise
couldn't stand rt when AI asked me
to move into his home, whtch I dtd.
Unfonunately, his horne is dim:tlv
behind Louise's.
It's tough to liv e tn another
-woman's house because you always
feel her presence and are constantly
being compared witb her. I don't
mean to be disrespectful , but
invariably, the doceased wife takes
on the qualities of a saint. nus can
be a very hard actiO follow .
Meanwhile, Louise is trying to
desuoy my relationship with AL
Sensing this, I asked AI Lo buy
another house and move out of the
area. but he wanl5 to sea y here . I am

capable of rupporting myself, but 1

care deeply foe Ibis man and doubt
that 1 could find anyone who could
compare with him. What is your
advice? -- STRICTLY ANONY .
MOUS
DEAR SA: AI is going to have
to choose between you and Louise. 1
hope you win and AI agrees to move.

run , now the I saac M

An alcohol problem? How can you
help yourself or somLone you love'
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize li .
How to Deal With It, How to
Cof14uer It" will give you the answers. Send a self-addressed, long,
businus-siu envelope and a check
or money orthr for S3 .65 (this includes postage and handling) to
Alcohol, c/o AM LAtukrs, P.O. Bo1
I 1562, Clticago.l/1. 60611-0562. (In
Callfllia. send $4.45.)

r\ .P Sl'l e n r~ \Vril r r

MR. AND MR S. ARTHUR MILLER

50th anniversary observed
1&lt;1 I l -\r-.:LJ -

Til ~._' \

'lr .IIlli \J r,

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o l ln dr ,tn;t) rn

S11 rucr. \\' V.r, LPg. m Coun11
A nh ur ,.., t h~ ~ o n ol the l.n . .·
Nn at1 .11HI Mr,~o un Brownr nb

Miller ol Onw , W. Va., She" Llh'
daugh1 cr ol 1he late Monroe :nHI
Bess rc Co rnl11 Olr vc r ol Mon:l\ rlk.
W V" .md Rntl:md

h,l\l' [\~{) t ittidll' l l ,

d \ Uil,

J~ o h l· rt I ~ltl kr Ruti.IIH I , .trHI .1
d ttt t! il ll·r .tnd \tll1·t n - l ,t \\. 1\· rr t\'
,ll ld . l J,[Jit.. lllll i"l'[, 11 tlllh' l ll) I\\ (I
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\1 1th l~l· J)l'll. t .11 1tl l trlthl'\ llou "-

I IL'\

tllll ~ rl'.ll !!fd lld \ Oil ,
\lt l li.~&lt;.: l ~ltll -.r
l lh Pi .Ji n,, .1nd
tl! ll' ..,t,·p - ~ r (. ll · t.;r,t rHhtlll . A d .tnt
l r , i'tl lll L' rl l)

1\ [ l'r\, l&lt;ndn ~.·\
:\l rl k·r \\,1\ ·,·rnp lu \l' tl ,l! C.thll '\h

B.t lo.uH.:
\V V:~t

Su n h~.· . 111l Ctt

Ch.Hic 'aon ,

the old l!t d ~urn B.t ke 1y,

""ldk porl , tilL' Callr pol" Dcv cl tlp mcn t;.tl Cc n l ~ r. (;;.Jil qwlts, and
'llw D.nl y Senltnr l. Pomcrov . .I S .1
Ill.""

..,p.t pc r dr ~ t1 thu lor pn or to ht s

l l'' l l l'lllt' lll

~ l r .IIHI Vl rs. Mr ll cr ha ve rcsr d,. ,1 .11 1~711) Whrt c'' Hrll Ro,l&lt;l,

Rllll ,tnd . lor

"V1year'

NEW YORK (A P) - Doc tors
te ll near ly one rn fr vc preg nant
wome n 10 s ~t y rn bed for a week or
more, but &lt;1 stud y has found lr ttle
cvHlc ncc th1 s prcsc npuon docs any

good
Bed rest dr srupLs women's lr vcs
.111&lt;1 c &lt;IS is more than S I hrllron a
JCM

rn IO:-i l wages, los l pruducl!vlly

.rround the home and hospiUII costs,
the stud y s:rrd It ma y al so present
tt s own mc d1 c al r 1sk s, s uch as

blood cloLS , researchers swd.
Prcsc rrllcd for ,, varictv of con drtr ons, be d rest " usually done m

yc,rr , or abou 1 IH peru lll ol prcgndnl women who &lt;le lr vc r J lt cr 20
week' of preg nancy, .1rc .rd vrscd by

ho rne .1nd c.m lctsl several momh s.

" In nearl y eve ry case when rt's
hcc n studrcd, there " no proo f ol
hcncfrt ," ' ""I Dr Robert Go lden-

t llCJr doc tors to res t 1r1 bed lo r at
lc.t sl .1 ''-'CC k durrn g prcgn.mcy
T he resea rchers ~t bo dtd a l O III -

berg, a pro fessor ul ubstcLncs and

gy neco logy :r l th e Un&lt; vc rsll y o l
Al.rb,una :11 Brrmrngham .
He and hrs co-duthors conclude
rn tl1e Ju ly rss ue o f the JOurnal
OhS!et rrc s and Gyneco logy that
doc to" should cut down sharpl y on
ordcrr ng bed res! :md !hal lurth cr
studres should be done to sec if 1L
reall y helps.
•
The researchers used rcsull5 o! a
19XH natr ona! survey to cal culate
thni more than 700,000 wom en a

put cr r;ccl se arc h ol stud rcs 111:11
C\ alua tccl heel rest.
IIley found no C\'ll lence th.11 rl
rcdu tcs the r.11 c ol l lrst · trmH.:: stcr
m1 sc a r rt ~1gc, eve n th o u g h 1t IS
~o m c tnn c~ prcscr rhC(I l or wu rn cn

The lsr,1clrtc changed rts narn e
the A111cnca n Israe lite 1n 1R74
and rcmarncd a na tiOnal newspaper
until the 1930s. when !he lsraclnc
10

turned 'lL1 mtcres t to the C tnc11ma t1
Jcw 1sh co mmurut v

who ha ve slr ghl bl ee din g call ed
spottm g
S11nrl :rr ly, :rl lllll rr gh ohst etrr cs

RUTLAND -

Br,ul y John ' "" ·

l&lt;utl anrl. rece nt ly graduated lrom
th e l l S A rr Fo rce Ac ad emy "'
Co lor.rdo Sprrn gs, Colorado
Upon g radu i:lll on, J ohn ~on wa'
u m1mt ss10ncd as sec ond lieutenant
c~rH I w,1 , ass1gnc&lt;l to th e lour11l c 1v rl
cng lllccnn g squ.ulron ol Sc ymour Jo htH.on All· Force B.1 sc m Gold ..,-

horo , North Carol rn,1
Scvc nrl local peopl e trd ve lcd to
the J 11nc I ~ r,uluauon rn Co lorado
Sprrngs wh"crc IOOH cadets were
U Hn ln i , SI On c d In front of

a crowd

o l an es trrnat cd 2 1.350 peopl e
Those auendmg to sec Lieutenant

lohn , on graclual c rncl udccl Mr and
Mrs. Larr y John son ,wd Tahnc c
John son of RuLI ,mcl, Mr. and Mrs.
Will ram Aslleck and Emil y Asbcck
of M~tlcll epon , Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Shumate ol Man slrcld, and Ruth
Ann Dean of Black Mountarn,
N01th Curo lma

Monday cvcmng prror to gmcludlron ccrcmonr es, Squadron 5 hosteel .1 formal cllnn c r rn honor ol
graduat1n g se niOrs John son org,l ·
nr ;ccl ,wei emcee d th e donner lor

45th anniversary celebrated
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
James H. Caldwell celeblllted their
45th wedding anniversary with a
surprise cookout at tbeir home Sunday, Jply 10 by their children,
Jimm~Johnny, Jerry, Brenda and
Edna. Helping celebrate was :
Anl!ie Brent, Britney Adkins.

Naiicy Caldwell, Mandy Harold:
Ricky Wells, Angie Burgess, Johnny Dale Caldwell, Trica Prall,
Norma Beaver, Dawn Caldwell,
Jimmy Dale, Becky and Jessie
Caldwell and Terry, Missy, Darake
and Decota Martin.

MERRIMACK, N.H. (AP) - A
restaurant owner refused to refund
a $1,500 deposit even though the
)Vcdclrng was canceled because the
bmlc-to-be died. He changed his
rnrnd after the story appeared in
new spapers.
" I personally apologize for any
lack of tim eliness m !he decision
thai was made,'' Mark Haseltme
wrotc Thursday rna teller 10 Daniel
Barrcllo.
Barreuo 's fian cee , Nancy
Ogrodowc zyk, d1cd in Apnl after
sui fcrrn g an aslhma &lt;lllack. They
were to be married Aug . 13 and
h:rd m:rdc thqlcposrt at Haseltine' s
restaurant. L6v1 Lowell's Rcstaur.mt. It was where he had proposed
to her.
Haselune' s apology came afLcr
Barrcllo complamed to at least two
newspapers. whr ch published hts
story.
Haselunc called Lhe complaint

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

Covtngton, Ga ., was tran sformed for six years into Spana,
the home of srnall town Poltce
Chief Bill Gillespie, played by Carroll O'Connor. The senes, set m
the present, was a spinoff of a 1967
film about a white Missi ss ippi·
police ch1ef who teams up wrth a
black dctccuve from the North.
The sale Saturday and Sunday
rncluded furniture, lunch counters,
children's toys, hospital beds,
drapes and police uniforms.

till'\ l,lJ l il L' l l ll~C' I )' 1\H/!ll [lJ I Cd,
IL''L'.t rcll cr-. ~. u d

bccl rest lor women at rr sk ol pre-

OFFERING:

th.._• .tc.1d..: my 111 June l lJ 1J()
ti[H1 11 til ~ rcLornm cnd.ttl (1 11 o! for-

•
•
•
•
•

lll L' r Co n ~:: rc~s llldll

C lurcnr _' Mtll cr
Upo n lt ~l l\ltrn g h.J\I C tr ,ltntn g ,

Stocks
Corp~~rate

Bonds
U.S. Treasury Securities
Mutual Funds
Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
• Insured Money Market
Accounts
• IRA's

Johll \ Oil Cll t(rU I h1 s J'r csllllldll ) Cell
to ptrr sue ~~ c t v d e n g 1n ccr rng

degree
Dunng Ill s lrcs hrnan year, John ·

'" " was ,&gt;wa rded th e 4th Group
Fr c" l11nan of the Se mester aw ard

lor exce ll ence rn mrlrt:rr y pe rlor m,mce. Hrs freshman year Mrl rtary
Perform ,mce Average (comp,:r.rhlc
to u PA) w:" \ ) 6 . John so n "''" on
th e Command&lt;tnt 's L1s1 rtl(h\ o l h1-.
c 1rc..:r lor n11lll.try per lnr lll,Jn LC.
In lu ....... ophornorc ) c,t r, John son

Contact:

1\RA[)Y.JOHNSON

.tL".td c m y

Jay Caldwell

Honor NCO In hrs scno or yc.1r, he
"'·" Honor Off icc r :lgdrn and al so
th e Humdn Relation s Edu catron
Ullr ce r.

took Sf' RE rr;unrng -S nn rval Ev,l R. c, rst&lt;.ln cc anll Esc&lt;1 pe. He
went on to hc&lt;.:om c an rn slrut:tor 1n
lil t' \ IIIVIV,tl tr;IJnJOg lhc lollow1n g
' IOll ,

Account Executive
441 Second A:venueGallipolis, OH. 45631

Jol111,on , who 1s horn e on lc.1vc
.lit e r ~ r ;uhJUliOn , 1s sc he dul e d to

he w ,l~ d Bd ~JL Tl.lllllll g
mstru ctor for 1nc om1ng lrcshrn en.

) L:..Ir Also,

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

r c po r\w Sey mour Joi1n son A tr
Force Bd sc 111 Nor1h C dlllllll d o n

Durrng hrs _1 11nror yc:tr, John son
was appo1nt ed I st Se r ge ant ol

August I.

Squadron 5 and wa&lt; also :rpporntcd

t:ach year thousand,
or Amerrcan famllll'S !IIS(~l\'t'r

11Wn

new worlds b~ hostm~ a forq~n

"-Jlt'ndtn~ mmw~.
Ilost fanullt·~ rt't'CIVI' a

Gf'rmany, Spam, .lapa11 .uul

'it 'htJ!arshlp for mlernalltmal

Brazil or one of th1rty ol hPr

lravt'l

lhc world.
These bright and laiPnlL;d
studenls ages 15- 1~ have a lol
to olfer their host fam1lies.
More than anything else, theS&lt;•
studenls want to share their
cultures while learmng aboui
American life

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED

-OUIP-H.-....
t

(304) 675-1675

GALLIPOLIS

CA PE CA NAV ERAL, Fla .
(AP) - Co lurnbta 's Jst ron aut s
strugg led 10 frx a pnmc laboratory
rns tru rnen t crr ppl ed by arr bubbles
rrr cld y.
Three of the seve n mem bers of
the space shulllc crew spent most
of thcrr seve nt h day "' odlll wor krng on the tr un k-srzcd elcc tn cJ I
c h,rnrbcr, clcs rg ncd 10 scpa ral e
com ponent s of ce ll s. rn clu drn g
wo rm DNA
'
The unrt 's coo lmg pump would

111 1hc J .t pan c~•&gt;
nm lc c h ~ mh cr . wl11c h ll,ts llown rn
. . p.tcc once bcfore

to be con du cte d

R ese archers w:t nt to usc th e
cli:rrnhcr to stud y wmm DNA. r,11
giO\\ th hormones .tnd rno usl.! Ll'llu
T.tr ~ccrC ti OTh The u n tt uses .111

clcu rrc frc ld to sep.lrdiC ce ll cnmflll l h' lll .., rn &lt;~
l! Op! HH C\. 11\

not wor k hcc.1u sc of bubbles tn a
water I rn c
" Bubbl es arc ve r y t c n..t c r o u ~ 111

sp.1cc,"

s ~ud

II) JEFFREY IIROD EUR
Associated Press Writer
TRE NTON, N. J. ( AP )
Cau ghtm currents after acc ldcn wl ly clrrvrng rnto a ra m-swollen lake.
Vrctcrra Hofl rnan sliugg lccl to kee p
her head above water while clutchrn g her 7-ycar-old son.

In a drlvJn g r&lt;.u n und gro\\-in g

d:Hkn css Thur sda y nt ghl , Mr s
Halfman sc rc.rrncd for help. Mm ut es lat e r, she shove d he r son
!O ward :1 resc uer befo re she was

ICI P -

.Pa&amp;h-5ervlce lor thl Homtleu

&gt;Piyctlolhonipy

co ui&lt;!Tt ' t because she was hold tng

on lo the boy," sa11l Mr kc Mrn yon.
" 110 helped grab th e boy, Gregory,
and clm g hrm ashore.
" That was th e la'i I saw l1cr."
Mrs . Hoffman' s body wa s tlrs
cDvc rcd Jho ulthrcc ho urs \._tter
\V1th th e thundc1--tonn tl PrMr c nt

Tuesda ) , .lul y 1'1

~aANI. FIOUIMW
-Malge~

&gt;CMa ,...,_,.,...

-ConmoniY-.o
.....,,_Houalnglor
Emotloo.., ~

24 HOUR
CRISIS LINE

LOCAL CRISIS LINE

OUTSIDE OF

24HOURS

GALUPOUS CAWNG AREA

446-5554

TOO AVAILABLE

POMEROY

3088 STATE RT. 110

TOU FREE DIAL 1
ANDTHEf'

MULBERRY HEIGHTS

446-5500

800-252-5554

992·2192

' \I[ I

'I

\ \ llilll.ll!l -, l~t l' ll.lrd : 11.._h .11 , j
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fl' jl r\ld liLC, lk\~,'lop .trlll ,l\l ,qll Ill

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, ,ttd

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kct

-lt l\l 11 , 11 1p

pol!u: Dc t l'L l tv ~ Jn -;c ph Kttl' T he
l:ll,l' 11 '\ll. tl l ; 1\ nn dee per th a n ~
lrL t

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l1 cr."

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n o th11 1~

to

s l tl ]l

" 'lir e· lake h,rd

A nony mo us Clean ;md F·n.::~ Croup
~ 10 p m at Epr sco pa l ChurL I&gt;

l'v e nts. The ralcndar is not
to prnmute SHies nr

•••

desi~ned

July IX t hro ug h

~~

:11 10

.t

1n

rl :11 Iy

POINT PLEASAN 'I - i",uculoc '

non · profit groups wishing to

l, l lld\L'\

:lfld S\l,tl ·

*'*
CA LLIP O LI S - French Crty
B:rplr sl ll rblc sclrool Jul l' IH
1h rough 22 5:45p.m

l,, , ~ , l· d

h.tnh. " .1n d the Lurh w.t ,

Sht'

\\L III r rg ht
1

111

·\1 kN

(l

111 t h ~.· t\'-l&gt; lttlllrs hc lo rc

.ti L d

112 mclrc·, ul r.un lcll

\lr\
H o lllll.tll drnwnn! , th e
'\.1t Jon,1 l Wc,ll li u SL'r \I l l ' ,: trd
~ I rs IIL' IIIl r,rn, \2, "" " C rcgory
\~l· r c abk to get o ut o l lit e car, hut
.. tr uggkd to keep th ctr hl'. ld s ~t bO\ c
\\, l! l'f wl!tl c lq; htm g th e cu rre nts. A
n-. 1g hhor's : -; hout s c~ lcr ted Min yon ,
'' ho !'' c~ u n the l. tk~.

~1';-t;--ePHOTOGRAPHY
Professional Wedding Photography

(614) 446-6700

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Cal vary Clrm uan Church July 17 at 6 p m. to 20
:II 7 rIll wrlh Rev. Jeff Comcll

...

•••

LECTA - Church ol Cltrr st ancl
Chn sllan Un1 on 7. 30 p m. wrth
D.r vrcl Coal grovc and Rev. Rocky
Jcll crs

•••

•••

Bihle sch&lt;H&gt;I
CHE SHIR E- Val,IIIOn Brblc
Sc hoo l Kyge r Frccw rll B:r ptrst
Church Jul y th ro ugh 17 !rom 6.3 0
10 H.30 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS · Bell Chap el
Church homeco ming 10:30 a.m.

•••

HARRISB URG - Union meeting new Hope Bapl1 Sl Church 3
p.m. with Re v. Eat! Ham s and
chorr lrorn Grcmer Allen AME.

•••

CROWN CITY · Vrcwry Baptr st Church vaeauon brbl e sc hool
July IR through 22 6:30p .m

•••

•••

POINT PLEASANT - Narcotrcs
Annn yrnou s Trr Co unL y Group
7:30pm. Iii I Viand St.

GALLIPOLI S - Frrst Prcsbytcn an Church vacauon b1ble school
'

'

Let us copfyour old family
photos. Special 2-5x7's for
$14.95. Reg. $19.95. SAVE
$5.00. We have over 300
photos of sailors &amp; soldiers
from Gallla Co. Come In and
see If we have yours.

TAWNEY STUDIO

KITCHEN SAFETY DEMONSTRATION - Vincent Brod~r­
ick, left, and Michael Leillteit presented a program ~n s,~fe!y 1_1ps
in the kitchen for beginner cooks. They stressed usmg t~mkmg
before acting", reading directions, using t~e proper equtpment,
proper use of a microwave, proper use of kmves, safety around the
stove and cleaning up.

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

Grand, reserve champions
for 4-H projects picked
POMEROY - Grand and reserve srs tcd of dcmonstratrons on a varichampions for 4-H projects were ety of subJCC Ls, ranging from trcalselected in the first of many JUdg- rng crash VICtim s 10 ki tchen safety
rng sessiOns to be held before the lr~ .
.
Chrp Haggcny, 4-H exten siOn
Meigs Coumy Fair opens on Aug.
~rge nl , was rn charge of the proJCCI
15.
.
Rccrpicnts of grand champt.on JUdging.
The remaming schedule of Judgroseues were Josh Hager, JUniOr
-division; Vincent Broderick and mg ts as follow s:
Li vestock: Monday , July 25, I
Michacl Lcillteit, team demonstration &lt;n the junior division; and toR p.m. at the Rutland Civrc CenCrystal Smith, sen1or divisron .
_ ter.
Foods: Tuesday, July 26, 4 to 7
Reserve champions were Jessip.m.
Scnror Crtizcns Center.
ca Arna ll and Crystal Bennet!,
Miscellaneous : Wedn esday,
team demonstration in the junior
divisron; Jeanie Newell, senior July 27, 9 a.m. to noon, Rutland
div1sion; and Crystal Bennett , Civic Center.
Clothing: Thursday, July 28, 4
junior division.
to
7
p.m. Senior Citizens Center.
All arc now eligible to take
Dogs:
Friday, July 29, 9 a.m. to
their dcmon'stration projects to the
noon,
Meigs
County Fairgrounds.
Ohio State Fair next month.
Style
Revue:
Friday, July 29,
John Costanza and Carol Brewer judged the projects which con- 6:30p.m., fairgrounds .
•

you are planning a wedding,
then you should come see us at
Haskins-Tanner.
You will have over 190 styles of
tuxedos io choose lrom. We have a
large aeleclion ol the latest styles ·
and co/1'1)llmentary acreasories lor
thil apecial occasion.
~

••r

O••lltr for• ..
at
AHortl•lile Price•

-

.~ ~.,

If you betieve a haircut ts more than JUSt a haircut,
Fantastic Sam's® gives you exadly that-The Cut Plus.
With a shampoo. conditmning nnse , precision cut,
and style. 1t's not JUSt a ham:ut. it's everything you
want in one low price
You don't need ;m appomtment. we're waiting for
you now

11 Ohio River Plaza
BelwMn Hlllo &amp; Big Beer

446-SAM

iJ

r.'""'·-

=HOURS

swept

till'

Reviv:1l

July 17

ov er th e

~. urb .1r111 tlh'll 1 \e t urrc nt
llll' lll Ill "

GA LLI POL IS- L&lt;&lt;HIS Cl ub 6 30
p m Foruhcauon 1-IIIL

fundrai,ers of any type . Items
,~re prinlcd as sp~ce permits and
cannnt be guaranteed tn run a
'pecific numher nf days.
Sund~1y,

/r 01 n

•••

announce meetings and special

prolif eauca11ona1 orpanuar10n

&amp;nlor Servlols

I II' II

'\[ d l,dt,'ll.,

'f ile

,u ddcnly pulled under water to her
lll'.ll h
" I hol lered 'C.1n yo u sw rm'''
,1n d she sa icl ' yes.' but th at she

The Communi! ) Calendar IS
puhli~ht·d ,as a f1 t' l' s t:r\'it:l' to

~·11\.
_..,,_ AJFS Found1tlon

-&amp;-. &amp; T--.g

I : ,l [til

ll' .,l'.lfd llf\ \ tUd \ 11 1\' ll l'. lt lll l ' I I

--Gallia community calendar--

Sttzl
(8001322-4678
Ill. 5411

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS

l'l...~._

til Ill '\ 11

' 1'-lll'

idp

Mother drowns in lake after pushing son toward rescuer

GALLIPOLIS - Smeltzer Famr ly reuniOn fairground s tn 4-H
rcswurant building.

an 1ntt•rnatwnal student,
plt'a'"' call

pr occ :-.s l. tll c d

SLIC il!I St \ hl' l lt..'\C !I ll' CX I f d l k d
cel lular ma le rtal w 1ll he pur er 111

NASA miSS IOn sc rcn -

POR TER - C lark Chapel
Church 7 p m. Pastor Steve Rollm s.

uppn your ht'art and homt: to

MEDICAREoMEOICAII&gt;llTLE XX•SUOINO FEE SCALE-CERTIAED BY STATE OF OHIOoEVENING APPTS. AVAILABLE

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUlt
POINT PLEASANT

The bride and groom reside in
Columbus where botb auend The
Ohio State University.

If you would like to

d not-tor

&lt;icw14N'IIMLIIua AdoiiiCif'll
Cou-41&amp; Tllanpy
~rldiell'a-111

286-7075

white roses and rose carnations.
Flower girls were Lauren DeYCr,
cousin of the bride and Laci
Comer.
Both wore heatherblue and
white tea-length dresses with a
crown of white flowers and baby's
breath witb cascadmg pearls and
satin ribbon{
They carried white lace baskets
witb white rose petals.
The groom wore a black tUJtedo
wilh tails and a white vest and tie.
Best man was Charlie Young ,
Groomsmen were Btll Atkins,
Todd Hamilton and Brad Marcum,
cousin of tbc bride.
The groomsmen all wore black
tails with a rose tie and cummerbund and had a boutonniere of two
white roses.
Ring bearers were Billy De~er
and Jeff Williams, both cousins of
the bride. They wore black tails
witb heather blue ties and cum merbunds with blue mini-rose boutonnieres.
The mustc was provided by
Oran Barry. Programs were distributed by James Williams and
Jessica Thomas, botb cousins of tile
bride. Guests were registered by
Angie Barry.
A receptiOn was held immediately following the ceremony at tbe
American Legion Hall of Gallipolis.

Studt•nL-t haw tht•1r
nwtlu al msurant'P ,lfld

exchange student lmm
1hfferenl counlru•s around

PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED

200MAINST.

GALLIPOLIS - On May 14
Julie Marie Edwards and Gregory
Alan Dilley were united in marriage at Chapel Hill Church of
Christ in Gallipolis. The ceremony
was performed by Ralph Shaver,
mini ster and grandfather of the
groom.
The bride is the daughter of
Jackie Sheets of Gallipolis and
Steven Edwards of Slidell, La She
is the granddaughter of Virginia
Bias, Eugene and Katherine Plymale, Layunie Nibert and Mr. Jennings of Gallipolis; and Leo
Edwards, of Belpre.
The groom is tbe son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Dilley of Gallipolis.
He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Shaver of West Manfleld.
The bride, escorted by her
father, wore a satin gown with
beaded bodice and a chapel length
train.
The back exposed a heart
shaped cut-out witb pearls connecting both sides of the heart. The
sleeves were long Victorian style
witb lace and pearl accents.
She wore a head piece of white
satin flowers and pearls with a
waist-length veil, and carried a
bouquet of white and rose-colored
roses witb blue bells and queen's
lace with white cascading ribbon.
Maid of Honor was Misty Scanley. Bridesmaids were Jennifer
Bias, cousin of the bride, Teresa
Wells, sister of the bride and Amy
Dilley, sister of tbe groom.
All attendants wore taffeta rose
dresses and carried bouquets of

Host A Foreign Exchange Student

ONE~ Til' IICST COMPREHENSIYE &amp;PlllfESSONALI!ENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES N SOJTHEASTEAN OHIO
• - - l o - I n po~ by tho Go-lllaMiotgo tlolnlol
~· Drug Addiction ontiMonlll HaaMh !lontc:aa

JACKSON

Edwards-Dilley

DISCOVER NEW WORLDS

Wood'fand Centers, Inc.

-·•

GREGORY AND JULIE DILLEY

' " ' l&lt;ohc rt Snyder
The dstrontlu t s trr cd th tcc t tllll'\
to IL'IllO\'C' th e buhb lrs by -,q untrng
\\ ,llcr 11 0 111 sy rt ngcs th ro ugh til~
ltnc Ground cnntm l krs dc h.l!cd
wh~llto do ncx t
Tlm"·c cxpcrr!IICill"i .1rc s u pp u..,~,· d

•••

premature, alll10ugh he had carll?r
wrincn a l.cner to Ogrodo~czyk s
estate calling the dcpostl totally
nnn-rcfu~~able as St1pula1ed tn the
contract. He also had wntten that
he would cons~dcr refundrng part
of 1he deposit tf he could book a
fun ctron s1m1lar'" SII.Cand cmL for
the date.
Barre no, 31, had set ,up a scholar shrp rn h1s f1anccc s name aL
Souhcgan Htgh School , where she
hacl wught for ahouL a year. Tcachcrs and siudcnts scm a pctllron to
Hascltrne CflliCIT.Ing h.lm. .
The photogmphcr .md drsc JOCke y h1.red by th e couple for the~r
wcdcllng returned dcposns so they
could be used for the fund .

Couliwlil!l

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CEN'IY.R)

lill

The
Ohio
Company

n11.: nt 1\J

-;taga&amp;F~

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

\U

-----..

rng fn cnds an&lt;l l ~un r l1 es . _ \
Jo lln ~on rcLe rved h1-. .tppo tnl

-24-Hr. Crtlll PrO:~
oQ4Hr.En_.,._

sale.

sllt HJid \)L' llt 'S jlltal r;rc d

.rpproxrrn .11cly 100 caclch and v"ll·

Fans get a piece ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M:.D.
of the 'Heat'
FAMU·Y PRACTICE
COVINGTON, Ga . (AP)
What wa s hot, hot, hot is now
going, going, gone.
" In The Heat of the Night" fans
got a chance to hold on to a bit of
the canceled televtston series when
everyt111ng from street signs of the
make -believe town of Sparta,
Miss., to the white Stetson off the
police chief's head went up for

!Hl'~'ure \\ Crc more com plex. For,,
(l ,l!l t.:l'rtHJ\ lorrn called proternur rt
h~p~L' I\ Cll~ton or pr c -cc lump st.J ,

IL'x thooks g~ n cr.lll y rc~..om m c nd

Restaurant owner decides to
refund grieving fiance's deposit

MR. AND MRS. JAMES CALDWELL

'li re londrn gs lo r hrgh blo od

Johnson graduates from United
States Air Force Academy
,o n o f Ltrry ,111d G lcm .1 Johnson o f

llv MAR CIA DUNN
Ai) Aerospa ce Writer

'- .l id

lar drive lhrough 1he rnunly's remote areas.
Officials are al'o plann ing In drsigna te 1h e
routes on the"''" Oh io maps as set·n ic. The proJH I was mad•· possible local ly 1h roug h th e
fll'orts or Kim Sheets, dirN·tor of the Ohio Valley Visilors Ct•nlcr and .luselle Baker, director
of 0.0. Mclnly re Park llistrirt.

Astronauts try to fix instrument crippled by bubbles

111,11111'-' d.: !t\ L' I y, r csc;trc h c r ~ l ound
111 1 • Jl: ll th,tl 11 ilw.cr ~ th :tt rt s k 111
\l.(l!lll~ll t.uryrn g a srng lc l'r ttl'-' A1HI
thlrl t '\ lt t tlc C\' ttkn cr th .ll 11
fl'dUL ~~.., th e nsk of Jl(l' lll :tlu rL' dl'lt\
('f\' tlf rlllflrUVCS h~tby lu.:,ll th Ill
wome n w11 h multip le fe tu ses, they

\\'ll ll h' fl

SCF:NIC VI EW -State Rou te 7 has been designated 'a scenic highway by th e Ohi o Depart ment of Transportation. The sce nic route starts
across the Gallia County lin e a nd follo ws the
Ohio Ri ver through Gallipolis 1oward Crown
C ity. Th e orlicial scenic route is severa l mules
put togeth er, including stale rout es 553, 21R,
790, 775 and 141. Togelhcr th ey &lt;H ate a l'i r&lt;" u ·

ucs around the cou ntry.

Bed rest in pregnancy shows few benefits
Bv 1\JALCO LM RITTER

W 1sc Te m-

pl e.
The lsraclrle was the frrstJ cw rsh
pap er publ1 shcd wes t of th e
All eg heny MounUtrn s. It was pub1rshccl rn Engh sh and was devoted
to rclrgron, hrstory and lncraturc,
wrth reports from Jewrsh comrn uni -

Q Parf.tastic &amp;mz.s ·
• the OrigiuiFam~rv Hai(OJt1efs •

Mon. lhru Fri. 9 to 9
Saturday 9 to 6
Sunday 12 to 5

�July 17 1994

'

0

=P=a~g=~==B=6==S=u=n=d~a~y=TI~m~e;s~~~n;tl~ne;I================;P;o;m;e;ro;y~--~M;Id~d~l~ep~o;r~t~G~a~ll~lp~o~ll~s,~O~H~_,~~o~ln~t~P~Ie~a~sa~n~t,~WV~=r--~=========================Ju ly17,1994

p

r::--:-~:-~---~--------.;:o~m:e:r~o~y;:M:I~dd~l:ep~o~r~t~G:al~ll~po~l~ls~,~O~H~P~o~l:nt~P:I:ea~s:a~n~t,~W~V~------~S~u~n:day Tlmes--Sentlnei-Pag~B7

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat
Hot Dogs 2/s1.00 with sauce 3/$1_00 plain

--The House of the W e e k - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Beat of the Bend ...
Traditional Touches Make House a Home

by Bob Hoeflich

STORE HOURS
Hy I'AT LUKAS

Congralubtion s ;u c (Crl&lt;.linl y in
order for Mr. a nd Mr s. Haro ld
C h:~ sc who w rll chal k up a hig
mil c'\lo n~ on Fri(l;t y, July 22, wllcn
they ohse rvc th ei r t\5th wed ding

AP N£'wsft&gt;Htun:s
Hollll'S that arr tr:Hlitional, at

!t·a't on the extrrior. continur to
calc II Ihe r yl' of rnany lionu·buyt'l

;um1 \'Crs;u-y.

~

ill'&lt;i&gt;:n F-J, by llomeSiyles
"Source t '' Dc ~i R"nt·r s Nrtwork.
is s u,-11 a homl' . Thr ~.70H ­
..,quan .... tu ut d&lt;'sign fcaturPs a trtl dttil&gt;nal facade . llw ('Yt'-&lt;'atrhing
l'X I r rior wrlcornc ~ yoll with a
rovt'rt•d front enlJ)', ;1 priv;Ite cor ner porch. a gablt·tl rlnrnwr ~nd
large. shutlerl'tl windows.
SlopinR moflint'S ami tht· col!lb r·
nation of brick ami wood si ding
:r dd a dist.ius;::uislwd touch .
lnsidr. thf' foyr·r opPns to an
rrJ! t•rrs ling '1"' st..1irv.·ay . a char.il'lt~ri"it i c oftt'Il found in older
hurl l! '" This allows tamil ~' mrmtlt'r ~ to go upstairs both from the
for mal front rntry or fro!ll the

inf•&gt;rrnal kil•·hcn-brrakfasl room .
l11t· w,•ll-zonetl plan place s all of
the Jonn;1l ,lrt'tl ~ in tht' front of

the hnlllt' ;UJd thP informal ill-t·as
in tilt' reJr

To 1111' lrfl of lite fo;-rr lin lhr
l·trgc. formal li vi n.R room, which
tlffl'r s J fwm:h door to thP corrlt'r purrh A n1zy drn lrJds from
the living room to tlw ~ pacious
familv room. Th r family room,

lugltlighied by a calhetlr~ l ce ilinR
and a crnlral firrplac''· is lhP perfeel plac&lt;' 10 spen d rom forlable
t•vrnings at hornr.

Tlw su nny breakfast room ft'alurc s a bu ill -in desk and a bay
window iltal overloo ks Lhe backyard . 'llw gourmcl kilchrn houses an island cook lop. a buill -in
panlry, and t'a sy access lo lhc
forma l dinin1&lt; room .
upper level hosts a spcclac·

nw

ular

ma s ter

suitr

en t ered

through r legan l doubl&lt;· doors . A

l laruld ami Ou1Ja were 111e1rned
July~~. 1lJ2'J. 1n K:maug:1 by

1.111

the f&lt; c,. E. C. Vcn~: :1 nd ha ve hccn
l i l'clnng TCS id C ili S or Micldl eporr .

ll;uold I"" hccn se ll-e mployed
llhl:-it nf' th e tt me over the years
havin g opcra!cd ~~ sc rvtcc station

lll Ciu&lt;ling

OLII O

rcralfS &lt;tnd a hard-

\.V are .'&gt; !ore m th e co mmunity . In
l: tt cr yr ars. he &lt;&gt;c r ve d ;Jo,; mainl c n:HlL'I.' supC'r\'i.\Of for th e Vill~\gc or
· ~ltddlcp\Jrl &lt;.tnd still ~crvcs as the
10wn' ' b11ilding inspec tor.

TilE

TIV~DmONAL

facade is a rombinntion of various elements and textures,

wood • •dong_
tray cei ling adds inlt•rrst lo the
sleeping area. whi ch features a
walk -in closet ami a built-in chest
of drawers.
TI1c luxurious bathroom boasls
a spa lub, a separate shower and
a dual-sink vanily. A balcony nul side thr suilc overlooks I he fanli ly room be low.
Two olher bedrooms s hare a
bath . An optional fourth b('droom
over the garage is a weal bonu s
fealu rr.
Additional rooms in thr hou se
include a half-balh off 1hr foyer,
plus a handy utitity room off lhe
kitchen lhal incorDorales extra
storage space and a recycling
cenler.
The spac iou s utility room can
be reached from th e backyard .
The two-car garage fcalures a
large workshop and slorage area.
A handy powder room is localcd
near I he foy er.
Conslruction blueprints provide
detail s for a stand ard basement
found ation.

(For a more detatled. scaled plan
of this house, including guides to
estimatinR casts and finan cing,
se nd $4 to /lou se of tire Week,
P. () /lox 1562. Neu• York. N l '.
101/6-1562. /Je sure to include
tlte numbrr of tlt e plan .)

usin~

both brick and

F-3 STATISTICS

D

c s i~:n

F-3 has a living
room, den, family room,
di ning room, kitchen,
Lr.. akfasl area, tllree to four bed rooms, lwo balhs and a foyer,
lolaling 2.708 square feel of habitabh· space. A French door from
lh P livi!IR room leads loa porch
'llt c overall dinwnsions of 65' by
:37'4'' in c lude lh e garage.
Bhwprinls provide for a slan dard
Uasl'nwnt fou ndation.

He and Ouida arc rarcnt s of
th ree dau ghters who arc Ruth JenkIn\ of Rin Grande: Frances Young

of C lrlton. W . Va .. :mct Dorothy
1\ nthon y ul M1dd lcr on . Th ey ha ve
10 p&lt;.~rHlchildr c n who in c lud e

Shril;l Ruush, Michael L icv mg :md
J:nn cs Z1r l.: k, al l o f New Ha ve n,
IV . Va .: Judy Lrcv ing of Rir lcy, W .

Va.: Sue Gumm o f Hu~ s t . Tex.:
Jcnk1ns of Hutland : David
Jcnk111&lt;. Newark: Beth James of
S!C\ C

L i \'IHiitl, M1ch.; Joe Anthony, Mid dleport . :1nd fl:trh:~ra Wh ite of Fort
! . :I IH krd:d~._· Fl:1 Til ~ cnup k li:1s l .l
~1\':1 1 - L'I ; I IHLhtldr\' ll :1 11d \Wll l~,I'L~ :I l -

~IL'; I[ · ~ I-, IIH! •..: hildr ( ll.

"

.- \lihou~ h 11 ""' :1 hit c;~rl y d:ue-

\\ 1'c. ;1 l;nnil y reunion \\'41 ~ held o n
Jul y .~ :11 the home ul'th~,.~ir dau~.;htcr
,111d '0 11 -ln - l:lw, Ruth and Jay Tcnk lll"-, 1r1 l&lt;1o Cr:Jn(k with 7K f: 1mi ly
lth' lllh~,.· r . ., :mtl guC!-.IS on h;mtl fnr :1
b1~ pil· nic. ll ;Jmld and Ouid a \\'C fc
rrc,c nlc d rlurn ~_:rou" c:1nh , t: ift s
&lt;llld lluw c r s in honnr o f t"hcir

- .J -:- -" - .-:-- .

BR IO2'f'

,, .... I

. IJl&lt;..'i' lllllll!. ; Hl ll l ,·cr~ar\'.

~-lr. :11,111 ~Irs . Cha&lt;c rcs1dc at Ill

CPII:I~,·

BR 3

Dri•··· '" Mitltllcport .

&gt;nr , ,,.,.

\lr "'"' Mr&lt;. C. E. £\l" k,·slcc\C hucK ;·1rHI l);ll ."iY ltl ;1 lot ol
r_l'ltrrn cd tn th ei r Pom ero y
li n lll L' S: l lllrd :~ y :tit er spcm hn g 10
d.l\'\ Ill \-JtcllH.:;tn .
th:ll

~·tl ll

·ll11r11tg th•·' Ill d;r ys they ;n tctHI -

FAMILY
Jcnr •

·~·I'

Ulf&lt;lDII.I. C(IUitO

11011..... (

BKFST
I l 'r

I

I

wo• ~SHOP

. ... 1 , ...

I·~·

U'O" •

u ·r

I:, d lhrYc rn rni nn;-;. T he fir st w;1s in
St. Jnhn..;, ivhciL , where 1hey w~ nt
111th e (lX Ih reunion o f' Chu ck's high
q hool gr~1duatin g c lass. T hen 1t
w;lo,; to Nc whttry . Ind ., D ai sy's
IHHII l' ; 1r c~t . for 1t1 c 55 th reunion ol

'

:
GARAGE
10'11 • • •

DEN

r_ _____ ,_,

DINING

IJ 'II' I IC ' f'

••·cr • ,, ...

lYING

ORCH
--

!l'O" • ll'lr

____

PORCH
.___~--

MAIN FLOOR

,

SPI\CIOIIS fnmily nrenR allow plcnly of

TilE

stair is a return lo the
slaiiWny, allowinl(
access from both the entry or the kitchen-breakfast room .

mom for he&lt;tic . everyday
activities, witJwut anyone feeling crAmped. The den offers a quiet
retreat. Spucious stomf(e i!&gt;i importnnt in lhe mst!'lter hedroom, El~
i• lhc ..Cilllmtion of the Hhnwt•r and bath. A •llRCC nvcr the ~~~m~e
_uiTcno n jl&lt;IHHiblc fourth bcdn•mr .

a hiJ;h sc ho ol class where Ch uck
for the c l t1ss rncmhcro.; when th cv ·
w-::r C' ~cvc nth grad ers . Ahout I ()
out of 50 gr:J duatcs were on h&lt;tnd

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD JULY 10 THRU JULY 23, 1994.

voca ti ona l agri c ulture 1c ac hcrs

even though Chuck last taught 56
They a lso v i su c d

Chuck's sister in St. Jo hns. She'll
he 9~ llC.\ tlllOilth .
\l'hr lc the so ng, "Do n't Ge t
Arou nd Much Any More" might
apply to a lol of '" these davs nm
so lo r th e £llakcsl ccs They s'ecm
to he on th e move eve ry rni ntJt ~~
:tnd mnrc poi).'C r to th em.

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

24 PK 12 Ol CAN

Ol g:1 ,\ngc lclli Gauilin will he
ret urn ing to her horne in Fort Laud-

ndak. Fla . thrs wee k :&lt;ftcr h av in ~
spe nt a month in Pom eroy wrlh hc'r
S I ~·.\ C r , rv1rs. Ro . . e SISSO n . I don 't
~n ow II th ey paint ~ tl th e wwn rl· tl
d unn i,! the rL't tll iC IIl hut vo u C trl
\\; I ~Cr~ tll C' rC' WL'rl' :1 Into! :. rL'11lCIIl ·
!1c r wl 1 c n ~" tli:t t G llll l' up tlur1r1 g
thC'ir ltWn lh - !on ~ rL'tHlinn

ll

\'t lll

i;

o r :t rncmho ol

\' &lt;lUr

GROUND

Beef ••••••••••••••••••••• ~...

nex t llli.'L'tJng .ur tilt.: Mcig'i U1;~hct ·:'
Sup purl Ne twork ha s he en set for 7:
p.m . o n Tue sda y, A u g. ~- Tlh·.
topic wil l be "S kin Care and Di:~ - ­

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

hclc s" ~md th~ sess ion wrll be held

tn til e ca feteria at Vctcr:ms Memori;ll Hos pit:t l. Family members as
we ll :ts !hose having diabetes arc
more than welcome.

HOMEMADE SANDWICH

A nd here's :lll urxbtc !lll kss ic:1
C:llH ii ll . nin e-ye ar -o ld McArth tll'
~:irf w ho w;.ts seriou sly inju re d in ;1 •
nvn acc id ent n t.: ar Pom~,.·roy 011

Jul y 4t h. She was t;rkcn hy Lik ·
fli g ht to Chtl dr en 's H&lt;&gt;S I1r tal 111
Co lurnhus.
J essrc a s uffere d " I raclure d
skull . :1 t c:~ r 111 th e lun gs and a
l1rui sed li ve r '" the accid ent an d
~ndcrwen t surgery &lt;~I the hospitdl
lo r th e lun g inJu ry. She wa s·
l'\JlCC I Cd l il be r CIIIrtH' d t o h e r

hom e on Frida y a nd wll l n eed
;~ hou t lhrcc m o nlh s rec overy t ime.

So &gt;he rs ge lling along we ll anct it
could have been so much worse.

II

Full study plan informatron 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 Sell it. Ranch Homes. 24 of lhe 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
labelto: House ofthe Week. The Sunday- Times Sentinel. P.O. Box 1562.
New York . N.Y 10116-1562.

$ 29

1
$ S9
Chuck Steak ••••••••••• ~~. 1
Spread ••••••••••••••••••• !~. 99

Lun .

tl y
;1 \'iL· tl!ll ot d1 :ill:' tl'\. y1111
lll lg iH W&lt;.tllt tO make (I IIUIC th &lt;.l l tlh ' .

To Order Study Plan

II

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

lor the gcl-logcther.
The
Bl"k cs lccs visited fri end s at Cass
City. Mrch .. before hc"ding back 10
Lan so1 g for a rc unton of re tired

)&lt;..'ar . . ;tg o .

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

h;1d once wugh t. He \\'as a teac her

PEPSI PRODUCTS
AND 7 UP-OR
DIET 7 UP

$

ECKR~CH

BONELESS BEEF

s
159
Rump Roast •••••••••••••·•

Franks •••••••••••••••••• ~a•••

LB

BONELESS

(

119

Chicken Breast ••••••••~ S2

69

TYSON BBQ

Pork Rib •••••••••••••••••~~

$ 29

2

ni ·······~·····;.o;~. s119

Clip th1 s order and return label

Enclosed is $4 for plan No. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Enclosed Is $4.95 each for the booklet(s) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

NEW CRUISERS

Name _________________________________________

John Cornett, branch
manager for the Bank One
Gallipolis Office, third from
left, shakes hands with Gallia
County Commission President Kenneth Farmer after
finalizing a $55,596 loan for
four 1994 Ford Crown Victoria police cruisers purchased
through the state. The four
cars are the first new cruisers
owned by thesherifrs depart·
ment since 1978. AII other
cruisers were purchased used.
Als~ pictured are, left to right,
Ch1ef Deputy Dennis Salis·
bury, Commissioner Harold
Saunders, Commission Vice
President Harold Montgomery and Sheriff James o_
Taylor_
(Tribune photo)

Street

-------------------------------

City _ _ _- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State ( Z I P ) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

OPHTHALMOLOGY
At
Holzer Clinic of
West Virginia
in Point Pleasant
Howard Greene, M.D.

Baseball error made on
misspelled jersey
c\f~LIC:C:TO\.

Texas (i\ P) -

81uc L1ys outricldcr Juc Caner \\&lt;IS
l·la·.vl...: -;s in th e fi eld. l·l1s unifonn
wa-; lltll.
c.~~~.ncr pl:tycd s1x mn i ngs aga1n ·..;t
tiJL r l'\;h R:tngc r '&gt; With ~I Jl'r SCy
tll~l l rnr" " flcllcd l11 s t~alll nam e on

the front: "Torotno " tn .'!tc act of
·'Toron to.··
II you're ~coring at hom e, g1vc
the error to th e m ~lflu facturc r Wil -

so n Sror 11 ng Good s. whicl; rcdfaccdly lrk cned the guof 10 til e
"Steve Gravey rnci&lt;lcnl."
Th e pr ohlcm start ed when
Carter return ed fr om Tuesday 's
All -Star game . He didn 't want to
usc hi .; primilry ro:.~d uni f orm
hec:~ u se 11 st ill con laincd the AII St:tr pa!C h. So he sw itched to hr s
hitckup unrform .
Bul 1hc back up unt form booted

Bananas •••••••••••~:•••••••• 39c

Is Now Available.

'" chance. Jays employees dtseovcrcd th e miss r c ll ing before lh c
g:~ : n c . but rt was 100 late 10 do anythrn~ .
·
l.r1 th e SIXth tnn in g of Thursday ' game, Caner sw itched to the
unrtorm wn h the AII -Sw r patch,
l11n Calhoun. public affair s
tltr cc1or fur Lh c C hi cago- ba sed .
sporltng goods house, cal led 1hc
gal fc cmharmssing .
" It' s so mcth ing th a t s lipped
th rough our qualrty con1rol people,
through lhc c lul)hou sc people,
througlt Joe Ca n er. The las l lime
thrs harpcucd was whal we call 1he
'Steve Gravcy incident."'
The typo on All -S tar firs t basem;tn Steve Ga r vey's uniform
occurred so metim e in . the mid-

19XIl\. Calhoun sa rd .

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF
SOUTHEAST OHIO
Confidential Family Planning Services for females &amp; males
• Medical exams
• Pap tests
• Pregnancy t~ts &amp; counseling
• Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
• Anonymous IDV tests &amp; counseling
• Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
Norplant-lmplant
DepoProvera'lnjectlon
Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee scale
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance
414 Second Street
Gallipolis
446-0166

509 S. Third Street
Middleport
99l·S~ll

OPHTHALMOLOGY (of'thal·mol'o·je): The sum of
knowledge concerning the eye and its diseases.
Holzer Clinic of West Virginia now offers
OPHTHALMOLOGY services from 9:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m~ on Tuesdays and from 1:30 p.m. to
4:00 p.m. on Fridays. To schedule an appointment
with Dr. Greene, call Holzer Clinic of
West Virginia at 675·4498.
HOLZER CLINIC OF
WEST VIRGINIA

2605 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

675·4498

VALLEY BELL

2% Milk •••••••••••••• ~!~..

$ 89

1
9(
C1trus Punch •••••••!!:o... 9
SU~NY DELIGHT

89(
Peaches ••••••••••••••••••••
19(
Salt •••••••••••••••••••••••••••

DEL MONTE

KEMPS

Ice Cream ••••••••• !:'•~a:••••

29 oz.

$299

s1
oo
Burrito's ••••••• :.o!.•• 4

26oz.

••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••
I
• ----COUPON- • - •• -·,I 1 ----·--··----·----·--1
I•
COUPON -------.
'
COUPON
~.---.--COUPON.-

I

1

I

1 I I
I :

---~I I~--

:!
I

It

I

liTTLE RAINBOW

1601.

s;sl oo:: : - 5/ 1° :!
:: : :7'!. oz.
1

1
'I I

I

I

5 0

\,:1

I

lo
tl I
I
1

CLOROX

NORTHERN

BLEACH

:: ::

BATH TISSUE

GAL.

79(

~: : .:
I

Good Only At Powtlt'e Super Vatu
Good o 1 AI p ell'1 s
"1
OllerGoodJuly171hruJuty23,1994 ,1 ',
ny
aw
upervau
' 1
1
Umh 1 Per Customer
II
oner Good
16 thru July 23,1994
1'---- _l::!f!!h_1!!r~!!S!.CI!!'!!-.--- ~I I '- -- --- ----- ----- -- -- 1•- ----- ...

I 1 Good Only AI Powatl'a Super vatu
1 t Oller Good July 171hru July 23,1994

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

1
1
I

••••••• •••• • ••• •••

I

'I I,
:I I I

tl I'
:I I:

:1
GOLDEN WHEAT
:: SPORTS DRINKS :: :: MAC AND CHEESE :: ::
::

s

10 LB

90

PATIO

MORTON

~-------·

GROUND
BEEF

I

I r

'I I
'

I
I

12 ROLL

$249

'I

I

,I

'I
I
,I
'I
I
,I
'I
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,I
1

Good Only AI Powell 's Super vatu
Offer Good July 16 lhru July 23, 1994

1

I

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rl
II
I '· _ • __ !J!!'i!l_ ~e! &lt;!U.!t!!"leL _ • __ ~I

..
• ••••••••••••••
• •••

CHICKEN LEG
QUARTERS
10 LB.

s

90

�Entertainment

July 17, 1994

People in the news
DOWNERS GROVE, Ill. (AP) One week after emergency quad ruple bypass surgery , Gov. J 1m
Edgar left the hospital and headed
for the cap• tal to recuperate at the
governor's mans1on.
The 47-year-old Edgar uaveled to Spnngficld by helicopter
from Good Samaritan Hospital in
thi s Chicago suburb.
He was expected to spend
several weeks recuperdting at home.
The Republican is up re-election m November.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)
- The bridge stam ng w1t11 Clmt
Eastwood in ''The Bridges of
Jim Edgar
Madison County" 1s an unpostor.
To save money, filmmakers
.
.
selected an uncovered bridge for
the _mov1e versiOn of Robert Waller' s best-selling novel, a modern-day
bodice-npper set am1d the Iowa county's si' covered bndges.
Wood panels will be used to cover the bndge and still leave enough light
to film.
"They would have had to remove some s1ding to get some Iightm there,"
said Brian Morrissey, Madison County engineer.
Two of the county's covered bridges may be used for filmmg short
scenes.
Shooting is e•pccted to begin th1s fall.
•
Eastwood will play Robert Kincaid. a National Geographic photographer who has a torrid affair with a farm w1fe wh1le on ass1gnment takmg
pictures of the bridges. His leading lady hasn't been named.
WEST UNIVERSITY PLACE, Texas (AP) - A drunken dnvmg
charge against Houston Rockets coach Rudy Tom Janovich was dropped
Friday for lack of evidence, but he could still lose h1s license.
Tomjanovich refused a si&gt;briety test after bemg pulled over m this
Houston suburb Wednesday. Police said he was speeding and weaving
across the center hne.
"We reviewed the videotape of the dnvmg and the tape made at the
station and based on tha~ it's the opinion of all mvolved tlmt the proper
disposition of this is that it be dismissed," prosecutor Lynn McClellan said.
Te•as drivers can have their licenses suspended for not tak.ing a breathalcohol test That issue will be decided later, sa1d TomJ3nOv1ch's lawyer,
Rusty Hardin.

NEW YORK (AP) - Jamie Lee Curtis wants to be a s•ster - not a
sc.,pot.
The actress told W magazine that has she left behind her d1shy days and
hopes women now fmd her approachable.
"The last thing I want is for women to feel threatened by me, or think
that I'm this alleged sexpot - that's such a dumb word," Curlls sa1d 10 the
August issue. "And that 's not who I .-----------~
am. I want women to recowuze that
I'm a sister 10 thestruggleonliTe. I feel
as yucky at Urnes as everybody else."
There's lots in Hollywood that
the daughter of Tony Curt1s and Janet
Lc1gh doesn' 1like.
"I just hate when you walk into
a party in this town and you gel tlle
•dca that there's not one real thing on
any of these women," Curtis said.
"That not only scares me, 1t makes
me sad . That's why I think at a
certain point it 's good to get out of
this business.
"I see these faded stars who
JUSt become caricatures of tllemselves. If they had red ha11 before,
now they have really ned hair. Their
lips are lined to hccccrc and their
eyes! It's scary!"
Jamie Lee Curtis
LOS ANGELES (AP)
When you've had a brush with greamess, it's hard to start over. But Brenda
HoUoway is trying.
She has fond memories of p1llow fights with Ringo Starr and luxuries
such as apnvate chef when she opened for the Beatles on their first U.S . tour
three decades ago.
Despite her hits "Every Little Bit Huns" and "When I'm Gone," she
dropped out of show business in I969, when she felt she wasn't as popular
as she wanted to be and was fnghtcned by an addiction to prescription drugs.
Now, Holloway IS prepanng for an oldies show Sunday at Steven's
Steak House m Commerce.
"I know I'm on a totally different level now," Holloway, 48, srud in a
~ recent interview. "I may be crazy, but I've got to uy it."
She said she intends to do more oldies appearances, work on a gospel
album w1th Bobby Womack and try for a record deal .
It' s a far cry from opening for the Fab Four.
"Qnce you've done all that, 11 never gets out of your system," she Said.

--------------Concerts------------MEAT LOAF
Meal Loaf wi ll perform 7:30
p.m. Jul y 20 at th e Charl es to n
Civ1c Center.
TICkets can be purchased at 'the
Civ1c Ccmcr box office and dl all
T1ckc1Mastcr locauons or by phone
m Charleston at (304)342-5757 or
Hunun gton :11 (3 (~) 523-57 57
ELTO N .JOHN
BILLY JOEL
Billy Joel an Elton John wil l

Jl&lt;'rlorm at the Oh1 o Stadium 7:30
p.m Aug. 6.
TICkets arc available at all T•ckctMas ter loca ti ons or cha rge by
phon e at 43 1-3600 in Columbus.
·1here w1 11 be limit of eight tickets
rcr tra nsac 11on
GRATEFUL DEAD
The Gratefu l Dead with spec ial
gues t Traffic will perform 6 p.m.
July 29 at Buckeye Lake Mus•c
Center. Tickets can be purchased at
all T1cketMaster locations or

charged by phone ;11
or (304)523-5757.

(31~)34 2 -5757

HANK WILLIAMS JR.
Hank W1ll1ams Jr. w1ll perform
at Paramount Kings Island's T•mberwolf amphitheatre Ju ly 20 at 7
p.m. Tickets arc available for the
park and co ncer t by ca lling
(S 13)573-5700.
BLUES FEST
A blues fest with B.B. King,

L1ttl e and Dr. John w•ll be at
Para mount Kmgs Island s Timberwo lf amphitl1catre Aug. 15 5 p.m.
Tickets arc available for the park
&lt;1 nd concert by callm g (5 13)5735700.
MARTY STUART
NEAL MCCOY
Marty Stuart and Nea l McCoy
will perfarm at Ponderosa Park 2
p.m. July 24. Tickets may be
obtained by calling (216)747-121 2.

Are Earth, Wind and Fire on the missing persons list?
By DAVID llAUDER
Associated l'ress Writer
ALBANY , N.Y . (A P) - Is it
possible for a band that sold more
than 40 m•llion records to essentiall y disappear? Philip Bailey •s
lcammg the answer is "yes. "
The smgcr still makes albums
and performs with Earth, Wind and
Fire the horn -dn ven collccuvc that
has ~omchow managed to miss out
on the current mu sica l obsessiOn
w1th everythmg from the 1970s.
Nearly tw o decades removed
from such hits as "S hining Star,"
"After th e Love Is Gone" and
"Fantasy," Earth, Wind and Fnc
has reformed and is making mu ~ i c
again . The band ha s made three
albums since the late 1980s.
Th•s um e, few peo pl e hav e
noticed. Many are a little mysD f1 cd
about why radio slalions don't play
the band's songs anymore, but B;u lcy offers a rcw msighLs
"That's a part of the recoil!
10dustry and a pan or li fe," 1hc 43 yca r-o ld hi gh-oc tave &gt;~nger s:ud
" People don't rea liZe that there "a

lot more reJCCIIon than th ere IS
acceptance 10 th e record mdu stry ,
the mov1c industry and ,,II of entertainment.

"You have to deal w1 th that as
well as you deal with suc cess. Fortunate! y, we had a lot of success."
And fortunately for Bailey, he
ha s diversified. Bailey, whos e
"Eas y Lover" duet w1th Phil
Collins established his solo career,
alterna tes rhythm 'n' blues and
gospel albums . He performs so lo
shows on tour packages and wnh
1hc band.
Bailey, also a percuss ionist, has
worked on severa l jazz projects as
well.
HIS new so lo album features
perfo rmances by Prince Be of P.M.
Dawn and Nadnah Ali of Arrested
Deve lopment. The fat her of four
Children aged 13 to 23 hkcncd it to
workmg w1th his kids.
"I like their sense of melody,"
sa id Bailey, who admits he's not
much of a rap fan. " I like the fact
Ihal tllcy 'rc not so enraptured with
an R 'n' B overtone. The)' have a

cc rt :11n univer sa lity ,lbo~hcir
mu sic that's like me as well." \
Bm lcy, who IS writing songs for
hi s nex t gospe l albu m when he
isn' t performing and promoting the
new album, doesn't consider the
pace ex hausting
Earth , Wmd and F11c records a
new album about once every three
years. That would give him a "lot of
fr ee tunc if he didn't have the otllcr
projects, Bailey said.
"W h&lt;~t else would I be doing if I
wasn' t working - sit around and
go fi shing?" he asked. "I don ' t
golf."
The solo work also gives him
the luxury of experimenting, an
opportumty limited in Earth, Wind
and Fire because the band doesn't
sll ay too far from a signature
sound . Bailey opens many of his
so lo shows with a version of th e
Bcalles' "Come Together," and
tncs to inco rporate several musi cal
styles
Ea nh , W1nd anti F11c to ur ed
Lipan ror

LWO

wee ks earlier

Lh! s

Sports

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B8

In box reporting
there's truth.· .. and lies
1\y JOHN IIORN
AP Enlertamment Wnter
\h, llk . ., \lf C h1 c. 1~ D bal lo t stufltnJ..; ,

ho x t;lftce rC[lOrt tng h ~s

''T he L1011 K1ng'' l1 g\trcs
llllp C':ldl ~lhlc. too.
""'

~lfl'

In a spcual "sneak prcv J C\~· on

July 9 and 10, DISn ey ' howell ll s

\V Ili C il 1110 \I I C grO\\CS arL: SO II IC·

ll C'\\ movtc "Angels tn th e O ut i•cltl " '"some 1 .~00 thcatc1 loca -

11111CS
11 011

an

Jldddcd to

h~·.tl

th e l Olllj)C II-

Juollllg

tions where " The L111n K1ng" was
pla y•n g Anybody who honght a

around w1th lhcm." one top mov1c

ttCki..'l fo r "A ill!Cis" was COU rllCd

•

"We Jll know

lh ~y' rc

ex h1bll o r, " JlC\t~ lfl b un l (llld :ttl. lll PI

Jnun ymtl y,

~~~~d o l

" But how :.Jrc yu u

t·hc s tudto ::;.

!;O lll g

to pruvc

1\ ) "

Con sider wll •ll llappeucd fo1 lllc
weekend of July X- 10, when a Ill)''·
tcr~ou s $34,000 diSc o vered by
Param o unt P1 c tu rcs .11 th e l ast

m1nut c. helped " Fo rres t Gump"
edge ou t "The L1on K1ng" as 1he
nauon' s No. I film .
On that Sunday, D1sncy reported an cslllnated S23 million weekend gross for " Th e Lion K1ng."
Paramoum s;ud "Forrest Gump"
made S24 mi llion in 1Ls first three
days .
On Monday. Paramount reponed to the mcdJJ that final fi gures
showed "Forres t G ump" ea rned
S24.415 m•IIJO n. A lew moments
late r. Di sney s:ud "The Lion
K1ng" brought m 524.425 million
to fini sh f1rst - JUSt S10,000 more
than "Gump."
Paramount quickly said it had
fad ed to count Ihea ters in San Francisco and New York that took in a
eombmcd $34 ,000: The rea l "Forrest Gump " gross was now $24.45
million.
Barry London, Paramount 's distnbut •on ch1cf, sa1d th at while
grosses in vo l ve some g uess work,
th e "G urnp " proceeds wcr~ truth ·

Jul.
" We were accur;.Jt c to th e be st
nl our kn o wledge at th :.H 1imc, · ' he

s;11d "We report the numhc ro; as
we gct tl1 cm."
Uut a perso n c lo ~e to " Forrest
Gurnp" ;Jcknowlcdgcd 111 ,\11 intcrV J8W th ~1t the film 's gross was dt shoncs l The 1wo "miSsmg" the'lle rs, sa 1d the person , who also
spoke on cond •llon h1s name not be
used, were located "at Melrose and
Gower" - th e location of th e
P;.~ramount

st ud to.

The "F01 rest Gump" numbers
prompted an unusual rebuk e from
Da ll y Var ie ty box-of!J cc anal yst
Leonard K latly, who wrote:
"The seesaw reponing IS jcop;.m llzmg fauh in the accuracy ol th e

Trey Anastasio added, "The su m - Lappd , bluegrass, fus1on and ci&lt;ISSI·
mer is bcautiJ'ul in Vermont, where cal mu sic can be heard in Phish's
we all live. We get to sw im ami mu s1c. The New York Times added
frol1 c."
" bad Jazz " to 1hc liSt after the gig
But success made the swim -and- here.
froliC pl an wa ler under the br~d gc.
Under the headline "Phun, not
Ph1sh so ld out all three Arril nighLs Phunky," Ncw sday called the
,\!the Beacon Theater here- more sho w " Less funky but a lot more
than 8,500 ticket s - in 35 minutes. fun than Blues Traveler or the Spm
So th e tour contmues throu gh th e Doctors - Ph1sh' s con freres in
su mm er. until August when Anas - fr ee- form , nco-hippie improvisatolas•o becomes t11e first of the quar- ry rock ." The New Yorker
lct to marry. They'll Sl&lt;lll to urmg d csc r~bc d "a strange coll ection of
again in September, post- honey - 1hc so lemn and the sill y, of earnest
moon .
""'"c•ansh1p and " so rt of hiJlJliC
Mc Connell, 30, Anastasio, 29, abandon ."
and drummer Jon F•shman, 28, arc
AnaslaSIO dcsmbcs tile music's
graduates of Goddard Co llege in m1.' as ''East Coast rockasucy.''
Plamf•eld, Vt., which didn 't offer a
He recalls tlle beginnmgs, "We
major in music. AnastaSIO stud1ed got togclher and started having a
with a composer; Fishman perused IHtlc fun playing 1ogcthcr. The nex t
how- to- dr um book s; McConnell thin g you know we were offered
rlaycd Jazz. Bassist Mike Gordon, $200 to play a ROTC dance . We
2R, s1ud1cd film at the University of had to come up with a song li st in
Vermont. He direc ted PIHSh's first about a week tllat was big enough
video, "Down wi d1 DISease," thi s to do a Christmas formal dance. •'
year.
McConnell says they learned
The song is on the band's fifth so ng s from thinking-men's rock
album , " Hoi st," all avm lablc on gro ups instead of 1983 's latest hit.
Elcktra. But Phish, hke the Grate'"Thriller' (by Michael Jackson)
rul Dead, sells more concert tickets had co me out. That's what they
than rccordmgs and it doesn't wish
wanted . We're playmg Billy Joel.
to become a video-driven band . They didn't like us one bit. They
Some consider Phi sh th e natural
turned the stereo up louder than tllc
successor to the Rrizzlcd veterans band. We got to leave ea rly. But
of the Gmtcful Dead if that band we got paid."
ever stops performmg li ve. Many
Anastasio says, " A year ago a
Phi sh-Heads wear hippi e garb and, fncnd of mine sent me a picture of
l1kc the Dead-Heads they resemble, 11. I framed it. There we arc in tllc
loyally troll along on tours from corner, hockey sticks holding the
town to town .
microphones up. Us in our nannel
Jnnucnces of the Dead . Frank shirts . We angered the ROTC , pea-

:lllCIICillig 'Til e I 10n K1n g" eve n though th ey ma y ha ve !cit
before S11nba's f11st song.
Th e hox -oll•cc ch,nts arc l'ca -

:1\

turl'd n:ttHlll \\J tk by tcle'' IS JOn :md
fdlitO Sl .JIHlll S and m;tlly fll' \\ " Jl~l4
r~rs.

Stud 1os look upon fav or"blc
hnx-o!!Jc~

ston es ~1s fr ee :1&lt;hcrt 1s·
111g A. !Ck \ ISIOn StfH IOr1 I \ !lkl' IV 1\J

show a cl1p lrom th e f1r .st -pfacc
111m , and some mov tcgocrs ass ume
1ha1 If H fil m IS flOpul:ir II mu st he
good.
Box -off1 ce numbers repo n ed
Sunda y morning arc ba se d on "
polling of tiiOUSands of th edtCrs by'
the Independent sc rv•cc Enreru mmcn l Data In c. The ED I sur ve y
COVCIS about 70 ]lCICC nl of Ihe
nat1 o n' s th cmc rs, and o bviO usl y

docs not mcludc Su nday afte111oon
ancl cvcn mg showmgs. The mov1c

studios, m" 1ng mathematical for mula s w1th naked gue sswo rk ,
cx trarol3tc from the EDI figures to
nrnvc at~~ number.
The f1 gu rcs reponed about noon
Monday arc more acc urate as more

theaters ha ve been surveyed, but
there's still room lo r fudging . One
Independe nt f1lm company 1s notonous for wall ing until all the other
studios report film grosses Monda y
before submitting 1ts fi gures.
Those "fmal" f•gurcs are then
compi led by Ex hibi to r Rela tio ns
Co. Inc., which supplies them to
subscribing news o r gan Jza tJ o ns,

1ncludm g Tile Associated Press.
ED I' s Phil G:~rf•nkl c sa1d some
room for c11ur ami n1an ip ulati on
cxJscs, but the system "IS probably
more accura te than any reportm g
sys tem on an y consum er product
out 1hcrc."
In th e 1.11cs1 potentia l tiiS]lUl l'
over hox-oiT•cc IJ ~u rcs, 20th Ce ntur y Fox op~c n c d Arnold
Schwar;cncggn' s ... 1rue L1e s" on
Thursli"Y· IIIS tcacl of tile ong•nall y
announced Fr~da y elate.
The early debut gives the film a
on e- da y jump start over '.'Forrest
Gu mp."

Grades 6-12, Jllly 18-20
llorrta &amp; Dorothy Haaklna
Mol "-11'1 421ZIICI. Avo. Olllllpolll. Oh

Call 446·1115

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Barry

homa. ' '

· Sw itzer, known for his pep lalks
at Oklahoma, gave the Cowboys
one of his srecial motivational
speec hes.
"I challenged them," Switzer
sa•d. "l told them it was their work
ethiC that scp.aratcd this team from
the rest or the NFL . It was their
pride that made tllem different.''
Wide receiver Alvin Harner said

TO PERFORM • Singef'7Songwriter Arlo Guthrie will perform
t_he Paramount Art Center as part of I he Troubadour Concert
Senes _R ~- m . July 22. Gu~hrie , sun of legend:~ry folk sin~er Woody
Guth,~•e .•s famous for h1s h1t record and movie "Alice's Restaura~t. T1ckets can be ordered at lhe Paramount Art Center 131111
Wmchesler, Ashland Ky. by calling (606)324-3175.

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT. SUN.
JACK NICHOLSON,
MICHELLE PFEIFFER
IN

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.
WOODY HARRELSON,
KIEFER SUTHERLAND IN

THE COWBOY WAY PG-13

WOLF R

no player is motivated an'y more
than Sw1tzer.
" He watched our ring ceremony
and said he wanted to be a part of it
some day," Harper said. "He said
every body was qu estioning hi s
coachin g ability and he wants to
rro vc them wrong.
" He wants to be ran of hi story

IN
MAVERICK

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
AD..SSION $2.00

PG

446-1088

~3

t)( l dl!!'~

'"'" ...

'PRIMTOBEAWW

THILION KING I~ ATRIUMI'H'

""'" ""' ~' '"'""""'

BLOWN
AWAY
,

LION'IGJ"'KING

1:00 l :JO

1:10, J:OO

... ' ' 0

• ~.~. · • " "

...

7:10,9:00 DAILY
IIATINEIS SAT &amp; SUW

IPC- 111
7 :20,9:20 DAILY
IUI.TlNDS So\'1' &amp; SUN

1:20 1:20

lftiY'S DRY OUT
IUI.T llfCBS SATVJIDAY/SUIIDAY OfiiLY 1 :1 0 IPCI

SP£ED • ""'" • -·· .,.,.,

7; 10 ,9110 DAILY NAT. SAT/SUH.J,)O 1 PGI

STARTS WBDNISDAY, JULY 19th
'!'OIIft' LJII'! JOIIBS "'1'111 CLIBII'r"

QIFT CERl1FICATE8 AVAILABLE!

,1Joc111n the nlld ·(J(ls

The weath er

IS

supposed to he

gDml.

"]l's h;uci 10 rrcd JCl wh,Jt wil l

\\ U il lh ~ ~1~ 1 ) [\.'r ~ Ill

ll)XO ,tnd ih l'
l ' S Open '" 1 0 R~ "TillS \\Uultl
b . : .l rlot lw r lh l t Lh Jl\ 1hc L:t Jn ll.tn't

ll·l l ~o u tww Jlllrcd1hll ~r h .,ll \~!ltild

!J-: .. '

Gn !Jkc, Zoc ll ll, Watso11 anti

lu ppc n tom or row," F,1xo n satd

Pn cc , the 12 )l'llf·old F~t xon never

ahout th e f rnal roun d " I do n 't
thm k Jnyonl: can prl'liiCtthc wr,lt h·
cr .trounc! here.''
Pr1:.:c, the Jl)!)::! PG,\ c hamph)!l,

ILl \ con tL'mh.x l go1n g 1111o t he l1n:.U
rou nd o r a maJor ckml rH onsh l[l
" I ' m JU~I honored lObe w rth
th e m,·' he s~11d .
l \\ o strokes h~..·h md tile lc~1dc:rs
\'&gt;.IS Dav1d h .: IJcrt y ul Northcm lrcl.uld at 2113. ~l:irk James of Eng -

lonkccl 'l t th e lcadcrhoartl and sc i
t!Jc \l,lgc for Su nda y's siHlO IOIIl ,
\\h1c h has 19 p l ayers w llllln

f1\l'

qrokcs or lh e Icat!
·' The re IS too nuJC h cxpc n cn&lt;.\:

on 1hat leatlc rh oard,' · he sa1tl
" Fu17.y Zoe ll er and Tom Watson
,~rc bo th p lay~n g grea t and they
hot.h w:mt 1t.

,,

"But so clo I ..
It wou ld be ,1 very speCia l VJllO ·
ry fo r bo1h Wa LSon an d Zoe ller.
Fo r lhc 44-year-o ld Wm son, 11
would be hiS rcco rd-ty n1 g SIXI h
13riush Open championship, and 11
wou ld end talk that he can 't w1n
anymore, g1v1 ng him h1 s fma VICto -

ry :myv. hcrc sin ce 1987.
For the 42 -ycar-old Zoeller. who
ha s no t won Since 1986, it would
gJVC him victori eS in three Of the
lour maJ Or champ•onsh1ps, a feat
accomplished by only c1ght 01hcr
rlaycrs. mcl udm g Watson.
" It 's every go lfer's drea m 111
ha ve all fou r," said Zoeller, who

l;md was at 205
Eleven go it ers were al 206
111Ciut11n g Larry M11.c, To m K1tc'
Cr,ug Slad lcr, Lo ve and Lore~
Roberts.
Four pLl)' l' l ~ "'l~ l c at 207. s1x
strok es bc tH nd , lll i. ' ludmg Ue!cndm~·
c h.un p 1Uil Cirl'g Notni.Hl u ! ,\us~

lr&lt;lha , v. ho doublc -hn):cyc&lt;il'o. 1(1 ,
ant! U.S. Open cham IliOn [nue Els,
v. ho shot fl9 , In '\ :-.C\'l'nth con ...~c u­
t l\C sub-7 0 round 111 lh l~ Hrtll sh

Ope n.
\\':1lSOil W,l.'i

tilr.. : clear

ld\ Ofl\ C

of

til e crm&lt; d ,Jilt! was Cdm cd to the
111,1 tee by a lon g. chccn ng, slwut lll,L: w l11 ~t l1n g uv~lli O il punctua te d

w1th cncs of "Go ge t 'cu1, Tom,"
"Good luck, Tom," and "A ll tile
wJy, m,Jn ." Only ocC:1sional ly w:.~

.1n Amcn ta n ac cen t heard am ong

the Sco ttiSh bu1rs that earned the
shout s.

w hen we w1n Lhrcc rin gs in a row ."

Among tho se who ha s questiOned Sw itzer' s ability is John son,
who dcrartert after one too man y
di sputes with owner Jerry Jones.
Sw it ze r ha s gotten so me return
shots in at hi s one-time fri end and
colleague, who will be takmg a hiatus from coaching for a year as an
analyst with Fox Television.
A sweat-soaked Switzer was at
least as active as Johnson, on the
St. Edward's University practice
fie ld bright and early when the
kicking specialists took the field.
He stretched h1 s ham strings like
he was a player. The 57-yea r-o ld
Sw1tzc r conslantly wired away the
swem from his face as he refu sed to
wear a hal.
'' M y eyes were burning and

cloud mg up ," Swi(ZCr s:lJ&lt;i. " It
was the Coppertonc I guess.·'
Sw ll z.c r was :~ppr cn hcnSivc
about h1s rcccpuon m a to wn th at
loves tllc Texas Longhorns, one of
1hc Sooners' biggest riva ls.
" l1hought we had a great reception ," Switzer said .
There was only one untoward
moment. A fan spotted Mississippi
Slate coach Jackie Sherrill on the
sidelines. Shemll was d1sliked in
Au stin when he coached at Texas
A&amp;M .
" It 's bad enough having to put
up with Sw iller," shouted d1c fan .
"Ge t out of here, Sherrill. Get off
the Sidelines"
An anti -Sw it ze r ba nn e r was

taken dow n by security guard s.
Wtulc ove r 20 m•ni -c&lt;un s followed Sw iller's every move, Jones
swycd away unul the last few mmutcs o( the mornmg prrtCLicc, IcUing
Sw1tzcr take center stage.

Sw1tz. cr exc han ged ple;1santrics
Wllh Texas Gov. Ann R1chards .
then got back into the thick of the
pracucc, which included a brief
scr immage.

By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
NEW YORK - Most free
agents in the NFL have taken the
money and run. Bart Oates left the
money and took the starting job
instead.
As the deadline passed Friday
for free agents to UJOVC from tlleir
old teams to new ones, the 36-ycarold center, a two-time Pro Bowler,
JUmped from the New York Giants
to the San Francisco 49ers. He took

$100,000 a year less from the Nin ers knowing that he'd start there
but be a backup with the Giants.
"If it were a perfect world, I
wouldn't be going out there," said
Oates, who signed a three -year deal
worth $1.8 million with San Francisco, which moved Jesse Sapolu to
guard to make room for him.
"It basically bo1ls down to have
the opportunity to be a starter out
there. I had a great run here (with
the Giants). Now I hope to go out

th ere and help th em win a Super

PROFESSIONAL DEBUT - New Dallas
Cowboys head football coach !larry Switzer
gives a speech to players berore the team's lirst
practice during training camp Saturday in

Oates' move was one of several
by veterans ' as the deadlin e
approached, including two by
members of the 49ers' Super Bowl
team s - guard Guy Mcintyre to
Green Bay and fullback Tom Rath·
man to the Los Angeles Raiders.
Mcintyre' s departure opened up the
spot on San Franci sco 's offensive
line that Oates w1ll fill.

Rustin, Texas. Five years removed from football,
former Oklaho'!la coach m:1de his profesSIOnal debut by takmg charge ol' the two-time
Supe&lt; Bowl champions. (AP)
t~e

Netherlands remain
alive in Davis Cup series
ROTT ERDAM, Netherland s

Howl.' '

AND
MEL GIBSON, JODIE FOSTER

Lomorrow,' ' so undmg like a man

'' ho tilt! nut wam to make U1c num -

ber ol blrlhe putts 11 would take 10

CART, said Herta did not sustam any other
apparent injuries.
The accident apparently occurred after Herta's
speeding Lola came upon a slow -movi ng safety
vehicle on the tight L7H-milc temporary circuit.
The safety truck apparently was headin~ hack to
its station after helping a stalled car off course.
Herta, who drives for AJ. Foyt, is 17th in lhc
season standings.

Oates takes pay cut, changes
teams to keep starting position
~t

TURNBERR Y, Scotland (AP)
- Funy Zoe ll er has a dream, Tom
Wa1 son has a WISh and Brad Faxon
was JUS t lwppy to be there as a Lno
of Ame11 cans top ped a Jamn1 ed
leadcrboard hcad•n g into Sunday's
hnal round of t11e Bnush Open.
Pla yin g under bril liant sun am1
111 gentle breeze s, th e players had
the ir way with the Ailsa Cour,e at
Turnberry Saturday, the 81 players
averagi ng 69.39 over Ihe par-70
layout.
Zoeller missed the course record
by one SLrokc with a 64 and was
lice! for th e lead w1th Faxon at 9undcr-par 20 1. Faxon shot a 67.
Watson, who struggled with l11s
dri ver and was revi sited by hi s
pulling prob lems, was one Slrokc
hack after a 69 that put him at 202,
along wllh Nick Price, Jcspc r
Parncvik of Sweden and Ronan
Rafferty of Northern Ireland .
" If we have good wea ther l1kc
tlus tomorrow Sunday), it JS gmng
to be a shootout,'' Price sa id after a
67. "If it' s like thi s, I'm goin g to
need 65."
Watson agreed.
"Witll weather like th1 s, 11 wi ll
take somcthmg m tllc mid-60s," he
sa1d.
Then lowc nng hi s voi ce m a
mock whispe r. he added: " I wi sh
the wind would blow about 40 mph

Switzer challenges Dallas
Cowboys to 'do it again'

ul'm excited, it 's hkc I'm a kid

Ariel Players preseat
Neil Slmoa's

Theatre Workshop

TORONTO (AP)- Race car dri ver Jlr ya n
Herta suffered a pressure fracture to his right
femur Saturday in a crash on lhe main straightaway during practice for the Toronto Molsonlndy.
,
The 24-year-old rookie from Dublin, Ohio, was
transported by ambulance to St. Michael's Hospital and was expected to undergo surgery to repair
the fracture.
Dr. Steve Olvey, director or medical affairs ror

again," Switzer said. "I'm pumped
up like it was my first day at Okla-

7:00,9:10 DAILY
IIATIRJ:KS SAT I SUN

July 29 &amp; 30, I p.m.

BRAD FAXON

Herta injured in Saturday crash

F1vc years removed from foot ·
ball, the former Oklahoma coach
made h1s professional debut on Saturday by k1kmg charge m the 1wolimc NFL champion Dal las Cowboys trmning camp .
On his first day as boss of the
Super Bowl champions m place ol
Jimmy Johnson, Switzer challenged the tcatn to do it again and
take him with them.
He did it in typica l Switzerstyle , emotionally waving his
hands around and getting into the
face of some of the players.

..

"THE ODD COUPLEn

fUZZY ZOELLER

Sw 1Vc r was a rook.ic agam.

year. But the band h;bn' t do ne an y
showS· Ill 1he UnJLed Sta tes, largely
because It s recent albums have
nopped.
That's largely beca use leader
Maurice Whi le wants a big show,
Ba1lcy sa•d.
The "Encyclopedia of Pop,
Rock and Soul" desc ri be d the
opening of one vintage Earth, Wind
and Fire show from th e 1970s:
" Rockets shoot on WI Ul a shower
of orange-ye llow sparks and den se
smoke. Two f1gu rcs in ancient
Egyptian ga rb stand poised with
huge mall ets before large dull-gold
gongs Nine !&lt;i ll gle;~mmg cylmders
malcnali ze lrom above and slowl y
descen d. As th ey nca r the noor ,
li ghts go on msidc rcve;dmg nine
stOI C f1 gures m llow1ng scarlet
ro bes. The cylinders touch down,
th e gongs sound, and the nin e
doors open, and the f1 gurcs move
forward sedately - and suddenly
cruptm a dcrvish-hkc dance."
It' s tough to pu1 on such extravagant shows unless you're se lling
oul arenas.

pic m tuxes and gowns.
"At that moment we realized ,
'This is the life; there's a future in
this,"' McConnell says, deadpan.
"Y es, that was when we
knew." Anastasio agrees. "It was
back to the garage at that point."
In hi gh school, Anastasio had
wri11 en mu sic to fellow student
Tom Marshall's lyrics. They 'd lost
touch but found each other agmo
and re sumed collaboration, for
Ph ISh songs. " He sends me batches
of poetry in the mail ," AnastasiO
says. "I'll weave through til l I find
something that catches my eye. We
call each other on the phone and
ball! around."
Marshall never joined the school
of Ph ish. He swam another wa y.
Anastasio says, "He's a computer"
programm er now. He 's married,
lives in New Jersey and has a new
bahy."

Zoeller, Faxon share
first place after three
rounds in British Open

'&gt; Ill

l ll l ri C \I t.' g_; Hll ~ Ill

ll!lll t.:: d IIIlO

Sec-tion C
July 17, 1994

I

diD\ "

W1th

LOS ANGlTES (API -

i l11 ll ywood

by Jh.L

!l),!llfl'-. hclllg f l' lc. J, Cd

Phish makes a bigger and bigger splash 1n music
EDITOR'S NOTE - The
ruck group Phish isn't as well
known as, say, rhe Grateful
Dead, but each has loyal fans, in
tie-dye and jeans, who follow the
group around . And Phish, which
sold nul three New York concerts
in 35 minutes, is making a bigger
and big~er splash.
Jly MARY CA MPilELL
AP Ncwsl'eatures Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Ph1sh IS a
rock quartet whose members may
not hav e majored 111 spelling but
who chose a name th ai' s bait for
he&lt;~dhnc writers. Ph1sh IS jumpmg.
Going w1th the fl ow . Making a
splash. Gilding into Lhc , mam strcam . Sw1 mming into a b•ggcr
pood.
It s fan s, of cou rse , arc Ph •shHeads . It s co mputer network.
where Ph•sh - Hc;~ds hook in to tell
and catch some big Ph1 sh stories, is
the Phish-Nct.
It calls 1ts s!Jtisucs- fe w
bands can rcco um suc h details Phish Phacts.
Phish played 107 concert s in
)993 sold 311 ,807 ti ckets at $18
each and reeled in $5,612.562. This
year Phish expects to do twice
that. it started as a bar band inVermont a decade ago.
The band toured this spring so it
could take the summer off. Keyboardist
Page
McConn ell
explained. "Everybody tours 1n
summer. It makes 1t eas1cr fo~ managers and bookmg agents 1f you
don't have to compete." Lea d
vocali st, guitarist and songwntcr

ihnts-iennntl

(AP)- The United States couldn't

knock the Netherlands out of the
Davis Cup on Saturday. However,
heavy hillers Pete Sampras and Jnn
Courier will have another chance to
del•ver the knockout blow.
The Dutch stayed alive in the
quarterfinal s by winning the doubles match. Jacco Eltingh and Paul
Haarhuis defeated Richey
Reneberg and Jared Palmer in five
sets to cut the U.S. lead to 2-1 in

the best-of-5 match comrelitJon.
The Dutch pa11, last year' s
world champions in doubles, prevailed 2-6,7-6 (8-6), 6-3,6-7 (2-7),
6-2 1n a 3 1(2-hour marathon on a
hard court ncar the Rotterdam
docks .
"I tllink Jacco and Paul's extra
experience playing together wa s a
b•g fac tor," sa1d US . ca ptain Tom
Gullikson.
Dcsp1tc the loss, the Americans
can advance to the se mifinal s by

wmnin g one or Sunda y's two sin gles mat c hes - Sa mpras vs.
R1chard Kraj1 cck and Courier vs.
El ungh.
Sampras and Courier eas ily won
thc11 opcmng smglcs matches Fri day, and w1ll be hcav1ly favored to
repeat the feat Sunday.
Defending champion Germany,
Sweden and the Czech Republic
won their doubles matches Saturday to ~1k c 2- 1 leads in thc11 q~;ar ­
tcrfinal s.

Bengals to open training camp on upbeat note
ny TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati Be)lgals begin
training camp Monday on an upbeat note, with II
free agents and the NFL's No.I draft piCk signed.
"I see a good season coming, a much better season," general manager Mike Brown said Wednesday. "I see some light at tlle end of the tunnel , and
it's welcome.
"We've been through a couple of very hard, difficult years. Ii was not fun to experience tltat. And I
think this year is our chance to get it turned around
and headed in the direction we want it to go."
Fans let Brown know midway through last year's
3-H season that the Bengals had to get better. They
stopped going to games.
: "A lot of things have changed ... a positive
change pointing in the right direction," coach Dave
Shula said Wednesday.
He said that six off-season coaching changes

should make the Bengals better dmn a year ago, especially the return of Bruce Coslct as offensive coordinator and the hiring of longtime Washington Redsk ins coach Larry Peccatiello as defensive coordmator.
" We bottomed out last year," Shula sa id.
''Already I can sense from the players tllat tllings are
going to be different. It starts from what you ask
them to do, and then they have to go out and Jo it."
Brown said some of the newly signed free agents
will be immediate starters, including strong safety
Louis Oliver (Miami) and offensive linemen Eric
Moore (Giants) and Darrick Brilz (Seattle).
Dan "Big Daddy" Wilkinson, the No.I pick in
the NFL draft, is expected to start at defensive tackle.
"That's some consolation prize," Brown said of
the Bengals' last-place finish and f11st-place draft. "I
feel preny good about that - not good enough to
win a draft in that position ever again, but Dan is a
guy who ought to be something special in future

.

,

years."
He also talked glowingly of an unsigned secondround pick, wide receiver Darnay Scott of San Diego
State.
"He has the physical ability that would put him m
the category with tlle better receivers that we've had
here." Brown said.
The B.e~gals' career leader in passes and yards,
Isaac Curus (420-7,106) also was from San Diego
State.
Brown said he was counting on continued maturation of the Bengals' "young veterans"- free safety
Darryl Williams, linebacker Steve Tovar and defensive end John Copeland.
"Our sparklers- the standout players we're
going to have on our football team - are gomg to
come from th1s group ... (wide receiver Carl) Pickens
and, we hope more than any, (quarterback) David
Klingler arises to where we think he can,' • Brown
sa1d.

" If he docs, we're suddenly go mg to go from
being a team that didn't do very well to a team th.tn
can do very well, indeed."
Shula said he finally has the players to mjcct some
hi e mto the Bengals' offense, which ranked 27th out
of 28 teams last year.
" I tllink you'll sec this year our abllny to get the
hall downfield quickly much improved," Shula sru~.
"We've wanted to have that here, but we haven 't had
the people to do it."
He, too, mentioned the unsigned Sco tt as a needed
addition at wide receiver, along w1th leadersh ip from
Klmgler and a hne thal can protect him.
"We know we have a quarterback with an arm
that can get the ball down the fiel d," Shula sa•d
" Most importantl y we have a mu ch more soliti
offensive lme that will give us th e tunc to lhrow the
football and then get some push •n the running game
to put us m good Sltuat•ons to throw the loothall."

'

•

�•
Page-C2-sunday Tl mes-Sentlnel

July 17, 1994

In the Kyger Creek LL Tournament,

Reggie pokes one in red seats; Reds win 7-1

Tigers, Bobcats
first-round winners
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Starr
CHESHIRE
The
commencement of the 27th Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament,
delayed by 39 minutes Friday night
because of a two-hour rainstorm,
saw the Tuppers Plains Tigers and
the Kyger Creek No. 2 Bobcats earn
the right to play the initial secondround games today against bye

teams.
Tuppers Plains Tigers II
GaUipolis Mariners I
The Mariners wa~ted little time
getting oo the board, as No. 2 hiaer
T .R. Rogers, with one out in the farst
inning, airmailed Matt BisseU's 2-2
pitch beyond the center field fence
for a solo homer.
But the Tigers, runners-up in the
Bill Hubbard Memorial Little
League Tournament and entering
this diamondfest with a mere tluee
days' rest, shook off a three-up-andthree-down first and executed a sixrun jailbreak in the second that put
them in the driver's seat.
The three hits Tuppers Plains got
in the second - Wes Crow' s double
to left and Matt Edwards' single to
center preceded Eric Smith 's threerun homer to right center on a 3-2
pitch - surged the Meigs County
crew into the lead. But the Mariners
committed six errors - five came
after Gregory struck out Josh
. Broderick and Steven Weeks
swinging - after that to help the
Tigers get tluee more runs.
After the Tigers got two more in
the third, they got four hits in the
fourth, with Smith singling in Crow,
Jeremy GiUilan getting a bunt single
and Josh Will singling in Smith
befmre Bissell's single to left got
Gillilan home with the fourth run
that sealed the mercy-rule victay.
Solid pitching and effective
defense were also instrumental in
the Tigers' victory, as Bissell and
company stranded two in the
second, struck out the side in the
third and left the bases loaded in the
fourth .
Bissell, who started what he
finished, fanned nine and walked
four. Gregory and reliever Mathew
Bush combined to strike out five
and walk four.
The Tigers' hitters were Smith
(3-3), Crow, Gillilan (both 1-1),
Broderick (1-2), Edwards (1-3),
Bissell and Will (1-4). The
Mariners' hitters were Rodgers, Tim
Mahan and John McGraw (aU 1-2).
Inning totals
Mariners .................. 1000 = 1-3-6
Tigers ...................... 0623 = 11-9-0
WP-Bissell
LP-Gregory
Kyger Creek No.l-18
Gallipolis Rangers Ui
The game that lOOk up most the
tournament's first night featured a
blizzard of wild pitches which was
responsible for more runs than the
eight hits the game's six pitchers

surrendered.
The Rangers, who carried a 1-10
record going into the tournament,
looked for a change in their fonunes
when they touched starter Bryan
Rose for three runs in the first, held
the Bobcats scoreless in the bottom
of the ftrst, scored two more in the
second, weathered the Bobcats'
four-run rebellion in the bottom of
the second before scoring two more
in the third to lead 7-4 going into the
bottom of the third.
But Kyger Creek didn't give up.
No. 3 hitler Jeff Gardner. who got
aboard on a single to left, scored on
a wild pitch during McDade's (no
frrst name listed in the roster) at-bal
After George Garnes was thrown
out at the plate later in McDade's atbat, Rose, who reached afler being
hit by a pitch, scored on a wild pitch
during Bryan Sutphin's at-bat.
Sutphin, who reached on a walk,
stole second during Thomas
Polcyn's at-bat and later moved to
third on a wild pitch and scored the
run that tied the game at 7· 7 before
Polcyn struck out to end the third.
In the fourth, the Rangers shook
off Chris Burnett's being tluown out
at home when Tim Mathews scored
on a wild pitch and Justin
Drummond scored on a walk by
Gardner - he started the game
behind the plate and began the
inning at shortstop - before
Gardner's balk scored Brian Gordon
with the bases still loaded.
Staring a 10-7 deficit in the face,
the Bobcats sent 13 batters to the
plate in their half of the fourth.
What did that mean? No. 9 hitter
Shannon Louden reached on an
error and walk:ed. He scored two of
the Bobcats' nine runs, which came
as a result of the aforementioned
error, three hits (Garnes' groundrule double through the left field
fence got two runs home, including
Ryan While with the last tying run)
and six walks. Before it was done,
the riot eventually chased starter
Adam Holcomb off the hill.
GaUipolis kept chipping away at
the stone in the next two frames, but
Gardner, victimized by two errors
and five walks that were primarily
responsible for the five runs the
Rangers got in the top of the sixth,
put his finger in the dike by striking
out Drummond and Gordon to end
the game.
Rose, Garnes and Gardner
combined to strike out 15 and walk
24. Holcomb and relievers Brad
Bowman and Burnett combined to
slrilce out eight and walk 13.
The Bobcats' hitters were
Gardner (2-3), Rose (1-1), Garnes
and While (both 1-4). The Rangers'
hitters were Burnette (2-3) and
Mathews (1-1).
Inning totals
Rangers ..............322 315 =16-3-2
Bobcats ..............043 92x = 18-5-7
WP - Gardner (in relief of Rose
and G. Games)
LP-Holcomb

Carter has two-stroke
lead in Big Apple Classic
NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (AP)
~ JoAnne Carner, the LPGA Hall
nf Fa mcr who hasn't won a tournament 1n almost a decade, shot a 4undcr-par 67 011 Friday and took a
two-shot lead midway through the
$650.000 JAL Big Apple Class1c.
Carner. 55. has 42 LPGA lilies
to her cred it, but hasn't won a tour-

name11t since J9RS . She had six
bmli cs and two bogey s in Friday's
round over the 6,09S-yard Wykagyl Counuy Club course. .
''I' m cxc iLcd ahout play1ng on
the weekend." Carner said. "! get
to sleep in on Saturday and Sunday
and still know I can play 111 the
afternoon."

(;()()!) I)RIVE, T.R.! - The Gallip11lis Mariners' Forrest Grego·
r_v lng hl) mngratulates teammate T.R. Rogers for hilling the lirsl
horner of the Kyger Creek Lillie League Tournamenl in lhe first

_i~.nillJ.: nf Friday rli~ht' s first·ruund game against the Tupprrs Pl~1ins

l1gcrs, who erased the lead Rogers ga\'C lhc Mariners wilh a six-run
riollo won Il-l in four framcs . (Timcs-Senlincl photo by G. Spencer
Osborne I

TIED - Kyger Creek No. 2's llri:m Sutphin slides in from third
base on a wild pitch by Adam Hokomb (standing) lo create a 7-7
deadlock in lhe third inning of Friday night's Kyger Creek Lillie
League Tournament first-round game against the Gallipolis Rangers,
whom the Bobcats later passed to win 18-16. (Times-Sentinel photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

CINCINNATI {AP)- Reggie
Sanders became th e answer to a
scoreboard trivia question Friday
til~ kind that ask s: "Ten player;
have homered to Lhe upper deck of
Riverfront Stadium. Can you name
th em?"
The answer: Tony Perez, Bob
R&lt;ulcy, George Foster, Dave Park er, Greg Lozinski, Champ Summers. Dave Conception, Darryl
Strawberry, Kevin Milch cl l and
Reggie Sanders.
Only 16 homers have reached
th e red scats of the upper deck
Since the Reds moved to Rivcrfronl
Stadium in June 1970. Perez did it
twice, ancl Foster did it six t1mes,
include twice in 1977, when he had
52 hom ers.
"Reggie doesn' t even know
how suong he is," said Mitchell,
the Reds' home run leader. "He
reminds me of Eric Davis; you
know how suong he was."
Davis never reached the uvper
dec k in Riverfront.
Sanders' two-run red -se ater
highlight ed a f1ve-run third innmg
as the Reds heM Ihe Ch icago Cubs
7-l.
"I never thought I'd do that. I
was very surprised," said Sanders.
"In baLling practice, you're always
Lrying to do it, and ll never happens."
He saw the ball bounce off a red
seat in th e second row of the upper
deck about the time he reached first
base coach Joel Youngblood.
"I almost broke Yo.ungblood's
arm with a high five going around
fir sI base." Sanders said. " I was
very excited."
Mitch ell, Sanders' unoffic ial
mentor, had told Sanders to look
for a change- up. That's what he
got
" We talk a lot. He watches the
way they pitch to me," said
Mitcltcll, who bats just ahead of
Sanders. ''I told him they would
stmt out with their fast stuff, then
go 10 change- ups."
Sanders' homer. his 15th. was
the crowning blow in an inning that
gave Chicago manager Tom Tre blchorn fits.
" He hi t the ball over the fence;
it doesn't maller how far," said
Trcb lchorn. "They have some firepower. bur we dinked around and
gave ~l.1em extra walks and ~x tra
bases.
Chicago's Willie Banks (8-8)
faced I 0 Reds in the third.
Jose RiJO doubled, Jacob Brurnficl&lt;l walkeri and Barry Larkin
reached base on a bum sing le. Hal
Morris grounded to seco nd baseman Rey Sanchez, who threw to
shortslop Shawon Dunston for the
force. But Dunston couldn't handle
th e 1hrow, and the bal l rolled
toward left field.
Rijo scored from third , Brumfield went home on Dunston's error
and Larkin advanced to third as
third baseman Steve Buechele
chased down the ball. Mitchell
drove in Larkin with a sacrifice lly,
and Morris sco red ahead of
Sanders on the shot into the red
seats in left field.
"Thai game spoke for irsclf."
Trcblchorn said. "I can't explain it,
I can' t interpret 11."
Rijo (9-4) srruck out f1ve and
sca llcr ctl eight hiL s over seven
innings. Sammy Sosa's 20th homer
in the fourth inning accounted for
Chicago's only run.
Rijo sa id he was glad for the run
support because he doesn't think
he's as sharp as he could be, and
the 'extra day off because of the
All-Star break messed up his rou·
tine.
"My slider is not sharp enough
and my forkball is not sharp
enough," Rijo said. "I like to go
with no more than four days rest. I
like to keep on a routine."
But Sanders' homer was a spe·
cia! thrill.
. "Like it? I loved it," Rijo said.
"That's something that you only
see once or twice a year."
The Reds' first run came
Larkin's groundout in the first
inning. Their final run was Jeff
Branson's fourth homer of the year,
off Jim Bullinger in the eighth.

HACK AGAIN- The Tuppers Plains Tigers' Eric Smith, who one
inning ear lit.'r cratkt.'d a threl.' - r-tlfl homt•r to put his f('Um in ~ he lead,
does his part to keep the pressure on the Gallipolis Mariners by scoring on .Josh \Viii's l'il•ldt•r's-choit·e groundt.'r in front of' Gullipolis

pitchrr Forrest (;re~ory in the third innin~ of Fri(lay nighl's Ky~er
Cn·ek Lillie Lea~uc Tournmnent l'i"l·round ~arne, whirh the Tigers
won I 1-1. II was the second 111' Smith's lhree runs for the ni~ht.
(Ti mes·Senlinel photo hy (;.Spencer (hhorne)

IIREAKS DEADLOCK- The Gallipolis Rangers' Tim Mathews
home in front or Kyger Creek reliever George Garnes In give his
learn an H-7 lead in the fourth inning of Friday night's Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament first-round game against Kyger Creek No.
~rts

2. Though the R•m~ers would scorf.' twice more in the frame, I he IJoh-

cats rioted for nine runs in their hall' of lhe fourth to win IH-16.
!Times-Sentinel pholo by G. Spencer Oshorne)

Frishette captures.Ohio Amateur golf tourney
IIJ RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
UPPER ARLINGTON, Ohio
- The last nine holes of any cham pionship arc the most gut wrenching and compelling. right'l
Nor for Er.ic Frisheue.
"The back n1ne really was :1
boring nine for me ," he said aft~r
building a nine-stroke lead at the
turn. "I didn 't aim at the pins. My
caddie helped me a lot. He told me
I didn't need birdies."
No, he had piled up cnou g:, of
them through earlier rounds of 70,
71 and 68 so that when he starred
the back nine at 2-under 011 the day,
about the only thing that could
have prevented him from winning
would have been an act of God.
He shot three of the tournament's seven subpar rounds. His
closing !-under-par 70 lefl him at
S-under 279.
That matched Lhe competitive
course record over four rounds. In
the 1986 U.S. Senior Open, Dale
Douglass - playmg the identical
pin placements and a shoner course

;_ beat Gary Player by a shot with
a 279.
As a point of refere nce, Jack
Hesler won the 1971 Ohio Amateur
when last Scioto hosted it, shooting
a 301 in dry and windy conditions.
The last time an Amateur was
won by suc h a large margin was
Brian Mogg' s starqo-fini sh victory
m 1983 at Aurora Country Club,·
also by nine shots.
He lcfL the rest of the fiCid m his
w~tkc

and 10 awe.

" ll's a remarkable score," said
defendin g champ ion Bob Fairchild.
"T hi s golf course is in absolutely
champions!Jip condition with the
mu~h th e way it was. I was conqnccd Lhat plus-4 or plus-S would
w1 n the go lf tournament. I never
dr eamed anyone would get to
179"

" If he ca n work on a co uple
aspects of h1s game- working the
ball right to left and left to right which is what I saw in John
Coo k," said third-place fini sher
Chuck Smith. "I played with John
in the tournament before he turned

pro . That's the only thing I sec that
Eric needs to work on. If he works
on that , I compare him very favorably to John Cook."
"His scocc is awesome. I finished 3- or 4-over and I think a lot
of people thought 4- or 5-over
would be good. To be S-und er is
awesome." smd runncrup David
Leggett.
Frishettc. a second-team AllAmerican as a senior at Kent Swte
last year, wasn 'tthat impressed.
"I hitthc ball really well, but I
sec a lot of pulls that were close
that didn't go in. 1 made a lot of
pullS that were 6 feet and shorter. If
I don't make those, I'm back with
the rest of the field," Frishclle said.
Paired with his closest pursuers
- Smith and Lcggell - Frishcue
not only held his lead but extended
it on the front sid e of the famed
6,90 1-yard, par-71 layout.
He birdied the third and ninth
holes while Sm1th and Leggcu trailin g hy fiv e when the round
started - fell four more shots
behind by the turn .
it easy on
Fnshcnc then

the h:1ck sid e. hilling to the middle
ot the· ~ rcc i L\ and sel!ling for two
puth .
HiS i&gt;nly lapse came at the 72nd
hole, where he mi ssed a 4-foot putt
lor par LhaL would have given him
the compel Hive course record for a
fo ur-d:t)' tournament.
Frish cllc. 22, will turn pro m
OcLobcr in time for the tour qualifying sc hool.
Leggett, a n1ne-timc champion
at Col urn hus' Brookside Country
Club, fini shed second. His 74 left
him at 4-over 288.
Smith, the top-ranked senior
amateur in 1hc country, had a 75 to
fini s!J at 2X9.
Un1v crsity of Tennessee golfer
Dale Thorley from Amherst and
Duke University's Joe Ogilvie
from Lancaster, last year's runncrup, both closed with a 73 to end
up m 29 1.
The top 20 fini shers receive
exemplions into next year's tournamenL. The 199S Amateur will be
held July S-9 at Coldstrcam Country Club in Cincinnati.

Astros blow lead,,

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Carbajal of Phoenix with a right hook to ~he h~ad ~~ the lOth
round at the WBO Junior Flyw~ight Ch~'!'p1onsh1p Fnday at the
America West Arena in Phoemx. Car~ajal, however, won by a
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: Elsewhere in the National
I;.eaguc, it was San Francisco 7,
Montreal 3; Philadelphia and Los
Angeles split a doubleheader. with
the Phillies winning tl1c opener 4-3
and the Dodgers the nightcap 3-2;
Pittsburgh II, Houston 8; Atlanta
6, Florida 4; Colorado 10, St. Louis
6; and New York and Philadelphia
splil a doubleheader, the Mets taking the first game 4-3. and the
Padres the second game 2- I in 14
innings.
It's the kind of loss that can
stick with you long after the season
ends.
The Houston Astros, with sights
on postseason play this year, blew
an eight-run lead Friday night as
the Pittsburgh Pirates rallied at
home for an I 1-8 win.
Carlos Garcia homered and
drove in four runs and the Pirales
staged one of the greatest come- ·
backs in their 107-year history.
"It's a sick feeling to lose a
game like, that," said Astros starler
Greg Swirtdcllj who led 8-0 in the
second inning. "I don't know what
you can compare it to.''
Jeff BagweU was 4-for-5 with a
homer and three RB!s, increasing
his NL-Ieading total to 8S, but hit
into an inning-ending grounder in

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

the seventh with two runners on
and the Astros down 9-8.
Garcia th en mad e it 11 -8 by
homerin g off Todd Jon es. the
Asuos' 1hird pitcher.
"You ' ve 1!0l to win this game."
Hou ston manager Terry Collins
said. ''You can't say anyth1ng
except we've got to win this game.
Wt opened the door for them and
they came back and beat us. "
The P1raLcs otugcd the greaLesL
extra-mning comeback in major
leag ue hi slory by scoring &lt;ix runs
in the lith to hea t the Chicago
Cubs 13-12 on April 21, 1991, but
do not have an offic1al club record

for biggest comeback.
Ravelo Manzanillo (3-2), batting only because Pittsburgh was
running out of reserves. hil a gametying two-run double in the fifth
and pitched 1 2-3 scoreless relief

fifth, stomping around the mound
as Collins lifted him with an threerun lead.
"From losing an eighl-run lead
to acting the way I did when I was
taken out, it's a shame it hap·
pened," Swindell said. "I apologized for my actions. No one ever
wants to come our like that, especially when you're given eight
runs. I felt like I could get two

mnmgs.
"I always know I can hit. When
I hun my arm in 1983, the PU"ates

wanted me to become an outfielder
but I said, 'No, I still want to
pitch,' " Manzanillo said. "When I
got that hit, I stood on second base
and said, 'Thank you, Lord.' ''
Shane Reynolds (6-4), who
replaced Swindell, was the loser.
Swindell left unhappily in the

IIRI'AKS UP DOUBLE PLAY· Chicago
Cubs' shortstop Shawon Dunston leaps over
Ci ndnnati's Barry Larkin after Dunston let a
throw get by him on a possible double play in

wv

more outs.''

Collms was ejected before getting back to the dugout, going toeto-toe with horne plate umpire
Jerry Layne to complain about his
ball-strilr.e calls.

the third inning or their ~arne in Cincinnati Friday. Two runs scored on the play. The Reds
went on to win, 7-1. (AP)

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cklliJtr a

Phone 675-3930
426 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV
.'

•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

1616 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS
(614) 446·3672 or 1·800·521·0084

.

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

July 11, 1994

July 17, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant, wv

Scoreboard

Indians regain first with 3-2 victory
C III C: A GO l AP ) -

corker

of~~

I t wa s"

h:1scha! l game be tween

tvvo teams lt t.h tt rlg for f1r&lt;.; t pl_acc .
T l11 s ll tn c til e Cl ev ela nd ln cl 1an s
wo n to r r c l ~l im th e top fr om th e
Cl11cago W lti tc Sox.

BtJL th ~ w -:: l l ~ pl a yc d 3-2 lnd tan s
victory was not the topi c of disc usSIO n 1-r td ay ntgl]t ~J ft_cr ~he \\'l11t ~

So.x ' s sc vc n - g~mt c
Ulm c to a n end .
Mo ~ t

w t 11111n g

-: trcaK

rayed or cut open.
Had Phillip s determ ined on the
spo t t he b at wa s cor k ed . Bell e
would have bee n ej ec ted . Bu t
Phi ll ips said he could not sec any·
thin g w ron g

wilh the bat.

" li e (Lamo nt ) ask ed me tl&gt;
chec k it. He is all owed to have one
hal chec k ed and con f isc at ed per
g:un e as i s th e ot her manager,"
Phi ll1 ps said. " He took ad vantage

of th e rule and V.. C d 1d what

of the talk ccnt l'fi..'d o n the

fJr st - tnnt n g req ues t of Chi c 1go
man~t g c r Gene Lam ont , v.: tlo went

W:) S

;!'ked."
Clark ( 11 -3 ) gave up onl y one

ended a ninc-g&lt;Unc Comiskey Park
los ing streak .
M cDow ell , los1ng for the fir st
trm e since May 29, ga ve up ni ne
htts, walked th re e and Sl ru ck ou1
nine rn S 2-3 innings.
He wa s ya nk ed ju st as Bacrga,
who wa s 4 -fo r -4 at the lim e, was
about to ba t again.
"T hree o r h is hit s we re o r r
som eo ne ' s g love I guess th at 's
to ugh 10 swa llo w. T o l eave th e
gam e w ith o nl y a chance to lo se

w ho hall wo n Ill s p rcv wu ~ fi -.. c
decisions.
Russe ll got the fi nal tv.·o o uts for
hi s 14t h save. He ended the game
by re tiring pinch-l111te r Joey Coro

r tnch -hittc r \ Va r rc n N C \'•.'SO !l on a
long dr ive to ce nter in th e seve nth

" I wa s no t try 1n g to mak e on a grounder to second with run -

cr l' ter t h ~ W hit e So x had sco red
on ce to ma ke it 3-2 -

umptrl' Da \'C Ptl il ltps

t tu rl . bu t th e ruk i s yo u c an ' t hit
with a c01 kcd bilt. " Lam ont said,
dcny1 ng that hi s move was gam es ·

man.shi p.
A l ben Bell e m ad. I ju st f i gure d
there was a poss ibil tty he w:" cork -

c.x tr a· basc hit , w alk ed

(\VO

and

struck out five in 8 1-3 innin gs. He
de feated Jack M c Dowe ll ( 7- X) .

ners on frrst and third as Cleveland

At A Glance
By The 1\ .~sod atcd l' rcss
i\ II Tim l's EIH
Ea&gt;l Division
W L l'ct.
(; II
Athntll
53 34 .609
Mo ntrea l
54 35 .607
J-londa
42 GS 467 12 ] (2
Ph l!~dclr!m
42 GIL4(,7 12 1(2
~cw Ym~

the ninth innin~ (if the -Indians ' 3-2 win o ver
C hirago Friday night. The win put C leveland
hack in the !earl in the A L Central Division .
lAP)

Tigers, Royals split doubleheader
ll.v The Associated Press

To say iL was an int c rcs l i ng
night in Kansas City i s understating
thin gs a bit.
F ~r s t there wa s a bench -c learin g
braw l , then the lllStigator made the
most ol hi s second chance, then a
tr:~ g c d y nearl y happened in th e

stand s.
It all added up to a strange seven
hours at Kauffman Stadium as the
D etr o it T igers and Kansas C it y
Ro yal s spli t a doubl ehead er. The
Tige rs won the first game 14-2 and
Kan sas City won the nightcap 5- 3.
In other games, New York beat
Seattl e 10-8 in II innin gs , Cl eveland edged Chicago 3-2, Baltimore
beat California 9-2, Boston rall1 cd
past Oakland 4-1, Toronto defeated
Texa s 1-5 and Milwaukee beat
Mmnesota 8-7.
Th e do ubl ehead er at Kan sas
City seemed 10 revolve around Bob
Hamelin , whq charged the mound
in th e ninth inning of the opener
afler reliever Greg Cadaret ' s first
pi tch sail ed behind his head.
Four Detroit bailers had been hit

by pitches pnor to that point.
''I'm no t go tn g to stand out
th ere '111d be a targe t ," Ham elin
S~ll (L

Hamelin punched Cadaret in the
fa ce and look a swing at third baseman Tra vi s Fryman before bein g
lack led by Cadarct. Ham elin's eyeglasses were broken m the melee.
Both benches emptied, but order

was restored in less t.han five min ·
ut cs.
Htltncl in was ejec ted , but he was
b;rc k for th e seco nd gam e wi1h a

new pair of glasses.
'' These arc the glasses I wear at
horn e. Th ey' re not the protec tive
type that I wear on th e fi eld . If
so mething happens to these, they
bett er p ut so mebo dy el se in
hcclU SC I ' m not go in g out th ere
w1thout glasses. I'd rather have no
helmet than no gl asses. "
The replacement pair seemed to
be workin g ju st f i ne in th e fifth
inning wl1en Hamelin hit his clubleadin g 17th homer, a three-run
sho1off Mi ke Moore (R-9).
" It was a fas tball in . He didn' t

get it in

Cj lllt C J S

far as he w:\ntcd

to," Hamelin saicl .
T he Ro ya ls set off a firework s
display aft er Hamel in ' s homer. hut
part of th e di splay sho t into th e
ri ght fi eld stand s ilttd cxplcxled. Six
fan s were tak en to hospiwl s w ith
w iLl\

w e re dcsc rih cd as minor

lllJ Uri CS

Mark G ubi cz a (6 -8) w ell! si x
innings for hi s first victory in four
start s, and Jeff Monlgomery got the
las! three out.s for hi s 16th save.
In the fi rs t game, Cecil Fielder
had a thr ee -run hom er and f1v e
~Bi s ;md Tony Philltps an d Travis
Fryman eac h reached ba se si x
tim es for th e Ti ge rs, w ho had 15
hi" and nine walks .
Detroit starter Dilvid Wells (3 -5)
went seven inning s and allowed
seven hits. He struck ou l four and
dl(l n' t issue a walk
' Kansas Ci1 y ' s Tom Gordon (9 5) wa s see king hi s fifth strai ght
win. bul he hi1 two batters, threw a
wi ld pitc h, wa lk ed in a run and
all owed six bases on ball s in three
Continued on C-5

0

PASADENA , Calif. (AP) Ro berto Baggio is soccer's "Mr
October."
Just as baseball's Reggie Jackson would save his best performances for the games !hat really
mattered, Baggio scores goals just
wh en his team appears down and
out.
· 'The team was on the plane
home and I pulled them back,"
Baggio said af1er his two goal s
against Nigeria turned a 1-0 deficit
round 10 a 2-1 victory.
Now the .striker with the braided
pigtail has taken Italy all the way to
the World Cup final against Brazil.
Thanks to him , Italy could be on
the way from disgrace to glory.
But the team may have to face
th e multitalented Brazilians on
Sunday without their best weapon.
Ba ggio limped out of Italy's
semifinal v1ctory over Bulgaria in which he scored both goals in a
2-1 victory - with a hamstring
injury that makes him a doubtful
· sianer for Sunday's final in the
Rose Bowl.
"At the moment I can't say if
Roberto will play Sunday. It' s a
deci sion which could be taken at
the last minute," l1alian coac h
Arri go Sacchi said.
" It docs not hurt when 1 walk,
but I can feel it when I flex the
musc le, " Baggio said . " 1 hope I
can play. "
If he docsn'l. Ita ly could be in
trouble.
A I ready without suspended
d efenders Mauro Tassoui and
Al essandro Co stacuna, Italy has
three other injury headaches.
Fran co Bare si, its influential
captatn and sweeper, has been sidelined since the second game and
midficldcr Alberigo Evani hasn't
played since the opening victory
over the Russians. •
Now Roberto Donadoni is
another doubtful player because of
a s1iffened leg muscle.
But Baggio's absence against
the Brazilians would be a major
problem.
"Baggio is one of the greatest
players," Sacchi said . "It would be
a bad blow for us if he can't play.
Others will have to work harder to
make up for his absence if he does
not recover."
Even if all these players were
fit, Italy would face an uphill bat~e
against the confident Braz1hans.
They have conceded only three
goal s in six games and strikers
Romario (five goals) and Bebe10
(three) have tormented every
defense they have faced .
When FIFA , soccer's world

•

•

governing body, named its all -star
World Cup team Friday, four
Brazilians - defenders Jorginho,
Marcio San10s, midfielder Dunga
and striker Romario - were on it.
Brazil has not lost stnce a 2-0

"I}Jnn
"n
IS 1/l

4]
4 2 &lt;W 4 88

)7 51 420

r; u

. 47 4) .522
. 44 48 .4 78

4

4\ 50 451 6 \{!
36 55 396 \I !(/.

Sm ha nm co
Sm D1 cgo

Frld aJ ' S l; am~'S
l 'h tl a J clrlu~ ol.l.os t\n~ c l t:.~ J. I , I gm •c
l. o&lt; ,\ng ~lc.s 3, l'htl add ph ta 2, 2·td
gmt~

San Fran&gt;tscn 7 . .\ 1untrt:41 J

Cmc tnn a11 7. Cluc•go 1
l 'm~t&gt; u rgh 11. \l ou&gt;lt&gt;n X
i\ tiHIIil fo . F\ ond d G
C olo rado 10, St !.ou ts 6
t\' c~~o

York 7, s ~ n D1ego 3. 1s t ~; ~me
Dtcgo 2. ,' \ cw York 1, l.l 111 1 \llll) ~ .
2nd game
Saturday's fi aHlt'S
S11 n Fnnn~co (ll url-: ctt 5· 7) Jl ~ hH&lt;\:J l
SMl

(ll tll ]) .]) , 8 .05 il .m
Sa n D1cgo (:-ianders 3-6) at J'\ew YorK
(Jacome 1-1), 8 OS p.m
Lus Ar 1gclc.s ( ll crsh..~&gt;cr S-&lt;1 ) at l'hlla dcl ph.u (Munot4 ·3). 8:05 prn .
l louslon ( II J mtsc h 5. 4) 11 Prt~burgl:t
(Sm ilh 9-6), H OS prn .

Honda (Kapp S·S )at

A thnt~

(Snmh1 (,.

9), 8:05 p.m
Chica go (Mmgan 1·. 9) at CJr.c uJn al t
(Roper S-0) , &amp;.05 p.m
St . Louis (OitY Hn.~ I I) al Cul oradn

(Jla imer 2- 3), R 05

rm

Sunda ~' s (; amC'~

l·lo n da (S ch~1d 0- fl) at A tl mta ( \ 14cl du ,
11 -5), 1· 10p m
San h on c11C'n ( Van l _ afldo•t ~han l &lt;l I ) J '.
Mom rca l ( F a&gt;~ cr • l r,.s). 1·35 r rn
l .m 1\ ngc lcs ( \'\ art. rtCI. Ii- 5) ALI'II tl adcl rh t ~ (Vaict11o.~&lt;: la 0.2 ), I :35 r m
l lou.w m ( Dr1hck 10· 5 ) 111 l'n t.~hu r ~h
(Wagnt'T S-7), 1·35 p m.
SJ f\ Dtcgo (llam tl tnn S-4) al ,' \cw Ynrk
(Sm tih 4-8 ), 1:40 p.m.
Chtca go rFO!i lcr 1· 3) at Ctn c tnnall
(I Iamon S.S), 2: 15 p.m .
St . Louts (Su1cliffc 5-3) at Colora&lt;:o
(Freeman 7 -2), 3:05 P·'!l ·

C arl o~:; Ba c r g a ' s

A nrl nobod y w ant ed 10 check
his lm . •
L:11n o nt sa id he 'd d i sc usse d
ll c ll e ' s bat w ith hi s co aches and
general man~1 g c r R o n SLh uc lc r

/\llll'r lOIIl l..Clii!Uf'

before Lh c ga m e and dec idcd to usk

i\1 A Glance
ll y The Msncla\cd

1hat it be checked before Bell e hit
in the f iN.
So with Belle approaching the
plate alter Baerga 's RBI single had
made it 1-0 in lhe first, Lamont
asked crew ch1ef Phillips to look at
the bat and he did. Af1er conferring
w ith fir st ba se ump i re Joe
Brinkman, th e bat wa s put out of
play. Phillips said it would be sent
10 the American League office and
in spected, meaning it could be X -

Press

All Times EDT
Eas t l)hl~loo
W L 1'&lt;'1.

New York
lla\tirnnrc
D c tr &lt;~i l

~1 H lSPri .
r.&amp; 0 fVi'table~

'l'ommo

WJ.Pd .

.. .52 34 .60S
.. .5 3 35 .602
.. 47 43 .522
7
K11n~ •s Ca y
42 46.477
11
Minnes ota
41411 _461 12 \ (l
Mtlw~ ttk r.c
\\'c1&gt;l Divislun
W L l'ct. G il
Tcus
.... 43 46 .4 11 1
Oak.li nd
..... 39 50 .43 !1
4
C•liJomi•
.. . .38 53 .418
6
Seattle
.37 52.416
6
fo' rlday's Gamel
Detroit 14, Kansn City Z. I st game
I\ anus City S, Detroit 3, 2nd game
Cleveland 3, Oticago 2
Milwauhe 8, Minn~ot.a 7

10 Sessions
For $20.00
First Session Free

Toronto 7, Tcu1

5

Boston 4, Oak land 1
Baltimore 9, California 2
New York 10, Seattle 8,11 inningJ
Saturday's G1mCi
Cleveland {Martinez 84) at Chicago

Open Mo11day - Saturday 9-8

(Alvarez I 0-4), 8:05p.m.
Mil waukee (Wcgmiln &amp;· I ) a l Mtnn ~ol.a

Call 985-3569 For Appoi~tment
Located in Baum Lumber's New
Hot Springs Showroom

upset defeat by Bolivia in World
Cup qualifying aclion almost a year
ago.
"Brazil is the best prepared
team in the Cup," goalk eeper
Claudio Taffarel said.

t. ll

ClcYcla nd

Grand Opening
Special

Air Strong
Basketball

lf2
s 1fl

Chtcago

Where America Goes Th Relax-·

JUST DO IT.

GU

.. .44 44 .500
.AI 49.45 6 12 1!2
... 39 49.443 13 1(2
Ct•nlrall&gt;ivis!nn

BrutCln

Come In For AFree Test Soak Todav.

.5 2 35 .59&amp;
. .52 36 .591

(I)C.!;hatc:.s 4·9), 8.05 p.m .
Detroit (Gulhckson 4-4) at Kan s a ~ City

(Mihcki 04), 8:05p.m .
Toront o (llcntga1 11.·5) at Tcxu

(llrown 6-8 ), 11 :05 p .m
llaltim ore {Muu ina 13-4} at Ca liforni a
(Finley 7·8 ), 8:05 Jl.m.
New York (Key 13·2) a\ S catU c (John ·
son 10-4), 8 :05 p.m .

Doston (Sc1e 7·4) It Oakland (Darling

8·9). II :05 p.m

BAUM LUMBER CO.

rrFie Sfioe Cafe

State Route 248

Lafayette.Et;;;iii!IIGailipolis,
Mall
OH

985-3301

Sunday's Games
,
C\eve\llld 11 Chi cago, l :35 p.m.
Milwallku at Minne.~ou. 2:05 p.m .
llaltimore at California, 4 :0S p.m .
Iloston 11 Oakland, 4:05p.m .
New York at Se~ut e, 4:35p.m.
Detroit at Kansas City, 8:05p.m.
Toronto at Texas, 8:05p.m .

Chester, Ohio

II AS ElJALL
Aunri ca n IA:a11ue
IlOSTO:S REP SOX--Ci aUllcd Sm
k oycr. UJhel der .off wa 1ve rs from lhc St
l .ouu Card lf\a \s ~ ~ gnated Serg.J o
Yii ldc1, pnc he r. fClr reusi gnmcn t.
C AlJFOR~'lA A~GELS ~ A cc;u red

Bo Oruz, outfi elder, f rom the Ba!u morc
! )n o les to c omplete the '. nde for Dwt ght
ou tfi c:ldcr Asstgncd 011.1:z

lo

I,I:!J .

lu uJ uf tlt c 'l c• •s lt;, guc O pt 10nc.d "' ! , ~ .:
ll utchcr, p11chcr . to Van couver of t he l'a

ctftc Cms t

l.e.~ gue

Recall ed And rew L"r

/Jtll he r, from Y.n COUVCf
C II CAG O WJIITE ~OX -- A cuv~ t ~ d

!HIIC,

Joey Co ra , s ocond basema n, from Lite 15 ·
ddY

\'t' LI'cl.
Los AngdC$
Color ado

hlda y's S por h Tranu ct l o n ~
Dy Th e i\ mx: htcd !'reM

~ m t t.h ,

I; II

36 S96
40 .55 6
45 489

\\'t·sl J)i ,is ion

ro ur hits and Lwo RB is .

Italy wins 2:1; -faces Brazil for title

so

St. \...ou.s
Cht cagn

rul es
Belle, who'd hn a long homer 111
til e first 1nmng Thu rsday 111 ght , had
tills response: " T hat's bu ll Th :ll ' &lt;
my quote ," he said .
" I ha ve no id ea ( w hy ' hc
checked) unless he got informa tion
from su rn c wh crc. I think it wa s
crrum:uus," I nd ian s manager Mike
Hargrove said.
Belle 's bat wasn' t the reason the
ln di a11S beat th e Sox and moved
percentage poi nLs ahead in 1hc AL
Central . Th ere wa s th e combined
six-hi1 pit ch1 ng of M ark Clark and
Jc l I' Ru ssell , w ho go t their II th
v1c10ry and 14U1 save respectively.

A nd th ere wa s

13

\\' L l'c t.

n

CuKIIHidll
I l ou~ Inn
PotL&lt;hu rgh

i ng II! ~ h:lt and that ' s ag ~1 i n s t the

CLARK CONGRATULATED -Cleveland
pitcher Mark Clark, left, is con~ratulated as he
heads into the du~out after he was relieved in

4 1 G8 4 6 \

C'&lt;.•nl ra ll&gt;lvision

wa s nut th e be s t sc e na r io ,''
M cDo well said.
" Cleveland has had ~1c offense
for three years and now they've got
th e pitchin g, th at ' s w hy they 're
\\-' here thcy'tc at. " .
Clark cut o f f ralli es when he got

to l1orn c plate

and asked th:tl Albert ll cll c's ba t be
cilcckcd for cork
" I dun 't want a bunch of atten-

~a tlun a ll,(' agu c

tl1Hblo.:J

!J Sl

. KA NSAS UrY ROYALS ~ i' lau.:J
(. jary Gaeta, thud hucman, un the I'\ .!• y
disabled lut Rcu\lcd Chn~ I J ~ ncy, J11 1dtcr. from O ma ha of 1hc Amcncan As~ nct ot
IIO!l

l\.11 LWAUKEE BR EWERS- Pl a ~ ul
l&gt;aYc Valle, catcltcr,on lhc IS-Cay dtl ahlcd h , t, rctm a ~ t • YC to Jul )' 7 Rec•l le&lt;'
!'roy O' Lea ry , outflc h.kr , ftOIIl 1\'e"" 01
lca.ns of the Amcn can AHoclatt on
SI:AT f LE .\.1A]{J:" E R S~ Pb c r d
C hns Oos10, pm hcr, on U1c 15- d~ y J t, ahl c.J hst. rctflli C\.JYC 10 J ul ~ ]0 _Hcnllu!
Jeff ~cis on , p ttcher. fro m Ca lgar} o f ·.h,
l'a c1fic Coast Lu gu e
:\:a llonall .caRUC
l'l.ORIDA MA RLI SS - C I ~tme&lt;J
~hl e

l.unme mu n, pitcher , o ff
frcm t.he Pittsburj;th Pl ra te&amp; .

WI \Ye l ~

PITISDURCH PIRA TES---C, \lc.d up
Midre 0Jmm ings, omftelder, •nd Joh.'l
Wehner. inficldcr·outfie!dcr. from !l uff, Ill
o f the i\ menca n Associ a tJO n Pl aced A1
Manin, outfielder, on the I S·day dua blcd
11~ 1
.
ST. LOUJ S CARDINALS Pu rchased the cootrac t of Gera ld Y oung . out·
ftclde r, from Louisville of the Ame ri c ~ n
Association. Pfa ec.d Brian Jordan, oo t·
field er, on the 15·day diub\C{j lis1,
re lroac \JYe to J ul y I 0.
Ea.~

tern Leaauc

BALTI MORE 8A Y SO X ~CaUcd up
Clayton By rne, oulf1elder, fro m f.rcdcn ck
of the Cuuliru League.
fOOTUALL
Nallonal Footb• lll.caguc

ATLAKI'A FA LCONS---S igned
Ricky Sanden. wide rcceiYcr. to il one·
yca r c onlrJCI .

BUFFA LO lltLLS- Sig.ncd !luck y
llmoks and Kevin Knox. wid e recetvcrs:
Sea n Croc ke r, defe ns ive hac k: Loru11e
Johnson and A.J. Ofodilc, ti ght en d~ ; ftnd
C are y

Louchiey, offcn1ive lincmm

CU\CINNATI BENGALS- WatYc.d
Tom Scott, ofTensive lineman
C IJ-:VE I.AND llROWNS- Wat vcd
llouston l looYer, offensiYe \mcman.
S tg n e&lt;! Mike Sch1d, offensive lineman
Jl!.1ccd Carlson Lcomiti, offensive \me·
man, on the phyli ca lly-unable·to·pcrfoml
list. Waived John Derby, linebacker, and
Tim Kalal, punter
DALLA S CO WHOYS ~ Ap ocd to
tcnns Wllh Shiln tC Ca rve r, d d .e n.stve end .
George tlq;~m 1n, offensive t.adle: anJ
Dc wa yne J)ou on , lincbi ckcr

DETH OIT LI ONS-S ig.nc;;:l B w tk r·
ick Thom as , linebacker. Re ~ igncd
Aubrey \-1auhew~ . wide receiver

J\0\ JSTO N OIIJ:RS --S i&amp;ncd liary
Jl rown , runn mg back, (0 a th ree- year con
t ra ct, T im Roberts, defens ive tackle; Tnrw
1l rown, cornerba ck; Gary Wellman and .
Shenm.n Smith, y,·idc rccci Ycrs; and lh~
Berry, Larry Kc\m and Joe BOwden.
l1n~backc~ . Wai vc.ll Curtis Dunn n. wHk
nxc iY~r, Mike Duma ~, nf..:1y . and Stdn
rhnmas. offcn~IY C ltncm an
1 1\TIIA ~A PO LtS COJ .TS ~ W w·cd
~ft c had ll nr ndun , ddc nsivc en d. S il)ned
Malt MClmiJ, defensive end
MINN'ESOTA V IKI :'\: G S~ A g ru.!d to
terms with Fcrmndo Smith, dclc nsw c
cnd. and GIIlo Torrcttt. quancr0a£k
1\f:W ORJ .EA NS SA\t'\I'S --Stgrlcd
Jimm y Spencer, comerhack. Wa tvcd Ed
Tilluoo . fullba ck: Jimmy Young . t omcr·
hack; md Darryl Mil hum, 1lnebacker

Pl'rrSHUROU Sll::ELERS----S ignl:(!
lknnon tti naw~on. center, 10 a lhrec · y t~H
contract ox tension . Ag,recd 10 tenns wtth
Jason Gildon, hn cba cJu :r, Ham .\.1nrri.s.
runmng back ; and Myron l1eU , d(fcnliYe
ba ck.
SAN DIEGOCilARGERS - An·
nuunccd the retircmcm ofG i.U llyrd, co r·
nc rbac k.

SAN PRANCISCO 49Ef.i.S -S, g lltd
I! art OatCJ, center.
IIOC:Kt: Y

Nallonalllockey Lea~:u•
1\'EW YORK RANOF.RS---Coach
M1kc Kccn•n 1nnounced he has left the
t(!am

hccau~ e

o f 1 contn et displJie.

COI .U:Gt·:
Ni\ VY - Named R1 ch1e Meade men '1
), crosse coach
PRINCETON- Named Jerry Price
man1gerof lfl:?TtS media relllioM
VII .LA ~ OVA - Nam~ Ca ri-Lynn
Pux ro wski womCll 's IS.SISiant basketball'
cnach
U : AGilf: U :Ant:RS
lly The J\uoda1cd Press
AMERICAN I.EAGUJ.:

Sunday nmes- Sentl nei- Page-CS

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l.n s ..\ n~ t·l t• &lt;.; Fr id ay. A jud ).! t' j.! rant ed prost'l' u \tors t" o \ I t't' kS to d t:dd l'd '' ht•t h l' l' to fil e felony

aidin g a nd a bettin g r hargt&gt;s aga in . , t him fo r hi s
pari in aidin ~-: 0 . J . Sim p ..; un iu t h t• {, 0-m il t·
nati on . lll~-tt'l ev ist· d tr t.' k ln m1 O t ,lfl ge County to
0 .. I. ' s Br ent\\ OOCI hornt• th e d&lt;l\ "i l!n p . . on ~~a \
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1

Tigers, Royals split pair...

l llfl llt ~ s.

Y;tnkn·s 10, .\ larinns X
A t th r Kin g d n trl c.

T~trl , lhu ll \lllg kd

Conti nu ed from_ C-4

th rc.tc r un s ~1nd C IHI S Saho iut a
two- ru n homer fo r B a ti mnr~ . \\h !C h
staye d a ha lf-g am e h ~ ll 1 nu :-\ c w

D :l ll ll )
\\ Jill

York .

111 \ \\ 0 riJil .'i

two ou ls in 1hc l it h inn 111g to ~ C'( p
Ill f irs! place Ill the AL
East .
·~·...
Oriolt s t), An~;[~ 2
A t A na h~i m Su Lliu m, B rady

Red So.x 4, Athldir s I

Ne w York

J-\ t Oak l a nd Cu li sc unt , Tulll
13run dn s k v ' s thr e e· r un li o nh · r
c; l p(lc d a f&lt;l ur· run nill y i n the nm th
nmin g o fr Dcnni s Eckersley (2·4 ) .

A n d ~ rso n had th ree hi L'i and sc ored

\

7 · l~a n_~t· r . . )
r\ ( ! h·: Hal lpdll--:

Ill

.
r\ r.llflg toll ,

~ ll l\' l vc d \ I X
w;Jik ~ . thro..·c w rld jl ttch. .·..., and t ·.',(l
erro rs to !!~ I llt -; tllml "-l J .tl~'ll l '- H.Jo
Ju :1n C u :tn :1:1 ( () ())

ry
Brt: \\~r s H, T\\ill ~ 7
1 ~ t lll c ,\k trodOill C, ruok ic j,_- 1r
Cir i l lo hit h 1s f 1r.".l 111 ~ 1 J nr - l c 11 g 1 1 c
ll o mc r and drove i n thr ee r uns

Ainu. \1n nlrc~ l. 332 . Jcfl'c·n c.&lt;, S1 ].. ,,_"·
3211. P"t aua.l.o' ,\ n ~: dc.s , )2-l

IH"'S ll;j• w ~ll . ! l o tJ ~:, m . 7(, , (i:t'
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10 . \. ar·kfo:d St Lflt .IS . r,'l, lttggtn,

'"111.

II PIIqnn, ll•. Brwd 1. '\ ~ r. FranctSCCl. (H.

Ainu , ~h 1n1rca \, 6J
Hlll -lhgwcll , ll omton, ~J:S :
l l t c h~ u c, Colora do , 7 K, Pl an a. I o~

Ang~·

Ic.~. 7 (,, Ga larrdgd, Cnlorodu , 75: "'l a\Vtl ~ t~ n ·s . San l-rm c l' l \1, 7. , ~ I UTI ',

Ctn c mna u, (/l, L W J i k~r . \ l un lrc~ l. 67
IIJTS -- -\ lnrns, Cu tc tn n ~u. 122. 'j'( ;

461 SOUTH THIRD

w ynn. SJ•t Dtc):o. 1:'0 . fll dl ~ I IC, Cul
111 .1d0, 117. Ga iMrJg J . Colorado . II S.

PH ONE 992-2196

fvftDDLEPOR1, o\\

\ lnno.fe q,J.n~ ,\ 11 g rk ~ . liP, l!ogwcl l,
l ln,"t" n. 110. A!"ll, \l n~ tr&lt;.:JI . JOfJ . ll lj.:;
g t~l , ll nuq nn. l 1) 1 )

I)C l ' l! l.l., l ~ : h 1 : . &lt;~ . l l , ,.,,., ,. n , 1 ~ .
LWa lk.tr, Mcmrc.a l, JJ, Mom s. Lul t: Ul ·
nat t. 27. lltchc!:c. ln'nr ~ dn. 211 . ln cll .

.'

Save - Save.• •.S aVe

1\u.,t&gt;tug h. ~( •. 1)\], ,\',1, l 'hd.•J d r !u &lt;~. ~'i.
Ai nu. \ l&lt;mt :n!. 2-l
1'1&lt; 11'1. \· '
llutlc • I m ,\ ngd "' · !&lt; .
1-&lt; S.m dc:' . C. n cm, ~ t l 7. \ l n m~c-'1 , 1 . &lt;&gt;,
,\n gcl t:.\ , 3. Cid )-1 •111, 'i .l rt I :d i\CI\lll , _\
IJ I.cwt s. S ;n l : r...,·r , ~ c o . 5: ~ m ~ . Cl • "~ t.: ' '·
5; Ali cea, St. Lotti$, 5, .)and berg, Chtc; ·
t;Cl , 5.

LX 2 DR.

110 \lF RL\'S - .\l .tW I II t ai~H. S.m
h an c i ~co. 33 ll a~"·d l, lloU5LOII, 28,

D l.c w1s , San Fn nci~eo, 23, .\ louton,

4 .6 VS eng ., P. steering , P. bra kes, auto.
lrans., a1r cond ., AM /FM stereo cassetle,
till &amp; cruise, dua l power seats, P w1ndows
&amp; P. lock s, rea r defroste r, cast a lum111um
wheel s.

ll ou strm, 22; l..&lt;~rk t n. Cmcinnn i, 22
I' lTC I nr....:G ( I0 !J e&gt; i~ t&lt;'r1 .1 \ Kl ltll.
\l •wl r'-"1 1. 13-3. Kl '1 . l 27. J nJ .t c k ~ " "·

WAS$16,995NOW

Ga lurag a, t: cJ]orado , 211; ll ond~ . S ~ n
F ra n c t~ro . 2S _
, jc( ; rtrf. 1\ t la n u, 23 . J\ v
.la , L o.~, /\ r. ~;.c l es , ~ I ; Jl ,chcnc:, Cn l&lt;!r&lt;ed u,
2 1, Md't h cll, C mc mrH II,..Z l.

STO LEN !l ASE S - DSandcrs,
Cmctnna \i, 32: G n~~11m , \ 1 &lt;ll t l re&lt;~ l. ) 0;
U 1 ~gJO,

l looston, T l: Cm_ !·l ond.1 . 26_

l'ht Lt•kl r' hiJ , 1 1·4 . 711 . 3 l~ . ~ ;t&gt;cr l u ·
!!e11. \'c" Yllr.(.]l) .. l _ 71 .11 1 ~ \,·d

( ·,d•. ra.r .•. 11-1 . (,11 2,
n~ u.

11-&lt;l .

r,&lt; l~. ~'1 7,

_J

SJ5,995

) I. ~ lJ". r··, n, ., ·

{ ; \!J ilc l.o l , \ t( a lll J

11 -5, (,~7. 11UJ. DrJ hd l lou, ;,, t to _&lt;
.
HRlKtOLJfS -:-I.lcnes, San Di ego,

1993 FORD THUNDERBIRD LX 2 DR.

.61J7 , 3.07.

1]8; RIJO, C1ncinnmu. 12M; G~sddu~. At ·
l ~· n ~ . 11 ~: ClaY lllC, 1\ tl alt l ~ 11 4 I'JMHllnc/ , \l nmrc&lt;~l. 112. Fa·., ~crr;, ,\ \on ·
trc~ l._ 11 2:. ~ cG ros~ . l.n( Angcb, I 06
S A V ~ ; S - I)Jo nc s, l 1 h,l adcl ph i a , 22,
r rJnw, F\ c w York , 19. 1\lcl\.LJ d ucl, AI ·

lama . 18: Bed:, S11 rt f.'ra ncrs co, 18 : M y er~ .

Chtcago, 18; I ludell , lloustu11 , I 5; RoJ dS ,
Ma-Hrcal, 15

6 cyl. eng ., P steering , P. brakes , auto .
trans , air cond .. AM/ FM stereo cassette,
Iii! &amp; cruise , P. windows and P. locks, P.
driver seat, rear defroster, cast alum 1num
wheel s , 14,000 miles. Extra clean.

13,995

8

Smi·l'h's."GMC Truck Center Inc.
~ 35

PINE ST.

1994 FORD TAURUS GL 4 DR.

GAlLIPOLIS

3.8 V-6, eng, P steering , P brakes, a uto.
trans., air cond ., AM/FM stereo cassette,
dual air bags , tilt &amp; cruise, P seal , P. wind ows &amp; P. locks , ca st aluminum whee is,
rear defroster.

SUBURBAN
QMQ

wAs $16,99~ow

SJ5,995

GRAN PRIX LE 2 DR.
A. 1990 Ford F-150 4x4 Aulomalic, Air Cond., AM-FM/Cass, AU Power.

YOVR HOMETOWN GMC TRUCK DEALER
SJIFIIRI XI ~L~ SClNClmFI ~L~

B. 198S Chev SUverado 4x2 V-8, Auto Loaded, 41K MUes, Real Sharp.
INJURED - Italy's midfielder Roberto Donadoni who has an
inj.ured left thigh, rests after a light workout during t~am practice
~roday at Loyola Marymo~nt_ University in Los Angeles. Its questionable whether Donadom w11l start in Sunday's World Cup final
match against Brazil. (AP)

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2
~~~~

~~~~

C. 1989 Dodge Dakota PIV Ssp, AM-FM/l;ass, Alum Wheels Priced Right, Local Trade.

V6 eng. , P. steering, P. brakes, auto.
trans ., air cond ., AM/FM stereo cassette
till &amp; cruise , P. w indows &amp; P. locks, rear
defroster, cast aluminum wheels, new
tires, extra clean . Like new condition .

NOW

D. 1988 and 1987 Ford Ranger Super Cab Ssp., AM-FM/Cass, and Much, Much More.

8

8,995

•

E. 1991 Chevrolet S-10, 4cyl, Ssp AM-FM/Cass, Fiberglass camper lop, 25K miles.

•

1989 FORD

•

F. 1989 Chll1!rolel S-10, 4cyl, Ssp, AM-FM/Cass, New Alum Wheels and Tires.
G. 1987 lsuzu PIV, 4cyl, 4 sp, AM-FM Cass.
Jerry Bibbee, Owner
John Reeves,

The

TAURUS GL 4 DR.

1998 CADILLAC
SEVILLE

Power steering, P brakes ,
auto . trans ., AM/FM stereo
cassette, air cond., lilt &amp;
cruise, power windows and
locks, new tires . Extra clean.

Front wheel drive, 4 Dr . V-8
engine, P. steering , power
brakes, auto . trans ., air,
cond., Climate Conlrol, till &amp;
cruise, all power, e&gt;dra clean

YOVR ROJOTOWN GMC TRUCK D.EALBR

Sales Mgr.
I

Bibbee

•

MOTOR COMPANY

Sierra 3500 HD

•
•••

•
I

.' -

wlil. . try to meet or Beat the Deal•
DEAL••

oraoa ·a oss

•

614·667-3350

V-6 engine, power steering,
power brakes, aulomali c
transmission , air condition ing, tilt and cruise, rear
defroster, extra clean . Local
one owner.

$4,995
-~·

•

COOLVILLE, OHIO

PREMI:::R LX 4 DR.

Brlni''ID·YOut'beltdeill ;bn· ~ New Car or Truck'·arid 'we

••
•

STATE AT. 7

1988 EAGLE

't

· ·· ·

�Page-C6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 17, 1994- .

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

W~tson
By 11~)11 (,REEN

retains lead in British Open

AP (,olf Wnter
1 URN BERRY . Scotl:tnd
Th ere was JO Y tn Tom Wa,1 son's
~_o , cc - and '.'.'ore than a to11ch of
I told you so - wh c11 he !lashed
th a~ g ap · IOOihed g11n .
Not bad for a 44 -yc;u-old hasbeen, huh '' ' · he asked tire asse mbl ed med1a, m:rn y of whom lrad
wnllen h1m olf years ear Ite r as a
rclrc of tl1c past; a respected re ltc.
butrcltc, nevenhclcss.
Wa tson . who had JU St completed
a6 5; or a l -shot lead Fr~da y at the
~:a ~ po rnt of the 12Jrd Brnrsh
;;;~C h amp r on s hrp , &lt;JUrek It cor·
rc .. . hrm se lf.
"· en •" he ',,""· 1·
.. . I m not a .ha,s·""
1 vc been pia) rng we ll. Ear lier
th ts )'C ar I •t-1red1ctcd
I wo uld ~\ ·Ill
,

·. t .
ag;un t

JU St

wil l happ~n ..Vlaybe tt'll happen
th is week ."
The holder of eight maJor cham pt ,ln shop s - but a fru str at ed ,
slurnp-riddc11 SIIuggler for most of
the last seven years - put him self
111 posuton to make it happen Fn da y.
Half wa y hum c in th e que st to
ma tch Harr y Vardon' s rec ord six
Bnush Open victories - Watson
has a 133 total. 7 under par.
While he won't have to contend
with old fr imd and rival Jack Nrck la us. Watsof\lras more than enough
work ah ead of hliJJ over the last 36
hol es at th e .scc 11 c of one ol hrs
grea tes t triumph s. the link s at Turn •~

"""Y·

He ha\ I I nr cn. rnclu&lt;lin g Nick
· n rr l our \t rok ~s ~of hi s
Pn·cc, wl\l

66.
The group at 136 inclided David
Edwards, Jonathan Lomas of Eng·
land and a pair of New Zealanders,
IJrst-round le&lt;rdcr Greg Turner anti
Frank Nob 1·lo.
A co upl e of No rthern Ireland
prod uc ts, Ron an Ra fl.cr1 y an &lt;I

hasn t happened yet. It

love the lin ks

Belichick sees better competition in NFL

IY IllS IIIHTISII OPE N· Amerira's Torn Watson smi l ~s
.d!rr l ~· ;nin g lht lHth ~nt:n Frid01~· \\hen ht• t.:omplch:d his ~t.·l· ond
!"II(JIId in rile Briti-.h Opt.·n at T urnb t'fr\' (;otf CourSt'. \Vatson
l'll dt·d \\ilh .t 7-undn -pa r, IJJ for a on.t· ·s frokt lrad afttr t\\o
r 11t 11 H j.., 1 \ I' I

Area sports briefs
Wood wins twice
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - Burt
Wood, the son of Chuck and
Marjorie Wood of Gallipolis,
captured first place in the shot
put and the discus in the
intermediate boys' division (1516 year-olds) at the Youth
National Championships, which
ran from June 28 until July 2 on
the University of Tennessee
campus.
The Gallia Academy juniorelect's 52-foot, 4 l/4-inch effort
in the shot put created a five-foot,
BURT WOOD
one-inch margin between himself
and Wher Gregory of Wilber, Neb. Wood was joined in the lOp 10
by fellow Ohioan Bartholomew Shane of Chardon. who took
seventh with a 36-foot, 10 1/4-inch effon.
Wood's 163-foot. 4 3/4-inch effort in the discus put a seven-foot.
10 1/2-inch margin between himself and Gregory. Wood was joined
in the top 10 by Shane, who took fowth with a 130-foot, 8 1/2-inch
throw.

Cliffside ladies' results posted
GALLIPOLIS -The Cliffside Ladies Golf Association
announced its early July results.
Wednesday's low net winners were Joan Folden and Rayna
Hawk, who shared the lOp spoL
The July 6 winners were Jackie Knight in the A flight low gross,
Jean Gloss in the A flight low net, Robin Lane in the B flight low
gross and EDen Deweese in the low neL
The July 7 winners were Knight in the low gross and Wandy
Boxdorfer, Jean Hankins and Cindy Smith, who tied for low net.

Yankees win LL title
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Yankees won the Gallipolis
Little League championship Thursday night by recording a 10-0 win
over the GaUipolis Rangers.
Cody Lane, who pitched his second no-hiuer in six days, racked
up 12 strikeouts and gave up cnly one waiic against the Rangers ( 1-

10).
The Yanlcees tapped out 10 hits, which carne from Robbie Kulul
(2-3, double), Jason Johnson (1-2, double), Michael Rogers (1 -3,
double), Justin Jones, Lane, Wesley Larlcins, Jeff MuUins, Richard
Mullins and Jimmy Wiseman (aU 1-3).
'rhe Yankees (9-2) will play Mason County Bar Association's
entry in the next-to-lasl game of the fust round of the Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament IOday.

st:llldpotnt. probabl y lookrng ;rt e&lt;tp
ptnl,l cms rn ord er to srgn all of om
Jr:tlt cllllllc:s. " he s:1id . "Ru t rtghl

BEREA , Ohro (AP) - Ev en
I hough NFL tea ms arc JUSt swrung
tllcir tra inrn g ca mp s. Cle vela nd
Browns coa ch Bill Bc li chi ck said
h ~ sees someth ing di fferent around
the league.
" Ovcr&lt;J II, I thin k th e compctt ·

thu sc cnntrtr cts nrcn ' t done or we
dlln ' t kn o w ex ac tl y what those cap

t1vcncss o f the league is In creas -

numbers arc goin g to be tJnd what

ing ," Bclrchick sa id cr id ay, on the
13rowns first day of tm ining camp
for roo ki e free agents and draft
pick s. Qua rterbacks and younger
play ers report to camp Monday,
while veteran players don 'I have to
report unti l July 22.
" 1 also think that it 's a pretty
level field out there with the salary
cap," he said.
Bclichick said the sa lary ca p,
which tl1c NFL started this season,
will directly affect the parsonn el
dec ision s made by eac h tea m,
includin g his.

moves we'll have to mak e."
But no mancr what personnel
moves he decides to make during
th e season, Belichick sa id that it
won't chan ge the strength of hi s
team ' s dep th, es pe cia lly at the
quarterback position.
'' In '9 2 and '93 we we nt
through six quarterbacks in those
two years. Wi th Vinny (Test&lt;t ve ld c) ami Mmk (Rypi cn) tim
yc:rr. I think that' s th e best we've

''V.,'c still nrc, fr o m a ro ster

Physicals slated July 23
ROCK SPR INGS · Ph ys ica ls
lor a ll Meigs High School and
Jun 1or High School athletes will be
given July 23 from I until 4 p.m. at
Ve terans Memorial Ho spital' s
Home Hc.1 ilh Office. The ofli ce JS
located across from the main hospi tal in Pomeroy.
Physica l cards arc now availah le
to be pi c ked up at Meigs Hig h
Sc hool rn the office. Students must
have a ph ys ical card sig ned by a
parent or guardian before taking
physicals.
·

GAHS helmet
fitting Monday
GA LLIPOLIS - Ga lli a Aca demy
Hi gh Schoo l head footba ll coach
Bre nt Saunders announ ced today
that a ll Blue Devi l pro spec ts
(grades 9-12) will receive fittings
fo r helm ets fo llowrng H p. m. worknut s in th e GAHS locker roo m
Vlonday, Jul y IK

111 m. wc' n..: rc;.rll y not Ill d position

to make tho:-.c deci sion s bec au se

countmg on, i.s in that fou r, fi ve,
six , seve n, eight yc&lt;.H ex per ience
r:mgc ," he sa td . "We don' t ha ve to

rel y on our rook ies and draft picks
to lake us far."

"'"I

Correction
POMERO Y . In Wedn esda y's
D:uly Sentinel. one of the Racine
A's nam es was inadvertently omit-

led. Wes ley Thorne, who was
absent from the piclurc, was left
nut The A's fini shed third in Hub·
hard 's Little League Tournament.

90 CHEVY
Astro Conversion Van, 4 captains chairs, fold down
bed,air, automatic.

89 DODGE
Ram pickup, blue, custom
wheels, sharp!

88 DODGE
Grand Caravan LE, red, air,
automatic.

car. home. life
and health
insurance .

88 FORD
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stereo, 2 lone finish .

STATE FARM

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SNOWDIN
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H-446 ... 111

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Football instruction period Monday
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs Marauder head football coach Mike
Chancey has announced that the I 0-day instructional period for the
1994 Meigs Marauder football team will begin Mooday 816 p.m.
The hefnl'et-fitting session wiD be held on Tuesday, July 19 at J.O
a.m ..
For more information, call Chancey 81992-5558 or 81992-2158.

Southern physicals slated
RACINE - Sports physicals for the Southern Local School
District will be held the next two Wednesdays- July 20 and 27at the office of Douglas D. Hunter, M.D.
Physicals will be for all sports for the 1994-95 school year and
wiU be held according 10 the following schedule: July 20 from 8:30
a.m. tn noon for boys in grades 7-9; 1 to 5 p.m. for boys in grades
10-12; July 27 from 8:30 a.m. to noon for girls in grades 7-9; 1 to S
p.m. f&lt;I girls in grades 10-12.
Physicals will be done free of charge only on these days. To
receive a physical, athleiCS must bring a. completed sports P.hysical
card, signed by a parent or legal guard11111. Cards are available at
Hunter's office in Racine or at Southern High School. Athleres
should dress in shms and T-shirts for their exams.
P

NEW 1994 DODGE DAKOTA SPORT

NEW 1994 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM

NEW 1994 DODGE RAM 1500

V-6, air, casseHe, alloy wheels, power steering, Auto, air, lih, cruise, casseHe, 6passenger seating, LT lrim, V-6engine, AM/FM stereo, short bed, red
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lachometer, air bog.
MSRP $12,S6S air bag.

$11,999

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such sponsorship

in

future

Th ere wtl l be two g JITl C'I c;,tc ll
~ l o n d ay throu gh Thursda y, a ~ in glc
g;nn e Fridn y at Lancaster, ancl the
champion ship gam e or gam es on
S;tturday at Lan caster.

All gam es arc to begin at 5:30
p.m. exce pt for lhe Saturday games

which will be at II a.m. and 3 p.m.
Under Legioll rules, all contcscs
11i ll ilc nin e illning s and if lllt erruptcd by rarn or darkness. wil l be
concluded at a lat er time by being
ptckcd up &lt;rt the potnt of intcrr11 p·
tton.
In first round games Monday,

McArthur wi ll mee t Wel lston at
L:tn castcr and Ath ens wil l fa ce
Lancaster at Picke rin gton . Tu csd:r y's ;rcuon lind s GalltpoltS play Ing th e McArthur-Wellston ,~,.· ,nn c r
Pitkcrtngton and P1ckcnngton
l.;lu ng lhc Alhcns- L:HKa-.; tcr winner
;ll La ncaster.

,It

First round pairings were dctcrrnim.:d by an oncn draw . No team s
·

Paddlefish in two Ohio rivers

~!~!~WI~~ta On Si~~~: !IIJ2e~:~!

-

•.

..

·,

DIYISIOD of Wildlife
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
study ofpaddlefish ~stributionand
habatat an the Ohao and S~aoto
nvers has produced the best mformatJon on another rare and threatened fish known as the salver lamprey.
~esem:chers from the Ohio State
Umversaty School of Natural
Resources trymg to find adult paddlefish that were captured in January_ near the mouth of the Scio_to
and Implanted wath radio transmatters.
. Of the 81 p~dlefish collected,
nme mal~ and su female paddleftsh receaved the transmitters and
were released back in10 the Ohio
River so their movements could be
lniCed.
When the paddlefish were collected last year, researchers discovered moce than 50 silver lampreys
auached to !he fash and noted that
aU had muluple lamprey scars. The
lamprey auaches i~lf to other ftsh
and feeds upon vanous body flutds.
The silver lamprey is one of
seven types of lampreys found in
Ohio and is listed with the paddlefish as a threatened species by the
Division of Wildlife.
Initial findings of this research
revealed that paddlefash seem to be
relatively abundant in the Meldahl
Pool area of the Ohio belween the
Meldahl Lock and Dam in Clermont County and the Greenup
Lock and Dum in Scioto County.
Researchers believe that the
abundance of silver lampreys may
be related to the abundance of paddlefish.
' 'The silver
is a diffi-

of
liS distribution and abundance
because it can not be co llected
throu~h ordinary fish sampling
techmques. The early findings in
the paddleftsh research project we
are funding certainly gives us
e~cellerlt information on silver
lamprey abundance in the Ohio
River, " said David Ross, wildlife
diversity program coordinator for
the Division of Wildlife.
Ohio State researchers said the
adult paddlefish used the upper
Meldahl Pool and lower Scioto
River during the spawning season.
The fash were 1mclced moving into
the lower Meldahl Pool following
spawning. ·
Sixteen larval paddlefish only
recently hatched, were coUec'ted at
six sites in the Ohio River. They
suggest that paddlefish spawning
occurred in the upper Meldahl Pool
around Portsmouth, though some
may have spawned in the lower
Sciow River.
Paddlefish have been caught in
parts of the Scioto River as far
upstream as the Greenlawn Dam in
Columbus.
Surprise win
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) If you post an 80 on one of your
rounds in a major golf wumament,
you can usually kiss first money
good-bye:
Bur according to the statisticians
of the PGA,' there was an exception . In the 1986 Honda Classic,
Kenny Knox staggered to eight·
over par on the third round.
The next day he finished with a
score of 287 for 72 holes, oneunder-par, good for lOp money.

Associated Prt'."-S Writer

C' IN C INN,\TI
Kevin
.Vlit chcll ha s hcc' n assesse d an
unJ Jsc losecl ltn c lor mt ss in g th e
start o l Thurqb ~ ntght ''i game,_ with
th ~ C h 1 c :r ~ o

still l ~lt c and w~..~ drm't have a
do uble '\ tandaH! ctrouud her e, "
manager D:J\'C) John so n sa1d Fri wJs

C'ohs

'' I kn,ow t11 ;11hl.' th e r e we re

GAHS reserve
seats to go on
sale Aug. 15
GALLIPOLIS - Reserve seats
for GaUia Academy High School's
five home football games will go
on sale Monday, August IS, and
Tuesday, August 16 for Blue Devil
Clan members and film sponsors
according to Bill Wamsley, athletic
direciOr.
Parents of varsity and reserve
football players will be able to purchase reserve seats on Wednesday.
August 17, and Thursday, August
18. '
Reserve seats for the general
public will be available on Friday.
August 19. The price will be $20
per ticket. Tickets may be purchased in the principal's office at
GAHS belwecn 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Clan members and film Sp&lt;?nsors will be limited to a 10 ucket
purchase on the farst day of sales.
After the first day, there will be no
limit on the number of tickets
which may be purchased.
Gallia Academy's five home
games are Sept. 2, Meigs; Sept. 16,
Pt. Pleasant; Sept. 30, Marieua;
OcL 7, Athens and OcL 14, Logan.
The Blue Devils will host Fairland in a scrimmage on Saturday,
August 20, and scrimmage at Vinton County on Saturday, Aug. 27.

Gallipolis Area
Football Camp set
to begin July 25
GAL LIPOLI S - The fourth
annual Gal lrpol is Area Foo tball
Camp. for hoys entering grades 5-R
thi .i fall . will run from Monda y,
Jul y 25 to Thursday, Ju ly 2X !rom I
to 3:30 p.m. daily al Memoria l
Ftcld in mid -town G:r ll ipoli s.
The Icc is S40.
Ga llia Ac ad emy vars ll y hea d
loot ball coach Hrcnl Saunders and
Hlu c Devrl ass tstant coac h Man
Bokovil!., the camp clircclors. will
he assi stccl by the rest of the GAHS
coaching stall
Participants should wear cleated
shoes if possib le. A camp T-shin
wil l be rrovidcd for each partici·
pant , and a contest will be held for

da y
Mit c hel l ~ a !ll ht . , pl;.111 e was
gro und ed tn C ht cago nearly th ree
hours t~ t. lll \l' ol nw ch:utt cal prob -

lcnt s. He &lt;lrn vc d 111 the club hOIJSC
ahout i.lll ltuur alter g;IIIICltmc. and
prn c h hll 111 thr c-tg htlt rrtrtin g,
dra w mg ~~ \\ ;tl k.

try to slnk c out su

SALE

$14,899

Page-C7

m~my p~,.·(lpll'. ''

Johnson said . " If he IIL"t put th e

games.

Julrn sun satd ""Y4Lnhbl c he had
wt llr i( tj&lt;l's kr•ctrc s was ve ry small

ba ll in play , he' d fnl ts h llt iJ r c

gamer;. "

Wtth Fri day's start . i&lt;'lo ('ql
took over the NL k ad m "- l:.ul -.. \\ 111!
2 1. G om g 1r1 , he \\;t .., "L'I..·on d tn
strtk r out s \\' J(IJ 1 ~~ ;1 nd thtrd 111

h u-.., tlh.'"'• ,.., (ll l!'. tand 1ng," John son
..,; ud '' !! .:'.., :1 l: utll ll' ;\hi JUt In s run -

earn ed run ~\ve ra gc :11 \ Of,, I 1:.: h:td
fi ve SlftkcOtu s i:nt la}, .u1d lowcl~..·d

L.\\'l l

in the who!&lt;.'

"'I hl'

h 0.11

\L

IK'rnc of things.

w~1 y It~· ~ocs

:t l : ll l,tl t ~..

Ik "

llllt .t'

his ERA 10 2 n

!"&gt;~· ,

:Jbout ht s

.t hmit Iu s arn1

[ ~' 1\ l' htttl :\ \ :\C rl\&lt;.,&lt;.,

thr

d

" I don ' t have an yllllllg lu say,"
Mr tchell growled to report ers. ' 'I' m
gettin g tired of th1 s. I' m g01ng to
put so me h;us aro und my loc ker
:J nd get som e guard dog~.'·
Brct B&lt;,o nc, wh ose .: ubi c lc

ne1ghbor s

~lotclr c ll,

olkrcd to

mediate.

' 'I' ll guard tt," Boone s:ud .
Muchell was 111 the star[lng lineup for Fri day ni ght 's ganre, and
Johnson s:ricl ~1 c ma tter was closed.
"Ji m (Bowtlcn) hancllctl thin gs
wi ~r Mitch . I was kind of out of the
loop. " John son sa iLl . " He callccl
Jim fro m th e airport ; I gue ss he
didn't have 111) numbCJ ."
Deion Out
Dcion Sanders, who rc· agg rabru tsed hee l 111 '1hu r.sd~I Y
nrght' s game , drd JJ(ll pia ) l-r 1d&lt;l\' .
" ll e' .s ha vi ng" heal ;-;c ,lnt.Jr ;1
bone sca n, or som cthtn !.!. tu o,;cc II
there' s somet hi ng we' re~ llll" \ 11\ )!."
v~n c d a

John son said.
Sa nd e rs lead s the·
League in stol e n b:t scs

·~ attn n. rl
·.vtth 3 ~

Call For
Appointment
MondayFriday 9-5
Saturday 9-2

including 13 since betng traded I&lt;&lt;
the Reds on May 2 ~ .
" He was reall y favorin g it last
ni ght," John son said . " He ta lked

l
I

the t.rtJincr thi s rnorntng and was

I

to

gomg to sec the doc tor :rbo ut tt."
Rijo Power
Jose Riio mi ght be even more
effective ii' he d(dn 't work so hard
at bei ng a strik eo ut pit cher, hts
manager think s.
" At times, I wi sh he wo nl ctn 't

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~~

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
(!D.
I~... Celebrate
Invites You To Help Us
(
Our 3'd Anniversary ~..
I~J

fGesl

GMCTRuc:K.

LooJa for Great Seleetions and
Prfees All Month

y

[Gee I GMCTRUCK.

various pri1.cs.

Water and refreshments will be
provided daily .
RcgJS tratJOn s forms at GAHS
ofl1c c and the Coaches' Corner ,
located in the G.C. Murphy's Man
in ilown1 own Ga lli rol lS.

~\\.

1995 CHEVY
tll~ MONTE CARLO
OR

199 5 CHEVY LUMINA
BOTH LOADED
BOTH HOT!

RUBKY!!!

The money that you spend in your community
reappears again and again-in jobs, in the school
system, in economic development, in new homes.
To help you work the magic, Peoples Bank offers you
a package of no-fee accounts when you support local
business. It's called Money Magic, an essential threein-one account that includes Checking, Visa and
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When you open a Money Magic
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Peoples Bank will reinvest a portion of
the opening balance in United Way.
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1991 GMC 1500 PickUP-·····--$10,200
LWB, V6, 5 opeed, llir.

1993 Chev. 1500 Plckup ....•.••$11,400
LWB, V6, 5 opeed, llir.

1989 Buick Lesabre ......... -.... -.. $6400
4 door, auto., air, loaded.

1986 Buick Lesabre .........••....•. $5250
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1989 Chevy S 10 Pickup.-.•..•.••. $7995
4X4, auto., V-6, atereor.

1989 Chrysler New Yorker-.. -...$7445
Loaded, 4 door.

1988 Chevy lroc Camaro ......... $6995
350 V~a, auto., air, T-topa.

1990 Ply. Grand Voyager ....•.••. $6295
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1991 Cadillac Fleetwood ··---- $14,495
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1992 Buick Regal--·-·······----·-·-··$8990
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air, stereo, P. windows &amp; locks.
0

$11 995°

SHS gridders to sponsor tourney
RACINE - Southern High School's football program, undm' the
direction of head coach Joe Bob Hemsley. will be sponsoring a
softball tournament on Saturday and Sunday, July 24 81 the SHS
fields.
The entry fee is $70 and two balls.
For further infonnation call Hemsley 81 949 2611 or 304-7735483 after 9 p.m.
That same weekend, Southern's baskdball squad will host a car
show at the high schooL

Sunday Times Sentinel

Conununi!Y reinves1ment
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reams 1n the past. did not do so dur·
•ng the ~~~ 4 c&lt;rmpaign , but could

91 DODGE

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Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.®

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lqJo lt :-. . Lmcaslcr, McArthur, Pick cr-tng tnn and \\o' c ll ston . Glou•ilcr
: ~rHI M c ig ~ . whi ch have sponsored

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Vlonday and IS sc heduled 10 contin·
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Ath ens wil l be see king to
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yc:;tr. The Post 2 1 tc;r rn emerged as
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St.x team s will be parti cqJatlng

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Ftcld in Lancaster, located on north

cring ton rmhcr than Athens ~1 s h ~Js
h~c n. the case in rcc c11l years.

...,~ 11d ..

were seeded. Gallipoli s and Pi cker·
tn gton drew first-round byes.
G;r mes will be played at Beavers

Etg hth Dt s.tn ct Ameri can Leg ion
ln~.;c ba ll tourna ment

"i ll be held in Lancaster and Pi c k ~

$11,995

•
HORSE RA CING
CHICAGO (AP) - Ship In A
Slip, S4 80, led at every pole to win
by a head over Roya ll y Noted in
th e $22,5 00 feature at Ar lin gton
Jnt crn ~l tional Racecourse .
INGLEWOOD, Ca lif. (AP) Cool Air, S4 20, won the S 155,600
Hollywood Park Budweise r Breeders' C up by 2 1/2 length s over
D'Hal lcvant.

AT HENS · Their wt ll be "
cha nge of locau ons for thi s year' s

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MeiQS football notes

ROCK SPR IN GS - There will
h:lll at tha t posi tion since I've been be a meeting for all seventh · and
here." flelichick said. "c\nd ohvi - eighth -graders in terested in playi ng
Du 'd y , th&lt;H's bee n a cri t ical ;-.pot for footba ll at Meig s Junio r Hi gh
Sc hool on Monday, Aug . 8 a~ 10
u :-; th ~ last two yems"
ll c lt c hi c k
Tcs ta vc rdc a.m in ihe jun1or hi gh auditorium .
rc nt&lt;lin s th e Browns s tart e r lor
The purpose of the meeting will
no w, w1t h R)' jliC n as th e backup. be 10 hand out ph yscial cards and
Rypicn. th e fo rme r Wa shingwn general information .

Tournament planned
VliDD LE PORT · The Middleport Recreation Commission will
host a men's USSSA Class D &amp; E
state qualifier tournament on July
23 and 24 at Middleport Park in
Middleport.
Entry fcc for the doubl e-elimination event is $80 and two soft ·
ball s.
For more information, call Skipper Johnson at 992 -6364.

"The thmg I feel the best about
is the fact that the majority of ou r
team, nr m least the players we arc

lil·

wv

lo.I:S.~EY

92 PONTIAC

Redskin quarterback, sig ned wnh
the Brow ns on May 10.
Belrch 1ck, whose three -year
rec ord is 20-28 with the Brown s,
s:rid he th inks that this year' s team
ha s what it take s to be a playo ff
contender. Tile Browns haven't
made tire playoffs since the 1989
SCllSOn.

g:r111 ~· ,''

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant,

Legion tournament will
Mitchell fined by Reds for being late Thursday
get underway on Monday llyTERRY
thm gs he couldn 't control, but he
ll 11 t he lr:ts Jll &gt;t two comple te

•

Dav 1J Fcilcrt v, and i\ llt ertc lll ve icrans Fuu y /.oe llcr :11111 Lo ren
Robert&gt; followed at 1:\7
In the absence of Ntck lans - he
mi sse d th e cut lm the fin al two
round s over th e mursc where in
1~7 7 he engagc' d Wat son in a
memorable slll tntout - Wat so n
was the clear f:r \'Orr tc ol the Scots
gall ery, m:my of .whom cons rdcr
llim one ol thctr mil t.
Th e fe elin g " rec rpro c:rtcLI by
Wat son. who won alll tvc uii11 S
llriti sh Open tit le's i11 Sco tlcrud :urtl
spcaks lrccly and IIClJIICntly ol lr ts
love ol lhc IIl l ' S U llli SCS and stylr
of plcry
" I love 11 1ay111 u Cel li oc c1 hell'.
'
I've alw&lt;Jys loved ·pl.lytng
g&lt;&gt;il uce1
here Thi s is the "'"l ~o i l hc~:nr. I
hope. someda y w lmr ll~. rny ~~1 11. U\"l' l
here and let tllln k':u'n l\ l ? b y ; ul d

narrow lc;uJ.
Brad Fa xon and Jcs per
Pamcvik, an e n ~ :t g on g Swede wuh
a turn ed -up c tp and power ful
game. are the closest al 134. Fa xo11
matched Watson 's 65 tn the brisk.
ch rlly wind s anti PMnev tk btrdied
three of lite la st lour hol es an d
scored ail eagle 111 a round of 66.
. Pn cc, arguabl y the best player
rn the world and the w1nncr of 14
worldwide titl es gorn g bac k to the
1992PGA,was alonc at 135 aftcra

July 17, 1994

Loaded, 4 door, V&amp;.

1993 Nissan 4X4 Ext. Cab ..•. $13,980
HURRY I

1985 Chevy K1 0 4X4 .•.••••••••••••• $7460
Long bed, auto., 56,000 mllh

1991 Chevy S1 0 Pickup .••.• .--.• $5,495

NEW 1994 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER

Air, etereo with cua•tte.

NEW 1994 CHRYSLER LHS

NEW 1994 DODGE INTREPID

1994 Ford LID.£k&amp;n Vict..-$19,994

V-6, auto, air, lilt, cruise, cassette, 7 passenger V-6, aulo, air, tilt, cruise, cassette, power witdows leolher interior, all power options, ltixufY sports
seating, dual air bags.
MSRP S18,356 &amp;locks, dual air bogs.
MSRP $19,177 sedan, dual air bags.

$16,f99

SALE

$17,799

Carbajal (32-1) lost his IBF and
IIOXING
WBC
crowns Feb . 19 in a split
PHOENIX (AP)- Michael
.
decision
to Humberto Gon7.alcl of
Carhaja l powered his way to a
Mexico.
urw nimous, 12- round dcc is1on over
Camacho ( 15-3) lost in his sec·
Josue "Dick ie" Camacho ol Pu erond
defense and fourth fight since
to Rico.
he
knocked
nut Eddie Vallejo on
€ MbaJal won the WBO juniorJuly
31,
199210
win the title.
ll ywe ight title.

WAS $24,275. L~ti;;,, 800 milM.

SALE
~--~

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

~~~

614·992·6614, 1·800·837·1094

I

NdSOIIYlUr

Ntwri

~ Ptalns

IDD Only

7 S}- I~S

~~

797.4s.t7

37~7123

�)

Outdoors

July 17, 1994
•

Sunday Times-Sentinel/C8

Ohio fishing report

Farm/Business

Section D
J ul y 17, 1994

Low-sun conditions be.s t for catching Fox ·Lake largemouths
OAKTHORPE LAKE - Fish to 22 inches.· Usc spreader,; tipped
COI . UMBUS . Ohio (A P) Here" the wee kl y fi shmg report as with minnows beneath a bobber in with min nows fi shed ncar the hot·
prnndd by rh e Divi sion of deep water with submerged brush tom to take yellow perch. At night,
Wildhk of the Ohio Department of piles and timber to take crapp ies. usc chicken livers or night crawlers
Use larval ba i L~ and wax wonns in fished along the bou om to take
1\.J&lt;Hural Resources·
shallow
water to take rcdear sun- channel catfish. Largemouth bass
Southeast
FOX I. AKE -- Largemo ut h fish . The deep drop-offs alo ng the and bu llheads al so offer good fi shing opportunities.
bi.i~ s mca..;urc up to 22 inc hes and western shoreli ne arc good places
MAUMEE RIVER - Good
can he wk cn rhroughout the mom - to fis h for largemouth bass.
numbers
of channel catfish arc pre utg anJ lat.c cvcmng on a variety of
Northwest
sent
ami
provide
plenty of midsum !Jvt' and artificia l ha ils fis hed near
LAKE LECONT E - Drift
mer
night
fi
shin
g
opport un ities for
the shoreli ne. Usc trad itional baits we ight -forward spin ners tipped
the
bank
fi
sherman.
F1sh with sma ll
1"hul along the houorn close to the
with night crawlers or slow ly trol l
"horclin..: when pursuing c hanne l deep-divi ng crank baits when fish- jigs or so ft craws in the dee per
~·,ttri...,h . An angler survey 1s bei ng
ing fo r waUcves which measure up holes be low the ri ffl es arountl

:n ndu c tell

31

var1ous

Otsego, Weirs Rapids, Waterville
and Bu tlonwood and be low th e
Independence and Grand Rapids
dams to take small mo uth bass.
Northeast
TAPPAN RESERVOIR Largemout h ba ss range in size
from 12 to 23 inches. Usc surface
lures fished around areas of vegeta tion or plas tiC wor ms fished in
deeper water during early morning
for best res ults. Channel catfi sh
average I 5 inches and can be taken
during early morn ing and evening
when using traditional catfish baits

fished along the hottom.
WELLINGTON RESER VOIR
- Bluegills are numerous, but of
smal l size. Usc smal l wonns or larval baits fis hed at dcp ~1s of two to
eight fee t with or without a hobber
along the shorel ine for best results.
Largemouth bass arc also in good
num be rs, bu t sma ll in sue. Try
fishing with ni ght craw lers, soft
craws or imitation baits.

Lake Erie
Some limit catches of walleyes
contin ue in the we stern basin by
drifting weig ht-forwa rd spinners

tipped wit h ni ght crawle rs andtro lling. Try th e areas around th e
Davis Besse plant , West Sis ter
Island, Green Island and the international harder.
In the cen tra l basin, wa ll eye
anglers arc fi nding the best action
one to five miles out from Cleveland to Conneaut. The Lorain area
is also producing good wall eye
fishing action.
Central basi n anglers are trolling
dipsy divers and spoons at depth s
of 35 to 50 fee t.

, ifhll ll h'l '{IL'Il drn' r ,·h·ur 1. l

I d: !.r l, t1 . _, rll [\I'. ,i!1,1ill '- : I J II lit ill rn, .J\I L (kill
11r.l , ro~k t tl .\1.11..~ ~r~,lrh r, r~' ~·l·1 ,·t !ll!llll ul ;h e
• '' 11p. 11I\

hours

All individuals should have a will

rhrougllOUt the summer at th is lake.
I.AKE I OGAN - FISh near the
,Jwrclmc oppos ite the public beach
'" ~tk c large mouth bass . Blueg ills

BRUCE

arc numerous and c an be taken

!rom many shoreline areas. Usc traililional ba1ts ri shed along the hottom to take chan nel catfish. The
western end of the lake is a popular
fi shing spot.
South west
ACTON LAKE - Use red
wo rms and larva l ba its fis hed
beneath a hobber in shallow water
to wk c bluegi ll s. Nig ht fis hing is
best lak ewide for channel catfish
angl ers. Thi s is a good bass lake
which is ofte n o ve rl oo ked . Fish
during cm-ly morni ng and evening
hours to avord rec reational hoatin g
traffic.
GRAND LAKE ST. MAR YS
- Large numbers of bullhead catfish an' prese nt. Fish with small
ni ght crJw lcrs along t.hc botrom in
the boat channels and in shallow
wa ter fo r besl results. Night fi shing
provides the best action when fishing fo r chan nel catfish. Use min now s fi shed in areas w1th submerged structure to take bass and
crappies.
Central
BIG DA RBY CREE K - This
state and national sc eni c ri ver
offers good float fis~ing opportunities. Cast small spinners or night
crawlers to areas where vegetation
borders deeper water to take· largemouth bass. The riffles in the area
between Orient and Darbydale provide good opportunitie s to take
smal lmouth bass. Rock bass, channel catfish and carp arc also plentifu l throughout the Darby creek system.

Rom inger quits race
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r ial i n1 1. 1

Annual tobacco field tour scheduled July 19
84 Month
FINANCING*

~L\ C IIINF - T ile Su~a r Run As hland stalio n in
l )llllH.' ro~' 1111 Mulhl'rry t\\'l'IHie has ill.'(llli rt• rl : 1 Ill'\\' pit•rt.• ol' t'lprip .

NF\V

111ent. a' llann_l' llufTincton, ldt , anti lloh

ll ;~ r t on tl e rnon s t r ;~ tt·.

Ba r lcm, 0\\'lllT of tht· station fo r 2 1 .n·a rs, ."iaid hi ' r umpan _r nm1
ha o., flu• ah ilit v to fi:\: mufTit.·r,, s hocks, struts and hr :J kt's . " \ \'t'n·
t'\t' ilt d and l~to k ing for\\a r d to d oi rq.: dif'ftrt·nt thirll-!"· 1 ' Barto n
\; tid.

IIMI'IIIDI
•••IIi

BRAND NEW '84 CHm lSTRD IITINDID CBNVIRSIDN VAN

17 BIB**
'

8

Extended Chasts, OrNe&lt; Side Air Bag, An\i-locll Brakes, Air Cocdil!on,
Atlomaoc Ovemnve. PIS. PIB. T ~. Cru1se, AMIFM Cass. PIW1ndows.
P/Locks, 4 Capl Char;, Solal8ed Filelglass Rl.OI'Org lloalds,
ndirect Lighting, Premium Wood Package,F ~I C&lt;lnv&lt;rn:ln Loaded'

llliEW 1184 WIIIINDIR CAMPIR VAN

ll~~~~:o:~=~!!'~!~!~~e~=e~ator,

Sola, Loaded'

s34'888

f'«l Doc Fees Oelt-MOO'

" Scor1 P111n1Scheme Aa1itional

BRAND NIW '141UICK CINTURY SlOAN
Driver Side A~rbag, Anti-Loci! Brakes. 2.3 Liter Quad OHC
L-4 Engine, PIS, PIB, AMIFM Stereo, PILocks, Custom
Clolh lnlenor, Rear Deck Lid Sp01le1. Well Equtpped'

488**

1Tillll' \ · ~l' llli1H.' l

phu lo 11," (;l'Orgt: .- \halt•)

lUIIII

IHI All NIW 94
1

Automatic, Air Condition, Power Steerrng, Power Brakes,
Custom Cloth Interior. Front &amp; Rear Floor Mats, Steel
Belled Tires. Driver S1de A!rbag, Well Eq111ppedl

CIVY S·SIRIIS PICKUP
8

7,988**

CV5lom WHe Wheeb Opbooal

All NEW '14 S·SIRIIS 4K4 PICKIP
4.3¥-IPDWII

7:56

4X4, 4 3 V-6 Power, 4-Wheel An\i.l.od&lt; B!alies. PiS, PIB, Custom
Cloth Interior. Steel Belled Tires, WellE~

r'\ thrrd ,

813

. II Hllll L'f :-. r\ \l'L'O IHh lu n lw 1 h~ r c k .

Vi rcnque cla llnccl Fr;mcc 's third
Fnday. L.tst
)'l':lr, France wun just once.

co n ,~._'l'll lt\ C .'&gt; ta gc wm

288**

Appraisers vs. inspectors
By SONNY GARNES
JACKSON - Here's a tip that
could save you thousands of dollars
in home repair costs:
Don't ever mistake an appraisal
repon for an inspection report Tbc
two are vastly different.
Some homebuyers confuse the
two groups because both perform
some of the same tasks. Both wall&lt;
through a house, clipboard in hand,
and check off items on a list. Both
look for obvious defects such as
cracks in the foundation or loadbearing walls, bowed basement
walls and leaky roofs. Both also
note obviously malfunctioning and
antiquated plumbing or electrical
wiring.
But while they may do many of
the same things, the two groups '
mindscts are anything but identical.
Appraisers generally are hired
by lenders, in the case of conventional loans, or assigned by the
local HUD office, in the case of
FHA loans.
Appraisers check the home 's
structural integrity and its interior
systems to make sure they compare
to those of other homes in the same
price range and neighborhood .
They have to be able to assure
HUD or the lender thai the home is
worth its loan amount.
Inspectors, on the other hand,

Sports deadlines
Th e Gallipolis Daily Tribune ,
The Daily Sentinel and the SWid&lt;Jy
Times-Sentinel value the contribu-

BRANd NIW '14 DLDSMDIILI CIIRA
Dnver Stae A1r Bag. Anh-Lock Brakes. Automat&lt; . Au rondrtion.
PIS, PIB, AM/FM Stereo, PIDoor Locks, PIRecttners, Custom
Cloth lnterKJr. Fronl &amp; Rear Fkxil Ma~. Steel Beted Tiles. Well
EqUipped'

8

13,288

NOW IN STUCKI

IIllO NIW '14 3/4 liN 414
IITINDID CAB PICIIP V-1 PIWIR
314 Ton C\'assls, V-111'owe!, SP~ Bend! Rocini")Sea\ Rear .IJ"""""
PIS. P/B, Fu1 Size SpiJe rre, Wei E~

llDSIIBili'IIIW
CINIUIIIIIf lOllY,
IHillllll "lllliSIIBillliRIU

8

17,988

To
Tab ~77 kl Ripley FAIRPlAIPI lftWchlngt
(EDt 132) 1\lm tbttl Ofl RL 21, o..leratllp ls
3m1Monlltl.

Will Jlfl/1111 #I OIJJ, 1111, 1111/lr, 11/rl, Su lllratl• Jlllallr.
Tlllllll-1-111-BZZ-Hil • 11Z.Zif4 • Hf·llfl• fZZ-1111

••••r·llti111J
••·•••
•••••, 1111-···

• Taxes, Tags, Hie Fees ed1a. ROOate included in sale price of new ~ehicle listed where applicable. On approved credit. Not restXl"Bible for typographical errors.

•

often arc hired by you , the buyer,
to ftnd out beforehand if a potential
home is falling apart and pinpoint
items that will need to be replaced.
Reputabl e inspectors may certify
tlrat tl1eir work is acctHate and that
certain internal home systems, such
as the heating and air conditioning
system, arc in good worlting order.
They also will point out problems
that are sure to cause trouble and
expense: a roof that needs replacing, a poorly draining shower that
may need retiling or a stove that
doesn't heat properly.
Another difference between the
two groups is in training and
licensing requirements: There are
none for inspectors. Appmisers, by
contrast. must take appraiser education courses, work 2,000 hours
and pass an examination to earn a
state license.
That's not to say appraisers are
beuer qualifierl to judge the working order of the systems in your
home, however.
As one acquaintance has said,
"asking an appraiser to do an
inspection is like going to an orthopedic surgeon and assuming he can
perform brain surgery."
So if you have any questions at
all about the structure and operating systems inside your home, you
mtght want to consider hiring an
Continued on 0 -8

Investment Viewpoint
A view from midyear 1994
lly Jay Caldwell
GALLIPOLIS - With summer
already upon us, this is an appropri ate time t() review

ti ons their readers make to the
sports sections of these papers, and
they will conunue to be publisherl.
However , certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball-related
photos and related articles, from Tball to the majors, as well as other
spring and summer sports, is the
day of the last game ·of the World
Series.
The deadline for photos and
related articles for football and
other fall sports is the Saturday
before the Super Bowl. The deadline for photos and related articles
for basketball (summer basketball
and related camps fall under the
spring and summer sports deadline)
and other wjnter sports is the last
day of the NBA final s.
These deadlines arc in place to
allow contributors the time they
need to acquire their photos from
the photography studio/developer
of choice and to grve the stalls the
chance to publish these items in the
appropriate season for those sports.

~\)

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hc lr i nd . .-\n o thcr Fr...: nch ry c lis t.
,\1m : tn d

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al -.;n :1t

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; 111 d \h r~·( lhHih' :-. L\ ~~ l l lll;l! ( d ,il

Chr is Bcwduwn, lhc prologue win ncr and early leader, quit before ihc
motJnlatn s. lta lwn ClaudiO Chiappucci . in rhc top six the l ;~sl four
years. fa iled to stan the 12th swgc.
Romi nge r, ex pec ted to be
lndura 111·s chi ef co mpetition after
an l lll JH Cs .~ iv c win in May's Tour
of Sp:1in. fell hehmil by mi nutes,
nnt sn:omh, th i ~ wcl:k and was
7 '\6 l&gt;.' lllill l lnrt ura111 when be quiI.
i\ lr er Ro min ge r dropped out .
pbr . .·,

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Thr ee- time champ1o n Greg
LeMond or the United Suucs was

1nhcritt..' d

Il l f.

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II ·111

'

hi s chal lengers !a lter or drop out.

R rc h ;1rd

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tit•

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,,', 111&lt; '&gt; 111 '1&lt;•11 ',\ill L:l'l I III I''\.

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FrcncllrlL lll

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10

tri;ll s :rnd mount:rin climbs as

I.

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AI hi.
wi tlld ra \'.':1 1.
Rominger lx:carn c the lar c~·il vic11111 uf the powerful Sp;miard , who
h;!\ ro l l ed eve r furth er ahea d in

I

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T ony

Bag na cs de Bigorrc

'II

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T he wc:tkc n1n g Swiss r 1d c r .
ll;ICCiy al1lc \0 ke ep up Wilh lh C
pa ck. go t off hi s bik e &lt;J bout 25
mil e' from the end of the 13th
, t:I ,J;l\ from

;,.Jd

11

~~ . ., th e rrdc r i"ou tt:d a.'i l11.s

ltl u g h cs t
R o mrn ~c r ,

lll.\ 1! Ill&lt;
o,'l •'

the events of the
first half of 1994.
Tllc 1990's got off
to a strong start.
Over U1c past three
years, the financial
markets mad e
suong gains baserl
primanly on a low -interest-rate, lowinflation environment.
These low rates hnd stable prices
made it easier for people to afford
new cars, buy new homes, refinance
their mongages, and for companies
to modernize and grow. The favorable conditions also encouraged
people to put more of their money
aside in sa vings and investments.
As we entered 1994, the results of
these favorable conditions remained
in evidence. The stock and bond
markets persisted in their advance,
consumer confidence was on the rise,
and corporate America continued to
issue optimistic earnings projections.
The Federal Reserve Board became
concerned that the news was too good.
That too-rapid growth might reignite
inflation. In a preemptive move, the
Federal Reserve began raising shonterin interest rates. The markets,
uncenain of the full implications of
the move, became volatile.
Of course, no one knows for ccr-

tain what will happen during the latter half of 1994, but there arc triedand -true principles that have tradi tionall y served investor., well in good
times and bad.
Prudent investing begins with
choosing investments that make
sense, given your linan cial needs and
objectives. Make ccrta&gt;n the inv estments you've made still reflect your
needs.
Dive rsify your holdings. Divcrsi ficatiort-is the cornerstone of invcstrng. Spread your assets over several
securities to help reduce risk by lim iting the effecl of any one investment
on overall performance.
Invest for the long term. Throughout history, financial markets have
risen and fallen in response to ceonomic conditions. and they will continue to do so. Successful investing
docs not der:Jend on timing the market' s moves. Rather, it depends on
making sensible investm ents and
sticking with them.
Finally, keep your eye firmly
focused on the big picture. Investors .
should
never make long-term investments
based on short-term events. It' s better to meet with your _investment
advisor and make thoughtful decisions ahout your appropriate course
of action.
Jay Caldwell is an investment
broker with The Ohio Company in
the Gallipolis office.

GA LLIPOLIS - The annual
Twrhght Tobacco Field Tour is
scheduled for Tuesday evenmg
(July 19). The Tour is scheduled
for Tuesday evening (July 19).
The tour will be a traveling tour
to three locations. Th is year's tour
will featur e: Weed control programs; new vari eties; topping practices; housing and handling facili ttes; and other production related
items. The three stops will be along
SR 7 South starting at 6:30 p.m. at
the Mike Bostic Field located near
the intersec tion of Hannan Trace
Rd and Route 7, just south of the
Swan Creek Bridge on Route 7
(watch for signs).
The tour will then move north
to the Keith Corbin family farm
and begin the second stop from the
intersec tion of Clay Chapel Rd and
Route 7. Plenty of off-rood parking
is available at that intersection. The
final stop will be at the Baughman
farm which is located adjacent to
the Corbin farm . At both of these

locations there will be several acres
edges.
of re latively new varieties.
High populations could warrant
The evening will conclude at the
border trea tm ent 10 some sweet
Baughman's farm with refresh- . com and soybean fields.
Colorado Potato beetle control'
All too famili ar are comm ent s
about products mat have been used
in the past not working anymore.
There are a number of al ternatives
ments of sweet corn and soft
available to home ga rde ns that
drinks. Plan to attend! Note starting
include: Sevin; Diazinion; Imidan;
time at stop I is 6:30p.m.
Pyrethrin ; New Spectri cide; or
Japanese beetles are certainly
Bacillus Thuringiensis. Alternating
making their presence known. They
treatments th at hav e different
even seem to be eating some plant
modes of action may provide some
leaves that in the past they have not
short term reli ef. There are a few
prefenned. Hopefully peak activity
things that can be done to manage
is just about over. Tbc timing sug resistance problems and pesticide
gests that optimal timing for
dependence.
Japanese Beetle Grubworm control
Reducing the extent and fre in lawns will be early to mid quency of insecticide applications
August for our area. For control of
will reduce exposure of the pest to
adults now on landscape omamenthe insecticide and help delay resistals, the sevin urettable powder or
tance . Combining non-c hemical
dust may be the best for home ownmethods will help enormously .
ers In crop fields, most of the dam Hand picking into a bucket of
age is normally around the field
soapy water is an example . Stink

Farm Flashes

bugs are a natural predator of the
~ota~ beetlbef larvae. Protecllng the
. 110
ug rom pes llctd e wrll
mcrease Potato beetle control.

The 1994 Gallia County Junior
Fair is coming up Augu st 1-6.
Entry form s are being tabulated.
Early numbers indicate increased
exhibits in most all live stock
shows.
Fairboard members are worlting
ea ch evemng to make building
improvements that will accommodate the increases. One of the major
changes for this year will be the 10
a.m. starting time for the annual
junior fair sale. The sale rotation
thi s year will be tobacco , Iambs,
hogs, and steers. As with tradition
the 1994 Gallia County Junior F&lt;ili
promises to be bigger and better
than ever.
Edward Vollborn is Gallia
County 's agriculture extension
agent.

Identification key to proper control of plant diseases
By HALKNEEN
POMEROY - Diseases on both
vegetable and flowering plants
have kept the phones ringing. Due
to warm and humid nights, almost
ideal conditions have existed for
the development of bacteriaVfungal
blights . Many of the blights lay
dormant throughout the years in the
soil awaiting a susceptible plant,
proper disease growmg weather
conditions and in some cases a
means of entering into the host
plant.
Generally. control may be
obtained by planting disease resistant varieties, crop rotation, cleanliness of" growing area or as a last
resort, the application of a registered bactericide/fungicide. The
key to proper control is iden_tification of the plant disease. Ohio State
University has one of the best diagnostic plant disease and pest labs in
the country. For a fee , diseased
plants can be thaoughly inspected,
diagnosed and appropriate control
measures given.
Leaves with dark bro~n spots

swrounded by a purplish halo have
been reported on several plantings
of "Dianthus(carnation)", a popular
low growing flowering bedding

Extension Corner
plant The disease has been identified as Alternia blight. Disease
control is best achieved by the
removal of infected leaves and
stems then the application of an
appropriate fungicide such a.• wptan, chlorothalonil, l'r cupric
hydroxide. Remembel that chemical sprays should be used according
to directions.
Bacteria spot has been sighted
on several plantings of peppers.
Tbc disease affects leaves, fruit and
stems of the pepper plant. Leaf
lesions begin as circular, watersoaked spots that become necrotic
with brown centers and thin
chlorotic borders. Lower leaves are
normally first affected. Spots
quickly appear under humid, warm
nights and then the leaves turn yellow and drop off. If severely infectea. the plants appear to be stunted

with an apparent bunchrng of top
branches . The bacterium can be
seed-borne and persists in crop
debris. Clean seed and crop rotation are important in the disease
management Copper sprays reduce
the of disease development.
Sheep on pasture may become
infesterl with wool maggots. WiJ.h
the carny weather, hot humid conditions and heavy build up of nuisance adult blow flies, there will be
problems with wool maggots.
Sheep left on pasture and not
checked regularly have the best
chance of becoming infested wiJ.h
maggots and dying. Firs~ carefully
catch and inspect all sheep and
lambs with scour problems. Pas tured sheep should always be provided with plenty of clean, fresh
Water, minerals and some type of
overhead shelter to escape the troublesome, nuisance, blow flies and
hot summer temperatures. Experience has shown that it is best to
catch and "dip" the infested animal

thoroughly , soaking the entire
wound site in a washtub or some
oth er container containing
coumaphos(Co-Ral) or Diazinon to
most eiTectively eliminate all maggots. Make repeated treatments if
needed. Treated sheep should be
removed from the Oock, placed in a
barn stall to rest, recuperate and
heal from painful the larval feeding
wounds . For further information
please call the extension office.
Horticulture Field Day will be
held August I Sfrom 9 a.m.til noon
and 6 p.m.til dusk a! the Ohio State
University's Piketon Research and
Extension Center. The field day
will emphasize current small
acreage specialty vegetable ad fruit
crops currently under research. The
center is located off U.S. Route 32
east of U.S . 23, at 1864 Shyvill~
Road. The event is free and open to
the public.
Hal Kneen is the agricultural
agent ror the Ohio State Univer·
sity Extension, Meigs County.

SIP is designed to
improve forestland
ll1 LIS A ME AilOirS
. C ALLI PO LI S - The Stewar d·
, l11p In ce nt ive Pr og ra111 (S IP ) "
dc . . 1 g n ~.~ d

t&lt;l

1mprovc f n rcs t l;rnd

tiH !lll g h ~I \C [ or inno vali VC COS! ·

,Jwc practices .
One such practice is rhc SIP ,_
l m cst
m~ 111

an c ~

ag rog forcst improvt' ·

prnc ucc.

The purpose ol th1 s practice 1' Ill
unprovc the condition of rorcs ts for

mult ipl e resource benefit s an d
ocl udc dolll cs tic li vestock frorn
! orcs ted areas.

tost·s haring is authori zed fo r

lc ncin g (exc lud ing bound ary and
road fences) with \:OSI-s h:&lt;re avail ·
:rhl c at the 75 percent level not to
exceed: $.73/foot of barbed wire
in stalled; 591/foot of woven wire
i n s~ill ed or S.73/foot of hi gh tensil e
wire fence insUJllcd.
Some of th e o th er practi ces
availabl e und er the stewardship
in ce ntiv es pro gram arc : loggin g
erosion control, strcambJnk ~w bi ·

l r;.rtion.

wll dlrfc hahili.ll

c nh ~llll' C­

m..: rrt , tree pl antmg, and rccrca1ion
practH.:c..; such a..; sce ni c v i s ta ~ and
lmcst bul k rs.

The ASCS office , loc;ucJI in 1he
C. H. McKcn1ic Agricultura l Center &lt;11 I ll Jackson Pik e (446-X6Hrl)
t he sw rtin g po int rnr thi s proerarn .
· Fu nds lor the st cw:~ nl s hip inccn·
t&lt;VC program arc provided by rhc
U SD ;\ ·, f'orcs l se rvice with mos t
1-\

pra cuccs cost-shared at 7) percent

urcost.

.A ll &lt;i ppl icati ons ltl cJI with th e
ASCS offi ce arc forwa rded to the
ODNR-Di vision of Fores try's ScrVJCC Fores ter Jerr y Grcz lik.
For more information about . the
prog rmn , contact Grc; llk at 2K(l-

'\&lt;J(Xl or the ASCS office.
Li sH

Mc a dow~

is thc count y

rxeculi ve direttur uf the (;allia
Cuunty Agricultural St &gt;Jhiliza tion and Conservalion S c rvic~:.

·
CUSTOMER APPRECIATI&lt;''Ii DAY. Customer a
tion day was held at Bodimer's Exxon on Old Route 3 f~r~c•:·
Proceerls fr~m the day's activities went to the Rodney Graue~ ~ali
r?~ rem~ehng. Ab~ve, Charles Bodimer and Tom Woodard .
hcrpate m the dunkmg tank, supplied bv the Gu•an F' D parmen!.
•
'
tre epart-

�Page--02-Sunday Times-Sentinel

July

WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

17, 1994

July 17, 1994

11

Pomeroy-

Help Wanted

11

0.11 a Bakery Worker, Baking
Experience R.aquired, Evening
Shift 1-10 P.M. Nood Ou1golng
Pei"'Inlthy, Good With Public,
Pay Minimum Wage, Bu1 Negotlabl• Depending On
EJ.
perienee, BrOW'n'•lGA, 614-4480818, Botwoon 8 6 3 Edlo
Wor'lm1n Contact.

Help Wanted

Public Notice

The budget for the Dr.
L.
Bottard
Me morial Library for the
fisc al year January 1, 1995

Sa muel

to December 31, 1995 ha•
been adopted by tho Boord
of Trustees and Ia open for
tn spectlon at the Library, 7

Spruce St. until 9:00 p.m.,
Wednesday, July 20, 1994.
Judy A. Wilcoxon
Clerk -Treasurer

Gallia County District
Library Board of Trustees

July 17, 1994
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT Of
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo , Ohio
July 8, 1994
Contract Sales Legal Copy
No. 94·582
Unit Price Contract
Sealed proposals will be

recetved by all pre-qualified
bidders al lhe office of lhe
Department

of

Prolect # : 940403
Public Library
Proje c t Location : Fourth &amp;
Pearl Streets, Ra c ine, Ohio
In accordance with the
Plena and Specifications
prepared
by
Reiser ,
Valentour &amp; Callahan .
Architects , Inc ., 131 West
State Street , Athens , Ohio

Road , Columbus, Ohio
43215.
Copies
ol
Plans,
Specil tcations,
and
Proposal Blanks toge1her

CONTRACTORS
REQUIRING ASSISTANCE
IN SECURING BIDS FROM
CERTIFIED
MBE
SUBCONTRACTORS AND

with any further information

SUPPLIERS MAY CONTACT

d.. ired may be obtained by
Prime Contractors from lhe
OHice ol Reiser, Valentour &amp;
Callahan, Architects, Inc.
131 West State Street ,
Athens, Ohio 45701 . All
bidding documents will be
forwarded shipping charges
colloct upon receipt of a

THE
STATE
EQUAL
EMPLOYMENT
COORD! NATO R
BY
CALLING 614-466·8380, OR
THE MINORITY BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT DIVISION
BY CALLING 614-466-5700
OR TOLL FREE ON 1-800282- 1085.

Ohio, unlll 10:00 a.m.
Tuesday, August 2, 1994 lor
improvements in:
Gallia County. Ohio lor
improving section 11 .54 on

US Route 35 by ollp repair.
"The date sat for
completion of thla work
shall be as set forth in the

bidding proposal."
Plans and Specifications
are one file in the
Department
or
Transportation and the

office ol the Cis1rlc1 Deputy
Jerry Wray

Director of Transportation

July 17, 24, 1994
Public Notice
SECTION 00010
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propoaalt will be

deposil in the amount of

addressed to : Meigs County
Public Library, 216 West
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.
Minimum Wage Rates,
Equal
Employment
Opportun i ty and Minority
Business
Enterprise
Requirements as provided
In Chapter 4115, Section

9.47, Section 123.151 ORC,
Administrative Rule 123:215 - 02, the Governor's
Executive Order of January

27, 1972, and amended
Governor's E)Cecutlve Order

Architects, Inc. The deposit 153.54 of lhe Ohio Ravlsad

84-9 are applicable to this
bid Invitation.
No Bidder may withdraw
his bid within olxty (60)

wilt be refunded to bidders
who return the plans and

Code.

days after the actual date of
the opening thereof . The

spocillcatlons In good
condition within (101 days
alter receipt or bids . The
cost of replacement or any

CONTRACTORS
ARE
REQUIRED TO S~.BMIT ~
CUR R E NT
EE0
CERTIFICATE OR SHOW

Callahan.'

received al Meigs County

missing
or
damaged
documents will be deducted

Public Library, 216 West

from the deposit. The low

Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

bidder may ret1ln the plens
and specifications and

457 69 by: Thursday, August
4 1994 at 1:30 p.m. and
Immediately
0 'pened

thereafter, for furnishing the
meteflal end performing the
labor for the execution and

must

Bids shall be sealed and

be

&amp;

bid

PROOF FO SUCH A
CERTIFICATE WITH THE
FORM OF PROPOSAL.
FAILURE TO DO SO WILL
RESULT IN REJECTIOf'l OF
PROPOSAL

$25.00 (twenty-live dollarsj ..accompanied by a BID
per set In favor of Reiser .-GUARANTY meeting the
Valentour

Each

Public Notice

requirements of Section

N0 T E :

ALL

JOW75-142!1 .

AVONI All ariU. Need axtr1
monlitJ or w1nt 1 carHr, ellhar
wa~-eall Marltyn. 304-882-2645
or t--81)()..-992-6356.

Sunday. July 17, 1994
Recog n1! 10n or advan ce me nt that has
been den•ed you 1n your chosen f•eid ot
endeavo r could come through 10 the yea r
ahead Keep up the go od work . l'ecause
1t w11t bC! ac kn owledged

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don·, lake
t1le too sen ousty today . In tact . th•nk o l 1t
dS a game . out play to wn Th1 s can be
both tun and produCtive . 11 you tallow the
ru les Cancer, treat yoursetl to a b1r"1hday
g dt Send for your Astr a -Graph pr ed•c ·
t1 ons for the year ahead by ma1hng S 1 25
to Astra-Graph . c/o th1s newspaper . P 0

Box 4465. New York . NY 10163 3e
sure to state your zod1ac s1gn

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today you could
11a'le a great deal of 1nner resolv e upon
wh1ch to draw Th1s strength ol character
w1ll serve you well and be an 1n s p~ra h on
to those who observe you

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Somelhtng tn
whrc n you became mvolved rece ntly ha s
g re at e r pot e ntral tha n you may ha ve
antrcrpated Fortunatel y tode1y you mrght
oecome aw are ol 1ts total value

l.IBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Ba se your
1ud gm en t pe rt a.nrng to ma te nal m ail ers
on thrn gs yo u know work from your own
past exper 1ence What was a w1nner pre·
v1ously can be one once aga rn

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov . 22) Your lead
er.:;h1p qu at1!1 €S are accent uated today
O rh Hrs m ay w1 sh to pl e ase you . not
oecause ot yo ur co mmands but bec ause
you II 1nspue them to do so

SAGITIARIU S (Nov . 23-Dec 21) Thtngs
·you un selfiShly do 101 others today cou ld
produce unso ught benelrt s tor yourself as
well The wheels are se t 1n mot1on by the
goodness at yo Uf hean

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Try lo
spend your da~ w11t1 fnends 1n whom you
can cuntrde Somethrng mutually advan tageous could res ult from an exchange of
conilden!lal rnformahon

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) You have
i:l . mann e r

abo ut you today that make s
others feet comfortable rn your presence
and easy to work w1th . Those who sense
tt11 s may help you achreve someth1ng you
cou ldn't do on your own

P1SCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You re m a
good cycle tor developmg sacral contacts
who could be of help to you •n several
areas of your life. Make the best lmpressron you can when meehng others for the
ltrstllme

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) You could be
ell:tremety adept today 1n helping others
sort out lhe1r problems. Usually a w1 se
course of action 1S to avotd butting m. but
today may be an exception

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Go ah'ead
and take a hrm slance today onf1ssues
you ~&lt;now more about than your rfers do
Eventua lly those with whom you ' re
1nvolved w1ll see the merrt m your move

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Someone
who need:; sk,u ; r knowledge you pos sess m1ght bL wrlltng to pay a fa1r pnce
lo r your talents today . Be reasonable
regarding what you ask for your serv1ces .

, 1994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPIUSE ASSN

0

3 part Chow/German Sh•pherd

Director.
Jerry Wray

Announcements

Bo&gt; 4465 . New York, N.Y. 10163. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Usually you're a
pe rso n who get s reasonab l y good
mrleage. out of the dolla rs you spend
Today~~ however , you mrght have blinders
on where real values are concerned

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If you do no1
believe m your leadership abtirl •es today ,
don't expect others to fill 1n the gaps for
you To be successfu l you must brte the
bullet and try again and aga1n 1f necessary .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Try no1 10 lei
your emotions dommatc yo ur th1nk1ng
today If your feelings pervade your JUdg ment . you m•ght end up m a km g poor
decrsrons

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your
assessment of o th e rs IS que st1 o na b le
today There IS a poss rbrllt y you mrght
cater to the undeservmg and rgnore those
who warrant your full attenuon

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) In
order to ach1eve an 1mportan! ObJeCtrve
today . you mu st be both a ssert1ve and
bold . H you 're not properly mot1vated, it
could JUSt turn rnto a practice sessron.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Keep all
of your dealmgs out m the open today . ll
you attempt to do something coy. regardless of how harm~ss. •t mtght be. it cOuld
produce negatrve repercussrons

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. t9) Your feel·
ings might be unduly Sensitive today and
cause you to expect more from loved
ones than they 're able to deliver. Don't
nurture unreasonable expectations

PISCES (feb. ZD-March 20) In endeav·
ors today that require a collective effort.

don't lake full credil tor lhtngs olhers help
bring abo ut . Leave room on stage for
everyone to take a curtain call.

ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Do nol dele·
gate critical assignments today to subor-.
dinates with questionable abi lities . The

product they produce may be up 1o thetr
standards, but not yours .

TAUIIUS (April 20-May 20) Be careful.
regarding your romant ic involvements
today . If you trespass down forbidden
paths. you cou ld end up wrth a headache.
as welt as a heartache

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) In order 10
placate somebody you like. you mtghl
feel obligaled Ieday 10 make a commtl·
ment without your heart being in 11.

Cl994 Nt;WSPAPER ENTERPIUSE ASSN

14x16

28 drake duckt, 6M-668-303i .

Aher5 P.M.
6mo. old t.me'- Beagle, aU
ahote, new dog boa, puppy
Fhain, lead1, ali eccessoriea.

614-1112-2276,

i Week Old HouN Broken Kit·
ton To Good Home, 614-446-41n .

Couch a 2 Chal,. To Gtv..way,
614-245--9171. ""
Ktttena, To Good Home, 6*3J9.
2585.

Announcements

loat Strayed Or Poaalbly Killed,
Gorman Shepherd M•le, Acf..
dlaon Plkt, Brick Sc~ Road
A,..a, 614-367·7i'l5.
Lost: green ParakMt, West Main
Street, Pomeroy araa, reward,
614-892 -2008.

614--371-

top doU•r ~ld , 614-i92-)lil41.

All Y•rd Satn Must Be Paid In
Advance . ONdllne : 1:OOpm the
day before the 1d t1 lo r\Jn,
Sunday ldltio~ 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
edition
10:00a.m .
Siturday.
Moving aala, 1718-?23 (Mond•Y·
Saturdlry), gam-5pm. Some fur·
nttur1, aome Fenlon, dlahware,
Lowery organ, old Slngar
Hwing mtclllne and tote of
mlac. ltema. Rain or 1hlnt. Tuppe,.. Plaine, 11ke SR 681 p1.t
elam~tntary school, lum left on
Brook&gt; Rd . (Twp. 312), go to ood
of road.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auetkm Company,
full time auctlonMr, complete
auction
aervlce.
Ucensed
166,0hlo &amp; Weel VIrginia, 304173-5785,
Wodemeyer's Auction Servke,
Gallipolis, Ohio 61~37i-2120.
Auc1ionHr Col. Osc::ar E. Click,
License I 754-04 &amp; Bonded,

304-1195-3430.

SR -22
• DU I • No Prior
Insurance

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

J I O'a Auto Parta and Salvage,
also buying Junk cars &amp; trucka .
304-173-634 3.

Want to buy alii: of ater tor
mobile home, 614--e92·505 .
Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos
With Or Wltholil Motora. Call
Larrt Unly. 6l4488-i303.

6 Linden and
Holbrook
10 Yell
15 Seelhes
20 Express a beltel
2 1 Orch estra membe r

PHILLIP

22
23
24
25

ALDER

EAST

.,o 9 8 5

•764 3 2

•7

• K 8 4
tJ96 5 2

t\0874
• K I0 4

•9
SOUTH

•Q
•AQJ/096
t A 3

•A 7 3 2

Vu lnerable : Both
Dealer: West
South
West North
Pass
I NT
3•
Pass 4 •
4 NT
Pass 5 •

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

6•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Food tra m heave n

Reddish·brown
color
26 Movtng abou/
27 Ltzard
28 Antlered an rmai
29 Housing expense
31 Dtp lomacy
33 Appear
35 Ktlled
36 Hardy characler
37 Quarrel
3g Ryan ol 'When
Harry Mel Sally"
41 Cook a certain way
44 Ice cream holder
45 Wtmbledon champ
ol 1975
48 Trea/men!
53 Boll
54 Leaping crealure
55 Warmer
57 Work of ftc!ion
58 Amino 59 Drench
60 "Beverly Htlls -·
61 Gracelul h9rse
63 Ftntshed
64 Gtve stlen! assem
65 ExploSive sound
66 Flu/e player
68 Mr. Casstni
70 Tiny
71 Punch or Hollywood
72 Lampoons

• 5 :! 2
t K Q
•QJ865

WEST

Ltnger
Of lhe leelh

Opening lead: • 10
By Phillip Alder
There are many instructive
deals in "' Kosher Bridge 2'" by
Australian Ron Klinger and
Englishman David Bird, published
by Gollancz. My particular favorite
is the one in loday's diagram . The
correct play is easy to overlook
South's lour no · trump was
Roman Key Card Blackwood .
North's reply showed either one
ace or the heart king. So the rabbi,
silting West . knew that his partner
couldn't have the club ace . South
wouldn't have bid the slam missing
both an ace and the trump king .
Therefore , the rabbi led the spade
tO.
Declarer won with dummy's
king and played a heart to his
queen, which held. He returned to
the dummy with a diamond and led
a second trump, but when East
discarded, South couldn't recover.
He won with the ace and played a
third trump, but the rabbi just
exited with a diamond. South had
to play clubs from his hand. And
when South saw that the club
finesse was working all along, he
grumbled about his bad luck. What
do you think7
The rabbi played very well to
duck the heart kin~. If he wins trick
two, the contract IS easy to make.
But after returning to the dummy
in diamonds at trick three , the
declarer should have cashed the
spade ace and discarded his
d1amond ace. Now when West wins
the third round of hearts, he is
endplayed . Whichever suit he
l eads. declarer oan lake the
winning club finesse and discard
his two low clubs on dummy's
spade jack and diamond king.
The book is available for $16.45
from The Bridge World, 39 West
94th Street, New York, NY 100257124 .

74 Arrow's smalle r
COUSin

76 To pteces
79 Contestant

8t
83
87
88

Pertorms
Thanksgivtng bird
Stalion
Food regimen

2 lndesce nt g e m
3 Cosily lur
4 Aclress - Solhern
5 Closes!
6 Trumpet s

97 T res wrth co rd

7 Borde r on

98 Pl an/ part
100 Sense
102 - -o· -lhe- wtsp

8 - Angeles
9 Scene
10 Pile

1 04 Pocket watch cha1n
10 7 R1d e a wave
109 Hummrng sound

11 "-

110 Grona
11 I Spa/ on a card
114 Conc e rnm g

Lal. . 2 wds

make s wa ste"

12 Scrap offood
13 "Exo du s'" a uthor
14 Bnll sh whrt ewail

15 Implore
16 Burden of prool
17 Type slyle abbr

116 W eavm g machrn e

18 Road drvrs1on

118 Devour
119 Change
120 12-potnl lype
I 21 Plea san/ odor
123 Garland
125Tend
126 Com ol a ktnd
127 Row of shrubs
128 Ttdtngs
129 Shoe pan
130 Take tnlo cuslody
131 Poe/'s "belore"
133 Rock sail
136 Pesky bug

19
23
30
32
34
36
37
38
40
41
42
43
44
46
47
49
50
51
52
54
55
56
59
60
62
65
66
67
69
71
72

137 Low sing1n g votce

141 Notton
144 Grime
145 Journey
146 Ftsh paddle
149 Old addtng
machrne

151 Jargon
153 Paslernak
c haracter

155
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164

"- porridge hoi..
Somelhtng satd
Ftxed gaze
Mtld oalh
Wriler - Zola
Unyteldmg
Mary - Moore
Rounded roof
Monarch

DOWN
1 Ctly rn Ala ska

Cabbage salad
Cotn
Natrve of: suff1x

Htgh card
Brighl green
Faslened
Tome
Belrayer
PtSIOI
Htgh-ftber load
Puerto Eager
Study '" has!e
Depot abbr.
Big sandwtch
Turt
Declare openly
Hackman or Krupa
General Robert Tncked
W estern lndtan
Mus1ca l drama

Scalier seed
Melropolls
Pummel
Glass contarners

Took pa ~ tn a lele
Lte
Complatn ·
Cook under a flame

Wat e r vapor
73 Pnc k pa mfu liy

11

614-245-SO':lQ.

.

Eam ThouaanM Stuffing En-

Help Wanted

velopea. Rush $1.00 And A Self

Addrooood, Stompod Envelope:

Nama, Addr8A To : H1ll'1 En..
lorpri-, P.O. Box 152, Applegrove, Wut VA 25502 .

up

to

Eaay _World Eacellenl Pay! A.umtflll Product.a At Honw. Call
Toll frM, 1--800-467-5566, Ext.
313 .

Automottve
AIR CO NDIT IONING
Se rvi ce And Re patr
All Makes
Sm1th Buick· Ponti ac Galltpolis
446-2282

·

Person needed to milk dairy
cows, hourly pay, paid vacatlon 1
mobil home available. Sena
ruume : Box R-12, clo Pt.
Pleasant Register, 200 Main St.,
Pt . Pleaunt,""WV 25550
Pomeroy
Nursing
and
Flehabllltatlon Center ha• an
lmmodlate opening lor 1 full
time AN or LPN on 11·7 shift .
lhll posttlon Ia tor a nurse
committed to delivering exeeptlon~l
qu111ty care for our
geri1trle rnident•. We otter an

1

LARGE SELECTION

Gallipolis

OF

Gall 1a County res1dents each year

W1nted to buy: UMd mobile

Brnn

Con trol Serv1cos 1nct ude a physrc1a n
e) am,na11on. ca ncer screenr ng. ed uC&lt;ll iCn
and b1rth control suppl1 es Women a r.d men
may rece1ve test s and treatment ror sewarry
1ransm1ned d1sease and anonymous HIV
tests Shd1ng Fee Scale, Pnvate Insurance
and Mc d1Glrd arc acce pted
Planf"11r&gt;g
preve nl s unl'l tended pregnancy For an

homoo.8~75

Employment Services
AVON SELLS ITSELF! Potontlot
Eomlngo $200 -$2,000 Monthly,
5oll At Won Homo And Moi
-Crder. F- Trolnlngl1~742-

JPP1 ca ll (614) 446 0166

4738.
BartenMr Wanted: Apply In
Person At The Addleon bub,

Lost: Tiger grey kttten, wearing
a purple collar An swers to lhe
name "Sassy". Lost tn the
VICinity of 588 and Texa s Rd . If
found please
call 446-0122 any1ime .

814-446-4756.

- - - -- - -- --

For Sale
86 Monte Carlo S -S

80 No!htng
82 Cu i-de- 84 Blood relallves
85 Concluston
86 Word ol assen1
90 Pnze ol a ktnd
93 Ftrsl ktng of Israel
95 ln se r1 mark
96 Afler·dtnner candy
99 Showed dtspleasure
101 Ark butlder
103 Chmbtng plan!
104 Troul , e. g.
105 Formerly
106 Rat sed
108 Golfer' s cry
110 Woody slem
111 Spearllke weapon
112 Sherbe!s
11 3 Gasp
11 5 Sch. sub1 .
117 Cal's cry
119 Despicable
120 Harbor I own
122 Golf·ball s!and

Garage Kept. Ve ry low
mileage, perfect c ond ,
Keepers special 441 - 1506

Building for Lease
276 Upper River Rd .
Beside Car auction.
ca.u 446-0247
Galltpolis Emblem Club No . 199
Charily Golf Tournament
When . July 23. 1994
Shotgun Start9 a.m.
Where : Cliff side Golf Course
Dinner/Shelter House after gam e
Format : Four Person Scramble
(Men &amp; Women) Bltnd Draw
Elk s membrs stgn up allodge
Non·members of Elks sign up at
Gall Course
Cost: $40.00 per person/
members
$50 .00 per person/non-members
Includes green fees. cart.
Continental Breaktasl served
at 8 a.m .
Please re spond by July 20, 1994
Make checks payable !o Emblem

124 Cig a r res idue

125 Pted
126 ·- John, M.D"
129 Kn tghlly !tile
130 Cuckoo
132 Chance ol loss
134 Love
135 Metric measure
136 A+ orB-, e.g.
137 Taverns
138 Atd and 139 ldenlical
140 Mark Irom a wound
142 Bndge poSt/ton
143 Dtle!tan!tSh
145 Briti sh streetcar
146 Fall shan
147 Atl
148 - -do-well
150 Samovar
152 Gtrl
154 In the past
156 Au slraltan btrd

Channel Marker
Late Summer Special
Available 7/30-8/6,
8/20-8/27' 8/27-9/3
$500 per week,
accomodates 6

75 Bealen palh
76 Classtlted 11ems
77 Energy
76 Mtl add .

SOFA&amp; CHAIR
PRICED FROM
$450

TO $11 95

FREE DELIVERY

curise, tilt, cassette.
PWR wind, Blue,
runs good, looks
good-

446-8232446-0008
$3595
Teacher wanting to relocate.
Desires work in or oul of
education. Experience in
Elementary Education, Spectal
Education, Compulers &amp;
Technology. Call Teresa 317-8563965 collect
Group of Mens &amp; Boys
Nike"' Air
'30 off!!
The Shoe Cafe
Lafayette Mall

,,

Sal• peraon, 5 poahlone aval llble\ wearing I lOlling high
tash on Jewe!ery. 304-917-2681,
i :OO 111111 :OOPM.

SERVICE PERSONNEL
Servicing
Silk
Flower
O.partmantt 01 Nallonol Retail
Chain Storel In Your Area . Part
Time, Flealble Hours, Hourly
Wage, And Milaage. Mall Letter
With Ou11ifleatlons To : Reliance
Tndlng, Attn : Mlk• Lynch, 3583
lnverary Drive, Columbua, OH
43228.

1

Card or Thanks

Ia look·

lng for an experienced MDS+
Documentation Nurse. Muet
hlvt l\lndl on experience with
MDS+ In long term Clre eettlng
with 2 yrt txowkrnce In long
tarm e~ra t.eillty. Ohio nursing
Salary
negoUable.
UeenH.
PINH apply In person It Ovll·
brook Center, 333 Page St.,
Middleport, Oh. Yartlyn ConIWay, DON. EOE

Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks
from the James A.
Smittl Family.
We would like to
thank Dr. James
Young, Dr. Mark
Walker, Dr. Mark
Christopher,
Ctlemottlerapy
Nurses, ICU Nurses,
McCoy Moore
Funeral Home,
Salem Center
Volunteer Fire Dept,
DAnville Churct-.,
Vinton Baptist
Church, Rev. Marvin
Sallee, and a host of
Friends.

The family of IRENE
IIANSON would like tu
thank l'\"Cr)'HDl' for lhc
sint·ere kindne~s .\hown
h)" our r~mil y , friends, &amp;
neighbors in lhl· n-rcnl
death uf our lun·d unc.
We upprrriate the
rards. Oowt'rs. food, and
prayers . We wnuld like
to thank the Fisher

Mon l hru SaL 9·5: Ph 446-0322
3 Mtles Du1Bulavtlle Ptke

Home Grown
lomatoes, half-runner
and Blue Lake green
beans, Silver Queen
corn, jumbo
canteloupe , freestone peaches, all
shrubs and hanging
baskets
Buy 1 and Get 1
FREE
Rayburn's Market

f' uncrul

Home,

The famtly of Lula
"Lu c y" V
Fisher
would l ik e to th a n k
everyone who helped
in any way in .the
recent
death
of
Mother
and
Grandmother.
We
appreciate all who
sent food &amp; flowe rs.
We
al s o
ex ten d
thanks to R ev. Rick
Vala r ido , s inger s ,
pallbe a r e r s
an d
Crem eens Fun e r a l
Hom e. Sadly m 1ss ed
by son &amp; daughter -inlaw &amp; grandchildren .
May God Bless You

thl'

Veteruns llomc Health
Cart'

Nur s t•s,
Dr.
Walker, llolur nur s e~.
pallhcart'fs itnd Rn·.
Roafh &amp; a SJH'l"ial
person Nina Milll'r fnr
all the pl'rsonal l·are of
our mum and wil"t•.
Sadly mis..'ied by

husband, children.
granrhilrlren, dnughh·r~
in.law, sons·in-ln"'•
nieces, nephews &amp;
cousins.

Kanauga, Ohio
The Kyger I Pee -Wee Grrl s SoNbatt
Te am and Coa ches would lik e 10
thank th e following bu sin esses
Vaughan 's Cardinal, Bnttany·s.
Mt chael and Frr end s . GallipOliS
Tobacco and Candy, and all wh o
support ed our g~r l s . Rec ord 8 -3 ana
3rd 1n county tour nam e nt.

5

HappyAds

You soy you feel ooo1111
Still in your prime
Just like you would
If you were log!
Hoppy Birthday
Lawrence Akers!
Love,
Bif

Chair Caning
17th Anniversary Special
1977 prices at hole
Ju ly 15- August 15
(614) 256-1616

Special Every Monday
Scu lptured Nails by
Chris Reynolds
$39 .95
Free Merle Norman Gift with
purchase
Head/Quarters by Juanita
313 3rd Ave . • Galli polis
446-2673

RNILPN· 100 bod lacllhy

Th a nk s
to
lhe
fr ien ds and netg hbors
wh o se nt car d s
P raye rs, f ood, vist ts
during th e tl lness or
our husb a nd a n d
father. Thank you for
lhe love and support
you h av e gi v en us
during tht s 11m e.
The fam1ly of
Charles L. Eskew

3

Announcements

3

Announcements

***

GRAND OPENING

Come explore the fun at
Vacalion Bible School with
Pati and Lernie and their
ventriloquisl act. Each
evening 5 :45 - 8 p .m .
French City Baptist Church
St. Rt. 160 Gallipolis, Oh1o
446 -333 1

Mid-Western Based Co. has
expanded to Gallipolis Area. We
offer excellent earnings to start
&amp; paid vacation.
Call Mon. 10 am- 5 pm
1-800-491-4648

Call 446-2206

87 T-Bird, air,

Tlmes-Se ntlnei -Pag~D3

Attention Volume
Buyers Silver Queen
Sweet Corn for Sale
256-6011
Going out of Business
Everything 60% off Last

23, 1994

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

11

excellent beneUI p~rek.age , com-petl!lvt ulary 1nd 1 .table,
eupportlve work environ ment.
Perscm• aeeklng to thare on
lhl• team of nurwe commlned
to our etandar d of pos ltl'le out·
come. plane Cltl a14-992-66 06
or apply In p41rson at 3675Q
Rocksprlnga Roa d, Pomeroy.
E.O.E.

Needed Now: Companion lo
Live In fi'M Board , ~o Strings,
Any Age, 614446..J41i .
Will Do House &amp; "Trailer Paint·
lng ,
R81sonabla
Rat11,
Fl:efa rencu, E~~: perlaneod , FrN
U ti mat . ., 614-388-9240.

WUI alum clean carpttl cheap
to llnlsM my paymentl on
Tomato plckera needed. Mar- cleaner, 614 ·992 -4 ~ 36 .
shall Adam• nad Jim O' Brien
Produce, lat AI1 Fall, 614- 247- Woul d Uka To Crea n HGuae Call
2055.
Any1 ime, 614-446-64i-4 .
Wan11td : E ~~:per1anced Fumtture
Rellnl shor, Will Tra in, Pays By
The Piec e On l y, 614446-4514 B-5
lot-F.

Financial

Business
Opportunity
Ca rpon1er work, root, de cka,
add ons, ate, frM estimates,
INOT1CEI
6 14-992-2322.
OHIO VA LLEY PUBLISHING CO.
18

21

Wanted t o Do

General Maint enance, Painting, re commends that you do bual·
Yard Wor k Wl ndowt Washed n &amp;s~ with people you know , and
G uttert Ctean9d Llght Hauling, NOT to sand ..nlOtHIY through I he
Commerital , Jl aaldential, Steve: mall unlit you hav• lnvestfgated
6 14--446-4143 .
the onerlng.
Georaes Port able sa wmill , don't
haul yo ur logs to the mill just
Real Estate
c all 304~75·1 9 57.
Miss Paula "s ~ay Carl Cen t.ar Houae tor aala , L.on arM. 3()4...
M-F 6 A.M. -6 .3{1 P.M. Dua lit y 6 75-8872 .

lollin g Care FQr All Children

Time, Fed. Assi stance Ava il able. 31 Homes for Sale
Call For Information Or VI sit . In·
tan! tloddl er 614-446-6221 P r~t­ 2 bedroom house wlbasemant
Schoot,
Schoolage,
B&amp;A located In New Hl'len. CION to
School, 614-446-8 2.24.
IChOQIS, $13,$00 . 304.a82·2583,
Quality Cleaning At ANord able 2br., carport, utility room,
Pr lca!l, 1 Time Weeki~, Biweekly, heat, garbage dlspoeat, autoMonthl y. FrN Estimates, 614- di shwasher, compl.. e carpet·
17'9·:2199.
lng . 401 Walnut St, Henderson.

a••

Sun Valley Nursery School.
Chlldcare ~ - F 6am-5 : ~0pm Agn

2·K, Young
School
During
Summar.
:J Da
ys perAgo
Week
Min-Imum 614-446- 3657.

;=========:::;
2

In Memory

I" tot'ing

Will Babys it In Ny Home, Gal·
llpolls Area, 1 Child, Dayt Only,
Parler Infant . Pat1 y, 614~46-8037
Will Babysit On e Child In My

Homo Slar1 1ng End Of August,
Exparlonced Wilt'l Refar•ncee,

Mt•uwry Of'

Kt•lfnetlt Bissell

614-:245-~7.

2

St'f''· fl . 19411
ju/_y 17, 1992

In Memory

Srully mi.' ·"'d
Moth e r. llrotlu•r.
wtrl Sisll'rs

In M e mo ry of
Donald Ea rl Guinth e r
who passed away
May 16, 1994
Turtle,
Two monlh s ag o
to d a y w e ca m e to
yo ur doo r, Ju st lik e
we h a d don e, So
many tim es be fo re.
Bullhings wasn '( jusl
right. Som e lhing had
went wrong in th e
night. But th e lig hl
lhat shown on you r
fa ce let us know you
h ad go ne to a be lte r
p lace . You a re loved
a nd mi sse d mor e
than wor ds ca n e ve r
sa y.
Sadly Mt ssed
Sa m &amp; D ebbie
La rry &amp; Ra y
And A ll Your Fn e nd s'

11

Help Wanted

In lo ving m emory of
All e n J Eichinger Paw . Paw
Nov. 5 , 1908
July 16 , 1993
Hi s m e mo ry 1s our
k ee p sa k e,
From
whi ch we'll never part ,
G od has him in Hi s
keeping , We have him
1n o urk hearts .
Hi s Fa mily

11

Help Wanted

WANTEO COMM UNITY
SKI LLS INSTRUCTOR
neede d
lo
te a c h
c o mmuntt y Cl nd pe r sona l
s kr!l s t o an adult w1th
lea rnrn y lnn rt at1 o n s 1n
M td dle po~

Hours 8 a m

Sat. t hru 8 a rn

Man ·
s teep -ove r reqwre d . High
sc h oo l d eg r ee . va lid
d nver ·s l1ce n se. good
dn vm g record . thre e year s
!1 c ensed
drt v tng
exp e rren ce. and adequat e
a ut omo btl e l ll!:i ur ance
coverage r equ ~r ed Salary
$5 .00/hr,
Ia
Sla rJ .
Vaca t ,o n/s 1c k be nefit s
Tr a 1nm g p1ov rdcd
If
in te r es ted cont acl Cec1/1a
a / 1 BOO 53 1·2302 Equal
Opp onumly Employer

WANTED
C OMMUNITY
SK I LLS
INSTRUC TOR n ee ded to teach commun:ty
and pe rso nal s k;ll s to a n adu lt w1th learning
limil ation s in M idd le po rt. Hou rs 8 a.m . Sat.
lhru 8 a. m . M on: s leep -over re quire d High
s chool d e gre e, v a lid driv e r' s license , good
driving reco rd , lhree ye ars lice nsed driving
experience, a nd ad e quate aulomobile
insurance coverage required Sa lary: $5 .00/hr,
to start. vac a tiOn / SICk beneflls . Training
p rovid e d . II inte reste d c o ntact Cecilia al 1800-531 -2302 . Equal Opportun1ty Employer.

WANTED:

(J

Mechanic/Service Manager

Jo's Craft Shop

Day July

11

Ou r 11 Goa l. Pa rt-Time, Fu ll·

LAYNE FURNITURE

Phone (614)446 -6111

Drd you ~ n ow 111;.1 1 Plann od Parentrood ot
SoL!heast 0111u m Ga llipOliS pro ·J~ae s
confidential family plannmg sOf\JICes to 600

Colna, Gold Rings, Silver Coins,
Gold Colna. Y.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, G•lllpoli ..

Help Wanted

11

$1000 wMkly
prc~eulng mall, .tart now, noe.:periene., frM..euppiiH, frM.
Information, no-obligation. Send
SASE: C.sclde Oep1 - ~, P.O.
Box S421, San Angelo, TX 76902.

Eam

LIVING ROOM SUITES

Top Prlcu Paid: All Old U.S.

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-4
89 Unlru!hful one
91 New England s1a1e
92 Booly
94 Secular
96 Chop fi nely

Chriatmae Around The Wor1d
O.Cor And More, Oemonltatcn
NMded, Fr-.. SJOO Kit, Eam
Full-nme Pay For Par1 -Time
Wort. Also, Booking Partlea,

Cancell e d / R e jec ted

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

Help Wanted

NOT ICE'
Anyone w1th a Burl lie Ot l Co .
Propa ne Tank I hat need s
pamtm g. please call our oH1ce
at 446-411 9
7 30 - 4 30 Mon -Fri

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucka, 1987 Modal• Or New•r,
Smith Bulclil Flonllac
1QOO
Eaatam Avenue, Galli~ 1..

Oon1 Junk ttl Sell Ua Your N~
Wortlng
Major Appllancee,
Color
T.V.'11.. Refrigerators.
FrMurs, \ICH'~tt Uicrowavee,
Air Condl11oner.,
Wuhera,
Cryors, Copy llachl,_. Etc.
814-256-1238.

11

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Antiquo- will buy one piece or
entir11 household, O.by Manln,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Utter

4 Or 5 Month O&amp;d Khtent, To
Good Home Only, 814--&lt;W6-2823

Anilab~l

2720.

Oeocoratlld etooewa,., watt tel•
phon•, old Lampe old ther·
momotars, old clock., arrtlque
tumtture. Riverine Antiques.
Ru11 Moore, owner. &amp;14-m·
2.5.26. We buy eatatea.

10 wU . old, 1 male , 1

4 Lcv.able Khtene,
Tra\Md, 814-245--5091 .

Complete t-louHho6d Or E.
tales! Any Type Of Fumhure
Appl ianeea, Antl(lue'a, Etc. AIM
Appr1leal

Help Wanted

BULLETIN BOARD

Wanted to Buy

Mu~h Morel Ttlursday Thru
Sunday. Rain Of Shine, 9 A.M.
Till Carl( . 5 Mil .. Out SA 160
Lef1 On Hom"'ood Or, Follow
Signs.

r.amale, 614-W2·l45i.
u~ ,

Lost : Walker Coon Dog, Mostly
Strul Yow Jtana P1gNnt, July While &amp; Brown With Brack SFlO'f
30th,
Krodel
Poitl, Point
Hie Back, Anewere To Name
Pl....nt. Uuat call Sheila Hlt1 On
Of Dub, VIcinity: Ulll Creek
tor entry form. 304a755-oo60.
Road. 814-446-9552.

BRIDGE

Monday . July 18. 1994

establrsh your own pace today where
your work IS concerned . your lndustnou sness m1ght ru n at a low ebb Be a seit motrvator Mater changes are ahead lor
Cancer rn the com rng year . Send for your
Astra-Graph predrct1ons today . Matl $1 .25
to Astra-Graph , c/o this newspaper. P.O

Ing Furnllure, Ol shn, Toys And

Director of Transportation
Lost &amp; Found
6
July 17, 24, 1994
I:-=-:-...,..,.,:-..,.,...,~

1 ··- - IS an 1stand'"

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Jl allowed Jo .

a.m.

Giveaway

o"lce or the Distrlcl Depu1y

reserves the right to waive
any informalities or to reject
any or all blda.
(7) 10, 17, 24 ; 3TC

'-Your
'Birthday

ln the year ahead. you mtght be luc kter 1n
ventures or enterpnses rn tllaled by others
lhan rn those you orrgma te yourself . Be
on the looKout tor a product tve partner·
Ship

Baby Child ren And Aduh Cloth-

Ohio , unli l 10 :00

Tuesday, August 2, 1994 for
Improvements in :
Gailia County, Ohio for
Improving various sections
of State Route 7 , by linear
grading, pavement repair,
crack seating, and minor
shou lder widen i ng with
asphalt concrete .
" The
date
set
for
completion of this work
shall be as set forth in the
bidding proposal ."
Plans and Specifications
are on tile in the Department
of Transportation and the

Sunday tdition . 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday ldl11on · 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

9

Sunday

~

11

- -· --

Meigs County Public Library

Subcontractors
and
material suppliers may
acquire,
for
their
convenience. Plans and
Specifications or portions

~'Birthday

4

rvg w/a1alrway &amp; hallway
pclecea. bronzt color, pluah &amp;
aeulptured. 304--882-310ot.

deposit will be refunded.

~'Your

Athen• and l.Dgln. "'Sliding FM
Scale.•

Unit Price Contract .
Sealed proposals will be
received by ali pre-qual ified
bidders at the office of the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation , Columbus ,

3

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

AppolrOmont•.Call 614-«&amp;-0166,
414 5econa :&gt;1 ., Gl/llpolio, AJ110 ALL Yard Sates Must Ba P.ald in
.ballabMr lit Planned Paren- Advance . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1hood ol Southooot Ohio In the day beto,.. t~ ad 11 to run .

No. 94-580

Blcls will be received for :
The General Contra c t
including all subc ontracts .
The information l o r
Bidders, For m of Proposal ,
Form of Contract, Plans ,
Spe c ification s , Form of
Bond and o ther Contract
Document s
may
be
examined at the following
oMices ·
Public Notice
Reiser,
Valentour &amp;
Call ahan , Architects, Inc .
131 west State Slreet , thereof by paying for the
Athens , Ohio 45701
cost of reproduction and
F.W. Dodge Corporation , handling .
117 5
Dublin
Road ,
All questions rega rding
Columbus . Ohio 43215.
the plans and specifications
Builders · Exchange of should be addressed to the
Central Ohio , 1175 Dublin Architect.

Yard Sale

luting 1nd CounMilng
lnonymou• (Your Name 1:1
Ne'Wtr A.sked). Planned P•renthOOd of Southeast Ohlo. FOf' In

Contract Sales Legal Copy

45701 .

7

HIV

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Cohj,mbus, Ohio
July 8, 1994

Proje c t N.ame :
Branch - Meigs

Tran1portatlon, Columbus,

Director.

3 Announcements

c onstruction of :

PUBLIC NOTICE

Ohio

Public Notice

WV

AVON I AI Areal I Shlrtoy

~n.

.

Public Notice

Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant ,

Sear s Amenca's # 1 Relailer ol Appltances ,
Electronics, and Lawn and Garden Eq utprnenl is
currently seek1ng candtdales to own and operate a
Sears Authorized Retatl Dealer S!Ore in Galllpollo, OH.
The Dealer Store s will teaiUr e Appliances.
Eleclronics, and Lawn and Garden Equipmenl The
Dealer Stores are supported by the Sears Rela tl
Networ~. including systems, potnt ·OI ·sale terminal s,
distribul ion, training, as well as , local and national
advertising and marketing campaign s. The Dealer
Store will se ll and display the Kenmore and Craftsman
producls, as well as, GE, Whtrlpool, KttchenAtd,
Tappan , Hoover, Sony, Magnavox , and more.
For addilional information,
interested parties should call

(708) 286-9656
Interviews will be held in the near future.

· Call446-2342
or 992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

Must have own tools, be certified
in air conditioning repair, knowledgeable on most works of vehicles. Salary negotiable, paid vacation, group insurance, paid
holidays.
Call
SOUTHEAST lfJIPOATS
614-592-2497

Ask for Chuck Hupp
44

Apartment
for Rent

WATER'S EDGE APARTMENTSl
SYRACUSE,OH.

OPENING IN JUtr
Over 62, dioabled or handicapped FmHA t bedroom. Rente for SO to $405, baaed on Income.
Range, "'frlgarator, carpet, ale, on aile laundry.
parking.

614-949-2012 TOO 800-750-0750
FmHA Rental Aaaistance
Equal Houaing Opportunity

01994. NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

f

r

•

..

.,

�cl

Page-04-Sunday

July

n mes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-

Middleport- Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

July 17, 1994

I

Scram-Lets on Page D-7
ANSWERS-----------------~
TO ~R.t\1¥\-~Et;wS~l7~94
DEMEAN
RABBIT

l

band s1ghed . "To comprehend the

PLACID

meaning of the phrase, 'm illion dollar

THRUSH

srn ile .' you must have had

CH ILD in BRACES

a CHILD 1n

8

Public Sale

Homes for

J
1

In Khchen, O..lrable Nelghbof.

65 A.cr• Of Land In W•r,ne

ln~ller

Real Estate to sell dl ·' 00 am
Palmer Realty
Charles (Bud) Sptr es Broker
10% down day o f a uctron
Balance on del1very ot dee d

Joe Tillis - Owner
Cash
Posltve ID
No Foo d
"No t responstble for awdents or loss of Propetly"

PUBLIC AUCJION
10:00 AM

Camp

$30,000.

wlupando,
Conley

area.

Shown .by appointment only,
304~7~091.

Cozy·~3;-=-;8C:r.~
R-an-c7h-,-:S:--po-c"tou
- ._
Modem Khchen1 Family Room,
Buln·ln
Woodoumer,
Deck,

Pool, 2 Car Garage, 113 k:re LaC,
CloM io Town, 1~2 Adal1lde Dr.,
614--446-06HI After 4:30 p .m.
$5g,soo.

Eat11ta

S.nlement
Sa .. : 3
Hou..., Acreage, satellite Dish
.C0nt1ct Tom l.oftla AI 1-30().

County Wnt Vlrgklla , Pr me
Hunting, $10,000, n lnlarHted,
614-:ZSS:.tooa.
9 Adlo lnlng Lota. 2 Acree. All To
Go 'ro 1 Buy.r. All UUIItJM
Awallab'-r, 114 Uti 3657.
Two lOOllOO on SR 100 Actou
From Old Notth GaiU. H.S. I~

l88-i126.

Wonlod To Buy: lot 1 Ac10 01'
More, Call After 5 P.M. I14-4467S57.

Wanled to buy· two or more
acr•, aultabfe 1o bulkS on and
C:IOH to I tMircktop ro.d, 114-

tl4g-24a\.

iMS-1702 Or i12·32a..IWT.I After 6

P.Y.
For aale by owner- ~ home,
1860 .q. ft., full bir..mwrt

M1l01 School Dl.trlct, davtlm.;

6'f4.~-231 8,

evelng

114-Gt2-

'l't33.
Greenbrier Eatat.. -eplh

toyer,

lllrgo living 6 dining 100m, 3bt.,
2
112
bath,
lamlly100m
wnlreplace, double car garage.
ln-t~round pool, 3.85ac. land,
•xc. cond. Somervll.. R•ltr,
304~75-3030 Of 117~ .

44&amp;~82l

Country Sid• Aparrtm•nl 588 2

Bodroomo, CA, WID Hook-Up
5350/Mo. DopooH Roqulrod, 61444&amp;~222.

1~ t)\1

to a&lt;tJenlse · any preference,
lirrV!aUon or discrtmlnatlon
based on race, color, relglon,
seli lamiWal status or national
m1gln, or any lnlenUon to

Not r es p o n s tble lor acc1dents or loss

Lunch by Easlern Band Boosters
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Douglas Bartram- Owners
667-6359
"Mac" McCoy- Auctioneer 985-3944

no-

PUBLIC AUCTION
THUR. EVE JULY 21, 1994
6:00PM
Located at the Metgs Co
Fatrground al the
lntersectton of St. Rt 7, 33 &amp; 124, Pomeroy, Oh to.
"Antique or Collectors Items"
7' dtmng room table. oak wash stand. w/towel bar. oak.
Hosier cab•net w/flour btn. flal wall cupboard . Side
board server. round wood cheese box. round ped .
table . pictures and ptcture fra mes. platform rocker.
Arbuckle &amp; Prince Albert cans . mtsc . oak chatrs. tee
cream churn . mtlk crocks . 25" double hydrailically
Buddy "L" tru ck . Pomeroy bottles . 40 pc . brass.
scooter. meta l toys . doll cradle. glass kn tfe . pocket
knifes . Coca Cola . Wtnchester. Parker, JA Henckel.
Robt Claas . Uncle Henry, Barlow. case &amp; o th ers . corn
1obber. wo oden aoventstng boxes . se t of flatwate tn
box . glassware . old kttchen items. occupted Japan.
Hummel . Oepresston . Carntval &amp; eel dtshes. coins.
Silver dollars. halls . quarter s. &amp; dtm es. s mall ltngere
cabinet, 6 pc dtmng room su tl e. Jewell T coffee metal
insert . free hand 1ars. Hamilton Jones. G reen brough.
Jars w/sten ctl s. vtntage pteces. old dolls . barn lantern,
farm tmpl ement seal. gran tie wa re and lots, lots more.
Owner- Osby Martin &amp; Associates
Cash
Posttve 10
Refreshments
Dan Smith- Auctioneer 57-68- 1344 &amp; 515
Auction lobe held tns td e- Bnng chair. stay late.
"Not responstble 101 accidents or loss of pr operty"

42

44

,...,.enc.,

Apanment

Mobile Homes

2 Bodroomo Futnl~, On Cloy
Chapel Rood• I3UUi11o. Pluo
1300 Dopoeit, •*251-4401.

oocUIHy dopoolt roqutrod, no
polo, 6t4-e92-22t8.

room HouM, t-umlehed. No
~;..~: S350/Mo. Dopoolt, IM-7V7-

Pot'!!_':-..

It: VIllage Q,..n ApC1. 1411 or
c.tll 114-li2·3111. Eafi.

Real Estate General

. II ~~NEW USTING- $42,000 Buys This Onel Just
what everyone is looking for... an affordable
homo in Green Twp. offering 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, living room and aat~n kitchen situated on
.71 acre.
This homo is in very good
conation and ready to move into. Out of town
owner isanxious to sell. Call today!
1606

mn.

,~,

.

·;~~. '

..', ,_.."

'~-

.

SMALL WONDER- Therv's no place like this
homo for tho money. Vinyl sided on tho outside,
lroshly painted on tho inside, all you havo to do
is move. 3 b&amp;drooma, 1 bath, living room. large
kitchon with new floor. Full unfinished
basomant with 2nd bath, 1 car carport on a
large lot for only $49,000 . Call Carolyn today!
f605

.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUcrtON CO.
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
LUNCH
MASON, WV
773-5785
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH 1.0.
Not rnponolble for ltCCidentl or looo of property
Ueenoed and bonded In Ohio, Kentucky &amp;
Wnt Vir11lnio 166

LARIAT DRIVE Nice noiJhb·orh ood
Close to hospital and shopping. 3 bedroom
brick ranch is complete with eat-in kitchen,
living room , 2 baths, family room and more.
Nice patio, large fiat lot. Pnced at $n,soo
1200

AHorclllble living on the Edge ol Town!
Clean and neat 2 bedtoom homo on Texas
Road. Uvin11 room, eat-in kitchen and utility
area. Large lot- over an acre. Low price ol
$24,900.
123 t

you can
build equity in this 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath ranch
homa. A family room , raar deck, fonced yard
and a woodbuming stove to cut hooting costs
are some of lhe fealuras that you will
apprvciato. A home of your own for S39,900.
1501

POSSIBILITIES ARE ENDLESS I Over 14,000
sq. ft. of oHica, warehouse &amp; garage space.
Noraly 1 1/4 acraland in tho heart of town with
322' of street frontage on 2 dillorent streets.
Over 21,000 sq. ft. of parking space. Muchm
much more . Building in very good ropatr. Call
Dave for tnorv detaisl

NEW LISTING IN RODNEY! 3~ bedroom
home located on Cora Road oHors a large lot
with finished outbuilding (currently used as a
guest house), ~ving room with woodbumer and
oat-in kitchen. Nica dack. Large yard. t car
garaljO wtth
$49,900
12Cla

111»81 Trtller 14x70, 3 B.ctrooma,
1 112 Bath, 2 Dec~1 Awnlnge,
Underplrvdng, $8,~, IMaae!
13211.

NEW USTlNGo Move In Condition .. . Vory nice
arva, lcvaly 3 bedroom brick home. 1 1/2
baths, clooe to hospital &amp; storos. Call for an
appointment.
1403

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

D. C. ...II Sills, IlL
Cannelburg. Inc . 45719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings .
De signed to meal you r
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF t 0 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Posl Buildings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollars.
Local Sales Representative
DONNA CRISENBERY
11366 Stale AI. 7
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

PH. 614·256-1633

AFFORDABLE Bf·LEVEL • Immaculately
maintained homa oftantmora than most in this
range. Consider 3 bedroomo, 2 batlts, livin11
room, family room with fireplace, garage, pool,
dack, haat pump/CA. &amp; comer lot. On top of
that. irs all In grat shapet Priced to sell at
$59,900.
1215
EASY ON 111E EYES, EASY ON YOUR
BUDGET TOOII Lovely 2 story home located
in a nice country setting, yet just minuteo away
from the pool and goll course. OHars 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dinin9 room,
nice front and back porches, pluo patto area.
Priced at only $47,000, you can't afford not to
call Carolyn today bafore its too latell
1600

GARDENER'S DELIGHT! Beautiful gardono
and landscaping surround this large attractive
Cape Cod. Mucb larger than it appears, this 4
bedroom home offers 2 1/2 baths, living roojm
dining room &amp; lamily room pluo basement:
Large deck .. Large 2 car garage. Much more.
12f0
Calllordetatls.

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

Poopwdow ...._

VINDALE DOUBLE WIDE ON 1.59 ACRE LOT. 3 BR, 1 t /2
BATHS, CARPORT, COVEFJED PATIO . $49,000 NEW
LISTING!

Hoovar upright aweaper, IIU

Daytona B~ach Condominium
For Rent, Aug . 201h -27lh . Ocean
Front Pool ' Sauna SIHpe 4,

new, $75. :104-675-6ga&amp;,

Lennox Heal Pump, $350, 114446-9780.

Dining Room Tabl• WHh 4
Chalra &amp; Ser\llng Buft.t, $150,

Living

room

aulla

with

J

recliners, 5 months old, like
new, $1050, 814-G4&amp;.21111.

Evana •
Jenning• Electric:
Wheelchair &amp; Charger, Good
Chair, like New, 614-446-8207.

eapac:rty wasMr, I y••r. ofd,

Ue~ A!.vui.~ :~~~· COL lEC:

Golda Gym weight t.nct\- llk.
new. 104-882-3432.

New 5li8 II" bed utlll1r lraller.
304'1!75-5744.

pottery, clocka, bona, Jara bot·
11M, bookl, toys, •tc. ALWAYS

Golf etubt w~g. l-8 lron1,
pitching wiKige, 1,3,5 woods

Plush couch, low ... at, lounge
cha ir,
charcoal
gray
wfth
mauvllblua apacka, like n.w,

fiNE ANTIQUES. American art,

chi

1

•

tuo -•1

lum"u•o
1

TIBLE"S- prinla, post•n, tool1,
BUYING ARROWHEADS.

Top

dollar paid. One placa 01 on•
tlundred .
APPRAISALS,
&gt;40
yeart •xptrrt•nce. Pl•aaa call
614-992·2822.

Maytag tluvy duly

e~rtra

&amp;aro-

uklng $250, 614 -949-2268.

Wiping COVIilr•, putl lilr. Used 2
Ha!IOOI , $200. JO.II-E7r.-1504.

$.800, 614-992-S756.

Hayward High Rat• Sand Flller1
Pro Seriu 1 Year Old . Haywara
Pool Pum{ 16x32 Solar E!l.anket
Mlac, Poo Equip. 614--446-1079.

Rotrlgeratora, Stov.. , Washert
And Oryert, All R•eondllioned
And G.auranteed! SIOO And Up,
Will Deliver. 614-66~1.

54

Miscellaneous
Real Estate General

OFFICE 992-2886

67S-7fi74.

51

Household

Goods
C.rpot $5.00 Up Yln11 1•1.4g To
$6 SO In Stoek, 814-446-,... ••
Mollohan Carpet..

Klng-tiZ8 wat•rbed compltlt,
ralls,
aeml-wave
maitre ...
heat•r, 4 drawer ~-. $400

OBO. 3Qot-l;75-5llt2 or 675-1770.

Khchen atowe, $100. 304-6756981.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete

BRICK RANCH HAS 3 BEDROO MS .. 1 1/2
BATH S... FAMILY
ROOM
WITH
DINING
AREA ... ENORMOUS RE CREATION ROOM IN BASEMENT
SPACE FOR 4TH BEDROOM IN BASEM ENT. COVERED
PATIO. ATIACHED GARAGE. KYGER CREEK AREA.
VACANT LAND APPROX. SIX ACRES. LEVEL TO
GENTLE SLOPE. CALL SOON TH IS PROPERTY IS
PRICED TO SELLI

home

tumlshlnge.

- - - - - - - -1985 S-10, Grtvely, recliner, 1981
Ford 4llo4. 304-675-5162.
1992 S.t Ot Brtttanlca Eocyclopedia• With An Additional
60 Boob, Leather Bound, Uk•
Brand New $'1,200,

614-44&amp;-6~4

3 Ton Mobile Pack Air Con·
dltloner

Installed,

Ananclal

Available, 614-446-6308, 1.SOO.
2117~308.

- - ' - - - - --

-

304~75-3034 .

36"' Whitt Croae Buck Storm

Doof 1'3crNn lnclud.d, Very
,Good Condition! 614-44&amp;-6278
AH•r 3 P.M.

50 WhHe Oak

~.

t0"1&lt;6- 12

·18 R. long, 614-3~2720. Al1•r

OP.Y.

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 112
Olivo S1., Galli polio. Now I Uood
tumttur•. hute,., WH1rtm &amp;
Wort&lt; boola. 114-446-315g,

Alr Cond111oner for Sal•, als.o
Washer, Dryer,
Retrlger~ lor,
ft'Mzar call 614-256-1238.

Return Call.

Chm Fraezar $'100 614.4.46-4141
Arter 5 P.M. Or On Wttk•nda.

Qualhy Household Fuml1hlng•

Call•r 10 box, 14 memory, brand

Any Budget • E~-H&gt;WN 1110
DAY SAME AS CASH !LAYAWAY
CASH&amp;CARRY

W• Alao Have
A Repo. S.ctlon

POMEROY- E Ma 1n Street N eed r ental pr ope rty ? Has 2
ren tnl unr ts A 2 b e droom dpart ment clowns tarr s trJa t n eeds
snr n c&gt; work .1nr1 i'l onr&gt; hPdr co m ap ;utrn ent that s n 1ce
$25,900

LoOSidlr :::.

new, $43.", 814--992-616&amp;.

,

Clnnlng Jars; 2 cannara; 1mall

•xercls• bike;

6~j4i-2698

atter

1:30pm.

&amp; Plattlc Septic
Tankl 300 Thru 2,000 Gallon•
Ron Evan• Entarprlsee, Jackoon, OH 1-801).637-i528.

Concrete

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

$59,900

Automatic: washer, like new,
304-67~12n •h•r 5:00 PM.

VI'RA FURNITURE
4 Mltn Out t4t
614-4411-3158
And Appllancnil With Term1 FOr

LONG RUN ROAD· Approx 56 acres wrth ,1 4 bedroo m 1
11 2 sto ry l1urne Also co mes with a 2 ca r garage sa tellite
d1sh. b;:u n . trailer hook up &lt;rnd cellar ho use

2 Year Old Amana AC 6,600 BTU
Excallant Condl1lon, $200, 614446.3869 Leave Uaaaag• Will

.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

16,000 btu Whirlpool air eon·

dltlorwr, $250.

Houre: M....Sat, 11-5. 814-4460322, 3 mi!M out Bulevllle Rd.
Frw Delivery.

OPEN Mon.- Sat. U /Wod 11-1.

RUTLAND- N elso n R oad 2 lots wtth a 2 bedroo m ranch, a
l&lt;1 rge ltvt ng dmmg room. one bath and a seperate detached

2 car garage Also hLts a f1r11shed storage bulldrng

$39,500

STATE ROUTE 7- Ches ter A 14170 mob1le ho rne w 1t h a 2
tJcd'oo n, f1::ldr t1 on anacned All 3 b€drooms are good s1zed,

suY

Ql

as an tnvestment o r use as residence

REA~

®

514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008
Joe Moore, Associate 441-1111
L•No•ft

==-...;._~:__-~-=:

1475· BRAND NEW, PICK
CARPET DEBBY DRIVE, 3/4 BRs, 2 baths,
LA w~amed ceiling, cherry cabinet s In
kitchen, FR. extra nice view.

1472 LeGRANDE BLVD•. $53,900, 3 BR, 1
112 baths, kitchen, LA, gas heat cent. atr,
attached garage. lanced yard.

I 1 2 ba th s. large l1 v1ng room , newer carpe t through t ou l
ne w e r hectt ptiiTIIJ. c111d approx one acre of land Mu st se~
ol LOVE
$26,900

HYSELL RUN ROAD- A spaCIOUS ranch harm~ w1th free gas
sr ttmg on app rox 11 a cres Home has 3 bed r oom s an 1 1/2
ba th s Also tne re IS a ga rage and above gr ound s w rmmrng

pool

$86,500

CHES TER - Scou t Camp Roa (1 Appr ox 4 1 2 Je res of
!1llable lanll w rtt1 a rcm ch ho me th a t t1as 2 bedroo ms pr e tt y
k1tc he n W1lll f, epface. fu ll basentc&gt;nt and .1 g, untH ol roOicd 2
$42,500
story barn
RUTLAND- E ver thr nk o f gorny 11110 tJusmess fo r yourse iJ ?
Step r1g~tl rnl o bus r m~ ss 1n ttl1s Slaug ~l!er ho u se th at was
state Approved Carnes wrth all cq urprnent needed to
operat e s laughler hous e and butr:hP.r s .rop A lso h as 2
mobile h or1c h oo k up s and approx 2 acres of n 1ce layrng
yard ancJ &lt;tpnrox 5 acres total
$47,000

MIDDLEPORT· Hud so n S t Feel right r11 home rn any room
of tht s 1 1 2 story housP. from th e k1tchcn that has beau tiful
tongu e c1 r1d yrooVt' wall s. to the 11ght and arry 11vrng room .
drntng roo rn .lr Pil Se tirng on 2 lot s. rl ha s 3 bedroom s. 1 1/2
baths . c"lnd i t rANG furnace WAS $37,900 NOW $34,000
BAUM ADDITION- Ocautllu! laymg 178x 117 lot rn a n 1ce
subdiVISI On TPC W.Jier i-l lld Co lumbus SOirlh ern ElectriC
$8,500
ava rlable

mn.

OWNERS ANXIOUSIII Beautilul Spring Valley
homo . A must see homo thai you'll just fall in
love wilh. Outstanding features include custom
oak kitchen, remode led bathrooms (2), living
room with attractive warm fireplace . 3
bedrooms and oozy denflamily room . AI in top
notch condition . Plus full basement, 2 car
garage and a very largo tree shaded dock in
the back yard Call lor appointment. SO's 12f 1

Tycoon laka, 28.5
1444-38.50 ACRESA. in Raccoon Twp. and approx. 10 A. in
Huntington Twp., homo on property offers 5
BAs, bath, LR, kitchen, now fumace, wood
burning stove, sid1ng, some new carpal. Bam
on proparty.

1411- LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
AND QUIET- This could bo it. 49.66 acres,
Andrews Rd., B year old home with 3 BAs. 2
1.2 baths. LR, OR, FR. heat pump, 2 car
garage plus 24x48 detached gar&amp;ljO.

MIDDLEPORT- A larg e lot w1lll lot s of flowers and trees A 2
story stor1e horne w1th 2 bedrooms . d lnt ng room . and 1 112
bath s, lull basement Ha s n1ce cab1 net s 1n krtc hen a nd
k•tchen 1S equrpped
$35 ,000
1 ACRE ... River
1437- NEWER HOME
Valley School Distric~ 3 BR, mastor BR &amp;
bath wlgarden tub 14x21, LR, kitchen, planty
of cabinets &amp; closets, HP, $65,900
1441· OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
TO $49,900111 Ranch style homo oflers _3
BAs, 2 baths, LR, OR, kit, hplcent. atr,
garage and 1.094 A.

Take Step B.Ci. In toni&amp;. ·
the
charcter that has been prvsetVed this home
~·s easy lo do. Beautiful woodworl&lt;. La'lle
wardrobes upstairs. Grand cenlral foyer Wlth
original open staircase. A definite must sea
home if you're looking for a "largo in-town•
homo, or set up as a duplex. Beautiful view of
the pari&lt; and river. Off street parking.
1225

HOME IS WHERE 111E HEART fS... And your
heart will tall you to mako this house your
home. Remodeled 1 112 story home includes
all the chann of your grandmotho(o home--iuot updated! 3 bedroomo, living room, oat-in
kltchan and dining room. Bonus: largo block
building witll potantial for many usao. $52,000
1214

25,000 SO. FT. OF WAREHOUSE SPACE!
Located only 3 mites lrom Interstate 35 on a
state hrghway, Several loading docks and
ramps. Very ntce office space (5 offices) and
oonferonc.. room. 2 baths. Many possible uses.
Appro• .. 7 acres of flat land. $175.000. Call
David Wtsoman.
1213

"i.£r.7:Eft

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1007

f442· INVESTORS OR FIRST TIME
BUYERS- $29,900 home located at 25
Evans Heights, 3 BAs, bath, kitchen, FA,
fireplace, 11as heat, basement, woodbumer in
FR, Washtngton Elementary School.
FACING THE OLD FRENCH SQUARE Return to yoslaryear. Three resido~cas, two
units in each. Too much to descnbe. Call
Renny Blackburn at BLACKBURN REALTY
for more detaile.
14111- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD- Additcn
Twp., 386 acrv fann, 3 ponds. tobacco base,
44x1DO bam with concroto floors. May
oonsidet split. (578)
1431- $17,000 Ewlngton araa, 3 BRs, BAtlt,
LR, kilchen, gas heat, cent. air, Bx12 utility

bldg.

'

1400- Four lots, 4 BR home, reduced to
$44,000, 2 baths, LA, OR, full basement, gas
heaVcenl air. Comer lots.
1445· PRfCE REDUCED TO $69,900 ..
Vinton Aroa, All Brick, 12x24 Fr. 12X12
Kitchen, · tsxt5 Dr, Ftroplace, heat
pump/cant air, ga~, new carpel

1452- RIO GRANDE- 1 1/2 story brick homo
offers 4 brs, 1 1/2 baths, LA. FR. DR, full
~ntshed basement, attached garage. Call lor
morv details.
ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS
AND
tNVESTORS ...EXTRA NICE PIECE OF
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR PORTER ...
Large lake withlake front _sites, mobile home
on property at present time, county water,
entirv tract consisls ol77 ecrea. rnA.
1432· MOM &amp; POP OPERATION FOR
SALE· Small restaurant with two rental
houses. Property io located in Oak Hill, Call
for morv details.
1455-- 80 ocrn, tn~. Sardio Road, Madison
Twp, Jackson County, 40x56 bam, 2 ponds,
fenced. Grvat hunting ground.
1429-0FFICES, OFRCES, OFFICES- Thate
what this 3,000 e&lt;t'fl building oHaro. Located
on SA 160 near Holzer. ideal for many uaas.
Call for more information.
1465- CORNER WOODS MILL AND SR
2 33 acres, m~. $16,500. Fronts on

a s-

143f- Approx. 5 acres with lrontage on
Raccoon. beautiful shaded lo~ house has 3
8R, bath, LR, kitchen, large unattached
garvga. onars a lot of privacy ang peace &amp;
quiet.

1473· BEAUnFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
offers 63 .75 acres, m/1, mostly pasture,
tobacco base, 40a60 barn, 22x44 block
milkhouse. 750' road frontage lor po ssible
1446-GREENBRIAR AVE ... Grval home for bldg. silas.
tlto lamily .. .3 BRa, FR, DRILR combo,
oquippod kitchen. garage, gas heaVcenl
t474- EXCLUSIVE RESIDENTIAL
1447· OAK HILL. former clothing BUILDING LOTS .. .near HMC, all lots
consists of 5 acrvs or moRI. Call for delruls.
storv ... $27 ,1100. comer lot. Call for more
infonnation.

145f · 151 acre•. more or less, Greenfield
Twp. $47,500, comer of SR' 233 and
Kennison Rd.
1440- ROOMY HOME IN TOWN- home
oHers 3 8Rs, 2 baths, LR, DR, FR, kilchan,
workshop, gas hea~ cent air. Home ~alifial
for FnHA financing. Call for more detatls.
1476- HEAD ROAD, 6 acrvs, mn. 3 BR, 2
bath, kitchen. family rm., full basement,
garage &amp; pond.

Raccoon.

"I

POMEROY· L1ncoln Hill - A 1 112 story perma stone home
wrth hardwood floors. 3 bP.drooms. ful l basemen t, 2 bath s.
frreplace. carport, and has 3 lots
~
POMEROY- Ba1l~y Run · Approx 56 acres w1th free gas and
roya ltr es A one st ory small h ouse. and a one ca r garage
$32,500

1414- OWNER WANTS TO RELOCATE
ANO HAS PUT 11115 NICE HOME ON THE
MARKET- Ranch homo oHers 3 BAs, LR,
DR. kitchen, 2 baths, attached garage. heat
pump, cant. air. oKtra nice yard.

A

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
1i.
446-3644
@t
r

Merchandise

Merchandise

Gold Magic Chief gaa atove, · 2 MatehlnQ Easy Cha lr1, Exc:olgood cond., $100. i5cublc ft . lent Condrtlon, $125 Both, 614chesHypa frHnr, axe. cond ., 446-2214.

TRAOinONAL COUNTRY HOME KEEPS PACE WITH
TOD&lt;\Y;_tl, LIFESTYLES. MADE TO ORDER KITCHEN HAS
EFFICit:NT LAYOUT. LARGE FAMILV ROOM
3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS . FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM
OPEN STAIRCASE. 2 CAR GARAGE. 40'X70' BATN.

BUSINESS OR RESIDENCE OR BOTHII
Located along Bulavilla Pika, thts home can be
used as both a business and residence . Plus
thara i_s a rMtal unit with saparnte utilitiGs.

Well C•ad For Split Level. Located on Rt.
160, this home has been wall maintained and
is in mova in condition. With a slightly differvnt
lay oul than your average ranch, this home
offers 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, living room &amp;
eat in kitchen. Lot maasurvs 100K300 allowing
for plenly of back yard fun . Priced at $64,900.
1218

Loretta McDade • 446·7729
Garnes·

Miscellaneous

614-446-0042 After 5 P.M.

1 yr old living rvom auil•, couch
wlmatchlng chair, 2 lamps,
IWIYII c:hilr Ill for $400 . 3()4.

A little dough will do you I Don't
be fooled by the low price on this 1 112 story
home located on a large lot In Vinton. Offers 3
bedroomo, 1 batlt, living room, dining room,
••tra large kitchen plus a full basement. All tho
woik has been dona for you, all you have to do
is movo in. Priced at only $35,000. Vou ooul!tl't
rent for this monthly payment, so now's tho
time to become a homeowner.
1602

DAVID WISEMAN 1 BROKER- 446-9555

I----------

Merchandise

OON' DRIVE BY... CALL FOR APPOINTMENT TO SEE
THI S WELL MAINTAINED BRICK HOME . 3 BEDROOMS .
BATH , LIVING RO&lt;UM . KITCHEN/DIN ING AREA ON MAIN
FLOOR PLUS ONE BEDROOM , KITCHE N AN D LI VING
AREA IN FULL BAS EME NLATIACHED GARAGE PLUS
24'X40' DETACHED GARAGEIWORK SHOP. ADDED
BONUS HOT TUB. ACRE LAWN . CENTRAL AIR COND.

BLACKBURN

DUPLEX W1111 A VIEW I. Uve on one side and
enjoy a beautiful view of tho Ohio River and tho
Gallipolis Pari&lt;. Let tho other side help make
your mortgage payment. Here's the perfect set
up. Half of this duplex has been completely
rvmodeled. 2 bedrooms, 1 112 bath, large living
room and eat-in kitchen. 011 street parking .
$139,000. Call for details.
1226

54

Miscellaneous

20 deer t layar barrel Wl1h rUle SASD, 614·388· 9758
olghlo, 614-66 7- 3226 .
~7--=.:.:,;=..:::.=:::-:-,-----::c:--:---:

"'Hooked on Phonic•", like new,
flSO. 30H7S-4075.

8Q0~1jg-34ell .

'

I

Remington
870
Wlngmaater
Ma,Pnum, 30"' w•nt rtb barrel and

P11ce rFor 1 P.t:, Can Fumlah
R•l•r•nca, 814-446-4620.

Real Estate General

with help
on payments. Good location lor either.
Residence has 2·3 bedrooms, living room eatin kitchen. Easy to heat.
i:z1o

'l'tOil.

446•3636

rangu . Skaggs Appll ancea, 76
VIne Strwt, Call 614-446-n~. 1·

r:;'"' '.I

WHAT POTENTIALII You won't boliovo tho
spade and potential this 2 story home has.
2800 sq. ft. of living spaco including 3 large
bedrooms &amp; t srnallar, 2 112 bathrooms, living
room. lamily room, 2 kitchens (could bo easily
made into one) and down stairs study or
another badroom . This one needs soma work
but ifs worth itf Bring back all tho 1880's charm
and character. Overlooking tile pari&lt; and rivr on
Court Street Don't hesitate. Call for a showing
today. $90,0001 Backyard and 2 car garage I
1224

304-675--

Merchandise

1982 PARK WOOD MOBILE HOME. . 14'X70' HAS LOTS
OF LIVING SPACE. 2 LARGE BED ROOMS 2 BATHS
KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG.
UTILITY ROOM WITH WASHER AND DRYER. 2 DEC Ks:
UNDERPINNING. STORAGE BUILDING. MOBILE HOME
ONLY.

~

clubs, like new bag.

llpolla Or Rural Ar.a , Mu .. Hava

TAKE A DIP IN 111E POOL OR RELAX ON THE FRONT
PORCH OVERLOOKING THE BEAUTIFU L OHIO
AIVER ... 3 BEDROOM S... GLASS DOOR ED MASTER
BEDROOM SUITE OPENS ONTO THE VERY PRIVATE
POOL AREA. FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE AS DOES
THE BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM ... THERE IS
ALSO FAMILY OR
HOBBY ROOM . BRI C K
EXTERIOR. .. OVER AN ACRE LAWN PLEASE CALL FO R
AN APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THI S HOME SOON'

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

54

Realty .

RANNY BLACKBURN. BROKER 446-0008
JOE MOORE, ASSOC . 441-111

52 Sporting Goods
Goll cluba l bag. Protllstional

SyracuM, &amp;l4-W92-2886.

2bdrm. apia., tolal eloctrlc, ·~
In town. Appti'Utlone available

Sunday Times-Senti

ProNnlonal Couple Ootlru lo
Rant 2 Bedroom House In Gal-

1420.. LAND CONTRACT- $ 2;:,,:&gt;uu ... ;J&gt;&lt;::,:&gt;U'UI
DOWN ... $298 per month includes taxes
insurance .. .1 1/2 story with full basement .
Located at 24 Evans Heights .

2 large B.droom•, 2: Floc:w.,
CA, 1 112 Balh, 2 Poole, Pallo,
S3201Mc&gt;. No
Ptuo
Socurtty Dopoon nequtrod, .,.._
387-7850.

Ntw condttlon, 3br., reference, Tr1U.,. tor rent, you P'IY utllhl•
depooh, no polO. 304-41~82.
pluo ISO dopoolt. 304-4~35.

1g114 14x80 Brandy Wino 3 Bod-

'

email apartment or houM at
r..aonabM
prtca.
Prefu
Pom•roy,
Mlddlepor1
or

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washa,., dry•re, r•trlgorators,

pllancea
fumlaMd,
laundry
room tacilttlel dou to echoot

Unoleum, New Bath'
St0,500, c.u 114-367.0321 Anai
I P.M.

Located at 2g15 Meadowbrook Drive In Point
Pleasant WV. Watch for signs. Mr. &amp; Mrs. Nibert have
sold their home and will be selling the following:
Matching FleKsteel sofa and love seat, FleKsteel chair,
4 pc_coffee tab le and end table set, 25" Quasar color
console, Fisher remote VCR, Kroeler chair, like new
Hickory sofa, 2 antique chairs, oak wash stand,
antique trunk. 4 drawer chest, 5 pc. 1950's dine"e set,
metal wardrobe, nice microwave cart, maple floor
lamp, Magnavox stereo. antique anniversary clock
(Germany), maple record cabinet, 8 place se"ing of
l&gt;fa~zgrafl--Village paHem, 8 place setting or lronslone
china-lndependance pattern, milk glass, viking glass,
phcher and bowl, large ceramic nativity scene, Stewart
McCollough pheasants, McCoy po"ery, small kitchen
appliances. Hamilton Beech food processor, Fry
Daddy. all like new, baskets, flower arrangements,
pictures, lamps, canners, wash tubs, 3 boxes ceramic
tile, sleeping bag, radio, Hoover sweeper, several
braided oval rugs, exercixe bike and more .

lot•l Space 3,600 Sq. Fl. Available. Good Location CioN To
Bridge, Clll Dav• Wl ..man AI
Wiseman Rul Utata, 614-446--

1 B.drocm Apt. Near Holzw,

2012 Chatham $265/llo. Jl80 Jbr. all oloct~c, M11U. 304-4'15Dopoolt, Sto" And RolrtgorotOf 4018.
Fumlohod, IM 4M 3810.
) ;;::::=;::::7'7--::--:-----,Fumlehed 2 a.drooma In
3 tt.droom houee on Uncoln Chnhlrt, 114-4~8781 t14-t8:2Helghto, 114-NI-7Qtl en., 5pm. 6637.
'

12J60 Mlrloncl, 2 b&lt; In lA&gt;ng
Bottom, Ohio Molgo Co., $560G;
good condnlon, 114-i8$-3HII.

Old., Trailer, 2 Bedrooma, Oocd
Shopo, 2 A..,., 11/L, State
Rout• 180, Mu• S.UI 113,&amp;00.
814-311&amp;-1271.

Mobil• Home Lola On Stat•

Routa 7. K•n••ll"· 61~40-11786 •
614-IMI2-U37.

$150. Conning joro. 304~7H677.

1g83 SchuM Md4 New Corpot

THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1994

0637.

qulrod, 114-311l'-T.I45.

Control Air. $256. Coli: 814-4&lt;162957.

2 B.c:trooma, Texu A01G, Oaf. 3 Bod100m0 $260/Mo. + Dopoeit
!!polio, Dopooh Required, 114- 1 Bedroom, $200/Mo. • O.poe;h'
44&amp;.0756, 814-2M-1318.
014-245-0!104 01' 8*256-41101. '

now woOpaparl paint, wooho~
dry01, good condition, 14500,
114-742-2340.

rooma, 2 Full Bathe, 3 Ton CA,
With Hoot Pump, Laundry
Room,
Undollllnnl"tt,
Tie
Oowne, All Bat \Jp Ori Private
RentMt Ld, :=t,!xtraa, ''""
modlato Poe
, 814-2561357.

Mobile Home Lot In ct,•shlre
$100111o. 014~40-me. &amp;1&lt;-e112:

EJderiy lady would llka 1 nice

1 Bedroom Apartment, Bulavllle
Road, R•t.rence &amp; O.poeh A•

1'1 VanOvu, 2 bedloorn, t bath,

1980 M180 Uberty, 2 br, AJC
WID, 18500, 014-llt2-3105.
'

304-675-

5x10, 10x10, 10x15, 10K2b 10x30.
304-67&amp;-2460.
L

47 Wanted to Rent

NEW FREE OUAUTY HOMES BOOK SHOWING NEARLY
ALL LOCAL REAL ESTATE LISTING IN CO LOR IS NOW
AVAILABLE, PLEASE STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR YOUR
FREE COPY.

tor Sale

1m Elcona 12J80 With 11m
Troll., Roomette 121128 3 BR 2
All CondiU--. $41,000, 114388-itl21.

tor ,..nt,

Marhart Rental &amp; Storage Unha,

3644.

AUaan r. CANADAY, DOIUII

1 and 2 bedroom apartm•nta,
tumlahed
and untumlah.d,

114~56-1088 .

Uti!Hy Roome, 1
oth, Full
BaHment Forced Air, Gat Furnaco, 2 Dor:u, t/2 A&lt;ro Mora 01'
l.Ha, Eooy Ct..n WI.-,
Vinyl Siding, 814-622-«156.

32

Tnll•r Iota
6984.

Real Estate Genera l

on'ICS H LOC1JI'T I!:__·~~PO~a_, 011

for Rent

14x60 2 Br, 1 mila South ol
Eu10ka, on Sl Rt.7. No poto,

HouH In c.ntervllle: 3 8edo

Small 4 1oom houae lor oatil,
$10,000, 304-Tn-a113.

5855.

Canaday
.,.,,

for Rent

roome, Uwlng, Dlnl'1, Khchen

Now Home For Sale By Builder:
3 Bodroom Sottlng On 3 Acroo,
Rural Waler, 5 lllnut• From
A1eeoon Park, S62,000 080,
814-:1711-2240.

County Wat•r. Phone: 614-246-

r - ·1w4~ ­

Mobile Homes

Hew

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Real Estate General

· knowilngly O&lt;X:Ofll

opportunity basts.

Alao trallw e~ae.. All hook-upa.
Call after 2 .00 p.m., 304·1"rl5651, M..on WV.

Space for Rent

wv

==

wtl not

ad\lelfisemeris for real eslat•
whktr Is 11 vtolallon or lhe law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwel6ngs
adver1tsed In ttu: newspaper
are avallabkl on an equal

Lot For R•nl: Mobile Home l.Dt,

Sleeping room• wtth cooking.

46

'

Offlco Spec• For Rent ' Owna• _5_3___
A_n-:tl:-cq:...u_e_s__
Fltlllble On Terrnt I Spaca. DONALD SMITH ASSOC IATES :

,.,.._

make llnY sud'l prelerence,
Mmilalion or dlacrtmlnaUon:
TNs

Piut RaterencM, 61

oepocti

Space for Rent

3 Room OHice Suit• With
Privata Totlet In Modern Fir•
Prool Bldg. Call Morris Haaklna
114-«6-26!11 01' 014-446-2512.

AHTBOUll

me

the Federal Fair Housing Ad
ol 1968 wlllcll makes Hllogal

4 6 6l57.

$330/Mo. Plua "Dam a~:

46

. . . . . .daa.c.--.-dal

Dot&gt;oolt

41 Houses for Rent

Clou To Spring Valley No Pet a'

Nice 3 br. apl. In Mlddlepon,
Fumlahed 3 Roome l Bath
614-992-5858.
Clun, No Pet1 1 Flehmmce &amp;
Oepoal! Requlrea. 614-4411-1519.

NFA lno:_

858-2m.

All real estate advertk!dnQ n
thb newspaper Is JUbfed to

EOH.

'"

HOUM For Slrle In Rio Grande

ltsted .

'

Roome tor rent ~ w..k or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.
614-446-gsao.

N..r The Bapll81 Church. Ph.
Day 814-353-6$t28, Ewenlnge 114-

Sat J uly 23rd at 50102 LICk S ktllet Road . Approx 1
mt north of S R 248 mtdway between Chesler and
Long Bonom . OhiO . Follow auct ton stgns tram 248
1 have so ld my farm so wt ll sell th e following
Davtd Brown 990 Tractor. 66 NH Baler. steel wheel
S.D rak e . 5 M brush hog. H.D wood splttter M W 11
HP ri dtng mower. 14' boat w/30 HP Johnson motor. 38'
truck toppers. 3 c hain saws . Sktl circular saw. san der.
floor tng hammer. Locust fence posls . 2 rower exetctse
machtnes . cattle rack and dog box for PU tru ck . rabbtl
cages . dog cage. mtsc lumber and butldtng matenal .
lot elect n c wire. boat wtnch , 2 snow plows fo r lawn
tractor. bench gnnder. air patnt spraye r. garage door
opener. H .D floor 1ack. lot used truck !Ires. I beam s.
aux gas tank. lot scrap metal
Antiques &amp; Collectibles
Kerosene tank w/ pump , ani v1se. 2 mort ar hoes. 10
gal milk cans. wooden rake and many mor e tl ems not

5:00P.M.

Nice 2 B.c:iroomt, All ElKt
Fum. Kltch.n, Country senlng'

~'k";-~

2 S.droomo, IC, No Poto,
And
Ret..-..,
~0/llo., W""'"!J Ofyor; 2 Bod-

Rentals

wlfamlly roomlt woodbumer~ 3

bedroom•. 2 k cho,., 3 batno,
CIAI central waccum, cathederal
c.! I ng. atone fireplace, aarge
dock,
32&gt;56
outbuilding
wlheat.d work room, 2• acrealn
wooded lrwl ciOM to town

Graeloue living. 1 and 2 bedroom epar\menta at Vlllag•
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartment• In Middleport. From
$232-$355 . Call 614-g92-58Sg,

)

0

Furnished

Brookatdll Ap~rr1manta, 1
room,
Stove
Refrtgenrtor,
Wuhl(,· Dryer Hook-Up, 114-

$14,570.
Raybum
Rd,
re ..onable restricUona. lnfor.

4 Btdrooma, 2 Story 1£, 2 112

Approx Kre tal, comer z:orM

down sta rr s

&amp; Acreage

m1llon maUH on r.qu.t. 30487H253.

Wl14xro

Dan Smith- Auctioneer 57-68-1344
" Real Estate "
5 room s and ba th upsta1rs Kit ch e n 18x 12 , dmrng
room 14x18. hvrng ro om 1.:1:.: 24 bedroom s 12)(16 P.
12x18. ba th 6x8 . Porch 6x24 Paneled wall s. carpel
vrnyl 1n k1! c h e n . dry wall cer l1 ng~. a'ld 18x36 room

Lots

5.32 acrw, $13,160. I .M .crea,

1\ood, Cl&lt;»e HUC, 814-t-4s..&amp;C15.

Loca ted tn Hutland Ohto or St Rt 124 Joe IS
leavmg state so will sell the toll ow ng per son a I r!f'ms at
10 00 am Real Estate to sell et t 1 00
" Auto ..
1981 Ca dillac 4 d o01
" Misc .·
Electrr c range . small TV. sled. prcL..He~ qun rock. bar
s tool . pool tabl e. hub caps corJntcr l o r s tov n mrsc
dishes and lot s o l mrs c knrck kna cks

1.0.

SaW!

Batho, LR, DR, FR With FP Eat-

10:00 A.M.

35

ActH on Addloon PlkeJ. C«ner Ot Poaaum lro4 And ulaur
Rood, t14,000, 114-311l'-78tl1.

lor delalla . 304-6'r5-l328.

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT. JULY 23, 1994

t.,. bulldlnt, 114-802-2458.

45

Rooms

-,.ov.

Common:lal building 101 rent In
Ylddloport, the old Yolgo Wel-

Apanment
for Rent

7P.Y.
'For l.aaM: Ora Sed room
AJM1r1ment 3 Roome, Private Apertment, Second Aoorl C«Bath, U'lllhiM Paid, 828 Second ner Second &amp; Plne,--4;;AIIIpotlo.
P•
Monlh.
Aw•nu•. Galllpolll, $22.5/llo . 1210
RefTtgerator And Wat•r Fur:
Jt50 Dopoelt. 614-44&amp;-3117.
nlohod. No Pota, Coil 514-446BEAUTIFUL APARTYE~S AT 424g 01 8 -2325.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 JacUon Pika Fumllhed Apartmenl, Utllttl"
trom $222 to $265. Walk to ahop Plld , 1 B.c:iroom, Up.talr
1 mowl... Call 814-446-2588. S.cood Aw•nue, Galllpolla, N~
P•t•, Excellent Condition •14EOH.
448-i$23.
. •

4

lbr. r~nch, GamPOn. Ftny, call

&amp; Auction

Aw•nu., Galllpolle, $220/Mo.
UtlltUM Paid, 614 t48 4418 Ahar

Business

44

Apartment
for Rent

·--a-.

Fumlohed Entclency $165/llo.
Utllltln Pold, Shore Both, 607
5ocond Avo.&lt; Golllpollo, 014-4464416 Ana&lt; 7 •.M.

m2 Buddy 12J:IO With ~l"l'rl
6 Undorplnnlng $2,500, 8
38811» l.eav• IMjeag. Will RMum

44

Apartment

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant

for Rent

for Rent

Buildings

---------~~---------~-l1

44

Apartment

for Sale

34

BRACES I"

1

44

Fumlahed EHiclency 101 Founh

daughter's orthodontist bill. My hus-

CRUTCH

Mobile Homes

'I'' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

C. II.

We had finally finished paying our

UNEASY

32

KIT

17, 1994

1470- 47 ACRES, HARRISON TWP•• Elliott
Rd .. all wooded. good hunting land, $16,800.

MIDDLEPORT- Hamrlton Stree t - Lookrng for a nrce home rn
town , on a qurel s treet Thts 3 bedroom . 1 112 story h ome 1s
JUSt the one It has a lot of hardwood floors . f1 replace. 2 full
baths . 4 porches. central arr and a new FANG furnace Sits
on a corner lot and the home 1s well ca red for
$37 ,500
NEED A BUSINESS BUILDING IN MIDDLEPORT? A 2
story bu1 ld•ng w1 th rooms upsta1rs

$19,000

RT 143· At 1/ 2 story. 4 bedroom, l 1/2 bath home that has
a beauttful Slo ne fireplace between liv1ng room and d 1n 1ng
room , has spac1ous eat 1n krtchcn , a large 2 car garage
w/ wo rk shop, ce llar &gt;~¥ /s torage above. and 1s a ll 's1tting on
app r o~ one acre
$49,000

MORNING STAR ROAD· A 1 1!4 acre lot wtth brick 1ron t 3
bedroom ranch l1om e. 1 1/2 bath s. full ba se me nt. garage

and ca rport

,

MUST SEE $69.000

RUTLAND· McC umber Road· Approx . one acr e with a 1973
Kirlo;wood mob1le home Ha s 3 bedrooms, eq uipped kttchen

and Iron! porch
MIDDLEPORT- S Th11d

$22,500.
A 3 bedroom . 1 112 bath. 2 story

hom e wrth fam1ly room , newe r sh1ngles. and fireplace wrth
buck stove tns1de
$45,000

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY- A 3 car garage now betng used
1453· OHIO RIVER PROPERTY located at
and of White Avenue off Garfield . Several
lots $20,000.
1477· LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTS
OFACE SPACE AND GARAGES FOR
TRUCKS ... frontage on Third Ave. and Grape
StraoL Call for dotails.

as a used car lot Cou!d be mecharn rcs garage, has welders·
elec and gas. and an compressor. Has 14x65 H ol ly Park

mobtle home also

With mobile home $100,000
Without mobile home $90,000

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker ....... ..... .............. 992-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS .............. .. ......... ....... : .... 992-3056
JERRY SPRADLING .......................... (304) 882-3498
OFFICE .......................... .................. ...... ...... 992-2886

�..
Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel

54

56

Miscellaneous

56

Pets for Sale

Merchandise
AKC Gormon SMphonl pupo,
304475-61138.
AKC Regl.ttnd Chow Chow
Puppleo, Born 1!1231114 Sholo,
Wormed, 4lloloo, 8,. 388 84 .._
~

Sonlollto dloh lot oolo, whh oil

hooll

Upl,

$25G, 814-11112-.372\.

S.arw U,_.ytllr 1800 TrMdmll,
Uood Very LJttlo. t:IOO. Colt 814~-1527.

Pets for Sale

61

Farm Supplies

Go&lt; TICK probierM? HAPPY
JACK ENDUAACIOE 1o tho oolulion Klllo tk:ko I n.u g-~
Clllly Immune to oldlr tormutaa.
BIODEGRADEABLE. Avolloblo
0-T.C II R.O FEED &amp; SUPPLY
614-1102-2164.

&amp; Livestock
Chain Sow bora &amp; chalno lo II
almoM any • • · e..t prk:ee In
aru. Sid.,.. Equipment, 304675-11121 or l-aoG-2J'7.31117.
John Deere Mckhoe, 11180 GMC
1 ton 4x4 truck and kwtboy

Sowi"'OI mochlno $28. TV flO.
robllll w/8 ··~ 160.
robol 10. 3044n-l63t

v-n

lrwncf:ler, Dlwla 25+4, call e141112·2833. 12pm-Vpm, llondoy

Two

thru Saturday.

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Oollon
Upright, Ron EVIInl tnt•r'Dri•a.
Jockoon, Ohio, 1-&lt;100-1137-0521.

New Holland Hlry Blrwl, Raket,
And Square Baiera, $1,000 l Up;
Tedder f.850; Hay Wegone

$350; 6H ford Troctor, ~ 1 350i
John Oeora 18 •A Wing who.,
Disk, $1,175; Pick-Up 0111&lt;. Plowo
1 Through 4 Bonom, Com Pick-

era, Othw Equlpm•nt. Howe'•

Maaaey F«gueon 65 Tractor

With Now B ..h Hofl • Blldo,
$3,1100; 135 llaoooy 01- With

Uwd lion who.. houw Hell alr
cond, 304-lln-31168.

Now Hollond 273 bolor, FO&lt;d 1501
mower, 7ft. Sunlloww rake. 3()4..
&amp;75-3888 Of tl14-441·l44i.

tfty

Form llochlr-.ry, Jockoon, Ohio,
814-286-51144.

Loader $6,350; 103 CaN $4,500,
814-286-6522...

MO Oliver

Livestock

63

Farm Equipment

17, 1994

17, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

63

1 Pallmlno Horse &amp; 1 Paint
- · • Dlhara, 814-446-4110.

10 Cowo 6 Holforo
814-388-11352.

uvestock

:J:."ta, oM lot

.eoo /Pound,

po. 304-182· 11

trractor, top cond,

0

SlmrnentaJ eo.. And C.lvea,
And Dlhor Crow-Brad Conlo,
8~388 8361.

R. POLLA~

74

WORD
GAM I

-------

Rearrange I he 6 scra~bled
words below lo make 6
S1mole words .
P'm : tellers of

Tranamlnlon, 114-446-3m.

3 yoor old pony, 1250, 814-1102!1070.

S© R~ }A -!l £!} s~
Editod by CLAY

AutOS for Sale

1888 Flroblnf 400 Big Block
Runo Oraa~ Loolul (lfoal,
$3,500. With Exira llclor &amp;

2 year Old Reglatered quarter
hoiwo goldlng, ~IU67-llll30.

4 buU calvee tor breeding pur·
poNe- 2 black and white facti 2
pollod horoford; oloo cowo WHh
c:olvoo by oldo; 614-11112-1'458.

T:~~:t:~y

Transportation

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

ea ch m

1t s

Flah Ttnk &amp; Pot Shop, 2"' 3
Jackson Ava. Pohrt Pl ..aant,

SUNCUEST WOLFf TANNING
BEDS

1983 Thundercraft 15 f11rt-haul

304-ll75-2063.

H. . Commercial, Home Units,

From $199.00. Lim~ l.Dtlona,
Accnaorl ... Monthly Ptymtntt
Low As $18.00, Call Todoy FREE
NEW Color c. .. log. 1-aDD-462i197.

I. I~ I I I

I

Instruments
Black

Stud&amp;o

AUY ES N

I IsI I I

Typo, S500, 814-38i-U308.

WANTED NEW LISTINGS!
BIG BEND
REALTY, INC. r!lMill

Building

Block, brlek, uwer pipet, wl,..
dowt, llntele, etc. Claude Wlntt,., Rio Grande, OH C.ll 614245-5121

Groom tnd Supply Shop-Pit
OrOQmlng. Julie Webb. 614-4460231 .

I

6

#932 . NEW LISTING, clo se IJ lawn ' hiS 11omc needs a
t1t!le 1 LC !Jut could oc a super 11r c~ ptdu' . great
n"IQilhrorhO•Jrl C&lt;1ll Wrlmn1or more rnformatron

Acctssorlea, 614·367-0117 E.arly

Mofnlng Or Lite E~enlngt .

I

SEICLllDED HOME - Btg lfl everylhing but pnce 4
bedrooms. 21/2 baths. 24 ' hv1ng rm w/flreplace. 18' drn•ng

I

.

I•

10k10x6 dog kennel, $199 95.

Whitt.

THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME! Alumonum sided ranch
home Den . 3 bedrooms . full basement lots of attrc storage
could be eas rl y 2 addrtronal be drooms 1 ca r attached

garage' 50 "x200 " lol mi l CENTRAL AIR'

Bird, I2SO, 614-245-!1602.
AKC Golden Retrievltt' tamale
Puppies, Raady July 5th, $150

#658

11874.
HOME w•lh lull basement . app 1710 lrvrng
space gas neat ce rrt a1 r 2 l1replaces. 3 bedrooms , 2
\lat hs 2 LiH tJ e\d ched garage 30 ~ 16 s ~ted 2 smar t
ou•build1ng s 5111 J.II lr &lt;Jme horr1e w1lh 2 BRand I bath 2
11 o·ne~ d•tU 1Ju1rJurys Slt ual e do n 5 ac res more or less
prrced 1n !ll e $70 s

FREE GAS · Super nrce tm ck ran ch home sr tuated at 3824 1
State Route? . offers over 1 700 sq It plus a lu ll basemet . 3
BR . 2 baths, krt DR , FR. &amp; more' Cent ral sterP.o &amp; vaccum
Large detached garage Am e nt rl! es too nume rou s to
mentiOn'
#630

Each, ISO Oapooll Will fiold,
614-J.SS.9243 After II AM .
MC Registered Sauett Hound
Puppies, ' w.. u Old With

Sholl, $125, 614-446-3354.

LOTS OF SPACE FOR THE MONEY! 4 bedrooms 1 1/2

AKC Roglslonld Boaglo Pupo,

baths, famrly room . Owners mov nry suon 1 Wants sold fast'

Wonntd And Shots, S.SS 8
Weeks, Stew Stapleton, 614446-41n, &amp;14--256-1818.

$28,500.00

#659

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Henry

f978 . NEW LISTING. 14 a c o~s m/1 m Greenfield Twp .
barn, drrlled well , sprrng elec ava•lable, beaultful trees.
some trmber Long road lrontage A great place to butld a
new hOme

Sherri Hart .............

949·2439

11

Office .....................

992·6191
992·2259

~!.:~. -"~ - " '"

'ljt4;•"'!
lf943. NEW LISTING - HOME &amp; INv'oli'rin'NT

1981 Eldurodo Cadillac $2,100,
good ahlpe, 304-675-6988.

-1"

be

1894 CLOSE TO THE GAVIN PLANT. 4 bedroom, 2
storv. 1ust recentl-y remolded wrth new roof furnace and
sid1ng, prrced to sell.

"971 . LAND CONTRACT - Make a deal nere. Oleler
home wrtn some work completed 3 bedrooms . 1 bath .
new cabrnels 1n k1t , good garden Barn &amp; garage 4 ac .
Th1s wtll be a good spot to start or ret1re $45,000.

LISTING - PRIME POTENTIAL CORNER.
2 180 sq tt block btog bath, 1 ac m/1, Equ1pment extra
Located on SR 388-8826

Auto Parts

1981 Lindy motor home, low
miles, exc cond, aJ04..882-2319.

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance· wallpaper, ltorm
doort, rooting and complete
home repair, complete window
r•palr, prauure washing and
mobile home repair. FOf tr. . . .
limite call Ch.. , 614-lil92-6323.

Freeman's H•atlng And Cooling .
In sta llation And SeNiee. EPA
Cartlflltd. Rasldentl•l, Commercial. 614-256--1611.

D&amp;O

84

Services

81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

Unconditional llfotlme guarantae . Local reference• lurnl!!hed .
Call 1-800-267-()576 Or 614· 2370488 Rogers Waterproofing . E•
tabllahod 1975.
Curtis Home lmpro'olaments. No
Job Too Big OJ Small, Y.ars Experience On Older /Newer
Homes Additions, Foundations,
Roo ll ng,
Kitchens
/Baths,
Replacement Windowa, Insured,
Froe Estimate&amp;. 614-367{)516.

Servlcea.
Cleaning,
rnanagemonl rvpalr, lnduetrlal
and private properties, compeU-

II't'• lllllee,

rvterenc• on r.-

quott . 304-675-2458.

J&amp;E Home Malntananc• Plllntlng, vinyl aiding, roofing and
drywall. Free astrmatee, 614-992·
4232, as.k tor Joe or EarL
Ron'e TV Service, apeclailzJng
In Z..nlth al.o ..rvlclng moet
other brands. HouH ca lla, also
I
rvpalra. WV

Electrical

&amp;

Refrigeration
Heat Pumpt, Air Conditioners,
Fumacet, Master Electrician,

614-446-6308, 1-800-287-4308.
Residential
or
commerc ial
wiring, new Hrvlce or rwpalrs.
Master Ucensed electrician .
Ridenour Electrical, W¥'000306 ,
304-67&amp;-1786 .

614-446-2454.
Real Estate General

&amp;

Accessories
l50 or 400 turbo tr~nam1111one 1
u.ad or overhauled, gua111nt..a
I &amp; 3ll doyo. ~7S-4ill0, PI
PINNnl.

PRIME BUSINESS LOCATION

Budget Priced Transmlu lons,
Used &amp; rabullt, all typee, startIng at $69; owner 614-24S-56n,

===!
WILL TRADE FOR FARM - 27 EVANS

614-J"Ill-2935, 614-378-2263.
Yokohama

215160HR15

spud rated blackwall tlros, lou
than 500ml.

Co mpl e te lhe chuckle quoted
by frlling in the missing words
. you deve lop from step No. 3 below.

r I' I' I' I'
73

Trucks for Sale

vans

PS

PB

cond lion, call 614-11112-3004 .
K2.S088 evenlnga.
1978 Ford F2SO pickup, 4 opood. i=::..::=~::.:::!.::__ __
V-ll, PS, $600; 814-992-6833.
1992 5-10 Pick-Up Truck, Tahoo
:;~-;;.:.-::-:.:;,::-:::..:.::;:..:;~~:::- P~."~2"· llu111 Sell I
Finn,
1984 Oodgo 318 L.oadod, PS, PB, 6
2415.

New ga1 tanka, one tan truck
wheat. r11dlatora, Uoor mats,

ate. D il R Auto, Rlploy, WV. 304372-31133 or 1-100-~9129 .

Real Estate General

t716-1717

CLAUDE DANIELS, REALTOR. PH. 383-9612
KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR. PH. 245-5855

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

Real Esta te General

Real Estate General

tJ3ig $end ~a{tlf, Inc.
446-71 01 or 1-800-585-71 0

sa.soo

Tilt, Cruise, AMIFM Call.,
79,000
1134 llilu, 1 Dwnor, 614-446-

Call Now'

New Bath, New Paint, and Carpet,
New Roof and Gutters.
Call Blackburn R
446·0008.

b11o lruc:k $75. 350 Oldo Rockot
engine. 3Q4-.tgs...385g,

evy wan, • r,
'
•
truck! AIC, cruise, excellent amttm casMne,
$1000 080, 814-

In Ga ll ipo lis, previously used as Ca r Wa sh - Serv 1ca
Sta ti on . Land has many poSSible uses . could be uS9d as
IS, remode led or tear tt down and rebuild to su1 t your
needs Ba the fir st to see th1 s Pnme Busmes s Property

HEIGHTS - 133,900 - 3 BRs, l'/1 Story,

Ladder raclc tor short wheel

&amp; 4 WD's
I

w.. r, $160. 614-4-41·

01:15.

ro r'

'86 F150 Extondod Cab 4WD '81 Ch

I

76

Four

1987 Red Jeer. Wro~ler wlextra
·lop, 43 ,000m ., ••
. ""'
~·~

1982 Dldomobllo DB R~oncy,
~
64,000 MIIOI 1 Family Dwnad,
·
59711oftor Spm.
Full Power, ~Jdro Cloan, $3,500. 1185 GMC 1000, 23000 GVW, 366
Will Tako Gun. Or Boat In Trad•. gas engine, 2 •P axM, 18' bed, 19811 Dodge Ram Van 60,000
614·251H141l.
..500, 614-1149-.2248.
Mlln, $4,000; Con Bo Soon AI'
Galllpollo Dally TribUno, 825
198a Ford Eocon, 614-!148-22111.
1987 Dodge Do~~'!t mld-111zo, Third Avonuo, Galllpollo, 1141983 Dldsmobllo Omega 78,000 now llroo, 5apd., ....,o. 304-875- 446-2342.
Milas, $1,500, 614-446-3754. ,
2M~.
82 Chevy Conversion van, niW
1985
Uncoln
Continental, 1988 Dodge 0-100 V-8, LWB, paint , new tlrae, high mlleag-.
-•
Auto, AC, Staroo, CUllom Top- 13000 814-64Ut75
loa d..... new tlra, nlctr, $2795, per, 73,000 Mil• Elcellent
'
.
614-94D-228B.
Condhlon, 11,ooo, 614-256-6136 74
Motorcycles
1988 Codlllec Sedan Do VIlla, After 8 P.M.
I,.....,.,....,..,,_......::,__ _ _,
614-446-2153.
'88 EX500 KIW., OICOIIInt cond~
1991 Che'IY S·tO Tahoo, V-ll, Air, lion, loou and runa groal,
1986 ChovoHo 5 apood GT whh AMIFII Couono. Sharp! 614- 12100,
614-11112-2078
oltor
sunroof, tlctlltnl body 1nd ll')oo 388-9S56.
1:00pm.
lorior, rod whh GT olrlplll, nod &amp;
bleak lntorlor, Nno good, $1325, '82 Ford Bronc:o, good cond~ 1960 750 Kawooakl RLnl Good,
114-114'14282.
Uon,
,.buln
onglno
ond Would Uu To Tracfo For 4
tranamlaalon, new torch conY.,. Wheelar, Or S WhM&amp;er Of Equal
19611 Dodgo 100, lrado or ooll lor, $2800 OBO, 814485-4488.
Vlluo, 814-441-1-465.
$700. Flnllll 4UII but runo aood.
Urea very good, 3Q4..67S.51i5.
1184 Yamahll Venture, drnHd,
1994 Chovy 4.3 lk:yl ., 2WO, vory cllln blko, IJ100 OBO 6141986 Dodgo Chorgor, Good ohorl bed, lOll gr_,, $14,7'00. 882-2721.
Condhlon, lluot Soo $950 OBO, 304-li75-766D.
614-146-ll855 If Nol Homo, 614188? four lru 250 Honda, 30444S-4D44.
Chovrolol, Ford, Dodgo- pk:kup 882~318.
IMido. Shon or long. No Nil.
XR OR Dl
Bl"- R
1986 Pontiac Bonnovlllo, Po-r 304-475-6218.
1111
8
n
uno
Evorythlng. Noodo Tranoml•
Good, For $800, 114-256-1S8t
Ilion Boll OHor Tokoo h. 614- Ford &amp; Chovy Truck Pa~ob~'c:',;'
••• ~
South-Ill Cobo, Bodo
Hondo 125 4-whlllor, noodo
-~·· 6·
Hood•, 1m Ford BOd Sharpl minor rapolra, $350. 304--BB2·
1D87 Camero, T·lops, loaded, 614 446 0440, 114-256-eOII.
3431.
good cond., $3500 OBD. 3047'73-5244.
Real Estate General
1987 Ford lluotang GT, 5.0,

bJught tuyetllCI New 3 bedrm ranch home wllarge rm5 ,
Whrle bri Ck tr or, t ct1arm rnq LR . Om rm targe rrm;
throughout toads o! oak cabmets 1n krt 2 car garage 2
ac M/l w/llOme

~-------0~F~FIC~E9~9~2·2~25~9===-=---~I

72

~

1959. COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Ot rve 51 16' door &amp;
ce rlmg w/loft lor storage 210 &amp; 220 elect water &amp; sewe r.
6 ce ment to load &amp; unload rn !rant 30x80 building
I
&amp; frame 545.000

N940. SWEET &amp; LOW - $39,900. 3 BR, ca rp et vrnyl
s10rng, good roo! . tmt water tank furnace Lovely cabtnet
m k1tc hen Located m the City V1r1] 1nra 388 ·8826

,ew decoraliOns 18 x 22 krt 15' x.
Prrvate IOCi:ltiOrl VLS 388 BB26

Autos for Sale

19711 Dodgo Alpon, Slanl 6 Enlne Runo Good •--o 61"37"'
•
• ~ • ... ..
720 Aher 8 P.M.
19111 Chryolor La Bar111n, 1
owr-.r, 57,DOOml. 304-475-49111.

1849 - TRULY DELIGHTFUL - The remi'l rk ab le
spac1ous ~1 0 '118 ,...1th v1ew ot the cou nty ltal1an trle foyer.
cathedral cerl rng wrth balcony, 3 BR . 2'/1 baths . trvrng
roo m wrth wood burnrng fi rep lace, equrp krtchen .
breaktast room has a rg w1ndow. stereo speakers
;.
l hroughout. brass lrg,ht frxtures and mu ch more 2 car M938
attached garage, a«1c storage , 2 ac res m/1 Thts house rs bedroom, lull basement , call toda-y lor more 1nfo
marntenance free of best quatrrv Make your apporntm ent ,931 NEW LISTING, owner want's sold now make an
nnd sec 11 ','OU don t agree
otter on thrs one 4 Oed room ranch 011 Brentwood Orrve .

#972 A PLEASURE TO SHOW,

742·2357

E. Cleland Ill. 992·6191

Kathy Cleland .........

We had finally finished

Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-4

'V

&amp;

Heating

7574.

I
I I I I lrNI I I I I I I

E. Cleland ••••• 992·2259

Tracy Brinager .........

Henry

11966
TWP. - 3 bedrooms . I
1/2 story home ga rage &amp; outbulldrngs 5 acres all fenced
Rem odeled w/love tv k1t chon cab1ne1s lg LR &amp; DR new
ltei::t l ~u mp &amp; good root

_

Plumbing

Ytm•hl Wave Runner Jet SkJ
naw trailer, $3000, 814-092·

I0

I' 1 I, r

2 AKC Reg istered Toy Poodlea.
Male : Whlta . Great Breeder. $150

1•

76 camper, 22' long sleeps 5
uses electric or gas' bath AJC,
$2500, call 614-04i2872 'atte;
4:l0 pm.

62

with

10 11 1

2

rm, equrpped krtcnen lull basement, 47 acres M/L ol
PARADISE Trails throughoul the woods Mrneral nghts
and the boundary 15 fenced L&lt;Hge barn &amp; out bu ild1ng
Also a mob1le home pad w/elec , water &amp; septi c
$89.000 00 Ca ll V1rgrn 1a 3B8 8826 1446.6806

Paint Plua, 304-675-4084 .

I_

1973 St.arc:raft pop-up camper,
sleeps 6, electric retrtgerator,
exc. cond., $1100 . 304~?'S.21 1 7
after 6pm 304-675-1036.
'

Home

1990 Yamaha Wave RunnN 500,

p

S T HH U R

camper, ..It con·

61

!Oual Trailer, Ol4-44tr9364.

I"'
sighed, "To comprehend the
1--,r-:8:---~.-.,,--.,-=-9 "-T"J-1 ;... meaning of the phrase, 'million
you must have
I_ _ 1_ _ _ _ had a -smile,'
- - - - in - - - - 0A L c I

1976. CUSTOM BUILT HOME - Very neat 3 bedroom . 1
1{2 story hom e w/2 baths. 3 ac m/1 The 1ntenor rs most
unusa l l ut1Shed rn beau111u1 wood Tne LR has ca\tledral
ce ilrngs &amp; rott The wrap around deck 1S &lt;1 great place to
swrng &amp; rock 2 c:a1garage &amp; bu!ldrng

Weeks Old $200; Also , Mynla

I

_ 1_ 1_ 1
_ 17
_ 1
_
paytng
our
daughter's
~....1...---'l.....-'------l-..L___.J_,. orthodontist bill My husband

23 LOCUST ST.

TRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ... .............. 245-9575

10 Calion Aquarium• For Salt,
Ferrets, Pot BetU&amp;d Pigs, And

Each Or $250 Both, 61~1 0965.
AKC Boston · Terrier Mal•, I

1887 11' Citation old bool, 130
hp, lnOO.nl mere, cNIHr, good
condition, $6000, all coast
guard required equipment, 614882-4544.

L--L-L--'------1--'--l"'

Pampered Ptll by Sony•. dog
groom ing, bathing , all brtldl.
304-882-3730.

Female : Chocolate 6

12,300. l04-C76-1272.

_~d ollar

MEIGS COUNTY
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
C heryl Lemk y...
...... .742-3171

1978 25ft.

ta lned, 6 beds. 304-773-5244 .

1886 Chockmolo 16ft DOhp llor-

HUR CCT
f-:--..--,---,.--.--..--l

1-800-585-7101

Pets for Sale

~75-5480.

cury outbo.rd, trellar ncluded,

I

Real Estate General

Supplies

56

Real Estate General

Musical

Plano

304-ll75-2~8.

70 hp Mercury, wllraller, S3,50o:

3

Baldwin

1974 27ft. Tltan motor home
tully Mlf~alned, gena,...tor:
tlr,
ntrlgantOflfrMZer,
microwave,
mauve
Interior
59,000ml, rudy fOf ~d, sasoo:

&amp;

Improvements

cond itioning, Dodgo 413 C.I.O.
15500, 614-ii4Q-3301
'

5P.II.

1061.

.n.,.

55

Real Estate General

Campers

Motor Homes

Superior 22' motor home,
eleepa 5, rur-. like new, roof air

board, Power Trtm, Walk Thru
Wlndahlld, 114-441-0148 Atter

OBO.

79

·n

&amp; Motors

188.5 opood boo~SOO . Fostoot
bc•t on River.
75-5200 or
8J'5.6878 oftor 5pm.

Real Estate General

57

Boats

&amp;

'69 Stlrcran told-out camper
with lfova an.d refrtgorator 304Tn-5163.
'

, .

16' Open Bow 115 HP Marc Ou1·

1878 Buk:k Rogal, v-a, $1,000,
304-li7W=
1818 Chivy MalibU, 400 omoll
block rebuilt, new dual e1hau.t
new poln!L_.!'!"" grNI, $1200
OBO. 304-Tr.&gt;-01111.

Chihuahua Fem~la VNr 6 112.
Bred To Chocolate Male, Pu~
pi" Due 8f.2QJV.4, $125, 614-256Collie Puppl• FOf Sa... 014256-1058.

.

for Sale

lrne o f squares

304-BB2-231D.

379-2720, After I P.Y.

Whh1 IIIMI lneulat.cl gauge
door, like new, etz. ;'1T, call
m...sm
4 pm.

m.am.

Campers

Motor Homes

1984 H1rt" Davidson Softtall
1340 CC, Evolution engine e 1 ~
callent condition $10 000 '814-

75

SoiH 17! Dr Boot Ollw, 814WATI:R UNE SPECIAL' 314 Inch
209 PS&lt; f1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI
132 .50; Ron Evant Entefl)riMa.
6t4-28&amp;-5g3() Jockoon. Ohio

79

Motorcycles

Sunday Tlmes--:Sentl

I
&lt;

THE OUTDOORSMAN'S DREAM! 75 Acres
m/1, pond , 2 lakes totallin g approx . 4 1/2 acres

QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD, MINUTES TO
DOWNTOWN! All cily ulililias, 3 bedrooms, 2
balhs, family room, kilchen. living room . Lois of
closelspace. CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING!
Homo
approx. 3 yearn old.
1665

sleeked w1lh plenly of fish' 10 yr old VInyl Sided
3 bed room , 2 bath ranch style home. 1 1t2 ca r
detac hed ova rs1zed I car garage . Cal l for

connple&lt;le r

PRICE LOWERED! "5" ACRES ALONG THE
OHIO RIVER! Newer 3 bedroom doublawide
home, la'l)a bam, detached garnge. plus an
additional mob1le home\ Real neat &amp; dean I

1666

1668

H

Family Size Homo- Roomy
Modem, 4 bedrooms. Whal do you want?
LOOKING FOR AN AFFORDABLE HOMEI
Then you might wanllo consider lh15 I 1/2
story home wilh vinyl s1ding , newer gas

HEALTHY

is

lhis

tncome producmg property. Two-2 bedroom
apartments plus retail area All un1ts presently
rented . Close to down town area . Co mer of
Cedar and Third. Call for mora 1nformabon .

fumance, 3 bedrooms, bath , kitc hen , livmg

balh, laundry. 2 car detached garage.
1632

11631

This one has it all!' Four plus acres (surveyed)
Gr~ ssed lot, almost level. County water, well or
spnng wa ter. Live stoc k cemen t watenng
lrough. Great place for children, nmmals pet s

Good bam, 36'x70'. Joins Wayne Nal'l ForesiHu~d.reds

of

acros

JOining

lot,

Hunter's

Pand1se . As a g1ft, il needed, a !railer pad wilh

al~

fac rhtles

rn

place.

Located

on

State

H1ghway- Make your appo1nlmenllo-day. »628

34,118 mlle1, blta, amlfm ca•
Mtt-, •lr, aaklng $4500, 614- IM~
DYES VILLE · t '6 story frame hom e on 2 lots,
appro x ~ OOx50 each Home has 3 bedrooms
and 1 bath N ewe r blue s1 drng and newer
storm wmdows Bloc k ce llar. wood storag e
bu•lding and ce rlmg fans 1000 gal. septic tank .
Newer cove red pat io/ca rp ort Also ha s a

garden area

ASKING $20.000

HYSE LL RUN ROAD· Lovely 1:;, slory frame
home wrttl 3·4 bedrooms . 2 bath s. 27-+ acres
wrth lree gas, large deck, 2 car garage, 52x40
barn pond pasture, and hayfle lds most land
fenced Home 1S well taken ca r e of with
hardwood and carpet Hoo r•ng , cen t ral arr and

unusually deep !~replace ASKING I $89.500

I

lf969.
LISTING - Charmrng c~untry i10n~e. 3 BR ,
k1t . range &amp; ret . LA . OR. fam rl'r' room . w/f1replace . ful l
basemen t. pat10. 1 A M/l Very clean &amp; good
marntenance

SYRACUSE · N1ce 4 bedroom , 2' balh frame
ran c h sty le home with ce rhng radiant hea t.
back patro area, shed, hardwood floor and
carpeting . attrc space. umt arr. cable hook·up
.30 acre . Lo ca ted at R u st •c H1lls . Ntce

neighborhood.

ASKING' $39.500

. J!&amp;i

,ft~&gt;'t '

#967 GREAT FARM READY TO BE FARMED, 100
acres w•th a large narn and anotner barn and outbuilding
wrth a lovely 4 bedroom bt level wrth stone and frame
Pnced nght call now

f887. SPACE FOR REAL LIVING - Immaculate 4
bedroom home, new carpet. pa1nt, new kit chen w1th oak
cab•nets, dishwasher, range and ret., attached garage,
outh ur lding Beautrful landsca pe Ready to move in

$65,000
ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAUTY
Two story home. full basement and garage has a great
deal to oHer. De signed lor great livmg. First floor has
formal entry with open sta rrway, formal llvtng room wun
frreplace. formal dimng roo m. Cherry cabmets line the
wall of the C)(lra large kit che n Breakfast room and
powd er room Second floor offers four bedrooms and
bath . Bedrooms are krng siz e. ca rp et over hardwood
floors, bath has all new fixtures and Love Tub Basement
has huge tam rly room w/hreplace . bedroom , exercise
area . laundry room and storage room Thts home 1s of
superb qualrty as the plumbing has been replaced All
new all covering, beautrful new carpet throughout, new
wrndows rnsralled Spacmus kitchen With cnerry cabinets.
island for Jenn·Arr ran ge Only prr vate show1ng w•ll
dec1de the value rs nere

CALL VIRGINIA L. SMITH 446-6806 0&lt; 388·8826

2000 clayo or IU-B4a-5151 l8pm, uk for Bob.

Wood Realty, Inc.

1987 Grand Am $2,795. 1991
Chov 5-IO truck $3,995. 1987
Blalll' all power, auto $3,995.
19s1 Fonf Rangor 12,695. 11187
Ford 150 $3,295. 1984 Ponlloc
Trana Am $1,995. 1969 Plymouth
o~glnol mil• 32,000. 19111 Buick

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

G~
neck stock trailer.
Scottv'e Used Cars, New Haven,

wv 304-a82-3752.

story home w/enclosed porch, fenced lot. 3 carports, 2
burldmgs, office or sales bui ldmg, blacktop &amp; cement
dnveways. Best garden spotn V1nton. $47.700.

1975 STEP BACK INTO THE COUNTRY, watch the deer
run . l}ut be close to convenience Th1s home and its 17
acs more or less is located approx 2 mites from Rto
Grande on a blackJop road ThiS home include s 3
bedrooms . 2 baths. kitchen llvmg room. utility room .
barn, 2 out bUIIdrngs. 2 car garage and tobacco base
$55.000 00

1987 Plymouth Sundanco 871&lt;,
AC, Oood Condlllon. 614-24&amp;!1595;

n1ce shape

ASKING ' $49,000

NEW U STING I!! REEDSVILLE - 3 room Cabm

ASKING! $39,500
an 5 acres Ca b1n 1ncludes 1 bedroom There back yard
IS publ1c hun tr ng on Slate property Deer &amp;
Turkey are abundant With1n walking distance NEW LI STING' SA 7 JUSt oul of CHE STER ·
of ForkP-d Run State Park
Truely lovely frame ranch style home that
ASKINGI $22,000
offers mo re th an meets the eye! Some
features inc l ude 3 bed ro om s . Mas t er
POMEROY· Located on Skinner Rd - A bed room w1th bath , built 1n d ry sau na, atnm
sec luded 6 room Huntrng cabm , 3 bedrooms , 1 doors. skylights, ceda r closels 1n hallway. den
bath. space heat. 65' drrlled well . situated on with ceiling fan, workrng firepla ce, carpet
61 .5 acres

ASKING! $39,900

throughout . lolal electnc. wired in all BR "s lor
sate ll rte (dish &amp; w1nng rncluded)

Modern

POMEROY- Located on W Ma1n- This 2 Slory kitchen w/c lay lile &amp; appliances . Beaut1ful
home mcludes 5 rooms m all 2 bedrooms , 1
bath . Columbi a gas , C &amp; S electnc, umt air ,
cable , s tove . re l ngera tor. washer &amp; dryer,
some furnitu re All w1th a r1ver view!

ASKING' $24 ,900

view of 16 x 32rnground pool , surrounded by
cement patio, abundance o1 flowers and
pnvacy fencing , also features one car garage
that is co mpl etely wired to h andle all

handyman needs THI S IS A MU ST SEE
HOME'
ASKING $74,900

POMER OY- Unron Terrace · 17 912 +ac res of
vacant ground lmmed1a te possessron! Great
bUilding s 1te '

NEW LISTING!' New Hope Ad - Nice I floor

LONGBOTIOM

area . blinds, AIC , panel, carpel, Elec H P.
and cellar.
ASKINGII 35, 000

ASKING! $25,000

Dew1ns Run Rd . · 1 acre

'i(llh One Fl oo r Frame H ome
bedrooms , 1 bath . newe1 bottle

with

home. reatures 2-3 W rooms, 1 bath , 2 car
gara ge, oulbU1Id1ng, fenced yard, garden

3 -4

drilled well , shed &amp; wood
OFFER I!
ASKING $21 ,000
MIDDLEPORT · Two unit Apartment building
Both units currently rented' Grear rental
opportun rty! Good monthly 1ncome

ASKING' $13,000

li33. HOME AND INCOME - Double with earning
power You can live m one unit and rent the other Close
to schools,
1 &amp; cnurcnes . Calt for full information
and an
Vl Smith

1974 . NEW LISTING- 3 bedroom mobile home and 4
ac m/1land rs tenced &amp; spnng on property Great place
lor krds 2 car garage &amp; burldrng , $20 s.

s
1963. BRICK &amp; VINYL BI-LEVEL - Home located on SR
160 3 orms . 2112 baths. LA. lg eat ·ln kit chen, lower
level w/famtly rm . laundry rm ., bath, k1\ &amp; 1 car garage.
1 ac m~ '$48 000

"

,..
'

,_ __,_
'

'"'"'* ,.. . -

~ ?T~~

o, /?:/#~

8626

HOME?

THEN

COME

TO

CLELAND REALTY, WE NEED
THE LISTINGS AND CAN FIND
YOU

A BUYER!! II

3 bedroom. 2 car garaQe wrth Qarage apartment tor extra
income in the Albany area
1957 RIVERFRONT PROPERTY. spacious colonial with
5 bedrooms and two balconies that face the river thiS one
won·t last so better hurry and check this one out
1968 NEW LISTING, 123 acres of trmber and pasture
land call today for more mfo

1873. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land tays well.
Older 2 story home wrth 4 bedrooms and buildings. Home
in need to repair 117 ac m/1 Call for location . Price
Reduced
tl48 GREAT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY AT HOME,
beaultful
brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2- baths on 4
I
4000 sg. ft. commercial building

'
I

I

oftor~

25&amp;-IJIII.

t977. NEW ON THE IIARKET 1154 &amp; 1154 1/2
Second Ave charming 3 bedrm . home, bath, lu!l
basement, 2 car garage, rents for $375 . 1t54 1/2 has 2
bedrms. 1 bath. lovely new k1l . &amp; Windows . Great rental
with off the street parking .
1135. COMMERCIAL BUILDING- 940 sq fl .,
floor, ~ew rubber roof, 200 amp . 3 phase electnc
Ulru wmdow, 5 ton neatmg &amp; cooling unit. Will sell or
term lease Virginia 388-8826.

room, kitchen, two d

12 NIMin lontra XEI2-*, I op,
~1 40,000 m loa, uldng
IM-9411-2013 aa.- 1:00

•

wlappl fa nces including dishwashar. Fam1ly
room , low maintenance Over 1 314 acres. For

1651

HOME ON ROUTE 141· 3 bedroilms, t 112 balhs, family
room in basemen!, kitchen remodeled, now carpet in
living room, lol 150x160, fenced back yard, 12x20 deck.
CAII Io seel
LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE- 156X100 cily walar
and ""war, oloclric to polo l&lt;lval. Priced $14,000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION.
ACREAGE FOR SALE- 16 acres mofll or loss located
close to Rio Grande. PRICED AT $64,000.00 Realtor

Own&lt;ld.
VACANT LAND - Approximalely 10 acres localed on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call for mofll information.
OLDER HOME • .4~-g room. dining room,
kitchen, fami l\f.lUI. ~dtAled~ on 1.8 acres. PRICE IS
REDUCED. C~L SOONI
GARAELD AVENUE· 3 bedrooms, tiving room, kitchen
and bath. wilhin walking distance of sloflls and schools.
Call to see.
HOUSE, BUILDING &amp; 8 ACRES MORE OR LESS,
localad in Lawfllllce Co.. 2 bedrooms. living roorrr, dining
room, kilchen, bath, lg. garage 24x40. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT! II
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE lJIY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER

fronl porch. Level lawn.

1588

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUAUTY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

fencing, pond, several feet of roa~ frontage.

Nea12·3 bedroom home. ldeallocabon.

GREAT FARM LANDI Over 35 acflls. Road
frontage along lwo paved roads. 1 1/2 slory
home, has four bedrooms and more . Call
todayl
167B

WOWI
100 acrao ·mo,. or
Large pond,
bam, 2 1101'1 home with 4 bedroomo, family
room, living room, equipped kitchen, bath.
Counly walar.
·
t655

GREEN TWP. $15,000 NINE ACRES- Counly
walar available. N1ce bUilding site. Call lor
direclionol
1672
12+ ACRESI Road frontage,
Counly watar availabtel

CITY SCHOOLS! 10 acres, counly water
ava~labla. Acreage s1lualed 1n Green Township.
Calllodayl
1634

good home .:~It'

bedrooms

and

morel

Electric

heat

pumplc.antrat a1r. Lois ol woodland and
paslure! 36'x50' bam. Cily Schools'
1662

klt~h.en .

Concreto drive, t car carport Storage building!
1680
Call for your appoinlmenl today!

WANT SOMETHING A UTILE DIFFERENT?

ACREAGE WITH LOTS OF . ROAD
FRONTAGE and a 1 1/2 slory 3·4 bedroom
homo. Nice 111ew. Lois ollruillrees, small pond,
tobacco base. Appro&lt;imatoly 38.5 acres mofll
or toss. Some malkotable bmber.
16411

dining room and kilchen w~ols of nice cabinelot
2 Aero lawn mofll or less, lots of fruillflloa. Call
today, immediala possession!
1664

ACREAGE· GREEN TOWNSHIP· 1992,
14'x70 mobile home. 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs.
.,.00 nent condition. 7 acres mofll or less, pond,
privala, other acreage available. Make an
1647
sppoinlmenl todayl

2594 BULAVILLE PIKE- 83 Plus acres.
Fencing, pond &amp; buildings. 3 bedroomranch
olylo horne. Tobaooo allo~enl
1676

m_

1677

NEW COMMERCIAL LISTING! OWNER
WANTS TO RETIRE &amp; RELOCATE AFTER 25
YEARS! Car Wash, 3 boy wilh 1 automatic.
Excellent localion frontage along Eastern Ave.
Will bo ideal for ollices or other lypo ol
busn~ess Wllh some fllllovabngl
16711

WANT TO PURCHASE ACREAGE? Then

OVER 169 ACRES! 2 story home wilh 3

CHECK OUT THIS PRICE?
$34,000.001 3 bedrooms mnch, newer . rool &amp;
vinyl windows, living room, eat·ln

PRICE
STILL
UNDER
RRANTYI
Low
mainlenanee home (brand new). One story
ranch, 3 large bedrooms, d1ning room, living
room, kilchen, cathedral cti11ng. 2 baths wilh
skylight• . Over I acre lawn . Eloctric heal
pump.
1617
NICE WORKABLE FARMI Over 70 acres. 2
Silos 40'x90' shad, 20'x28' bam, 1B'x42'
milkhouso, plus several other buildings.

2 bsdrooms , living room,

REA LTOR ·

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

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

1813 "PEO Mot"' llu now 111M
uncfor. wonnly. GIMI 11M
mlloa.. coli: 114-441-01101

an offer. Vinyl siding

oms; 2 baths, living
school district, counly
ots. can lor appointment

NEW usnNG· Double ·

I -800-894-1066

lt01. MAKE C?FFER • One of the best thmgs rn life is
h?me ownershrp . 3 bedroom ranch. charming LR, eat-in
kit .. .1 112 bath, 1~11 dr~ided basement w/office room and
outs1de entry 24 x32 garage w 10' doors Malle It! I
yours now. FHA or VA. NOTICE AEDUCEOI
s

I

.

1981 llonto Corio, good ohopo,
14500. :J04.875-a201J or 67!-8871

19113 ....4 T-po. Loadod, Uu
Now, •pllcod Book, 114-

1950 OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL OR TRADE, 2 story,
DO YOU NEED TO SELL YOUR

111110 · Nluon pick up WICIP 6
/IJC, rodlo, $38110, 814-"lll2~082.

1892 ~ Door, Acconl, E.l·
cotllrll Cond"lon, 5 Spood,
AIIIFII 81orao Co-o, AC,
Now • Tim 31 IIPG, 11,000
Hlg-y 1111-.IIC 441 OO:ztl.

~ #

'

1954. UNUSUAL LOG HOME - w/4 2 Ac m{l This home
is so easy to care for It'S like being on vaca!IOn. 3.168 SQ.
ft. m/1 wrtn an oak wrap·around deck Rooms &amp; doors are
•638. LOT IN LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION - A CHOICE extra large to accommodate the handicap Barn an.d
, fence tor a horse, etc . Garden spot, too. Virgrnra
1 i
PLACE TO BUILD - 2 to 5 acres more or less Onve to
White Rd. to Charola•s Lake Or. to Lakeview Ct . Offering
2 flat to ro111ng rots. varrety ol trees and beautiful view of
the lake AU amemtres available . Rural water.
underground electnclty. aerator systems acceptable
Restrr ctrve cove nant s apply Close to Holzer and
shoppmg . 5 acres $33,000 Others $15,900 &amp; $18,900.
N946 JUST REDUCED, that anyone can afford. 3
1955 HOME
UNIT, also 2
l pads .
tledroorn mobile llUrne rn a mce mobile ho.me park wrtl
Home can be reverted to one lg. 1am1ly home. SA 160.
cons1der land contract.
Call lor further information $65.000 00.

NEW usnNG-3 bedrooms, 1Wo balhs, new root In 93,
new siding, 10x 14 metal build1ng, selellite, nice level lot
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

IDBD Eocort, runo &amp; look aood,
will •II lor poy off. 304"-Tn.
!15DUftor 3:0CI Pll.

Milot PDLi Pwi RK; Gray lrtteriOP$8,800,114-446-1201.

1945.
Freeway. 3
bedrms., ranch w/new kit &amp; bath Lg . family rm .
w/woodburning fireplace On acre m/1 Only $45,500 388-

Rio Gmnda, c1ly school system. $59,900 1673

LOT TO RIVER- - A 12 x 65 Mobile horne, 3 bedrooms,
1 balh, 1 car garage, lront &amp; back porch . Priced at
$25,000.00.

IOBD "
Pontile
Fonnull·
Autoifto11cj AI:.. T-Tops; 44,000

TAKE A LOOK? AT THE EDGE OT TOWN- J
BR, 2 BA homo. Kilchen co mplelo

your personal v1ewing. Calllodayl $40's

&amp; kitchen , 4 bedrooms , 2 baths . Home is
approx. 3 years old. Over 2 aero lawn. Close to

water. Located on 1 1

1981 Ponllac Flrablrd Fonnull
Whllo With T-Topo N- TlrH,
Und« 21,000 Mlln, loaded,
$8,00JI Nogolllblo, 614-141-3625.

1622

COMFORTABLE RANCH I Roomy living room

19111 .. Pontolc Grond Am. lulbo,
$2,500. 3CJ4.n5-ll158.

198D "Fonf ll~allng Convo~oblo
OT, ~ Spoocf, s ..ndard, Dark
Bluo &amp; Oroy. · Exccllont Cond~
tlontllt 441 0415.

mora or lass\ Good location\

nK:e farm pond . Attractive 2 story house , .3

1987 Oldo Cutlon, 1 Dwnor,
New ·carb., Tranamlplon, BIHf1"'01, .lrokn, Bono, Tlr•, High
MR._, Will Cora For, L.ooko
And · Runo Good, $2,500. 614446-41170.

MIDDLEPORT · 2 Slory Br~ c k Home w1lh
older garage, pari fenced back yard lh al
inc lude s shed &amp; herb garden Home featu res
8 rooms , 4 bedrooms. 1'h baths, cellar and
attic space. carpet . wood/v rnyl floori ng . cerhng
fans , so me remo d e ling co mpl eted 3
frrepla ces. blmds . refrrg erator. unrqu e older
home wrth larg e rooms , h1gh cei lings, large
wrap around porch Vrew of the river from the

SMALL FARM!
~•&lt;
JUU.'UU
Selling price is now $52,000 .00 40 acres of
good grazing land. Has a l111le bmber and a
bedrooms, beautiful wood wori&lt;. Bam IS
suitable lor callle or stalls lor horses, 1n good
home in
condition. Tobacco base, good
lha country. Please call lor a
1644

1987 lroc Black With T-Tops,
Pow.- Evorythlngl lolo Of E.l·
lrool as.ooo OBO,I14-3711-2113.

446-0611.

wmdows . electrrc hea t pump , TPC water .
Home rncludes 2 bedrooms . fi replace. attic.
s pace . above g ro und pool , 2 car garage.
carport &amp; deck Good location, home in very

Mose Canterbury. Reahor-446-3408
Jeanene Moore. Reahor- 256·1745
Tim Watson. Reahor-446-2027

oil _ . , $1.2". N- Volloy

1987:Pontlac Turbo Grand Am, 2
Doo~~ loodod, 80,000 111111, 614-

FlATWOODS AD · Mobile home wolh room
add1l1on . sh1ngle roo f. new perma payn e

Allen C . Wood, Reahor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reahor/Broker-446-0971

euper ah•pe $1,295. 1985 Chev

1916. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS

PRICE
AEDUCEDII
IMM
TE
POSSESSION! E&lt;lons1ve remodeled 1 1/2
slory home. 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs, concrete
drive, 1 car garage . C1ly schools, 20 acres

446-1066

Take a peek at this home. Large living room ,

(jive

constdsr th1~, over 47 acres. Good home site

wooded salting, counly walar available. Call lor
mofll 1nlol
1633
GREEN TOWNSHIP· Mobile Homo &amp; 1 acra
mil wilh additional mobile homo hook-up
complete Wllh septic and water. Call lor
complela lislingl
1671
VIEW·TI-FUL HOME OVER~OOKING THE
CITY PARK AND THE OHIO RIVER! Spacious
homes that is ideal for restoring for a nice

homo or lor condofonvestmenl propeny. Some
unils have had rvmodeling. Call today tor mor11
infonnation and your privala lou~

rus Jl Ca[£. ..

Russell D . Wood, Broker .. .... ........................... 446-4618
Phyllis Mlller........................... 256-1136

Martha Smith ................. 379-2651

J. Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2164

Cathy Wray .................... 446-4255

Tammie Dewltt ....................... 441-1514

Cindy Drongowskl ........ 245-9697

Judy Dewltt .. .... ...................... W-0262

Cheryl Lemley ........ .... .. . 742-3171

Ruth Barr ................. ... .. ....... ... 446-0722

~

-ltlNDC ..

WANTED NEW
LISTINGS!

�Page-DS-Sunday Tl mes-Senilnel

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant, wv

KC tourney
will resume
tonight

()hio Lottery
~

l'

Pick 3:
922
Pick 4:

~­

9497
Super Lotto:
3-16-23-25-32-39
Kicker:

,~~ ,

Page4

Ton l~ht ,

clear.

Lows In the 60s. Tuesday, sunny.
High In lhe mid · 80s.

863475

•

ent1ne
Vol. 45, NO. 52
Copyrighl1994

DISPLAY CERTIFI CATION· J im Rlnins.
lert, associate administrator, Pat W&lt;H&gt;Ium, R.N.
branch manager, Karen McCall, RTm -M. &lt;"erti fi ed X-ray technolo~ist and Ted Adams, dia~ -

nostir testing center manager, display the Holzer
Clinir of Jackson's Mammography Certifica·
lion .

Clinic receives
certification of
mammography
J ;\CKSO~ l c~~

ol ! CJd~tdo~..:' (t\ ('K ) Cn1nn 1Jl·
I L'~' on l 1 r:1Uil"l: \c~·rL·lln.IIJtlfl 11:1"

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M;JillllH I_L'. r.Jp!i~ · hi llnJ;n l'llllll. ol
Ln.: hun ( ·l l!llll\
TIJ ,.., ,,uk ~_:, li ~,J;n Clin ~~.· til,·

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ll ill;~·r ('IIII IL" {II (;; lllq )() IJ " \~;h tlh'
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I.

' ] II ,. jll(lt!f~tlll 1111" ~ l lT f U IJt ; I I IIHI
Li.lll li.' Jlllll lK IIlb as :1 rcsu :t
o l th :.:: conce rns
r~ld10iogJs ls,
n ~ Hi [) ll l tl tncdicill mganinltinns , the

or

.L:ov~r nm c nt

,

B:mc Cor·

pora\H lll ;uJnouncc d Thurstb y conllllU~ d 1mprovcm cnt m llJSJ4 earn ings .
Sl·co1HI qu~ trt c r l ()l)--l Lt Hl'\OIJ Lb tcd rh' t Jll l·n n1 c rcac li cll a rcund
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rnillJ o ll cn rnp:trL'd

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tnHl'-. prtl\' ttkd ('\I ra e lt on lor docUllll'IIL: t[H \11.

f3y p;lSS tllg thi s cc rtlliClli Oll,
Hol1cr Cli11 ic is proven 10 ll~ vc the
ht!.! hC'I I SI~HHI;trds of Jn&lt;lfllll lOg raph -

ic ~t es ting. hoth in r esults :1 nd safe -

ty. Cli &lt;t ii Cl'S or Ullit cd S t:lt CS
WO I11 C1 1 tkvc l opi n g breast cancer
:trl· one tn ei gh t. Marnmlll_: r:Jrh y
l'.\; 1111 '-. c;~ n tktCTI IH CL\1 1rr c.~ ul : u1 ·
t 1c-. trp to t wo y~.·:1r.., hcfor~._· tlh'Y Clll
1\,' 11.'11. In l'IJ I1ittn l·tio n \\ ltlt .,~,_· J r .
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L'\.: tlll . m:lllllllll~r:tph ~ c:1n hl' a
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v:i\u:lhk prncc( \urc.

salespeople with extra training to
earn the right to call themselves
realtors, and who've agreed to
abide by professional standards and
a striqcode of ethics.
Sonny Garnes is president or
the Southeastern Ohio Board or
Realtors.

m 11 110il lw the "l'U liHI qu :1rt n ol

ltJiP, :md
qu :l rll'l"

S~7. K

llldlron lor thL'

l1r... 1

ol l'JiJ-t.

Sl'l"t llhl
lll l fl' :h1.' d

qtJ:Hh.: r 1 1) 1)-l c arn1ng s

12.(l pe rce nt

O \ ' i,_' r

PROMOTED · Daniel S.
Pullin has been promoted from
associate chemist to assistant
chemist in the chemical department, effective July 7, 1994, at
the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant.
Pullin join OVEC in July of last
year. He is a graduate of Ohio
University with a bachelor of
arts degree in chemistry. He
resides in Nelsonvillr•

cent o\· cr the fir ...; t quarter ol· 1904 .

\

JUST ARRIVED!

5 Grand Am Gt's, 2 Drs. &amp; 4 Drs.!

MAR IET TA- Til e o llt cc of
th.. :

add&lt;110 11 ol E:1rl Dn ~g ·'· DP~l. In
hiS podiat m pr:lc tt rc 111 M:tn clla
and Ath ens. D r. Dri ggs is a n;J\ 1\'C
O hio~m :md cornp lctclf h1s 1 w o -yc~1 r
residency tr;Jining ~H Vlc lho1n B ap -

ti st Ho,pi lal . Evansvil le, Ind. Gr:l(l ualln g !ounh 1n hi s c lass !"rom lhc
Univ c r \I I Y
of
OstcopalhJc

PORTSMOUTH - Douglas S.
Peterseim has been promoted to
director of office services and facilities according to Roben L. Morton, president of American Automobile Association Club of South
Central Ohio.
Peterseim h:;s been the club's
director of safety and education
smce July 1993 and prior to that,
assistant director or safety and education since June 1992. He is a
native of Lancaster, Ohio. Peterseim is a graduate of Ohio State
Univer.;ity.

Mcdic&lt;n c ;lnd Health Sc1ences Colol Podiatric Medicine :111&lt;1
S 1;rgcry. Dr Driggs received th e

$18,998
Power seat, cassette. cruise
control, rallye gages, illuminated
entry, power mirrors, s poiler.
custom interior with bucket
seats, 16" aluminum wheels,
power windows

l c~c

•

''Excelle nce· 1n Pofl 1atr1 C Medicine
Aw~ 1 nt" 111 I 1J&lt;J2. During hi s resi d e n cy, h-.: wor k e d with th e

Evan .-.,· tll c Me n 's Spurt:-. f='~Js ­
~,;ioto nu ~s .tiiHI lws lectu re d on dia ·
hc li c lun t c ;~r e :IIHI plam;~r

l:tscll i.s/hccl .sp·ur .sy ndrom e at the
tndi ;,1 n ~ t PiHir;ltric

tton , 1:11l'

Mcd1cal A ..;..;ori a-

lll l'~ trng .

Business brief
NEW YORK fAPI - CBS Inc
droppc&lt;l plan&lt; lo huy QVC In c.
af"tc r !.1 riv&lt;.1l suitm, cable company

ComcaSI Corp .. proposed to th e
home sl1oppmg ch annel operator .
In stead . the TV nc1work plans to
spend S 1.1 hill ion bu ying iiS own
SI&lt;)Ck.
Mcdi:1"n:dy.sts said 1hc buyback
should prov ide CBS wilh some
prot cc li on over the ne xt tw o
months ag;tinst a sharp s10c k price
decline that cou ld attract unwel come bidders. But they said unless
the company wk cs some signifi cant
steps to nnprovc its :lffihatc rcla lions, dcvc lnp programs th"t appeal
to young er viewers and diversify

111to

c:~ hl c

TV. it may he a 1argct

for a wkcovcr.

Fraley promoted
CHESHIRE · Michael L. Fraley
was promoted to yard supervisor in
the yard department, effective July
I, 1944, at the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant.
Fraley joined OVEC in 1979 as
a laborer. He 1ransferred to the yard
department in 1981 as a coal handler and advanced to barge auendant the following year. He was
promoted to tripper operator in
1984.
In 1987, Fraley was pro'!'oted to
tractor-diesel opemtor and m 1989,
conveyor operator. He progressed
to cmne operator in 1990.
Fraley and his wife Linda reside
in Gallipolis. They are the parents
of two daughters,.

Some homes tiy to separate
you from the environment.
Our homes make you a
part of it.

New Car Financing
on Selected Models!

1994 GRANDAMS

As Low As

Automatic. air conditioning, tilt, cassette. cruise
control, rear defogger, drivers side a ir bag , antilock brakes. balance of 36/36 bumper to bumper
warranly. Low Miles

,$11,990

1994 SUNBIRD
Automatic, air conditioning, rear defogger,
8,000 low miles

As Low As

$9 900

Call today ror more lnrormalfoo

Jt 1&gt;1&gt;"1" ac;hian

...,.tractures,

PONTIAC.

Inc.
More choices make for better living.

P.O. BOX 614
RIPLEY, WV. 25271

t -800-458-9990

~==,====::=-J
Ave.

CtL~ tc m

Ohio. I dill surveys l or my own di slrtc t &lt;tnd

tried to co mpare how docs tillS ra11k us wnh othe r
di str ic ts, ar c we in fact too many chiefs and not

enough lndtan s 1 " Dunnan saul.
The Oh10 Department ol h luca1um pcg ~c d stu dcnl enro llm en t 1n 1 9X3 - X~ al I.X27 ,17.\. w1t h the
number of principals, aSS IStant pnnupal . ; and other
administrators at 'J.672.
In the 1993-~4 school year. c nrolln~c•nt dcclmcd 10
1,7X2,77 1. The nu mbe r of aclmtnistr:unr.s was placetl
at 11 ,962.
The Ohio Coal iti on i'or Equ11y &amp; Adeq uacy of
School Funding noted V01 novic h 's challenge for
schools lO follow the lead Ol agencies under hi s CO il·

Gallia deputies
investigate
armed robbery

1994 BONNEVILLE SE

Peterseim promoted

"Whe n I w~Ls a sc hool .s upcnntcndcnt up '" norl h·

lly GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Th e scarin g job of squ elching
lircs is even honer for the Middleport Volunteer Fire Department
because of soaring costs, Fire Chief
Ken l:l yer said Friday.
The fire department 's appropriations tota le d $16,500 in 19 93,
while expenses were $19,994, Byer
said.
"You have to remember everybody's in hard times and must take
cuts," By&lt;!r said. "But, it' s tough
and it's hard on morale. With the
volunteer departments you need to
have new training and new
approaches .... This is the cheapest
division that this town has, paying
no salaries."
Training requirements - which
mu st come from the budget have jumped to more than 30 hours
and may expand soon to more than
I 00 hours of training.
Slate and federal rules have also
changed dramatically, Byer said.
"The standards arc changing
every day," Byer said . "To comply
with these slandards takes money."
The village's volunteer fire
department has held games to supplement money that comes from its
tax levy, along with village fund s
and county emergency service
funding, Bycr said. The dcpartmcnl

\

Former Gallia
resident
named to post
COLUMBUS -Catherine Clark·
Eich has been selected as diversity
manager for Nationwide Insurance's home office in Columbus.
She is the daughter of Mary E.
Clark of Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
She comes to Nationwide from
The Ohio State Univer.;ity's
CoUege of Human Ecology, where
she was the director of siUdent and
alumni services.
Clari:-Eich graduated from Gallia Academy, and has an undergraduate degree in retail merchandising and communication, a masters in education, and a doctomte in
counseling, developmental psychology, and evaluation from OSU.
Clarlc-Eich is active in community 3Ctivities. She and her husband, Paul, live in Columbus.

adminislf:.Hors th an bu:-.1ne s~ or th e rest o f !-!0\'C rn -

mcnt.

troland ~:ut cnsts th rough more ,· I lH.:Il' lll opr ratiOilS.

\Villiam Pl1ill is. coaliti on L'\l'l'Ui t vc dtrcc tor, said
1hat rs cxactJy what schools h C~vc· hcc11 ti&lt;Hn~ .
" Where 's the ~ovt: rnor bci..'n ! ColurllhtJ'i C1 t y has
annou nced cuts. Cleve land ll~1d Ill :ui JH itt!JU~ cuts,
C incinn'lt'

ha.'l bee n L: uttm ~, C~m t u n uty Lllt ha lf of

1hclf central ofli cc Sl: til, " Ph &lt;I :" 'a'd
St_;_ltl&gt;g uaranu.:cd private luar1-.; tn ht.' lp . . dill•.d di strH.: t.-; avo id hudgct dcfll'lh ri.'LJU IT C ll ll,tl l"lll" in

S PL' Tldlll ~ .

"Sehoul dtSi fi LIS have been

C ullin ~.

,\ntl hence

sc hool d tst n l'L'-' have been way ahead ol othn Jgcn-

n cs 1n terms ol cuts." Philli s sai d.

Tot;tl swtc and loca l spending for primarv and seconda ry educatio n has grow n, but opponc111.s of the
current funding sys tem say edu cation 's 'ha re as a
pcrccn lagc ul the state budget has dec lined.

Middleport fire department
survives with tight budgets

th e

,,til" pcnml in I~'J:l and 2.4 per-

Dr. Driggs joins podiatric
staff in Marietta facility
~tnnnu n ccs

Du nnan said .st:hool adrn iu istrators arc sensitive to

comments lik e tho se Vo1novich made abo ut
increa sed hiring of managers at a wne when there arc
fewer students in the sys tem.
" I thmk many di stricLs as we speak arc downSIZing administraDvc s1a ff,' · Dunnan s:ud .
"B ut I'm not so sure that' s go in g to m ntribulc to
a world class, 21 sl centu ry education when we have
chi ldren m risk. all kinds of probl ems dcaltng w1lll
fi nance and staffin g, and meeti ng new swnclards, and
10 provide llle kintl or prog rams tha i we need to provide for our boys and g ~rl s." he .s;rid .
Dunnan and other school :td \'OCales said national
studies show schools empl oy comparatively fewer

15'" Aluminum wl1eels, s poiler. air
condi!tonmg. casse tte. tilt wheel,
delay wip e rs. rea r defog ger.
door loc ks. anti-lock bra kes.

'~

Donald Hcbh , DPM.

schoo l di strict and sec what's exactl y happenmg."
said Barney Dunnan of the Buckeye Association of
Sc hoo l AdminiStrators.

$11,795

tiJ ~ pJ iy\ ti.· l;llll'-.), l h'l".'-l lllJl ~·J ;J1Hi l'i.jll 1p111 Crll

Star Bane shows
•
•
•
Increase 1n earn1ngs
St;~r

1994 SUNBIRD LE COUPE

·\L T I L' tiJI;![I\Jil l"(I\L' I \

Appraisers... con11nued rrom o-1

(' 1:-;C INN /\ Tl ·

lly JOliN CHA1.FANT
Associated Press Writer
COLU MBUS, Oh1 o (AI') - Gov. George
Yoinovich is mis~ ing the mark with complainLs that
schools arc too quick to hire admmi,trators and too
slow to cut cos1s. lea ders of two educati on groups
said .
Both issues bubbled to the top m debate al"tcr a
Perry County mun rulmg that the sUJic sch ool fund ing system was unfair and inequilllble because of disparities m per pupil spend mg.
The slate said it will appeal.
Groups of admini strators and loca l districts took
issue wi .h rece nt Voinovich comments about lh c
need for schoqls to cut costs and administralors.
" I think that the governor really should go to a

lt111~ dlld ri ~orut~'&gt; 1~''-!ill!..:. :--L·Il,·duk''l

and th e publi c th:ll

inspector to find the answers.
Trust me: the peace of mind
you'll be buying is more than
worth the cost of the inspection.
For more information about
appmisers and inspectors, call your
local Southeastern Ohio Board of
Realtors. Realtors are real estate

School groups dispute governor's claims

The Ohio Valley's New
LOW PRICE OUTLET

wnh the k:t··a possi hk' n ... h . To ot11;11 rt tlii" :tppro va!.

I''' II I'I" JII :llh ·~·

t;liiOil .

you may win a $5 prize from th e Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. Leave JOUr name. address and
telephone number with JOUr card or letter. No
telephone calls will be afcrp ted. All fonte sl
en trit•s should be turned in to th e news paper
oilier by 4 p.m . each Wednesday. In case of a tit•,
the winner will be chosen b.v Iotter)·· Next week,
a Gallia Co unty farm will be featured by the
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District.

MYSTERY FARM- Thi' week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs So il and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs Co unt)' . lndh·idual s wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm 's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
guess to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

Section , 10 Pages 35 cento
AMultimedia Inc. Newspaper

t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 18, 1994

Gallipolis, Ohio

FARMERS' MARKE"I -Area-grown pro·
duce was available Saturday at the Middleport
Farmers' Market near Dave Diles Park. Mar·
vene Lowery of Middleport, left, buys her goods

from Shirley Sayre, who operates a 20-acre produce farm in Letart. The market will be held
again from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. next Saturday. (Sen·
tincl photo by George Abate)

More killed in refugee stampede, shelling
GOMA, Zaire (AP) -Rebel
forces in Rwanda declared v1ctory
today as hundreds of thousands of
Hutu refugees threatened to over.whelm a second area of neighborin Zaire.
gThe Tutsi-dominated rebels said
ihey had swept away the lasl_.Hutu
~overnment resistance, and that a
j;ease-fire was in place. The rebel
)eader said he hoped the end of the
fighting would halt the desperate
Jmman llightoutofR~:Yanda.
.
· It was eerily qutel today 111
:aoma where up to I million terri·

r

fied Hutus had f!cd advancing
rebels in the prcv1ous five days. An
estimated 170 people died Sunday
in cross-border mortar fire and in
two massive stampedes across lhe
frontier . Today, the shelling had
slopped and the gunfire had tapered
off.
.
Hutus, feanng reven~e from the
rebels, began crossmg mto Goma
last Wednesday -at least 300,000
commg across on Sunday alone.
From Geneva, the Red Cross
satd fears of a rebel advance mto
southwestern Rwanda touched off a

new exodus Sunday into Bukavu,
60 miles south of Goma.
Red Cross spokesman Tony
Burgener said tens of thousands
had arrived by this morning and the
number was rapidly approaching
I00,000.
"There is a potential of another
couple of hundred thousand people
that might come in there as well,"
he said. With that many refugees,
the situation in Bukavu would
become "very dangerous." he
said.

The manager of an area res tau ·
rant told Gallia County sheriff's
deputies he was robbed at gunpoint
early Sunday morning when he
stopped to help what appeared to
be a disabled motorist, but Sheriff
James D. Taylor seems skeptical.
"This is an extremely unusu·al
crime for Gallia County and we're
looking into its validity," Taylor
said. He declined to comment further, olher than to say the incident
is still under investigation.
Sidney D. Shorter, 24, 40 Lincoln Pike, Gallipolis, told deputies
he was taking home the night's
receipts from Chef's Galley and
Clipper Lounge when he saw a
white Ford Escort pulled off the
side of Fairfield-Centenary Road .
The vehicle looked disabled and
Shorter stopped to sec if he could
assist the two men.
Shorter told deputies one of the
men pointed a sawed-off shotgun at
him and ordered him to get out of
his vehicle. They then stole the
money from his car, tied him up
and left the scene.
Taylor would not release the
exact amount of money stolen, but
said it was several hundred dollars.

also gets money from an agreement

with Chcshtre Township for fire
protection.
As of June. lh c villa ge's fife
~ qu 1 pmcnL fund was

man y years they've don e a good
job. If it ain't broke don ' t fix it.
They've got a group of dedicated
work ers over th ere."

runn ing a

Firefighters donate more than 80
ddic il of S490.
hours each munlh just washing
But this defi cit IS not a proble m trucks. mowing grass and malcing
since the fire contrac ts co m e in at repairs. This docs not count the 50
the. end of th e year. Middleport emergency runs th e departm ent
Mayor Dewey Horton saitl .
responds to, Bycr added .
" Th e fire department is no
Only one -third of the departworse off l11an they have been," ment's time involves making runs,
ll onon said. "They arc no worse Bycr said .
off than the rest of the village."
" I don't know what the solution
The village has had bill s of is. I feel the people in this town are
S25 .000 for four snow day s and paymg a lot of t;I.\CS already,'' Byc r
S1,600 for pesticide tests that never ~a id . " Th er e n c~ d s to b e ince nt ive
occurred before, Horton sa id.
fur ,lhc working ma n and woman to
"As far as the village goes we're mo ve lo Middleport. Th ey bring in
close r than we were at 1hc beg in - lax dollars ...
ning of thi s year," he added .
Adding the fund1ng prohlems is
Horton praisc&lt; l the departm ent .
many youn g people ha ve a "mc"They rai se quite a bit of money flfsl" att ilucle and arc less lik ely to
and they arc preuy much self-sup- vo lunteer, Bycr
portin g and self-run, " he said. "For

Local briefs+-------.
Man hurt in motorcycle wreck
A Guysville man remains in critical condi 1ion following a motorcycle accident Sunday afternoon in Orange Township , the GalllaMeigs Post of the Swtc Highway Patrol reported .
Lowell M. Guthrie. 22, IR 776 Iluck l.~k e Road , was transported
by 1hc Tuppers Plains Emergency Squad to St. Jo seph Hospittl m
Parkersburg, W.Va. , where he was admiucd to the intensive care
unit. The hospital would not release lllc cx tenl of hi s injuri es.
According to the accidcnl report, Guthrie was eastbound on S~tte
Route 6R I when he went oil the right side of the road. The motorcycle overturned and then struck a tree ami a fence post. susUJining
moderate, disabling damage.
The accidcnl is still under invcsDgation .

TP-CWD announces shutoff
Water to residents along several roads in Chesler Township will
be shut off Tuesday the Tuppers Plains- Chester Water District
announced .
Water will be shut off around 9 a.m. on slate Rou1c bclwecn
Chester Agri Service and 500 feet south of Baum Addition , Bawn
Addition, Warehouse Road, Wood Road, Pomeroy P1kc bc1wcc n
Epple Road back to 2,000 feel south of Chesler.
Wa1cr should be back on at4 p.m. said Donald C. Poole, district
general manager. Th e reason for the .s hutdow n is to com pl e1c
repairs from a leak on July 2. In th e evcm of rain , work wil l be po.s t·
poncd to the following day.
When service is restored, a boil order will be issued until a sanlple can be drawn and tested, Poole said.

Continued on page 3

~Comet fragments smash into Jupiter
\

lly PAUL RECER
:AP Sc:ience Writer
; GREENBELT, Md. - One of
'the biggest of the 21 rragmems of
&lt;:omet Shoemaker-Levy 9 smashed
:Jupiter early today, causing the
EOSl powerful planetary exploston
:ever observed and blinding some
::instruments w~tching from Earth.
''
~ The comet shard, called frag:ment G, hit the backside of Jupiter
:and immediately bloomed mto a
•

''·
•

any of our experiences on Earth,"
hugh fireball that for a few
moments was brighter' than the · said Lucy McFadden, a University
of Maryland astronomer. · 'Ten
whole planet. as1ronomers report.
thousand megatons is the total
· "It was a big wallop," said energy that we can create on Earth
Eugene Shoemaker, a U.S . Geolog· with bombs."
ical Survey scientist and co-discovInfrared radiation, which is heat,
ered of the comet. He estimated was so great from the explosion
that the energy released by frag- that detectors at the Keele Observa·
ment G was equal to about 250 mil- tory instruments were overlion megatons of TNT and created whelmed, or saturated.
temperatures of more than 30,000
More big explosions are expect·
degrees. ·
ed as fragment H, nearly as big is
"The energy released is beyond G. hits later today.

"'

Pictures from other telescopes,
including !he Hubble Space Telescope, show that the effects of car·
lier impacts have left black pock marks in a band on the southern
end of Jupiter. The marks are
spreading out and some now are
bigger than the diameter of Earth .
Scientists said the spots seemed to
be !~inning and it was unknown
how long lhese scars would last. /'
Shoemaker said that both G and
H were about two miles in diameter.

PLUME OF IMPACT • This image from the Universilf of
California's W. M. Keck Observatory in Mauna Key, Hawaii taplures the plume of impact G, lower lert, of Comet Shoemaker/Levy
9 Monday. This image taken from NASA ·television was photographed in the 2.2 micron infrared range. (AP) .

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