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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, July 29, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Rio native
participates in
D-Day ceremony
·Featured on page 81

Whitewater &amp; politics
Pro football •Hall of Fame•

-page

- pageA7
on Page A2

c1

•

tmts A Multimedia Inc., Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant. July 31, 1994

Pomeroy revitalization:
Village receives $357,200 grant from state; Project
includes business renovation, riverfront amphitheater
Take
Advantage Ot

By JIM FREEMAN

Our Low Low

J

2.9°/o

1994 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

Times-Sentinel Staff
POM EROY - Revitalization of Pomeroy \ downtown
bu siness di strict came a little closer last week after receipt
of a grant agreement from the Ohio Department of
Development 's Office of l11cal Government.
Pomeroy Co uncilman John Musser. grants administrator for the vill age, said the grant of $357,200 will go along with other funds· towa rd co mpletion of the $750,000
revitali zation project which includes business and facade
renovation. new stree t lighting and a nve rfront amphitheater.

Financing

BRAND NEW ESCORT

Air conditioning, AM/FM
driver Side air bag,
cassette ,
d.
anti-lock brakes, over nve
transmission.

AM/FM cassette, air conditioning, rear defroster, power steering.

1994 BUICK REGAL

1_994 FORO ASPIRE

. b g keyless entl)',
Driver side atr a •
·r
dual comfort temp , al ,
~oor mats,
rlt cruise ,
rear window defogger, I , wheels
~ S'" alumtnum
·
3.6 V6· ound system, power
coneert S

I

Dual a~r bags soft
power disc b;akes feel shift k.now,
steering, body sid • ra~k &amp; Pm1on
e moldmgs

$7998

1994
CADILLAC
SEDAN
DEVILLE

1994 FORO TAURUS

V6,
automatic
t
.
conditioning, AM/F~ans~1ssion,
air
bags, loaded.
radio, dual air

over 100
NewGM
and Toyota
Vehicles To
Choose From

1994 FORO RANG

XLT trim, cloth 60-40
~R
seats, carpeting
I . split bench

Full . 1994 FORO F-150
SIZe spare overd .
4.9 6 cylinder' fuel .n~e transmission,

businesses in the downtown area .

Next, they will take the draw ings to the busi ness owners, adding improvements to the buildin gs and co ming up

w tth a li st uf mate -

• :..~;.·v~. 29, No. 25

· ;.;~~\:1L~·

,.

rials, he sa id.
L tch proJect will '
be put out fnr hid .
Musse r sa id part
of th e proJeCt tnvulve&lt; removi ng powerlines and poles
from Main Street and re routing the lines.
"'ntc prujec t must be cnmplctcd by Ma y 1996, or we
have tu send the muncy hack,"" sa id Musser.
" We hope to have the ampith ca tcr bid this wi nter." he
added.
Project plans have been ~c nt to ow ners of riverboats

1ga7 NISSAN

44 000 miles . air , automatiC,
;,ower windOWS &amp; locks.

1992 BUICK

200 sx 2 Door

Park Avenue

ti!HtJ$;iUM·H1

1993DODGE
DAKOTA,
automattc, ait ......... .
1994BUtCK
CENTURY,

$12,97 8

$13,978
78
$13
9
..... .....
l
S13 978

1990 CHEVY
CORSICA.
4 dOOf. .. · · ........... . .. .
1991 poNnAC
sUNBtRD,

4doOr............... ..

1993FORD
AEROSTAR,

··············· ·····

4dQOf.. .......... ... ··········.

:~a:~ICK

1993 poNTIAC
GRAND pRil(,

4doot .. ........ ............

1988 CHEVY
ASTRO VAN,

$18,47 8

1993 cADILLAC

$23,478

oEVILLE,
4&lt;1001 .. ···""""'"""
1993 UNCOLN
TOWM CAR,

···············
1994FORD
MUSTANG,

GT .......... ···

$6998
$7448

$23,478
$21,478

1987 NISSAN
SENTRA,
XE ................... ..
1984 FORD
BRONCO II,

4Qoor ............ ··············

1992CHEVV
CAVALIER,
2 door .......................... .

·························· ·············

5

NEW 1994 TOYOTA
4x2PICKUPS

1988 PLVMOunt
REUANT,
1986 UNCOLN
TOWMCAR,

........... ··············

'997 8

DON

$8498

3978
$3978
.......................

'9478
8
~87

~~FORD
AEROSTAR,

$3278
$
3478
$3888

1987 oLDS
CALAIS,

$8995

199t PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX,

NEW 1994
TOYOTA TERCELS

4X4.. ..........................

S8995

1986 poNnAC
TRANS AM,

$1995

1982 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA,

1991 HONDA
CRX,
2 dOOr. ...................... ..

1993FORD
F-150.
)(LT ......... ,., ....... .. .. .

2 dOOI , 4x4 ......... .

$6978
$6978

GRAND AM........... . ...

l

alJIZER,

$5978

t990 pONTIAC

$14 47 8
S16,995

1993CHEVY

1998 DODGE
ARIES,

2 dOOf. · ... · .......

l

1990 CADILLAC
DEVILLE,
4&lt;1001 ... . ..............

&amp;mH#;if!.r.l·'

~------------==========~

$4478

1991 CHEVY
CAVAUER,

············· ·········
1987 Gt.IC

Financing
Available On
AllCamrvs

S15,

................. ............
1915FORD
F-150,
4•4. . . .. .......... .

AI pricM are lfter all rebllln and lr.centlvel Subject to pnor tale and credit approval

OOD
593 6641
•

·

amount fell below the maxi· ing solvent.

The new boundaries include the

mum level for contaminants Mason County Airport- sile of a
allowed by law.

In Stoek c:a-

"Where Better Really Matters"
East State St~eet
Athens, Oh1o

498

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has
expanded its estimate of possible contamination sites in the area of the
abandoned West Virginia Ordnance Works in Mason County .
According to corps spokesperTraces of TCE were found son Wayne Budrus, Po inc Pleasant's
waler supply falls within the sile
In two of the city's water boundaries due to che decection of
TCE contaminalion. TCE is a chemiwel/S last week, but the trace cal used as a degreasing and clean-

"'2.9% ~for up to 48 months on new 94 Fold Etcorts only.
•4.9% for Up to 36 months on Toyota Calnry only. Dealtrcontl'lbutlon may aflect consumer tOll

former rail switch yard. Also wilhin
the revised area is thesiteof a former
acids dock, which includes the

former Panlasote Plant.
Budrus said the corps drew the revised map to contain known or suspecled
contaminated areas, plus buffer zones for possible contaminalion spreading.
According to the city's waler superintendenl, traces of TCE were found in
tWo of the city's waler wells las! week, but the trace amoun! fell below the
maximum level for contaminants allowed by law.
Danny Rodgers said there was no deteclion of TCE in previous well tests.
He said the conlaminant was found only in the well, no! in !he finished water
· hed wa ter ts
·
product.
"The water is completely f'me, " Rodgers sat'd . "0 ur f'IRIS
excellenl."
Rodgers' analysis was confirmed by corps authorilies, as well as by officials
of the Environmental Proteclion Agency and !he Depanment of Environmental Protection.
The corps advised that monitoring wells for the Point Pleasant and Camp
Conley water supplies are schedflled lobe installed in October or November.
The corps is currently sampling wells at the former Pantasote Plant, wb1ch
reportedly housed a 5,000-gallon TCE slorage lank when it was in operation.
If the Pantasote Plant is found to be the cause ofthecontaminacion, the cleanup cost could be placed on !he owners, !he corps said.
The EPA said it was prepared to take immediate action to clean up the area
if it is determined to be a lhreat to the communily.

•

The proJCCI ··wil l

littl e rnon:

attraci J\'C

and plcastng place to shop.·· he

added.
Clark ~•nd thc: pn~f\.:ct was d 1c:sult uf ~cVl'r al yt:ilf~ · Wl lfk
whic h im.:l udcd sending out surveys and qucst ionnam:s to
rn~..:rcha nt s.

.. We hopt.• tht . . crc&lt;.~tes the type o( env ironme nt to attrac t
ne w husincssc ... we don., currently have.·· he sa id. ·

Man confined to wheelchair
on fourth floor apartment

Times-Sentinel Staff
SALEM CENTER - Charlie Neece refuses to call
himself a hero.
But the wits and perseverance of Neece and I 0 other
miners saved them from the deadly, black maze and ·
rampaging waters of the Meigs Mine 31 disaster last
July ll.
The 18-year-veteran was just four minutes from
leaving for the surface when he heard about the flood
that eventually dumped 800 million gallons of wacer
inlo one of the two active Meigs County mines.
"I had to go back. I was always raised to help others
if !here was a need," the Rutland resident said. "I
couldn't have left those men. Who could turn their
back on fri ends or co-workers in their time of need?"
As part of the three-hour rescue, Neece waded
through more than a half mile of waler up lo his neck
to find and steer the other miners to safely.
"I don't consider myself a hero, just a nice guy who
'.
could be counted on." Neece said. "There were men on
the other side and I just had to make it. It was my
HEROIC MINERS-(Top)Charlie Neece points out the route the miners took to nee from
the water. (Above) The four miners instrumental in the rescue ora group of miners trapped
decision only."
On this July Sunday night, Charlie Neece already in the flooding Meigs Mine3llast July talk abouttheir experience. From left are, Dan Beam,
had worked l2 hours straight when the miners heard of Bob Payne, Neece and Carl Curry. The miners fled from advancing water that eventually
the nood. In charge of ensuring safety standards, filled the mine with about800 million gallons of waste water.
Neece had !he best knowledge of the mine and its - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - myriad passageways, air ducts and convolutions.
The foreman, Bob Payne, called ahead to nine miners who had been cut off This light kept him from complete darkness. Neece kept trudging forward as
by the flooding water. When Payne phoned he suggested the shortest escape logs and debri s flooded past.
No darkness can compare to that in a mine, Neece said.
route - but then he realized that would lead them directly toward the raging
"There's dark dark and there 's dark, dark. dark . You go down there and
water that blocked their way in a matter of minules.
there 'snothing," Neece satd. "You can run your finger plum through your eye
· Payne quickly called back, but the line was dead.
Neece immediately spoke up, telling Payne he would wade through the and there 's nothing."
He slogged on, his hip waiters filled with water - at times grabbing the
flooded area and lead !he miners to safety.
Thus began a half mile trek against neck-deep, frenzied waters. Neece fell rocky ceiling of the mine shaft to keep his head above water when he lost hi s
once and lost nearly all hisequipment, salvaging the lighl on his miner's cap.
Continued on page A2

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A loca l man confined to a wheelchair is greatly inconveni enced by his li ving arrangemen ts itnd the apartment buildin g· s management
is unable to give him any immed iate relief.
A World War ll ve teran who had both legs hurned off in an accident, John
Rohinctle lives on the fourth fl oor of First Hol?e r Apartments tn ~~ uni t not
designed for the handicapped .
His unly access to the ground noor is a single eleva tor, which Robinette said
is unreliable . Malfunction s hav e left him
trapped i ns idc three
times and once left him
pri soner on the fourth
floor for mos t of a week-

end.
Robinette. who likes to
ride around tow n in his

motorized wheelchair, t
said being con fined to
h'is apartm ent and the
short hall wayoutstde for
two da ys "wasn 't too
mcc

"l didn 't feel too good
about it," he sa id .
"That's when I started
contacting people to get
out. (But) they said they
cou ldn 't call 111 an elevator man o n account .
of overtime .'·

Building manager
Ditnclla Gn:cm: sa id the
el evator fai lure was due
to a power outage. She
added that she is not
MISPLACED -John Robinette looks down a
night of stairs ncar his fourth-floor apartment at
First Holzer Apartments. The double-amputee
said he feels he should be in a first-floor handicap
accessible apartment. Robinette recently spent a
weekend trapped on the fourth floor because of
a malfunctioning elevator.

aware of any t)thcr prob~
\ems since she heca me
mana ger in Jtu\uar y.

Greene said she wuuld
like to help Robinett e.
hut her hands arc ttcd by
the Americans wtth Di sahtlittcs Act and lllhcr

regulations .
"I could not legally put someone out to give him an (acecssthlc) apartment. "
Continued on page A2

News capsules
Racine boys found
after disappearing
in wilderness

lhc project, ~;11d rc VJta l! za t tun will
"g ive Pomt.:roy .-1
Lldt nitc hon~t. "

No immediate relief:

Miners' actions save 10 men
trapped 360 feet underground
during rampaging '93 flood

Corps expands ordnance
works clean-up boundaries

town coordinator fur

L...-----------------------1 make ( Pumcwyl a

Heroism in Mine 31 •

Contaminant found In water wells

Joe Clark. owner

of Cla rk ·s Jcwcl ry tn
Pomnoy ilnt1 Juwn -

Pomeroy businessman
Joe Clark

~·

19as FORD LTD

including the De lt a
Queen to determ111e
th eir docking ne eds,
he said.

The project "will make (Pomeroy) a little
more attractive and pleasing place to shop
... We hope this creates the type of environment to attract new businesses we
don't currently have."

•

By GEORGE ABATE

Dual air bats, antilock brakes, leather
seats, accent striping.

Musser sa id the village has also appltcd for a Appal;\"&gt;
chi an Regional Commission grant of $70,000 and a Ohto
Department of Natural Resources grant uf$100,000 to go
toward renovating the riverfront , including co nstruction
of a riverfront promenade.
" We should be ab le to start on the buildmgs thi s year:·
Musser sa id .
Musser said project coordinators. SBA Consultants of
Jackson, have already made drawmgs of coopera ting

.

GOOD MORNING

Volnovlch complains of federal review process

Today's Times-Sentinel

CLEVELAND (AP) - Gov. George Voinovich has asked President
Clinton in a cr~ical letter to uphold his promise to clear away federal
obstacles for states trying their own health-care reforms.
Voinovich, a Republican, said federal officials have not answe&lt;ed the
state's request to establish a health-care plan extending MediGBid coverage
to 500,000 uninsured Ohioans .
Voinovich reminded the Democrat president that he had told the National
Governors Association last year that state applications for permission to
establish alternate health-care plaoowould be decided within three months.
"The people of Ohio need to know that your administration will not allow
politics to get in the way ol reaching a decision to provide comprehensive.
affordable, quality health care," Voinovich wrote in the letter released Friday.
"I'm asking you to live up to your commitments."
OhioCare Is the Voinovich plan to restructure Medicaid, the stale- and
federally-funded health insurance for the poor. Voinovich wants to shift
Medicaid from a pay-per-visit plan to a managed-care network of doctors,
hospitals and pharmacies the state would hire to provide care.

23 Sections - 192 Pages

LANEVILLE, W.Va . (AP) Two Ohio boys who disappeared
in the Monongahela National Forest were found safe Friday, nearly
24 hours after !hey wandered nff
during a family camping trip.
Search parties were dispatched
by land and air Thursday and Friday to Dolly Sods, a 10,000-acre
mountainous area near the Maryland border.
The boys, whobothhaveasthma ,
were identified by a relative as
Christopher Randolph, l 3, and
Ryan Hill, 12, both of Racine,
Ohio.
Racine lies along !he Ohio River about 90 miles southeast of Co lumbus .
''They wen! wilh Chrislopher's grandfather picking blueberries and must
have wandered off," said Leigh Hill, Ryan's aunt.
She said she was surprised by the disappearance of the boys, who she
described as quiet and well-behaved.
"It just didn'l seem right. It didn't seem like them, " she said.
Searchers from local, slate, and federal agencies worked through the
night, hampered by fog and the rough landscape terrain in the remote area
near !he border of Gran! and Tucker counties.
"It' s very rugged terrain . There are cliffs and ocher hazards.The on Iy way
of gelling around is on !he trails," said Monica K. Gallion, a forestry
lecbnician at the federal park.
'They werespolledby a West Virginia Slate Police helicopter a! about 1:30
p.m. Friday, said First Sgt. D.L. Rosier.
He said the boys were not hospitalized and were released to their parents.
"I just spoke to my grandmother. She said they're slopping in a restauranl
and they're coming home," said Leigh Hill.
"I guess the boys were starving."

Business
Calendars
Classilieds

Dl
83
03-7

Comics
Editorials

Insert
A4

Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

A3
A6
Cl-8

Bl
A2

Columns
Guber.natorial candidates
agree to two-way debate

ml! '

.~

Bob HoeDich
Jjm Sands
Chuck Stone

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ll1e
gubernatorial candidates have agreed
loa two-way debate in Cincinnati.
Republican
Gov.
George
Voinovich and Democratic chalIenger, state Sen. Rob Burch, Friday
accepted an invitation to debate each other on live television Oct. 28. The
debate will be sponsored by The Cincinnati Post and WCET, Cincinnati's
Ohio Public Television affiliate .
Also Friday, the Post said !he major party candidales for U.S . SenateRepublican Mike De Wine and Democrat Joel Hyatt- have been invited to
debate Oct. 26 at WCET-TV.
Voinovich !his week said he would not appear in dcpales !hal included
independent candidale Billy Inmon, former Ohio Slate Fair manager.
De Wine withdrew from two debates wilh Hyatt after sponsors invited
independent Senate candidate Jospeh Slovenec.

1.-----------J

..

I

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

Page--A2-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Heroism in Mine 31 •
•

OHIO Weather
Sunday, July 31
Accu-Weatl1e,.. forecast lor daytime condi tions and high temperatures
MICH

•

IToledo I 85'

J

•

PA

Youngstown
INO

Continued from page A1
foo11n g
"I was kind of houncing around . I
d1dn 't have anything to hold unto,"
:-Ieece s a~d in a soft -s poken , modest
voice . "There was no mpc. ju' t taking

dent and father of four sa id. "I got my
pad out twi ce to write to my wife . But
I thought if I'm going to get nooded
no one 's going to find me ."
Neece led the minors to Beam and
the group readied to try to outrace the

o ne step at a time ."
Neece finall y h cul cro~~cd the water

on-coming water.

and he now had to find the miners in

along in '"' roller coaster-ride o n the

one of fo ur areas. fearin g a wrong turn

I0-seat mantrip, where they we re nut
buckled in.
They sped along the rail of the mine
ca r and were nearly to the Dover
Hoist whi ch would take them to the

bcca u ~c of th e los:-. of each minutt: .

As he looked back lu the risin g
wate r. he re alized he could nnt return
the way he ca me bccJ U\t: the wa ter

• IColum bus ! 84' I

th at had left rcxlm for hi s head was
now at the ce ll mg.

"I w uldn 't have tUined bac k. I really
didn't have time to get scared . Most
of it was instinct, know ledge and ability."
After he foun d the nine miners he
started wa lki ng toward a rendezvous

knew. "

poi nt where a mine car. also known as
a mantrip, was supposed to be waiting
to ca rry them away , Neece sa id.
One of the miners, Albany-resident
Jim Reed, had previously hurt his
bac k and that night his pained legs
slowed h1m down .
Neece directed most of the miners
ahead of him and had to ensure Reed
and the miners helping him were following.
Meanwhi le, Dan Beam sat in the
mantrip for SO minutes, thinking he
would be trapped while they might
have drowned.
Beam was just two minutes from
the surface when Payne called and
asked him to pick up the mmers. The
mantrip, which ca n reach speeds of
30 miles per hour, was needed because the miners could not have outrun the water, Beam said.
"I thought it would take the guys 20
minutes. After 35 minutes reality
starteci_!Q_hil me," the Gallipolis resi-

The thought of not surviving did
not hound him, he added.
"It probabl y crossed my mind one
time or another during the course of
three hours. But it wasn't so mething I
dwelled on, " Neece sa id.
But JUSt a mile away from the elevator, the mine car halted. The miners
then started running ahead when the
electrician made a last-ditch effort to
use a piece of cable to splice together
a six-inch space. Like a jumper-cable
in a car, the man trip sprung lo life and
sped forward to the elevalor.
The elevator could hold just three

" You've alway~.; hc&lt;nd of some-

return . I'vc bee n there ." Neece sa id.

Showers
V18 As.sociRIArl Prass Graptrics NBt

Weather
Extended rorecast
Monday through Wednesday ... A
· chance of thunderstonns each day .
Lows in the 60s. Highs in the mid

to upper 80s.
South-Central Obio
Sunday ... Partly sunny with a
high in the mid 80s.

Partly sunny skies
.on tap for today
·

By The Associated Press
Look for partly sunny skies
Monday with widely scattered
afternoon thunderstorms and highs
in the mid 80s.
Partly sunny skies are on tap for
Sunday. Highs will reach into the
middle 80s. Sunday night, skies
will be partly cloudy with lows in
the upper 50s to near 60.
.
Sunshine broke out by noon tn
most places after a rather foggy
start to Saturday. By mid afternoon
temperatures had risen into the
upper 70s and lower 80s across the
state.
Around the nation
Fog and clouds greeted much of
the East Saturday morntng as
Western StateS, baked in pre-dawn
heat, prepared for another scorching day.
A stationary fronlal system that
brought storms to parts of the East
on Friday again hovered over the
area Saturday, carrying the threat
of more evening and afternoon
thunderstorms in some coastal

The frontal system and an upper
level low pressure system over the
Ohio Valley produced turbulent
weather Fnday. Thunderstorms
with hail and strong winds socked
much of Ohio and northwestern
Kansas. Other storms were scattered over the central Plains, the
central Rockies, parts of the Great
Basin and parts of the desert Southwest.
Broiling temperatures were
again expected in the West, where
the mercury reached above 80 even into the 90s - before dawn
from Boise, Idaho, to Las Vegas.
Highs were forecast in the 90s
Saturday across the West, well
above 100 in the desert. Things
were expected to be cooler on the
coast, with highs forecast from the
60s to the 80s moving inland and
south.
In the East, highs were forecast
in the 80s, dropping into the 70s
along the Canadian-New England

AIIieS to
push Serbs
for peace
GENEVA (AP) - The United
States and its allies vowed Saturday to move quickly to step up
pressure on the Bosnian Serbs to
accept a peace agreement, but they
showed no enthusiasm for allowing
shipments of arms to the Bosnian
Muslims.
After a four-hour meeting, the
foreign ministers said they still
hoped that the Serbs would reverse
their flat rejection of the peace plan
accepted by the Bosnian Muslims

bard~.

andCroaiS.

Death Valley, Calif., was the hot
· spot in the country Friday with an
Scau.ered stonns also were pre- afternoon high of 122 degrees.
dicted over the northern Plains.

areas.

Last plane out leaves Haiti
; more isolated than ever
• PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
· _ The world shut down air service
• to Haiti on Saturday with ~he
· departure of the final scheduled -!'tliner, leaving the anny-ruled nanon
more isolated than ever.
"It is a super-comedy what the
international community is doing,:'
said the Rev. Rene Soler •. a Canad!an priest who was board~g an ~
France Boeing 737 to ne1ghbonng
Dominican Republic.
The plane, with a capacity 141
passengers aboard, took off two
hours late after an unspecified
delay earlier in Santo Domingo, the
Dominican capital. At least 50
stand-by passengers were left
behind in the sweltenng Port-au' Prince ICI11linal, Air France SBJd.
The now-total commercial air
ban, begun June 24 ~hen Ameri_can
carriers stopped scmce to Haio, IS
the latest internauonal economic
sanction intended to pressure militarY coup leaders to cede power.

There are stiU aboul 3,500 Americans in the country.
The army, Haiti's real leadership since soldiers ousted elected
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in
1991, has defied a worldwide trade
and oil embargo and U.S . ban on
most financial transactions with
Haiti.
American military forces
applied more psychological pressure on the coup leaders Saturday,
wmpping up four days of war exercises near Puerto R1co and steam-'
ing toward Haiti to resume patrols
off its coast.
The flight ban stranded more
than I ,300 Haitians who woo political asylum in the United States but
have been unable to gel trnnsportalion out. Haiti's military-backed
authorities, angered over the ban,
have not approved requests for
charter nights for the refugees or
for humanitarian organizations.
Air Fmnce was the last carrier to
ny to Haiti. Even before the jetliner
left, businesses inside the Port-auPrince airport were shutting down,
and a postal clerk closed her small
airport office.

(USPS SZS·IOO)
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THINK

"This is a dirficult, intractable
problem," said Secretary of State
Warren Christopher. "There is no
magic solution."
Christopher said he was influenced by Russian Foreign Minister
Andrei Kozyrev's view that the
Serbs "may still be open to persuasion."
So far, the Serbs have resisted
all efforts to pressure them. They
rejected the peace plan that would
give them 49 percent of Bosnian
territory, and 51 percent to a Muslim-Croal federation. After two
years of fighting, the Serbs now
control 70 percent of the former
Yugoslav republic.
Last week, the Serbs cut off
civilian access to Sarajevo: fiJ'ed on
a U.N. convoy, killing a British
soldier: and shelled the Muslim
enclave of Gorazde, all without
drawing a military response from
the United Nations or NATO.
In addition to Christopher and
Kozyrev, the participants in Saturday's meeting were British Foreign
Secretary Douglas Hurd, French
Foreign Minister Alain Juppe, German Foreign Minister Klaus
Kinkel, Greek Foreign Minister
Karolos Papoulias and Commissioner Hans van den Broelc of the
European Union.
They issued a communique saying they would go to the U.N.
Security Council this week to seek
a resolution tightening enforcement
of existing sanctions against Serbia. Coupled with that was a pledge
to seek a resolution for a phased
lifting of the sanctions if the Serbs
accept the peace plan.

1987 ISUZU PUP
PICKUP

ECONOMY

At the Pump

4 Cyl. 5 Speed,
New Tns, Low Low Miles.

(614)
667-3350
42945

State Route 7
Coolville,
Ohio

mmes.

"We pulled, tugged, carried . Ev eryone should be proud of the work
they did," Neece sa id.

Man confined to wheelchair
Continued from page A 1
she said. "We're following every rule
and doing everything we can to help
him."

Greene said First Holzer, which is
subsidized by the Fanners Home
Administration, has six wheelchair
accessible apartments, all of which
are occupied.
Greene added that Robinette is first
in line when an opening becomes
available.
Robinette said when he moved into
First Holzer last November, the manager- Greene's predecessor- told
him none of the building's handicapped accessible units were available and offered him the fourth -floor
apartment.
He was promised he would be
moved into a handicap apartment as
soon as there was an opening,
Robinette said.
"They said I would be up here not
over two months," Robinette said.
The fourth-floor apartment is designed for a non-handicapped tenant.
Robinette said he can not cook because the narrow kitchen does not
give him room to maneuver.
Robinette said the tenants in the
modified apartments are handicapped,
but not all of them are confined to
wheelchairs. He believes some of them
could live in a regular apartment without experiencing any difficulties.
Greene said she is not permitted to

limit the accessible apartments topersons with mobility problems. Persons
with other handicaps, such as deafness or blindness, are also eligible.
Robinette, who has a heart condi tion, said he is worried about how he
would evacuate the building in lhe
event of an emergency.
Greene said the fire department has
a list of tenants who would need help
out of the building and also has pass
keys to get into the apartments. Stickers are on order to mark the doors of
disabled residents, she said.
Robinette contacted Veterans Service Officer Steve Swords last week
ahoul lhe problem. Swords said he
has contacted officials at the local and
state levels seeking a solution.
"Ever smce that guy called me
Monday it's bothered me, " Swords
said. "If there was an emergency - or
if he had a ilearl attack- he couldn't
get out."
Last Thursday the Gallia County
Commission, after meeting with
Robinette and Sword,, visited First
Holzer to discuss the problem.
"Wedidn'tcomelobepunitive, we
just came to inquire," said Commission President 'Kenneth Farmer.
He added that he believes the
apartment's management is doing
everything possible to help Robinette.
"They are really caught in a bad
situation," Farmer said. "They felt
bad, too, that he had moved to the
fourth floor."

(614)

The

Bibbee
MOTOR COMPANY

667-3350

Call

John Reeves
or
Jerry Bibbee

-·

SUPPORTING MUSEUM - The Racine
Museum/Cmss Mill Project Fund received a sizable donation or $1,000 rrom the Racine Area
Community Organization. Here, RACO representative Kathryn Hart presents a check to
Racine Home National Bank President Tom

SYRACUSE - Sixteen Syracuse residents have been awarded
1994-95 Carleton Memorial Scholarships to assist with their costs of
attending college, it was announced
today.
Scholarships given this year
totaled $3,200, bringing the amount
provided by the Carleton College
Board of Trustees for higher education, to over $39,000 since the pro- gram was started in 1981.
Those awarded scholarships,
and the institution of higher learning where they are enrolled, arc:
Jennifer Lisle , University of
Dayton; Theresa L. Lee, University
of Rio Grande: Valerie Connolly,
Kent State University; Tamara
Hayman, Marshall University;
Chris T . Weaver, Washington
County Career Center; Ray Proffill
Jr., DcVry Institute of Technology;
John Bentley, Methodist College;
Michael McKelvey, Miami University; Cheryl A. Pape, Shannon N.
Counts, Michelle McCoy, Andrew
Fields, Robyn Stout and Chris
Stout. all Ohio University; and
Chris Ebcrsbach and Douglas
Lavender, Hocking Technical College.

EMS runs

:
'
:

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reponed 12 calls for assisJaOce Friday and Saturday.
Units responding included:
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT
9:32 a.m. Middleport to Seventh Street for Mary Lyons who
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center; 12:52 p.m. Middleport to
Page Street for Arthur Bahr who
was transponed to VMH; 7:48p.m.
Middleport to Pomeroy Cliff
Apartments for Lola Hovachek
who was transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; 9:01 p.m. Middleport to Powell Street for Dana
Longstreth who was transported to

I

HMC:

1

1

~
'

!
1

:

• Pre-tour reception &amp; valet parking
• Deluxe motorcoach transportation
&amp; baggage handling
• Winery reception at Pigeon Forge
• Three nights lodging at the new Country Inn
• Three breakfasts &amp; three dinners
• Christus Gardens

• Gatlinburg's Christmas Craft F'air &amp; evening tour
of lights
• Dixie Stampede dinner &amp; show
• Dollywood Park with dinner &amp; shows
• Heidelburg dinner &amp; show
• Outlet shopping
• ~sorted by Mary Fowler, Coordinator

Proples Cholet. Clwlce travel opportunities tttul
thoicetravel benel1ts for persons SO lind over. To
lind out how you can become a member, please call

Marv Fowler, Coordinator, at (304) 675-1121. Prop/es
Choice is a division of the Peoples Bank ofPoint

Pleasan~Mernber

---·---

··' .\

Trustees give
16 Carleton
scholarships

RACINE
II :39 a.m. Racine to Adams
• Lane for Pearl Adams who was
: transported to VMH; 7:10p.m.
t Racine to Yellow Bush Road for
•• Shane Riffle who was transported
' to Jackson Geneml Hospital;
POMEROY
12:22 p.m. Pomeroy to PNRC
for Marie Roy who was transported
to VMH; 4:55 p.m. Pomeroy to
Village Manor for Donald Van
Cooney who was t.ransported to
VMH;
TUPPERS PLAINS
4:10 p.m. Tuppers Plains to
State Route 7 for Lorain Thomas
who was transported to O'Bleness
· Memorial Hospital; II: 13 p.m.
Tuppers Plains to Blake Road for
Chester GooreU who was transport' ed to SLJoseph's Hospital;
'
REEDSVILLE
6:18p.m . Reedsville to State
, Route 681 for Gertrude Bass who
was transported to VMH:
',
SATURDAY
POMEROY
J
2:22 a.m. Pomeroy to Second
' Street for Donald Craig who was
: transported to VMH.
t
I

Mystery farm
winner named
POMEROY - Nonnan Will of
' Rutland won the July 10 Sunday
Times-Senrinel mystery farm con: test co-sponsored by the Meigs Soil
\ and Water District and the Ohio
~ Valley Publishing Co.
He was one of five to correctly
: identify the farm as that of Harold
~ Graham on State Route 143 near
, Harrisonville. His name was select-; ed in a contest to be the winner of
; the $5 prize.

_ RIO GRANDE -:- Membersh1p
• Accepted tne Carl D. Perkins
In the Oh10 CoalitiOn for EqUity Grant alloca tion s for fi sc al year
and Adequacy for the 1994 -95 1995.
sc hool year was _approved by the
• Approved the uan srcr of DebGalha-Ja~kson- Vmton Jomt Voca - orah Prater from special needs aide
uonall Boru;d of ~~uca~JOn ~ - :: s to sw itc hboa rd operat or. starling
recen Cmee tng a uc eye 1 s w1th the 1994-95 school year.
career
·
Th benter.
d 1
d
• Approved .•
we transfer of Rna
e f oar ~ sohappro;e P~Y - Allen from SBH atd e to spec ial
mentoldmemthers ipan suppe - needsaide,also inl994-95.
menta
toC e orgamzat1on.
·. d s up e r~nt
· en dcnt
D Ducs
v"d
. f G·ll 1
• A ut h0r11.e
1
1
r. a
annan
a J10 ts Kent Lewis to employ new tC&lt;Ich Ci ty Schools was chosen as a dele- ing and support staff as necessary
gate, and Susan Taylor of Jackson for student programs tn 1994-95. A
City Schools was named alternate Jist of new personnel rccommcndatorcpresenttheJVSDattheOhiO tionsls tobc Stlbmitlecltothc hoard
School Boards AssociatiOn Cap1tol at its Aug. 23 meeting.
ConT~hcrenbcc Ndov. l 4-l6.
d h
• Accepted the re s1gnat ion of
e oar a 1so
accc
f f.pt c t c Sara M. 0 x1ey. home ewnon11·cs
Ch ap ter II all
· ocauon or 1sca1 year
1995 and granted permiss ion to
proceed with action to rece ive the
funds. Lunch and milk pri ces for
1994-95 were set at $1.25 for students' lunch and $1.75 for adults.
while students will pay 20 cents for
milk and adults 25 cents.
Borden/Valley Bell and He iner' s
Bakery received approval as suppliers of dairy and bakery products
to the school.
In other action, the hoard:

°.

\

l

Join your Peoples Choice companions as we step back in time to an old-fashioned Ch · 1
complete with the sights and sounds ofeveryone s favorite childhood memories. lnc~~e;as

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A3

JVSD Board votes to approve
membership in school coalition

(
:

Gatlinburg &amp; Pigeon Forge, Tennessee
November 29- December 2, 1994

Regional ,

July 31, 1994

KIGALI, Rwanda (AP) - The
first U.S . troops landed in th e
Rwandan capital Saturday to secure
the airport for an expanded international aid effort. The ne~t step is
encouraging millions of scared,
displaced people to return home.
President Clinton ordered 200
American soldiers to Kigali to support the rel ie f effort in Rwanda ,
where millions have fled their
homes to esca pe e thnic ca rnag e
that killed up to 500,000 people.
Defen se Secretary William
Perry was to inspect the U.S. aid
mission Sunday.
Lt. Gen. Daniel Schroeder, commander of the joint American task
force, sa id it was unclear how
many American soldiers would
eventually be sent to Rwanda ,
whether they would be deployed
outside Kigali, or how long they
would stay.
Maj. Gen . Romeo Dallaire,
Canadian commander of the U.N
peacekeeping force here, said total
U.S. troop strength in Rwanda
could reach about 2,000 - if the
Americans agree to lake on all jobs
the United Nations would like them
lO.
U.N. officials hope a new com mitment of American, Canadian
and British troops will help them
carry out their mission and prompt
other nations to send the troops
they have pledged.
"The fact the Americans arc
here will make the other countries
send their troops quicker, " said
Shaharyar Khan, special represen tative for Rwanda for U.N. Secretary-General Boutros BoutrosGhali.
Thousands of refugees have
died in a cholera epidemic in
Goma, Zaire, where I .2 million
Rwandans are packed inro squalid
camps. Relief efforts so far have
concentrated on providing them
with food, medical care and clean
water to prevent the spread of the
water-borne choleza bacteria.
The goal now is 10 convince the
refugees to return home. Most are
Imajority Hutus who ned in fear of
reprisals by the victorious Tutsi-led
rebels for the mass kiUin$s of Tulsis. The rebels have mstalled
Rwanda's new government.
Aid officials in Goma said Saturday they thought the choleza epidemic was coming under conirol.
But in Kimumba, the most crowded
of the camps around Goma, hundreds of refugees rioted as a Red
Cross convoy distributed bags of
cooking oil, beans and corn flour.
Refugees said at least one person was killed and others were
wounded as men wielding clubs
fought off mobs that surrounded
the bags of food.
Dallaire said all 200 of the fust
Americans ordered in should arrive
by Sunday.
Schroeder, the U.S. commander,
said the size and scope of the U.S.
mission in Rwanda was "still
ambiguous." He said it would be
determined by security conditions
and humanitarian needs.

Price per person: $275 double 'occupancy $260 quad
or $350 sin~le. Non-members please add S25.00. A
$SO per person deposit is requiTed by August 1 to hold
your reservation. Final payment is requested by
October I. For mformation or reservations, please call
Mary Fowler at Peoples Bank at (304) 675 _112 1.

SAVE

$

surface.

Neece was the only one that actually saw the water that night.
The miners were racing the nooding waters. since the water was rushing down hill on top of them, Neece
sa id.
'" I knew how severe the situation
was," Neece sa id. "Some of us just
knew we were in a tight situation. I

hody speak ahout the point of no

W.VA

The II miners then had to hurtl e

miners a trip and 20 more minutes had
passed by the time the last load lifted
Neece and Ga llipoli s' Carl Cu rry.
The escape shaft flooded up near ly
30 feet short ly after the miners were
out of the mmc .
Foreman Payne sa id the many snap
decisions helped save the crews th at
n1ght.
"I would have liked to have been
down there wi th them, but I knew my
J&lt;lh was to coordinate fro m above ,"
the Winfield, W.Va ., man said.
Curry sa1d the resc ue that night was
a concerted tea m effort . The real rescue ca me in the foll owing seve n
months during work to clear the mines
and re-ope n thi s February .
"After the flood we had to du things
that were primiti ve," Curry sa id. "Thi s
is a modern coal mine but we had to
work by hand. "
Jim Tompkins, manager of So uthern Ohio Coa l Co., sa id he IS exce ptiOnal ly proud of all the miners for
their hard, often dangerous work .
"You're dealing with a group that
d1d a hell of aJOb thatnight ,"Tompkins
sa id. "It gives you an insight into the
type of people we have here . It 's a
spec ial breed. How many people earn
their living underneath the surface 7 "
Neece agreed the rescue of the live·
lihoods of 800 area miners was the
heroic action, especially aII the untold
people who fought to re-open the

First American
soldiers land
in Rwanda

Wolfe, center, and project coordinator Dale
Hart, right, at the future site or the museum.
The foundation stones, rear, "ere donated by
Doug and Cindy Sands from the old Norman
Theiss Farm near Racine.

r---Tri-County Briefs:____,
GJMV waste district to meet
WELLSTON - The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs- Vinton Solid Waste
District Board of Directors will hold a spec ial meeting at 3 p.m.
Thursday at the district office, 722 East lOth St., Wellston, Chairman Bob Willi s announced Friday.
The meeting was called to discuss negotiations relevant to the
lawsuit filed by the Athens-Hocking Solid Waste District.

Reception set for Glenn Smith
GALLIPOLIS - An open reccplion for outgoing Gallipolis City
Manager Glenn Smith will be held al noon Wednesday in the
Lafayetlc Room of the Stowaway Restaurant.
Anyone who wants to wish Smith well is cncoumged to attend.
Smith, who has been city manager since August 1991, will put his
final day in at the city building on Aug. 5. He will be filling the
unexpired tenn of the Guernsey County engineer.

Driver cited in collision with sheriff
GALLIPOLIS - A Point Pleasant, W.Va., man made the wrong
tum on First Avenue Friday and the vehicle he was driving collided
with another car- driven by the Gallia County sheriff.
William Brad Moore, 18, was cited for driving under the influence and driving the wrong way on a one-way succt in tl1e 10:48
p.m. accident at the intersection with State Street, Gallipolis City
Police said.
Officers said Moore made a left tum from a one-way succt and
was traveling in the wrong direction when th car he drove collided
with a southbound car driven by Sheriff James D. Taylor, 49, Gallipolis.
There were no injuries and damage to both vehicles was moderate, police said.

One-vehicle crash leaves two injured
GALLIPOLIS - Two youths were injured in a one-vehicle accident Friday on State Route 554, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol said.
Grover S. Holcomb, 17, 8210 State Route 325 North, Vinton,
driver of the vehicle, was taken to Holzer Medical Center by private
vehicle and was treated and released for facial lacerations, a hospital spokesperson said.
Bruce W. Ward, 16, 955 Durgan Road, Vinton, a passenger in
Holcomb's truck, refused treatement at the scene, the patrol said.
Troopers said Holcomb was easthound in Springfield Township
at 5:12 p.m. when he lost control of his pickup uuck on wet pavement while rounding a left curve, slid off the left side of the road,
and struck a fence and a tree.
The pickup was severely damaged and Holcomb was cited for
failure to control.

Commission
OKs Pomeroy
firm's job bid
POMEROY - Singer Construction Co. of Pomeroy was
approved Friday as the supplier for
paving material for this year's
paving projects tn Meigs County.
Two bids for the projects, being
done under Round 8 of the State
Capital Improvement Project program, were opened at the weekly
meeting of the Meig s Board of
Commissioners.
Singer submitted a bid or 153.85
tons of paving material per
$20,000. Tom Mayle Co. of Barnesville submitted a competing bid
of 148tons per $20,000.
Shelly Co. of Thornville will do
the actual paving, said County
Engineer Robett Eason.
Roads to be paved include portions of Salem School Lot Road,
Eden Ridge Road, Hiland Road,
Sumner Road, Rocksprings Road
and Pine Grove Road.
In addition, the board approved
a bid for bituminous paving materials from Asphalt Materials Inc. of
Marietta for August.
In other matters, commissioners:
• Accepted the minutes of the
July 22 meeting.
• Approved paying weekly bills
of $59,250.58, consisting of 93
entries.
• Received a lener from the
Ohio Department of Liquor Control
establishing a public hearing for II
a.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 24 in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Courtroom. The hearing will be
held concerning an application for
a liquor pennit by Bill Buchanan of
Reedsville.
Present were Commission President Fred Hoffman, Vice President
Janet Howard TackeH and Commissioner Robert

Youths injured in Friday accident
GALLIPOLIS - Two youths were taken to Holzer Medical
Center by the Gallia County Emergency Medical Service Friday for
injuries suffered in a one-car crash on County Road 3 (Bulaville
Pike), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said.
Clayton A. Callahan, 15, 7751 State Route 218, Gallipolis, the
driver, and Will J. Darnbrough, 13, 13 York Drive, Gallipolis, his
passenger, were both treated and released for abrasions, a hospital
spokesperson said.
The patrol said Callahan was eastbound on Gallipolis Township
Road 243 (Windsor Drive) at 12:50 p.m. Friday when the brakes on
the car he was driving failed.
The car crossed Bulaville Pike, went off the left side of the road,
struck a tree and overturned onto its top, the patrol said.
The car was severely damaged and Callahan was cited for no
operator's license. no registration and unsafe vehicle.

GRADS/IMPACT mstructor.
In the Adult Division, the hoard:
• Approve d bud ge ts for th e
EMT-A Basic . EMT Refresher and
Nurse Aidc(fCEP courses.
_ • Approved the following pant1me appomtments: Betty Adkin s
D'1Splaced
Hom e maker'
in struc tor/coordinator:
Sue
Burle son, Milton Cal l, Vannen
c ra. hucc. Elva oaviS, o·1ane Ham 1·J_
ton, Phyllis Rose, Tom Ru th and
Ge rald Shook, JTPA Job Fair ;
Diane Hamilton, Brian Hutch inson
and Patricia Reese, computer spe c tali st ; Roy L. Jones. EMT -A
Basic; Barbara Lanier-lones, Nurse
Aictc(fCEP; and Steven Yates air
· d'1uonmg.
· ·
'
con

Basic Channels:

T iHINI
Premium Channels: 1e~tra charge1
The

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\), I
Channel

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limtiililtt

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4) 446-8212
Local Com1panty_ • Local Service
"Serving the area over 14 yean."

Holzer Medical Center
i

'

KIDS' FAIR
..

Theft of car reported to deputies
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriff's deputies are seeking a
1980 Chcveue reportedly stolen on Friday, according to sheriffs
records.
.
"
Loren M. Mullins, 1331 White Oak Road, Gallipolis, infonned
deputies that the car was parked in Kanauga when it was taken.
Mullins said he had purchased the car for parts.
An investigation is continuing.

LEGAL SECRETARY
MEDICAL SECRETARY

Monday, August 8th
10:00 am to 2:00 pm
French 500 Room

-

�Commentary

July 31. 1994

Sunday Times-Sentinel I A4

House bill paves U.S. highways with . PQr~
A Division of

~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614)

'1'.12 -21 56

ROBERT L. WINGElT
Publisher
11011,\RT WILSON JR .
Eu"Cutive Editor

MAI{(;AI{ET LEHEW
Contrulla

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, lnlitnJ Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publisher.; AsSIIl' tallon

LElTERS Of OPINION m welcome. They should he le ss lhan
300 w ords lo ng All leiters are subj ec t to editing and rn u .~ t be sig ned with

nwne, addre ss and telepbone number No unsigra.·J letters will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, addre ssi ng iss ues , not

personalities.

Move to reform Congress
bogs down in Congress
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
.
WASHINGTON - When in doubl about a name, !he rcfom1-nunded
Republican said, he refers to Democratic congress ~en as "Mr. Chairman," figuring !hat !here arc so many comm tttees. tt sa good bet Jhc t1tle
will fit
.
There are 266 counting subcommittees, House and Senate. Smce
Democrats head them, and !here arc 312 Democrats in Congress, Rep.
David Dreier's bantering guess gets good odds.
He talked about it in Jhc House, complaining of inaction .on congressional reform legislation that would cut !he number of commtttees as part
of an effon to improve the way Congress operates.
.
.
Much of Jhc le):islation is inside stuff, proceduml, parochtal, and easdy
shelved in Jhc final weeks of a Congress that has more compellmg business at hand. Items like committee realignment, two-year budgcung and
curbs on proxy voting don't mean a lot away from Jhc Capt to I.
But reform does, especially after eth1cs ep1sodcs like the House bank
overdrafts. The reform issue took hold in the 1992 campai~n, and is a
challengers' !heme again this year. All !hat helped getlhe Jomt Commtttee on-Jhc Organization of Congress created 111 the first place, to draft
changes rtmt would make Jhings work better.
After a year 36 hearings and 240 witnesses, Jhe panel proposed relatively modest c'hanges for each branch, including one aimed at reducing
congressional payrolls by about 12 percent over the next five years, to
match reductions !hat arc supposed to be made elsewhere m government.
There was to have been action early !his year, but Jhc reform package
is stalled, in part because of olhcr priorities, in part because changong ~
system has to affect somcbody's powers. and Jhc elders who have II don t
yield it willingly.
.
There's somclhing nauering about being addressed as "Mr. Chanman," even if it is because the olher guy forgot your name. And it's more
than a title because committees have staffs, and Jhc chrurman ts Jhc boss.
Politically, the best-selling item on the reform list is a measur~ !hat
would make Congress subject 10 the laws it passes on employee nghts,
civil rights, health, safety- Jhe whole array of requirements !he government sets for private business.
. .
That's a marketable issue, a sure-fife applause line smce lhe 1992 campaign. Dreier said there's a guarameed standing ovation for !he congressman or candidate who tells Jhc crowd Congress shouldn't be exempt from
laws that cover everybody else.
So a bill on !hal score is likely to be approved, but separately, not as
part of the reform package. That would strip away one of the selling
points for the more techmcal stde.of con~ess10nal reform_. .
But even that is complex. Cnucs ObjeCt to any provlSlon that would
subject Congress to regulation by the executive branch agencies that make
the rules for pnvate employers. on grounds !hat it would breach separation of powers.
To get around that problem, there would be separate compliance
offices in Congress. So it still wouldn't be the system !hat covers everyone else. Even so, a compliance bill could put a popular reform vote on
the congressional record before the Nov: 8 clccuons._
.
Republicans say !hey want more; sccmg an 1ssuc 111 all Jh1s,_they_blame
the Democratic establishment that controls Congress for 10act10n on
broador reform efforts. "It is ironic that the majority leadership appears to
be in favor of just about every kind of reform ... c~cept reform for lhe
Congress itself," said Rep. BiU Emerson of M1ssoun. as House Republicans tried unsuccessfully to force acuon on !he whole package m midJuly.
' more drast1c
· c ha· nges ~~
· lhe
And there are Republican proposals for •ar
name of reform - terin limits, the balanced budget amendment, and 1tem
veto power.
.
.
. .
.
Rep. Peter Hoekstra of Mich1gan 1s camprugnmg for a nauonal referendum system so that voters could tell Congress what they want done on
such matters. "Get ready," he 10ld the House.
Improbable as !hat is, it has political appeal.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, July 31,the 212th day of 1994. There are 153 days
left in !he year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 31, 1777, the Marquis de Lafayeue, a 19-year-old French
nobleman, was made a major geneml in lhe Continental Army after offering his help to the rebelling American colonists.
On this date:
In 1556, St. lgnalius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus - the
Jesuit order of Catholic priests and brothers - died in Rome.
In 1875, the 17th president of the United States, Andrew Johnson, died
in Carter Station, Tenn., at age 66.
In 1948, President Truman helped dedicate New York International
Airport at Idlewild Field. (The airpon was later renamed John F. Kennedy
International Airpon.)

WASHINGTON - Rep. John
Doolittle, R-C alif., is a conscrvaLiv e so phomore lawmake r who
made a name for himself during his
first term by altacking the perks
and privile ges of his Hou se colleagues.
Comc !his November, Dooliltlc
may have something else to brag
abou t back hom e: $2 milhon in
federal highway funds to help build
a "loop" around a heavily con gcstcd area of Lake Tahoe, Calif.
Doolililc's pmjecl is hardly umque.
lt 's just another drop of pork in a
lard -bu c ket of a highway bill
recently approved by !he House of
ReprescntaJivcs.
Despite partis;m strife on health
care and crime, House lawmakers
arc forging rare consensus by
dtviding up the spoils of public
works proJects. For a conservallvc
like Doolittle, winning money for
his highway loop was as simp le as
writing a letter. "We didn't have to
do any arm-lw isting or anything,"
a Doolilllc staffer told us . "They
(Public Works Committee staffers)
said they were accepting applications. All we needed to do was
wnte a letter and present it. We gol
(lhc project) and it amazes me."

This year was supposed to heraid a new era for this kind of public
works spending. It's the year !hat
Ytce President AI Gore prom1sed

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Bin stein
ro "reinvent government., " which
mcluded a pledge 10 end Jhe wasteful practice of loading up highway
bills wilh "demonstration projcns" to placate politicians. Now
it's gut-check time for the reinventing-govcmmcnt crowd.
The House and Senate versions
of the highway bill could hardly be
more diffcrcnl. The Sena1e bill to
designate the National Highway
System is literally three pages long
and adds no new spending.
But the House literally took !he
low road . lts version of the high way bill is 176 pages long, most of
it laced wilh line-item requests by
members for special favors and
"must-need" projects. Rep. Norm
Mmcta, D-Calif., chairman of the
House Committee on Public Works

and Transporlation. boasls about
producing a bill !hat trimmed a hst
of more !han 900 rC&lt;juests totahng
more than S30 btllton 10 a mere
283 projects. But dcmons1rat10n
projects will still cost taxpayers
$1.5 billion if the House vcrston
stays inJaet The two sides wtiiLron
out their differences m conference.
Senate public works chatrman
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., con trois Jhe fate of the highway btll tn
the Senate and vowed 10 us that
there will not be a Nauonal H1ghway System bill !his year unless all
the demonstration projects arc
taken out. "Essentially we've got
10 put a slop to all Jhi s pork barrei,'' Baucus told our assoCiate
Andrew Contc. "Some members of
Congress want to spend dollars in
their di stri cts regardless of the
merit and regardl ess of Jhe
deficit. "
Though the results arc the same,
pork barrel spe nding on public
works is opera ling under an
assumed id enltty thi s year. With
demonstration projects gCiling a
bad name, Jhesc projects have now
been euphemistically labeled " high
priority congressional projects."
So what do our elected representa-

uves cons1der hLgh pnonty for
the commg year? Here LS a parual
hst:
...
- A $100,000 fea~~blluy study
for a state-of-Jhe-art· ~~~ermodal
transportation facthty for the
town of Van Buren, Ark.~ p&lt;&gt;pulauon 17,500 and home d1str1ct of
committee member Rep : Ttm
Hutchtnson, R-Ark. Appropnauons
commlltce member Rep. Marcy
Kaplur, D-Oh10, reccJvcd $5 m.LI hon for her dtstnct to butld an
111termodal_facthty 1.n Toledo, Ohm.
- Retmng Mmonty Leader
Rep. Robert MLehel, R-IlL,
recetved $2 mtlhon for the Peona
Heartland Rtverfront Project com plete w1th restaurants, shops and
fesuval sLtcs along the Ilhnots
R1ver.
. .
- Nearly $]3 m}ll10~ would
pay for 3.6 mt es o pe estnan
promenades m the Atlanta dJStrLct
of former pubhc works comm1ttee
member Rep. John Lew1s,_ D-Ga.,
m ume for Jhc 1996 Olymptcs. .
. -At the request ofappropnallons subcommlltee chatrman Rep:
Lou1s Stokes, D-Oh10, Cleveland s
new baseball and b~sketball sport
compl~x would rccctve $1 mtlhon
for a s1gnage ~rogram, traffic Sig nals and street1mprovcmcnts.
- As usual , the biggest players
on the Appropriations and Public
Works Commillecs wrenched a
generous share of Jhc pic for !hemselves. Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va .,
chair of the surface transportation
subcommittee of public works,
won approval for two projects in
his home state worth a total of
$24.4 million. Rep . Joseph
McDade, R-Pa., ranking member
of the Appropriations Commiucc
and a legendary provider for his
constituents, racked up three projects for his district worth $13.4
million. None of Jhe demonstrauon
projects arc in Mincta's home district
"If we're ever going to get control of the deficit, we cannot only
not let these trends CQiltinue, we've
got to SlOp !hem," Baucus toUI us.
"The best way I know to end a
budget deficit is to make cuts, not
to add on demos."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Who flung d u n g ? - - - - - Rupe, I am sure you know !hal
!here arc currently tltrec outstanding unsolved mysteries being discussed. The firs! is the 0. J. mystery. This will tax the minds of all
U. S. citizens including Angela
Lansbury.
Secondly, there has been for
ages, and still arc, attempts made to
solve the mystery of "who broke
the lock on the hen house door?"
Most prominent historians rule out
the fox as the perpetrator of this
cnmc.
Last but not least, there is the
mystery as to who threw !he horse
droppings on Mrs. X's front porch?
"Notice, we arc not disclosing the
name of the owner of the house. It
might cause embarrassment to !hat
person or her family." This
unsolved mystery should be titled
"WHO FLUNG DUNG."
The first two mysteries we will
leave to the imagination and scientific opinion of the crime solvers.
The Jhird mystery is most intriguing and has never been solved to
date.
To begin this story, the following facts arc related.
I ) That Jh is crime took place in
the early fall of 1932.
2) That some unknown person
allegedly dropped or threw horse
manure on Jhe front porch of Mrs.
X's house.
3) That Mrs. X called the sheriff
office. Hank Young and Otho
Tracy, deputies, responded promptly.
4) That at least one half dozen
male students at PHS were rounded
up, questioned and later released.
The girls "Junior/Senior Shakespeare Club"at Pomeroy High
School was meeting at the home of
Harry Ohlinger on Lincoln Hill.
This house is located on a hill
directly above Mrs. X's home. Mrs.
X told the deputies that someone in
that location threw and hit her

house with horse droppings.
The sheriff, after looking over
the scene. came to the conclusion
that someone had _intentionally

Fred W. Crow
dropped or threw thiS horse dung.
According to Mrs. X,thc porch had
been hit several times and that she
believed that the pelting of the
house apparently originated from
the vicinity of the Ohlinger house.
Upon funhcr investigation the
detectives
learned
of a
Junior/Senior Shakespeare Club
meeting at the home of Harry
Ohlinger. This was a girls' meeting
but it had been noticed that there
had been Junior and Senior boys
congregating on Jhc outside of this
home. The officers decided to
question these suspects. Among
those who were present and who
later scrambled when they saw !he
officers comin~ were Carl Jennings, Bill McQuigg, Phil Clifton,
Jr. and several other individuals.
These named individuals were all
members of the Mystic Knights of
the Sea. This was a boy's club at
PHS wilh Fred W. Crow, Jr. as !he
Kingfish, Carl Jennings as Andy
and Bill McQuigg as Amos. The
others named above were also
members of !his dub.
After the police car arrived, Carl
Jennings took off running across
the hill and down the steps of property owned by Sophia Fisher now
the Mila Stark Woods property.
Carl was later caught by the deputy
when he was wading in !he Ohio
River.
Carl explained to the deputy
that he was in the river to cool his
feet and that he often did this. Carl
was taken to jail but later convinced Deputy Young that he was
innocent. His story was that Jimmy
Karr wanted to become a member
of the Mystic Knights of the Sea.

Prior to the police arriving, Carl
had told Jimmy that he should go
to the house of Mrs. X and honk
the horn of Mrs. X's daughter's
boyfriend's car. Someone from
Mrs. X's house came out and seeing no one, returned to the house.
Jimmy Karr !hen honked the horn a
second time. It is Carl's statement
that the honking of the car horn
caused the police to come instead
of the alleged droppings.
Nevertheless, the police ruled
out Carl as a suspect in the horse
droppings and believed his story
!hat he was at the pany to get icc
cream and cake. They knew that
Carl would not fib about cooling
his feet or icc cream and cake.
Later that night the sheriff's
office found Junior Clifton hiding
in a barrel located at Jhc comer of
Sycamore a11d Main Streets. His
story "as that he was resting and
didn't want to be disturbed. He was
also tak~n to jail,then released.
Howard Ewing, dressed in a boy
scout uniform, was also taken to
jail and latcr released.
Bill McQuigg was a strong suspect in this case due to !he fact that
he lived next door to Dorothy
Ebersbach. (Now Jhc J. B. O'Brien
home.) Dorothy had a pony that
had free access to the hilL The
sherifrs investigation revealed !hat
Bill McQuigg had been seen picking up some objects off of the
ground which resembled the
objects found on Mrs. X's porch.
Upon questioning, Bill convinced
Deputy Tracy that he was gathering
walnuts off of lhe ground. No further investigation was made
although it was dc.termincd that
there were no walnut trees on !his
propeny.
On the evening in question, the
writer planned to attend !his meeting but subsequent events caused
him to return to his home. I told
Hank Young that I had nolhing 10

do with this matter and I am certain
!hat none of the Mystic Knights of
!he Sea would do such a dastardly
deed. Hank told me he was questioning me because I was the Kingfish of this club. How could anyone
who knows me believe that I was
involved in such shenanigans.
The next school day I was called
into the office of C. J. Rhodes, Jhe
Superintendent. He told me and the
olher Mystic Knights of the Sea,
that unless we gel rid of our sweat
shirts engraved with skull and bone
emblems, he would suspend cac!L
member from school. A meeting
was called by this club and no one
wanted to be kicked out of schoot.
So !hat ended the story of the Mystic Knights of the Sea.
·
As you know, there are many
unsolved questions pertaining to
!his mystery.
I) Why did the sheriffs office
suddenly cease its investigation?
2) Did the sheriff find any
physical evidence on the porch of
Mrs. X?
3) Was a laboratory analysis
made of the evidence?
4) Did the sheriff question any
of !he girls as to whether one of
!hem was !he guilty person? ·
5) Did Mrs. X's family conjure
this story in order 10 get the
deputies to come to her house?
6) Would they have investigated the car honking story?
For the record, Tippy Dye was
not involved in this matter. He was
home studying.
In God we trust.
Carry on.
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, criticize or comment on any subject
(except religion or politics) are
encouraged tu write to Mr.
Crow, in care of this newspaper.

Clinton's health care bill: D O A - - - - - - - - - - - Lill:e the apocryphal feline wilh expected to unanimously oppose Canadian national health insurance nomic act together. The Business
nine lives Bill Clinton will have any Democratic version of the , program in which !he federal gov- Roundtable, comprised of leaders
escaped ~ther political demise if health plan, the House leadership is ernment pays everybody's health of 200 of the nation's largest busiany "reasonable facsimile" of his reduced to working only the 256 bi lis. A second group of 70 nesses, opposes any system that
Democrats will vote against any would give any tax breaks or ecohealth care plan passes.
.
bill that does not include abonion nomic advantages to small busiThe prognosis. isn't g~. Right
Chuck Stone
services. And a third group of 35 nesses.
now the plan 1s 10 mtcns1ve care,
hooked up to an IV and ~e•ng Democrats in order to get the Democrats will vote against the bill
But like the ttead of mighty
if it does cover abortion services.
administered oxygen every ume a majority of 218 to pass a bill.
arm1es, health care reform is an
But
as
that
irreverent
Gaelic
Even the polls can't decide idea whose lime has come.
congressional opponent calls a
wag,
Mr.
Dooley,
once
mused,
the American people stand.
where
press conference.
It may surprise some of you If one uses Clinton's qualifying "Th' Dimmycratic party ain't on Two Tuesdays ago, the USA as it did me - to know that the
Today/CNN/Gallup poll reported
phrase for welfare reform, "wel- speak.in' terms with itsilf."
Oh, they speak to each other all that 55 percent of Americans were American Civil Libenics Union
fare as we know it," then health
defines health care as a civillibenv
care reform, "as Clinton knows right, especially in bars and at bac- opposed to health care reform. Last that should not be denied to anychanalian activities.
Wednesday, the New York
it," will not be enacled.
But three groups of 90, 70 and Times/CBS News poll reponed that one.
The entire health care debate has
Responding to the success of the
been reduced to a series of numbers 35 Democrats are united in their 79 percent of the American people anti-abonion lobby in squelching
oppositions
to
a
health
plan
that
believe it is "very im(XI1ant" that debate on the merits of the full
- 256 218, 187, 90, 70 and 35.
does
not
satisfy
their
various
agenClinton's
universal coverage plan range of reproductive health serAlgeb~a defines the politics of
das. The ~roup of 90 wants a "sin- is passed
health care.
vices - including abortion - the
Business can't even get its ceo- ACLU contends that the Health
Because 187 Republicans are gle-payer ' plan modeled after !he

Care Reform Bill of Rights is as
indigenous to democracy as the
rights to freedom of speech and
assembly and freedom of religion.
The Bill of Rights Article 1
guarantees everybody the right to
receive "adequate, accessible and
affordable health care services
throughout their lives."
Article II respe~:ts "a person's
right to autonomy in decisions concerning medical treatment, including matters of reproductive
choice."
Article III guarantees due process of law for all persons in their
right "to receive information about
their health care, ri'hts, options
and responsibilities.... '
Article IV reaffirms the First
Amendment's right to freedom of
religion and speech by "guaranteeing individuals the right to opt out

.,(the health care system if their
moral convictions or religious
beliefs forbid them from accepting
medical treatment."
.
Wh~t President Clinton has got
to dcc1de - which he seems congenitally unable to do in the Bosnia:
and Haiti crises - is precisely:
where he stands and how much he·
is prepared to give away in order w:
get a lieaith care bill passed.
:
. One thing we do know at this:
JUncture: The original Clinton .
health care bill is already DOA,:
dead on arrival.
Chuck Stone is a syndicated :
writer for Newspaper Enterprise·
Association.
:
(For inrormation on bow to ;
communicate electronically witb :
Ibis columnist and otbers, con- :
tact America OnUne by callt.a 1·;
800-827-4i364, ext 8317.)
•

Ohio/W.Va.
Prisoners eager to lodge
at new northern W.Va. jail
July 31, 1994

By A.V. GALLAGHER
Associated Press Writer
MOUNDSVILLE , W.Va. Prisoners want to get out of the
West Virginia Penitentiary. That's
not news . But officials say some
prisoners are eager to get into !he
new Norlhern Regional Jail.
Despite construction problems
- including cracked
ors and
peeling tiles - and c 1ticism r m
the five counties tha arc to send
1heir prisoners, jail dministrator
Paul Kirby said Jhc nmates to be
transferred from c pcnilcntiary
are eager.
"We've had work cre ws of
trusties here and the prisoners are
calling me to say !hey want to get
over here," he said.
The difference between the pris ons is stark.
The new, $19 million , 400-bed
regional jail is gleaming, electronically controlled and air-conditioned. Some of its prisoners will
carry keys to open their cells and
wtll have individual televisions.
The other is a huge, brooding
mass of stone, a structure often
described as a fortress piled into a
residential neighborhood of
Moundsville, on the Ohio River 30
miles soulh of Steubenville, Ohio.
The penitentiary, built in 1866,
· has yellowed. Its main administrative offices have been dosed
because !hey will not pass flfe safety standards. Prisoners live in
cramped, dark cells, sweltering in
summer and freezing in the winter.
· The state Supreme Court has
ordered the penitentiary closed
because it was unfit for human
habitation and violated the constitutional ban against ''cruel and
unusual punishment." The new
prison at Mount Olive, Fayette
County, is expected to open in
October.
The re~ional jail is a hybrid

facility in that half of its 400 beds
will be used as a medium - and min imum -security pri son. It is huge
compared 10 Jhe more Jhan 100-hecl
Easlcrn Regional Jail in W.ar~ns ­
burg, the first of 10 10 open. It is
also larger !han the 300-bcd region al jail in Charleston.
Many prisoners had been appre hensive aboul the move this summer that will send the toughest of
them 10 Mount Olive, and mini mum- and medium-security
inmates to the new prison -regional
J3ll 10 Moundsville pas1urc. ahout
1-1/2 miles from !he penitentiary.
Many feared the new quarters
would mean more regimen and
stricter control.
That was before word got ou1
from those sent 10 Jhe reg1onal jail
to work, Kirby said.
Kirby, deputy administraiOr of
the penitentiary and a corrections
official for 19 years, knows the
new prison by heart.
His pride obvious, he shows off
the multiple, clcctronically-con troUed security, the vastly superior
work areas for prisoners employed
by Prison Industries, and Jhc educational and medical areas.
He says any prisoner must clear
six electronic blocks inside !he jail
before getting to an outside fence.
In an upstairs tower, his face
eerie from the dim lights, Ktrby
leaned over a Star Trek -like black
panel that Contained yellow and red
decals and red and green lights.
"One person can vic w 96 cells
at one time," he said. Tha room
allow a single correctional officer
to oversee an entire section.
The officer also may speak to a
prisoner direcily in his cell, automatically release !he prisoner from
his cell and monitor his activity.
Another switch allows the officer to eavesdrop into Jhc cell.
The room is shielded from pris-

oners by mirrored glass.
A control panel has an emergen cy switch to pass control of the sec tion to Jhc prison's central receiv ing office. A guard trapped in Jhe
tower can escape up a ladder to !he
roof.
The central office is so secure
that its air comes from a separate
intake, Kirby said.
In the minimum -security section, the control panel will be
exposed to the prisoners. Kirby
said inmales will be expected 10
take much more rcsponstbility for
themselves in !his section.
They will be given keys to their
cells and will have individual television hookups if !hey wish to buy
a television . A unit manager will
supervise inmates in 48 cells, Kirby
said.
The jail plans 10 send out six man crews to help in area work
projects at a cost to governments of
$300 a month, Kirhy said.
The new prison's cells arc about
8 feet by Ll feet. compared to 5
feet by 7 feel in the penitentiary.
The new prison al so has larger
recreational areas, ltght -QamJed
walls, spacious rooms, ""'hiplc
cells equipped for disabled prison ers, expanded medical faciliucs and
classrooms wired for computers
terminals.
In the Prison lndustries ,.build mg, inmates will build mattresses,
run a print shop, bind books and
make signs. Vocational classes will
have other options. Kirby said.
In the kitchen, bright steel gurneys and polished kitchen utensil s
were everywhere.
Kirby said civilians will cook,
inmates will carry food to eating
areas, correctional officers will
serve the food, and inmates will
clean up.
"I dare somebody to tear thi s
up," he said of the kitchen.

Sunday Times-Sentinel /AS

No rtrftffN": .A.
' .•

co tf~ i c n ·o
'

NEARING COMPLETION - Paul Kirby,
an administrator al the North Regional Jail arid
Correctional Faciliiy, posed Thursday outside
He is not happy, however. wilh
linoleum tile !hat is bubbling up in
places and had to be replaced in
others.
He and members of Jhc Region al Jail and Correc tional Faciltl y •
Aulhority cnticized Pray Construction Co .. cspec1ally for crack s in
!he concrete noor because of fauhy
pouring of !he concrete.
Kirby said the cracks have been
gouged out and covered with a
sealant and paint.
Pray has denied a problem
exists and said it would work with
Jhc state to make sure the prison ts
acceptable.
The five counties ihat would
send !heir prisoners to Jhc regional
jail arc angry over the authority's
decision to allow the Dtvision of
Correc tions to run the prison. They
arc Jhrcatcning to withhold thei r
pnsoncrs.
State Sen. Larry Wiedcbu sch .

.

•

OIONAL

.L

FACI!

the nearly-completed building outside of
Moundsville, W.Va. Kirby said inmates should
be m•~&gt;ed in by the end or August. (AP)

D-Marsllall. sa Ill Ute cnulll y com mission wants more powt' r.

" I thmk it's comtng along very
well," said Wi cdcbusch, who
recently toured the pri son. " I think
itts an ouL~tanding inslllUIJon . The
sealant they put down on il1c cracks
is slrongcr than concrete. We· love
it."

Kirby sa id prisoners should
bcg1n arriving in August. He " a1
Caf.cr as the prisoners to begin th ~
mow.

" Look, we've got a $20 mi II ion
fa cilily here. Lei us get on with the
joh . We ' re excited and wc ·rc
ready. I want Jhc taxpayers 10 sc(' il
and he proud of it." Kirby sa til .

Fernald managers made
millions as consultants
CINCINNATI (AP) - Former
managers of the Fernald uranium
processing plant were paid more
than $2 million in consulttng fees
to help defend against two law suit~
plant neighbors and workers filed,
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported
Saturday.
Vouchers submiUcd to the fed eral government show !hat 19 for mer management and supervisory level employees of Nalional Lead

Co. of Ohio were paid as consultants in !he two cases, which ended
in settlements.
Weldon Adams. a former assistant plant manager, made $657,1 33
as a consultant. Three others made
at least $100,000, the newspaper
said.

NLO operated the plant for the
U.S. Department of Energy umil

19R5 . '(he plant used to process
uranium for nuclear weapons.

Ohio News in Brief:___, Bill promises more arrests in home violence

Ex-mayor sentenced on charges

CINCINNATI -Former North Bend Mayor Lawrence Drew
has been sentenced to six months in jail and five years' probation
for taking bribes and theft in office.
.
Earlier this month, Drew pleaded gmlly to seven counts of
bribery and eight counts of !heft in office in a ticket-fixing scheme.
He was sentenced Friday.
Drew was one of several Norlh Bend officials involved in scandals this year. The village is about 10 miles west of Cincinnati.
.
Former police Capt. Jess Wynn pleaded no contest earhcr th1s
month to four counts of theft in office. Wynn was set to be sentenced Aug. 5.
. .
.
.
Former Police Chief James Brown 1s_ m pnson after pleadmg
guilty in April to two counts each of theftm office and unauthonzed
usc of municipal propeny. He used !he pollee ~omputer system to
help a truck driver with a drunken-drivmg convtcuon obtam a commercial driver's license.

Couple battles city hall over sign
CINCINNATI -A suburban Cincinnati resident who painted an
anti-police slogan painted on his home is not giving up his fight for
free speech.
"If we have to, we'll go all !he way 10 the Supreme Coun," Ron
Pelfrey said Friday. "I said that in the beginning. Now 11' s show
time.' '
,
Pelfrey pleaded no contest Thursday_ i~ Forest P:u-k Mayor s
Coun to seven citations for vtolaung the CLty s stgn ordinance.
Pelfrey had painled "If you want protection in Forest Park, buy a
handgun,'' on the side of his house.
.
Pelfrey and his wife, Lisa, were 10ld July 5 !hat !hey had un!ll
July II to remove the message because it violated !he city ordinance.
Acting on the advice of !heir lawyer, the coupl~ painted over !he
sign July 18. Pelfrey said an appeal has been ftled m Hanulton
County Municipal Coun.
.
The couple pain led the sign after the~ eaUed pobce June 28 to
repon what they said was a stolen satellite d1sh. They were an~ry
that it took police more !han Jhrec hours to respond and !hat a pohce
rcpon was not filed.
.
.
.
Police Chief Steve Vollmar srud Jhe dish was not stolen. Primestar, a subsidiary of Time Warner Inc., said it was repossessed.

Cause sought for fire at business
CINCINNATI - Fire investigators were searching for Jhc cause
of a fire that gulled a two-story furniture showroom and warehouse.
Three fire departments worked more that two hours on Fnday to
contiol Jhe flfc at Stan Bloom Furniture.
.
.
Two firefighters were injured. One suffered smoke mhalatton;
the other injured his neck.
.
Thick smoke, in shades of black, gray and yellow1sh-grecn,
chased many neighbors indoors.
The store had been in the neighborhood for at least 20 years,
_
neighbors said.
No one was in the store at !he ume of the fire.

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Pres.~ Writer
COLUMBUS - A pendtng bill
in the Senate may lead to more
arrests in domestic violence cases,
but Jhe crime will remain a misdemeanor for first-time violalors.
Legislation awaiting action in
the Senate Judiciary Commtttee
designates arrest as the preferred
course of action in such cases
unless police have specific and justifiable reasons for doing otherwise.
Domestic violence now is classified as a category one misde meanor, with a possible sentence of
up to 6 months in jail and maximum fine of $1,000.
Subsequent convtctions raise the
penalty to a category four felony
that could carry up to five years in
jail and $2,500 fine.
Sen. Bcuy Montgomery, R-Pcrrysburg, headed a subcommittee
that wrote the pending legislation
from several House and Senate
bi !Is on the subject.
She said elevating domestic violence to a felony on first offense
was not considered.
That is because domestic violence essentially is a form of
assault, and a first-lime assault is a
category one misdemeanor.
"We're trying to make them
equivalent," Montgomery said.
However, the proposed bill does
contain other enhancements
designed to encourage police at
scenes of domestic violence to
leave with someone in handcuffs.
It would provide for statewide
enforcement of criminal domestic
violence temporary protection
orders and increase penalties for
violaJing !hem.
Police no longer could require a

Capitol notebook
victim to file a written complaint as
a condition for making an arrest.
Unchanged in the proposal is
the basic definition of domes lie
violence: "No person shall know ingly cause or attempt to cause
physical harm to a family or household member."
Montgomery is a former prosecutor who is challenging Democratic Attorney General Lee Fisher
in the Nov. 8 election.
Rep. Michael Fox, R-Ham_ihon,
seemed a linlc fmstraled dunng a
recent meeting of !he stale Control-

ling Board.
The panel was considering an
item that would clear the way for
the state to appeal a Perry Counly
judge's ruling that the st:.llc sys1cm
of funding education was unconsti tutionally unfair.
.
Prcs1dent Colleen O'Brien satd
the board was not actually voting
on whether to appeal, but on a
request to waive compclitive bid ding rules to hire a lawyer to han dle Jhc appeal .
The State Board of Educalion
had voted against appeal, but Gov.
George Yoinovich asked Attorney
General Lee Fisher to appeal anyway.

LoHery numbers
By The AJc~ociated Press
Here arc the winning numbers
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 4-3-4
Pick 4: 8-9-9-4
Buckeye 5: 15-20-22-28-32
The Ohio Loncry will pay out
$43)1009 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daLly game.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,427,647.50.
.
In the other daily game, Ptck 4
Numbers players
wagered
$321,260.50 and will share
$57,500.
Sales in Buckeye 5 toialcd
$512.230.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Louo drawing was $8 mtllion.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 9-6-6
Daily 4: 5-5-9-2
Cash 25: 2-3-8- I 1-13-24

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I HOME OWNED IIID OPEU1ED I
"Celebraring Our Tenth Anniversary"
O.Hipolla

It all reminded Fox of a football
game in which one team scn1 in
player after player 10 mn the ball,
only to sec them injured and carried oil Jhc field.
''The crowd was cheering 10
give the ball to the star, Bubba.
'Give the hall to Bubba. Give Jhe
ball to Bubba.'
''Fi nally the quarterback
hollered back 10 lilc crowd. 'Bubba
don ' I wan!' the bal~' " Fox said.
Hou se Finance Chairman
Patrick Sweeney, D-Cievcland,
voted 10 let !he statc appeal its loss
in the school funding case. But he
h:1rl some reservations.

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424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

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�Page-A6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

PomEiroy-Middleport-_Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

- -·Area deathS·-- Clintons
Emogene Wells Fisher

POMEROY - Emogene Wells Fisher, 61, Middlepon, died Friday,
Jul v 29 !994 in Holzer Medical Center.
B o~ Aug. 26, !932 in Cheshire, the daughter of Mary Rife Wells and
1hc late Asa Edmond Well s, she was a rcured nurse at Holzer Medical
Center

She was a member of the Heath UniLCd Methodist Church of Middlepan, a 1953 graduaLC of the Holzer School of Nursing, and active in the
opcrauon of the Fisher Funeral Home.
.
She is 1urvived by her mother, Mary Wells of M1ddlepon; husband,
Boh Fisher of M1ddlepon; sons, Bruce Fisher of Middleport, and Dav1d
Fhhrr of Pans. France: and si sters and brothcrs-m-law , Donna and R1ch
Jones of Pomcrov, and Marjorie and Chester Wigal of Middleport.
Se rvices will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, with AI
HarL1on and 1hc Rev . Vcmagayc Sulli van officiating. Burial will be in the
Rivcrv1c w Cemetery, Middlepon. Friends may call between 2-4 and 7-9
r m. \1 onday at the fun eral home.
.
.
Contnbutions ma y be made to the Heath Umted MethodiSt Church,
.149 S. Thlfd Ave., Middleport.

Martha E. Jeffers
ALBANY - Manha Eugenia Jeffers, 61 , Woodyard Road, Albany,
d1ed Friday, Jul y 29, 1994 at her rw dence.
Born ScpL 10, 1932 in San Salvador, El Salvador, daughter of the late
Marco A. Escobar Sr. , and Maria T. Barillas Escobar of San Francisco,
Cal if. , she was a farmer and homemaker, and was a concen pianist by the
age of9.
.
. .
She was a member of Christ the Kmg Par1sh m Athens, a member of
the Meigs County Farm Bureau, and an International Student Exchange
sponsor for Ohio Uni versity. She was a fonmcr member of Columbia
Grange No. 2435.
Surviving in add1~on to her mother arc her husband, Gene Lowell Jeffers; a daughter and son-in -law, Margie and M1ke Lawson of Racme;
three sons and daugh~ers - in-law, Lester and Lisa Jeffers of Athens. and
Marco and Jackie Jeffers, and Robert and Pann Jeffers, all of Albany; II
grandchildren; two brothers, Marco Escobar Jr. and Raben Escobar, both
of San Francisco: and two sisters, Normel Robel of San Jose, Calif., and
Dora Lewis of San Francisco.
,
She was also preceded in death by an infant daughter, Patricia A. Jeffers, and by an infant grandson, Carstens Jeffers.
Services will be II a.m. Monday in Christ the King Catholic Church,
Athens, with Monsignor Donald E. Horak officiating. Burial will be in the
Atl1ens County Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home, Albany, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
A rosary service will be conducted in the funeral home at 3:45 p.m
Sunday, as will a vigil for the deceased at 7 p.m.

Norman S. Sprouse
GALLIPOLIS - Services will be held at I p.m. Sunday in the Willis
Funeral Home for Norman S. Sprouse, 84, 3596 Swan Creek Road,
Crown Cily, who died Thursday, July 28, 1994 in the Veterans Administration Hospital, Huntington, W. Va
The Rev. Jack Parsons will officiate. Burial will be in the Sanders
Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Bruce Whitt, Tommy Cummons, Bobby Cummons,
Keith Campbell, Rick Clary and Dillard Sanders.

Ada M. Writesel
GALLIPOLIS- AdaM. Writesel, 60, 184 Triwnph St, Jackson, formerly of the Poner community, died Saturday, July 30, 1994 in Holzer
Medical Center.
Born March 24, 1934 in Urbana, daughter of the late Frank and Elsie
Nease, she was a homemaker. She was preceded in death by her husband,
Harold D. Writesel Sr., on Dec. 16, 1987.
She is survived by two daughters, Beverley A. Writesel of Jackson,
Ohio, and Cathy Writesel of Jackson, Miss.; seven brothers, Jay Writesel
of Lakewood, Calif.; Harold WriLCsel II and George Writesel, both of
Jackson, Henry Writesef of Gallipolis, Bill Writesel and Arthur Writesel,
both of Bidwell, and Earl WriLCsel of Jackson, Miss.; 14 grandchildren; a
sister, Linda Sawdo of Sturgeonbay, Wis.; a brother, Junior Nease of
Urbana.
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Homer.
Services will be 10 a.m. Tuesday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
with the Rev . Elmer Geiser officiating. Burial will be in the Centenary
Cemetery. Friends may call at the chapel from 6-9 p.m. Monday.

Gene T. Young
GALLIPOLIS - Graveside memorial services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 2, 1994 at Mound Hill Cemetery for GeneT. Young, 66,
• of Fon Lauderdale, Fla., who died March 26, 1994 in Fon Lauderdale.
The Rev. Leland Brehn will officiate.
Mr. Young, a native of Gallia County, was born April 16, 1928, son of
the late Lee Young and Lucille Young Barron. He was a retired electrical
engmccr.
He is survived by his mother and stepfather, Harry and Lucille Barron
of Naples, Fla.; a brother and sister-in-law, Robert and Eva Young of Gallipolis; one uncle and aunt, John (Bill) and Viola McPeak of Fort Lauderdale; and a great-uncle, William (Bill) Sharp of Gallipolis.

Deaths elsewhere
Jim Barrett
. PENSACOLA, Fla. {AP) - Jim
Barrell , who volunteered as an
escort shielding abortion clinic
employees from protesters, was
shot dead outside the clinic Friday.
He was 74.
The man he was escorting, Dr.
John Bayard Britton, also was
killed.
"I didn't go to Korea and serve
my country for 25 years in the service so that these (protesters) can
shoot doctors," Barrett, a retired
Air Force lieutenant colonel, was
quot ed as saying in February's
Gentlemen's Quarterly.
Dr. John Bayard Britton
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)Dr. John Bayard Briuon, who
began performing abortions at a
Pensacola clinic when its doctor
was killed by a protester last year,
was himself shot to death outside
the clinic Friday. He was 69. ·
Briuon's volunteer escort, Jim
Barrell, also was killed.
Briuon had a busy family practice in Fernandina Beach, a small
town north of Jacksonville, and
began traveling to work at the
Ladies Center for Abortion after
Dr. David Gunn was lcilled by an
abortion protester in March 1993.
Chuck Healy
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)
Chuck Healy, a pioneer sportscaster on local television, died Friday
of a hcan attack. He was 77.
A schoolteacher and coach in
Pawling, N.Y., Healy began broadcasting in 1949' after a radio engineer told him he had a good voice.
That year, Healy landed a job as a
sportscaster for Channel 4 in Buf-

falo, then known as WBEN-TV.
After retiring in 1978, Healy
returned to television to host Over
50, a talk show on Buffalo's PBS
affiliate, WNED-TV.
He is survived by his wife, Jean;
three daughters; and eight grand·
children.
Robert L. McCrary
MARIANNA, Fla. (AP) Robert L. McCrary, a judge who
presided over a case that led to the
landmark U.S. Supreme Court
decision giving criminal defendants
the right to a lawyer, died Thursday
in a car ace ident. He was 79.
In the early 1960s, McCrary
presided over Gideon vs. Wain·
wright, a case in Panama City that
led to a Supreme Coun decision
guaranteeing criminal defendants
the right to legal counsel and
helped establish public defenders.
Colin TumbuU
KILMARNOCK, Va. (AP) Anthropologist Colin M. Turnbull,
an authority on the cultures of eastern and central Africa and India,
died Thursday of pneumonia. He
was 69.
Turnbull's 1961 book, The For~
est People, about Zaire, is a stan·
dard text in cultural anthropology.
Other books include The Lonely
African, Wayward Suvants, Ti~t.
Man in Africa, and The Human

Cycle.
He was curator of African eth·
nology at the American Museum of
Natural Histay in New Yart from
I 959 to I 969. and taught anlhro·
pology at several universities
before retiring 10 India, where he
became a Buddhist monk and toolc
the name Lobsang Rigdol.

July

tout health
reform plan
at Mo. rally
By NANCY BENAC
Associated Press Writer
INDEPENDENCE . Mo.
Exhorting Americans to "finish
Harry Truman' s fight ," President
Clinton stood front and center in
the former president' s hometown
Saturday to demand victory in the
long batlle for guaranteed health
msurance.
"Harry Truman would say:
' The buck stops here.' The buck
stops in Congress and the buck
stops with you," Clinton told thousands of cheering supporters
massed on Independence Square.
"Let's push it over the finish
line. "
Clinton teamed up with his wife,
Hillary , and Vice President AI
Gore and his -wife. Tipper. for a
campaign-style rally des igned to
ignite a public outpouring of support as Congress nears a critical
point in the health care debate.
It was their first joint appearance outside Washington since the
campaign, and the White House
clearly was trying to recapture
some of the energy and enthusiasm
that accompanied the unveiling of
Clinton's health care plan last year
but later gave way to doubts about
the details.
But even as Clinton denounced
the "hot air and hot signs" characterizing the rancorous health care
debate, protesters in the distance
chanted their dissenting views,
waving signs such as, "No to
National Health Care," and "It's
Socialism, Stupid."
Supporters chanted in return:
"Pass ll Now! Pass II Now!"
Clinton's audience included
busloads of "reform riders" who
are riding the Health Security
Express bus caravan to Washington

Whitewater hearings end
week
with
_
new
allegations
"d t t"
r::

ay eS 1m0ny
on investigation
•
•
ratses questions
rfl

CONFERRING ON PLAN - Rep. Pat
Williams, D-Mont., second from lert, spoke with
Rep. Bill Richardson, D·N.M., prior to a press
conference on Capitol Hill Friday to discuss a
Democratic health care rerorm package. The
proposal would require most employers to pay
to push Congress to enact Clintonstyle health reform.
Mrs. Clinton sought to put the
focus on the gripping stories of
ordinary Americans riding the
buses, saying their experiences
need to heard "over all the shouting and the back and forth."
Sixteen -year-old
Rachel
Crowthers, who rode the bus from
Portland, Ore., told the crowd she's
been treated "like a second-class
citizen" since going on Medicaid
to meet her medical bills for cancer
treatments.
When protesters booed the soft·
spoken girl's speech, Vice President Gore told the crowd, "It made
me realize how completely out of
touch they are with the people of
this country. Unbelievable."
The Clinton-Gore team made its
stand before the bunting-decorated
county courthouse and a statue of
Truman, who first proposed his
first health care plan in November
1945. Everyone should be guaran-

By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The fir st
week of Whitewater hearings
ended as they began - with panisan rancor - as Republicans fin ished making one allegation of
improper White House meddling
and rrused another.
During testimony by law
enforcement witnesses Friday,
Republicans accused White House
officials of interfering with an
investigation into the suicide of
Vincent Foster in July 1993. lie
was deputy White House counsel
and handled WhiLCwater legal matters for the President Clinton.
GOP lawmakers also raised aile-

more than three-quarters or each workers'
health insurance and aims to cover all Americans by 1999. Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fia., chairman or the House Ways and Committee, Jert,
and Rep. Barbara Kennelly, D-Conn., second
rrom right, look on. (AP)

teed health coverage "regardless of
ability to pay,'' Truman reasoned.
Clinton told the crowd: " Let' s
finish Harry Truman's fight We 're
halfway home and we can go all
the way."
He rejected critics' claims that
his plan to make employers help
pay for their workers' insurance
was "either socialized medicine ,
somehow unethical or bad for the
economy."
Hoping to shake off negative
perceptions about the Clinton plan,
Democratic congressional leaders
are trying to fashion a similar alternative that they characterize as less
bureaucratic and less burdensome
to small business.
With House and Senate votes
expected in the next few weeks, the
administration is kicking off an
intensive two-week lobbying campaign, including 300 hours of local
radio interviews. Each Cabinet
member is committing 30 minutes
a day to in!erviews, and the Clin-

tons and uores plan numerous
appearances as welL
The Health Security Express,
sponsored by labor and health advocacy groups, is carrying advocates for Clinton-style health
reform along routes all around the
country. Many will converge on
Washington next week to deliver
their message to Capitol HilL
One of the most gripping stories
was that of John Cox, a Christian
broadcaster from Athens, Texas,
whose wife, Janeue, died of cancer
last week while he was on a bus
route in Illinois.
Mrs. Co~, whose cancer treat ·
menl was not covered by insurance,
had urged her husband to make the
trip "for me and for the millions of
others who have fallen through the
cracks,'' according to officials of
the Health Security Express.
From Independence, Clinton
was flying to Cleveland to attend a
fund-raiser for Democratic Senate
candidate Joel Hyatt

Then, some Democrats lined up all, are the so -called employer
agamst forcmg employers to pay • mandate, various taxes, new govothers agaiOst the taxes, others ernment programs (such as the '
agamst the coverage of aboruon.
bill's expansion of the Medicare
Republicans mstantl:t hated It
program), and new government
Then cam~ the special I~terests, regulations.
who had a field day castmg the
Even before Gephardt had put
Clinton bill as ~a~gantuan and the final touches on a bill, Repubti·
grossly_ bureaucrauc m Its tangle of cans had dubbed it ''Clintonrcgulauons.
.
.
Gephardt"
MIIhons of Amencans first paid
House ReP.ublican Leader Bob
auenuon to health reform when Michel said: 'This new edition has
they heard about It from the Health a new cover, but the story inside is
Insurance Associabon of Ame~ca: just the same.,
out of the mouthsoftherrTV car
The U.S. Chamber of Comact~rs ~arrydan~ Lotu:~- d ta'l1 0 f merce, which opposes forcing
on use a ou c e s
employers to pay their workers'
the dauntmgly thick tome, they insurance, labeled the bill "the
were ~wayed by the slo~~n~, b~ bride of Frankenstein."
Harry s comments about te .~ 0
Democrats - including the
thou_sa~ds of new b~crats, bbf
president- know the best shot for
~Ul~ ~ w~nungs of ~other 1 · getting a bill through Congress is to
IOnLo- 0 ar urcatiracy · d S te detach it from associations with
. ng ago, '" ouse .an tna
Clinton. Once it passes, of course,
versiOns of the bill, oy~ 1 he can take it back as his.
Democrats tnmmed out cenam
But at times Friday, the logic
u~popular ele~ents of the Chnton verged on surreal.
bill. Out the wmdow went mandaEvery House Democrat who
tory alliances and automauc pnce came to hear about the new bill at
controls. In came concessions to their party caucus Friday morning
worned small busmesses. .
got a 17-page infonnation packet
But Re~ubhcans contmued to Inside was a page reading: Key
slam the bill, for the yery thmgs Differences from the Clinton Plan.
that were gone. And F~day • House
Among them:
Repubh,can leaders satd Amenca
• "NO new, large government
shouldn l_let ~own Its guard_ yet.
bureaucracies to run the system."
Sull ahve 10 the House bill, after
• "NO disruption to the large

By JOHN SOLOI\ION
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- The White
House defense strategy became
clear during the first week of
Whitewater hearings: Provide a
uniform story and simply deny any
documentary evidence to the contrary.

II made for good political theater- the president's most important aides sitting elbow to elbow,
insisting in unison under intense
questioning that they did nothing
wrong.
But it gives Republicans in the
Senate and House fresh ammunition for the second week of the
congressional inquiry.
Under oath, several White
House aides disputed embarrassing
or contradictory references about
them in documents, handwrilten
notes or the personal diaries of colleagues. Some made outright
denials; others said they couldn't
recalL

seal.

Gaul has been lambasting Hoke
for failing to make good on the

Hoke called that "'the same old
Sweeney said Hoke should have
sat out a vote on a telecommunica- tired political claptrap that we have
tions bi II because "a guy who been hearing for so long."
owns $1 million wonh of stock in
The American cities with the highRed Carpet Cellular, AT&amp;T, Bell
South and NYNEX has no right esl proportions of singles in their total
populations are Washington,
voting on any piece of legislation adult
D.C. Uwo in lhreel; Detroit lone in
that could affect competition in the lhreel; Los Angeles lone in fourl;
communications business."
Philadelphia (one in fourl; and Chica Hoke said he has an asset man- go lone in five).
ager who handles financial transac·
tions for him. "I don't manage
Joe Lynn's Flowers
them, the people that do have dis·
4fl STATE ST · GALLIPOLIS
cretion - they don't call me up,''
he said. "I have minimal knowl·
edge of what I own in terms of
financial assets."
446-6488
That insulation from the day-today transactions is like a trust "for
all intents and purposes," he said,
adding that "the notion that my
assets are influencin~ my voting
record is preposterous. '
Hoke has received filing extensions for his disclosure fam, which
now is due Aug. I, the House ,
Clerk's.office said.
The fonn initially was due May
15.
Hoke said he sought delays at
his accoWitant' s request
At the Gaul campaign, Sweeney
said "I have no problem with stay·
ing in the law as far as exten·

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"My problem is, why not ftle?"
Jlro!!IHise.
· h'IS campaign
·
e prom•'sed m
he sai\1.
10 put all his personal holdings in a
And the Gaul team's support
bhnd trust. He obviously has staff at the Democratic Con~es­
reneged on his promise," said Tom ,c;ionaf Campaign Commmee
Sweeney of the Gaul campaign.
jumped in, as well, with spokesman
"I would argue the point with Mike Casey calling Hoke a "tlipMr. Hoke that he is being forth· flopper" who's "compiling a pretcoming with his constituents."
ty sad record 10 run on.''

VINTON

G.llla County lli•J-Loy Yard
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I

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STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 Third lwe.

Braun were sworn in Friday on Capitol ll ill
before the Senate Banking Committee, which is
holding hearings on the Whitewater affair . (AP)

GIVING THE OATH- Dr. James Beyer
deputy chier medical examiner ror Norther~
Virginia, and U.S. Park Police Sgt. Cheryl

A news analysis
he first told Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman of the ex istcnce of the investigation in March
1993, two months into Clinton's
White House term.
In addition, two faxes retrieved
from White House files show Allman sent an old newspaper anicle
about Whitewater to then- White
House counsel Bernard Nussbaum
about the same time.
Altman's response? He firmly
denies Roelle's briefing and says
h~ doesn't recall the faxes . Nussbaum said he, too, couldn't recall
the faxes.
Several denials last week
involved the personal diaries kept
by Altman and Treasury Department chief of staff Josh Stemer.
Their entries - often in frank

language - recounted many
instances in which White House
officials sought to _gather infonmation about a Whitewater-related
savings and loan investigation that
was potentially embarrassing to
President and Mrs. Clinton.
For instance:
• Steiner wrote that the While
House put extreme pressure on Altman, a college pal of the presi dent's, not to recuse himself from
the RTC investigation last February. At the time , Altman was acting
head of the agency. Nussbaum
denied there was pressure, testifying that he questioned Altman
whether it was necessary but left
the decision to him .
• Altman wrote that Mrs. Clinton's chief of staff, Margaret
Williams. told him that the first
lady was "paralyzed" by Whitewater. Williams' response: "I deny
making that statement.'' Allman
also wrote Williams indicated the
first lady did not want a special

Whitewater prosec utor nam ed to
"poke around " in her bu sine ss
affa1rs. Williams ' res pon se: She
couldn't recall the conversation.
While such discrepan cies will
be fodder for Republican s , 1he
White House has an imponant fact
on its side. So far nothing in the
hearings has emerged to contradict
its conclusion that ultimately no
actions interfered or affected the
ongoing investigation.
Nonetheless, Altman will be a
primary target of Republican
attacks when he testifies Tue sday.
He has already altered his story to
Congress several times, prompting
Republicans to flatly call him a
liar.
And so many di screpancies
emerged last week about hi s
act ions that even Dcmoc raLs were
reluctant to defend him .
The While House says it is up to
Altman to restore the confidence of
Congress. But it didn't help his
case when last week presidential

the independence of the inspector
general's office at a Cabinet-level
department,'' Rep. Jim Leach, RIowa, said.
Leach said he was concerned
about a "chilling implication" that
the Bentsen contact could have sent
to the IG, that the "White House is
very concerned and clearly would
like to have a given result.''
In all, interview transcripts from
about 20 top officials involved in
the Whitewater affair were forwarded to the White House. They
included Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman, Treasury counsel Jean Hanson and White House
aide George Stephanopoulos.
Acting Treasury IG Robert
Sesca said he approved Bentsen's
request after "some deliberation"
last Saturday. At the time, he said,
the IG's office had only one more
interview to conduc1 and had
already written a draft report of its
findings.
Sese a said he "made a judgment" based on his conclusion that
releasing the interviews to Cutler
would not affect the outcome of his
investigation.
"I felt no pressure,' he said. "If
there were any indication that we

were shon-ctrcuiung the investigation for political purposes we
would have not done this .... It was
a very thorough review."
Sesca said on his own initiative
he was pressing to get the review
done in time for the congressional
hearings. "I was sure there was an
interest on the part of the depanmenl to have completed this investigation prior to the congressional
hearings," he said.
Bentsen ordered the ethics
review earlier this year amid an
uproar over revelations that Treasury regulators had provided the
White House with 10formation
about a sensitive savings and loan
criminal investigation that involved
President and Mrs. Clinton.
Whitewater special prosecutor
Robert Fiske has concluded those
contacts were not criminal. The
White House has portrayed the
contacts as ill -advised but not in
violation of any ethics rules.
Nonetheless, Bentsen emphasized the importance of an independent review by the Office of Government Ethics. He asked the Treasury IG to assist the review by conducting the interviews with officials involved at Treasury.

aid es acknowledg ed th ey we re
uneasy when they recognizee! d"crcpan cies in Altman' s story and
urged him 10 correct the record.

ATTENTION
SHOPPERS
In the Kmart Circular that is in
Ieday's paper, w1th the sale
starting July 31st , a 16-pc.
Corella Dinnerware Set is
advertised for $19.97 . In the
ad it is stated "Dinnerware
Set includes 4 Bonus
Luncheon Plates" which is
incorrect. The correct description &amp;hou ld read "Dinnerware
Set includes 4 Bonus Covers"
as pictured. We regret any
inconvenience this may have
caused our customers.

At the time of Bentsen's
request, the OGE had not finished
its review, which is expected to be
released today.

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job is the same as for all of us who came from Republicans, but he also
ByCAROLYNSKORNECK
work in the law ... to help make the had suppon from 33 GOP senators.
Associated Press Writer
law
work betterfor people."
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, gave
WASHINGTON- Stephen G.
Breyer
was
accompanied
to
the
him
high praise as he began the
Breyer won easy Senate approval
by
supporters
from
Senate's
six hours of debate.
White
House
Friday to become the nation's
both
panics,
Ed
wand
M.
Kennedy,
108th Supreme Coun justice. He
pledged ''to help make the law D- Mass., and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah.
"Judge Breyer is extraordinarily
work beuer for people" after his
well-qualified
to serve on the
87-9 confinnation.
nation's
highest
court,'' Sen.
The Boston jurist, President
Befon: he gained Slar&lt;lom on Ihe TV
Edward
Kennedy,
0-Mass.,
said in
Clinton's second appointee to the
. shows "Maverick'' and "The Rock·
court, was approved as praise from support of the Boston-based · ford Files," James Garner worked '
senators of both parties drowned appeals court judge.
as a male model
All nine votes against Breyer
out lingering criticism of his per$0nal investments.
Breyer was expected to be
PLANNED PARENTHOOD
sworn in next week to replace
OF
Harry A. Blackmun
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a
SOUTHEAST OHIO
pioneering women's rights advoConfidential Family Planning Services for females &amp; males
cate, joined the court last year.
Breyer was at the White House
• Medical exams
when the Senate vote was taken
• Pap tests
and, soon afterwards, Clinton intro·
duced him a a previously scheduled
• Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
Boys Nation ceremony.
• fists &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
"This gentleman has set an
• Anonymous ffiV tests &amp; counseling
example of excellence and fidelity
10 the law and the Constitution of
•l\1ethods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
which every American can be
Norplant-lmplant
proud,'' Cli,;ton said
DepoProvera-fnjectlon
"You're looking at the only
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man in America with total job
security,'' he joked to his youthful
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SKYLINE LANES

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• Katie IIIUier, MINinor
1112·2588 • '

LARIE SELECTION

__

...._\

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Breyer sails to 87-9 confirmation as justice

Sympathy Flowers

(_

These contradictions are certain
to come under scrutiny this week as
the Senate and House commillecs
hear the other side of the story
from Treasury Department officials
who wrote many of the key documents.
One key discrepancy involves
when the Clinton administration
first learned of the Resolution Trust
Corp. investigation into a savings
and loan owned by the Clintons'
Whitewater business panner.
That investigation named Bill
and Hillary Clinton, their Whitewater land venture and his gubernato·
rial campaign as possible beneficia·
ries of improper activities by the
S&amp;L.
Several officials testified last
week that their first contacts with
federal regulators occurred in the
fall of 1993, after reporters began
inquiring.
But former RTC Vice President
Williann Roelle has been quoted in
congressional testimony as saying

Treasury arranged to get the IG
By JOHN SOLOMON
reports to save his staff from doing
Assoc:ated Press Writers
duplicative
interviews. "It was
WASHINGTON- Treasury
he said. Culler
more
economic,"
:Secretary Lloyd Bentsen asked his
leadoff
witness
in the
was
the
)gency's independent investigator
hearHouse
Banking
Commiuee
-fast weekend for copies of inter·
:views from an ongoing ethics ings into Whitewater last week.
But the arrangement drew
t eview of the Clinton administra;tion's handling of Whitewater, offi- immediate criticism from outside
the administration.
~ials said Saturday.
Sherman Funk, an inspector
• Bentsen, who ordered the
'
general
for 13 years at the State
:review and was among those interand
Commerce
departments before
'Viewed, forwarded the Treasury
said it was "totalretiring
last
year,
;i,nspector general's documents to
ly
inappropriate"
for an IG to
~he White House so it could prerelease
investigative
interviews
:pare for congressional hearings, the
from
an
ongoing
review.
:administration officials said.
"The whole purpose of the IG is
: By law, the IG's office is suptheir
independence, and if their
:IJOSed to be free of political interindependence
can be questioned
,ference.
than
the
very
usefulness
of the IG
Administration officials said
is
impaired,''
Funk
said.
they saw nothing wrong with
Republicans, who have sought
Bentsen's re~uest and the documents were Simply forwarded to in congressional hearings to portray
White House counsel Lloyd Culler. the Clinton administration as medThey said no one except Culler saw dling in an earlier savings and loan
investigation involving the Clin·
the infonnation.
"Nothing we did compromised tons and Whitewater, pounced on
the integrity of the investigation," the revelation.
"The question now under
Cutler said in an interview. "The
IG was essentially finished wilh the revit.N is one of independence of a
regulatory agency investigation.
investigation."
He said the White House and And now we have questions about

If you've put off ordering a memorial for
your loved one. the lime is now. Logan
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' the perlect expression of your love And
you can be sure it's the ~ost permanent
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CONVENIENT
CRECIT TERMS

" Well. it may be in more than
one way . Certainly what about the
abuse or power in using television
and radio and the print media as
kind of a bull y pulpit for those who
have sought simply to bring down a
pres ident," he said at the first Senate Banking Commiuee hearing on
Whitewater.
The witnesses before the Senate
on Friday were law enforcement
andmcdicalcxpertswhoconcluded
that Foster, 49, an old friend of the
Clintons commiued suicide for
reasons u~related to Whitewater.
D' Amato asserted White House
interference in the police investigalion of Foster's death, and claimed
that Deputy Treasury Secretary
Roger c. Altman had "deliberately
lied 10 Congress " about what he
told the Clintons.
Late Friday, Altman said "Sen.
D' Amato's statement today is sim ply incorrect."

Release of review data to Bentsen draws fire

1

Ohio congressman battles claim
he reneged on campaign pledge
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Assoc:iattd Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Rep. Martin
Hoke and the campaign that's try·
ing to unseal him are sparring over
a 1992 promise.
Democratic candidate Frank
Gaul is telling voters a promise was
broken. Hoke says nothing nefarious happened; he just changed his
mind.
Hoke, R-Ohio, said he didn't
understand all the ramifications
when he made the pledge, and
ar~ued that both he and his conslltuents are beuer off with an
arrangement that publicly identifies
all stock transactions.
"The public is beuer served
knowing exaclly what I do have,"
he said Friday.
With a blind trust, an outside
manager handles sales and purchas·
es so the person who owns the
~IS doesn't know precisely how
the money is invested.
Hoke, who became a millionaire
with a cellular telephone company
he founded, said during his I992
campaign against then-Rep. Mary
Rose Oakar that he would use a
trust if elected to the IOth District

majority of Americans who already
have health insurance."
• "Guarantees every American
the right to choose their own doctors and health plan."
Even the president joined in.
"The House bill tells the Arnerican people that they have been
heud. The b1ll IS Simpler, more
flexible and more sens1Uve to the
needs of small business," he said.

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO(Rij

gauons that a Wlute House a1de
was g1ven confidcnual mformauon
about an mvesugauon of the fad ed
Madi son Guaranty Sav1ngs and
Loan. MadiSOn may have suffered
losses from an Arkansas land venture, the Whitewater Development
Corp., m wh1ch President and Mrs.
Clinton were mvestors. .
. The IJrCsidcnt was given the
mformauon at a lime he could have
used Illo h1s advantagcm the
mqu1ry, the Republicans srud. The
former head of that mvcsugat1on
and a White House spokesman
demed Fnday that any confidenual
mformallon was provided to the
White House. .
Democrat s hav e re sponded
quickly w such allegatiOn s of
wrongdomg and d1d so a gam on
Fn~~y. ,
.
There s some who say White water 1s about the abu se of
power ,' · Sen . Ben Nighthorse
Cannpbell, D-Colo., sa1d.

White House strategy in probe leaves door open to GOP

House Democrats unveil own reform proposal
By NITA LEL YVELD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON House
Democratic leaders wanted to make
one thing clear as they detailed
their health reform bill: "This is
not the Clinton bill," said House
Majority Whip David Bonier of
Michigan.
"This is clearly not the Clinton
bill," said House Speaker Thomas
Foley of Washington.
"The bill we're presenting
today isn't the president's bill _ it
isn't the Congress' bill- we
believe it's the people's bill,''
waxed House Majority Leader
Richard Gephardt of Missouri.
Lest anyone miss the point, even
the name is not the same . The
House bill is to be known as the
Guaranteed Health Insurance Act
of 1994 - not, repeal not, Clinton's Health Security Act.
From a group of Democrats
worlcing closely with the White
House on a major piece of social
legislation, the disavowal of the
president seemed odd strategy.
But consider this:
Congress got nowhere with
President Clinton's I ,342-page
Health Security Act. First, many
members of Congress were upset to
have it handed to them -the result
of months of closed-door meetings
where they had no say.

Nation/World

31, 1994

audience.

Breyer, grinning broadly, told
Clinton: "Thank you for the confi·
dence you have placed in me."
.
"I look forward 10 serving on
the Supreme Court. The responsi- .
bility of that position ls awesome,
ralhec humbling," Breyer said.
But, he added, ''The goal of that

Sliding Fee seale
,. We accept Medicaid and private Insurance
414 Second Street
Gallipolis
446-0166

509 S. Third Street
Middleport

992-5912

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Pomeroy-:-Middleport- Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Along the River

July 31, 1994

Suspect in abortion clinic
slayings relaxed at hearing
lly lliLL KACZOR
Associated Press Writer
PENSACOLA, Fla. - A former
minisler seemed relaxed - almost
uor.: hJianl - ;,s he asked f:&gt;r the
jud!;e ·~ Juvice Saturday about find ing a lawyer to defend hun 1n the
killings of a doc tor and his b•&gt;dyguard outside an abortion clinic.
Escambia Cou nty Judge James
Roark Ill asked Paul Hill if he
wa nt ed a publ ic defender or
planned to use a private lawyer.
,.,, haven' t decided as uf yet,
sir," said the 40-year-old, strawherry blond defendant. " I don 't
know how the system works here.''
Then Hill asked the judge:
" What would be the wisest thing to
do?''

FIRST LOOK - Reporters gathered around
monitors Saturday to watch the initial arraignment or Paul Hill at the Escambia County (Fla.)

Jail in Pensacola. Hill is charged with the shot·
gun slaying of Dr. John Britton and his escort,
James Barrett, outside a Pensacola abortion
clinic Friday. (AP)

Pensacola residents reel
from latest act of violence
By ROBERT DVORCHAK
AP National Writer
PENSACOLA, Fla. - It 's a
cosmopolilall cemer at the base of
the Bible Bell, a city that beams
with pride at its Spanish colonial
heritage, its sun-bleached beaches
off the emerald waters of the Gulf
of Mexico and its distinction as the
cradle of naval aviation.
But after the second slaying in
17 months of a doctor outside an
abortion clinic, after four bombings, after cour.tless confrontations
that have become routine, Pensacola is also the national flashpoint in
the abortion wars.
"We've become a kind of magnet for a small ~;roup of terrorists.
It's one thing aLec another," said
DaUas A. Blanchard, associate pro·
fessor of sociology at the University of West Florida and a United
Methodist minister.
Blanchard, co-author of the
book Religious Vioience And Abor·
tion: The Gideon Project, echoed
the horror of ma1y Pensacolans to
Friday's latest blooJieuing: "Oh,
no. Not again. Not here.' '
But he added: "It's not a reflec·
lion of the community. It's a reflection of a small minority drawn here
for terrorism - a political act
designed to place fear in the operators of abortion clinics and the
physicians who work there. It's
working."
Blanchard described the city with its metropolilall population of
344,000 located in Florida's west·
ern panhandle near the Alabama

border - as th e "most liberal
community cast of New Orleans on
the eastern Gulf Coast.·'
It attracts a diverse mix of visitors - tourists who sunbathe on
the sugar-white sand, visitors 10 the
Naval Air Station where the U.S.
Navy trains pilots, college kids
who frequent the city's trendy
hangouts and seafood restaurants.
Yet politics are historically conservative here, where the Spanish
first auempted to colonize Florida
in 1559 and the area has been
under the dominion of the Spanish,
French, British·, Confederate and
U.S. flags.
And its religious roots are deep.
Church listings span eight pages of
the Yellow Pages. including one
church that sits across from a lopless bar. One stretch of highway
leading from Alabama reportedly
has one church per mile.
Its most notorious landmark
now, however, is the Ladies Center. a two-story abortion clinic
dwarfed by towering oak trees on
the city's northern edge near the
municipal airport.
On Friday, the day abortions are
perfonned, Dr. John B. Britton wearing a bulletproof vest - and a
body~uard, retired Air Force Lt.
Col. James Barrett, were shot in dte
head and killed. Barren's wife,
June, was wounded. AU of tltem sat
in a silver pickup that had just
pulled into the clinic's parking lot.
Briuon had succeeded Dr.
David Gann, a center doctor, who
was murdered March 10, 1993, at

another Pensacola clinic.
The Ladies Center wa s also
bombed on June 24, 1984, and was
one of three sites blown up on
Christmas Day of that year in what
four convicted participants called
"a birthday gift for Jesus."
Six protesters were arrested
there in 1986 after they raided the
center, which is protected by an
eight-foot high wooden fence and
adjoined by a triangle of ground
called th e Holy Innocents Plot
erected "In memorial to over 26
million babies murdered since 1973
in the American holocaust."

Roa rk adv ised him to ta~ c a
public defend er with the understanding that he cou ld change to a
private attorney later.
"OK, I'll uy th at," Hill said.
Hill's demeanor angered some
who came to watch the proceedmgs.
"He had no apparent distress in
what l1e has been charge d with
doing ," sa id Carol ine Tesche, a
lawyer for the Feminist Majority ,
.
an abortion rights group.
She ca me to Pensacola to urge
federal, state and local authorities
to investigate possible connections
among acts of anti-abortion violence across the nation. A multiple
juri sdictional investigation would
allow authorities to determine any
connection between attacks on doc·
tors.
' The slayings Friday of Dr. John
Bayard Britton and James Herman
Barrett came nearly 17 month s
after abortion doctor David Gunn
was shot to death at another Pensacola clinic.
Hill, who had advocated the
killing of abortion doctors as '"justifiable homicide,'' appeared
before Roark in a small courtroom
at the Escambia County Jail.
When the judge asked if he had
anything else to say, Hill mused:
" Hmmmm ... may I keep thi s
arrest repon?"

He explained he wanted to see
what he was charged wtth.
The charges arc two co unts of
murder and one count of auempted
murder. Barren's wife. June. was
wounded in the a;m.
Mrs. Barrell, (.3. a retired nurse,
was itt good condi1i011 S"turday at
Baptist Hospilal.
A grand jury is ex pected to
review the case tc ~ct::rmi ne if Hill
should be indicted and the degree
of any charges.
He could face the death penalty
if convicted of first-degree murder.
Michael Griffin was sentenced to
life with a minimum of 25 years
before parole in th e shooting of
Gunn.
Hill's next court appearan ce was
scheduled for Aug. 19.
She riff' s Lt. Ron McNesby said
Hill was be ing held alone in cell
separate from the rest of the jail
populati on and under a sui cide
watch - standard procedure in
high-profile cases.
MultJple shotgun blasts through
the windshield and windows of a
pick up truck killed Britton, 69, and
Barren, a 74-ycar-old retired Air
Force lieutenant colonel, in the
parking lot of The Ladies Center,
an abortion clinic .
Barrett had complained recently
to Escambia County sheriff's
deputies that he was being stalked
and harassed, sa id Chicky Desmarais, another clinic bodyguard.
McNesby said Saturday that he
could find no record of such complaints but additional files would
be searched Monday.
Hill was arrested at the clinic
July 17 and charged with disturbing the peace and a noise violation
for shouting anti-abortion mes sages. Police said they were well
aware of his militanl views.

~irements .

But the speed tactic is risky,

said defense auorney Harland
Braun, who has handled several
high-proftle cases.
"Generally it takes a long time
to think through your strategy and
figure everything out," Braun said.
"The facts of cases are like crystals. Every time you look at it you
see different facets .... UsuaUy the
defense thinks the longer it goes on
the bener."
Braun added that witnesses'
memories fade and prosecution evidence becomes stale over time.
To rush a case to trial, Braun
said, may indicate the defense
believes the prosecution can't
prove guilt.
"In that case, they're going to
make their case (by atlaeking) the
prosecution evidence and they're
not going to put on a defense."
UCLA law professor Peter
Are nella said he· s never heard of a
double homicide case going 10 Uial
in 60 days - and neither had any
other expertS consulted.
"It's unique, like everything
else about this case," said ArenelJa, who suggested that Simpson's
status as a wealthy defendant
makes such a move possible.
"He has such a huge number of
lawyers working for him that they
can pull off such a gambit," he
said.
Simpson, a football legend
turned actor and sportscaster, is
charged with murdering his exwife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and
her friend Ronald Goldman, on
June 12. After a one-week preliminary hearing, a judge found sufficient evidence to hold him for trial
and the official charge, was filed
July21.
THe California Speedy Trial
Act, an extensioo of the U.S. Constitution's Sixth Amendment guarantee of a speedy trial, has provid- .
ed since 1880 that a defendant is
entitled to trial within 60 days after
an indictment or filing of formal
charges.

ATTENTION
SHOPPERS
In the Kr.1art Circular that
is in today's paper, with
the sale starting July
31st, "Slick 50" Engine
Treatment is advertised
incorrectly at $9.77. The
correct advertised price
should read $15.77. We
apologize lor any inconvenience this may have
caused our customers.

Rio Grande native
contributes to D-Day
commemoration

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Gallipolis

D-DAY ANNIVERSARY Army Capt. Chris E. Moore, top
tight, goes over commemoratioo
activities with a task force staff
member. Moore Is an operations
qfr~eer who provided essential support to dignitaries and otricials of
tile SOtb Anniversary of D-Day
C'clmmemoration. A replica of Pvt.
John Steele, a paratrooper with the
8Zad Airborne Division oo D-Day,
bangs from the cburcb in tbe mellieval village or Ste. Mere Eglise oa
tile coast of Normandy, side. Tbe
yUlage was tbe first to be liberated
from Germaa occupation by the
Allies, and the cbureb bas become a
memorial to the many American
SOldiers kUied and wounded ill the
tfl'ort. U.S. Army paratroopers
from tbe 82nd Airborne Division,
Assigned to Fort Bragg, North Caro~. march by the cbun:b in Ste.
P,fere Eglise after parachuting into
• field near tbe town. Tbe division
~eenacted the air drop of American
troops into Normandy on June 6,
~ttom, that began tbe liberation
~rFrance and western Europe rrom
QC:Cupation by Nazi Germany dur·
lPI World War D. (Photo by RoJimdo Gomez)

360 Second Ave.

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446· 620

B

REMEMBERING A TIME .
A visitor stops to reflect at a grave
site in the American cemetery at
Omaha Beach in Nonnand y, where
ovu 9,000 American soldiers, including Brig. Gen. Theodore
Roosevelt, Jr., a Medal of Honor
recipient, are buried. A commemoration for D-Day and those who
served was beld June 6. The battle
at Normandy cost tbe U.S. ovtr
3,000 dead and wounded on the
first day alone. (Photo by Rolando
Gome)

~~AqeN;y

Speedy trial for O.J.
risky, experts claim
By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES- OJ. Simpson seems intent on setting a rccond
for the fastest start of a murder trial
in recent court history. Legal
experts see the laCtic as rislcy, but
clever.
They said that defense lawyer
Robert Shapiro's push to go to trial
within 60 days after arraignment
could indicate a number of
motives, among them:
• Force the prosecution to pre·
sent an incomplete case that's inadequate to convict Simpson and then
rest without presenting any
defense.
• Avoid the issue of DNA evidence by going to trial before scientific tests are completed or
before defense experts can do their
own tests and argue the material is
inadmissible.
• Yield to an impatient defendant's wish to prove his innocence
and get out of jail as soon as posstble.
,
"The bouom line is they re try·
ing to swamp the prosecution with
so much wort they won't be adequately ~ for trial," Loyola
Law School professor Laurie Levenson a fanner federal prosecutor,
said ~f the defense rush for judgment.
"Everybody, including Judge
(Lance) Ito is going to have to
work around the clock to get lhe
case to trial within the time limit."
Prosecutors are sharply limited
in seeking delays, attorneys and
legal scholars said, because the
speedy trial right is seen as belonging to the defendant. However,
such an issue as incomplete sctcntific evidence might lead a prosecutor to ask for more time. .
.
After a hearing Fnday m whtch
Shapiro stunned prosecutors by
urging a trial right after Labor Day,
the judge set Sept. 19, to meet ~e
statutory 60-day speedy tnal

" We\e done the best we can to
be there and see that everyone' s
rights are protec ted," said police
Sgt. Jerry Potts. " It's human nature
to want to blame someone and the
most likely one is the police."
Hill. who grew up in the Miami .
at ca. has sho•.vn a v1olent streak in ·
the past, accordi ng to a Coral .
Gables police report.
When he WJ~ 17, hi s father,
Oscar Hill, signed a warrant against .
h1m for ass~u ll , telling police he ·
wanted to force him to gel trea t- :
ment fo.- a drug problem. When :
police searched Hill a small bag of ;
marijuana fell from his clothing .
and his father turned over II more, .
the report said.

Popular Vacations Spots

1

Section

July 31, 1994

THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL

SUITS

1rimts - ~entinel

visiting dignitaries and mili tary officials, including the
U.S. secretary of state and
chief of staff of the Army
traveling in both England and
France."
The ceremony placed
round-the-clock work on
some units in order to sup·
port activities such as aircraft
maintenance and communi cations between all the sites,
preparing for thousands of
veterans and other visitors at·
tending the commemoration.
For Moore, however, the
work he was doing was in
many ways similar to what
he did at his home station.
"In Germany, I basically
do the same job, but I'm more
involved with planning mili tary exercises and preparing
military orders, which give

they could relate to the men
who landed and fought here in

OMAHA BEACH, Nor1944.
mandy, France - The rocky
"I think the veterans retnrnwind-swept beaches called
ing to the beaches after experiOmaha and Utah on the coast
encing such a terrible fight must
of Normandy are quiet now,
feel a sense of euphoria for
the wind carrying only the salty
achieving such an unbelievable
fragrance of the sea and the
goal, breaking into Hitler's so
sounds of seagulls as they hunt
called 'Fortress Europe'"
for food along the shore.
Moore said.
However, the scars of a
"But I feel they'd also have
battle that swept over this
a profound sense of sadness .
coastal farm and pasture land
because they lost so many of
50 years ago still remain, as
their comrades, but enjoying
concrete bunkers, rusting artilthe happiness of seeing again
lery guns, and huge craters from
those who survived. All these
exploding shells remind visiemotions must run through each
tors of the pivotal battle that
and every veteran of every war."
was the beginning of the end
Although most of the servfor Nazi Germany but cost the
ice members are here because
U.S. over 3,000 dead and
their units tasked them to come,
wounded on the frrstday alone.
mostagreedthatthecommemoFifty years later, the son of
ration is a worthy event they
a Rio Grande couple joined
would attend, even if they
thousands of veterans of
weren't required to be a
Operation
Overlord,
pan of it.
"Given the chance of supknown today as the D-Day
"Given
the
porting the commemorainvasion, who returned to
chance
of
supporting
the
tion activities, I've enjoyed
pay tribute to the service
commemoration activiand sacrifice of those who
seeing some important
ties, I've enjoyed seeing
died, as well as those who
parts of American history
some important pans of
survived one of the most
•
American history and rebloody and desperate
living, if only in the eyes
Army Capt. Chris E. Moore
battles of World War II.
of some of the locals, the
Army Capt. Chris E.
happiness felt when the
Moore, son of Loren and
Americans landed here 50
Betty Moore, Boyd Hall,
written guidance for these ex- years ago," said Moore.
University of Rio Grande, is a ercises," Moore said.
"Although not a direct voltask force operations officer
Many task force mem- unteer for these events, I nonewho provided essential support bers heard fascinating actheless will remember the acto a multi-service task force counts of the D- Day invasion
tivities and the opponunities
composed of over 2,300 Army, from veterans on the streets
experienced in France."
Navy, Air Force, Marine and and in local taverns in vilWorld War II ended nearly
Coast Gnard members .
lages like Ste. Mere Eglise, 50 years ago, at a cost of milThe task force, spread where the U.S. Army's 82nd
lions of lives. However, for
among many of Normandy's Airborne Division landed and
Moore, the veterans of that war
towns and villages, provided a subsequently captured the
and the French citizens who
myriad of services for the com- city.
have erected monuments to the
memoration, including aerial
A replica of U.S. para- Americans and France's libtransponation of dignitaries and trooper Private John Steele
eration, the event proved to be
ceremony officials, assisting still hangs from the church in
an ongoing reminder that freelocal French construction work- Ste. Mere Eglise town square
dom and peace are precious
ers with building seating stands where he originally was en- gifts .
and podiums, telephone comT tangled while attempting to
"History in general, and
munications, ground transpor- landonD-Day and later cap- U.S. history specifically, rely
tation and police security.
tured by the Ge~mans.
on others to pass it down and
Moore, as well as everyone
For many of the soldiers keep it alive in our society,"
involved in the event' s prepathe experience of being in said Moore." American history,
rations, took his duties seri- Normandy and taking pan in young compared to European
ously.
the commemoration, as well history, must be remembered
"I was pan of the actual as the friendship displayed for two reasons. So that battles
planning of the commemoraby the French people, left a like this are not repeated and
tion's military activities," profound impression. And the actions of thousands of
Moore said. "I coordinated air- because they train to do what brave Americans are never forplane and helicopter flights for the soldiers of D-Day did, gotten."

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

July 31, 1994

July 31, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Haggy-Giaze
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Haggy of Pomeroy
announce the approaching marriage
of the1r daughter. Pamela Jean, to
Billy John Glaze, son of Dennis
Glaze of Parkersburg, W.Va ., and
Pearl Glaze of Middleport.
An open church wedding will be

held on Friday, Aug. 5, at the Laurel Cliff Free Me1hodis1 Ch urch,
Laure l Cliff Road, Pomerov.
Music wi ll begin at 6 p.m .
·
A reception will be hclrt 1n the
ch urch. soc ial room Im med iately
followin§ the weddmg.

,

'

"'
Hill-Bailey

CA RISSA HILL, CLINTON BAILEY

t.. ,
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. : . :J;'
""' ..~'-·.

..

I

. ....

TRACY ESKEW AND CHARLES TURNER

MR. AND MRS. GREGG HARRIS

Eskew-Turner

Adams-Harris
POMEROY - Kristina Kim
Adams. daughter of James and
Carol Adams of Syracuse . and
Gregg Harris, S£ln of Dale and Barbara Harris of Mount Sterling, were
united in marriage on June 18 at
the Trinity Congregational Church
in Pomeroy.
The Rev . Roland Wildman performed the double-ring ceremony,
which included a meditation on
love in Christ by the minister and
the reading of I John 4: verses 7-12
and 18-19, by the bride's brother,
Todd Adams.
Guest registrars were the 1994
Wilmington High School senior
cheerleaders.
Musical selections were per formed by the organist. Ralph
Werry, and soloist Sacha Amen,
friends of the bride.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride was given in marriage by her parents.
Her gown was a Venice of California design of white bridal satin,
featunng re-embroidered lace
appliques, pearls and diamond cut
sequins. A decollete neckline and
princess bodice were heavily beaded with pearls and sequins. Juliet
sleeves were accented by a blend of
beaded aPP,Iiques, which extended
to the wrisi in bridal points. The
peaked waistline held a full skirt
adorned with matching beaded
appliques covering the front of the
gown. The plunging back of the
gown was highlighted by a peplum
of pearls and sequins. The cathedral train was embellished with
beaded cut outs and a scalloped
hemline.
The bride wore a tiara -s tyle
headpiece accented with pearls and

a

sequins. from which fell fingertip
veil and blu sher. She carried a
beaded cascade bouquet of white
roses, cala lil1es and stephanotis,
along with a lace handkerchief. created from her baby bonnet.
Matron of honor wa s Susan
Boyer, friend of the bride from
Columbus. and bridesmaids were
Christine Weber of Dublin, Rachel
Wilcox of Pickerington, and Mary
West of Washington Court House.
Jessica and Scan Walt, twins of
Wilmington. friends of the groom,
were the nower girl and ring bearer.
Tim Peacock , friend of the
groom , North Royalton, was best
man , and groomsmen were Todd
Adams of Beavercreek . Brian
Hough of DeGraff, and Trent
Applegate of Bloommgton, Ind.
The reception was held at The
Sportsman in Athens. The guests
were treated to three hors doeuvres
tables decorated with mirrors,
white lights, and floral arrange ments. A giant fruit cascade graced
on e wall of the hors d'oeuvre
room . The center of the banquet
room featured a bride and groom
icc sculpture. The bride's table held
a four-tiered wedding cake, baked
by Jocelyn !:!ailey, decorated with
strands of pearls, delphinium, and
ivy.
Following a honeymoon to
Hilton Head Island, the couple
resides in Wilmington, where the
bride is employed by Wilmington
City Schools a1 a high school home
economics teacher and chcerleading coach. The groom is a certified
athletic trainer employed by Clinton Memorial Hospital as tlle clinical coordinator of sports medicine.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Eslcew of Gallipolis announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Tmcy Eskew. to Charles E. Turner
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
Turner Sr. of Point Pleasant, W.Va.

J. MERRILL AND MARGUERITE CARTER

Carters to celebrate 50th
marriage Aug. 14 in Gallipolis.
Merrill is a retired dairy farmer
and active insurance and real estate
agenl Marguerite is a retired clerk
for the treasurer's office.
The couple has two sons, Gregory of Rio Grande and David of
Cincinnati and three grandchildren
Braunlyn, Evan and Leanne.
No gifts are requested, but cards
and letters are welcome.

. Blaines to note anniversary
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Blaine retired from the Gulf Oil
: Mrs. Thomas A. Blaine Sr. of Mid- · Corp. at Marieua.
dleport, will be celebrating their
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine are the par50th wedding anniversary Monday, ems of Michael E. of Gallipolis,
Aug. I.
and Deborah Zuspan, Mason , and
Mrs. Blaine is the former Willie the late Thomas A. Blaine Jr. They
Fay Wilson of Mason, W.Va. and have five grandchildren and three
is retired f'rom the Lakin State Hos- great-grandchildren.
pital.

JENNIFER MOODY AND HUGH GRAHAM

Moody-Graham
RODNEY - Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Moody announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their
daughter Jennifer Beth to Hugh
(Bumper) Graham, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Graham, Jr.
Moody is a student at the University or Rio G~de,_ majoring in

MELODY HANER AND WOODROW BURNETT, II

Haner-Burnett

GALLIPOLIS - Adrian and
Gladys Haner , of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement of their
daughter
Melody L. Haner to
of publication.
Those not making the 60-day Woodrow R. Burnett 11, of Gallipodeadline will be published during lis, son of the late Woodrow and
Carolyn Burnett.
the daily paper as space allows.
The bride is a 1979 graduate of
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be Gallia Academy High Scpool and
published with wedding stories if is employed by Shell Chemical
desired. Photographs may be eitller Company in ApPle Grove, W.Va.
The groom IS a 1980 graduate of
black and white or good quality
Kyger Creelc High School and a
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will 1984 graduate of Rio Grande Colnot be accepted. Generally, snap- lege with a bachelor's degree in
shots or instant-developing photos mathematics. He is also employed
at Shell Chemical Company in
are not of acceptable quality.
All male rial submitted for publi- Apple Grove, W.Va.
The wedding will be Aug. 20,
cation is subject to editing.
Questions may be directed to 1994 at the First Baptist Church in
the editorial department from 1-5 Gallipolis with music beginning at
p.m. Monday through Friday at 6 p.m. and the ceremony at 6:30
446-2342.

p.m.

•

Vinton brick plant
was one of many
at t~rn of century.

by J1m Sands
Special Correspondent
In tlle early 1900s, pieces of GalliaCountycouldbefoundall overthe
country - clay from the area was
usedtomakepavingbricksandbuilding tiles.
The county's
fitStknownbrick
factory came
shortly after the
Civil War. Prior
10 the 'factory,
brick malcers
made their products at the construction site.
The fust machine to make bricks
was introduced to Gallipolis in 1868
when Hamilton and Morton formed
the Empire Brick Company, located
near ~c Pine Street Cemetery. The
company hadnineworkersand could
tum out 20,000 bricks per day.
By 1880,thekilnscouldholdmore
than 200,000 bricks at a time.
In 1890 Gallipolis had three brick
companies- E. Betz and Son, located near Fifth Avenue and Cedar
Street; C.A. Clendenin and Son on
the site of the former Gallipolis golf
course, and tlle Gallipolis Drain Tile
Co., on land later owned by tlle Gallipolis Developmental Center.
All three furns sp&lt;x:ializ.ed in
paving brick. Only the Betz Companysurvivedtheturnofthecentury.
Other towns which had brick and
tile companies in the late 1800s ineluded Bidwell and Rio Grande.
MostofRioGrnnde'sbrickhouses

dating from the l870sand 1880swere
built from products made by the Wood
family's company.
In 1900 a fine white clay was
discovered On Samuel Cherrington's
land just cast of Gallipolis. It was
believed that his clay would make
excellent brick for houses, but not
much carne of it
B'y 19 10, Cherrington had turned
his clay pits into Lake Cherrington
- complete with bathatorium, diving boards and fishing pier. He aiS£l
hadasmalldcpotbuiltsothattourists
could disembark from the train or
sltcct car.
In 1904, the Vinton Brick and Tile
Company was organized with stockholders from Bucyrus and Marietta
as well as Gallia County. It was decided early in tllc company's history
thatitsbrickwasbestsuitedforpaving
purposes.
The Vinton company's f~rst clay
supply came off the farms of O.C.
Clark and a Mr. Keivana. Later, clay
was taken off a 70-acre farm belonging to George Shaclc where the 10-ft.
thick clay was found to conceal a !fL vein of coal.
A Nov. 3, 1904 edition of the
Vinton Leader reponed the company'searlydays: "The Vinton Briclc
and Ttle Co.'s plant started up ternporarily last Thursday. All the rnachinery staned off very and they are
running their 10,000 brick per day
easily. As soon as every thing gets in
good working order there will be no
trouble to run from 15,000 to 20,000
per day without any additional ex-

A

.

. ' , ,.

f •,

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OBSERVE SOTH ANNIVERSARY - John and Kay Hender~ son, Gallipolis, observed their 50th wedding anniversary during an
: outing at the Holiday Day Inn with relativies. They were married
~ on June 17, 1944, in San Antonio, Texas.

Before your baby Is born -

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

• Breastfeeding classes
• Prenatal nipple assessment

17MONTH
Michele Platt

Ohio Valley Ban~_,."

•

•

• Help with learning to breastfeed
• Education about breastfeeding

•

For more information, call 0' Bleness Memorial Hospital
and ask for Michele Platt.

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Drive, Athens, Ohio
593-5551

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club, Monday, 6 p.m. picnic, home of Mrs. William Morris.
Members to take covered dish .
Beverages,
desserts and table settings provided.

CHESTER - Chester High
Class of 1931, annual reunion Sunday, Chester Fire House, I p.m .
Take basllet tl"mner.

POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters, Monday 7 p.m., at the
high school band room . Parents
urged to attend to discuss fair food
booth.
REEDSVILLE - Bible school
with theme "God 's Very Important
People" at Fellowship Church of
Nazarene , Reedsville, Monday
through Friday , 6 to 8:30p.m.
1 ni~htly . Closing program Sunday, 7
p.m. Public invited.

RUTLAND - Bible School,
DARWIN - Descendants of Rutland Free Will Baptist Church.
Tommy Gilkey and Milda Jane Monday through Friday, 6:30 to
Hudnall reunion Sunday, U.S . 33 8:30p.m. Public invited.
roadside park south of Darwin.
Potluck dinner at noon, take table
RACINE - Racine Council,
regular session. 7 p.m. Monday,
service and folding chairs.
Star Mill Parle.
JACKSON - Twenty -third
annual Farrar rcunon Sunday, noon
LETART - Letart Township
at the shelter house on Sternberger Trustees , 7 p.m. Monday, office
Road, Jackson. Take a basket din- building.
ncr.
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
CHESTER - Chester High Springs United Methodist Church
Class of 1931 annual picnic Sun- Bible school, 9:30 to 11:30 Monday at I p.m. All teachers and day through Wednesday.
schoolmates welcome.
RUTLAND - Rutland Church
of
God Bible school. Monday
MONDAY
through
Friday 6 to 8 p.m. Classes
SE - Sutton Town-

f3allia community calendar

In the hospital -

At home• Telephone hotline
• Follow-up consultations
• Postpartum support group
• Breastpump rental

ship Trustees, Monday. 7:30p.m ..
Syracuse Municipal Building.

SUNDAY
HOBSON - Special singing
Sunday at 7:30 p.m., Hobson
Christian Union Church, featuring
Bill Ward Gospel Trio and Rev.
Charles Curry.

1

Sunday, July 31

•••

Church to have God's
71.m bassadors to sing at 10 a.m. serJice. Communion and foot-washmg. 7p.m.

•••

~hapel

•••

I

: BIDWELL - Layman Day Ser'ice Mount Carmel Church 10:45
a.m. and 3 p.m.
•

•••

• GALLIPOLIS - Hunt-Wood
Eamily reunion, Raccoon Creek
ounty Park Shelterhouse No. 4,
2:30p.m.

-f
-

...
...

: POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
~nonymous Tri County Group
9:30p.m. 611 Viand St..

: PROCTORVILLE • Fairland
lligh School Class of 19~ reunion
·»icnic, I p.m., Proctorville Fatr•
•

/

VINTON IIRICK PL t\NT - The Vinton Brick Plant operated
at full capacity from 1904 to 1917. This picture from the Ernestine
Polslcy collection dates to ahout 1910. llrickmaking in c;allia
County ceased around 1930.
pcnse other than labor."
In 1910 Vinton Brick was so ld by
its principal owner, M.L. Trout, to
LA. Corrier of Columbus.
Carrier and his Pittsburgh and
Columbus investors were of the
opinion that Vinton clay was betler
suited for tile and installed the appropriate machinery. In 1915 the company expanded, leasing lands belonging to W.F. Butler and A.B. Harnil too.

Two years later, oversupply
caused a depression in the brick
marlcet. The Vmton Brick and T1le
Company closed, although some
briclcs were still made for the local
market.
Probably the last Gallia company
to make bricks was the McCormick
and Co. firm (also known as Gal lia
Tile) which lasted to about 1930.
The fum's main product was drain
tile.
The fust building in Gallipoli s
history to be made from machine

produced bricks was U1c M1ller building, erected in 1868. It was later
known as the Womcldorff &amp; Thomas buddin g. wh1ch burncdfown
l;c;t fall.
Even though Gallia was noted for
paving bricks, very few of the briclcs
used on the county roads and city
streets were actually produced here .
James Sands is a special correspondent oft he Sunday Times-Sentinel. His address is: 65 Willow
Drive, Springboro OH 45066.

You don't have to
be lueky to be a
part-timer at
Marshall University
You JU-&lt;t need" couple of hours a
week. Whether you'n: il recent gmduatc. mother, hu .~ in cs~ O\\' nCI, faclOry
worker. sclretary or retired, we ollcr
a w1dc varie ty of even ing courses

Brad Maynard , Matt Babic; juniors
and little tykes: Heather Babic,
Amber Williams, Andrew Bissell:
Sack Races-seniors: Heather Babic,
Stephan ie Stemple, Margie Lemley; juniors: Harley Rose, Andrew
Bissell, Brittany Morarity; young
adults: Jay Proffitt. Marty Maynard, Brad Maynard.
Water Balloon Toss-seniors:
Matt Babble and Jamie S1cmplc;
juniors: Harley Rose and Brittany
Morarity. The children also loolced
for coins and other items in a pool
of sawdust.

Ihal will Iii your sc hedule and get
you on your way Inward an associate
or haccalaureale degree. Ca ll
Marsha! I U111versi1y's Mid -Ohio
Valley Center m Poinl Pleasant at
(304) 675-2627 or slop hy our oflicc
at 25 13 Jackson Ave. on Tuesday,
August 9. from 5-7 p.m. We wi ll
ha ve special oricmalion August 16.
from 6-R p m all he Nat1onal Guard
Amwry 111 Poinl Pleasant. call for
details. Get adm111ed luI he umvcrs, .
ty and gel rcgislered lor Ihe Fall
Scmcslcr. It lakes very lillie lime 10
he pan -lime al Marshall University.

for children four or more and
adults'.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Fraternal Order
of the Eagles Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday with potluck at 7 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
ALFRED - The Orange Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m., Wednesday at the home of the clerk, Patty
Calaway.
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township tru stee s Wedn es day,
Pagevillc townhall.

-z:~ic-e
PHOTOGRAPHY

Professional Wedding Pholography

(614) 446·6700

What? Nothing
to Wear?
Come to

MY
a

.~.

SISTER'S
CLOSET
~-

..... . ...

•

grounds .

•••

~ CROWN CITY - Liberty

r

I

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Meigs community calendar

MIDDLEPORT - 26th annual
Taylor-Harper reunion Sunday, I
p.m. Potluclc dinner followed by
business meeting. Home of Ben
and Ruby Rife, 29000 Leading
Creed Road , Middleport. Take
genealogical inFormation.

Services offered by O'Bieness Include:

Harley Rose , Amber William s,
Brittany Morarity ; little tykes:
Brady Bissell and Clayton Findley.
Spoon Peanut Race -seniors:
Matt Babic, Stephanie Stemple,
Margie Lemley and Heather Babic
(tie); juniors: Harley Rose, Brittany
Morarity , Andrew Bissell; young
adults: Todd Bissell, Jan William s,
Junie Maynard; Running Race young adults: Marty Maynard,
Todd Bissell, Jay Promu.
Tug-of- War-young adults and
seniors: Todd Bissell, Junie May nard, Jan Williams, Daniel Babic,

RACINE - Mount Moriah
Church of God held a fi eld day
July 23 in Racine . There were
seven events, including ball throw ing, relay races , spoon peanut
races, running races, tug-of-war,
saclc races and water balloon tosses.
The winners were: Ball Throwing-seniors: Daniel Babic, Matt
Bable, Stephanie Stemple; juniors:
Harley Rose, Briuany Morarity,
Andrew Bissell; Relay Race seniors: Matt Bable, Stephanie
Stemple, Daniel Bable; juniors:

POMEROY - The Calvary
Bible Church, Pomeroy Pike,
revival through Sunday, 7:30 p.m.
nightly. Blaine Farley will be the
evangelist.

t O'Bieness Memorial Hospital we want you and your baby to start off
with the best possible experience. Lactation consultant Michele Platt
has joined our staff to help mothers and their babies discover the joys of
breastfeedlng. Mother's milk Is the best nutrition your
baby can get-breastfeeding enhances the growth,
development and well-being of infants and provides
protection against Infections.

I

Minimum clepoolt: $1,500.00. Thlo CD II •ulomatlcaUy reaow.d.!e.
p..,.Jt)' fM Mrly wlthdnwal. Thll olfer nplres 1115.94

early childhood eoucauon.
Graham is employed by Southeastern Equipment Company . The
open church wedding will be Aug.
6 at the Faith Baptist Church, Rod·
ney. Music will begin at 6.p.m. The
couple will reside in Gallipolis.

Nothing is more natural than
breastfeeding your baby

l• CD SPECIAL !•
~

PATRIOT - J. Merrill and Margueritc Carter, SR 775, Patriot will
celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary Aug. 7.
The couple will be honored at a
reception from 3 to 5 ~;~.m. at the
Rodney United Methodist Church,
SR 588. The event will be hosted
by their family and friends from
Bethesda.
Carter and the former Marguerite Pitch ford were united in

•

~·······~···········································~

•

Grande, majoring in elementary
education. Bailey is a 1984 gradu ate of Eastern H1gh School.
The open church wedding will
take place at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday , Aug. 6 at the Racine United
Methodist Church.
A reception will follow \n the
church social room .

Sunday Tlmes--Sentinei - Page-83

Area congregation enjoys field day

Wedding policy
The Sunday Times -Senline/
regards the weddings of Gallia ,
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and is happy to publish wedding
stories and photographs without
charge.
However, w.edding news must
: meet general standards of timeli. ness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
:taken place within 60 days prior to
. the publication, and may be up to
: 600 words in length. Material for
· Along lite River must be received
:by the editorial department by
:Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date

The open church weddmg will
be held at I :30 p.m. Satlitday, Sept.
24 at the Jordan Baptist Church in
Gallipolis Ferry. W.Va . A reception will immediately follow in the
church fellowship hall.

LETART FALLS - Don and
Mary Hill of Lctan Falls announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of thclf daughler, Carissa
Dawn, to Clinton James Bailey,
son of James Bailey of Long Bottom.
Hill is a 1989 graduate of Southem High School and a 1993 graduate of the Univcrsi t of Rio

wv

Tuesday, August 2
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Lions
Club, Herman Dillon's residence,
cookout, 6:30p.m.

•••

Hyou are planning a wedding,
then you should come see us at
Haskins-Tanner.

•••

You will have over 190 styles ot
tuxedos to choose Irom. We have a
large aelectlon ol the latest styles
and COIJ1)Hmentary accessories for

Revival
GALLIPOLIS - Bell Chapel
Church, July 25 through 27,7 p.m.,
with the Rev. Truman Johnson.
LECTA - Church of Christ in
Christian Union to July 30 with'
Rev. Rocky Jeffers and Dave Colegrove.

•••

Vacation Bible School
PORTER • Vacation Bible
School at Trinity United Methodist
Church, Aug. 8-12, 6:30-8:30
nightly.

thla apacial occasion.

Quellty for••lwe•r et
AHoroW. Prices

''

All Summer Merchandise 50% Off!

My Sister's Closet
Lafayette Mall • Gallipolis

Eiil

�Page-84-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
If you didn' 1 get around ID par,
ti cipating in a co uple of prOJeCts
being carried out in observance of
th ~ I 75 th anntv crsary of Meig s
County, you still have orne.
Orders for a c u sto m - dc s i g ~cd
coverlet, bordered "tt h repltcas of
local po i nL~ of interest. wtll now he
accepted until Sept. I. The· 50-hy 67-i nch frin ged cover lets will be
available in hunt er gree n wtth
cream and '" Willtamsburg blue
wilh cream . Cost of eac h coverli: l

After high sc hool, she moved 10
Columbus in search of work. And
apparently she has done well. She
JOin ed the Hameroff{Mtlenthal rmn
in 1980 as vic e president; was
nam ed se nior vice president in
I 9H3; and in 19R6 moved up to
partner, president and chief opcrattn g officer. llcr name was at that
tim e audcd to the company, the
story on her sla!Cs,
Spence is acttve wtth Oh to's
Ce nt er of Science anti Industry.
·serving as co -chairwoman of the
COS I trus!Ces. building commiuec.
She serves as a member of th e
board of trustees of Children's
Hosp ital and the hospiLal' s exec utive commiuee; holds several post ttons wtth the Greater Colu mbus
Chambe r of Commerce; is vice
president of Global Sales and Markctmg at Westerville anrl has held
several positions with the Uni ted
Way of Columbu s and Frank lin
Co unty in cludin g two term s as

31,1994

July 31, 1994

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

HMC obtains grant
for Women's Health
Month observance

SPRING VALLEY PHARMACY'S
I'

':

10069 JACKSON PIKE, GALLIPOLIS

446·7459

J5'" Anniversar

t

GALLIPOLIS - For the fourth port made possible ID the Hospital
consecutive year, Holzer Medical Utrough the grant process asSJsts in
Cen ter ha~ been awarded a grant by prov iding educational activities
the Ohio Department of Hea lth, centered on women ·s hea lth conBureau of Materna l and Child cerns."
A specific objective of the proll ca lth . for th e obse rvan ce of
Wom en's Health Month in Scptcm- gram ts to encourage personal
awareness and comm un ity educahcr.
Chairpe rson Debbie Beegle, tion about women's health issues,
R N.. CC KN sa td , "We arc ve ry with an emphasis on prevention.
plcas&lt;:d to again he the rec ipient of
Beegle added, "Healthy
th e specia l grant to assist us wtth ltfcstylcs cannot be achieved pasour Women's Health Month activi- sively, but require an active awarettcs. Our application for the grant ness of po!Cntial health hazards and
was due before April 7, 1994, and ways to overcome them. Through
we were notified of the award early our Women's Health Month prom July."
gram s, we want ID help the women
Chairperson Fran S'ccoy, R.N. who live in our multi-county serpoints out , "The Intensive Care vice area to make more informed
Untt (ICLI ) at th e Hospital is in and hea lthier choices for th eir
charge of planning the numerous lives."
ac ti vities that will mark Women's
The month 's activities will
Hea lth Month throughout Scp!Cm- beg in , Sept. 8. with a special prober. Our goal, as spec ified by the · gram at the Ariel Theatre at 7 p.m.,
ODH for the women's health pro- featuring a nationally recognized
gram, is to improve the status of woman leader in the health care
women's health by add ressing field. Throughout the month additdcnltficd issues. The Jinancial sup- tional programs will cover a num -

is $50 plus $5 for postage and han dling tf it is 10 he. malicd. You can
order by wrtltng the 175 th
Anntvcrsary Commiuc&lt;:. P.O. Box
145 , Pomeroy, or you can place an
order at the Mctgs Museum. I think
you' ll be Wlpress&lt;:d wtth the attracIJVC coverlets. and whill the heck,
in 50 years of so. the value should
go up. You know how we arc about
collectibles.
The commiucc also has cx!Cnd ccl the deadline for gelling names
placed on th e anniversary quilt to
c hairwoman.
Aug. 5. Facsimiles of th e name s
And apparen tl y, Spe nce JS a
will be msc ribed on to th e qutlt "people person." Now having been
which will be put on pcrmal)cnt
reared in Metgs County, how could
display at the Meigs Museum . she be anything else"
Cost per name is SS and nam es
may be those of current rcstdcnts or
Plan s arc gctun g underway for
deceased Meigs County rcsidenLs.
the sLag ing of a musical by the Big
Names wi th payment of S5 eac h
Bend Min strel Associa tion come
may be mailed to the comm ittee at
November. Ace show accompanist
the above address, and you arc w
indicate if the persons arc living or Jenny Sheets has a new keyboard
McARTHUR - Oh io loggers
deceased and the township of rcsi- which will do about anythi ng. and
she's ready to get the show on ~1c arc geu in g revved up to compete
dcncy .
road. Last fall 's revival of the for more than $30,000 in cash and
musical staged at the Meigs prizes m the li fth annual "Game of
annual
An int eresting story on Paula
High
School in Middleport Lugging" regional and natJ onal
Junior
Spence rece ntly appeared in The
was
extremely
successful. A little finals.
..
Columbus Dispatch.
The Ohio regional compcuuon
enco
uragement
goes
a
lon
g
way,
Spe nce is president of th e
will be Saturday, Au~. 6, from 9
Hamcroff/Milenthai/Spence public you know, so hold onto your haL,, a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Vmton County
relations firm in Columbus. The here we go again.
Fairgrounds, located on Route 93,
firm employs 202 people and
one mile north of McArthur. Ten
Carol
Tannehill
wrapped
up
her
expects billing ID htt $95 million by
local loggers will be competing.
the end of its fi scal year on Scpl. nur sin g ca reer with the Metgs
The general public is welcome
Cou
nty
Dcparuncnt
of
Health
Fri30.
to attend the contest, which
day
and
moved
in!D
retirement
It
It' s interesting that Spence is
will be held in conjunction with the
formerl y from Pomeroy . Perhaps goes without sayi ng, that she will Vi nton Co unty Fair, the Ohio
so me of you re me mber her . certa inl y be missed . She·s been a Forestry Association's Log_gcrs'
According to the story , her father real angel of mercy over the years Chapter picnic and the Vtnton
died of pneumonia when she was 2 for many of us. One of Carol 's
Timber Fest.
.
years old. Her mother moved to greatest assets has been that beauti- County
A semifinal match July 30 wtll
ful
smile.
we
·11
count
on
her
to
Columbus ID find work and Spence
determine the 10 finalists for the
stayed in Pomeroy with relatives continue to bless us with it. That'll regional competition . ComesLants
sure
make
it
eas
ier
for
th
e
rest
of
us
where she finished high school,
will come from Ohio and surroundvisiting her mother in the summers. to keep smiling.
ing slates.
..
.
Regional compeuoons wtll also
be held in Arkansas, Gcorgta. lndt-

~

24

Pack
Case

I ~M·
'

WOMEN' S HEALTH MONTH - Debbie Beegle, R.N., CC RN,
left, and Fran Secoy, R.N. plan the Women's Health Month at
Holzer Medical Center. The two are on the Intensive Care Unit of
the Hospilal are co-c hairing the September observance of
Women's Heallh Month for the Holzer Medical Center.
ber of topics. all rcla!Cd 10 the overall theme for 1994, "Wome n at
Risk." Included along with the educational and information .programs
will be specific screenings.
A ca len dar of eve nt s for th e
month of September will be pub lished in August so thJI women in
the area may have advance notice
to mark their calendars for the programs that spec ifically interest

GRAND C HAMPION S~ The 4-H project
garments they made and modeled at Friday
nighl's style revue at Meigs High School won
grand champion roseltes for lhese yo ung
women, from the lefl, Pamela Neece, Arnie

them.
All programming and sc reenings will be available at no charge,
as a part of the commum ty outreach program of Holzer Mcdtcal
Center.

Drake, Heather Well, Kelley Grueser, JiU Lemley, Bridget Vaughan and Noelle Pickens. All
were se lected to participale in the Ohio State
Fair slyle revue nul month.

Reg. $1.19

Limit 2
Please

Pepsi

. i I.
d
,'';

Dishwashing
Liquid

c

''

and a "Game of Loggmg" instructor. event organizer and competition judge . " Competing before
spectators helps the public apprcciate the skills and tratning
involved."
Ten regional competitions lead
to the national finals, set for Oct. 8
at the Paul Bunyan Show in Nelsonville.

Dove

2 Liter

'.I

Professional loggers gear up
tor regional competition Aug. 6
ana, Mississtppi, New Hampshire,
New York , Pennsylvania, Virginia.
West Virginia and Wisconsin . Only
one logger from each regional fmal
will go on to the national competition, where the grand prize is .
S 10,000.
The "Game of Logging" competition is the culmination of a professional logger training program
conducted by logger Soren Eriksson of Sweden. The four-step program teaches the most progressive
logging techniques, safety and con servation .
Unlike any other pro -loggtng
contests, the "Game of Logging"
competitors arc professional loggers, not hobbyists. They use the
skills and techniques they would
normally usc everyday on the job.
"The basi s for the 'Game of
Logging· IIaining is 10 reduce
accidents and increase productivity ," says Tim Ard, president of
Forest Applications Training, Inc.

Boutique
95's

c

.ACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS!
~

Theme Books

70 Count.

) ~

Wide Or College Ruled .
1 00 Each Value.

1- ·I

Sidewalk
Sale!

- 3 Subject Notebooks

TOP WINNERS - In the more casual categorieli or clothing the grand champions modeling
at Friday night's style show were rrom the left,
Amanda Neece, Christy Drake, Denise Shene-

120 Count.

field, Rachael Morris, Heather Well with Mallory Guthrie, for whom she made a garment,
Tiffany Hensley, Melissa Barringer and Sarah
Lodwick.

69(:

Wide Or College Ruled .
1.79 Value.

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Or 4" x 6"- 50 Count. )
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6.99 Value.

e.l,. ''

J99

Many Items

1octo?

Day camps exposing
youths to good nutrition 'Biliary Beer' makers plan

POMEROY ~ More than 30
young Meigs countians recently
participa!Cd in the Expanded Food
and Nutrition Education Program
(EFNEP) day camps that were held
in Rutland at the Civic Center and
at the Middleport Elementary
School.
The camps were conducted by
sLaff members of Ohio State University Extension and were also
held in Vinton and Athens countics.
Staff members coordinating the
activity mcluded Sharon Smith.
Mei gs County EFNEP nutrition
educator; Janet Harris , Vinton
County, and Joyce Brown. Athens
County, also nutrition educators
with the EFNEP program , and
Mary Jane Black, coordinator for
the three-county project.
The OSU staff was assisted by
adult volunLeers Rebecca Foley and
Terrie Houser. who were in charge
of the ki!Chcn. 4-H Junior Leaders
and friends who were in charge of
games and songs at one or both
camps were Billy Crane, Christy
Mash , Missi Houser, Emily
Asbeck , Manhew King , Melissa
Hol stein. Jo sh Hager, C hristy
Drake. Knstina Kennedy and Ben
Crane.
The two-day camp was designed
to teach children, ages 8 through
II, the importance of good nutri-

lion , food safety, safe food preparation !Cchniques, and also introduce
the children to the food guide pyramid and how to usc it to ensure a
balanced dicL The campers helped
to prepare the snacks and lunches
for the two day camp.
Campers each received a ruler,
stickers, balloons and a certifica!C
recognizing their attendance.
The adult Expanded Food and
Nutrition Education Program is a
federally- funded project which
offers research -based nutrition
information. The program is
offered free of charge to all interested residents and is taught in
Meigs County . The program
includes a series of 12 classes on
basic nutrition, food safety, getting
the best buys at the grocery stores
and more.
Adult participants completing
the 12-week course will receive a
certificate from The Ohio State
University and a recipe book. Rcgistra•ion for the fall classes is being
accepted through the Meigs County
Extension Office and will also be
Laken at the Meigs County Fair.
For additional information about
the program, residents may contact
Sharon Smith, at the Meigs County
Extension Office, 992-6696. 8:30
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday .

B/OOd donors will experience
new pre-check technology
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. ~
Donors in the tri -state who give
blood from now on will participate
in the American Red Cross' first
step tDward an electronic, computer-suppor!Cd registration process as
the organization introduces a handheld computer sys!Cm used to assist
with pre-screening of donors.
It s called Pre -Check, a new
Red Cross procedure to reinforce
donor screening s!Cps already Laken
to provide the safest possible blood
supply for patients in need, according to the Tri-State Region Blood
Services.
· Dr. Mary B. Taylor, chief medical officer for the Tri-State Region,
said Pre-Check screens prospective
donors with known social security
numbers before they donate 10
identify more quickly than previously possible donors who are
deferred for health reasons and
1hose who have not waited the
required 56 days since their previous donation. •
"Pre-Check does not take the
place of the required hcahh history
screening. But by screenmg out at
the donation site, pre-check will
help prevent the collection of unusable blood, and thus enhance the

safety of the blood suppty, and protect the personal health of our
donors:· Taylor explained.
She added that Pre-Check pilot
studies conducted by several Red
Cross blood regions indicate that
the Red Cross' implementation of
Pre-Check may add about one
minute to the length of the blood
donation process.
"Pre-Check was enthusiastically
approved by the vast majority of
donors who panicipated in the pilot
studies, and has also been received
favorably by the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration, which provides regulatory oversight of our
nation's blood banks:· Taylor

donation to ease U.S. debt

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
brewers of "Biliary Beer," who
say they donate 25 cents toward
deficit reduction for every case
so ld , planned to give President
Clinton a $5,000 check when he
visits the city Saturday.
The beer, developed by Dave
Kaufman of Chagnn Falls and
Albert Mendel of Shaker Heights,
is advertised as "a beer drinker's
solution ID the national debt"
The founders of Presidential
Bottlers Inc. , both 39, said their
brew is "the politi cally correct
choice." The beer is sold in 12
states and made by the Pittsburgh
Brewing Co., which also makes
Iron City Beer.
The partners, friends since
childhood , already have donated
$5,000 toward the national debt,
currently about $4.5 trillion. The
first $5 ,000 was presented ID U.S.
Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, who
passed the money on to the Department of the Treasury.
Clinton, who will be in Cleveland to at!Cnd a fund-raiser for U.S.
Senate candidate Joel Hyatt, will be
met at the airport by the brewers,
who will present the second check.
The "Biliary Beer" can doesn't
have an picture of Clinton or ftrst
lady Hillary Rodham Clin!Dn - it
would be illegal to use their image
without permission - but features
a beer stein capped by a capitol
dome-shaped lid.
It also carries a disclaimer stating it wasn't made or cndoFscd by
the federal government, adding,
"Any similarity to any person or
persons living in a white house is
purely comcidental.''
At 25 cents a case, Presidential
Brewers would need to sell 18 trillion cases - 4 32 tri Uion beers 10 wipe out the current debt, which
no!Cd.
Donors of all types, especially
those with type 0, which are in
particularly short supply this summer, arc needed. For more information. contact the local Red Cross
chapter or call Tri-State Region
Blood Services at 522-0328 or 1-

800-344·6603.

grows daily .

MEAD
Wireless
Neat Book

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

RESERVE CHAMPIONS -Selected as
reserve champions ror the garments which they
made were these 4-H members who modeled at
Friday night's revue at Meigs High School. Lert
~-

.'

t

lo right, they are Rainy Walker, Christina
Neece, Melissa Dempsey, Kristina Kennedy,
Whitney Ashley and Anna Wotr.

w/Thermo

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MORE RESERVE CHAMPIONS - Win·
ning rosettes for their 4-H project work were
these reserve champions, from the lert, Chelsea
Montgomery, Rebecca Houser, Bittee Pooler,

to help you determine
why she doesn't want to eat•••.
especially when she has always
been such a good eater!
OPEN 8 AM-ll PM- ll PM
7 DAYS A WEEK

SPECIAUY TRAINED R.N. ON DUTY!!

Crystal Smith, Pamela Neece, Mariana Staats
and Kerry Allen. Winners were announced Friday night following the slyle revue at Meigs
High School.

~
I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY ~ Everything from
nightgowns to fancy fonnals were
modeled in the 1994 Mei~ County
4-H style revue staged Fnday night
in the auditorium of Meigs High
School.
"Fashion Flashbacks" was the
theme of the show, which fearured
nearly 60 young people in garments they created this year as part
of their 4-H project work.
Narrating lhe review were
Cindy S. Oliveri, home. economics
agent. and Elizabeth Downie, a former member or the Meigs Fashion

Board.
Before the 4-H club members
modeled tbeir gannents, tbe Meigs
Fashion Board members did a
show on ready-to-wear garments
provided by Pam ida.

The models wearing Pamida
clothing were Christy Drake, Kelley Grueser, Pamela Neece, Billee
Pooler and Denise Shenefield.
Ann wily a member of the local
fashion board is nominated for the
Ohio State Fashion Board, and Friday, Kelley Grueser was selected
as tbe Meigs nominee.
For those who missed the
parade of ciOihing fashions, another style revue wilt be staged 8l the
Meigs Cowuy Fair on the hill s1age
ontheW~~yruternocmoffair

weelc.
Clothing projects were judged
Thursday evening 8l tbe Senior Citizens Center, but the winners of
grand and reserve championships
and those receiving honorable mention in the various categories were
not announced until Friday at the
style revue.

Rosette and ribbon winners
were as follows:
Fun with Clothes: Melissa Barringer, grand champion; Rebecca
Barringer, reserve champion; and
Jessica Dillon, honorable mention.
Adventures in Clothing :
Rachael Morris, grand; Kerry
Allen. reserve champion: and Jennifer Allen, honorable mention.
Topping Your Outfit: Tiffany
Hensley , grand; Chelsea Montgomery, reserve, and Theresa
Baker, honorable mention.
Joyful Jumper: Bridget Vaughan, grand; Whitney Ashley,
reserve, and Nancy Pickens and
Jessica Justice, honorable mention.
Time out for CIOihin~ I: Amanda Neece, grand; Chrisuna Neece,
reserve, and Jus tin Hoschar and
Christopher Neece, honorable men( Continued on 86)

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Meigs youths' homegrown fashions
illuminate stage at 4-H style revue

CALL THE HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE

l-800-462-5255

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�Pomeroy-Midd leport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, WV

Page-86--Sunday Times-senti nel

July 31,1 994

jJ11
ul•y•3•1•, 1
• 9•9•4_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;P•
o•m;;;e~ro~y;-;;M;I;;;d;d;le~p;o;.;rt;;;;-G
;;a;ll;;:l'p;o;;;ll;s~,O~H~-;;;P~~~~n~t~P~Ie:a~sa:n~tl.,:w~v~------~S~u~
nday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Pa e-87

Miscellaneous j udging results posted for Meigs' 1994 fair
RUTLAND - The fo llow mg 4- Barrin ger; honorabl e mention ,
H members and th eir projects were Chri sla Circle and Tabitha
winners in various ca tegories 1n Swearingen.
Tee ns learn about children misc ellaneou s Judging at the Rut Grand champion, Crystal Smith* ;
land Civ ic Cent er Wednesday
Di scov erin g 4- 11 I - Grand reserve champi on, Karan Kauff;
ch;,mpi on, Michael Tavlm; reserve hono rab le menti o n, Ste phani e
champiOn. Crysl&lt;ll K 1 n ~; honorahk Jones and Jeanie Newell.
. And my world - Th e world
mcnuon. Rcl&gt;&lt;xc:l llouscr.
arou nd me - Gra nd champion,
D~&gt;c o vc r i n g 4· H II -G rand
~.: hamp 1 on , Elam c Putman : rcsavc
Rchc kah Karr.
l·ham pio n, OJ 1l' Karr .
Le arnin g about co mput ers E.\ p lor1ng an1111 a h - Gra nd C: rand champion, Michael Le ifheit;
C 1Jamp1on , Steph anie Kop eL·, r,·sc rv e champiOn , Tawn y Jones;
rcscr \'c c hampu)n, /.~!L h:..tr y Bu lm : honorable mention, Am hcr Fortney
ihln o rahl c mcllltU II, Cr y, tal Km g. and Jennifer Lam ben .
( 'h mt ina Mil ler and Les lie Parke I.
Crea uve arts - .Grand champi E :~ p l o rlfl g e ne rgy -- G ra nd
on. B.J . N1c hol son . reserve cham P"'"· Brandon Sm1th .
l ha1np tPil , Rcbckalt Karr.
. .
Su ence fun wllh electncll y E \ plo r1n g p l ant s
G ran d
rtl ~1111p 1 on , Rc hL
' kah Karr: reserve C: ran d champiOn , Scott Colwell;
reserve champ1on . M1kc Law son;
: c hamp1un, Stan'y Kunes.
S pL'l"t;J I ;J LjtJ:trJUill :-&gt;r t -up s honorab le ment iOn , Chn stina
( imnd ch:lmp lt lll. Jo'&lt;'Pil McCal l.
Mill er and Michael Taylor.
ALjU J I K rl ~ll ll 'i - (~ ra n d cham t
Me, you and others I - Grand
p ll)ll , Bnan Hll flrnan .
c hampi on, Jami e Drake; rese rv e
Archery - Grand cham piO n, champion, Karan Kauff.
MJ ry Cha rll' y; rc .s&lt;.'rvC cham pion ,
Sa fety in ev eryday livin g B rad \ 1orrisl'n: honl)r~Jb l c mention. Grand champio n, Ju lie Spaun *;
Od ll' Karr.
rese rve champ ion , Amy Smi th ;
BasJC bcd cc p1n g - Gra nd honorable mention, Karan Kauff,
champ 1nn, Kn , un Bro wn.
David ·Sobrieski and Nicole Whi le.
Ca n ng lo r yo ur hi cycle f' ishi ng .for th e bc g1nner Ci ra nrl ch amp um , Sarah Houser' .
Grand champion , Robert Harris•;
c~t g c d hird 'i Jn t he ho rn e reserve champion, Matthew Ki ng;
(i ran ct cha m p~tl n . J ulie Spaun ; honorable mention , Gabrie l Jenki ns
JT \ c rv c cha nl [lt On , Kimb erl y
and Crystal Kmg .
fi l(' r cc; honorah lc ment ion , Tr ic ia
Fishing for the intermediate Dav is. Pall y Nall y, Elai ne Putman Grand champion, B.J. Ke nnedy• ;
;JrJd Ra mey Wa"cr.
reserve champion, Frank Pierce .
Cats -~ G rand champion, Leslie
Exploring our forests - Gmnd
Parke r; rese rve champ ion, Evan cham pion , Rebekah Karr; reserve
Struble, honorab le mention, Jess1ca champion. Crystal Ki ng.
Ba rnngc r, Sarah Houser, Jenni fer
Grow ing beddi ng plants l.ambcn and Chnsuna Neece.
Grand champion, Jessica Justice.
Livillg and learn ing wi th ch ilG ro wing annua l fl owers dre n - Grand champion, Be tsy Grand champion, Cheryl Jewe ll ; 1
Shee ts• ; reserve champion, Rob1n reserve champion, Mariam Eldaba-

ja; honorable mention, Donny Carnahan and Rebekah Karr.
Vegetable gardening I - Grand
champion, Tiffan y Pridd y; reserve
champion, Cheryl Jewell ; honor able mention , Odic Karr.
The fam1l y vcge ~&lt;~bl e garden Gmnd champion, Julie Spaun .
Genealogy - Grand champion.
Amber Fortney; reserve champion ,
JessJca Bartram.
Sa fe usc of gun s - Grand
champ1on, Robert Harri s; reserve
champion, Ben Holler; honorable
mention , Bryan Colwell and Jcfr
Kimes. .
. Lookmg good - Grand champ1on, Billie Pooler• ; reserve cham PI On, Megan Sweann ge n; honorabl e men! JOn, Nancy Na lly and
Jea01 e NewelL
Kccpmg fit - Grand champion,
Laramc Lawson•; reserve champion , Jcanmc Newell.
Tobacc o and you - Grand
cham pion, Mc!Jssa Guess.
Al cohol deci sion s - Grand
champion, Jessica Barringer; hon arable mention, Melissa Guess.
Adventures in hom e li ving Grand champion, Megan Swcaringen• ; reserve champion , Crystal
Bennett.
Designed outdoor living spaces
- Grand champion , Lisa Stethem• ·
. Furn itu re and woodwork recyclm g - Gra nd champion, Josh
Hager• ; reserve champion. Cheryl
Jewe ll .
Desig ned inferio rs - Grand
Champi o n, Noe ll e Picke ns•;
reserve champion, Christy Riley.
Yo ur f Jrsl home away from
home - Grand champiOn, Nancy
Nally• .
Exp loring our insect world Grand champion, Vincent BroderIck*; reserv e champion, Jess ica

Barringer.
Laundry for beginners - Grand
champ ion. Crystal Smith *; reserve
champion , Chri stina ~ ecce ; honorable mention, Elizabeth Smith *.
La undry (ad vanced) _ Grand
champion, Kristina Kennedy* .
Leadership skills you never outgrow 1 _ Honorable mention , Jcssic a Amou.
Leadership skills you neve r outg ro w II _ Grand champion ,
Bethany Cooke*.
Leadership skills you never outgrow Ill _ Grand champio n,
Michelle Miller•.
Leadership skills you never out grow IV _Grand champion , Crystal
Smith *.
Mys teries of mi crow ave _
Grand champion, Joseph McCall*;
reserve champion , Lori Harri s.
Marvel s of microwave _ Grano
champion, Vincent Broderick•.
Lei' s learn to manage money Grand champion, Tabitha Swcaringen; honorab le. mention , Cynthia
Cotteri ll.
You and your money _ Grand
champion , Tricia Davis; honorable
mention, Chuck Parker.
Le t' s ex plore the outdoors 1 _
Grand champi on, Rya n Kauff ;
rese rve champion , Art Tobin Jr. ;
honorable mention , Od ic Karr and
Ann Kauff.
At yo ur dJS pma l _ Grand
champion , Kinde ll Brown ; reserve
champion, Jeffrey Circle.
Explori ng Ohio ponds - Grand
champion, Chris Kmwsclyn.
Guinea pigs - Grand champion, All ison Hayes; reserve champ1on, Pauy Nall y; honorable mention,
Jeremiah Cline.
Hamsters - Grand champion,
Amber Hayes; reserve champion,
Ji mmie PutmaA ; honorable menlion, Od ic Karr.
Pocket pets - Grand champion,
Rebekah Karr.
Adventures with your camera Grand champ io n, Lara in e Lawson •; rese rv e champio n, Lisa 1
Stcthem; honorable men tion, Jcssi- I
ca Arno tt, Mariam Eld abaja and
Amber Fortney.
Explo ring ph o togr aph y Grand cham pion, Cynthia Cotterill*; reserve champion, Chrisla Circle; ho norabl e mention , Amber

Hayes.
Adv entures with adju sta ble
camera - Grand champion. Jamie
Will iam son•; reserv e champi on,
Ke lley Grueser; honorabl e mention. Kelly Osborne.
Model rocketry - Grand champion, Jeffrey Kimes.
Science fun with airp lanes Grand champion, Brad Morrison .
Radio controlled vehi cles Grand champion , Mike Law son• ;
reserve champio n, Jos h Hag er;
honorable mention, Jeremy Jackson.
Rope - Grand champion ,
Michael Taylor; rese nd chain pion,
Robin Barringer; honorab le men tion , Tri sh Garey and Jeffrey
Kimes.
Se lf-de term in ed - Grand
champion, Matthew Kirk.
Lawn and garden power equ ipment - Grand champion, Thomas

McKay• ; reserve champion, Jcre my Johnson.
Safe usc of agri cultural equ ipmcnt - Grand champion, Joey
Dillon• .
Shielded metal arc we lding Grand champion, Michael O' Nail*.
Wor kmg with wood and tool s
G rand champion, Jame s
McKay•; re se rv e champion,
Chri stoph er Jac obs* ; honorable
mention Adam Barrett, Bren t
Buckley: Robert Ha rris• and
Michael Lambert
Wonderful world of tools Grand champion , Bradley Rittcrback • ; rese rve cham pion , Chri s
Barringer• and Jeffrey Ci rcle• .
Building bigger things - Grand
champion , Robert Rillcrback*;
reserve ch ampion, Bi ll y Crane•;
honorable mention, Mike Lawson.
• indicates projcc iS thai wi ll be
submitted to the sUite fair.

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

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Happenings around Meigs County
- Syracuse school clean-up
_ Syracuse Parent Teacher Orga- niza ti on wi ll mee t at 6:3 0 p.m.

· 4-H style revue
~ Lion .

(Cont inued rrom BS)

- Time Out for Clothin g II :
: Pame la Neece, grand ; and Rainy
· Walker. reserve.
Time Out for Clothing Ill: Jill
Lemley, gmnct.
Cloth es for Middl e Sc hool :
Jamie Drake, gra nd ; Kri slina
: Kenn edy, rese rve, and Andrea
: Nculzli ng, honorable mention.
Clothes for High Sc hool and
· Be yond : Ke lley Gr ueser, grand ,
and Meli ssa Dempsey, reserve .
Act iv e Spo rt swear: Chri sty
Drake . grand; Bill ee Pool er,
·rese rve; and Andrea Neutzlin g,
honorahle mention.
Spectator Spo rtswear: Noelle
. Pi cke ns, grand; Anna Wolf,
_rese rve; and Cy nthia Cotterill ,
Jeann ie Newell , and Melissa Houser, honorable mention.
Loungin g clothes : Deni se
Sh enefie ld . grand; Billee Pooler,
reserve, and Pauy Nally , honorable
... mention.

Coats and Jac kets: Sarah Lod·wick, grand ; Crys tal Smith ,
'fcscrve.
Sew in g fo r Oth ers ; Heath er
Well , gra nd; Pamela Ne ~ ce ,
·reserve; an d Do ro thy Leifheit,
,Amy Smith , and Cynth ia Couerill,
-honorable mention.
· Dress up fonnal: Heather Well ,
:grand.
: Others modeling garments in the
");tyle revue were Beverly Burdeue,
-Whitney Ashley, Shannon Enright,
:Rebecca Karr, Maria Drenner .
7vlichcllc Drenner, Rebecca Hous-er, Amanda Neece,
' Selec ted to model thei r gar:ments at the Ohio State Fair on
.A ug . 18 were Melissa Barringer,
J"riffan y Hensley, Bridget Vaugh1111, Amanda Neece, Pamela Neece,
J ill Lemley , Kri stina Kennedy,
Kell ey Grueser, Chri sty Drak e,
Noelle Pickens, Anna Wolf, Denise
:S henefield and Heather Well.

Monday at the Syracuse elementary
to clea n and paint play ground .
Bring wire and paint brushes.

69 and 97. All should bring cov ered dish and lawn shairs.

Hudnall reunion ~t
The seventh annual reunion of
Lenora McNull Hudnall and the
late Ernest Hudnall will be at I
p.m. Aug. 7 at the home of Howard
and Kathy Hudnall at county roads

Bedford firefighters meet
The Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the town hall.

CTC
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90

'

'

�Entertainment
Buffett brings Caribbean tour
to appreciative fans in Ohio
July31,1994 .

\

••

By DAVE HARRIS
BUCKEYE LAKE - He hasn't
had a Top 40 hit stncc 1979
("Fins") and the radio only plays
hi s two biggest hits (1974's "Come
Monday" and 1977's "Margalltaville"), but despite the lack of
electroniC exposure, Jimmy Buffett
has his fans - and what fans they
arc.
A crowd in excess of 45,000
jammed into the Buckeye Lake
Music Center outside of Newark on
July 16 for "Jimmy Buffett's Primo
Parrot Head Pan y I L"
Now you might ask, what is a
Parrothead'l A Parrothead is quite
simply a Buffett fan . The Grateful
Dead calls it's legions of fans the
"Deadheads," well, Buffett has his
Parrot Heads.
A Buffett concert gives his fans
a trip to the Caribbean without ever
leavmg the state of Ohio. Dcsptte
the lack of radio play, his concens
regularly rank among Pol/star's
top -grossing concert tours. Hi s
shows sell out in a mauer of hours
and attract a wide assortment of
fairly normal fans, who become the
definition of a Parrot Head.
The fans usually arrive by the
bus, van or carload, sporting shark
outfits or lobster hats, or completely outfitted in the wildest of tropical garb. The fun stans long before
the concert. The parking lot is

filled with tailgate parties, much
like you wou ld see at a co llege
football game.
Buffett himself tried to explain
in The Parrot /lead 1/andbook,
which accompanies his CD collection, just what one of his concens
is about.
"People try to unravel the mystery of our longevity and our fanat ical fans, but I choose not to lamper
with it," he said. "In today's world
of fax machines, cellular phones,
and call waiting, we need to spend
a little time with the fun pan of
ourselves, and that is what a Jimmy
Buffett concert is all aboul"
This year's edition of the Parrot·
head pany got underway at I p.m.
with several bands on a small slage
in "Margaritaville," which was
located on top or the hill above the
main stage.
Around 6 p.m. the pany moved
to the main slage where Margaritaville Records (which Buffett
launced in 1992 in association with
MCA) labelmates The lnganas presented a 45-minute set of their
brand of music.
Appearing next was Otis Day
and the Knights from Animal
House fame. Day sent the crowd on
a dance party of the 60's soul
music. Pcrformmg such favorites
as "Gimme Some Lovin," "Soul
Man,""Louic, Louie," and of

course, "Shout."
At 8:40 p.m. the man of the
hour took the stage, and despite the
protest of one sec urity employee,
the people in the reserve sets
climbed on top or their seats dancing and singing as Buffett took
them on a musical journey that
covered his career.
\ ;.
Complete with a sleel band
marching on stage, Buffett
launched into the 22-song set with
the title cut from his new CD,
Fruitcakes. With his special brand
of humor he performed "Boat
JIMMY BUFFETT
Drinks," "Volcano," "CheeseburgBuffett says every year that he is
. er in Paradise," "Why Don't We
Get Drunk" and "Fins," among oth- going to lake a break from touring.
ers. Buffen showed his serious side He has other business interests, he
also with "Son of a Son of a Sailor" has written two best selling books,
(written about his grandfather), Tales from Margaritaville and
"Jolley Man" and "A Pirate looks Where is Joe Merchant? He is also
gelling into acting, owns two Marat40."
Jimmy came out on slage for his garitaville Store and Cafes and also
first encore to the tune of "Wipe- has his own line of clothing. Bufout" and launched into his rendi- fett and Saturday Night Live alum tion of the Dead's "Uncle John's nus Bill Murray also arc pan- ownBand," ended that song with a line ers of a minor league baseball
from "Stairway to Heaven" before team. Despite the warnings of a
performing the Parrot Head Nation- break from touring, he stills lakes
al Anthem "Margarilavillc." The his pany on the road every year so
evening ended with "Come Mon - his fans can escape from reality,
day" and he reached way back to even if it is only for a couple of
sing a line or two from "It's Been a hours each year.
(Dave Harris is a corresponLovely Cruise" before exiting the
stage for the final time some 2-1(2 dent for the Sunday Times-Sentinel)
hours after fust appearing.

'I'

l ~

TV show searches for 'higher' reality
By SCOTT WILLIAMS
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK - One of the sad
things about the so-called "realitybased" television series is that
some people tend to confuse them
with the real thing.
Reality is not edited. It has no
theme music. And, as far as we can
tell, it lacks a grand, rich, thematic
structure.
Happily, The System, a weekly,
Sunday night documentary series
by cable's Court TV, has chosen a
grand theme to explore.
Since its launch May 29, The
System has tried to show that the
courtroom trial is not the centerpiece of American justice. It tries
to show how justice works in ''the
real world."
The System is looking at justice
in the microcosm of Far Rockaway,
in Queens, the fastest-growing and
most ethnically diverse of New
York City's five boroughs.
And although Queens is justly
celebrated for its diversity and vigorous immigrant life, it has its
share of crime. And racial tensions
have erupted there , in places like

Howard Beach.
The System chose to focus on
cao;es that get little attention in dayto-day press coverage, talking with
JOist Precinct police, criminals,
lawyers, prosecutors - the people
who keep the system running.
Writer-reporter Timothy Sullivan and producer-director Fredric
D. Cambria go to e~traordinary
lengths to be comprehensive.
In the series' ftrst episode, they
went straight to Far Rockaway's
heart of darkness, the notorious
Edgcmere Houses project, where a
drug turf war had claimed the life
or George Hairston, a 21 -year-old
felon.
Hairston, who was ambushed in
a breezeway and died in a fusillade
of more than 100 bullets, was
nobody's sweetheart. He'd served
three years' hard time for pistolwhipping a storekeeper during a
holdup.
Yet he became a compelling ftgure in a thoughtful investigation of
the crime, the neighborhood and
the three young men accused of
killing him, one of them a child-

hood friend
The documentarians also spoke
with the murdered man's parents
and mtemewed Edgemere resident
Zandra Myers, a community
activist, about making one's home
m a hostile environment.
The weakest thing about The
System seems to be that its producers don't really trust their material
and its simple JJ?Wer. They indulge
far too read1ly m the cheap tricks
that "reality" TV uses to hype an
uncritical audience.
For example, we often see a
"denatured" video still or
sequence, in which the color is
drained from the image, leaving a
monochromatic fragment that signals the viewer, "OK, pay attention now, you're looking at 'real'
video!"
It's worse when the sequence is
pixilated, skipping frames for that
familiar herky-jerky "reality"
tone , where filmmakers impart
false drama to simple movement,
with excited, pulse-thumping incidental music.
With all its faults, The System is

still far superior to the rest of the
genre. Court TV is spending a ton
of money to make something different.
When the Court TV helicopter
unit shows an aerial view of the
Rockaway peninsula, the camera
pulls back to show the dislant towers or Manhatlan rising above sunset clouds, as far away as neverneverland.
But just when you think The
System is onto something, it settles
for a vicarious thrill. It puts you in
a IOlst Precinct unmarked car,
trolling the tough, drug-ridden
neighborhood known as The Bungalows in the small hours. It's a .
place even crack-addled junkies
fear 10 go.
A police flashlight shines in the
face of a resident minding his business on the midnight streets and the
level gaze that comes back into the
car and into the camera is straight
out of a shark tank.
You've got no more business
there, citizen, than you have on the
far side of the moon. Move along,
now, move along.

What was the background of 'All in the Family'?
Q. I slarted watching All in the
Family re-nuns. Can you tell me a ASK DICK KLEINER
little bit about the show's background? And what happened to
Edith Bunker? My brother says she
died on the show , but I haven't
DICK
seen that episode. - J.G., Oak
KLEINER
Lawn, Ill.
A. All in the Family was an
Americanized version of an
English TV hit called 'Til Death
Do Us Part. Edith Bunker died of a
A. That not-so-holy place was
stroke. but not on the show - she "The.~hurch of What's Happening
was supposed to have passed away Now.
between the '79 and '80 seasons.
Q. I am a big fan of Kevin CostQ. In the old Aip Wilson show, ner. I like to watch all or his
we remember Geraldine and the movies, especially Robin Hood
Rev. Leroy. What we don't remem- with Costner and Mary Elizabeth
ber, and would like to know, is the Mastrantonio. I would like to know
name or !he church. Whatever it the ages Kevin and Mary Elizabeth.
was, it ended with "and Rib -S.C., Lenox, Iowa
Joinl" What was the name of that
A. Costner is 39 and Ms. Maschurch? - B.J.A., Klamath Falls, trantonio is 35.
Ore.
Q. Wings is my wife and my all-

time favorite show. There's a character, Carlton Blanchard, played by
William Hickey. He cracks us up.
What can you tell me about him?
-G. and F., Conway, Ark.
A. Hickey is a noted Broadway
actor and famous acting teacher
who, as an actor, has long specialized in playing older men. He had
an Academy Award nomination for
his work in Prizzi' s Honor. While
he spends most of his time doing
stage work and teaching, he has
done a few good movies, such as A
llatful of Rain and 92 in the Shade.
Q. Would you please clear up
this question? On The Fall Guy,
who played the blonde girl? Some
of us say Heather Locklear or
Heather Johnson. Also, who played
the blonde on T.J. Hooker? C.A.A., Cheshire, Ohio
A. We will now straighten out
the blonde Heather question.
Heather Thomas was The Fall

Guy's resident blonde, and Heather
Locklear was on T.J. 1/ooku. I
don't know a Heather Johnson.
Q. Years ago on TV, I saw a
show with Debbie Reynolds and
Barry (Somebody). I remember the
name as Mary, Mary. Had it been a
stage play or movie? I think
George Sanders was in it, too. C.S.K., Clinton, Ind.
A. Mary, Mary is the right
name. It ran for one season ('63)
and starred Ms. Reynolds and
Barry Nelson. It was adapted from
Jean Kerr's hit Broadway play. But
George Sanders was not involved.
Copyright1994 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(Send your questions to: Ask
Dick Kleiner, clo Newspaper
Enterprise A55ociation, 200 Park
Ave., New York, N.Y. 10166. Due to
the volume of mail, personal
replies cannot be provided.)

Loeb single tops weekly Billboard charts
By The Associated Press
Weekly charts for the nation's
best-selling recorded music as they
appear in next week's issue of Billboard magazine. Reprinted with
permission. (Platinum signifies
more than I million copies sold;
Gold signifies more than 500,000
copies sold.):
TOP SINGLES
Copyright 1994, BillboardSoundscan Inc.-Broadcast Data
Systems.
J."Siay (I Missed You)," Lisa
Loeb &amp; Nine Stories (RCA)
2."I Swear," AII-4-0ne (Blitzz)
(Gold)
3." Fantastic Voyage," Coolio
(Tommy Boy) (Gold)
4 . "Can You Feel the Love
Toni~h~" Elton John (Hollywood)
5. 'Any Time, Any Place-And
On and On," Janet Jackson (Virgin) (Gold)
6."Don't Turn Around," Ace of
Base (Arista) (Gold)
7. "Regulate," Warren G. &amp;
Nare Dogg (Death Row-Interseope)
(Gold)
8."Wild Night," John Mellencamp &amp; Me'Shell Ndegeocell;:,
(Mercury)
9."Funkdafied." Da Brat (So
So Del) (Gold)
10. "Back and Forth," Aaliyah
(Biackgnound) (Gold)

TOP ALBUMS
Copyright 1994 , BillboardSoundscan Inc.
I. "'The Lion King' Soundtrack," (Disney)
2. "The Sign," Ace of Base
(Arista) (Platinum)
3."'Forrest Gump' Soundtrack," (Epic)
4. "Purple," Stone Temple
Pilots (Atlantic)
5."We Come Strapped," MC
Eiht featuring CMW (Epic Street)
6." Voodoo Lounge," The
Rollinf Stones (Virgin)
7.' August &amp; Everything
After," Counting Crows (Geffen)
(Platinum)
8."1t Takes a Thief," Coolio
(Tommy Boy)
9. "Regulate ... G Funk Era,"
Warren G {Vtolator-RAL)
IO . ''Superunknown,''
Soundgarden (A&amp;M) (Platinum)
COUNTRY SINGLES
Copyright 1994 , BillboardBroadcast Data Sysrems
!."Summertime Blues" Alan
Jackson (Arista)
2."National Working Woman's
Holiday," Sammy Kershaw ,(Mercury)
3."Be My Baby Tonight," John
Michael Monlgomery (Atlantic)
4.''Love a Little Stronger,"
Diamond Rio (Arista)

5."Thinkin' Problem," David
Ball (Warner Bros.)
6.' 'Dreaming With My Eyes
Open," Clay Walke~ (Giant)
7. "Renegades, Rebels and
Rogues," Tracy Lawrence
(Atlantic)
8. "Every Once in a While,"
Blackhawk (Arista)
9. "Half the Man," Clint Black
(RCA)
10." Hangin' In," Tanya Tucker
(Liberty)
R&amp;BSINGLES
Copyright 1994, Billboard
1.' Any Time, Any Place-And
On and On," Janet Jackson (Virgin)
2."Funkdafeid," Da Brat (So
So Def-Chaos)
3. "I Miss You," Aaron Hall
(MCA)
4."Back &amp; Forth," Aaliyah
(Biackground) (Gold)
5. "Sending My Love," Zhane
(IIItown)
6. "Willing 10 Forgive," AreiJia
Franklin (Arista)
7." Always in My Heart," Tevin
Campbell (Qwest)
8."The Right Kinda Lover,"
Patti Labelle (MCA)
9."Stroke You Up," Changing
Faces (Big Beat)
lO."I'm Not Over You," Ce Ce
.Peniston (A&amp;M)

MODERN ROCK TRACKS
Copyright 1994, Billboard
(While the other charts are
based on retail sales, this list is
compiled from radio station airplay
repons.)
!."Come Out and Play," Offspring (Epitaph)
2."Vasoline," Stone Temple
Pilots (Atlantic)
3."Prayer for the Dying," Seal
(Sire)
4."Fall Down," Toad the Wet
Sprocket (Columbia)
5."Einstein on the Beach,"
Counting Crows (DGC-Geffcn)
6."Biaclc Hole Sun," Soundgarden(A&amp;M)
7." Stay," Lisa Loeb &amp; Nine
Stories (RCA)
8."Basket Case," Green Day
(Reprise)
9."Labour of Love," Frente!
(Mammoth-Atlantic)
IO."Headache," Frank Black
(4AD-Eleklra)
DANCE MAXI-SINGLES
Copyright 1994, Billboard
!."Take it Easy," Mad Lion
(Weeded)
2. "Nappy Heads," Fugees
(Tranzlalor Crew) (Ruffhouse)
3. "This DJ.," Warren G. (Violator)
4."Do You Wanna Get Funky,"
C + C Music Factorv (Columbia)

Sports

Sunday Times-Sentinel /BB

Second career for
career women

By BETH J . HARPAZ
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK - At first blush,
they're a diverse group of sober,
everyday professionals: a lawyer,
an engineer, a math teacher, a
retired colonel, a science librarian
and a literary scholar.
Strip away those cool facades
and expose a steamy common
ground - second careers full of
hammering heartbeats, glittering
eyes, tearful confronlations, whispered confessions, candlelit bedchambers. And happy endings,
always happy endings.
They're romance writers, and
they've sold millions of books.
This weekend they're in Manhattan
for the Romance Writers of America convention.

12."

By CHUCK MELVIN
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - The cold, calculating,
stone-faced image Bud Grant cultivated during 18
years as the stoic coach of the Minnesota Vikings was
washed away Saturday as he choked back tears during
his enshrinement into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Inducted along with Grant during a frequently
emotional ceremony that lasted more than two hours,
were Dallas running back Tony Dorsett, San
Francisco comerba~:k Jimmy Johnson, Oeveland running back Leroy Kelly, St. Louis tight end Jackie
Smith and Dallas defensive Iackie Randy White.
None of the acceptance speeches was more
poignant than Grant's. Many in the audience had to
wipe away tears as he credited his father with inspiring him to make it in professional spons.
"When I was born, my name was Harry," Grant
said "I was a Junior. Well, you can't have two Harrys
in the same house, so my mom nicknamed me Buddy
Boy and dad called me Kid. Buddy Boy got shortened.
Maybe if I was a boxer, I would have been Kid Grant
"You can't imagine what an honor this is. If mom
was here- she's 93 and couldn't be here- I'd look
at the pride in her face. U dad was here, he'd stand up
and say, 'The kid made it. He finally made it.' "
During 18 years with the Vikings from 1967 to
1985, Grant went 158-96-5, leading his team 10 the
Super Bowl four times- all losses. But he noted that
he left the game on his own, never getting fired from
his job.
"If you're going to succeed- survive is maybe a
better word - you've got to handle losing," he said.
"You die every time you lose, but you've got 10 get
over it."
Kelly's induction came 18 years after he was first
eligible, perhaps because his accomplishments with
the Browns always seemed to pale in comparison with
those of his predecessor, Hall of Farner Jim Brown.
The seniors committee acted to put Kelly in the Hall
this year.
When Brown abruptly retired in 1966 to punue an

A 1994 survey of 1,000
romance writers found that half
have other professional careers,
lopped by teaching, editing and
journalism.
Susan Wiggs, a Harvard-educated math teac her, has written 13
romance novels. Angela Benson is
having her first novel, "Bands of
Gold,'' published this year: the
heroine - like Benson - is an
engineer.

anytime soon. He got a letter Friday from the California S1are Athletic Commission saying he was
too old to be sparring with anyone,
much less Toney, without a permit.
The Shapiro-Toney match took
place July 3, about two weeks after
Simpson was arrested for murder.
LOS ANGELES (AP) Roseanne's first husband is suing
an on-line computer service that he
claims released his electronic mail
to people not authorized to read il
William Pentland doesn't say
what the E-mail contained. But his
lawsuit filed Friday in Los Angeles
Superior Court contends that Prodigy Services Co. had promised him
the E-mail transmissions would be
private.
Pentland, who is representing
himself, is seeking unspecified
damages. A spokesman for the
New York-based computer bulletin
board could not be reached for
comment
Pentland and Roseanne divorced
in 1990. The television slar is currently splitting from Tom Arnold.

NEW YORK (AP) - Talk
Show Hosts Who Destroy Priceless
Mementos! On the next Rivera
Live!
Geraldo Rivera borrowed one of
his producer's prized possessions
- a strip of three tickets to the
original Woodstock - for a show
commemorating the concert's 25th
annt versary.
Then he accidentally tore it in
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) half while holding them up to the Pianist Van Cliburn interrupted his
camera.
17-city tour with the Moscow Phil"I give it to Geraldo for five harmonic after his mother suffered
minutes and this happens," said a stroke.
producer Bob Fasbender.
Rildia Cliburn, 97, suffered the
But Fasbender, who had kept his stroke Thursday at her home in
tickets safely in a little glass case in suburban Westover Hills. Hospital
his dresser drawer, made the best officials withheld information on
of 11. ''I'm going to frame what's her condition at the family's
left of i~" he said after the taping request.
Tuesday.
Cliburn canceled Friday and
The CNBC show, which airs Sunday performances. His Tuesday
Monday through Friday at 9 p.m. concert date at the Metropolitan
EDT, will be broadcast Aug. 7.
. Opera House in New York
remained uncertain.
LOS ANGELES (AP)- OJ .
Mrs. Cliburn was her son's prinSimpson's lawyer apparently can cipal piano teacher until he entered
spar outside the courtroom, too. the J uilliard School in New York at
Robert Shapiro went two rounds age 17. She taught him several of
with super middleweight champion the major works with which he is
James "Lights Out" Toney - and identified, including Tchaikovsky's
claimed a draw.
Piano Conceno No. 1.
"I've got it on video," Shapiro
said. "I made out better than the
NEW YORK (AP) - Former
guy before me. He got a broken Mayor John Lindsay was released
nose."
from the hospital a day after colBut the 51-year-old Shapiro bet- lapsing on a train platform.
ter not count on switching cancers

NEW YORK (AP)- The New Yankees beat the Cleveland Indians
for the lOth consecutive time, winning 6-5 Saturday as Wade Boggs singled home Mike Gallego with the go-ahead run in the sixth inning.
With the score tied 4-4 in the sixth, Gallego and Pat Kelly singled with
one out off Larry Casian (1-5). Boggs singled witli two outs off Derek
Lilliquist and Paul O'Neill hit an RBI double, ending a career-high 0-for- ·
22 slide.
Ausanio (2-0) allowed one hit in I 2/3 innings, Carlos Baerga's 15th
home run of the season in the eighth. Steve Howe got two outs for his
' 14th save.
Cleveland, which hasn't beat the Yankees since last Sept. 3, went
ahead in the second on Sandy Alomar's RBI single. But New York scored
three runs in the second off Albie Lopez on Bernie Williams' RBI single,
Luis Polonia's bases-loaded walk and Boggs' RBI single.
Kenny Lofton hit an RBI single in the fifth, bl!' Don Mattingly's runscoring infield single gave the Yankees a4-21ead m the bottom half.
Cleveland tied the score in the sixth on Albert Belle's 35th homer and
Manny Ramirez's 14th. Belle's homer was his second in two days and
ninth m 12 !!ames.
Brewers S, Red Sox I - At Boston, Cal Eldred allowed four hits in
six innings to outduel Roger Clemens and lead the Milwaukee Brewers to
a 5-l win Saturday over the Boston Red Sox.
John Jaha and Jody Reed homered for the Brewers, who have won
seven of their last nine on the road. Jaha led off the fourth with his lith
homer and Reed, who played for Boston in 1988-92, hit a three-nun shot
in the eighth.
Tigers 14, Athletics 2- At Octroi~ Chad Kreuter tied a major league
record with three sacrifice nies, and Milt Cuyler went 3-for-4 With a
homer Saturday to lead the Detroit Tigers to a 14-2 victory over the Oakland Athletics.
h'
· 1
PhUlies S, Braves 2 - At Atlanta, Lenny Dykstra 11 a two-run tnp e
to highlight a four-run rally in the eighth inning Sarurday that gave the
Philadelphia Phillies a 5-2 victory over the Atlanta Braves.
.
The Phillies battered reliever Greg McMichael (5-3) for four straight
hits in the eighth to send the Braves to their eighth loss in 13 games.
McMichael, who started the ninth protecting a 2-1 lead, has blown mne
saves in 29 chances.

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Bobby
Bonilla, with a $5.7 million salary
this season, stands 10 lose the most
if baseball players suike in two
weeks.
Bonilla would lose $31,148
each day of a strike, a total of
$1,619,672 if a walkout continues
for the fmal 52 days of the season.
Chicago While Sox pitcher Jaclc
McDowell, who gained a $5.3 million salary in arbitration despite
losing his case, is next at $28,692
per day, a total of $1,506,011, followed·-by Roberto Alomar of
Toronro, Roger Clemens of BOSton
and David Cone of Kansas City,
who each would lose $27,322 per
day, a rota! of $1,420,765.
But the star players say they'll
strike to defeat a salary cap even
though ~ have the most to lose.
''There s no way the players are
ClliCking,'' Clemens said

tlttrJ BIG LEA.d

~.li!il,.......

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADIISSION $2.00
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1: 15 3:15

hOO 3:45

I

By CHUCK MELVIN
returned it 14 yards to the
CANTON, Ohio (AP) Chargers' 31. Klein then completRookie quarterback Perry Klein ed two passes to Corey Dixon and
scrambled five yards for a touch- Anthony Wallace carried twice for
down with 3 7 seconds left seven yards to set up the winning
Saturday, lifting the Atlanta TD.
Falcons past the San Diego • Klein is competing with vereran
Olargers 21-17 in the annual Hall Bob Gagliano for the Falcons'
or Fame exhibition game.
third quarterback job behind Jeff
Klein, a fourth-round draft George and Bobby HeberL
choice from C.W. Post, dropped
George completed an eight-yard
back on third-and-goal, then sprint- scoring pass to Andre Rison in the
ed to the right comer of the end fus• quarter.
zone. He had earlier hit rookie Ben
The Chargers led 17-7 at halfEmanuel - a converted quarter- time but couldn't score again. Sian
back - for a 41-yard touchdown.
Humphries got them slarted quickKlein's touchdown run, set up ly with a 36-yard TD pass to
by a late interception, capped what Shawn Jefferson on the second
had been a frustrating fourth quar- play of the game.
rer for the Falcons and gave them
John Carney's 24 -yard field
goal put San Diego ahead 10-7,
their ftrst lead.
Klein moved them into scoring and they stretched the lead to 17.7
range twice before in the period, late in the second quarter when
but he barely overthrew a diving rookie Willie Clark intercepted
Joe Rogers in the end zone with Gagliano's deflected pass and
about tO minutes left and was returned it 86 yards for a touchintercepted by Chris Johnson at the down.
Chargers' nine with 4:38 to play.
The game was typically sloppy
Atlanla got the ball back when for an NFL preseason opener: The
Charles Washington picked off a Chargers committed II penalties,
pass by rookie Jeff Brohm and while the Falcons had 10.

No players would be paid dur- beast," Moss said. "The players
ing a work stoppage, according 10 always win when they stick rogetb·
lawyers for both the Major League er and players are more unified
Baseball Players Assocation and than they've ever been.''
In the past two negotiations,
management's Player Relations
Committee. For each day of a commissioners Peter Ueberroth
strike, they would lose 1-183rd of and Fay Vincent took manage·
their salary. For players making lhe ment's salary cap proposals off the
$109,000 minimum, that's $596 table, which angered the hard-line
owners. Since forcing Vincent to
per day.
"The players are very solid," resign in September 1992, owners
insisted Will Clark of the Texas have kept the commissioner's
Rangers, who would lose $21,858 office vacant so they wouldn't
have the same problem during this
per day.
Dick Moss, a player agent and negotiation.
"The one person who always
the union's general counsel from
1966 10 1977, predicts these nego- acted in the best interest of the
tiations will end lite all others for game always screwed the owners,"
the owners since free agency Atlanta Braves president Stan
Kasten said Friday. "The commis·
began.
"They always lose and they sioner can't force the players to
always say going into a situation accept anything. All he can do is
lite this, 'We're going 10 win and impose things on the owners ....
we're going 10 show these guys.' We've never collectively bargained
That's not in the nature of the a solution. We've always had one

shoved down our own throats. This
time we won't."
Chicago White Sox chairman
Jerry Reinsdorf, viewed by many
as the most influential owner, says
the union ' s talk about players'
freedom to play in the cities of
their choice is a smokescreeen. He

says the union's chief desire is to
preseve the current system, which
has helped escalate the average
salary from $51,501 in 1976 to
$1,188,679 on opening day this
year.
"They just raise all kinds of
issues so they can avoid the main

~~!e:~ptures r~~~r! ~~:~~:~c~~~
~~~e~?,:)~ov~

. yBROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - AJ culmination of impressive comeUnser Jr., getting some late help bact after he Uted a low move on
from new series champion Mark the banking and went all the way
Martin won the IDternational Race from second to ninth near the midof Cb~mpions finale Saturday at way point of the lliCC.
Michigan Intcmational Speedway.
"I got caught ~alc.ing a lo~
· Unser an Indy-car star who is move and the low line JUSt wasn t
currently leading the PPG Cup the place 10 be today," Unser said.
. ints !liCe led only the fmal four "I had to come from the back and I
raps of the 50-lap race on . just uied to start picking them off
Michigan's high-banlced, two-mile one by one on the outside.''
oval.
He was back among .the rop five
Unser's record eighth !ROC vic- by lap 34 and stayed wtth the lead1

•

HOW DO I GET BY? - That's the question of the moment for
San Diego running back Natrone Means (carrying ball), as he looks
for a way past Atlanta safety Kevin Ross during a 17-yard ruu n the
second quarter or Saturday's Hall of Fame exhibition game in
Canton, Ohio, where the Falrons won 21-17. (AP)

m HOF exh1b1t1on

.Bonilla, McDowell numbered among top five money-losers

FRI. lHRU THURL

~il.l:tt.I.I'.¢K. ~- rum

·~

If the proposed strike comes,

COLONY THEATRE

'1lmlllliJID&lt;WIQJmb"

Atlanta hands San
~'",- ~iego 21-1 ~ ~~tback

Yankees, Brewers,
Athletics, Phils win

tary William Perry and :senate
Majority Leader George Mitchell,
D-Maine.
NBC's Meet the Press- Topic:
The Whitewater hearings. Guests
include Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, RN.Y.
CNN's Late Edition With Frank
Sesno - To be announced.

©Jinf~ill

acting career, Kelly stepped in, and Cleveland's
offense scarcely missed a beat. He led the NFL in
rushing in 1967 and '68 and scored 90 touchdowns in
his !(}.year career.
Not bad for a product of Morgan Slate who was
chosen in the eighth round of the I 964 draft.
Kelly, like Grant, wept as he thanked his family
and friends.
"I never felt I was in the shadow of Jim," he said
during a news conference before the ceremony. "It
was an honor for me to play with Jim. J irn helped me
out a whole lot. He was pretty much responsible for
me making the team.
"This is a great honor. It's been a long time coming. I'm kind of upset that it took so long, but I'm still
honored to be among such great football players.''
White and Dorsett were teammates during some of
the best seasons of Tom Landry's Cowboys in the
1970s and '80s. Although both were highly publicized
NEWEST ENSHRINEES -The Pro Football noon in Canton, Ohio. From left to right are Leroy
athletes in college, neither was a sure thing in the pro- Hall of Fame enshrined five players and one coach Kelly, Tony Dorsett, Bud Grant, Jimmy Johnson,
fessional ranks - Dorsett because of his size, White at its annual induction ceremonies Saturday after- Jackie Smith·and Randy White. (AP)
because the Cowboys initially played him out of posi- --.w=hl""te'"'ifi=aJik=ea,...L"'an"'diY=-r.to::r-=s""uc"'kiii=g'"'w=tifi""""ht'"'m,:,.dur=m::g,.-...:...."""'\\""'h"'e"'n.,w"'e"!"'tr"'st,..s"'lar=te,;d...,g""e""tu'"'n"'g~ih"'e,...;ug"'h"'t-:ec:n"'d..,d"'o-w,-n
tion at linebacker.
the early years, before he'd moved to the defensive into the ,wondary, defenses weren't set up to deal
The doubts were soon erased. After winning the line.
with that,' Smith said. "The guy just wasn't used to
Heisman at Pitt, Dorsett went on to rush for 12,739
"Some people said Coach Landry was not a great seeing me down there."
yards, including 48 100-yard games and eight 1,000- motivator. He's one of the greatest motivators I've
Johnson, a first-round pick from UCLA in 1961,
yard seasons. He also set a record that can never be ever been around in my whole life," said White, who played both receiver and defensive back early in his
broken, scoring on a 99-yard run in a Monday night was nicknamed the "manster" - a mix of man and career before settling in as one of the best one-on-one
game against Minnesota.
monster- by former Cowboy defensive back Charlie cornerbacks in NFL history. He tolaled 47 intercepIt was one of his 90 touchdowns in a career that w_aters.
lions in 15 seasons as a starting defensive back for the
ended with Denver in 1988.
,-- White tolaled Ill sacks in his cancer and was the 49ers, a number that was artificially low because
Landry presented Dorsett for induction.
. / NFL 's defensive player of the year in 1978.
opponents rarely threw in his direction.
"Everybody said I'd be too small to play pro footSmith, who ended his career with Dallas that year
He was presented for enshrinement by his brother
ball at 188 po~ds," said Dorsett, who as a youngster after 15 seasons with the Cardinals, was the leading Rafer, the gold medalist in the decathlon at the 1960
once loaded hlS pockets w1th rocks tn an unsuccessful career receiver among tight ends when he retired. Olympics.
attempt to boost his weight above the minimum although many of his receiving' statistics have since
"Rafer Johnson is my hero," Johnson said. "Most
required to play football. "I never dreamed I'd play been eclipsed by Ozzie Newsome and Kellen kids have a hero in another city. I had a brother that I
12 seasons. The man in the hat, Coach Landry, Winslow.
was always able to talk to and get the direction 1 needbrought me along. He taught. me discipline. He taught
Smith averaged an impressive 16.6 yards per catch, ed. I wish we could split this trophy right down the
me to set goals. These are thmgs you lake w1th you m a figure he attributes to the Cardinals' innovative middle. because he surely deserves half or it.··
life."
offense at the time.

In major league balietJtall act,lon,

Today's news show lineup
By The Associated Press
Lineup for the Sunday TV news
shows:
ABC's This Week With David
Brinkley - Topic: The baseball
strike deadline and sports salary
caps. Guests: Donald Fehr, executive director, Major League Baseball Players Association; Richard
Raviteh, president and CEO, Player
Relations Committee; and Bud
Selig, owner or the Milwaukee
Brewers and acting commissioner
of Major League Baseball.
CBS ' Face the Nation -Topics: Rwanda and the Senate health
cru:~ plan. Guests: Defeo~ _Secre-

July 31,1994

Dorsett; Grant an~ Smith
among newest inductees

"The ftrst convention I went to,
I saw a notice up on the board for a
lawyers' breakfast," said Kristin
Hannah, a lawyer who's written
four romance novels. "I thought
there would be at least one other
lawyer besides me. But there were

vation .''

"Some of you are saying, 'What
is he doing here?' " Murray said
Thursday. His explanation: he lives
on the Hudson Rtver, home to stur·
geon.
Murray left no doubt about the
depth of his commiumen~ though.
He tossed a signed blank check at
Kathryn Birstein, the wife of Dr.
Vadim Birstein, a geneticist and a
champion or sturgeons in Russia.

Section C

At the Pro Football Hall of Fame,

People in the news
NEW YORK ~AP) - Bill Murray speaking at a conference about
sturgeon? Sounds fishy.
Murray admitted his appearance
probably stumped a few of the 200
scientists who gathered for the twoday "International Conference on
Sturgeon Biodiversity and Conser-

~imts-~eJttitul

ing pas! Martin 10 take the lead on
lap47.,
.
.
.
That s the way 11 flrushed, w1th
Martin, satisfied to protect secoml
place from fellow NASCAR
Winston Cup stars Rusty .~all~ce
and Dale Earnhardt, fmtshmg
0.347-seconds_ -.about 1 1/2 earlengths- behmd m the race among
12 identically prepared Dodge
Avengers.
·

issue ,"
Reinsdorf
said.
"Obviously this association has no
interest in addressing our problems. One of the obligations of the
union is to negotiare the problems
of our industry."

'
"' i •

HI'ITING THE WALL and gett1n1 by the scene
of tbe damage are parts of a day in tbe life of a
NASCAR race, as Dale Jarrett of Hickory, N.C.
proves after losing the front bumper of his mount

,

during !laturday's International Race or
Champions near Brooklyn, Mich. Kyle Petty of
Higb Point, N.C., approaching Jarrett's car in the
lura, wasn't involved in the crash. (AP)

'

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

July 31, 1994
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-C2-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

( Magic signs Grant before ·trading Skiles
'• and first-round draft choice to Bullets in
·:'
~= exchange for second-round draft pick

In NL action,

Reds beat Padres; Dodgers top Astros
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Jeff Branson has grown used to his role by
now The Cincinnau Reds' uuhty
man usually gets short nouce that
he'll be in the lmeup, and then 1s
expected to produce
Branson usual ly comes through .
With third base man Tony Fernandez absent Fnday n1ght to be wnh
h1s pregnant w1fc. Branso n was
pressed into acuon agamsl the San
Diego Padres, and he hll a two-run
home run in the Reds' 4-1 viCtory.
"A lot of times, l don't know
when I'm playmg until I get to the
f1eld." Branson sa1d. " h's not an
unusual snuation. l have plenty of
time to prepare when l get here."
Branson' s homer LOOk on JdiJed
s1gn ll icance as th e Los Angeles
Dodgers defeated Houston to move
Cmc1nnat1 back 1nto flfS! place m
the NL Central by a half-game.
Reds starter Pete Schourek (6-2)
p1tched so l1dly, allow mg one run
and mne h1 L~ 1n 6 2/3 mrungs. Jeff
Brantley threw onc-h1t ball over the
final 2 2/3 1nm ngs for h1 s 12th
save.
" !d efin it ely fee l th e added
importance of each game from now
on," Sc hourck sa1d . " It 's much

more lun to pitch when something
is on the line than goi ng through
the mooons."
Andy Ashby (4- 11) gave up
thr ee runs a nd SIX hits 1n six
mnings.
Amvmg at th e park Friday.
Branson found out that Fernandez
was en route to be with h1s w1fe as
she prepares for the birth of the
couple's fourth ch1ld.
The stan was onl y Branso n's
16th of the season. and JUSt h1 s fifth
at third base. The game also illustrated Branson' s value to the Reds.
He has hit safely in I0 of hiS last
II sum s, go1 ng 14 -for -3 7 (.378),
an'd is balling 350 with men in
seonng pos1uon. The start couldn't
ha ve come agai nst a hetter team.
Agamst San Diego, Branson has a
career average of .339 (19 of 56)
and has five h1ts m 14 at-bats th1 s
season
Branson's homer - his fifth in
h1 s last 44 at -bats - came on a
hanging curveball from Ashby. The
hom e run put the Reds up 2-0 in
the second inning, and Cincinnati
never trailed thereafter.
" !! was one pitch and he took
adva nta ge of 11," Ashby said.

"You could tell the way he swung
on it, he just got enough on it to get
it out of the park."
"There's no rea so n for it,"
Branson said about hi s home run.
''I'm definitely not a 20 home-run
hiller. They'll come on occasion."
Cinci nnati manager Davey
John son appreciate s Branson's
value.
"He's done a great job when he
has played," John son sa1d. "We
ha ven't played h1m that much
because everybody on the infield is
playing great. "
After Branson gave the Reds the
early lead, San D1cgo scored its
lone run on To ny Gwynn's RBI
double in the fifd1 .
Elsew here in the National
League, it wa s Lo s Angeles 7,
Houston S; Atlanta 5, Philadelphia
2; Montreal 8, Florida 4; New York
4, Pittsburgh I; Chicago 8, St.
Louis 3; and San Franc1sco 8, Colorado 4.
Dodgers 7, Astros 5
The Los Angeles Dodgers were
in danger of dropping out of first
place in the NL West for the first
time since May 14, while keeping
the Hou ston Astros atop the NL

Central.
Delma DeShields didn't like
that option. His three-run homer in
the ninth off Astros closer John
Hudek (0-2) kept Los Angeles on
top and gave the Dodgers a 7-5 victory over Houston on Friday night.
Hou ston' s lo ss, coupled with
Cincinnati's victory at San Diego,
pushed the Astros out of fust in the
NL Central and put the Reds on
top.
It was DeS hields' second dramatic game-winning hit in a month.
His three-run double in the ninth
inning on June 30 again st Philadelphia gave Los Angeles a 4-3 wm.
"I was just trying to hit the ball
hard somewhere," DeShields srud.
" I'm not going to hit 20 home
runs, but l can pop the ball out of
the park every now and then.''
Ismacl Valdes (2-0) pitched two
inrtings for t11e victory despite giving up the go-ahead run on a balk.
Hudek blew h1s second save m
18 chances this season. The righthamler, who became the fifth player in history to make the All-Star
team after starting the season in the
minors, allowed an earned run for
(See NL on C-3)

•
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - The
•:orlando Magic signed free agent
; •forward Horace Grant on Friday
&lt; night, a move that had been expect•.
• .ed for almost a year.
:
The se ven -year veteran was a
:. key member of the Chicago Bulls
·:during their run as three-time NBA
~-c hampions but had talked of wan!., : ing to join the Magic since las t sea•:. • son.
: : Earlier Friday, Bulls chairman
• : Jerry Reinsdorf said he would no
•:

MITCHELL STEALS - The Ciocionati Reds' Kevin Mitchell
steals second in front or an airborne Rip Roberts, who is pulled orr
the bag by an orr-target throw in the eighth inning or Friday's
National League game in San Diego, where the Reds won 4- I. (AP)

Yanks down Tribe; ChiSox defeat M's
By TOM WITUERS
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Yankees have the Cleveland
Indian s' number this season- not
Albert Belle's.
New York won its seventh
straight game against Cleveland and nmth in a row dating back to
last year - Fnday night w1th a 5-2

AL standings

Baseball
NL standings
l!utenl Dl•loloo
Team
W
Montrea.l ............ 63
Alllnll ................. .61
PIUIJdclpiU.o ......... 30
New York ...........49
Florid. ................4l

L
31
41
~J

Sl
l7

Pd..
624
J98
.485
.48S
.441

Cmtnl Df•Won
aNCJNNA11 ....... 39 4) 378
"""'""' .................19 44 .l73
1'1""-Jh .... .. .... 41 S4 471
QUcaao ................. 46 SS .455
S1.. Lwi1 ................ 46 55 45S

Wtltem Dl•ldon
Loo Anjda ..........50 52 .490
San~ ....... .SO S4 .481
Colondo ...............so ss .476
Son l);qo ........... .41 64 .390

Cl

2.5
14
14
ll.l

.l
II
12..5
12.!1

1
l.l
lO.l

Friday's scores
Pitl.burP I

C!Uool" I , SL t.o.;, J
aNCINNA114, San D;oao l
l.oo""&amp;doi7,Houaon!'
Son Fnnciloo I, Cdcndo4

Tbey played Saturday
l'hi1odcloiU (Scllillinl l-1)

Eaatrm Dhlalot~
Team
W L Pet.
N- Yodt .............62 Jll .620
Baltimore ........... .55 45 ..5SO
o..ron ....................so SI .495
Toronto ........ . ..48 53 .47S
Dctroll ............... 46

~

.451

GB

7
125
14.5
17

Cftlul Dldlion

ClJl\'EU.ND .......l9 41
Chi&lt;:l1o.................60
Klnlu City .......J6
Mil woW... ...........41
Minaoo... ............ .47

at AIWU

(Git¥ino t:!-1). 2:10p.m.
Colcndo {Ritz U) n !an Fr.nciaoa
(l'odupl9·1), 4,(15 p.m.
Nonuoal (Ruotor 6-2) at f1orid1
(o...Nr 3-3~ 7,(15 p.m.
New Yodl (Saba!IIFO 1:1-4) II--

""'"" (Neop 9-1), HI~ p.m.

Chiuao (Baakt 1· 9) at St. Loui•
crowU~ourJ I I)-I 0), am p.m.
HOUIIOII (ltllo 7-S) II Loo A01ol11
(0...7-1), tO:O! pm.
CINCINNATI (Smiley 11·9) 11 Son
IMp OJ- 6-ll), 10:0! p.m.

Todlly'111mes
Philldclphil {WN&amp;4-I) 11 Atlanta
(Smoltz6-IO), UOp.m.
New Yodl: Q. CuLW.o Q-0) ll Pitulluroh (Z. Smilb 9-1). 1:35 p.m.
.
(1'. Cutillo [).0) at St. Louie
Z-3), :!:IS p.m.
(3-7-7) atLooAnplol

ou...,
(Oli•-

~9-7),4:0!1':'"'
CINCINNA11 (Rijo 9-4) 11 Sm Diqo

(Sondta 3-1), 4:05 p.io.
Colcndo (Thom- l-0) at s.. Pru- cv~~~Lonclin~Joot 6-1), 4m ...,..

W:onueal (Martmcz 1-5) at Florida
(W•Ihml-9), 6:05p.m.

against the m all year," Indians
manager Mike Hargrove said .
" Not timely hits, no big plays ...
it's just one of those things."
Belle, however, has been the
Indians ' lone bright spot against
the Yankees, hitting .464 (13-for28) with five homers and nine RBis
in seven contests.
Belle h1t his 34th homer and
went 3-for-4 with two RBls on Friday as he continues to disprove
skeptics in tlhc wake of the controversy surrounding his alleged use
of a corlted bat.
Before padding his stats against
the Yankees, Belle had a hearing
with AL president Bobby Brown to
appeal h1s 10-day suspension for
using a corked bat
Belle had the suspension
reduced from 10 days to six, and
then continued his torrid July by
bashing balls pitched by Sterling
Hitchcock (3· 1).
After striking out swinging in
his first at-bat on a fastball, Belle
reached for an outside pitch in the
fourth inning and dropped it over
the wall in right for his eighth
homer in I I games.
No one was as surprised as
Hitchcock. "The home runs was a
breaking ball away," he said. "I
though it was a pretty good pitch
and I was lookin~ for the ball to go
foul. The next thmg I see is (Paul)
O'Neill looking up in the stands
and I said to myself 'geez how did
that get out there?'
"On the other hand, he's got 33
(homers) so I'm not the only guy
he's done that to."
Belle added an RBI single in the
fifth mnmg and in the eighth hit a
screaming line drive that hooked
around the head of shortstop Mike
Gallego, who didn't know whether
to jump for it or gel out of the way.
"It's a good thing Gallego is
only four-feet tall or he would have
been dead on that,' ' Hargrove said.
Other than Belle's three hits,
Hitchcock kept baseball's top hittmg club relativley quiet, holding

the Indians to two runs and hine
hits in 7 2/3 innings. He walked
two and matched a career-high
with seven strikeouts.
Bob Wickman closed the eighth
and Steve Howe pitched the ninth
for his 13th save as the Yankees
won for the 12th time in 15 games.
Charles Nagy (8-8) was victimized by an error that led to New
York's three-run fourth and the
Indians inability to deliver a timely
hit. Nagy gave up five runs, three
earned, and seven hits in 7 2/3
innings.
The Yankees capitalized on an
error, an infield single and a basesloaded walk in the fourth inning to
score three times and ~41 4-1
lead.
',::;.
Danny Tartabull reached when
third baseman Jim Thome f~led to
come up with his grounder, and
Don Mattingly singled. Stanley's
single to center scored Tartabull,
and Bernie Williams followed by
grounding a base hit off Nagy to
load the bases. Nagy walked Mike
Gallego to force in a run and the
Yankees went up 4-1 on Pat
Kelly's groundout.
"We did enough things wrong
and they dide enough things right
to get three runs in that inning,"
Hargrove said. "It was a tough hop
to Jimmy (Thome) and the ball got
by him."
In other American League
games, it was the Kansas City Royals over Minnesota 5-3, Boston
over Milwaukee 7-2, Oakland over
Detroit 6-4, Chicago over Seattle 54, Toronto over Baltimore 4-3 and
Texas over California 5-3.
Royals S, Twins 3
Mistakes happen, and veterans
know what to do about it.
When Kevin Tapani made two
mistakes to Gary Gaetti, the 13year veteran made the Minnesota
pitcher pay dearly.
"Any time you hang a breaking
ball to- really, any hitter, even
the small guys - you're going to
gel knocked around," Minnesota

They played Saturday

Transactions

Milwaukee (Eldred 9· 10) at 801ton

4l
47
S4
S4

.l90
.l88
344
.470

.46S

W..ca-n DIYIISoa
Tu. .....................SO 53 .415
OokWod ..............47 S4 .465
C.Jifomio ............ Al 62 404
S..ul• ...................40 60 .400

4.S

12

125

2
1.5
1.5

Frlday'a scores
New Ycnk 5, Cl.EVEI..AND 2
801100 7, MUweubo 2
Konou City S, Minncooll 3
Ooklond II, Oeuoit 4

Oricaao s. s-.ule4

AIWU S, Plilladolpllil2
Manu..! I. Florida 4
New Yod 4,

victory.
A three-run fourth inning and a
sol id ouung by starter Sterling
Hitchcoc k enabled the Yankees to
'mprovc baseball's best record to
62-38, and tighten their inex plicable 7-0 stranglehold over the lndi ans.
" We haven't played well

Toratlo4, Btltirnore 3
Tuu 5, CalitOUU. 3

BANKRUPT?
BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?

(Clernena 9-S), 1:05 p.m.
Oakland (Will 8-8) at Detroit
Olallmon 0-0), I :IS p.m.

.__.......,.
pono;on
BasebaD

- t'l..EVEL.AND (Lopoz 0-1) at New
Yod&lt; (Abloott 1-7), I o3S p.m.

ALo RodlaoooJ lbo ...
&lt;I AllMft
B.Jio, ClovoJond lndiona outfioldo.-, """'
10 prtleiiO tCMIIl
BOSTON RED SOX: Saa Sill! ltoy•· inrldder, to Pawtuck• • the lntema..... Loop. R...W Cadoo 1Wri-.
mfodda,rt.mhwou&lt;kd.
MIL WAIJKI!E BIU!WI!IIS: RocoiJod
John Jaht, full btiCIID.In, from New Orleant ollhe Ameri.cu Aaociatioll. Sent
JUc:t Wrau~, caW., cuziahl1D Now Or-.

Toronto (Stotllcmyrc 5-7) at Baltimcn

fm.

(WillWnoon 3-0), 7:05
Seattle (BoUie o-o at OUcaao (McDowdll-1). 7:0! p.m.
Minne10ta (Eric:hon 8-10) at Kantu
C1ty (Appier 6-6), 8:05p.m.
California (Andc:non 6·5) at Tcua
(Bohon"' 1-0), 1:3S p.IIL

Today's games

""""

NEW YORK YANKEES: Nomod
Dcbbio T~ diraliaar ~ m•Mna lAd
Brian Snuth diMCIOr ~ CCIIIIDUinilJ mliU....A......,....tbenoiptioo&lt;ITun
HaiiOU, ciiroctCII' of Ndi\1111 opontiou.
Wah•od Don Pall. piw:bar.
OAKLAND ATHLII11CS: l'll&lt;lotJ Bill
Taylor, pitcheJ, on the l.S...Say diubled
liii.IUcolJod - · ........... p;tdoer,T.coma of lhe PaGific Co.l\ Loaauo.
Tnnderred St.eva K.lruy , pi.tdlor, fiUII
lho Is-day to &amp;be 60-dly diAbiod JilL

Milwaukee (Bona tQ-1) at BOlton
(Nabltolz 3-3),1,(15 p.m.
Cl..EVELAND(~ 10.~ at New
Yom (ltoy ll-3), lo35 p.m.
Toronto (Ouunan IG-10) at Baltimore
(MoDonold IZ-6), l:lS p.IIL

MinneiOU

~aiCII

5-10)

c;,, (Gonion 10-6). 2::05 p.m.

It

JC.10111

au..., (Al-

S..ulo (Qonvcno 0-3) at
varm: 11-6), 2:35 p.m.
Oakland (Ontinrot 6-l)

11

Detroit

(Wolb4-6).1,Q!p.m.
CalifDmia (Pinley1-10) at Teu1
(Bro.., 7-l),lm p.m.

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I

I

II

jl

•

~ :Only the lifth lime m 38 appcar; ..ances.
•7 "Most likcl y, l' II be out there
: -again tomorrow m the same situation, " Hudek sa id . "Thi s is th e
type of game where you can 't
dwell on what happened today. He
hit the homer , the game's over,
that' s 11. Yeah , I was upse t. But
tomorrow' s another day and I've
got to regroup.''
Braves 5, Phillies 2
At Atlanta, Fred McG riff s tworun single capped a three-run fifth
inning and Javier Lopez h1t a tworun homer an m-.ing later as the
Braves snapped Philadelphia's
four-game wmnmg streak.
The rally kept Danny Jack son
(!3-5) from becoming the NL 's
second 14-gamc winner this year.
Jackson gave up mne hits m six
innings.
Steve Avery (7-3) allowed six
hits, walked none and fanned eight,
five on called thlfd strikes. It was

pitched eigh t so lid innings and
Steve Buechele h1t a two-ru n
hom er and an RBI tr1ple as Chica-

go won for the eighth lime m II
games.

G ian IS 8, Rockies 4

L.A. Kings trade Robitaille
to Penguins for Tocchet
By BETH HARRI S
eel Dionne, totaling 45 goals and
LOS ANGELES (AP) - High - 84 points.
sconng left wmg Luc Rob1talile
He later played with the NHL' s
was traded from the Los Angeles career sconng leader, Wayne GrctKings to the Pittsburgh Penguins zky. In 1992-93, set a goal-scoring
on Fnday for right wing Rick Toe- record for left wmgs w1th 63 and
chct and a 1995 second-round draft fm1shed with a career-best 125
choice.
points as the Kings made it to the
Rob1taille, who was in Los Stanley Cup Finals, only to lose to
Angeles, sa id he was sad 10 be the Montreal Can adians in five
leaving the Kings but looked for- games .
ward to trying to win the Stanley
Last season, the Kings failed to
Cup with the Penguins.
make the playoffs for the only time
Robitaille is a seven-time All- m Robitaille's career, although he
42
· · 83
Star with the Kings. The 6-foot-1, had 44 goals and
assists '"
190-pound Quebec native began games. He has 392 goals and 411
his career m 1986-87 and played assisiS in an eight-year career.

GRANT GOES SOUTH- Horace Grant is all
smiles while showing orr his new jersey after signing a free-agent contract with the Orlando Magic

Frid&lt;~y night. Grant previously was a power forward on the Chicago Bulls' three NRA cham piunship team s. (AP)

Tocchet, 30, is a 6-foot, 205- unu'lthc 1991 -92 seaso n when he
pound. big-hitting right wing With a wa s dealt to the eventual Stanley
scoring touch. He began his career Cup champion Penguins.
with the Philadelphia Flyers in
Tocchet, along with goalie Ken

samuelsson were sent to P1ttsburgh

a Feb 1992 blockbuster deal for
le ft wing Mark Recchi and
dcfenseman Brian Benning, and an
10

his first complete game of the sea- lpla•lo•nlig•si•diiicf:!iilal•l•olif•F•arn•e•c•e•nt•e•r•Mar••
- -•••••••••••••'•9•8•4•-•8•5i.,an•dllllip•la•yi.c•d•w•i•th•th•e•m••W•reiigilgiieritliaiirnlid•diirciiifliielinliseilmiiiiiaiin.iKriii'
.erilli..leilxilchlianiiii£llerloi.fdrafllllltilcilho-Ic~e~s.••lllll
son.
Expos 8, Marlins 4
At Miami, Montreal broke open
a tie game with a four-run seventh
inning on just two h1ts.
Larry Walker' s single drove '"
Randell White with the tie-breaking run. The Expos also scored on a
walk, a hit batsman and Sean
Berry's sacrif1ce ny , all with the
bases loaded.
The Expos, who have won nine
of 10 games, maintamed a 2 1/2game lead over Atlanta in the NL
East. The Marlin s lost their fourth
in a row and fell 12 games below
.500.
Jeff Shaw (5-2) pitched I 1/3
innings of perfect relief for tlhe victory . Mel Rojas and John Wetteland combined to shut out the Marlins over the final three innings.
RJchie Lewis (1-4) took the loss.
Mets 4, Pirates I
New York right-hander Bobby
Jones continued to excel on the
road, and Ryan Thompson stayed
hot in Piusburgh.
Jones (11-7) limited the Pirates
to seven hilS and a run over seven
innings. Jon Lieber (5 -6) lasted
seven innings, allowing seven hits.
Cubs 8, Cardinals 3
At St. Louis, Jim Bullinger

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL

..
MATIINGLY'S OUT- The New York Yankees' Don Mattingly
(left) looks like he's about to give Cleveland catcher Sandy Alomar
Jr. an earrul or tobacco after Alomar lays the leather on him ror the
out in the eighth inning or Friday night's American League game in
New York, where tbe Yankees won 5·2. Mattingly advanced from sec·
ond base on Bernie Williams' bit. (AP),
manager Tom Kelly said. "You
hang it and they ·u bang it."
Gaeni, who hadn't homered
since June 26, hit two homers Friday night, powering Kansas City to
a j-3 victory over the Twins and
pulling the Royals within 4 1/2
games of AL Central -leading
Cleveland.
,
"That's why he's played so '
long," said Tapani, whose flubbed
pitches came in slow and high to
Gaetti's strike zone. "You make
mistakes, and he nails rou. Hanging two pitches shouldn t beat you,
but tonight it did.''
The Royals, who have won
seven straight games, own the
longest current win streak in the
majors and the team's longest since
1989.
"We're playing with the confidence that we're going to win. And

Youna, pitcher, on the 1!5-day daaablod.
liat. Rcc:aJled Ftonlt CuWio, p1tdlcr, !tum
low11 of the American Auocialicn
HOUSTON ASTROS: Phcod Sid
Bream. fiot buanan, • tho 15-G., d»ablod lilt. Rocalled llobadu ,_,~ in·
fielder, fnm TUCICII ollbo Plcilie Cout

lafA'N DtEOO PADRES: Opt;oood Roy

Mc.J)Md, cMfiald., \0 1M \tctu of lho
Pacific: Co11t IMsuc. R.ccallod An:hi
Cionfooooo, illfiCidcr, fmm Loa v.....

o..ketbaU
Nallonll BulttlbiU Aaodallon
ORLANDO MAOIC: Tndod Scoll
Sk.il.CII, pat.rd, • fust·round draft pick in
1996 and fulure conaidotadon to the
WubinpJn BuiJcq f• a HCond-round
pic:l in 1996 IJld futuro conlidondon.
S..... llanct Onna, f'"'ud.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS: s; 1 ood
Chllek Penon, forwaJd, to • multi-yeu

.........

it's about time," Gaetti said.
Chico Lind was 4-for -4, stretching his hitting streak to a careerbest I 3 games. Jose DeJesus (2-0)
went seven innings for the victory.
giving up seven hits. Tapani fell to.
9-7.
Rangers 5, Angels 3
In Arlington, Rusty Greer and
Dean Palmer each hit two-run
homers to power Texas to its fourth
win in five games and give pitcher·
Roger Pavlik his first victory in
almost two months.
Greer hit his ninth homer of the
year during a three -run second
mning. Palmer, mired in a 4-for-48
slump, added his 19th in the Sixth
off Mark Langston (6-7), padding
Texas' lead to 5-2.
Pavlik (2-5), who hadn ' t won
since May 31, allowed two runs
(See AL on C-3)

Football
National Footbaiii.Aacue
ARIZONA CARDINALS: A...... U&gt;
u::mu with Eric England, dcfam~c md.
WaiYcd Ymk Kmiruky and Eric Wolford.
ofl'tnaive WumC!I\.
CINCINNATI BENOALS: R....aod
Gcorao Hinllc, defc:ntivc ladle; Jeff
Thomuon, tight end; Karmcclcyah
McGill, lincblc:kcr, and Ron Carpwi&amp;cr,
aafo1y. Placod T""l'iUdwdocn, ........
bt.ck, on injured taer\'c.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Rel01ood
Tun Bamcu. wide ru:civot.
LOS ANOEUS RAMS o AMounood
Grea McMwuy, wide reoe.iv•, hu left
the ~earn.

PITISBUROH STEELERS : Sipod

Roaio Cllllt,linoblctor.
'S'AN FRANCISCO 49ERSo R...,~

Mart Loaan, lullback Waivod Lin1y
Collinc, wide ncoivor, ud Anthony
Thonpon. IUIIIUn[) book.
Sl!ATIU! SEAHA WKS : Apood 1A&gt;
\Crml wi1b Sam AdU'nl, dllauive tackle.
UTo a fi\1&amp;-yeuoont~w::~. .

u..,.

N........
CIDCA!lq CUB So Ploood

I \

c&gt;pansion team five years ago~ and
Magic officials praised him as they
lei him go.
"No player has meant more to
success to the Orlando Magic since
1ts mcept1on !h an Scott Sk1les,"
said John Gabriel, Orlando's vice
president of baske1bal I operauons.
Sk1les, slaled to make $2. 1 million thi s seaso n. averaged 9.9
points and 6.1 assists in 199 3-94.
Anferncc Hardaway replaced him
as the starting point guard m February.

:NL action ... --~(c.:::..:on:::.un=u=cd:.:.:fr.:::om::....c:::...-2~)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'

In the AL,

longer try to re-s1gn Grant, whom
he accused ol backmg out of a
handshake deal for a five -year contract wonh more than $20 million.
Terms of the deal between Grant
and th e Magic were not disclosed.
To make roo m for Gra n! , the
Mag1c traded point guard Sco ll
Sk iles and a first -roun d draft pick
to the Wa shin gton Bullets for a
second-round draft pick.
Skiles was th e last rcmaming
player from th e Ma~oc's o n ~ mal

•.

Bidwell Summer BaseiJall
Assodatfon would lfJce to
thanJc the followfq for
their support.

Deanie's Pizzo
Places To Go Travel
Dr. Don Kiesling
Blokes Construdion
McDonald's
Adorns Insurance
Empire Furniture Gallia Optical Center
French Gty Foot Clinic The Korner
Rodiff's Pool Center Artesian
Bob Evans Forms Coaches

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS

Over 40 Years 01 Dependable Servite

AL contests ...
(Continued from C-2)
and four hits in 6 2(3 innings, with
five strikeouts and five walks.
Atbletia; 6, Tigers 4
Ruben Sierra's 22nd home run
snapped an eighth-inning tie and
boosted visiting Oakland to victory. Seven A's pitchers combined on
a four-hitter, with Bob Welch (3-6)
winning in relief and Dennis Eckersley getting his 17th save.
Sierra led off the eighth with a
'424-foot home run to left-center
:field off Tim Belcher (7-13) for a
:s-4 lead. Belcher lost for the fifth
'time in six starts, allowing five
irons and eight hits in 7 1(3 innings.
!
White Sox 5, Mariners 4
: In Chicago, Alex Fernandez
:won his fifth game without a loss
jn July to lead the White Sox past
,&lt;;eaule. The victory snapped Chicago's four-game losing s-treak and
'sent Scat~e to its fifth straight loss.
; The win, coupled with Cleveland's loss to New York, moved
the White Sox into a virtual firstplace tie with the Indians in the AL
Central.
Rookie Norberta Martin had
dlrec hits for Chic~go and drove in
iwo runs. His two-out single in the
seventh inning broke a 4-4 tie .
· Femande11 ( 11-7) gave up nine
liits and four runs in 7 1/3 innings.
Roberto Hernandez pitched the
ninth for his 13th save.
.
Blue Jays 4, Orioles J
:. AI Leiter pitched six solid
~nings and Joe Carter homered as
.Visiting Toronto defeated Balu~ore for the fm;t time this season.
:)&gt;aul Molitor had two hits and
,COred twice for the Blue Jays, who
aoke a three-game losing streak..
L Yntil Friday, the Blue Jays th1s
lf""'son were 0-6 against Baltimore,
~a~aging just eight runs in 54
p1nmgs.
•
Red Sox 7, Brewers 2
• In Boston, Mo Vaughn homered
iwice and Tim VanEgmond (1-3)
pitched a five-hitter for his first
tnajor league win.
J Vaughn, who also had an RBI
pundout in the fiTst, !ed off th~
lixth with a 425-foot drive and h1t
1 two-run homer into the screen
tiOp the left field wall to hijlh~ght

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~~:~=gadded three hits l...i(6;..;.14.)1i7i.4iii2i.·iii2;.5.i.11__________".~.".m•illllii~._Own_•e•d•"---------li.·il8il00;.·riii81ii3·7··8;2;.1~7;...1

~ an RBI for the Red Sox.

'

t

,,

�Pag~unday Times-Sentinel

July 31, 1994

July 31, 1994

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

the season, they led the NL m e1ght
offensive categoncs.
And the) were winmng Wllh a
flrur They led the maJor leagues in
cxtra-mnmg wins and had the best
home record .
"1 don 't want th•s thing to go to
waste ," pnch cr Jose R1jo sa 1d .
" We've got the kmd of team that
doesn't come around often. How
often do you have a team lhat leads
the league '"JUSt about everything?"
"Probably a lot of guys are not
gomg 10 be here agam next year."
outfielder Jacob Brumfield said.
''When you get a team like we
have now, you want logo ahead
and take advantage of it and win.''
The Reds learned last year how
prcc10us such a season IS. They
went Into 1993 opccting to contend, but wound up with one of the
worst seasons m franchise hislOry.

Reds to a 66-42 record in '81 and
wound up havmg lO hide behmd a
banner. Besl record m baseball?
Doesn't mean a thmg when the
payol f " no playoffs.
"That su II hum." he said.
McN&lt;unara, now a scout for the
Ca l1forn•a Angel s, compares the
hun of 198 I 10 the one he felt m
1986, when h1s Boston Red So•
lost the World Series w Johnson's
New York MelS.
''The only thing that separates
the hun 1s t•me," he said. "It's like
a death 111 the fam1ly I lived and
gncved tlus thing. But what can
you say or do?"
Nothing, except hope 11 doesn't
happen agam. Unfortunately, 11
m1ghl.
The Reds arc m the m1dst of one
of those rare seasons when everythmg seems 10 go nght and everyone in the clubhouse is having
great fun One hundred games mto

Strike may trash Indians' dream season
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - T1cket
scalpers m Cleveland. Imagine that.
The only way to get a decent
seat at an Indians game lately has
been through the black market outside Jacobs F1eld. Tile last 24 home
games have sold out - needless lo
say, that was unheard of at mass1ve
old Cleveland Sll!dmm - and you
can only find llckels for many
remaining games 1f you 're willmg
to Sjllil your party of four mlo four
parties of one.
Fans' pride in their new ballpark
is palpable, their excitement over
lhe prospect of the fust Cleveland
pennant race since 1959 is almost
unbearable.
Nolhmg is gomg 10 spo1l it for
them.
Nothing, !hal is, except a strike.
"We feel pretty terrible about
it," said Frank Cicero, 43, of Warren, a union member at General
Motors Corp. who has some sym-

pathy for the players' Slluallon. "I
can understand the players' perspective. But with the lnd1ans' hav•ng a great year, lo cut it short
would be a real disappomllnent"
C1cero has been following the
lndums for 30 years, wh1ch means
he's never seen them do anything
truly worth followmg. Until now.
During the Indians ' recent fourgame showdown with the AL Central-leading Chicago While So&gt;,
C1cero drove more than an hour
from his home lO Jacobs Field even
though there was no guarantee he
could get into the sold-out game.
"We're actually addicted to it
nghl now," he said. "We carne up
here with no llckets. That shows
how deep our addiction goes. But
we found some l!clcels at face
value. We didn't know whallo
e&gt;pcct"
The players set a strike dale of
Aug. 12, when the Indians open a

scncs agmnstlhe Milwaukee Brewers.
The players understand what
long-suffenng Cleveland fans must
be feehng. So far, though, there has
been no VISible wcakenmg in the
players' sohdanty, no suggestiOn
that they m1ghl break ranks because
they're makmg hiStory on the field.
"Every thmg in hfe 1s crazy, I
guess," third baseman Jim Thome
said. "Thmgs don 't always go the
way you want them to go. Fans
have been real supporuve. They've
been there for us all year. But we
have lo do what we have 10 do. ll
was done for us in the past, and it's
up lO us 10 protect the players coming up."
Manager Mike Hargrove is '"
denial about the whole mess.
"The owners aren't going to
consult me, and the players aren't
either," he srud. "You always hear
the express1on, 'Don't worry about
thmgs you can't control.' TI!1s may

be the firslt1me 111 my hfe that I've
actually done that.
"I'm conccntralmg on domg
what I can to help th1s ball club
play as well as 11 can. I thmlc baseball can bounce back. I worry about
how long it wtll take to bcunce
back."
When the game does get llself
straightened out. catcher Sandyc
Alomar pomts out that the same \
players who have made the Ind1ans
competitive so far th1s year will, for
the most part, still be wearing
Cleveland uniforms .
"A stnke- that's reality,"
Alomar sa1d. ' 'B ut the way some
fans are. talkm\l, it's like we're
never gomg to wm agam.
"Well, we're a team for the
furure. lt's not like we're going 10
win this year and then go back
below .500. We've got some good
young players. This is not a oneshot deal."

Now that they've tinally gotten
theu act together ...
''Last year would have been a
good time 10 have the stnke,"
Brumfield sa1d. "II happens that
way a lot of ~mcs."
There's more at slake for lhe
Reds than just disappointment.
They've had trouble rebUilding fan
support after the disastrous '93 season - Tony Perez's firing, owner
Marge Schou's slurs, the 891osscs.
Even though the Reds have been
111 first place most of lh1s season
with an e.citmg team, auendance is
down from last season. Schott said
she was embarrassed when the first
game of a showdown scnes With
Houston on July 25 drew only
25,24 7 fans.
R1jo fears a strike would further
erode the Reds' support

By The Associated Press
Gary Harrell has heard before
that he's 100 small, too light, too
fragile. Tonight, the question will
be putlO lhe M;ami Dolphins.
Sprcadmg 150 pounds over a 5foot- 7 frame, the 22-year-old Harrell does look a little out of place
on the football f1cld. And never 1s it
more apparent than when Harrell 1s
domg what he docs best, returning
punts and kickoffs.
"I know it's a preuy dangerous
job, but 1t's somethmg l like to
do," said Harrell, who is tryong to
make the New York Giants team.
"I know I'm 5-7 and those guys
are much b1~ger. Bul I'm ala
standmg posillon and they're coming full speed. If I can make one
move and they're off balance, I can
go the opposite way. So actually, I
have an advantage 111 duck•ng
defenders. It's not as d1fficull as
people thmk."
As a freshman at Howard University, Harrell led the nation 111
punt returns w1th a 16.4 yard average. He finished h1s career as the
school's career leader 111 receptions
with 184 catches and set a smgleseason mark last year, catchmg 72
passes for 982 yards and seven
touchdowns. He caught 19 TDs in
his career, two shy of the schobl
mark.
However, if Harrell is going to
make the Giants, 1t's going lobe as
a return man, Dave Meggeu 's
backup. The real test comes tonight
when the Giants meet the Dolphms
111 the season's flrsl exhlbllion
game.
Packers
When Reggie Wh1te arnved at
camp, he was nearly 20 pounds
lighter than a year ago, when he
spent the offseason being wmed
and dined by every NFL owner
eager 10 sign the free agent
"I'm a lot trimmer. It's been a

"I feel most soriy for the fans,"
he said. "They're going to lose
interest, no matter how much they
love the game.
"Most of lhe owners forget
about lhc fans. The owners own the
game, but the fans ARE the game.
There can be no game Wllh no
fans."
And the Reds feel there can be
no real season without playoffs or
some format to determine a champion. Who cares who has the best
record?
"Maybe they can fl1p a com lo
determine who won (the playoffs).
They can say, 'Decided by a coin
flip,' " Johnson said. "The luclciesl learn gelS 11. There would be no
auendance, so there would be no
Spoils, so go buy your own rings."
Or, your own banner.

-Area sports briefs
GABS freshman practice Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy's freshman football team will
hold a mandatory pracuce on Monday at 7:45a.m., not 8:15p.m. as
was listed in Friday's Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All prospective players mu.st meet at the GAHS football locker
room on Fourth Avenue at that time.

Football officiating class Tuesday
ROCK SPRINGS - The Athens Assoc1allon of Football officials will start an adult education class for those interested in high
school football officiating on Tuesday al 6:30 p.m. at Meigs H1gh
School.
The successful completion of this class will allow the official to
officiate all levels of football e&gt;eept for varsity m the current year.
Further information can be obtained from any local official or by
calling Dave Jenkins al614-992-6534 or 2117.

Helmet-fittings slated
GREEN TOWNSHIP- Helmet-fitting sessions will be held for
prospective seventh- and eighth-grade football players in the Gallia
County Local School District on Tuesday. Aug. 9 at the Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds.
The sessions will run at these times: Kyger Creek, 10 a.m.; North
Gallla, I I a.m.; Southwestern, noon; Hannan Trace, I p.m.
•
These players and all other fall athletes in the GCLSD must lake
their physicals before the first day of practice for their particular
sport. These practice limes will be announced by the learns' coaches.

RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the rest of the week of
July 31 -Aug. 7 al the University of
RwGrande's Lyne Center.
Gymnasium
Today-1-6p.m.
Monday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- l-6 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 7- 1-6 p.m.

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - The River Valley Athletic Boosters
Club will mecl on Tuesday, Aug. 9, at 7:30p.m. at River Valley
High School to prepare for the 1993-94 athletic season.

Swimnastics classes offered
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Dcparunent
is offering a swimnaslics class at lhe Gallipolis Municipal Pool on
weekdays beginning Aug. 22 and ending on Sept 2.
Trudy Werry will be the instructor for the aquatic aerobic exercise course, which will cost $20 per person. Checks should be made
out to the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department, 518 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
For more information, call441-6022.

Pool
Today- closed
Monday - 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday - 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday - 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday -closed
Saturday -closed
Sunday, Aug. 7- closed
Fitness center
Today-l-6p.m.
Monday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday -9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 7- l-6 p.m.
Racquetball courts
Today-l-6p.m.
Monday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday -9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- l-6 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 7- l-6 p.m.

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Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Scioto Downs results for Friday:
First race-$1,400 Clmg, Pace
Emma W (HaslOn) 4.403.202.80
Washpa Nivea (Me Knight)
5.204.40
Scoreboard Patti (Harper) 3.20
TIME-1:59 1-5. Dietitians Rage,
C C L•ttle Bit, Shoo Shoo Von,
Dare's Dream, C'mon Annabanana, Marcy Hill, Mitzy Sota.
Perfecta (3-1) paid $18.40. Trifecta
(3-1-4) paid $82.00.
Second race-$2,400 Clmg, Pace
Summer Breeze Z (Winters)
11.406.806.40
Tammy L Top (Hanners)
6.204.80
She'sGolha Look (Wilder) 5.60
TIME -1:57 1-5. Almabara,
Cherylcherylcheryl, Sharp Stiff,
Goodbabys Dont Cry. Scratched:
Rexann
Cordelia,
Reality
Almahursl. Perfecta (6- 7) paid
$56.00. Trifecta (6- 7-8) paid
$570.20.
Third race-$1,800 Pace
Nihilon Melody (Ledford)
6.204.203.00
Fast N Loose (Grundy) 4.603.60
Ascot Breeze (Wilder) 3.40
TIME-I :58 4-5. CWJdy N Roses,
Nostradmblue~rass, Shear Pleasure, J J Nobility, Barnacle Lady,
Nola Ouistine. Perfecta (3-4) paid
$28.60. Trifecta (3-4-5) paid
$75.00.
Fourth race-$3,000 Clmg, Pace
Gray At Heart (Dailey)
4.003.402.60
Wiclcster (Miller) 4.802.60
Waiting For You (Myi7'S) 2.40
TIME-1:56 3-5 . Champagne
Margot, Shiagram Illusion, Lady
Aben:rombie, Goodnight My Love.

Perfecta (2-4) paid $21.60. Trifecta
(2-4-1) paid $42.20. Early Pick
Three (6-3-2) paid $114.80.
Fifth race-$1,300 Pace
Mary
Midnile
(Miller)
4.403.603.20
Happy Hugger (Miller) 5.804.00
Needs Garlic (Collins) 4.20
TIME-\ :59 3-5. !rna Rich
Champ, Sweetie Pie Sue, Downwyn America, Succuba Bluegrass,
Ugotheriteonebaby, Stylish Secretary, Bouree Hanover. Perfecta (74) paid $28.00. Twin Trifecta (7-45) paid $21.20.
Sixth race-$4,000 Pace
Medoland Tam (Hanners)
29.6019.005.20
Desert Hill (Quinn) 7.003.80
Dianna Hill (Miller) 3.40
TIME-1:58 1-5. Oakley Bilmac,
Yankee Passion, A Little Lalor,
Wink At Me. Scratched: Ineeda
Anita. Perfecta (7-5) paid $166.20.
Trifecta (7-5-2) paid $838.00.
Seventh race-$2,400 Clmg, Pace
Some
Sum
(Miller)
4.803.803.20
Gogo
Marje
(Ledford)
12.608.20
Wiffenpoof (Dailey) 5.20
TIME-1:59 4-5 . Southern
Music, Look Again Stella, Third
Call, Narly, Aeel Confection, MagRic Cochran, Lookhomeward
Angel. Trifecta (4-6-3) paid
$478.80. Twin Trifecta (44-3) paid
$4,055.40.
Eigbtb race-$4,500 Pace
Fujimo (Ater) 5.003.202.60
Justa Filly (Hanners) 3.203.20
This-N-That (Herron) 6.40
TIME-1:57 2-5. Honey . Bun
Osborne, Timeless Motion, Lady
Pacifist, Katy Hill.
I

Notes: A Lyne Center membership is required to use the facilities.
;Faculty, staff, students and admin·istralOrs are admitled with their ID
:Cards.
· Racquetball court reservations
can now be made one day in
.advance by calling 245-7495 local:ly or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
: All guests are to be accompanied by a Lyne Center membership
holder.

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:sports deadlines
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
·The Daily Sentinel Wid the SUTJday
:rimes-Sentinel value lhe contribu_tions their readers make lo the
·sports sections of these papers, and
:!hey will continue 10 be published.
· However, certain deadlines for
:submissions will be observed.
, The deadline for submissions of
-local baseball- and softball-related
pholOs and related articles, from Tball to the majors, as well as other
spring and summer sports, is the
day of lhe last game or the World
Series.
: The deadline for photos and
telated 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
qJring and summer sports deadline)
and olher winter sports is the last
!laY of the NBA finals.
· These deadlines arc in place 10
allow contributors the time they
~eed to acquire their photos from
lhe photography studio/developer
of choice and to give the slaffs lhe
cbance to publish lhese ilems in the
appropriate seas~n for those sports.
.

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blessing because last year I was on
the road a lo~ travelong around trying to figure out which team l was
going to. I couldn't work out at
all," While S.'lld
"This year, I made sure that
when I preached or traveled thai I
gol my workouts on before. Then,
when l got there. I made sure l
fo11nd a health spa to work oul m
b~.cause I realize my rcsponstbli• ·
ty," sa1d White, an ordamed monister.
Patriots
Thanks 10 the sa lar y cap,
R1chard Griff1lh is gelling a big
opportumly with New England.
Gnff1lh was the PatriOts' f•fthround draft ch01cc last year. taken
I 38th overall. He was active for
only three games, seemg action as
a blocking llghl end and a special
learns player, without havmg a pass
thrown 10 h1m .

Because of the cap, the PatnolS
gol rid of two-time Pro Bowl tight
end Marv Coole, going only wilh
lasl year's starter, Ben Coates. Thai
g•vcs Gnff•th a chance lo become
No. 2 on the New England depth
chart.
49ers
San Franc1sco ught end Brent
Jones rclnJurcd the nghl ankle he
broke at the Pro Bowl last January
wh1le running a route late m Thursday 's pracucc. The mitial cvaluat•on md1cated Jones damaged the
same spot, poss1bly tearing scar liSsue or rc-breakmg the ankle.
"The hope IS 1t's JUS! scar ussue
and that's the 1111!1al read on 1t,"
49ers head coach George Sc1fen
srud. "But they're havmg a special
isllook al him 111 the Bay Area, and
if it is a break he's going to be back
in a cast, and the worst-case scenano IS siJt weeks.''

Se1fert added the learn w1ll
probably not s1gn a veteran tight
end on the meant1me.
Colts
Trcv Alberts sal out of pracuce
l'nday afternoon while h1s contract
was scrutimzed. Nobody was avail able lo discuss lhe latest delay on
bnngmg together the Colts and
Alberts, the f1fth overall pick m the
draft
"I JUSt want lo play football . l
understand the Colts wanted 10 add
a paragraph or two, and everything
1s lllkcn care of," Alberts said carher.
Alberts had m• sscd nearly two
weeks of trammg camp and a five day rook1c oricn~1Uon before s1gn mg a six-year deal reportedly worth
about $8.1 m•lhon. He then m1sscd
four pracucc sesSions beca use of
concerns about the contract' s lan guage.
Bengals
The Bcngals cut four players
and pla ced runnmg back ·1crry
Richard,;on on lllJurcd reserve w•th
a broken foot. '
Wa1ved were delcns1ve tackle
George H1nkle. tight end Jeff
Thomason, linebacker Karmcc lcyah McGill and safety Ron Carpenter.
Sea hawks
Seattle may have Ulken another
step lOward filling oul its defensive
line by agreeing lO terms with firstround draft pick Sam Adams.
Adams, the eighth overall draft
pick In lhc NFL, IS e&gt;pecled to Sign
(See CAMPS on C-6)

' "

I

'' t

with MIKE
BARTRUM

By Dave Harris, Times-Sentinel Correspondent

While M1kc Bartrum (Me1gs
'88) has completed the first week
of the Kansas Clly Ch1cfs' pre-season tra1nmg camp, startmg ugh!
end Ke11h Cash •s sti II holthng oul
for a new contract.
Bartrum has moved up, at leas t
temporanly. lO the top pos1tion
On July 23, Banrum was 111jurcd
running what 1s called the Oklahoma dnll when h1t hy out&lt;~de
l1nebackcr Derrick Thomas . On
Monda), desp11c bcmg held otJ! of
contact dnlls because of the neck
mjury, Baruum tn)ured hiS thumb
when a teammate stepped on it.
Because of th e lllJUTICS, he was
held out of contact dfllls 11nl11
Wednesday, when he was restored
to playing status.
Bart rum appeared on ESPN 's
Sportscenter Thursday evcn 1ng

461 SOUTH THIRD

Lyne Center slate

Booster meeting posted

PLUS

Oil the
warpath

Wispy Marrell vying ·t o stay with Giants

Reds dreading 1981 will revisit them this season
to do for that! "
Well, you cou ld do what the
Reds d•d after the '81 stnkc: make
up a goofy banner and trot the team
on the f1 eld for one of base hall's
most awkward momcnL,.
The stnkc that year led to a
spht-scason format. The Reds had
the best record '" baseball. but fin Ished second both halves - and
out of the playoffs.
What d1d they do'' Stew about
11. whonc about 11. For the lasl day
of the season, they made up a banner thai sa1d " llasebafl ' s Best
Record 1981 " and had the players
gather around 11 for photographs m
front of bemused fans.
·'Try to find m) face m thai picture," smd John McNamara, who
mana ged the 'HI team. "1 was
behmd the banner. I didn't want lO
be part of 11."
If anyone knows about futihty,
1t' s McNamara He guided the

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-C5 .,

On the NFL c~mp scene,

In light of their current success,
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
team that prov1dcd the s1gnature
moment of the last lengthy baseball
st.ril&lt;e •s m pos1Uon w do 11 agam
The Cmcmnau Reds t1ave been
m first place most of 1he season
They've gelled 11110 1hc 1./auonal
League's best offense They've got
a manager of the year cand1date 111
Davey Johnson . They ' ve done
everything but wm back the fans.
And it may w1nd up getung
them absolutely nowhere - JU S!
hke m 1981.
"You were Jead1ng your divi sion when 11 was called. What IS
that good for? Absolutely zero,"
Johnson sa1d, crmgtng at the
thought. "The on ly reason you go
through this grind 1s to be the No. l
team in bascba II
"11HS one may not even get an
asterisk. 'Leading when play was
suspended' - what arc you gomg

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

wh en he pulled m a touchdown
pass from future Hall -of-Farner Joe
Monll!na in a scnmmage. Bartrum
pulled m a pass over the m1ddle.
broke a tackle and cut in for the
SI X pDinlCf.

It looks like Bartmm Will gel a
starl m the Ch1cfs' first pre-season
game ton1ght when HouslOn travels
to Kansas Cuy .
"Evcr)thmg IS g01ng good," d1e
second -year ught end said from the
Ch 1cls' tra1n1ng camp 1n R1ver
Falls, W1s. "We will leave here
Saturday afternoon and fly back to
Kansas Clly for the game Sunday
cvenmg. After a day off on Mon day we wlil fly to Tokyo on Tues day for next week's game w1th the
V1kmgs."
Saturday's game w1th Mmnesota w11l be shown on ESPN.

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pounds lighter than he was last season. (AP)

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

Page---C6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

O'Brien wins decathlon despite
struggling with 1,500-meter run
decathlon sweep, as Steve Fritz finBy BERT ROSENTHAL
ST . PETERSBURG, Russia ished second with 8,177 points and
(AP)- Dan O'Brien has no diffi- Kip Janvrin was third with 7,908.
O'Brien's vicwry was one of six
culty beating his opposition. He
by Americans in track and field
JUSt can't conquer I ,500 meters.
"We need a victory over the Friday, including a sweep of all
I,500 meters," coach Mike Kelle1 four relays,
Michael Johnson, the 200-meter
said Friday, after O'Brien struggle(!
with the final event of the 10-event, champ1on, anchored the U.S. men's
two-day decathlon for the second 1,600-meter relay team to 2:59.42,
a Games record and the world's
Lime in six weeks.
Going into the I ,500 at the fastest this year.
Gwen Torrence, the I 00-meter
Goodwill Games, O'Brien needed
to run only 4 minutes, 40.92 sec - and 200-meter champion, anchored
onds to break his world record the American women to vic1Dry in
score of 8,891 points. Instead, he the 400 relay in 42.98, the year's
loafed around the track in a humili- fastest time.
ating 5:10.94, and finished with
Carl Lewis, the former world
record -holder in the 100, ran the
8,715s.
"I am not in very good shape final leg as the American men's
for the 1,500, and it's an event I de team won the 400 relay in 38.30,
just because I am in the and 400-meter champion Jearl
decathlon," O'Brien said. "It is so Miles keyed the U.S. women's tridifficult to run that event when you umph in the 1,600 relay in 3:22.27,
arc ahead by h50 points. I have yet a 1994 best.
Kenny Harrison was the other
to develop the mental toughness
U.S. winner, taking the men's triple
that it takes to run the I ,500.''
Although he didn't break the jump at 57 feet, 2 1/4 inches, with
record, O'Brien led a 1-2-3 U.S. Olympic champion Mike Conley
second at 56-7 1/4.
Another Olympic champion,
Javier Sotomayor of Cuba, won the
men's high jump with a Games'

Roger Morgan of Athens (L-R). Proceeds from
the tournament, which drew 88 area golfers,
went to Ducks Unlimited for land acquisition
and education. Organizer EribJ. Aanestad,
D.V.M., of Athens, Sllid the event usually raises
about $6,000 before expenses.

WINNING TEAM - The winning team in
the four -man scramble in Thursday's Annual
Tri-County Ducks Unlimited Golf Tournament
at Riverside Golf Course in Mason, W.Va., consisted or Bob Miller of Pomeroy, Mitch Roush of
Mason, Max Whitlatch of Middleport and

After going 'on the wagon,'

Rembert looks to make Bengals'. WR corps
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP)Reggie Rembert is staying out of
trouble and showing up for practice.
That means he is making
progress in the eyes of his Cincinnati Bengals coaches.
General manager Mike Brown
brought Rembert back for another
try this year, over the objection of
Bengals coach Dave ShuJa.
The Ben gals' wide receiver has
had more holdouts (two) and alcohol-related driving accidents (three)
than NFL touchdowns (one). Rembert also frequently missed, or was
late for, team meetings and
appointments in the training room.
Rembert, 27, said he is staying
away from alcohol, which almost
ruined his football career.
"I lived the wild side. It's time

NFL camps...
(Continued from C-5)
a five-year contract believed to be
worth about $6.5 million.
"It was a win-win situation. He
got a nice signing bonus and we
got a five-year contract," Seahawks president David Behring
said.
The 6-foot-3, 285-pounder from
Texas A&amp;M will be the last Seahawks' player to sign a contract.
He was an 18-day training-camp
holdout.
Chiefs
Kansas City learned that NFL
commissioner Paul Tagliabue has
approved the May 2 trdde in which
the Chiefs acquired quarterback
Steve Bono from the San Francisco
49ers in exchange for a draft pick.
Tagliabue, who must approve
all NFL trades, investigated allegations raised by an unidentified team
that the 49ers and Chiefs violated
the collective bargaining agreement.
Bono was released by San Francisco, re-signed for a lower salary
and then traded 1D Kansas City.
"I'd forgotten all about it,"
Bono said.
Also. the Chiefs released troubled wide receiver Tim Barnett. the
day after he pleaded innocent to
second-degree assault of a child.
Steelers
Pittsburgh guard Cari1Dn Haselrig will miss up w two weeks of
training camp with a dislocated
wnst he insisted Friday isn't badly
injured.
Head coach Bill Cowher said Xrays revealed no fracture.
'' I don't think I could stop a
300-poundcr right now." Haselrig
said. "If there were a game wrnorrow , I co uldn't play. But this is
training camp, so if it takes time to
get better. that's what I'll do."

to live on the other side for a little
bit," said Rembert, who said he
has not had a drink since he went to
jail at the beginning of the year.
"I guess it (the drinking) was
pretty bad- it cost me my job.
You can get help for anything, but
if you don't want to help yourself,
you're just wasting your time and
everybody else's," he said.
Rembert arrived on time for
training camp when it opened in
mid-July. He has been in the right
place on and off the field.
Brown said Thursday he thinks
Rembert "has a good shot to make
the club."

Rembert's comeback took a
sight detour Thursday afternoon
when he strained his right shoulder
in a blocking drill , an injury that
could shelve him three to five days
and cost him playing in Saturday's
scnmmage.
But this is temporary. It looked
like Rembert had wasted his talent
for good last October, when the
Bengals released him after his th11d
drunken-driving arrest in three
years.
He was sentenced to 30 days in
a Hamilton County rehab program.
When Rembert emerged last
spring, Brown angered Shula and
some Bengals' veterans when he

Jackson upbeat about Browns'
offense in coming campaign
PLATTEVILLE, Wis. (AP)Michael Jackson's teammates
might not be as bold, but the Cleveland wide receiver thinks the
Browns will have one of the top
offenses in the NFL.
"From what I see now, the way
things are called and the way we're
executing them, I think we'll will
be one of the wp scoring teams in
the league," Jackson said.
The Browns have been in Wis-'
consin this week training with the
Chicago Bears.
Receivers coach Mike Sheppard
agrees with Jackson that the
Browns could surprise some teams
when they have the ball
"There's a subtle confidence in
our players. With Mike, it's not so
subtle. But everyone feels good
about where we are," Sheppard
said.
The Browns have set a goal to
be the top scoring team in the
league, Sheppard said.
But that might be difficuiL
Last year Cleveland scored an
average 19 points per game, which

ranked them at 15th out of 28
teams in the NFL. San Francisco
led the league with an average 29.6
points per game.
But Crosby said the Browns'
receivers- Jackson, Mark Carrier,
Keenan McCardell, Rico Smith and
rookie Derrick Alexander - are
vastly underestimated.
"We've got five real solid
receivers and we've got some
young ones who are coming on and
improving," Crosby said. "There's
a lot of team speed. I mentioned
that back in February, and people
looked at me like I was crazy."
Running back Eric Metcalf is
expected to be the focus of the
offense this season. In the early
practices, the speedy Metcalf
looked like he will carry the load.
But Crosby said Metcalf can't
be called upon to do it all.
"We've got to have other
threats and we do," he said.
"Michael Jackson's a threat. Mark
Carrier's a threat, the runni~&gt;g
game's going w be a threat."

re-s igned Rembert to a one-year
deal for the $162,000 minimum.
:Tm not a bad guy. I just run
into stuff, dumb stuff," Rembert ·
said. ''I need to know what I'm
doing. I owe Mike. Mike stood
behind me through the whole thing
... I've got three kids to support. No
one but me will support them. So it
was my time to learn that. It wck a
little while."
Shula is taking a wait-and-see
attitude.
"I say this being very cautious
and guarded, for obvious reasons,"
Shula said. "He's cau:hing the ball
in his hands better than he ever has.
His route running is better than it's
ever been ... He could never stop or
start, change direction very well.
He could run straight."
Rembert faces stiff competition.
Four receivers are expected to
make team: second-round draft
pick Darnay Scott; last year's
starters, Carl Pickens and Jeff
Query, and free agent Tim McGee,
who got $80,000 to sign.
"With a 53-man squad, having
five wide receivers is not unneasonable," Brown said.
That means Rembert is compeling with Milt Stegall and Patrick
Robinson , two reserves last year,

•••••••.Illnlojllu•••.J.~:t

~fo~r·th~e~f~if~th~s~po~t~.

State Bank No. 130
Federal Reserve District No, 4
or Gallipolis, Gallla County, In tbe State of Oblo at tbe close of business on June 30, 1994.
ASSETS

Casb and balonceli due from dcpooitory institutiono:
a. Noninterest-bearing baliiii&lt;CO and currency and roin ................................................................... 6,794,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ........................................................................................................ ....... 2,251,000.00
Securities
a. Held-lo-maturity securities .......................................................................................................... 84,730,000.00
b. Available-for-sale securities .......................................................................................................... 2,106,000.00
Loans and lease finoncing receivables:
Loans and te ...s, net of unearned income .................................................. 196,083,000.00
LESS: Allowan&lt;e for loan and loue loaoca .................................................... 2,086,000.00
Loans and lease•. net or unearned income,
allowance, and reserve ............................. ,..................................................................................... 193,997,000.00
Premises and filled assets (including capitalized leases) ...................................................................... 5,424,000.00
Otber real estate owned ............................................................................................................................... 6,000.00
Intangible asseu ......................................................................................................................................... 75,000.00
Olber assets ........................................................................................................................................... 2,671,000.00
Total assets ........................................................................................................................................ 298,054,000.00
Totalusets and lossca deferred punu111tto 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ....................................................... 298,054,000.00

CELLULAR ONE
s99.00 Phone Speci__
al._,~
• Full Feauued PhoiUl
• 3 yr. Warranty
• Monthly Plmu S1aning al $29.95

614·441·1168
1502 Eastern lve. .._ 1
cl Vi
-• ercar • 111

Gallipolis, Ohio

Contact:

Jay Caldwell
Accounl Executive
441 Second .(venue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

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'

23 .
Dogs placing in the qualifier arc
eligible to take pan in AKC World
Hunt to be held m September at
Green Castle, Ind., said club treasurer Oscar Smith.
Grand night champion was a
trceins walker named High Country Nile Rapper owned by John
Wood s. Also placi ng were, in
order: Wabash River Thunder Lip,
Shane Marcum; River Kennel
Butch, David McCloud; P.R. High
Country's Nite Hawk, Jeff Bennen;
Burn's Deep Woods Dip, Dean
Bums; Kelly's Yackin River Mick,
Bill Kelly; Lockdown Loretta
Travis Keaton; Cedar Creek Tom:
Robert Graham; Karshner's Buckeye Bubbles, Dan Karshner and
Nitc Champion P.R. Jamie'~ Big
Bad John, Howard Baldwin.
Sixteen dogs were shown in the
bench show. Winners were: grand
champion male- P.R. Stitz ' Blue
Dummas owned by Brian and
Leslie Stitzlein; champion male Champion P.R. Crystal Springs
Sprite owned by Kenneth St. John;
champiOn female - Champion
P.R . Gypsy HiU Champ (all owned
by Keith Richardson); male best of
show - P.R . Mitch's Tao River
Tec-J owned by Jeff Mitchell .
Smith said the club has been
holding a qualifier since 1977 and
added that events such as the qualifier can have a positive effect on
the area's economy.
The 50-to-60 member Shade
River Coonhunters Club meets
once a month - asually at 7 p.m.
on the third Saturday with a club
hunt following, unless the meeting
connicts with a scheduled hunt,
Smith said.' The club will next meet
on Aug. 6 at the clubhouse located
in the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Bob Dennison of Fairmont,
W.Va., was appointed by the AKC
to serve as master of hounds at the
July 23 qualifier.

--

Duane Will of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., a member of .the Gold
Ridge Gun Club in Meigs County,
smashed 99 of 100 clay targets
Sunday in the handicap event at the
Point Pleasant Gun Club.
Will was standing on the 21 I(l
yard line at the time he accomplished this feat. hitting all but the
84th target, reported Kenneth R.
King of Middleport.
Will plans on shooting next
month in the Grand American
World Trapshooting Tournament in
Vandalia but will have to shoot
from the 22 1{2 yard line due 1D the
high score he shot Sunday.
By ATA rules, singles are shot
from a line 16 yards behind the
traphouse with handicap shooters
firing from the 19 to 27 yard line
(depending upon their ability).
Congratulations and good luck
1D Duane Will.

count on seeing a "mattanza"

nearly every day. This season
ended after only four, and many a
touri st left d1sappomted.
The captain of the "tonnaroll "
is called the "rais." an Arab title
going back some II centuri es when
Arab conquerors fished for tuna in
Sicilian water.;. Being the "rais" is
an honor that was passed down
from father to son.
Prayers, chanted at dawn before
rowing out to check nels or baule
with the 1una, have been recited for
generations.
"Bedda Matri .. . quattrumil a
tunni stanotti 'nta tunnara ,"
(Blessed Mother, may you make
4,000 tuna come into the nets
tonight) is one of these prayers.
Giuseppe Aiello, a "tonnaroto"
in his 60s, recalls seasons that netted a few thousand fi sh, sometimes
weighing about 800 pounds apiece.
Now, he says, about t 55 pounds a
fish is average.
In 1865, Favignana's "tonnaroti" took in 14,020 tuna. Last
year the cau:h was 975, said Aiello.
When Aiello was younger, th e
ranks of the "tonnaroll" numbered
170; today there arc 64.
Pollution has been blamed. But

By JAMES HANNAH
MAPLEWOOD, Ohio (AP) Something is stalking Woody
Joslin's sheep.
And there's little he can do
about it.
Farmer.; around Ohio are losing
their battle against the coyote, a
swift and stealthy killer that has
claimed almost 300 sheep this year.
"They're professional hunters, "

said Joslin, who has been trying to
run the wily predators off his Shelby County farm in western Ohio.
"They have all the time in the
world. They wait. They know
where you are. They know where
your guns are. They know what the
sheep arc going to do before the
sheep know it."
Since April, Joslin has lost more
than 30 of his 300 sheep 1D coyotes.

DOW allows over-the-counter
special hunting permit sales
bonus penn it.
The Division of Wildlife advises
hunters to obtain a copy of the
newly published 1994-95 Hunting
and Trapping Regulations Digest
for complete information on deer
permits, licenses and other information. These publications will be
available throughout Ohio begin ning in mid -August.
"We do have a lot of permit
requirements and application procedures, but we also offer some of
the finest deer hunting opportunities anywhere in the M1dwest,"
Page said. "It's up to the individual hunter, just as in other states, to
become informed about what is
needed to take advantage of these
opportunities."
The agency for the f1rst time this
year will issue Urban Deer Penn its,
which allow hunters w take a second antlerless deer within newly
created urban deer zones in parts of
21 counties that include the gneater
Akron-Cleveland, Cincinnati-Dayton, Columbus, Toledo and
Youngstown metropolitan areas.
The Urban Deer Permits are sold
only through the mail and at Division of Wildlife headquarters in
Columbus and district offices in
Akron, Athens, Columbus, Findlay
and Xenia.

By JOHN WISSE
Division or Wildlife
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Division of Wildlife now
allows over-the-counter sales of
Special Management Antlerless
Deer Permits throughout much of
the state, but hunters wanting a
bonus permit in 26 counties still
must apply by mail.
"What we have done this year
is too simplify this process by selling the bonus deer permits through
most of our hunting license outlets," said Bill Page, supervisor of
the wildlife agency's license and
permit section.
"The exception is in 26 counties where we want to limit the
number of bonus permits we issue
to ensure that an overharvest of
deer does not occur," he said.
The 26 counties are: Allen,
Auglaize, Carroll, Crawford,
Darke, Defiance, Erie, Fulton, Hancock, Henry, Huron, Lucas, Mercer, Morgan, Ottawa, Paulding,
Pumam, Sandusky, Seneca, Trumbull, Tuscarawas, Van Wen, Vinton, Williams, Wood and Wyandot
Hunters must submit their ap(&gt;lications and $40 fee to the Div1s1on
of Wildlife by Aug. 19 if they want
a bonus pennit by the start of the
statewide deer archery season,
which opens Oct. I. A second
deadline of Nov. 4 is for hunters
who do not need a bonus permit
until the start of the statewide
firearms season, which is Nov. 28Dec. 3.
The permits will be valid for use
in one of the 26 counties where the
number of permits issued is being
limited and in any of the 62 counties where an unlimited number of
permits will be available through
license agents. The $40 fee
inc! udes the cost of the regular deer
hunting permit in addition to the

SIGN UP

••

Aiello scoffs at that , contending
that the water here is so clean it 's
drinkable . He, lik e many of hi s
comrades after a rece nt morning
out checkmg nets, blames the big
fishing outfits.
Fo r many " tonnaroti ," th e
Japanese. insatiable for sushi . have
come to symbolize the culprits.
"The Japanese ruin ed every thing," said Gioacchino Emandes,
who rcured as "rais" seven years
ago. when he was t\5.
Ovc rfishing has helped diminish
the cau:h off Favignana. said Antonio Di Natale, a marine biologi st
and consultant to tllC Italian government and a U.N. agency .
Italians. Fr ench, Span is h.
Japanese, Korean and other nceLs
practice long -lin e fishing, with
lines and hooks cxu:nding as far as
60 mil es in the open Mediter ranean.
The French-Spanish dispute. for
example, was over the length of
net. which the Spanish claimed W&lt;lS
more than 2 miles longer tllan the
1.5 miles allowed by the European
Union.
Other competi1Drs set out drifting nets. Some usc aircralt to track
down schools of luna before currents can carry them toward Favignan a.
Emandes' grandfather, then his

as

father served " rais" before him .
Emandes worked on hi s fiN " mat
tanza" when he was 16 .
"It's not hard - it' s very hard
work . It all depend s on a man's
strengt h, " said Ernand es. "Il ut
Lhcre was sec urity '' in tuna fi "'hin g.

Now many young men here
look away from the sea fur work.
like Emandcs' son, who work s in a
priso n on the island.
Tuna have long bee n specia l
here. The meaty li sh arc amon g tho
animals drawn some 2.000 yea"
ago on the walls of a seaside cave
on the neighboring ISland of Lcv anzo, part of the Egad• archipelago.
Tuna reach the " death cham ber," a four -sid ed net with a bot tom, after swimming throu gh a
labynnth of nets which arc adJu sted
daily after checking currents and
wimls.

When the chamber swell s with
tuna. the " tonnaroti" wi ll hea ve up
the nets, slowl y rai sing the desper ate tuna 1D the surface.
The fisherman ha~c to dodg e
pmcn!lally deadly swipes of two pronged tuna tails as they spear and
wres tle their prey into the boats .
Occasionally, sharks show up, liko
the two-ton white female whose
tailbone is nailed as a trophy inside
th e fi sherm en' s rolling barn -lik e
tmn gout and storage plac e.

Ohio farmers losing sheep to coyotes

5th and 6th grade boys and girls

Questions
Call David Jenkins, 992·6534 or
Lisa Roush, 992·3486

mattanza in trouble

draws touri sts to the island from
around the world.
Until about tO years ago,
tourists with strong stomachs could

By FRANCES D'EMILIO
FAVIGNANA, Sicily (AP) For a few days each year, the emerald waters around this tiny island
blush red with blood. acwmpanicd
by the grunts and prayers of tuna
fishennen.
The slaughter - or "mauanza"
- of tuna struggling for life as
they arc harpooned and wrestled
out of a "death chamber" of fish·
ing nets, is an ancient ritual, livcli·
hood and way of life for Favignana, a mountainous, windy island
nine miles orr Sicily's western
coast.
But after centuries of bounty,
the tuna arc running fewer and
fewer and smaller and smaller. Dis·
appearing along with the choice ,
red-fleshed blucfin is a rare species
of fisherm en, Favignana's "tonnaroti. ''
The "tonnaroti," whose few
concessions to modernity include
walkie -talkies and a scuba diver to
mspcct nets, simply can't compete
with big nects in the open Mediterranean. Large-scale competition
can be ruthless, as the ransacking
and seizure by Spanish fishermen
of a French tuna boat in July
showed.
Favignana is the only place
where fishennen practice the ''mattanza," with all its ritual, a gory
show each May and June that

that include_people 66 and older
and others wtth permanent dtsabil•ues.
.
.
Hunters ":Ill ~y $1~ for then
res•denthunung hcense, non-restdents wtll pay $91. The three-day
non-restdent small-game huntmg
license wiU cost $25 . De_er and
turkey huntmg permitS w•ll cost
$20, mcludmg any bon~ penn1ts.
The Ohto Wetlands Habttat Stamp,
often referred to as the state duck
stamp, wtU cost $~I.
.
A fuU list. of hcense and permit
fees IS contatned m the_ new 1994- f-:::;=======::::~
~5 Hu~ting andTrappJOg Re_gula- .
tions digest, wh1ch con~ns mformauon about most hunting. season .
dates and m~y or the state s huntmg regulations. H ~lso replaces
several _other pubhcauons that were
disconbDued.

Aug. 2 and 4, 6 to 8 p.m.
Aug. 6, 10 a.m•.to 1 p.m.
at
Big Bend Health and Fitness
87 Mill Street, Middleport

I

Centuries~old

BIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL LEAGUE

We, !be undcni&amp;oed directon, IDeal ILl the correctoeu of tbiJ Report or Condition and ~lore that it bas been
examined by UJ and lo !be beat of our knowled&amp;e and belief bas been prepared in confOI'IIlllKle with official
instructio111 and iJ lnle and com&lt;:t.
Merrill L l!v1111
Morril 1!. Haskins - Dirccton
,
Wuren P. Sheets
State of Obio, County 111 Gallla, u:
Sworn to and subscribed before me lbia 26th daly of July, 1994 and I hereby cellify that I am not an officer or
director of lbia bank.
Cindy H. Jobnaton, Notary Public
My commiuion npirea Much 26, 1996.'-

Lafayette MellloGIIIII)OIIl

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) :Hunting license and permit fee
:increases that become effective
·Sept. I continue to represent an
·excellent investment of recreational
dollars spent in Ohio, the Division
of Wildlife said.
Some of the division's largest
expenditures are for purchases of
Jtew public hunting and fishing
lands, expansion of the turkey relocation project, fish bau:hery reno;vations and improved public
accesses which benefit Ohio's
bunters and anglers.
. The division issues about $5.3
million worth of free hunting and
·fishing licenses and permits to
:about 200 ()()(} eligible applicants
'

I, the undersigned officer, do hereby declore that tbia Report of Condition bas been prepared in conformance
with official instructions and iJ lnle and correct 1o the beat of my knowledge and belief.
Patricia L. Davia
·
V~ce President- MIS Division
July 26, 1994

(614) 446-2125

'

Shiloh introduced himself several week s ago, the sound of his
incessant meowing drifting across
the neighbors' pasture in the cool,
orange glow of a southeastern Ohio
sunset.
The following morning revealed
a small, half-starved gray and white
furball that had taken up residence
in our barn. Quite shy, the little
critter would scamper away, hiding
under the floor upon any intrusion
in1D his sanctuary. Food and a gentle approach wore down his resistance (the kitten proved to be a
'him') and he soon became comfortable with our presence, bounding over to visit and orbit our legs
at any opportunity.
Naming a killen, or any stray
animal for that maHer, is serious
business. If you name it, you own it
• - the commitment made. As a
result, Shiloh remained nameless
for about a week -just before his
untimely demise.
While home for lunch, I found
the little body in the driveway; fortunately our two young children
weren't home so I secured a shovel
and a plastic bag and, with linle
ceremony, proceeded to bury the
Ieinen. Ten minutes later, the task
completed, I returned to work.
That same evening, in the hazy,
orange glow of a southeastern Ohio
sunset, the wailing sound of kitten's meowing hauntingly wafted
over from the neighbor's field .
My father-in-law made the comment that perhaps the kitten had
only used up only 7.5 instead of 8.5
lives before its fatal car encounter.
Perhaps.
Just as I prepared to get a nashlight, a small gray and white baU of
fur tore toward us from under the
fence, running for all the world like
a kitten that has known us for some
time.
After the initial shock, a quick
examination revealed this second
killen (also a male with a good,
rumbling V8-type purr) to be
slightly larger with darker fur and
different markings. For some unexplainable reason, this kitten, certainly a linermate of the aforemen, tioned feline, had picked just that
: time 1D adopt its new owners. How: ever, cats, like little girls and but, terflies, need no excase.
: The next day found the new ani: mal well established to the farm,
· angling back and forth across the
: path of and between the feet of any
' who ventured outside and gracious; ly allowing itself to be coddled by
: children who had already forgouen
· their previous kitten.
: Lazarus is doing very well.

~.By JOHN WISSE

EQUITY CAPITAL

Stocks

The tale of two kittens

!-Division or Wildlife

Common stock (No. of Sbau 1. Autborized .................. I,OOO
b. Outstanding ................. l.ll00) .......................................................... 5,617,000.00
Swpluo .................................................................................................................................................9, 715,000.00
Undivided profita and capital reoervea ................................................................................................ 7,346,000.00
Net wu-ealizod holding aaina (loaaea) on avoilable-for-aale securities............................
(142,000.00)
ToW equity capital............................................................................................................................. 22,S36,000.00
Total equity cap;W and lonea defemd
punuant ILl 12 U.S.C. t823(j) .......................................................................................................... 22,536,000.00
ToW liabilitiea, limited-life (Wefemd atDck, equity capital.
and louea defemd punuantlol2 U.S.C. 1823(j) ........................................................................ 298,054,000.00
MEMORANDA: Amounta oulltaadiDg u or Report 111 CondiUo• dale:
Standby !etten of credit Total ......................................... .................................................................. t,311.000.00

OFFERING:

By Jim Freeman

- Hunting license, permit fee
: hikes touted by Ohio DOW as
:. good investment of revenue

Deposits:
a. In domestic offices .................................................................................................................... 2S6,627,000.00
(I) Noninterest-bearing .................................................................................. 25,343,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ..................................................................................... 231 ,284,000.00
Federal funds purcbased and aecurities sold under agreements
to repurcbase in domestic otro:a of !be bank .t of iu
Edge .t Agreement subsidiaries, .tin ffiF.:
a. Federal funds purctwcd ............................................ ,................................................................. I0,438,000.00
Other borrowed money
With original maturity of more than one yeor ................................................................................... 1,075,000.00
With original maturity of more than one yeor ................................................................................... 5,235,000.00
Other liabilities ..................................................................................................................................... 2, 143,000.00
ToW liabilitiea .......................................................... ................................................... ,.................... 275,518,000.00

NATE COMMUNICATIONS

-. In the Open

~

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C7

Because of fewer tuna off Sicily's coast,

.

A total of 108 'coonhounds
: were entered in the American Ken; ncl Club World Coonhound Cham~ pionship Qualifier at the Shade
· River Coonhunting Club on July

LIABILmES

• 5 Countie• lo lr14lu local calls

Company

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

excited when I make

birdies. I get ma&lt;l when I make
bogeys.
"I'm a lot better than I was 10
years ago. I think I've mellowed
out."
McNamara was smiling as she
discussed her round, which included a six-inch pun for a birdie at her
final hole, the ninth.
"I didn't know which way I was
going to putt," she said. "The
shon putts felt good one way. The
long putts felt good the other.''
So she gripped her puuer differently depending on the length of
her shots and shot a 2-under-par 70
at the 6,137-yard Blue Hill Country
Club coLIISC.
.
Bradley hasn't won since her
30th career victory in 1991 got her
into the LPGA Hall of Fame. But
she led by one stroke after the first
round and birdied her ftrst hole Friday.
She thought she was "off to the
races," she said, ."and then I made
17 straight pars."
Alfredsson made three straight
birdies on her 14th, 15th and 16th
holes. She missed a three-foot
birdie pu~.?.n her 18th hole and
ended !he day with a 68.

The Ohio Valley Bank

O~io

o

record 7-10 l(l.
Overall, the U.S. track and field
team rmished with 18 gold medals
and a tOial of 38 medals. Russia led
in medals with 41, but had only 10
golds.
Keller even said that O'Brien
might need counseling 1D overcome
the mental block he has developed
about the I ,500.
"We need to do something different than we've been doing,"
Keller said. "Obviously, it 's not
workin~ for us. We've tried everything.
"I ~uess he needs a sports psycholog•st now."
In other Goodwill Games action
Friday, Cubans and Russians split
six boxing gold medals. The most
impressive winners were Cubans
- heavyweight Felix Savon
knocking out Russia's Sergei
Machalov with one punch in the
first round, and flyweight Manuel
Mantilla beating Choi Joon-wook
of South Korea 30-3.
Russians won gold medals in all
four weight classes in wresjling,
and Russia and Gennany advanced
to the water polo final, while the
United States 1Dok fifth place, beating Hungary 9-7.

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
{lnc:ludlng Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)

The

o

,,

Inkster leapfrogs four to lead
in Ping- Welch's Championship
By HOWARD ULMAN
CANTON, Mass. (AP) -Two
Swedes, one Hall of Farner and an
grip-switching putter were headed
for a four-way tie after two rounds
of the LPGA Ping-Welch's Championship.
Then a golfer who gave birth to
her second daughter four months
ago leapfrogged over all four of
them and inw a one-stroke lead.
Juli Inkster's eagle on Friday's
last hole poi her at 7-under-par
137, one stroke better than Swedes
Helen Alfrcdsson and Annika
Sorenstam, Hall of Farner Pat
Bradley and Melissa McNamara,
who grips the dub differently on
short and long puns. All five began
~:yni~:e lOth hole and finished at
Inkster's eagle with a 30-foot
chip came on a 451-yard, par 5
hole. On the previous hole, a 503d
5 h b
d b 2
yar par ' s e ogeye
Y putting from IO feet.
"I was mad. I just said, 'OK,
calm down. This is a birdie hole
(coming up). You have two par 5's
back to back,"' said Inkster, who
shot 69j "I'm just an emotional

Outdoors

July 31, 1994

Some homes try to separate
you from the environment
Our hOmes make you a
part of it

~
I-IDMES

" Last year, we didn 't have any.
This year, it's a catastrophe," he
said.
Marty Mathis, a Shelby County
dog warden who keeps track of
coyote kills, sai&lt;l the number of
sheep killed by coyotes has skyrocketed this year. In the past, one
or two kills a year was normal.
Don Miller, a sheep farmer in
nearby Logan County, has lost
$10.000 worth of sheep to coyotes
in the last two years.
"My whole world got turned
upside down," said Miller. "The
problem is what it docs to your
mind. Every time you go check
your sheep, you're kind of on pins
and needles on what you're gomg
to find."
Logan County farmer William

THINI(
SNOW

Shultz lost 30 1D 40 sheep last year.
"You just feel absolutely help less." said Shultz. " It just absolutely drives you nuts that you
can't control what 's killing your
liveswck.''
Farmers in Ohio arc permitted
to shoot coyotes. The problem,
they say, is catching them. ll takes
a coy ote only a few minutes to
swlk and kill its prey.
Jack Carver, the state Agriculture Departm ent' s only wildlife
damage specialist, said Ohio currently has 10,000 to 12,000 adult
coyotes. He has logged about 275
sheep kill reports this year. In
1993, about 600 kills were reponed, up from 500 in 1992.
Ohio farmers lost about
(See COYOTES on C-8)

1992 FORD BRONCO
XLT 4x4

V·B Auto, Power
Steering, Cruise, Tilt, Air
Stereo/Cass, and Mu[h
(614)
667-3350

42945
State Route 7
Coolville,

(614)

The

667-3350

Bibbee

Call
John Reeves

MOTOR COMPANY

Ohio

Jerry Bibbee

Since 1967

1220Washington Blvd., Belpre, OH 45714

614-423-7521
Ernest M. Shuler, a life long resident of Meigs County
(Letart Falls, OH) has owned Miller Homes since 1970
providing sales and service of top quality manufactured
housing at reasonsable prices. In 1991 Ernie opened a
new sales center Fairplains Factory outlet just off 1-77 at
Fairplains on old Rt. 21 Exit, South of Ripley, W.VA.
Ernie's son Steve Shuler is the manager of this lot. Ernie
invites you to stop by either of his 2 locations for all of
your housing needs.

Call today f~rlDoro i~ro~matlo~ ·

l....-h~~-;

"-l&gt;liTJ ~ tur~s.

L;

Inc.

Mqn chokes IIUIUfor H/Ur living.

P.O. BOX 614~ ..

RIPLEY, WV. 25271
1-80CI-458-9990
'•

or

'•

�'

~

..

!
Page-cs-sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

July 31, 1994

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

0

Farm/llusiness

Section D
,Biotech industry continues to lose ·steam

Ohio fishing report

Bluegills, redear sunfish in abundance at Lake Alma
crappies. Night lishmg for channel
catfish has also been productive.
Lake Erie
In the western bas in, lop wall eye fi shing areas ar c ncar th e
Dav• s- Bcsse pl ant , Wes t Sisler
Island , Green Island and the interSERVICING
redear sunfi sh arc num erou s and national border. Avcragc length s
MerCruiser
offer good fi shin g opportunities , arc '16 10 20 inches.
especiall y for beg innin g anglers .
In the central basin , some ycl·
Volvo Penta
Use small worms and larval baits low perch arc hcin g taken one to
OMC
for best results. Channel catfish can three miles off Cleveland and one
be taken at night when fishing with to two miles off Fairport Harbor
traditional baits along the lake bot· and Ashtabula. Walleye fi shing is
1/0l!US
lorn. Largemouth bass are in good good one to five mil es offshore .
numbers, but a high density of Most angl ers arc trolling dispy
J .-.~A'I:
aquatic vegetation can make fish · divers and spoons al depths of 35
ing conditions very challenging.
to 55 feet. Anglers in the central
:00-6:00
Karr St., Just Off Rt. 124, Syracuse, OH
992·6520
BELMONT LAKE - Bluegills basin sometimes catch a stcclhead
arc num erou s and can be taken trout while walleye fi shing.
lakewide by angl ers using larval
baits and red worm s. Channel calfi sh arc also in good numbers and
range in si7.e from 10 10 25 inches.
Largemouth bass can be taken on
four -inch plasti c worms or imitation surfac e ba llS during early
morning or evening hours . ~
Southwest
RUSH RUN LAKE - Boaters
are limited lO the use of electric
motors only. Worms and larval
baits fished along the edges of submerged plants work well when
seeking bluegills. Largemouth bass
are numerous with a few fish
weighing up LO five pounds. The
daily bag limit for bass is eight.
Use small spinners. surface baits
and night crawlers for best· ults.
WHITE OAK CREE - Some
portions of this creek in Highland
and Brown counties of~ opportunities to lake smallm th bass and
rock bass. Fish i lhc pools below
shallow rifnes ·th soft craws or
small jigs. Carp, su rs, bullheads
and channel catfish an also be
taken. Some of the best fishing
along this creek occurs where il
enters the Ohio River.
Central
ALUM CREEK RESERVOIR
- The deep water by the dam has
been producing some good catches
of saugeyes, mostly by anglers who
are trolling for muskies. Early
morning and evening hours are
among the best time to fish. Try
using plastic worms, small spinners
and live bait fished around the
drop-off points to take largemouth
lUifD!
bass. Shoreline areas and the shallow coves will provide good fishing for crappies and channel catExtended Clia$la, Driver Side A~ Bag, An!Hod&lt; Bmkes, PJr CordtJon
fish.
LUDfl WITH 11• AIR CIMDIDIIIIII
Automatic OYer!)lve, PIS, P/8, Tl, 0\Jse, AM'FM Cass, Pll'llndows, .
HOOVER RESERVOIR PA.od&lt;s, 4 Cap. Chairs. SoMied, Fllerglass Rllll'ing lloalds,
110 V. Power, Porta Polly, Microwave, Refrigernlor, Sofa, Loaded!
Saugeyes up to 25 inches are found
lrdl1ld l.ijiti!YJ Premum Wood Packaga,FtJI CorMJrnion i.Daded'
in Hoover. Anglers should troll
No Doc Feoo.No Doc Faes. ~
crank baits or drift weight-forward
spinners in deep water for best
results . Night foshing along the
causeway during summer is popular among anglers seeking white
bass. The shoreline areas produce
good fishing for bluegills and at
ni~ht for channel catfish when
usmg traditional baits fished along
tbe bottom.
Northeast
CUYAHOGA RIVER - Bass
fishing is best from Front St. to
Edison . Anglers should fish at
BRAND NfW '94 PDIITIA£ SUNBIRD ll CIIJPf
depths of 10 to 30 feel at Edison
I-IPIWII
Anti·
Lock Bra;es. PIS. PIB. AM/FM Stereo. Custom
and five to 10 feet near weed lines
Euro Package, V-6 Power, Automatic Overdnve
Cloth
Interior.
Rear,
Steel
Belled
Tires.
Well
Equipped'
at Front St. for best results. Use
Transmission. Air Conditton. PIS, PIB, PIWindows, PIDoor
four-inch plastic worms in dark
~fe~6r :R~r~f~il::FM casselte Custom Cloth
colors. Channel catfish are being
1
Defroster. Cast Aluminum
taken at the gorge bridge at Edison.
Wheels. Loaded'
Bluegills are in deep water and can
be taken on red worms and wax
worms.
PYMATUNING RESERVOIR
- Muskies up 10 44 inches and 23
pounds have been taken in recent
weeks. Walleyes up to 30 inches
and eight pounds can be taken on
weight-forward spinners tipped
with night cmwlers. Minnows and
jigs work best when fishing for
COLUMBUS , Ohio lAP) Here is the weekly fi shing rcpon as
prov1ded by · th e Divis ion of
Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources:
Southeast
LAKE ALMA - Blueg1Us and

WHEN YOUR BOAT NEEDS SERVICED•••

·By STF.VE SAKSON
:AP Business Writer
_ NEW YORK _ The biotech indu stry, who se
;stocks soared several years back on hopes that genet;•e engmccnng could cure unyielding di seases like
.cancer, ts staggering. Nearly a dozen high -profile
;drug tests have failed tllis year.
; Although two companies - Biogcn Inc. and Teva
.Phannaceuucal Industries Inc. - reponed successful
•tests on lhc ~r mulu'ple sclcros· dr
th.
k
•
IS ugs IS past wee
.observers say a oonsc· of I
.,
•
~ · g g oomd prcvru s. .
. The 1·nduslry's
.
encra 1 ownturn s•nce 1992
;seems to be dropping faster this year:
' _ Syncrgcn Inc Cemoc
Ch.
C
•and Xoma Corp a.l,l fa,· led ol r 1nc., thtron h orpth.,
·· ·
WI
bl od come
. f . roug
h k'll
drugs 10 treat sep
SIS
,
a
oo
m
cellon
1
at
' s
100 000 people
'
a year.
.
- Regencron Phannaccuucals Inc . abandoned its

rJa/(j it to

.ll l N

u

MARINE SERVICES

All NIW 1814 WEIII.IR CAMPER VAN

8

18
488**
··~Palm!.:~

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative recently presented a $1,000 donation in support
of the University of Rio Grande
Center for Economic Development
to Dr. Barry M. Dorsey, president
of the Uni versily of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community
College.
Gerry Gust', director of the
Berry Center for Economic Development, said purpose of the donation is to establish intersll!te coop-

Coyotes...
(Continued from C-7)
$150,000 in related COSts last year.
But an increase in kills also costs
the taxpayers money. The state,
which reimbun;es some costs related to a coyote kill, spent $38,500
or its $40,000 reimbursement budgel last year.
Nationwide, coyotes killed
311,900 sheep in 1991 - the latest
tally available. Fanners and ranchers lost $21.7 million. Texas
reported the largest loss that year
- 56,000 sheep.
If the problem persists, the price
of raising sheep will rise - and
consumers wiD fool the bill, Carver
said
"One or the greatest problems is
our predatory problem," said Jim
Chakeres, executive director of the
Ohio Sheep Improvement Association, a 600-member trade and lobbying group.
And it couldn 'I come at a worse
time, he said.
Federal legislation has made it
less profitable in western states to
produce sheep. Ohio is the largest
sheep-producing state east or the
Mississippi River. Some 7,000
fanners raise 190,000 to 200,000

BRAND NIW '14 DlDSMDBIU CIERI
Ortver Side Ait BaQ, Anti·Locl&lt; Brakes, Automatic. Ar conditon.
PIS. PIB. AMIFM Stereo. P/Ooor Locks. P/Rediners. Custom
Cloth tntertor. F10nt &amp; Rear Floor Mats. St.., B~ted Tires Well
E&lt;!Jippedl
'

,.. women's chairpersons from the
region will also be recognized.
GALLIPOLIS - The 1994 Ohio
Women 's commit tees are active
Farm Bureau Federation (OFBF) in all 88 Ohio counties. They volSoutlleast Fall Rally, featuring the unteer time and effort for a variety
women's program will be held of agriculture and non-agriculture
October 4 at the Ohio University activities in areas such as safety,
Inn in Athens, beginning at 9 a.m. public affairs, membership, ag in
and concluding at approximately the classroom and other youth pro2:30p.m. The theme for tllis year is grams.
"Exotic Fall in tllc Hills of Athens
Deadline for registration is
County."
September 20. For more informa Highlights of this year's pro- tion contact the Gallia County
gram include seminars entitled Farm Bureau atl -800 777-9226.
"Outhouses I Have Known" by
A new product being offered by
noted humorist Ron Ramey, Lan- the local Farm Bureau is the green
caster and "Exotic Plants" by Tom reflective house number signs. You
Win and Ken Freeling of the Glass can purchase a sign with two sets
House Gardens in Stewart. Other · of your house number. You can
entertainment will be provided by pick the sign up at tlle Gallia Soil
Ohio University. The 1993-94
Continued on D-8

8

29'888

..Tobacco marketing quota
:penalties are announced

8

13,288

BRAND NIW '14 BUICI CDIIUIY SIDIN
Driver Stde Airbag, Automatic, Air Condition, Power
Steenng, Power Brakes Custom Cloth lnt&lt;Jior, Front &amp;
Rear Floor Mats, Steel iloted Tires, Well Equipped'

By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - When tobacco
·growers market more tobacco than
tl\eir farm quota, they will be subject to marketing quota penalties. A
:penalty or $1.36 per pound for burley tobacco will be assessed when
burley tobacco producers market
more than 103% of their effective
farm marketing quota.
· This penalty also applies to
tobacco which is marketed on a
marketing card for a farm other
than the farm where the tobacco
was produced. The penally rates
vary for other kinds of quota tobacco. Marketing quota penalties are
assessed at the rate of 75% of the
average market price for that kind
or tobacco in the proceeding marketing year. These penalties apply
10. every kind of tobacco subject to
marketing quotaS.

lUI J-1 PIWII

Two lucky winners will
receive 2 tickets each.

~i~~~;}~fr~t~~sselte, CusSiom C1oth lnterior, Rear

14988

Aluminum Wheels. Loaded'

,

Investment viewpoint

Must be 18 1ears old. Need not be presenile win. Drawtng
wtll be held Sunday. July 31. approximately 6:00p.m.

IRANI H '14 BUICI PIRIIVINUI

fUll SIZE PICK-UP
Will EQUIPPED!

8

25,888

8

12,488
/

sheep.

Joslin, 47, said has tried almost
everything to protect the sheep that
live on his hilly, wooded 300-acre
fann.
Confining them to a field right
next to the barn only emboldened
the coyotes. He has spotted coyotes
in broad daylight, within a few
hundred feet or the house.
Guard dogs and donkeys have
not worked. And the coyotes jump
the electric fences he erected.

'

L

r
To

Will 1/rf/1111 #I Ctlfl, 1111, 1'111111, lllt:t, '&amp;IIIII CIIIB VII later.

· TBII ~REI 1-BDI-122-Hil • llt-2Hf • Hf-6141• 421-1151

MII.IJ-hbii1IJ Ill-BPI
III~IJ 1111·8111

Taxes. Tags. Tid9 Fees extra. Rebate included in sale price of new vehicle hsted wtlere applicable. On approved cred•t Not respons,ble lor typog'raphicalerrtrs.

All other things held constan~ the
higher your marginal tax mte, the
When would you choose a bond more you should consider investing
yielding 6 percent over a similar in municipal bonds.
As an example, when an investor
bQnd yielding 7
in
the
39.6 percent federal income tax
percent? The anbracket
purchases a tax-free municiswer: When you're
pal
bond
yielding 6 percen~ this
in the 28 percent
equates
to
a
taxable invesbnem yieldor greater tax
ing
9.9
percent.
bracket, and the 6
Here are several reasons on inves~ent bond is
tor
would consider municipal bonds:
tax-free.
• Tax Exemption-Municipals ofWhen state and
local governments need to borrow ten provide more income after taxes
money, they issue municipal bonds than taxable invesunents bearing
to finance capital expenditures such higher interest
• Safety-Municipal bonds offer the
asroads,schoolsandhospitals. Many
of these bonds are rated among the highest degree or safety ne&lt;Llo U.S .
safest in credit quality because they Government bonds.
are backed by the government entity
• lncome:Municipal bonds provide a solid, steady income from taxissuing them.
Like most other bonds. munici- free interest paid semi-annually.
• Diversification-You have an oppals pay periodic interest at a stated
"coupon • rate, but u nlike corporate portunity to piD'Cbase a variety of
.PI: U.S. government bonds, interest municipal bonds encompassing a
J1!!id on most municipal bonds is wide geographical choice.
OIICmpt from federal income taxes.
• Flexibility-You can choose any
:-::. If you live In the slale of the desired maturity date from one to 20
iiiuer, the intereSt you receive is years or more.
llllnelimes exempt from statc taxes
• Marlcetability-Since the tnlding
:as well. Therefore, the higher your marlcet for municipal bonds is broad,
burden, the more money you can you can sell them wilh relative ease.
mtenlially save.
-- Deciding between a tax-free muJay CaldweU is an Investment
ikipal and a taxable bond really broker wilb The Oblo Company In
~nds on your marginal tax. rate. its GalUpolis omce.
BJI Jay Caldwell

BRAND NEW '84 C-1500

Dual Air Ba~ Anti·locl&lt; Blakes, Automate, Dual A1r
Comlclftemp Llimate Control. AWFM Cassette. P/Antenna.
P/ Ortve!s Seat, Power Passenger Seat. leather Interior
Ke1less Remote Entry System, AluminumWheels, Loadi.Jt

It's fair Lime! The Gallia Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service will share a booth at
the Gallia County Junior Fair with
the Gallia Soil Conservation Service and Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District - stop by and
say hello! Each year the county is
flown and color slides are printed ASCS will have the 1993 aerial
slides available for viewing during
the fair. Interested parties may
place orders for copies of 1993 or
1994 aerial slides during the fair.
For additional information on
aerial photography or marketing
quota penalties, please contact the
ASCS office at446-8686
Lisa Meadows is the county
executive director or the Gallia
Agricullural Stabilization and
Conservation Service

m

A penod of c uL~ and consolidations has alrca&lt;ly
begun . Some of the roughly 1,200 companies will
fa •l. analysts predicL Only the handful of companies
. that already have profitable produ&lt;:ts will emerge the
same or stronger. they said.
Included arc Amgen Inc., whose Ncupogcn wards
off mfcct•ons in chemotherapy patients, and Biogen,
whose alpha interferon drugs help treat hepatiti s,
lcukem1a and Kapos1·• 5 sarcoma a k. 1 ·
alad
, S In CSIOn m ' y
that often afnicts """PIC 'th AIDS
~~
w• w d · d
Biogeo's announcem
h
en 1 c nes ay l al 1alcstage t es ts or its beta interferon drug slowed the progrcsSton ol multiple sc lerosis was th be .1
. h
industry has had ·,n m.on•L s send· cB. s ~cwhs t e
u• ,
mg •ogcn s s arcs
up 50· pc rcc 1
"
·
· 'The B
fb k h . .
.
•
..'ogen news son o ro c I c c1mt ca l d•sastcr cham, satd Chovav.

(~
..

\

":)

'••

ACCEPT DONATION- On hand ror Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative's $1,000 donation to the University of Rio Grande to help promole the region's economy were, left to right,
Dr. Clyde Evans, athletic director; Beverly
Cr~blree, director ?f development and planned
giVIng; Walter TrUll!, Jr., executive vice presi-

dent and general manager of Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative; Dr. Barry M. Dorsey,
president of the university; John Wiseman, vice
president of the Regional Economic Development Association; Dr. Krisbma Kool, acting
dean of the college of business and Gerry Gust,
director of he Berry Center for Economic Development.

Inventive idea or a patent rip-off?

By PATTY DYER

'84 IUICIIIGAl
Au1omalic Overdrive Transmission, Air Condition, 3800
V-6 Power, PIS. PIB, PIWindows. PIOoor Locks. Tilt.

acllve leadership roles. This contribution to the new Center for Economic Development is one pan of
that (regional economic development) on behalf of the BREC membership."
Dr.Dorscy said , "The Center is
a unique experiment to bring
together the business leaders across
state boundaries. We hope tllis will
become a model for the nation in
regional economic development."

set Oct. 4 at OU

.
8
14 88

8,488**

eration between Gallia Jackson
Meigs, and Vinton counties in Ohi~
and Mason County in West Virginia. Specifically, he added, "This
money w1U supplement other donations to provide seed money for
promoting the regional economy."
Walter V. Truitt, Jr., executive
vice-president and general manager
of Buckeye ~ural Electric Cooperauve sa1d, Economic progress
doesn't happen without local citizens and organizations Laking

Fall OFBF ~_ally

CHIVRDUT lUMINA IUBD

8

. "The second assumption was tllat because people
m the biotechnology mdustry are smarter. they would
reduce tlle fa1lure r.~le of new pharmaccuucal s corn·
mg outof rc.search, he S31d.
.
Unlike b•g drug compamcs, whtch have hundreds
of products. m development and e~ pcct results from
Just a fracuon , most bwl.&lt;;e hs arc a smgle product
dressed up a.s a company, S31d Harry Taranto, of the
W1lkerson Group , a New York biOtec h consultant
f'
'
mn.
.
They ' re o f Len run by sc•enLISls
· · · wuh
· weak busmcss
k'll
h
d .
. · ·
s ' s w o persua cd mv~slors lo malce nsky bets
based on hopes of h1gh rewards.
" A lot of these companies were deluding them·
.. sa~d
. Mc~rav
.
se 1vcs as we 11 as mvestors
Chuvav a
b'•otcc h ana1ysl wttll
· Salomoo
' ·Bros m
· New York ·
So what are the ros
·?
.
.
'
P peels .

Buckeye Rural donates
$1,000 to URG in support
of economic development

84Month
HNANCING*

BRAIDNIW'I4

dru g for am y_otrophic lateral sc lerosis, al so known as
Lou Gehn g s d1 scase, after nollcmg sev ere s1de
effects ltkc coughmg and wc• ghtl~ss.
.
- R1bi lmmunoChem Research Inc. s rud results
of lcsLs of lls cancer drug were d•sappomllng.
.
. As a result, stocks arc do~n by about a Llurd smce
Janu ary , research cash IS runn•.ng oul. and the
pros peel of c urbs on dr~ g pncc s through health
reform IS sl1cmg mto expecwuons.
"Th b'
h · d .
,. . f
d •d
h·
c IOiec '" uslly \\a s oun c on w al
d
l
be
f
II·
·
·
·
·
"
turnc out u
two a acwus ass umpuons , sa•'d
R . L
d.
f
v· . . h
ogcr ongrnan , c . •Lor o . 1n IVO , ~. biOlec
newslcuer pubh shcd m Norwalk, Conn. The f1rsl
was that pharmaceutiCal pncmg would rcmam as ll
· ' 70 s an d '80s, an d peop 1e wou ld be
a. 1way s had Ill
.a bl e 10 pncc
· prod ucts for tern·fi•c (p ro f'tl ) margms
. · and
increase prices as necessary.

July 31, 1994

BANKER GRADUATESStephanie Stover, loan officer
of Ohio Valley Bank, Gallipolis
recently graduated from the
12th annual Ohio School of
Commercial Credit al Miami
University.

Business brief
WASHINGTON (AP)
Healthy economic growth and subdued inflation in the spring elicited
cheers from the Clinton administration and investors.
The gross domestic product, the
total of all goods and services produced in the United Stales, grew at
a 3. 7 percent annual rate in the second quarter this year, the Commerce Department said Friday in a
repon that also showed the underlying inflation rate was well under
control. Stocks and bonds surged
on the news.

DEAR BRUCE; A company
offered a relative of mine the fol lowing service: to process a request
for a patent and a search for a manufacturer, all for a $10,000 or a
$5,000 fee, plus 30 percent of
sales. This sounds too cheap and
too easy to me to gel a product on
the market. They claim that they
will get national distribution very
rapidly. What do you think? D.P., Indianapolis
DEAR D.P.: There are many
companies that advertise various
schemes for getting new inventors'
products on the market. They all
seem lD have one thing in common:
a substantial amount of money up
fronL I really don't agree with your
assessment that this is cheap, but I
suppose in the context of major
success it might be.
Allorneys general all over the
nation have counseled against
using these services, since, in their
judgment, the success ratio is
infinitesimal. I would agree. GetLing a new product on the market is
Lough; it's expensive and a lot of
luck is required. But using companies that promise the moon is one
way to ensure you will be a liulc
bit poorer at the end of this year
than you were last year.

SMART MONEY
BRUCE

msurance, $50,000 of which has
been paid. We spent $30,000 of
mat $50,000 for funeral expenses
and to pay off her debts .
we would like to know what 10
do with the other $20,000 now, and
the remaining $75,000 when we
receive il for our grandchild. The
money is in my name. Should 1 put
it in the child's name, and, if so,
can you suggest a way to invest it?
· ··'·d
- C.1. . Tnm
.... , co1o.
DEAR C.I.: In my judgmem,lhe
money should remain in your name
c/o custody control. Clearly, you
would want to name your grandchild as your beneficiary in your
will and make arrangements for the
funds to be managed by someone
in the event that you arc not in the
picture.
But I would not recommend
DEAR BRUCE: My 30-ycar- pulling the money in the child's
old daughter passed away recently. name, under which she could
She had $125,000 worth of life demand it when she reaches her

. .
maJonty. That could cause all sorts
of problems, as I am sure you can
apprcco3te.
.
. G1ven the l1kclihood that you
w•ll be supporung this child at least
for the foreseeable. future, and that
she ts probably_ ehg1blc for Social
Securlly bcncftts of some type, I
would put the money into d reasonably aggress1ve mutual fund or
family of funds. This could result
10 some temporary losses, but over
the long_pull, most experts would
agree Lh1s type of investment will
grow appreciably in value.
But_n should be underscored
th~l th1s IS not a day-to-day propo·
s•Uon. There could be some losses
some years and substantial gains in
other years. You have to look at tlle
long piCture.
I wish you well in your second
parenung.
S (Send your questions to:
marl Money, P.O. Box 503,
Eh~rs, FL 34680. Questions of
~eoeral interest will be answered
'"future columns. Due to the valume or mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.)
Bruce Williams is a syndicated
write~ f~r Newspaper Enterprise
AssocoatiOn.
(For inrormation on how to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Middleport Farmers' Market expands operation
By HAL KNEEN
POMEROY - Your efforts in the
home yard, garden, field plantings
are paying off in flower beds overflowing with blooms, a multitude
of fresh vegetables and expectant
high yielding com/hay fields. The
Saturday morning Middleport
Fanners' Market has expanded its
ability to supply fresh homegrown
produce 10 area citizens. Tomatoes,
beans, sweet com, potatoes, peppers and other produce are available on a f1rst come basis at resonable prices. For growers wanting to
participate, please call Tom Dooley
at992-3148.
Pumpkin Growers Beware! Diseases are springing up all over the
county in both commercial and
homeowner pumpkin patches. Due
to our current ideal climate conditions of wet and warm weather,

.

EXtenSlOn COrner
Downy Mildew disease can quickly
overtake the patch. This fungus
starts off on the underside of the
leaves as a whitish mold. The corresponding upper part or the leaf
surface becomes yellowish. then
fmally turns brown and dies.
Windy and rainy weather helps
spread the spores of the mold onto
surrounding pumpkin plants. Control can best be achieved by rotating the pumpkin patch within the
garden or field with a minimwn of
three years between plantings.
Choose a planting site with full
sunlight exposure throughout the
day. If the disease pressure is
severe, apply a registered fungicide
weekly, beginning soon after the
fungus becomes present.

If l h e weal her
. reverts back to
dry condlllons and moderate ternperatures pumpkms are susceptible
to both sp1der m11es and/or
another fungus disease, powdery
mildew. Sp1der m1tes cause yellowmg of the leaves and are normally
found when pumpkin patches are
allowed to be weedy. So keep the
field clean of weeds. Natural msect
predators like ladybugs can keep
small populations of mites in control. Powdery mildew only affects
'
h'
Older I.eaves an d •arms
a w tle lalcum-hke growth of spores on the
upper leave surface. Damage is
ltmlled to the leaves however
severe infections hastens the maturity of pumpkin fruit and causes
frull to sunburn and be of poor
quality. Control can be obtained
through crop rotatton, avoiding
overerowdm~. overwatering, and
excess fertoltzmg. Extension

· suggest Ben late .
pathologists
Topsin M fungicides in altern ~nd
sprays to best control infestalio~~mg
There will be a statew 'd Pu ·
kin Pest Management'T:,ilim~;
Meeting August 16th from ~-B
p.m ., at the Rhoads Farm Market
and Garden Center 1051 s R 56
which is about on~ mile s~uth ·
of Corcleville Ohio
east
Take pro~r car~ of yo
bles you have harv ur vegetatomatoes beans
estbeed. Rtpe
··
• cucum rs egg
plant, peppers should be
·
cool, moist tern rature stored at
and relative hu.!:fdity 9 5-50 F
Tomatoes ri n be
pen:an.
lures in the 7b-s A ~· a~ lemperaatures tomato ·ce~l •g ~r tebmperdown makin
wa s reak
and m~hy. g lhe tomatoes soft
Hal Kneen is
· •
Universil Extens~he
Oho~
Stale
al Ageotl'o.. M . ' 0c" Agnculture•go&gt; ouoty.

ot t

Ohio crops in good to excellent condition
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio crops are
rated mosdy in the good to excellent condition. The Ohio weekly
crop-weather report for the week
ending July 24 did estimate top soil
moisture in about one fourth or the
state to be short.
"Doane's Agricultural Report"
indicated in last week's newsletter
that their information suggests that
the eastern com belt wiD fall short
of the record 1992 crop but areas of
Iowa and Minnesota appear to have
record yield potential.
They predict that the weaker
!One in .the com market will persist
mto m1d-August. This is based
upon the theory that new crop
futures typically bouom prior to
harvest in large crop years.
The recent 21-state Milk Pro-

Farm Flashes
duction report showed that milk
production during June increased
slightly over year ago levels. Milk
per cow increased about two percent in June. Some economists
believe the low in milk price is at
hand reflecting the M-W milk price
ran or almost $2 per hundred from
April to June. SC$01181 increases in
demand .(IIIli only slight increases in
milk p.Qiuction should support
prices the rest of the year. Dairy
cow numbers have dropped five
percent since 1989.
The opening week of tobacco
sales ended July 21 for Georgia Aorida flue-cured tobacco, type 14.
The fJtSt week average was down
$2.43 per hundred from sales in the

same period last year. According to
a USDA report, auctions were
marked by lower prices but slightly
better quality than last year.
No confirmed reports of Blue
Mold in tobacco for our region or
even in the University of Kentucky
newsleuer. Environmental conditions do exist for an outbreak of
Blue Mold. Heavy dew and fog
with slow daily dry off and weather
fronts coming from the south
encourage Blue Mold development
Producers should check fields
daily.
Plan to auend the 1994 Gallia
County Junior Fair! When someone
asked me this week, what new
would be round at the fairsrounds
next week, it took me a mmute to
answer. An attractive new
anrouncers stand is in place at the
Irack area. A lot of lime and money

have been spent this .Year on proJects such as: upgrading eleelrical
se~v1ce; replacing leaky roofs;
pamung and repairing the stage;
1mllroved aruma! handling systems·
refnung barns with improved stali
systems to accommodate animals·
and numerous other projects.
'
The labor for these projects with
only a couple or exceptions has
been done by fair board members
and _a few volunteers. While these
proJects may not be as glamorous
as a new building, they represent a
comm1tment by the community to
make the. 1994 Gallia County
Jumor Fa1r .the biggest and best
ever. A remmder - The traditional
Fnday Jun10r Frur Sale will start 81
10 a_m. this year.
Edward Vollborn is Gallia
Couoty's agriculture uteosion
agent.

I

�July 31, 1994

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

Page-02-sunday Times-Sentinel

Analysts say

.

Mexican stock market good buy before elections
By PATRICIA LAMIELL
AP Business Writer
NEW YOR - Me~ican stocks
haven't e~actly been glamour puss es lately. Innation, civil unrest and
poliucal uncenainty have pushed
the coumry's stock market down
about 15 percent in dollar term s
smce the beginning of the year.

But over the past two weeks,
signs of solid econom1c growth and
good corporate earnings reports
have sparked a li ve ly rally in Mexican stocks. Some analysiS bel1evc
the mark et presents soine cheap
buying opportunities before next
month's presidential elections .

Timken says
second quarter
earnings up

Hotel taxes: Room
for improvement
,
,
By JENNIFF:R MERIN
For AP Specwl Features
. .
NEW YOR~ - Good news lor
traveler s who ve put New York
vacauons on hold -because of h1gh
pnces: Hotel room costs Will drop
by year's end by an ave r age of
$10.35 per room per ntgh t. Not
exactly small potatoes, even 10 the
Big Apple.
.
The chan ge ''due to a 6 per cent. two-her cu t m hotel room tax
rates lev ted by state and c tty gov emments. On Sept. I, New York
State wtll cut by 5 percent l iS tax
rate on rooms over $100 per mght.
Begmnmg Dec. 1, New York Ctty
wiH drop I percent from the ~d
tax 11 lev•es on all room s, rega dJess of pnce. A $2 n•ghtly surcharge per room IS unchanged.
The new bed tax IS 13.25 percent, regardl ~ss of rack rate . That
compares wl!h the current 19.25
percent on rooms over $100 and
14 .25 percent on rooms under
$100.
ti
The cuts could make a no ceable dtfference m hotel btlls.
A 1993 survey of 23 1 hotels by
the New york Convention &amp; Visitors Bureau Inc. found the average
cost of 3 one-night stay was
$166.34. After Dec. I, the average
will be $155.99.
When the cuts go into effect,
New York's hotel room tax rate
will drop to No. 5 in the nation
from No. 1, according 10 the Cam patgn to Keep Travel Competitive.
The Washington-ba sed lobbying
association supported by 40 travel
industry groups says Columbus,
Ohio, will be No. I with 15.75 percent, followed by Seattle, 15.2 percent; Los Angeles, 14 percen~ and
St. Louis, 13.85 percent.

"Mexico currently trades at 12
times estimated 1995 earnings and
is one of the world's cheapest markets." Morgan Stanley's Robert J.
Pclosky Jr . writes in a July 14
research report . "I don't think it
w ill stay that way much longer."
Mex ican stock s got a boost this
past week when the government

Close behind New Yori&lt; City is
Knoxville, Tcnn.,No. 6, fol lo wcrl
by Memphi s, Tenn. ; At l an ta;
Austin, Dalla s and San Anton•o.
Texas; Nashville, Tenn .; San Francisco; and Washing ton, D.C. New
Orleans is No. 15 with II percent
per night plus a $1 to $3 surcharge.
'' Bed taxes are a source of
much -needed . cash for revenuehungry local and state governmcms," says Rick W ebste r . tax
policy manager for the Cam paign
to Keep Travel Competitive, ·'but
they also make hotel rates high
enough to keep domestic and foreign travelers away."
When hotel prices keep travelers
at bay, he says, that means a loss of
tourist dollars for other local sectors of th e travel indu st ry . Yet,
even with nationwide lobbyin g,
New York is the only city to date to
lower or repeal the tax - even in
highl y competiti ve popular destinalions.
In Ca lifornia, which levies no
state tax on hotel rooms, Los Angel es cha rg es 14 percent; nearby
Anaheim II percent · and San
.
'
•.
Otego, 2 percent. Those differences
alone could dctermme bookmgs by
toun siS and convention planners ..
Meanwhtle, New York Ct !y 1s
expccbng 1ts trnvel mdustry to benefit from the tax cuiS.
Rtchard Alunan, spo_kcsman for
the New York Con~enllon &amp; Vtsttors Bureau Inc., says 25 mtlhon
travel ers viSited New York l ast
year , pumpmg an .esttmated $14
btlhon mto the city s economy. He
expects even _m ore w1th the cut,
particularly 1n the co nv entiOn
ar'!',a.
..
.. .
And !ha~ he says, w11l ha~e
a very posmve effect on -the c11y s
ovemll economy.

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Steel
bearings maker Tim ken Co. said iiS
second-q uarter net income was
more than double the earnings
reported in the same quarter last
year.
T1mken reported net income for
the three months ended June 30 of
$20.6 million, or 67 cents per
share, on sales of $494 .I million.
That compares with net income of
$9.6 million, or 31 cents per share,
on second-quarter 1993 sa les of
$441.2 million.
Strearnlinin~; of operations and
strong sales improvemeniS fueled
the earnings growth, Timken President Joseph Toot Jr. said Friday in
a news release.
" This progress is encouraging
and provides additional evidence
that we are moving toward necessary financial performance levels,"
Toot said. "We are further encouraged by our strong order picture
and good capacity utilization."
For the first six months of this
year, Timken reported net income
of $28.4 million, or 92 cents per
share , on sales of $960 .5 million.
The compan y reported a net loss of
$24 I .5 million, or $7.89 per share,
on flfst-half 1993 sales of $863.7
million .
The 1993 figures r eflect a
charge of $254.3 million, or $7.47
per share, related to changes in
accounting procedures. Without the
charge, net income for the ftrst half
of last year would have total ed
$12 .7 mllli on, or 42 cents per
share, the company said.

Ill '

'"Your
'WJ'Birthday

NORTH
• 4 2

ll 1994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPIUSE ASSN

•Q

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) An associate who

.

is very appreciative of something you d1d

In the year ahead, you could be rather
lucky with things or endeavors you either
create or personally direct . Make this
year count. Use both your ambition and
Imagination to the fullest extent

just to even accounts_ Major changes are
a head for Leo 1n th e coming year _Send for
your Astra-G raph predicttons today Ma11
$1 .25 to Astra-G raph , c/o thiS newspaper,

P.O. Box 4465. New Yolk, N.Y 101 63. Be
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Even though you sure to state your zodiac sign.
m1ght consider this a day oft, something VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today could
fortunate may develop for you that has turn out to be extremely interesting for you
commerc1al overtones _ Its reward cou ld where your social life is concerned. If you
be impress1ve. Leo. treat yourself to a are presen tl y un att ached , Cupid might

birthday giff. Send for your Aslro-Graph have you in his bow s1ghts.
predictions lor ttle year ahead by mailing LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) So meone
$1 .25 to Astro-Graph, c/o this newspa- who se companionship you e njoy might
per, P 0 Box 4465 , New York, N.Y. drop in on you unexpecte dly today . The
10163 Be sure to state your zodiac sign. reason for the visit may be very unusual
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Lady Luck but still retain a happy purpose.
might make it a potnt to see that thmgs in SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You are
general go well lor you today . The pay- presently in a mode where hopes and
offs may not be in material ways, but in expectations could become realities and
ways of greater worth.
tuHillment . Focus your efforts and attention

LIBRA (Sept. 23-&lt;l&lt;:t. 23) Someone you on things that will bfing you the greatest
recently helped is very eage r to repay happiness.
you in some manner and might be able to SAGITtARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21)
do so today. You may not have realized
the value of your gesture.

SCORPIO

(Oct.

24-Nov.

22)

Cooperation and sharing are the key
words tor your personal success today .
Gtve. and it will be given: cooperate with
others. and they. in tum. will help you .

Unusual inlluences that could contribute to
your material well being or add to your
resources in some uniQue manner are stirring today . Be alert tor the extraordinary

CAPR1CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Friends

and contacts you've helped previously are
desirous of dotng something nice for you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) today _ You won't have to plant any seeds
~everal 1mportant objectives can be or ask them. it will be of their own volition
achieved today if you make them priority AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) Gaming the
i"natters. You're 1n a cycle in where two or approval and cooperat1on you need from
more victories can come simultaneously.
others has a be«er chance of be1ng realCAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1V) Don't be ized today than it did yesterday. However,

afraid to take a calculated risk today, pro· don't make your motives too obVIOUS
vided you have thought 11 through in all ol PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You m1ght
its aspects. Probabilities tor a win look

good

AQUARIUS pan. 20-Feb. 19) Things

you do with family members or loved

meet so mebody thro ugh a frtend today
who has th e potential to become more
than just an acquaintance. This individual
and you share a unique mutual interest.

ones will prove to be the most gratifying ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) II you think
and luHilling lor you today.
something unconventional might work in
PISCES (Feb. 2G-March 20) The more order to achieve your obJectives today ,
people you have around you today, the give it a shot. Imaginative methods could
more Comfortable and secure you'll feel .

yield handso me dividends . but o nly if

it you don't have any plans at present , implemented.
put something togethe r that involves a TAURUS (April 20-May 20) New 1nsights
into beUer ways to get cHong with an indismall group activity.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Some type vidual who is pertinent to your prese nt
of financial gain is Indicated today. espe· plans might flash into your mind today .
cially in situations where you're not afraid Oon'llellhem go untested.
to prime the pump in order to generate a GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Devote as
flow . Be both danng and generous.
much anention as possible today to perTAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today you're sons who mean the most to you . Your
likely to be even more charismatic than power to inspire those who believe in you
usual. What makes this so appealing to is very strong in this cycle.
others is your unawareness of this gra- CANCER (June 21-July 22) An opportunity might present itself today that may
asset.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Something enable you to gain a bener understanding
rather remar . l le might develop for you of someone to whom you haven't been as
tbday, owing to a unique chain of events. close as you'd like to be. This can now be
11 will be precipitated by you try•ng to help improved upon.
ll l994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPIUSE ASSN.
someone and end up with you being

cious

'

1 Ballads
6 Fellow
10 Book of maps
15 The "11" game
18 Of an eastern region
19 Uses a loom
21 Job
22 Blue-pencil
24 "- and Cash"
25 Make up
26 Mentioned
27 Wheel hub
28 Mature
29 Strike repeatedly
31 Smells
33 Pictures
35 Loch 37 At that 11me
38 Hard-nnd fruit
39 Disllnguished
40 Singing group
42 Imprisoned
43 Exhausted
44 Run

7-]0-94

7 6

EAST
•J 3

•AK965

•to s

• 9 5 4
• 9 5 3
.7 3

Procoll Co. 1102-IM-10120.

dabte other than my own,
Lawrence L Pattanon, Jr.

7 -Day Diet Plan. L.oea Exceu
Lbo Far Good. I t.o.1 20 Lbo. In
5 Wka. Eotlng Righi WHhoul
Dletlna. 3 Min. Recorded M-Ngl. $1.95 /Uin. Mullt 81 18 To

Colt. 1-ti00-25S.5533.

3 2
• Q J 10 6

•K 6 2
SOUTH
AQ tO 8 7

•A K J

t4

•Q J 9 8 5
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
South
West North East
l •
PjSS
2•
Pass 3 •
Pass
3 NT
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead; • 6

46 Spinning or steering

47 Goatee location
48 Attempt
52 Procession

Know what
you need
By Phillip Alder
Spencer Tracy, in giving advice to
young actors, would say, " Know your
lines and don 't bump into the furni·
ture."
In bridge, it helps to know not only
your lines - your bidding and defensive carding agreements - but also
your opponents ' methods and how
they will play different suit combination s. South bruised his knee badly
wh en he overlooked something on today's deal.
The auction cruised into three no trump . West led the spade six and
East put in !he jack . How should
South have planned the play•
After winning the firs! trick with the '
spade queen . South led the club
queen . But when West played low,
South, with a knowing look at his partner , ca lled for dummy's ace . South
had seen that if the club finesse was
working, he didn 't need it. However,
the king didn't appear, so South had to
play another club. East won the trick
an d returned hi s last spade: one
down.
"I tried the best I could," said South.
North was unimpressed. "Wouldn't
it have been a good idea to duck the
first trick• Then you lose only three
spades and one club."
"I thought of that," South lied. "But
I'd look stupid if East held jack-third
of spades and the club king. Then tl\ey
can win four spades and a club."
"If West had led the six from A-K-9-6
of spades, you mean?"

53 Calls, as a cab
54 Areas of land
56 Cuckoo
57 Run o« to marry
58 Go by boat
59 Tomes
60 Soc•al class
62 Gratu1t1es
63 Tremble
65 Lasso
66 Fell-lip pen
67 Oir. letters
68 Retread
69 Border on
71 Farm ammals
73 Depend
75 Plus

1 Calico Cal , Spade, 614-448-

7313.
1

Versatile

v..r

Old Chow &amp; Shepherd

Dog, 61'h1N-:m8.

Strut Your JHna PagNnt. Cam-dan Park, Augu8t 6. All age
dlvlalona. Nice 1warda. C.ll

Shlllo Hart,

2 female Beagle pupa, wormed,
gocd hunUng dogs, 614-1149-

~75S-0060.

2844.

bf.nd

avallabl• for
par11es, dane .. •nd nlohtclub
worit All type• of muerc, 814-

2 ama ll tam111 puppln. 304895-3049.

1 The dev1l
2 Westem Indian
3 Dressed to lhe 4 Joke
5 Uppity one
6 Middle
7 Place ol refuge
8 Declare
9 Sty
t 0 Agreement
t t Fractional part
t 2 Oodles
t 3 Exist
t 4 Dregs
15 Leaseholders
16 Saying
t 7 Donated
t 9 "H1p" (hyph. wd )
20 Larry, Curly and
Moe
23 Examination
30 Make exp1allon
32 Formal combat
34 Hr . part
36 Discards
38 Highlander
39 Long stories
41 Conceal
42 Where Santiago IS
43 "Hamlet" playwright
44 Sally

Serious
Regret
Facet
Cucle the earth

45 Drive forward

46
47
49
50
51
52
53

131 Orawout

t 33 Burning
t 35 AI any time
t 36 City in New York
t 37 Console

Relinquish
Cut short
Job
Stake
Coffin stand
Falk or Fonda
Salon employee

138 Kind of numera l

54 Horn sounds

t 39 Curved letter
140 Passover least
141 Shoe part

55 Look over
58 Gleam
59 Savage ones
61 F1eld
63 Cond11ion

142 Oistrtbutes ca rd s

5 young ducks; 4 older ducks, 2
famaiH, 2 mal... 614-367...(1370.

noon Friday, July 29, Saturd&amp;J',
Sunday, Monday. Old tumltura ,
old glassware, lola of ex1raa .

BNgla OGQ, 114-il\9-2347 If no
anewer leave m....ge.
Cut• 6 Cudd ly Ktnen, 3 Monlht
Old, Gold &amp; M1 rble Striped M•le
lhtar Trained, 614-448-1880.

Khtens: Champagne Of Black,
814-446-711138.

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6 111

64 Sword
66 Like a tulep
70 Receptacle
72 Gusty
74 New Haven's sc hool
76 Secret agents
79 Courteous
80 Nail polish
81 Not tipsy
83 Roster
85 River in Paris
87 Concern
88 Spoken
89 Connect
91 - of passage
93 Coin-toss outcome
94 Explosions
96 External
98 Partly: prefix
101 Very hungry
102 Swamps
t 03 Competent
104 Zenana
106 Th1n pieces
108 Evergreens
109 Take out

Gallipolis
Did you know lhat... Planned Parenthood of

Sou theasl Ohio 1n Gallipolis provides
confidential lamily plann1ng services to 600
Gallia County residents each year. Birth
Conlrol Services 1nclude a physician
e)(amination, cancer screen ing, education
and I:Jirtl1 control supp lies Women and men

may receive teSis and treatment lor sexually
transm1ned disease and anonymous HI V
tests. SlicMo Fee Scale: Privale Insurance
and Medicaid are accepted. Planning
prt vents unintended pregnancy For an
appt call (614) 446-0166

LAYNE FURNITURE
LARGE SELECTION OF
LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $1095
LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER

111 Mineral
1 12 Stringed instrument
113 Ill Wt ll

$1195
Mon. thru Sal. 9-5 p .m. 446-0322
3 miles out Bulaville Pike
FRFF nFI

11 4 Church part
t 15 Take the car
t 16 Fashoos
t 17 Cost
t t 8 Outspoken
t 20 - donna
121 01 hearing
122 Youthful lime of
lite
t 24 Abbr. 1n footnotes
125 Farm structure
126 Fragmnl 01 nlmenl
130 Itinerary : abbr.
132 - Angele s
134 Enemy

EMPIRE FURNITURE'S
Gallia County Fair
Specials
6 month FREE financing
Plus Save on clearance

NOTICE!
Anyone with a Burlile Oil Co.
Propane Tan k that needs
painling, please call our office
at 446-4119
7:30 · 4:30 Mon-Fri .

ALL Yard Sal11 Must Sa Paid In

..

" But which card would you lead
from that holding?" asked North.
Quite right - West would lead high,
not low.
Consider all the options at trick one
- and reflect how each option relates
to the various possibilities.

A.nllqua Polalo Grater, Cast Iron
Kettle, Tripod Plant Holdera,
Toola, Gard•nlng, Nali!t Saw
BladH, Etc., F'enee, 1omato
cajln, Flowers, 3 Van Seat1, 416 Tlr .., Baby Crib Stroller,
Shop Vac, Small Tablee~ Knick·

Commumly Yard Sale
Am Vets Kanauga , Oh
Mon. Aug . 1 - Tues. Aug .2
8:00-4 00
Ca ll 446-34 78
446-7910
256-6578
Refreshm ents served

Daytona Beach Condommium
For Rent
August 20th - 27th
Ocean Front. Pool, &amp; Sauna
·$450
Sleeps 4
388-9758

Past and Presenl
21 B 3rd Ave. Will be open
August 1st. 2nd, 3rd, 4th 9-5
50 Cookie Jar, collectibles.
refnge rator &amp; ranges .

1,

St:OO-?,

ThrM lllmlly, Frtday, Aug 5, 0
am-5 pm, Flatwoode Ad, 1 112
miiH from Five Points, tllgh
chair, walker, alroll•r, baby accessories, clalhea·larga woman
ladloe, men, children, lntant o-z:

miec.

Tuesday, August 2, 128 Mulberry
Avenue, nice baby ltsma, boy's
clothes size Infant thru 3
9:00am?
'

8

auction
11rvke.
Ucensed
.S6 ,Ohio &amp; Wul Virginia 304-

•

Wedemeyer'• Auction Service

1012.

Gall la ~eigs Head Start Is Ac·
cepli n~;~ Applications For The
Following Positions :

Panmt Involvement Coordinator
• BS In Social Worf( /Related
Field Or Equivalent Experience
Ptue Three Yure Experience
Working Wilh Families With
Young Children.
Disabi lities Coordinator · BS In

Rick Paaraon Auction Company
full lime auctlonNr, completf

Galllpollo, Ohio 614-379-2120.

Babysitter: Flexible Hours Rell·

able And Dependabl&amp; 614-446-

Special Needs /Related Field Or
Eq uivalent
Experience
Plue
Three Years Experience WorkIng Whh Famltlaa With Young
Children.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

T73-57Sl5.

Experienced
farmer
for
Cambrid9e/ Zanesv ill e .,..,
help w11t1 general tarmlniJ.
Salary and bene fits, Rogovtn
Brothers,
P.O.
Boa
685,
Cambridge, Ohio .

Gallla And Meigs County Substitute Bus DrlvBre - Requires A
Class C ICOL Or Wllllngn•s• To
Obtain COL Prior To Employment.

'

•

Route 141, Gattlpolil, Ohio.

9

Augull 1ol, 2nd" 11-5, 3 Fomlly:

Ccmplate HouHhotd Of E..tatesl Any Type Of Fumtture,

All Applicants Must Possess A
Valid Ohio Driver's License And
Carry Auto liability Insurance.
Orlver'a llcenM And Criminal
Record Checke On ProspecUva

buma, Quln Racka, Wood
Boxee, Clothu, Ment, U.dl..,
Largo Ladlos, Toyl. AugU01 111,
2ncf, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 1914 Stale

Clolha, Stovt, 1ool Boxa1, Ex·
erciH Equipment, Ml~~e. U3
Fourth.
Community Vard Sale: Amvets
Ksnaug•, Ohio, Monday Augult
fet -TueaAugust 2nd, 8-4.

Garage Sali: July 29th, 301h,
Auguat 1It, D-5, Whhe HouH
Belllnd Addnllle School. Cloth·
lng, Word PJocnaor, DreiMr,
T.V'., Nlntendo, Etc.

July 30th Thru Augull 2nd, 78
Yard Sale
Corner of First and Locust
across from sheriff office. Lots
of 1tems , ntce clothes.
Monday 1st
8 am to 2 pm

Drlvlf' for my personal C\ar, mus1
be over 35, available 10:00 am
lo?

Contract Gallla County Cook Roqulr..
A
High
School
Dlplom• And Prior Food SaJVIce
Experience.

Bike, Crans, Tr• Skirts, Wood
Yard Decoratlona, Photo AJ.

Hubbard StrM1, Kanauga.

18t.t

Monday, Auguat
Augull 2ncfc 9-?

Tuesday

Vonco
Rood, OH Ot HI. 588.
Tuoo, Wod 2nd 3rd, 9~ 4186
Bulavll!o Plko, Tum In Shrino
un

Club Orlvaw•y.

Two Family: 715 Third Avenue,
Qalllpolla. U.rge Sll:n In Man,
Women'a Clothing. Gas Stove1

Mlecellaneoue
HouHhola
llem1. i-4 P.M. 811, 812104.

AuctlonMI' Cot Oacar E. Click,
Llcoo10 I 754-94 &amp; Bonded

304-ags-3430.

Wanted to Buy

Appllanc•, Antlque'e, Etc. Atao
Appraisal Available! 614-~

2720.
Babyslntng
In My Home,
Cheshire A:raa, 614-36'7-7849.
Clean Late Modal Carl Or
lrucU, 1987 Modele Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900
Eaatem Avenu•, GalllpoUs.
O.Corated .tonewa ... , wall tel•
phonu, old lampe old lhermometers, old ctocka, antique
tumlture. Riverine Antiques.
Russ Moor•, owner. 614-9922526. We buy estates.

Don'! Junk HI Sell Ue Your Non·
Working
MaJor Appliances,

lighters, milk bot·

ellverware,
magazines,
Trek itema;

Tuoo., Aug 2nd. I A.M. -5

P.M. Rain /Shine!

Yard Sale: Household hems,
Children•
Clothn,
Adult
Cloth.., Boys &amp; Misc. heme,
Salurday, Sunday 8-5, Slate
Route 160 O.J. WhJte Road.

Ing,

Coli

814~46-3362,

Lots of Baby Stuff
clothes, Memorial

&amp;

&amp; Craft

Supplies Too Much To List
Next to Old Eureka Bait
Shop Aug. 1st, 2nd
Rain Cancels

vera

Sale.Ouddlng

for
Car111111d
Nui'N
Aides. Com·
petltlve
Wagee,
Oitt.rentat
with

Sign

on

Bonue

Avallabto, Equal Opportunity

------

&amp; boy's toddler ctOChina. misc.

Of 1-i~UD2~58.

I family yard aale Aug. 1, 2, &amp; 3,
comer of 124

a.

Bract&amp;ry Rd. ,

chlh:hne; I aduh ctotttta, mlec .
S8!i

General

Har11ngar,

Mld-

dloport, Aug. 1-2-S boileprudo,

curtalnl, home Int., clothing,

mil•:.
All w•k· 1 4J10 mne out 143 on
right, ec:hool clothes, TV, h.tmJ..
tu,., new and uud llama.

All Yord Sol• Mull Bo Pold In
Advance. Oeadllnt: 1:00pm the
dey beto... the ad Ia to run,
Sunday edition- 1:OOpm Friday,

Monday

edition

10:00a.m.

Soturdly.
Aug. M, Ebllnto, Boum Add.,
love seat, ahag
table.

1

Nil, cottee

Card of Thanks

lo••

OwH Cllld
llalllewood
woolcl lllto 10 1ilaolt evoryo11
flf t1oo klldllss showo to ow
f...y by frilods nd otlgilbon lo ilto rouot dMI•s of

August 1 &amp; 2, 8 am-4pm
Ewing Residence
300 Fourth Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ourOwH
lovotl Edward
- · Da11owood,
our 1011. was klllod lo a plano
crasll ot Mad River Airport,
SarlotfloW. OW. Joly 16. His
sol tllotl lo Fort lodordale,
Florida Joly II. Wo tlplll'td·
ott the cords, Howtn, lood,
pltone c.Us, visits ond pray-

.,

Help Wanted

AVON! All arau. Need extra
money or want a career, ehher
way-call Marilyn. 304-882-2645

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Real Estate Career. Prohl11lonal
training . ERA Town &amp; Country
Real Estate, Broker, Beckie
Stoln, 304 -675-5548.

-----------

Lana,

Ae per Article t T,. .. ,_,. end
VaeendM, Section B, Poetlng,
of the N-aotlatlld AgrMment

bot-on tfio MLTA ond the
Boold of Educollon, tho Mllga
' - - ' School DllfriCI to pooling
tha following wae~~ncl• tor ha
rwgular INching at•ft: Fourth
Gr11d1 at Pomeroy El•mentary,
Chapter 1 at Melga Junlor High
(Eimentary Ger11UC.Uon), Junror

High Fodboll Cooch ond llnlotonl Junior High Vottowboll
Coach.

2

In Memory

In Loving Memory Of
REV. RAY L. ROUSE
July 30, 1980
A million times I've
needed you,
I million times I've
cried.
If love could ot saved
you,
You never would of
died.
In life I loved you
dearly.
In death I love you
atilt
In my ha'itrt you left a
place,
That no one else can
fill.
Sadly mlaeed by wife,
Orpha.

lnaur•nce
1~2»

Personal care •ttendant tor
young handk:-apped girt, approa:
40 hre per w.ek, mileage paid,
nursea aid experience prefer.

rod, nlodod lmmodlotoly,

~

67&gt;50i1.

RESPITE
CARE
WORKER
NEEDED: Would you bo wilting

to care for perwona with a..ming limitation In their home on
an "11 nNded.. baels? Sllary:
$5/hr. High lchool dogrM volld
drlver'e llcenN, good drtvlna

record, ttvN yea,. llcenMd
driving experience and let.
quale automobile lnaurence
coverage
required.
Contac1
Clcllll If 1-110~531-2302. Equol
Oppor1unhy Employer.

-

Lordy, Lordy
Leland's 40!
Love,
Cltad, Kala
&amp;Tara

1-1100-7:1G..21112

Experience,

11

program, time home.

2421.

storea. Muat be 1wallabr. both
Frtd•y• &amp; Saturde~. lmmedllle
work
.vallabla.
Tr~~lnlng
provided. WMkly pay 18.25/hr.
Call nowl NCfM

tmmodlato Oponlngo Avallablt

Employment Services

bob-4•11

ava liable, fuel cud eptem,
weekly
..tttem~nle,
rider

Cool - n oompllng &amp; Hlllng
food produc:to In tocol g.._ry

Director
of
NUI"''oing,
Pinereat
Care C.nter, 110
Pinecrest Drive, Galllpotla, Ohio
45631 614-446-7112.

Mason, wv. l.lon-Tuo. Womon'•

avall•ble,

Holp W.nlod: Body Work, 814-

tant

10-?

Owner!Ooereto,.
Cardinal Freight CarriWI ta
hiring experienced OTR'a to n..n
fl atbed, Nm percentag~ ot
gro.. revenue pulling company
trallerw or pulling own lraller,
health lnturance wldenlal &amp; vision av1llable, ba.. plaiN

Halrdreuar Needed Wagee,
Vacation Pay, 114-44&amp;-7266, 814-

Moving Sale

&amp; 4th

2421.

9-4

Llv•ln companion tor elderly
lady, mull have reterencea, 814gg2..:J140 or 614·992-6232.

August 2, 3,

hiring
experlanced
ownar/opentora
for
the
vanlllalbed divialon, profl11bte
pay program, accurate wMkty
settlements, m&amp;dlcal IM . 1veY.
able, rider program end time
home, no up fi'onl moh"'f to
lea se on. Call Boyd, 1~220-

Weekday•.

Employer.; Contact the Aeall-

Lots of Everything

New Terminal

Cardina l Freight C.urler. Inc. ill

Hor FLASH! II

elso buying junk cars 6 trucie .
Old

Needed lmmlldiately- Home
Healtn Aidn and Nursing Asslltanta . Comp.atlllve wages, tull
time, part time work avail able.
Please call Phyllis at 614-7640960.

To 3 Momlngs, Experienced
Pr•flrrld;
Coun11r S.Nica.
Evenlnga Plua Saturday Morn-

614-256-12311.

J &amp; D's Aulo Parts and Salvage,

Hospital On At. 160, Clothing,
CAll Slzn), Furniture, Olat.e,
boon, Ulac. hems, Mon., Aug

GuarantHd A Minimum Income
For Your Family's Security.
QUALIFICATIONS...
Hon.at
Ambit ious 1 Dependable Car, Ma:
ture, Gooa Referancee. FR INGE
BENEFITS... Extra ..Ordinary
Pension, And Proftt Prognm
Quality M11dlcal Coverage, o.n:
lat Coverage For You And Your
Family And More .. Call Mike
Bra ce Sunday E11enlng 614-24596n 17-&amp; P.l.l.)

lnlormlllon Coil 814-446-6674.
Gelllo -Nilgo H11d Stan Ia An
Equal Oppor1unhy Employer.
Grill Cook Evonlng Shlfla Ptu1 2

446-6958.

vcR·..

TEED INCOME... You Witt So

Head Star1's Woodland Cantara
Oftice, 3066 Stale Route 160
Between 8 A.M. And 4 P.M.,
Monday -Friday. For Addhlonal

Rotrtgeralors,

T.V. 'a

304-773-5343.

1~,

Law. Employment Appllcallona
Are Available At Gallta -Melge

Freezer•,
Microwaves,
Air
Conditioners,
Washers,
Orye,., Copy Machln11, Etc.

CoiOf

Be Youra Attar 6 Montha Of
Specialized Training. EARN ... An
Exceptional Large lncome In A
S.curily Income Field. TRAINING ... Sa iH Training, Expenaea
Paid . FIELD TRA11'41NG... Vou
Will Be Trained By Our
Management T••m Under Actual
Selling Ccndltlona To ln.ure
Your Succeaa. SELL ... New ~
count• lA Low Cost N~euhy
That Repeate) SERVICE... btabllahed Accounts That Wlll Be
Turned Over To You. GUARAN-

Employ••• Are Roqu"od sy5
: _ _.:_H::a::!p::!p;_;y:..;_A::d::S:.___

446-J'Ii20.

Two Mlln Nonh Of Holur

'"·
\·

p.m.

Friday. Monday edition - :ii:OO
p .m. Saturday.

Call 446-2342
or 992-2156
MORE INFORMATION

\

a:oo

the day before the ad Is to run.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.

GARAGE SALE

''Yes."

Etc.

Knacks, 25" Color T.V., uen:IH

Styles on Video
Aug . 4 -Receive a video tape
fealuring you.
Styles 12/$24.95
24/$29 .95
Appointments Please
Fountain of Youth 600 3rd Ave .
446-7266

Yard Sale

Personal Touch

Noll, Monday 9-5, C1olhoo

Grttt,

Augutt

reaickmce Sr 124
Portland, Oh . nice tittle boxea'
'
clothing, loti of everything.

Brlnager

Newborn And Up Household

I

Contractor with license to bui ld
new homH. lots are evallab&amp;e
to etart Immediately. Send
r..ume lo Box C-28 % Pt
Pleasant Register, 200 Main St,
Point Pl•unt , WV 25550.

-:--========:I

Monday,

Advonct. DEADLINE:

MANAGEMENT POSrTOtN Wilt

Drivers Want9d . Stra ight truck
class 0 lie ., 21 or over, current
August 1 &amp;2, tumlturw, dist»e physical, good driving record. 1·
appliances, bed clothes, cloth~ 800-484-5772 -C393.
lng, misc., 35710 Bashan Rd .,
Eam Thousands StuHing En·
0:30•m.
velopea. Rusn $1.00 And A Self
Auguwt 1-3, Laurel Clift ern Addressed, Stamped Envelope:
watch tor elgns, misc . hams. ' Name, Address To : Hall's Enterprises, P.O. Box 152, ApBanmenl yard tall run or plegrolle, West VA 25S&lt;l2 .
shine, yellow block houH up
from the ewlmmlng pool on Rt Eam up 10 $1000 wHkly
124 SyracuM.
processing mall, atart now, no•xperiance, tree-tuppliee, frllGarage N l~t- !Monday, Augulf infOfmaUon, no-obllgaollon. Sond
1st &amp; Tuesday, Augua1 2nd, SASE: Cascade Dopt-50, P.O.
9am-dart, 112 mile past Five Box 5421, S.n AngcNo, TX 7f.90:il.
Points, SA 1 towarde Chester.
Lote of good c: lothn, • II slz"; Easy Work! Excellent Payt Asfurniture; washing machine· semble Products AI Home . Call
toys; bicycle; Tupperware; rvlle ~ Toll FrM, 1-800-467-5506, Ext.
akataa; linens; misc.
313.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Goode, Waterbed,

AVON$$ SALES

5 tami ty yard sale inside &amp; out
Skat•A -Way Rink, Aug .1 &amp; 2, ~
6, clothes (all sites), toys, lites,
•lactric gr\111 ladles 10 sr.;ed
blka, TV, Avon &amp; Raw elgh
producte,
air-conditioner
&amp;

Huge 3 family yard N it, curtains, ladln clothes, jewelry,
mlec, 7"l5 Park St ., Mlddktport .

On Old R1. 7, Cloy
Townhouse. Clothing, lawn
Mower, Oiehwaeher, Much Mo,.l
July 30th, A.ugus1 111, 2nd,~?

20

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE

3 family garage sa le, 2 miles on
Hysell Run Rd. Pomeroy, Mon.
Aug . 1 thru Fri. Aug . 6, 9 am ,5
pm.

Harrison Smith residence, 31205
F-Ine Grove Ad, Racine, 7-31 lo 1

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Shlrlay
Spea,.., 304-675-1429.

Potential S200 42.000 Monthly.
Fantastk: Discounts! BerMfhsl
Flexible Houre. Territory ~
Ilona!. 1-800-74:il-4738.

Yard Sale

llpcllo

Automolive
AIR CO NDITIONIN G
Service And Repair
A ll Makes
S mith Buick -Pontiac Galltpolis
446-2282

home 3 bedrooms, walk -in

Hair &amp; Tanning Salon
54 State Street
Welcomes you to a once in a
lifetime experience
Video Imaging
Call for appt. 446-424 7
Aug. 3rd.
Tanning Sessions 10 for $15.01

7

2 Famlty: 3 MIIH Below Gal·

BIG, Extra Nice, Clean

446-3513

lost: Child's Pat, Male Chocolate lab 1 Missing Since Sunday
m4194, List Seen In Vlclntty Of
Raccoon CrHk County Park,
614-379-2S48.

614-388-8030
614-388-9991

1991 2Bx60 Double wide

$51 ,000

loll: black whlt•taeed cow,
..., ..an on Vance Rd. Snowville/ Harrtsonvllle vlcinhy, 614-

Operaters License &amp;
Bondable
No job to big or
to small

Vinton Elementary

and shopping

ktentlty, 814-446~946 After 4

P.l.l.

992-3146 or 614-992-52n.

5% extra for cash or check

garage. Close to hospitals

Found: In Vicinity Of City Park,
Hou&amp;e Key On Key Ring Call To

Experienced

First house on left past

fireplace , 2 full baths, 2 car

Lost &amp; Found

FOUND Dalmatlon dog betwMn
Leon &amp; Potnt Pleasanf, J04-87S6183 leave message.

Dozer Work
Back Hoe Work

items

closets. Lg. living room,

Two 3 Month CMd Klttena, Grey
Colored, 614-446-n13.

6

2 family ..tat• aale- 127 G.orga
Street, New Havan. Star1tng 12

11

Help Wanted

mile .

Pupplu, 614-446-6744.

in Des Moines, Iowa recently. Sarah Hill, Bidwell, exhibited the w i nning entry • .(Photo by
Amtrican Angus Association)

DOWN

1-------.:...____

2585.

BULLETIN BOARD

11

2 wllht mix brHd puppl .., mala
&amp; tamale, 304-675-4603.

Khtan•, To Good Home, 814--379-

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

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Giveaway

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

124 Kind of stew

125
127
128
t 29

4

367~302.

-

76 Rods lor roasting
77 Bowling 1tem
78 Chimpanzees
82 Change
84 Yearn
85 Ca used to go
86 Yoke - Lennon
87 Dog breed
90 Cleveland's lake
92 Regular
94 Spill the beans
95 Zodiac sign
96 Willow rod
97 Ethereal
98 Muck
99 Tried for office
100 Relies on
102 Northeaslem stale
104 Warm1ng device
105 Wap1t1s
107 To - - (precisely)
I 08 Story from Aesop
109 Maiden
110 Paramour
11 2 Gals
11 3 Eam
114 Respectful one
11 7 Pucker
1t B Glen
119 Quarrel
123 Shown to be true

Announcements

I wUI nol b. r..ponalb.. fOf any

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

ACROSS

j

r

10120.

3

live Hoi Glrta 1..gQG.2ti3-iiOOO

MID YEAR RESOUJTION

484-8000, ext. 8904, $3.99. 18
yra. Plu•, Procan Co., 602-aM-

SUNDAY PUZZLER

AA 10 4

WEST

Announcements

Btautlful Glrta, Exchlng, Pa•
alonatet II Talk to 'am live, 1-IKJO.

t·• ·I .J

WINNING ENTRY - Champion Hill Stone
Impact won bred-and-owned buU calf champion
laurels at the 1994 National Junior Angus show

tAK872

tor him/her concemtng this person's career
might do something nice tor you today.

Sunday. July31 , 1994

3

;"

PHILLIP
ALDER

Monday. Aug 1, 1994

A

I( l\\ \

Announcements

Ext. 5078 13.118 /Min. 18 + ~...

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page A-5

through two sepa ra te. unrelated so urces,
yet each will involve the sharing of some·
thmg with somebody else

Your chart indicates the year ahead could
be an excittng one. You may find yoursen
more active than usual and doing a number of things you neve r attempted previously. The results tOok promising .

\ 1( l l '\: 1 "

3

Announcements

ATIENTION
Horse Lovers and
Owners New Stable
Opening Professional
Trainer
Lesson Program
Horses Provided
Training
Boarding
Phone 614-388-9991 or
614-388-8030

happine ss may como t o you t oday

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

sa 1d the nation's gross domestic
potential of about 40 percenL ''
product rose. a modest 3.7 percent,
Their enthusiasm )'inges on which was m lme w1th analysts'
optimism about the Mexican econ- · expecta tion s and gave investors
omy, which has been hit hard by hope that the Federal Reserve
runaway interest rates. But McDer- would hold off tightening interest
mott was encouraged by a .66-pcr- rates for the fiftl1 time !his year.
cent drop in short-term rates at the
T he NYSE's composite index
government's week l y bill auction rose 2.02 10 252.62, up 2.38 for the
last week.
week. The Nasdaq index rose 9.73
"My premise was that Mexico
10 722.16, up 5.48 for the week . At
wasn't going to see good growth
the American Stock Exchange, the
until interest rates go down," she
market value index rose 3.81 to
said.
437 69. up 4.24 for the week. The
A sustained economic recovery
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 list ro se
will depend on whether the victor
4 .03 to 458.26, up 5.15 for the
of the upcoming Aug . 21 presidenweek.
tial election can keep interest rates
The Wilshlfc Associates Equity
down, McDermott said . "It's a
Index , which 1sthe market val ue of
complete confidence game."
NYSE, Amencan, and Nasdaq
T he Dow Jones industrial averissues, ended the week at $4.519
age closed Friday at 3,764.50, up
trillion. up $38.34 billion from the
33.67 for the day and 29.46 for the
previous week .
week. On Friday the government

1\ \110~ \L ll NIOR \~(;\ ~, S/10\\'

BRIDGE

helped by another
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Joy and

ASTRO-GRAPH

reported an unexpectedly healthy
growth in second-quarter gross
domestic product. "Everybody had
kind of psyched themselves down
for no growth," said Kelly McDermou, a global-fund portfolio manager at Dreyfus Corp.
Then severa l large Mexican
companies reported solid earnings
growth, including Telefonos de
M ex ico, often considered the bellwether issue for the market, and
Grupo Carso, an industri al conglomerate .
The market's key !PC ind ex
rose from 2,210 on July 20 to Friday' s close of 2,462. Carlos
Fntsch, head of Lati n American
research at the Wall Street firm
S.G. Warburg, i s calli ng for a 20
percent increase in the index by
yearend, to around 2900 . Pelosky
sees a "6- to-12-month upside

11

Help wanted

-==::::======::;
HELP W''NT£D
11

Help Wanted

r

M

Income Tax preparers,
career oriented or jusl
seeking part lime
employment, this is for
you. Training
available. Contacl
Dantax of Gallipolis
614 -446-8178.
Tue. or Wed. 10-4

POSITION : EARLY CLINICAL CONTACT
DEVELOPER
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine
AVAILABLE : Immedi ately after Search
SALARY: $25,000-28,000
Plus excellent benefn package
Grant funded posnion
QUALIFICATIONS: Bachelor's degree in nursing or
other health profess ions field required wnh Masters
level preferred. Three to five years experience in
health care field, experience wnh primary care and
community-based heatth service in rural communities
preferred. Previous leaching experience/development
of curricula and knowledge of osteopathy desirable.
Computer database management essential.
RESPONSIBILITIES:
Provide
support to
the
development and coordination of early clinical
experiences in undergradua1e osteopathic medical
education (tradnional and continuum c~rricu lum) .
Coordinates community-based
and
on-campus
academic and clinical aclivnies lor first and second
year medical students. Teaches medical students
basic clinical skills. Provides on-sne supervision of
students.
APPLICATION DEADLINE: Resume and letter of
intent, including three professional references, must
be received by August 12, 1994. Send to Anna M.
Dunfee, Human Resources Administrator, Ohio
University College
of
Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor West 013, Athens, Ohio 45701. (614) 593-

2546.
OHIO UNIVERSITY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNrTY EMPLOYER
High plforly II placed on tho creatlofl or., erMro1Vno11 "'-'tv.l o1
womon, mlnorltes, veterans, and penon. with &lt;lsoblltoo.

'

'

�I

Page-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel

PUBLIC AUCTION

11

With Experience Contact The
Director Of Nul"'lng, Plnec:rMt
C.re Center, 1n PlnecrHf
Drive GalllpoUe, Ohio 45631
614-446-7112 Equal Opportunhy

Mrs. Bentley's personal property has been
moved from Charleston, W Va to Star Millin
Racine, Ohio on St Rt 338
" AUTOS "
1978 Plymouth Volare &amp; 1968 Ambassador
" ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Fancy clock wood chairs couch Blue Boy pnnt
washboard WICker clolhes basket hat boxes &amp; hats
hall tree cut glass depress1on Nortakta Bavanan
Chma d1shes sew1ng rocker Readers D1gest 1930
1960 Lde to t 960 other books records 45 &amp; 78
RPM
"HOUSEHOLD"
Table &amp; cha~rs metal cabmet couch chatrs chest of
drawers bookcase bed dresser baby bed baby
chest of drawers booksheH shelv1ng, fans, sweeper
table TV lamps cart cook1ng stove ptctures trash
can 378 14 studded t~res h1de a bed dtnner canopy
lawn mower and lots of boxes???
OWNER- JULIAETIA BENTLEY
DAN SMLTH - AUCTIONEER
Cash
Posrttve 10
Refreshments by Park Board
'
"Not responotble for acctdente or
lou of property •

Employ~r

R..taurant

Wgrt ·twQh

llourly

n1t1
Plid
vac~dOn
trM
unltorma fTM food and many
other hinge
benllha
vary
r.asonable
hoepltatlutlon
available
management
ax
perlance Nghly desirable but
not .-.qulred Let ua be your
employer ol 1111 ehole~~ Plaau
Nnd t.ttar of lnteraat and
r. .ume to Bo• R·li C/O 1)1
Plaaunt Register 200 Ualn St
Pt Pleaeant, ""WV 25560
RNILPN 100 bed t.clllty le look
lng for an axperianced MOS-t
Documentation Nuts~
Must
hna handa on n~rianca w1th
MDS+ In long term e~ra lllllng
with 2 yrs experience In long
tarm care facility Ohio nursing
Ilea,.,
Sa lary
negotiable
Pleaae apply In paraon at Ovar
brook C.nter 333 Paga St
Middleport Oh Marllyn Con
away DON EOE
Southeastern Prob.atlon Treat
ment
Allemalive
(SEPTA)
CA!nter
7 W Twen1y Nina Orlva
Nalaonvllle Ohio 45764
AppUcallon may only be obtained trom and ratumad to
your 'ocal Ohio BurNu of
Emptoymant Servlceil office
(06ES) Complet•Job da..::rtpllona are available or review at
the OBES otflca Deadline tor
appllcatlona I• Auguat 10
1094 Poatlng descrtptfon Ia aa
follows
ABE Tutor· Salary
$10/hr wor1c schedule 6 OOpm
10 OOpm M-Th Planning and
admlnlst•ring ABE ln.tructlon
lor one-on-one tutoring amall
and large group Instruction
primarily In reeding and writing
akllls Minimum quaiiUcatlonacandldat" for thl• position
mu.. have 1 valic:l Ohlo Teach-

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
Antiqua or Collectible Sale
Jackson St, Vtnton, Ohio

Ing Conlllclto

Temporary Woric Must Hava
Experience In HouM And
Mobile Home Repair, Root
Floora And Painting 614-083-

A

SCRAM-LETS
AVERSE
QUARRY
UNISON
RECORD
JUNKET
DOTAGE
RETROACTIVE
31

Homes for Sate

32

Homes for Sale

Reduced to $13 0001

3 bedroom all electrk: horne
Spring Avanua, Pomeroy, 114H2 2013 or 614-992 7'304

wlba..ment,

3br ranch Gallpoht F•rry call
for d•talia 304-6'7~3328

Tlma ahare condo tor uta WV
akl rMOr1, third WNk of
January, 514-992 78S5

6 room &amp; laundry &amp; bath 2 112
acres bldg big r~ bam, 614Jit2 ZIS7
For sale by owner- log home
ft
full buernent
1860 tq
wlfamlly
woodbumer, 3
bedrooms 2 k tchlns, 3 baths
CJA cent ral vaecum eathadaral
calling atona hraplace, large

room!

dock,

32•56

outbuilding

wlhealed work room 2+ acres in
wood~ arN close to town,
Meigs Sc hool District daytime
614 992 2316
avelng 614-992
1133
For Sale By Owner 3 SA , 1 1!2
Bath 2100 Sq Ft 1 Story, 2
Fireplaces, Gast Heat, Cent Air
Urlat OrtVI Walking Distance
to hospital S85 000 Shown By
Appolntm•nt 614-446-1206
New Home FOJ Sala By Builder
3 Bod room Settl ng On 3 Acree,
Rural Water 5 Mlnutn From
Raccoon Park J58 000 614-3~

2240

Or Rent Patriot, 3 Br Attached
Garag1, New VInyl Siding, concreta Driuway lielp Flnancea,
614-4411806

m

2bf iloo11

-IOIC--~83

Wanted to buy· two

mora
aeru euttable to build on and
cioN to a blacktop road 614949 2481

36

614-'lll2 2241

NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 llhl

1960 New Moon 10150, 2br,
$1000 3Q4.8 75-71134

homo wornnty, ""• delivery &amp;
ut up, ownet financing avell-

Navar lived In, sUII ha• new

obto. 304-7SS.11i1

197'2 Elcona 121160 With 1Pt
Roomatta
12x28
Mullt
Ba
Moved., $6 000 Finn 614-388-

33

1913 Naw Moon 12x60 2 B.d
rooms, Ga• Heat, New C.rpet,

Farm1 36 acree, Cnb Cr•k Ad,
autteDle tor hou... , farming &amp;
hunting. Smell cabin $37,000

Like Now Through Out! 614446-

Fanns for Sale

35

Rayburn

Rd

2 bedroom Mobile home In
Racine area 114-992·5851

675-5253

2br ,
AC
fumlahad
washer/dryer, $250Jmo. ptua
utllltlaa retarence depoah 304-

Two t.droom mobile homa for
rent, rtvar vlaw,

utiiiUea fur

nlahad, 814-62·5048
1--...;..
________

44

Apartment

for Rent

1---:-:,...,.,...,.-----1 and 2 bedroom apar1mtnt 1

2 etory 2br all ..actric apte

Romodotld No Poto $250/Mo
614-367-&lt;)116

reaaonable restrictions lnror
metlon mailed on r.qunt 304-

polo 304-77H151

For Rent 3 Bedroom House In furnished
and
unfumlshad
Kanauga, Fenced Ynd, Carport aacurlty dapoalt required, no
$21S!Mo $275 Depos it 614-446- pele 614 i92 2218
1207 9-5 Monday ThN Friday Or 1':--::-.,.----:-;----,-:-~--614-!n-2441 Leave Name And 2 Bedroom Upa1alr• Apir1ment
Phone Number
1 Bedroom U~alra Apartment
Both Apartment• At 300 Fourth
Avenue, GalllpoUa, 614-446-1631
42 Mobile Homes

qulred, 10 MlnutM From Ga._
lfpolle,
Juat
Recently

5 32 acrn:, $13,160 814 acrn

..a

T-•

ulllltln per month New

lima Rd near Rutland ava1labla
Aug I 614 1112-3040

12&gt;165 2 Bodrooma au HNt
DePOd And Retwance~ R•

Lots &amp; Acreage

$14 5711

alectnc

1 Bcadroom Air Cable A'llallabia
Ovartoaklng Tha Ohio Rl'llar In
Kanauga Dapoeh, R•lerancaa
Requited Foster 1 Moblla Home
Park, 614-446 1602

304·743-3855

2br mobil home allalectrtc AC
washer/dryer, In Mason, no

446~926, Haul McCklllan

for Rent

CI75
1982 Kirkwood by Redman,
14x70 2 bedrooma, 1 bath,
tlrept.ce In living room 10x8
deck, central air lncluded, 814985-4332 avanlnge afl., 7prn. 1·
800 24U882 doyo,
hw

s3oo.

total

Real Estate General

carpoted, appliance• fumlthed
trw water, fr• tn11h pickup, on
aile management, holiday ac
tlvlty for chlld,..n, CION to
atom, church.., Khoold
Whl,. can you glt all thla tor
$210/mo Lauraland Apar1manta
6th I George St:J. New Havan

WV 304-882-3116 ~OH

2bdrm apia , total alactrlc appliance•
tumlehed,
laundry
room facllltiH, CION IO IChOOi
In town Application• available
at Village Crean Apt• f49 or

call614-iln·3711 EOH.

Vacancy
Homa
Economic•
GRADS
flmpect
Taachar
Ouallllcatlon.
Ohio
Homa
Economics Certlllcallon Notlty
Supt Ort , Gatlla Jackson Vtn·
ton JVSO PO Box 157: Rio
Grenda, OH 45674 By Aug 10

Choohlro, OH 45620 6t4-367·
7m Appllcar'" Must H1v1 High

School O.ploma And Prtor Coolt·
lng Experience ApplleaUone

Wilt Bo Acc:optod
AIJguot 12, 11194

Through

Wantad Subethut• TNchera
And But Drtv1r1, Competltl~•
Sllary Call Or Wrtte Guiding
Hand Sc hool, PO Box 1.f,
Cheshlr1 Ohio 45620 614-367-

7311

18 Wanted to Do
BOARD AND CARE HOME
For Tho Eldo~y And Tho Sick,
Peaceful Country Setting 24
Hour Supervtoton, 3 COoked
Mooto Dolly, Semi .Prlvoto
Room L.ounooy, Aulotaneo In
Dail" NMd•

Onif One

Room

614-3671024 Thla 11 A Smoke
Fraa Alcohot FrH Home

PUBUC AUCTION
SATURDAY, AUG 6TH, 1994-10A M
2617BANDREWS ROAD

VINTON, OHIO 45686
The owner Is Dave Crittenden Dave suftered a
severe heart attack In Apnl and therefore wtll be
ofterlng the following for auctton
DIRECTIONS 325 N out of Vtnlon for 3 1/2 mtles to
Andrews Ad 124E out of Jackson to 325 S, 5 mles
to Andrews Ad Watch for auction stgns
HOUSEHOLD Electnc gutlar w/Harmony amplifter
Gibson flat top gutter, 6 pc ktng stze bedroom sutte
(bookcase headboard w/mtrror), hutch dresser,
mtrrors, bunk beds, chest of drawers, 4 drawer chest,
end tables, trestle dtntng table w/slx chatrs and
matching hutch, WICker love seat·rocker 2 chatrs end
table-coffee tabla, upnght freezer, Yogurt &amp; Jerky
dehydrator, lamps, upholstered chatr, what not she~
canning Iars, k~chen can, commercial 9 gallon
stainless steel pressure cooker (like new), TV's
Christmas ~ems,ptcniC table, swtng set, lawn chairs
porch furniture, wheel barrow, bicycle hedge trlmers
gas grill, many other household rtems
TOOLS, EQUIPMENT, &amp; MISC -Craftsman riding
lawn mower 11 hp, Craftsman seed spreader Yazoo
sa~ propelled brush mower, 026 Stlhl chain saw
w/casa, Slthl weedeater, 2 118 hp ctrcular saw, Blue
Mule head gatB 3 metal gates, Bushhog 3 pt
hydraulic log splttter, 3 pt 16" plow, 3 pt hitch boon
pole, 3 pi httch round bale earner, Baltic 3 pi hitch
seeder, 1 row 3 pi hitch cult tvator, Super Shocker
electrtc fencer, 5' Ktng Cutter brush hog, Lincoln AC
225 welder 3 1/2 hp Murray push mower, 2" Bnggs
Stratton 3 1/2 hp water pump (new), 300 gal mtl~
tank T stock tra tler w/stdeboards (homemade), 16
hay loader w/elec motor, 100 gal water tanks, front
tine 5 hp ttller, gas and otl cans, car ramps, pipe
wrenches, levelers, lacks, elac. motors, caulking
guns, axes, pliers, hammers, carpenter tool belts,
plasttc calf bottles, homemade 800tl pig feeder,
farrowing crate, homemade wire cages, hog waterer,
314" water line, used
cement blocks, plywood and
scrap metal, block pulleys, elec mtr w/prop for milk
mixing tank, ext ladder, step ladder, Bugtne, 2 cycle
oil, grease gun grease, rollaway tool chest, nuts,
oo~s. screws, drills, sanders, paint, 5 shaH metal
cabinet, 2 cap laundry stove, wood cook stove
wtwater tank, stainless steel wire shelving, coma--a·
longs, elec lance wire, walld sprayer, garden tools,
12' metal hay wagon, cutting torch w/oxygen and
acefelyn tanks and cart, Super Grader tobacco
stripper, 3200+ tobacco sticks, knives and spudders,
homemade tobacco bale boxes, Hardee tobacco
sprayer (1 Yr old), one row tobacco sett'er, 22 Marlin
RHie, gun rack, pistol crossbow, fold up tables
"83" LTD Ford, 302 engtna, Crown VIctoria
There Is a reserve bid on I he tobacco str Ipper and
cutting torch
Auc tioneer: Finis "Ike" Isaac

a·

Phone (614)

388·9370 pr 388-8880

Licensed and bonded Ohio 13728, W VA 11 030,
IN #7248
Tenns Cash or approved check
NOI respon sible for acctdents or losl Mems

General Malnlenanca, Palnt!ng 1
Yerd Work Windows Wunac1

Outtora Cloonod light Hauling,
Commertcal Residential Steve

614-44&amp;-4t48
Georgn Portable Sawmill, don t
haul your toga to the m111 juat
call 304-675·1951
Min Paula a Day Ca,. Center

II·F 6 A II -5 30 PM Ouallty

c.,.

Loving
For All Children
Our 11 Goel Part -Time, FuiiTlmei. Fad Aalalanee Anllable
C.U r--or Information Or Vlsh Infont !Toddler 614-441H122l p,.

School,
Schoolago,
School, 614--446-6224.

2 K, Young

umbrella Food and refreshements will be available

Sc:-

Ago

AJI r&amp;al estate act.&lt;ertiUlg In
this newspaper l:s subf&amp;d to
I he Federal Fair Houmg Ad
ol t 968 wt11cn mak8S n ltogat
to adver1ise "any prufetence
Imitation or dl~natlon
based on race color relglon
sa11 tamiMal status or national
ongln or any lrtentlon to
make arry '""" preference
I mitation or Clscrtmlnauon •

TNs Mwopaper wll not
knowtlngly oa;ept
advertisements lor realeetate
Whk'lliS n vtotatlon or the llw
Our readers are hereby
tnlormed thai all dwoltngs
advertised In this newspaper
are availal:»e on an equal

STAT 35 WEST
In a aereoo neighbotlloodl
foatun~a 3 bedroom&amp; 1/, baths,
1ng &amp; kitchen Homo •• tn """''"'nt I
conditiool CENTRAL AIR and tn·
ground SWIMMING POOLI You can
conquer the heal "' th1s home
•n70's.
2.38 ACRES-St. Rl 588 Area
Mostly all wooded' Thts would
make a
home stte

AT. 588AREA
lovely homo, mruntensnoa ''"
Close to aty lot 11 partially wood·
eel 3 bedrooms, largo kvtng room,
lots of IMndows full baS4IITianl
CENTRAL AIR Priced tn 50 1
BUHL MORTON ROAD
35 West Area 5 66 acn~a Blacklop

road
excellent
Priced 20's

netghbothood

,... with -pll you know1 ond

NOT to aend money throug" tha
maU until you tt.ve lnvndgated

tho ol1orlng.

A++ Rated Uulti-Une lneuranca

Corner SMklng lndopondont
Agency Re-ntotlva In Tho
Gillllpoll• A,_ AggrMalwa Individuals lnterwt.a In Building

Own Agoncy Mall Rnumo Or
Inquiry ~o CLA Bor 320, cJo

Golllpollo Dolly Tribune, 825
Third Avonue1 Qalllpollo, OH
45631

Conelae,.tion Will

Contldo ...lll

VENDING ROUTE Won~ Got
Rich Quick. Will Got A Study
Cash Income Prteecl to Sell 1

aoo.-20-4353

Real Estate

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

31

Homes for Sale

2 bedroom &amp; 2 cor gorago opo
In Mlddllpolt, n- pol'" &amp;
wollpopor, tt3.100, 814-IKI2·5370
3

bMroom

houu,

attached

gorago, 3 112 - ... Ftolwoodo
Rei P.... roy. 114-IKI2-4503
3 Bodroom Ranch, t Ba1h, At·
1achod
Gorago,
20x30
~~~: tn .. ,,.. Out •teo,
3 bodroom ranch, 2 lletho LR,

fomlty room, kHchon w!dlntng
orN, ootor hal water, doc:~&lt;;
oc:rMnld porch uti!Hy room,
new ~. 3 c=ar prage w/apt
~

.aor•g• building, comer

#;: !llriot, Syr~euoo, '*

L----------------J
•

llr8placee, full biaMmant,

2

l...;t

pump wJCA, corpotod, potto,
gorago, 110x200 tot, Horton Sl,
lluon, 304-773-5885

DopooH Roqulroa. 8t4-446-t518
Nk:ety

Fumlahed Apartment,
lbr, ntxt to Ubfary Plr1llng
cantral heal, air ,.tarenca ,..

qulrod 814-4411.0338
Fumlahod oHiclony Apt Control,
Air Cond
Prt'llata perking
U1111tln
tumlshltd
except
prt~ate ElK 614-446-2602

Grecloua living 1 and 2 bed·
room apar1manta at VIllage
Manor
and
Rlve nide
Apartmanta In Middleport From
$232 $355 Colt 814-992 5858

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Otll~ery

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

62

Oliva St Galli poll• Naw &amp; Used
h.imhura, i'teatera Waatam I

Worll booto 614-416-3159

53

Antiques

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES
FINE ANTIQUES· American ar1,
china, art glua, ait~er fumlture,
McCoy Roeavlll1, etc COllECTIBLE"S- prlnta, postare, toola,
ponary clocka boxaa Jars bot
IIH, booka, toys, etc ALWAVS

BUYING ARROWHEADS

Top

dollar paid On• pleea or ona
hundracl
APPRAISALS,
40
yea,. eKpertence Pleau call

614-992·2822.

10x20 3 Room Tent Paid $330
New Asking $175, 514-256~704

Sjood

145 lC Ruger Blackllawk Mav
rick pump ehot gun 1 12ge 2 bar
rela 15 V' Hull ooat tr~~ilar
10hp motor 304-675-4338 after

67&gt;7585

5pm

150 000 BTU Gas Furnace
80,000 BTU Gas Furnace 1
Used 3 Ton P•ckage Air Con·
dltloner 1 Usad Electric Fur
naca Matat Door FramH Assorted Slzas, 614-446-6308
1981 GMC truck with 1og bed
1978 log trailer 2 aawt Ht oi
sklddar ehalnt, call 614-9925380 or 61• 992 3220
2 Wol H 124 S:,.
l ::T=-a'-n-nlcn-g'""'B
'""od-;-:-s,
Sold Togelhar Or Separate,
Moving Mual SaU 114 256 1558

2 Aah Tanke,1 Set Of Bunk

Bench

With

Walg ta
Recliner,
Sura
Clllftsman 18
Scroll Saw,
Stereo And CD Playlf1 Hlntendo
WUtl 18 Tapn For Morl lnlormallon, 614-3677446

54 M iscellaneous
Merchandise
1985 S.10 Gravely, rec:lln•r 1981
Ford 4x4 304-675-5162

2 TV antennas 6 rods hlirly
naw raaaonably priced 614-992
7221

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

1990 Chevy Astro Van v•ry
cond , 8hp rototlller,
weight bench &amp; welghla 304-

6t4-2511-tt3D

Bodoh Weight

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

3-hp Troy Bitt TuHy garden tiller,
like naw $350, ti14·742 2502
8,000 btu air cond axe eond
$100 304..a7S..nW7 lea'll• m....

Ngo

Air Condttlonw ror Sa~. al80
Walhw
Dry.,, Ratrlgeqtor
Fraazer call 814-256-1238
Apple II GS Computer and lm
ageWr11er II Printer 2 disc
dii'lle&amp;, mousa and aoftwara

$450 614-446-jl658

Baby bad
stroller
walker
awing high chair, car saat,
playpen, 3G4-675-4S48
Chest Fr..zar $100, 614446-4141
After 6 PM Or On Wukend•
Caller ID box, 14 memory, brand
naw, $43 95, 614-992-6166
Clnn lng jarJ.- quar11 12 V2 Qll·
Sont $3, •lao blue and gl.. s top
jare, 614-84&amp;-2484 after 6pm
Concrete
I
Plastic Septic
Tank.s 300 Thru 2 000 Gallons
Ron El!'ane Enterprises, Jack
son, OH t-&amp;OG-537-9528
Couch 2 chalra recliner and 1

Gun Cabinet Faney Ne'ller Uaod
Mold• 6 Gunl Child 1 Desk Ail
Wood, Anllquas Desk Vanity
Dressar
large
Chest
Of
On~w•ra, OraSMr, 614--441.()()21
Juka Bo• Very Good Condition
Brides Orne Sill 12 ·13,
WMkdays 614-446-3808 6\4-

446-11St6

Kenmore waahar brand
pump $60 ~S-1'C3i

new

King sill waterbed wllh llghte
end mirror ft draweN unMr
rlNth n.w
end liner
heater, comlorter and curtalna
$300, will dall'llar to ,.aaonabla
area, 11~9-2881

ma",...

Large Ounc11n cer11mlc kiln 304-

67&gt;7198

Light Br0¥1n Sofa &amp; Chair Blue
Grey Floral Print Great Condl·
tlonl $100 614 245-5793 Laave
Mesuge

7606

--c-:--:::-:-::--:In Mlddl•port
814-992·5858

New Irregular jeana $6/ea 111
alz.. Salurday July 30- Satur
day August 6 dally 9am 2pm

814446-21151

Nice 3 br 1pt

$450, 6t4 388-11158

One bodroom furnlahad apart·
ment In Middleport, call 6*092
5225 or 114-992-5304

dloabtny

Entertal nment

Ohio EOH

GE

Furnished
Rooms

20

Inch

TV

~;,;;~;:;,-------+.'hiS

TV Like New, :J134 95, Mag
navox VCR With Remota $99 95,

Sharp VCR 169 95 Gold Star
VCR With Remote $85 99, Sears

VCR $85 95, Shlrp VCR $74 95,
Sytvonlo VCR 169 95 J&amp;o
Technology 372 Stale Route 160,

Golllpolls, 614-44Hl950

COUNTY
D. WOOD, BROKER
742 1171
Chen II cmky
MEIGS

Used Carpet 614-446-2075

RUSSELL

WATER LINE SPECIAL 314 Inch
200 PSI $19 95, 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32 ~ Ron Evan• Enterprisae
614-286-5930 Jackaon Ohlo
Will trad• 4 ton H•ll Compressor lor 3 ton comp ressor 304-

875-7666

SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEDS
New Commerc ial Homa Untta
From $'199 00 lampe Lotlona,
Accasaorlea Monthly Payment a
low AI $18 00 Call Today FREE
NEW Coklr Cata log 1~0-462

91111

Building
Supplies

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pal
Grooming Julia Webb 614~
0231
Pamj)Cilrad Pets by Sonya, dog
grooming bathing all breada

304-i82 3730

AKC raglstarad Bexar male
pupe, faw n with black maak 12
wka old, raady to go $225 614-

$99g5

llko Now $249 851... RCA t3 Inch

Comlortable home that has been
remOdeled /o 11ve 1n1 K1t IS great
Lots of cabme ts BUilt m range
and oven
booth
2 s1nks
w/ga rbage disposal large hv1ng
room 3 BR 2 baths sun room
Baseme nt 1s f n1shed w1th l am1ty
room complete k1! and storage
area Also s1ngte car garage
w/auto door open m basement
Cent ral vacuum system IS a rea
plu s Back yard s lerraced MLJst
see lo apprec1ate let us shOw you

1"800"585- 7101

1r~~~§~~~~=-=: 6m

M1mo,.x 20 Inch Stereo TV.
NEW LISTING Sy1acuse
beaut1ful old home IS set on a
lot Wllh an ad]01n1ng garden
lot The front room leatures a
beau!llul b1g bay wmdOw K1tcnen
plenty ol cabmets w1th bu11t 1n
&amp; oven Relnge1at01 wather
dryer also go w1th th1s
There IS also a tam1ly
and hall bat11 downsta rs
w1de entry hall leads ups tatrs
bedrooms and a large batn
outbUildings b1g porcn
I ccover,ed 1 are also mcluded In

WANTED NEW LISTINGS!
BIG BEND
REALTY, INC. ~ iU I

10:~~10 x6 dog kennel
$199 95
Paint Plua 304-67&gt;4084
..:__c"-..__
6 Wogk Old Chow Pupplae $50,
3 Mala &amp; 3 F•m•l•• 61"""'*

Oak

Condition, St25 6t4·388-92t1

Apt1, Middleport

Unfurnished Upstairs Apartment
3 Rooms, Bath, 91 Cedar Street
Vary Clean, $300/Mo Water

Center

Finish Holda 140 VHS Excellent

6t4·11112·:W55

Stonewood

Soo Peggy t32 Bunornut
I I,P
...,o_m
_•ccro_,y_-=--c-=-oc--:--

Encyclopedia
Brlttanlca
Growlng Up with Selene~ paid
$'1750 will soU for $900 304 882
2885 after 6pm

Stonewood Apart manta ere now
accepting applications and rent
lng eparfments for elderly and

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upright Ron E'llna E.ntarprlsea
Jackson Ohio 1-800-537 9528

Block, brick sewer plpaa, windows llntela, ate Claude Win·
ters Rio Grande OH call 614245-5121

Daytona Beach Condominium
For Rent Aug 20th -2nh OeNn
Front Pool &amp; Sauna SIHpe 4

end table, must taka all $150,
614 992· 703i homa, 014-i92

Sofa With Hide-A Bed And
Cha ir Good Condition 4x7 Bay
Window 614..379-7198

55

New Air COnditioned 1 Bed
room, Convenient To Shopping
I Theltre S25Wo + Utllltlaa

EOH

Saarw Camcorder With Ace. .
eon.. $600, Sharp Home Copl•r
$400 Royal Cash Register $1:25
614-44&amp;-1608 L.aave Musage

llttla Tlkas Bed WJth Manreaa
And Bamay Sheet Sat Used
Very LIHia 614 367-0649
Moving Must Sell F.st Kin;
Walarb.d With O•k BookcaH
Headboard $250 End labll
$35 • CoHN Ta~a $60, Larg• An
tlque Mirror $55 Hooslar Cupboard $125 Oak Serpentine
Front Oruser With Mirror $150
614-441-D257.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Merchandise

Four P23b75x15 tlrae on Ford
truck rtma wlhub cape $100
614-7112 2502

985-3907
Ping Eye, 2 drlvel"' aJ~c cond,

$85 304&lt;;75-1&gt;156

Relrigeratorw StovH Washers
And l&gt;ryars, All R•cond1tloned
And Gaurante1dl $100 And Up,
Will Deliver 614-669-6441

AKC registered female Sharpal,
chocQJa\e &amp; two mat.. tor stud
service 614 94~2126

LOTS OF SPACE FOR THE P,IQNE Y' 4 bed rooms I 1/2

AKC Reg ist ered Mala Miniature

baths famil y room Owne rs mov ng soon 1 Wants sold fastl

$28 500 00

Sehnauzar 13 W•kl Old 614--

#659

256-6438

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

In the 30 s

Space for Rent

up 304_.75-6326 evening• 614-

as can

country

9 749 Acres more or less w/pond to

water callle or horoes 400 lb tobac·
co base 24x28 detached garage
t 2x24 storage shed Very n101 3
bedroom home Largo country kiloh
en wllola of csbtnela LNtng room
Den w/ woodbumer
Shown by Apptl Priced 40'o.

245-6344

Marhan Rental 6 Storage Unl1a,
5x10, 10x10, 10115, 10x20, 10x30

304-675-2460

Mobile Home Lot In Cheshire,

$100111o 6t4-446-9786, 6t4·992·
8831

Real Estate General

'

t /2 story home has bedrooms
upsta1rs There IS also a I v1ng
room d1nmg room
bed room
ut1hty and a bath downsta1rs
Forced a1r gas furnace and
msulated N1ce corner lot 1n good
ne ghborhood Won 1 nst long at

$14 900

acres m/1
ground or sell woodland lor
and keep 3 BA LA FA OR
home Call LJS today Langsv1Ue
On ly $29 900 (Make OHcr]

mce~a1zed kttchen , tamtly room

hardwood

Hoora and some now carpaltng Call loretta
today to aea lhts aHordably pncad homo
$48,000
1500

614-982-8631

8984

SZI.0340
49

L,fase

For LN11 Complete Foil Food

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... 388·8826
WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR 245·9070
JAMES WILLIAMSON, REALTOR 245-9070
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR
446-tB97
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR
446-6806
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR
446-6806
PATRICIA ROSS REALTOR
245-9575

Mexican R•staurant Dine In Or
C..rry Out S1rvlce Everything

You lllod To Get Stoned Graal
l..ocotlon, Newly Conotructod
Building, $750/Mo 8t4-24S.5040,
814-245-9578

23 LOCUST ST.

446-6806

0947 NEW LISTING - KING SIZE FAMILY HOME or
use !hiS super mce 5 t&gt;eclrm !()(PRIVATE HOME CARE
3 baths 3 ac m/1 V1rg1n a L Sm1th 388 8826
1638 LOT IN LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION oHenng a
rotlm g nome 511e Restr1 ct 1ve covenants and eacn
homes 11 e bemg 1 750 sq n or more 2 25 Ac m/t

$17 400

1965 SECLUDED HOME - Btg 1n everythtng but pnce 4
bedroom 2/ baths 24 hv ng rm w/f replace 18 d1n ng
rm equ1pped k1tchen full basement 47 acres M/L Of
PARADISE Tra11s throughout the woods M1neral nghts
and the boundary ts fenced Large barn &amp; outbulidmg
Also a mob1le home d w/elec water &amp; sephc $89 000 oo
Call Virgm1a 388 8826!446 6806
1978 NEW LISTING 14 acres m/1 1n Greenf1eiO Twp
Barn drilled well spnng etec available beauhtul trees 4
Ac t1mber m/1 Long road frontage A great place to build
a new home Connected to Wayne National Forest
119n NEW ON THE MARKET 1154 &amp; 1154 h Secono
Ave Ctlarmmg 3 bedrm home bath fult basement 2 car
garage rents for $375 1154 /, has 2 bedrms 1 bath
lovely new kit &amp; wmdows Great rental w1th off the street
parkmg

5 bedrm 2
story home w/enctosed porch lanced lot 3 carports 2
bu1ldmgs ofhce or sales bwldmg blackt op
cement
dr~veways Best garden spot 1n Vlrllon $4 7 700

a

1975 STEP BACK INTO THE COUNTRY Watch the
deer run but be close to convemence Thts homo and 1ts
17 acs more or ess IS located approx 2 miles from R10
Grande on a bla cktop road fhts home mcludes 3
bedrooms 2 bath s kttc hen h\lmg room uHity room
bam 2 ou1bu1ld ngs 2 car garage and lobacco base

4

1973 NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom mob1ie one t acre w1th
City ut1illles close to town
1932 NEW LISTING - Close to town thiS home needs a
lilt e TLC but could be a super mce place Great
ne1ghborhood Call Wtlma for more mformatiOn
1g40 SWEET &amp; LOW - $39 900 3 BR carpet vtnyt
s1dmg good roo1 hat water tank f turnace Lovely
cabtnets m kitchen Located m the City Vtrgtma 388 8826

18!14 CLOSE TO THE GAVEN PLANT

1946 JUST REDUCED that anyone can afford 3
bedroom motu e home m a mce mob ile home park Will
cons1der land cont ract

$44 000 00
1959 COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Ql1ve St t 6 dOOt &amp;
ce1t1ng w/lon tor storage 210 &amp; 220 elect water &amp; sewer
6 ce ment to oad &amp; unload m Iron! 30xeo bu ldmg
appro)( 3900 sq ft block &amp; frame $45 000

1963 BRICK &amp; VINV Bl LEVEL - Home located on SA
160 3 Bedrooms 2 I baths LA lg eat m k1tchen
tower level w!lam1ty rm laundry rm bath k 1 &amp; 1 car
gar age $65 000 lor all 63 acres m/1

1957 RIVERFRONT PROPERTY - Spar a us COlOnial
w tn 5 bedrooms and two balcon1es that face the r ver
Th1s one won I las t so better huny and check 1t115 one

1968 NEW LISTING - 123 acres of 1mber and past ure
and Call today tof more mto
1933 HOME AND INCOME - Double w1th earnmg
power You can /1\/e n one un11 and rent !he omer Close
to schools shoppmg &amp;churches Call for lull tnlormahon
and an appomtment VL Sm1th 388 8826

bedrooms full basement Call today for more 11lo
1931 NEW LISTING - Owner wants sold Make an offer
on thiS one 4 bedroom ranch on Brentwood Dnve

T~e

1849 - TRULY DELIGHTFUL remarkable
spac1ous home w•th v1ew of the co unt~ Italian t le Ioyer
ca lhedral ce tm{l w11t1 balconv 3 BR 2 1 baths hv ng
room With woodburnmg !~replace equ 1p k1tchen
breakfast room has a lg wmdow stereo speake rs
throughout brass hght f1xtures and much more 2 ca r
anacned garage att1c storage 2 acres m I Th 1s house
IS matnt enance tree ol best quahty Mak e your
appomtment and see 11 yoLJ don t ag ree

1976 CUSTOM BUILT HOME - Vory neat 3 bedroom
f, story home w/2 baihs 3 ac m/1 The mtenor !S most
unusual fm1shed 1n beautiful wood The LR has
cathedra l ce1hngs &amp; Jon The wrap around deck ts a
great place to sw1ng &amp; rock 2 ca r garage &amp; bu1ld ng

OUI

1979 SUPER DUPER, NEW LISTING You won I believe
your eyes when you see 1h1s adorable bl le\lel JUSt
rece ntly redecorated w1th all new carpet ready to move
1n1o 3 bedrooms In /ne Rodney area You dOn t want to
w;:ut on IMts one because 11 Will go la st So hurry and call
W1lma today tor a v1ew 441 0632

1938 50 ACRE FARM WITH LARGE FARM HOUSE

For

1971 LAND CONTRACT - Make a deal here Older
home With some work completed 3 bedrooms 1 bath
new cab1ne ts 1n k1! Good garden barn &amp; garage 4 ac
Thts w11 oe a gOOd spot to start or ret1re $45 000

ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAUT'I'
Two sl ory nome lult basement and gctrage has a great
!.leal to oMer Des ~gned tor great I \1 1ng F1rst floor has
form a en/ry w1th open sta1rway lorrn a lvtng room with
f1reptace form at dznmg room Cherry cab1ne/s fmc !he
wa ll of the exira large kitchen Brea kfast room and
powder room Second lloor o«ers lour bedrooms and
bath Bedrooms are k1hg S1ze carpet O\ler hardwood
floors bath has all new ftxlures and Love Tub
Basement has hLJge ta m1ly room wit replace bedroom .,
exerc1se area laundry room and storage room Th1s
home IS ol superb quahiV as the p umb.ng has been
replaced All new all covenng beautiful new carpet
lhroughoul new WllldOWS InStalled SpaCIOUS kitChen
With cherry cab1nets 1sland for Jen n A1r range Only
pnvate showmg w1il dec1de the \lalue 1s here

CALL VIRGINIA L SMITH 446 6e06 or 386 8826
1950 OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL OR TRADE - 2
story 3 bedroom 2 car garage wtth garage apartment lor
eKtra 1ncome m the Albany area
1955 HOME W RENTAL UNIT Also 2 mob1t e pads
Home can be reverted to one lg fam1 y home SR 160
Call lor further 1nformat1on $65 000 00

l1lee COUNTRY HOME/GREEN TWP - 3 bedrooms
1 h story hOme garage &amp; outbwld1ngs 5 acres all
fenced Remodeled w/fovely k1!chen cabmets tg LA &amp;
DR new heat pump &amp; gooo root

1873 PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land lays well

4 bedrooms 2 Older 2 story home w1th 4 bedrooms and bU1Id1ngs
story JUS! recently remodeled wtth new root lumace arid Home m need to repa1r 117 ac mil Call tor tocatmn
Pnce Reduced
szdu)Q Pnced to sell

1935 COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 940 sq ft quarry t'le

11148 GREAT BUSINESS DPPORTUNIT'I' AT HOME

floor new rubber root 200 amp 3 phase electnc dnve
thru w•ndow 5 ton healmg &amp; cooling umt W II self or tong
term lease Virgm~a 388 8826

Beautiful white br1ck ranch 3 bedrooms 2 !1 baths on 4
acres more or less wtth a 4 000 sq ft com merctal
butlding be1ng used as a weldtng busmess close to town

1969 NEW LISTING - Charm1ng country home 3 BA
kit range &amp; ret LA DR lamtly room w/ltreplace lull
basement pat1o 1 A Mil Very c lean &amp; good
maintenance

11967 GREAT FARM READY TO BE FARMED 100
acres wnh a large barn and another bam and outbu1ld ng
With a lovely 4 bedroom bt level With stone and trame
Pnced nght Call now

1945 NEW LISTING Conven1ent to /he Freeway 3
bel1rms ranch w/new k11 &amp; bath Lg tam•ly rm
w/woodburntng ftreplace On acre m/ On y $45 500

388 8826

1962 NEW LISTING - Close to the Un1vers11y 3
bedroom 16x80 Mob le Home on three acres wnh a new
pond stocked Wtlh plenty of fish Lots of pmacy

1944 NEW LISTING - PRIME POTENTIAL CORNER.
2 180 sq It block bldg bath 1 ac m/t EQutpmenr
extra Locate don SA 388 8826

Merchandise
Household

Clrpo1 $500 Up VInyl S4 48 To
se 110 '" Stoc:k. e14-44tFl11•14,
llo!!ohan Corpoto
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wolhl,., dryoro, rofrtgorot.,.,

I PLUpo,sos

DARWIN New Llst1ng Need a great butldmg sne on 15 1/2 acres m/1
wl!h a gas well and tree gas (and huntmg] F rst /!me on ma rket
last long Could be 3 or 4 good bu ldtng sites You can make
money here Call us loday

LIST WITH JACK AT HAYES REAL ESTATE
992·2403/992·2780

A l1tlle dough wtU do youl Don't ba fooled by
the low pnca on lhto t t/2 story home located
on a larga lot tn Vinton OHara J bedrooms, I
bath, hvtng room

dtntng room, extra large

kitchen plus a full ba..,ment All the worlt has
been done for you all you have 1o do ts move
tn Pncad al only $35 000 You couldn't nlllt for
thts monthly paymanl, so now'a tho ltma to
bacome a homoowne•
1602

, nc.
Allen C Wood, Reahor!Broker·446-4523
Ken Morgan, ReaMor/Broker-446.0971
Mose Canterbury, Reahor-446 3408
Jeanette Moora, Reahor· 256-1745

POSSIBIUTIES ARE ENDLESS I OVer 14,000
sq ft of off1ce, wan~house &amp; garage space
Neraty I 114 aero land tn the h9Brt of town IMih
322' of slr8111 frontage on 2 different sheets
Over 2 t ,000 aq ~ of pllll&lt;ing space Muchm
much mo"' Butldtng tn very good n~patr Calf
Dave for mon1 detaisl
EvtAYTHING YOU COULD WANT, AT A
PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD•• 3 bedrooma, t
bath vtnyf sided ranch on a largo lot Oftal'l
largo ltvtng room &amp; kitohan Full unhmahed
baaemant wtth a 2nd bath thai you c:an firnsh Ill
sutl your .-Ia. F"'ollly painted on the '""'do
Ju•t holed at $48,000, don't mtu eutl Call
Carolyn
t605

Ranan FumhureJ. Great For
Patio Or Geme Hoom Couch,

Tobloo,

Real Estate General

137 Butlornut Avenue

Pomeroy, Ohio 41708
1(114) 882-6333
SYRACUSE - Seaullful
now home, a BRs very lnex·
pensive utilities, new pool,
now bulking new porch
This Is a torrtnc home
$42,500
MIDDLEPORT- Spooclouo 3
BR 8 room, house Wllh
fenoed In yard dose to town
&amp; schools Owner Is Vf!IV
anxious 10 sell S18 500
RUTLAND - Ron-. 3
BR with moiJII8 homo rental
on property Nice yard, good
Investment

POMEROY
PRICE
REDUCED Lincoln llolghll
- 2 BRs, lui t&gt;asamonl, largo
yard l ganfen, wei 1aken
care of, owner lnanclng
ClniVSt8 500
SYRACUSE- SR t24, nice
homo, a BR, comer 10~ Inground pool, 82 ..,.
$59,900

MIDDLEPORT- Cute roomy

42,000 Buyo Thla Onef Juat what everyone ts
HOUSE, BUIWINii
located tn Lawnlllos Co , 2 bedrooms
room, kitchen bath lg garage 24x40
APPOINTMENT Ill
LOT TO RIVER-· A 12 x 65 Mobia homo a bedrooms,
1 bath 1 car garaga Iron! &amp; back porch Pncad at
$25,00000
GARRELD AVENUE· 3 bedrooms Uvtng room kitchen
and bath, wtthtn walking distance ol sto"'s and schools
Calllo088
HOME ON ROUTE 141· 3 bedrooms, t 1/2 baths fam~y
room tn basement, kitchen remodeled, new carpet 1n
liVIng room, lot 150x180, fenced back yard, t2x20 dock
Call to ....
LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE· t 56XIOO aty watar
and sewer, eloctnc Ia polo level Priced $t 4 000 CAll
FOR INFORMATION
ACREAGE FOR SALE· t 6 acn~s mon1 or loss located
t:loaa to Rto Grande PRICED AT $64,000 00 Raallor
Owned
VACANT LAND • Approxtmately t 0 acras located on
Bob McConn1ck Rd Call for mon1 tnfonna!lon
OLDER HOME • 4 ~A-ing room, dintng room,
kitchen , lall\il't.J11rtlllll!ll!"il'n t 8 acres PRICE IS
REDUCEO. l~t'!lOONI
NEW USTING-3 bedroomo, two baths, new roof tn 93
now sidtng, 10x14 molal building, 18tell~a. nt08 levllllol
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT
NEW I,ISTING- -~·6.crroomo. 2 battle, ~vtng
room, kitchcA.~Baf,"city lchool dislnct, county
waler Locallf'on I 1121o11 Cal for oppotntrnanl

197&lt;4 NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom mobile home and 4
ac m/1land IS fenced &amp;sprmg on property Great place
for ktds 2 car garage &amp; bu~dlng $20 s MAKE OFFER

POM!ROY - 4'/, .......
mobile llome aile, lui hoolwpo, dly water &amp; - •

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY

$56,000

LANQBVILLE - SR 124 Fonner 110111 Exoallem - IIJII bulking $3 250
WE NEED USliNQSf
DALE E. TAYLOR (Brokw)
ll.wG-1333

25,000 SQ Ft OF WAREHOUSE SPACEI
localed only 3 m1las from Interstate 35 on a

stata highway Sevaral loadmg docks and
ramps Very n1ce offiC6 space (5 officas) and
confaranca room 2 baths Many posSible uses
Appro• 7 acres ol flat land S175 ooo Call
David W1som11n
1213

ow'NEiils &lt;ANXIOUSffl Baaubful Spmg Valley
homo A must see hom a that you II JUSt fall tn
love wtlh Oulstandmg f9BIUn18 tncludo custom
oak kitchen remodeled bathrooms (2), hvmg

800-4119-34W

DALE E. TAYLOR
REALTY

HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS • And your
heart wtll tell you to make thts housa your
homo Remodeled t t/2 story homo tnclude s
all the chann of your grandmother's homa
tusl updated! 3 bedrooms, hvtng room, oal1n
kitchen and dtntng room Bonus largo block
butldtng With potential for many uaes $52,000
1214

room

1830 APARTMENT BLDG - 7 UOi!s Woll ma1n1a ned
&amp; dlOtce local1on overlook1ng the Ohto Rtver

be bought loge/her New 3 bedroom ranch home w1th
large rms large rooms throughout LOads of oalc
cabmers 1n kitchen 2 car garage 2 ac more or ess
home

Pne&amp;d at only

Real Estate General

cottago, 2 BR, 2 lots, portlal
basa tatt. on main rowj
$15,000

1943 NEW LISTING - Home &amp; INVESTMENT - Can

THE KIDS WILL BE SO HAPPY· hvmg thts
close to the pool and Mom or Dad can enJOY
the golf course LocatOO tn a ntce cou ntry
setting yet JUSt mtnutes from town thts klvely 2
story offers 3 bedrooms , 1 bath hvmg room,

$47 000 you can't aftord not to call Carolyn
today
1600

N Sec 4 BR hath LR kit alum s1d1ng Would make a
home or rental property Pnce drast1cat y reduced Make us an

rang• Skagge Appliances, 71
vtno St-1po1 6t4-448·7398, 1

Eiid

1200

be used lor a busmess or apa rtm ent low
stone extenor Extra lOts could De used tor a \lanety o!
as ut1il1ms me present Pr~co Reduced Make us an offer

446-1066

Goods

Choir Polo l.lmp
814-448-01113

NICS paoo largo flat lot Priced at sn,soo

d1nmg room EnJOy the ..,Htng from tha patio

32 Locust Street, Galltpolis

51

bnck ranch ts complete wtth aat-1n kitchen
hv1ng room 2 baths famtly room and mora

setl

Wanled To Rani 3 Or Mo,. Badroom Homa NHdad By Pror. .
elonal Famlty A•locl.tlng In Gatllpolla /Galli• County Aru, J04..

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

LARIAT DRIVE Ntce neighborhood Oul8t
Close to hospital and shopp1ng 3 bedroom

area or one of the porches

Mobile Home Lots On Stat•
Route 1, Kanaug,a, 814-446-9786,
In Rio

NEW USTING· Stretch the
your
Dollars· tn lhts surpnSingly aftordable ranch 3
bedrooms 1 t/2 baths ftreplacad kvtng room

47 Wanted to Rent

1053 OWNER WANTS SOLO YESTERDAY lovely b1
te\let In Grandv1ew estates 4 bedrooms 2 baths on a
large lotthat1s pnvate and secluded

3 bod-. 1112 botho
The owner will have the house open between 5 pm
to g pm Friday for viewing the furniture

Be

Furnished 3 Roome I Bath,
CINn, No Pat1 1 Aatarence 1:

Trailer Iota tor rent, 304~75-

1916 OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ONCE

recommenda that you do bull-

EOH

Mobile Home Space
Gr.nde, 814-446-361l

304·7'13-6488

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

1rom $2221o $285 Walk to ahop
&amp; mo'lllee Ca ll 814-446-2569.

Merchandise

Complete home tuml ahlnga
Hours Mon-Sal 9-5 614-4460322, 3 mllu out Bulavllle Rd

Frw

54 Miscellaneous

Proal Bldg. Clll Morrie Haskins
8t4-446-2631 Or 814-446-2512
Atre trailer tot, Fairview Ad ,
Bldwoll, Ohio, comptato hook·

opporturity bosls

weN.Iy baats, h1~e ref•eneee

Business
Opportunity

BEAvnFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jockoon Plu

54 Miscellaneous

Household
Goods

Sunday

3 Room Office Suite With
Private Toilet In Modem Ara

Will do boc:khoo _,k, 814-992
5858 or 6t4-IKI2-3173
Will do houHC:toanlng on

21

7PII

46

Du~ng

Financial

Fumlahed Etflclenc:y 701 Four1h
Avenue, Galllpolla, 1220/Mo
Utlltll" Pald, 114 H6 4418 Ahar

SIMplng room• with cooking
Also traller space All hook ups.
Clll after 2 oo p m 304-77J.
5651, Mason WV

Summer f Oaye per Week MinImum 614-4U-3657.

Will at•am clean carpeta ChNp
to Unlsh my peymenta on
c~aner, 114-G82-4538

-600
Furnished EH!cloncy $165JIIo
Utllhln Pold, Shoro B1th, 1107
Second Avo , Qolllpotlo 114-4164416 Aher 7 P II

614-441&gt;-9580

Sun Valley NuBery _ School
Chlldcar• M-f 6am-5:lflpm Ag..

abov•,

00 COME"I Bring your chair, straw hat and

B&amp;A

51

Roome tor rent week or month
Starting at $120/mo Gallla Hotel

t984, 614·24&gt;5334/EEO

..ao

Apartment
for Rem

2 Rooma 6 Beth No Khchen,
$200/Uo All Utllllloo lnc:ludod,
81~n33,
Batw•n
9 30

45

8164

Wanted School Cook (Po18lbla
Openlnga) P,.pare 8raakfall
And lunch Dally For &amp;5
Individuate Prapa,.. Menu~ Order
1
Food, Complete Dally /Monthly
Roporto Coli Or Wr1to Guiding
Hand School P 0
Box 14,

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

Paid 614-3118-80110

Real Estate General

===F=OO=D=A:N:D:R=E:F:R:E:S:H:M:E:N:T:S=A:V:A:ILA=B:L:E==~ t;:~";~d ~~:~ 8 ~"'J1 ~tac.C::

!

m

3 bedroom trailer tor r.nt 614-

3 bedroom 1 112 bath garage
hook.(Jp

2 Badrooma, N:., No Pata
O.poah
And
R1t1rencea
1400/Mc Waahar Dryer 2 Badroom Hou.., Fumlehed, No

61S-48'lll

2 badroom house M8!1on S250
plua dlilpoatl 304 7n-5934

July31,1994
44

1971 Falnnont, 'Mx70 3 b.d
room, 2 full bathe, ga~en tub
factory tl,..place, factory 7x2'11
axpando total lleetrtc .tth h..t
pump, vary good COndhlon
$9500 OBO, 5t4-'lll2·2210 Of SI4Jit2 2tl2

Peta $350/Mo O.poah, 614

41 Houses for Rent

w/d

Mobile Homes
for Rent

4345

Rentals

LIMITED OFFER I New 14•80

982t

Real Estate
wanted

Mobile Homes
for Sate

only make 2 payments no
paymante attar 4 yeare frN
delivery I Ht up, ownar financIng aveltabta 304-7S.S-556e

12x32 oHic•type room good for
room addtllon or ottlca, wood
frame muat be moved $:1500

Of

Wanted To Buy Lind Contract 3
Bedroom Tnuler Rus11e Look.,
VInton Area Good References
614 :Ja&amp;..SIIi'$6

1986 Clayton Winner 11 14X65 2
BR 1112 Bath After IPM 814-

Mobile Homes
for Sale

a.n

304-&lt;195-3568 Of 895-3433

441~757

32

01

utllitl.. IVallabl•
aehool bus to door $~ montl'l

1975 14x56 2 Beelrooma, Gaa
HMt, Moatly Fumlahld, Blocka,
Underpinning,
Anehort
Included, $5,oc:l0 614-24~0

New Haven,

42

one acre tr111er lot blk

.:rroad,

One fellow to another "Boy does
my wtfe have an achve tmagmaltonl
She can make a mountam out of a
molehtll " "Yea." the other fellow
laughed " but tt could be worse Her
1magmat10n could be RETROAC" 2
TIVEI"

31

Lots &amp; Acreage

4 Acrn Off Addison Pika Cor·
ntr Of Possum Trot And Blazer
Road $'14 000 614 3677891

ANSWERS TO

Compotltvo Wogoo, Dll1orontt;l

10:00 A.M.

iJ5

Scram-Lets on Page D-7

Help Wanted

Immediate ()penlnga For Par1
Tlme And ~ull Time LPN 1

SATURDAY, AUG. 6, 1994

Saturday, August 6th, 1994, 7.00 p .m
Dtrecl1on Approx 95 mt SE of Cols Oh from Cols
Take 23S to Chillicothe 35 E to Rto Grande left on
325 N to Vmlon
(Please note that our Sept ant1que auction Wlll be
held on Frtday Sept 2nd due to the Auctioneers
work schedule )
Ball cards '56 J1m Busby 56 Ray Monzant Topps
'75 Regte Jackson, Pete Rose Topps 75 Topps
Cleveland &amp; Ctnctnnatl Reds '86 Troy Snyder 85
Roger Clemens, '71 Lamar Parrtsh Topps Rookie 79
Topps team leaders w/0 J Stmpson football card
several boxes baseball, football, basketball hockey
cards comtc books, pack of old cotn calendars 3 4 5
cent U S plate No blocks, mtnl sheets souventr
postal sheets 1938 newspaper, postcards, Chrtslmas
1tems, Cast tron sktllets, Tonka toy s scales, sewtng
boxes ptllow fluHers, buggy loot warmer, Dertng
McCormtck corn sheller Grtswold gnnders,
bedspreact.s, qut~ tops, hand suched qu•lls, Vtctonan
paper mache doll, 1960 &amp; 1971 Ideal dolls, lratn lunch
box cookte tars, Thu~er &amp; Farmer Ptg mesh purse,
grater&amp;, Ariv ttns Shawnee planter, Ftrektng, stone
JUgs &amp; crocks, stlver plated ttems , frosted tlems,
banded Watt bowls tl8 Watt bowl, black amethyst
glass, Watt 5 ped Star1tre platter, Wall lterdrop 06
bowls , sideboard wrth mtrror corner cabtnet, ktlchen
cabtnet Carnrval glass 7 5 WW2 htgh powered niles
More nems aiTrvtng datly
AUCTIONEER: RNIS "IKE" ISAAC
PHONE (614) 388·9370 OR 388·8880
LICENSED AND BONDED OHIO #3728, W VA
#1030, IN 117248
TERMS CASH OR APPROVED CH ECK
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
OR LOST ITEMS

July 31, 1994

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

OUR TOLL FREE NUIIBER

looking for an aftordabfe home tn Green Twp

offenng 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, tivtng room and
aat~n kitchen stluated on 7t acre, mn Thts
home ts tn very good condition and ready to
move tnlo Out of town owner 11 anx.,us to sell
Call today!
1606
IN TOWN LOCATION" Good natghborhood
DMp lot 2 bedrooms, I bath, livtng room,
cintng room oal~n kitcllan Won I ftnd many al
this low pnca $29,500
1208
NEW USTINGI One of tho loveliest Ianna tn
tho area can now be yours located on 21
gently rolling aC/81, rnA, thtl totally ramodelad
home oftars 3·4 bedrooms, 2 baths famtly
room

formal hvtng room and d10mg room,

lovely kttchen pfuo a bonuo room lo fit your
family'a neado Now add the outsodo butldtngs
consosting of a 2 story bam With 2 stalls, 3
omaUer aheds and a detached 2 car garage All
we nMd 11 a buyer and tho fann of your
dn~ams can ba youra Calf Carolyn for further
detatll.
1607
Gltrde-'a Deflghtll Baautful gardens and
landscaping aunoond thta largtl attractive Capo
Cod Much larger than tl appears, thta 4
bedroom home on.... 2 112 baths ~vtng room,
dtntng room &amp; famtly room plus basement.
Largo dock Largo 2 car garage Much mon1
caBfor~•
1211

wtth

attrachva

warm

fireplace

3

bedrooms and oozy donAamtly room All tn lop
notch condtl1on Plus lull ba..,ment 2 car
garaga and a very largo trae shaded dock tn
tho back yard Callfor appotntmonl 90 1 1211
COUNTRY CUTIEII Very neal and clean 3
bedroo1m home comfortably ..,H1ng on a t 5
plus aero of ground Localad near AID Grande
UnNerstty the setting allows for lots of pnvacy
and plenty of room for sanfen•ng or any other
outdoor aciiVI!y Very mea homo tncludes 2
baths cook approved kitchen wtth eal m bar
d1mng area, hvtng room and dan or study 2 car
garage w11h work area for the handyman
Pncad to move tn tho mtd 70's
1232
BUSINESS OR RESIDENCE OR BOTHII
Located along Butavtlle Pike th1a home can ba
used as both a bu"'ness and "'sidence Plus,
thon1 ts a "'nlal umt wtlh aeparate utiltties Buy
as an mvestmanl or use as "'sidonce With help
on payments

Good location

for etthar

ReSidonOII has 2-3 bedrooms liVIng room 901·
1n kitchen Easy lo heal
1210
Wall C.red For Split Level located on Rt
160, th1s homa has baen well matntruned and
11 tn move tn condttion Wtth a sftghtfy dtften~nt
lay out than your average ranch lilts home
ofters 3 bedrooms t 112 baths ltvtng room &amp;
oaltn kitchen Lot measun~s 100x300 allo~Mng
lor plenty of back yard lun Pncad al $64 900
'
1218
NEW LISTING IN RODNEY! 3-4 bedroom
homo located on Com Road offara a large lot
wtth fimlhed outbu1ldmg (currentiy used as a
guest house), ivtng room IMth woodbumar and
oat·tn kitchen Ntce deck Largo yard I car
garage 1Mth workshop $49,900
1209

AFFORDABLE BI-LEVEL • lmmaculatoly
matntatned home offers mora than most 1n thts

range Con .. der 3 bedrooms 2 beths hvtng
room fam1ly room w11h !~replace, garage pool
deck heal pump/CA &amp; comer lot On top of
that 1rs all 1n grot shapol Pncad to sell at
$59 900
1215

WOULDN T IT BE NICE to como homo to a
place that has II all? Woll tf so wa have lUSt
tha home for you Locatad a shan dtstanco
from town th1s 2t00 sq H homo boasts 4
bedrooms 3 baths gas f a heal central a1r
and hraplaca t6x32 mground pool, pool
building and enclosed play araa allow you to
an1oy tho outdoors Nowar roof and fumace
Th1s home ts 1n a n 1ce netghborhood and 1s

vary well mwntamed $96 0001

1400

Affordable living on tho Edge of Town!
Clean and n9BI 2 badroom homo on Texas
Road Ltvtng room aat·m k1lchon and utility
area Large lot~ over an acre Low pnca of
$24 900
1231
ATTENTION fNVESTORSIII
Han~'s
en
opporl\lmty 1n town you shouldn't pasa up
located on F1rst AND Second Avenue, 3
buildings 4 rental umls tn good oondi!lon
Good rentaJ 1ncome Call for more nfonnation

$94 900

FIFTIES BUYER, BEAT THIS! Cnsp, clean 2-3
bedroom

NEW LISTING- Move In Condition Very nt08
area, lovely J bedroombrick homo t t 12 baths
closa to hoop1tal &amp; storoa Call for an
appotntmanl
11403
Handymon'o Bpeclolll If you hko a challenga,
than lhto house ts for you 3·4 bedrooms wtth
potential for more Largo lot close to grade
school At tho low pnca of $17,500, you can
afford to make the needed Improvements
1220

1212

l'lome

on

large comer lol

THE GATHERING PLACE· Family &amp; fn&amp;nds
can shan1 happy timas around the fin1place tn
the famtly room or tn the aaHn kitchen of th10 3
bedroom 2 bath ranch home IMth 2 car
attached garaga on t 56 ac"' Call lon11ta for
more 1nformat1on or an appomtment to see
1506

Pnced at $59 900

CJ

1.-..84-10141
FQA INFOAUAllON ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUAUTY HOliES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF ntE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL STORES, IUPEAIIAAKETI, MOTELS
AND AESTAUAANTI.

'

loretta McDade· 446·7729
Garnes-

tn

M11ldlopon Evorythtng you could wanl at 8
pnca you can aftord $55,000
1507

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1 007

�Page-06-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

56

KIT 'N' CARLYL E® by Larry Wright

Pets lor Sale

-'XC R-vl~ared Pomannlan
Pupa, Famalw I Mala, SIX
Old ; 1 Male

71

AU1os lor Sale

198""1

.\KC
~ltttf'MJ
mln11tura
Doberman Plntchar, mall , good
wlklda, 1 yr. old , 814.Q!a2-6Q3G.

WMke

leport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Chrsylar

71

LeBaron

1990 Corsica, air, cru1se, new

Rto &lt;:o uN \ 1- ~&gt;" A C AT B v R C. LA!&gt;- 'S

Turbo, Good Condition, $2,700,

tires, $4700. 304-682-2647 ahar

614-388--9725.

5pm.

f G" &lt;'J c~

·

1987 Plymouth Reliant, High

1990 Mazd1 Mlata Sport Cortvartabla. Red With /Black; Interlor, Loaded, 15K Mllea, Baal Otter, 614-446-~38 .

Mllugo $1,750;

1082 DoOgo

Cargo Van High NUeaga, $1,750,

Cockar

614-446-85118.

1987 Plymouth Sundanea, 4
door 5 speed, AJC, amlfm. good
condition, 84,000 mllaa, $:2495,

A.KC
Nglllter.d , Schlppelke
pupplee , 2 malu,1 lem1le,
ahol &amp;,
$250,
614--698-2908
e venings 1tter 6 or weekend•.

1il87 Pontiac Turbo Grand Am , 2

19Q1
Oldamoblla
Cutlau
Supr.ma 1 Owner 40,000 Actual
Milos, PIW &amp; [)()()r locka, AIC,
Cruise, Tilt , AMIFU Stereo, Ex·
ctl lenl Condit ion, $8,300, 814446-9266.

1988 C.n\aro 614-446-6114.

1992 Hyundal Sonata Very Clean
Low Miles, For Sale Or Take
Over Payments, 814·367-7113.

614·992·11l35.

AKC Regls lar&amp;d Weima raner
pu pplee. 304-675-TJIW.

Door, loodod, 80,000 Miles, 614446·1169.

Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 241 3
Jac kson Ave. Polnl Pleaeant ,

l04 -E7&amp;-2063.

1988 Ford Eacort GT 5 Speed,

n CK problems? HAPPY
JACK ENOURACIOE Ia the solu-

9317 Laava Message.

!lon. Kil le lick• &amp; lieu genal!·
ea lly Immune to ol der tormulas.
BIODEGRADEABL E. Available

1988 Lincoln Town Car, $4500.
Ul89 Ford Eacor1 , loaded,
$2300. 1985 Cadillac Eldorado,

High Mlioago $1,600, 614-446-

Got

&amp;

SUPPLY

$2100. 304-E75·2440.

614-992-2164.

1988 Muetang GT, T-51 transml•
alon, 5 1peed1. neeaa repair• ,
l04-77'J..S34g aner 5:00.

HAPPY JACK FLEABEACONo
El ectronic

Device Controls
Fleas In Tl"le Home Without P....
tlcldu.
Patented
Design
Cre atn Burtt Of Light Flua
Can 't Resi st Resulh Over~lt~ ·
J 0 NORTH PRODUCE 61
·

1988-Ninety

0

1933.

TWit Dy l'ff_ "

I.-.:

Tirl8. Exceptionally Clean, 614446-1000 Leave Message!

19811 Chov Conio LTZ $4,295.

304 -17'3-5436.

Farm Supplies
&amp; livestock

Reg istered Oalmallon puppill,
vet c heckDd &amp; thota, ~7!&gt;-

5553.

71

Sc hnauzer pu ppi es, mlnaturt,
AKC, champion bloodlln .. , 6146ti 7-3404 , Coolvlll•.

Autos for Sale

'84 Olde Cullan, new tiNa, V-4i
automatic, rune good, good
work car, ti14-"2·2648.

u lt &amp; pe pper ; also 1oy poodlas,

1950 Ponllsc

61 Fann Equipment

ChleHan 1 good

Si x week old coppemOSI
Beag le/u pa, 3 tomalea, 1 male,
has ha ahota and worm.d, $40,

213 New Holland bailer, 501

shape, $2200. 1987 Fora Talrue,
needs work, $600 . 304-61S-234l

mower,
3869.

1969 Mustang, 6cyl., auto., PS,
exc. Interior, $4200. 304-675-

614-992·3537.

Chain Saw bar• &amp; ehalna to fh
almoet any HW. Beat prices In
area. Slderw Equipment, 30487S-'Jil21 M 1-800-277-3917.

Tri .S tat1 K-Q A.cedemy, Tuppera
Plalna- basic obedience, law en·

lorcament, personal protection,
kennel urvl ca. pupa and ~oung

whee&amp; rake,

304-675-

Ford 17 Hundred Houra, $0,850,

614-266-6522.
Musical
Instruments

With Buoh Hog &amp; Biado, $3,600;

6522.
63

1989 Olde Ca lais SL, Quad 4,
New Paint, Breaks, 65,000 Miles,

$4,600, 614-446.03{12

Cannlng tomatoea, $3/bu., Pck ='7tic:.0.:.:3.-:-:--:--==:-::::::your own, bring contaiMrW. Bob Square baln hay. 304-675-3960.
J.tlorrl•.l.. SM-247-3421,
letart
Falla,

Transportation

Canning tom1ton, Wllll1m1
Farm, szracuM, Ohio, 61~- - - - - - - - : - - : - - 5666 or 14-992·3985.
71 Autos for Sale
Wanted to buy- picked blackber·
riea, need 8 or 7 gallone, 814- 1981 Eldurado Cadillac $2,100,
99H895.
good shape, 304-E75-E986.

V~,

$2400, 614-

1986 Olds Call, ru11:1 gooa, looka
aoocl, $1600. 304-01'&gt;4001 anor
l'pm or leave meiUge.
1987 Camaro Reel 525 Mllea On
Rebuln Engine 6 Tren.., Ster.o,
Morei814-SJD2-6051 After 5.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

73

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1977 GMC box body van, uMd
lor ltaa markats, good ehape,

$1500, 614·JII2·3315.

1977 Jeep CJ5 All Fiberglass,
Body Now Soft Top &amp; Bikini Top
Rebulh, 304 New Tlrea, 614-441 1660 After 4.30 P.M.
1978 CJ 5 )Hp, new WhHII,
paint lift, front end, brakes,
hood lop, looks/rune good,
$2600. 304-675·5128.

COUNTRY LUXURY &amp; NATURE'S WONDERLAND
Redwood home- old log cabin· hunting cabin· workshop/garage-barns • 78
acres, m'l. The quiet beauty of woods and unique landscaping make an ideal
setting for this eye appealing rustic ranch home . 3 bedrooms , 2 baths,
spacious living room , 28x32 family room with woodburner or fireplace ,
glassed in sun room . Log cabin is approx. 150 years old or more and has
fuel oil furnace, fireplace insert in living room. 2 bedrooms, bath . Hunting
cabin (approx. 20x32) is nestled in the woods offering living room with
woodburner, bedroom and kitchen. Garage is 32x48 with attached 24x32
heated workshop. Bolh have concrele floors w~h 12' ceilings. All of this is
localed on 78.66 acres. mil, complelely fen&lt;;ed. tobacco base. slacked pond
3 very well maintained barns . Blacktop road. You have to see it to
lbe,lie11e how nice~ really is!
#1 01

1986 112 Nlssan Hard Body 4· "&gt;,
87,000 miles, ••cellent condition
Inside &amp; out, well maintained,

Office ..................... 992·2259

Real Estate General

I

6

.

ranch style home w1th ce il1 ng radiant heat,
back pa!IO ar ea. shed. hardwood floor and
carpet1ng, att1 c space . un1t a1r. cable hook -up
30 acre Lo cated at Ru st1c H1lls Nice

I

home that 1ncludcs 3 be drooms , Master
w1th bath . bUill 1n sauna, skylights , cedar
closel den w/c e1hng fan . carpet throughou t.
total e!ec modern k1tchen w/ctay tile &amp;
appliance s 16x32 1nground pool, also a one
ca r garage lhat 1S completely wtred to handle

foyer home with 9 rooms Home includes
woodburner, wood bu rning fireplace, 4

bedrooms . 2 car garage , storage building, 2
decks. some new remodeltng comp leted with

new carpel. vmyl. elec . heat pump, and
central air, TPC water.

landscaped

~

.485 acrea, very well

ASKING $79,500

TR 275 LONGBOTTOM· 2 s\ory frame homo
wtth 1+ ac_, bay window. screened porch.

sheds, new implement shed, newer kitchen ,
bath &amp; laundry room , newer plumbing, wtring,
appliances, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, newer roof

(approx . 3 yrs old)

ASKING $49,900

LETART· Property located on SR 338 .. 40

elec heal pump and cellar ASKING $35,000

Ac . vacant River front lot, TPC water

POMEROY Loca \ed on Peach Fork Rd .·

available

ASKING $10,000

52 41 acres ol va canl ground. Includes old
barn . royalt1 es of $10~ 00/month. Should have

AT 1 COOLVILLE· 32+ acraa with 3 mobila
fr ee ga s w1\h properly ASKING $29,900 homes presently ranled. All homos are in lha
60'1. One is 12 x 60, lho socond is 10 x 50,
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
and tha d1ird Ia 8 x 35. 2 shade, t porch and
RACINE· N1ce 3 bedroom . 2 balh brick ranch. ooma lumishainga In all tha homes. Located
s11t 1ng on 2 shady lots Full basement, approx. t ·1 '/, mllaalrom Hocking Aver.
ASKING $43,500
N G FA heat. enclosed rear porch , lots of
slorage and clos et space. fruit cellar in

Rfi.DUCEDII NICHOLSON HILL RD.·
Outside of Rutland · 26.2+ acres with 1 1/2
story frame home.3 bedrooms, 1 bath, boHied
POMEROY. Peacock Ave .· 1 112 story frame gas space heat. appliances. dug well. 3
·
home w1th 3 bedrooms. one b ath. new thermo sheds, large stocked pond.
NOW ASKING $29,500
pa yne wmdows Elec B B. heat. remodeled in

CHECK OUT THIS PRICE?
$34,000.001 3 bedrooms ranch, newer roof &amp;
vinyl windows, living room, oat·in kitchon.
ConcMio drive, I car carport. Storage building!
Call lor your appoinlmant IOdayl
1680
NEW COMMERCIAL LISTING! OWNER
WANTS TO RETIRE &amp; RELOCATE AFTER 25
YEARS! Car Wash, 3 bay wilh 1 automalie.
Excallont location lronlaga along Eaafllm Ava.
Will bo idoat lor oHiceo or othor typa of
buonioss wilh somo ranovalingl
1671

~-~~~plete
1-:.1 -E,...-D-rG:-:-rO--rA_T-r~~
I 11 0 I I Ill V
L.--'·'---'-·--'-·_

ASKING $72,500

basemen\

ASKING $27,500

...._.___.___._

Trotwood camper, aiMpa e. ultcontalned, $1200. 3CW-.805-3361.

WE'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES TO SEL
YOUR HOME I COME LIST WITH THE
PROFESSIONALS AT CLELAND REALTY
AND LET US SHOW YOU WE'RE NOT
JUST TALK!

~-

61

82

Home
Improvements

Curtla Home lmprovamente. NO
Job Too Blg Or Smell, v.. ,. Ex·
perlence On Older !Newer

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Fraeman'a Heating And Cooling.
lnatallallon And S.rvlca. E~
c.rtllled. Realdenttal, Commer-

cial. 614·256-1611.

Homos. Addl1ions, Foundaliono,

S4

Ron 'e TV Service, epeclallzJng
In Z.nlth alae Mrvlclng mo.t
othar bnnde. HouN cttlll, 1110

R•ldentlal
ot
commerelal
wiring, new Mrvk:e or repelre.
Uaa1er Ucenud •ectrtclan.
Ridenour Eleetrle.al, WV000308,

Roofing,
Kitchen•
!Bathe,
Replacement Wlndoww, lneur.d,
F,.. Ettlmat•. 614-367-051&amp;.

somo oppllance ropolnr. WV
304-6"..2398 Ohio 614-446-2454.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

304-E7S.1786 .

Real Estate General

Tri-Hull

15 112',

8am-4pm,

~\Ud , !ll7:il :tl

2

4 WD's

74

otc. D a RAut.:O:iploy, WV. 304372·3933 or 1
:173-113211.

79
lhe chuckle quoted

by f i lling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below .

Condition 12,000 Mil.. Call
BetwMn D-2, 614-3B8-8254.

74

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

'72 Superior 22' motor homo,
aletpt, 5, rur. like rww, root •lr

condHioning, DoOgo t13 C.i.O.,
$5500, 514-1141-3301.
18 Ft HI Lo All Metal Compor,
$2,700, 614-367-7801.

r r I' r r ,. r r 1
Motorcycles

18 Ft. Travel Tr~~ller Well Car.d
For, Ooubl1 Axle, Elect. Brakee,
$2,300, May Conekler Smaller
Trailer Trade-In Or Small
Aluminum Ba.t llt~l'-r /Motor,
114-81111.a500.
1972 31' C.rrtage Camper,
Double AI11, NN Hoi Wat1r
Tank, Hide-A-Bod Solo, Sloopo

Six, Good Condhion, Soon:

Motorcycles

Harty Davidson Sportster
1200 CC, extrae lhowroom
condilion, $8,000 080, 614-9112·
~991

4503.

All minerals riltlla goes wilh tho land . Be tho firs! to ....
lhis baautiful farm home and land.
171 g
CLAUDE DANIELS, REALTOR, PH. 388-9612
KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH . 245-5855

Plantz Sub. Bulavllle
13,5011, 814-448·1365.

Pike,

1974 27ft. Than mot01 home,
fully Mlf~ontalned, gen1r~~tor,
air,
rah1geratorffreezer,
microwave,
mauv•
Interior,
st,OOOml, f'Ndy tor ~a. 18500.

304-675-211411.

lEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

with 'this extra large custom brick ranch on a

large I .25 aero lot 6 bedrooms, formal dining,
living room, lull finished besament Relax in lha
hot lub situaled on a 15'x30' dock. 3 car
garage. Close to !own location.
K85

1 bath mobil&amp; home IS situated on approx . 1.53B
riverfront acres. Easy access to a State Route for the
upcoming winter months. Great fish1ng oul your back
door. Better oomelook, befora it's gone.

CountY w.ter.

• ·

1655

NEW USTINGI PERFECT QUIET SETTING
FOR THAT NEW HOMEI Nica building lot
approximately IOO'x300'. County water
avaiabla. $7,000.00
1681
NEW USTINGI SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL! Really
nice 10+ acre• (correct amount of acreage to

ba determined by surv&amp;y), pond and 1992
14'x70' !olansion mobile homo which consists
ol3 bedrooms &amp; 2 belhs. City schoolsl I&amp;SG
NEW LISTING! RACCOON CREK
FRONTAGE I 10 LOTSI Owner will consider
selling on land contract to qualified buyer.
County wal8r available!
1684
OVER 161 ACRESI 2 story home with 3
bedrooms and morel Electric heat
pumplcenlral air. Lots of woodland and
pasture! 36'x50' bem. Cily Schools!
1662

PRICE LOWERED! "5" ACRES ALONG THE
OHIO RIVER! Newer 3 bedroom doublewide
homo large bam, dalached garage, plus an
adci~nal mobila hamal Real naat &amp; cleanl

1666

NICE WORKABLE FARMI Ovar 70 acroo. 2
Silos, 40'x9rt ohod, 20'x28' bam, 18'x42'
milkhouaa, plua taveral olher bultdlniJ•·
Fencing, pond, ....,. feat of .....:1 frontage.
Neat 2-3 bedroom homa. Ideal location. lffT7

Real Estate General

ASKING $35,000
NEW LISTING- A charming 2 bedroom, 1 balh homo
on approx . 2 .44 acras in Racina. Graat starter home.

And definaloly priced to soiil

ONLY $20,000

OFFICE 992-2886

LOCAL BUSINESS. WJ)D~Iiofil making business
in Pomeroy. .CM'.1!nliiMil!Min10wn location. All stock,
oquipment oiitrltXliJros included.
ASKING $30,000
RACINE AREA-

Mob~o

"'

homo lois. Porfact location lor

the parson who wants near town but not in it. Septic
system, water lines &amp; tap, electric ~e and service to

Prlcad from S9,000 to $10,000

polo inckJdad.

POMEROY· Beautiful 3 bedroom, 1 112 bath homo.
Central air, Gas log liroplace, Vinyl siding . Full
basemen!, cop~r plumbing. 1 car garage.
ONLY $39,500
BRUCE TEAFORD

JIM Hill

1878 Starcreft, 2SH., ulf con.
talnecl, eiMpe Sl, good concl.
304·773-5244.

SHERRY RIFFLE
Sales Agent

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

614-~9-2540

RACINE· Maon Slreet· A 1988 Clayion double w1de s•n•ng
on a 75 x 115 level lot. Home has 3 bedrooms and 2 bath s

ASKING $26,500

., BLACI{BURN REAt
a
lS

LONG RUN ROAD· Approx 56 acres w1th a 4 bedroom 1
1/2 slory home Al so com es w1th a 2 car garage , satellite
dtsh. barn, lrailer hook.up and cellar house
$59,900

POMEROY· E Main Sireei·Need renlai properly? Has 2
rental units. A 2 bedroom apartment down s ta~r s that needs
some wor k and a one bed1oom apartm ent thats n1ce
upstatrs
$25,900
MIDDLEPORT- A historic colonial 2 story bric k home that tS
on the National Histori c Registry. Mam house featu res 4
bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, living room . parlor. sun porch .
kitchen. breakfast room , and small den Has a court yard
between house and 2 car garage . elevator, and 2 rooms
and a bath attached for business or recreation .
$115,000

NEW LISTING· GUESS WHAT? This 3
bedroom, 2 bath home has over 7 acres. Fully
equipped kitchen. 2 car attached garage. All
this and more situated in Gr9en Township. Cily
schools! Priced in lhe 60's. Won't last long!
1688

1473· BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
offers 63.75 acres, mil, moslly paslure,
tobacco base, 40x60 bam, 22x44 block
milkhouse. 750' road lrontago lor possible
bldg. sites.
WOWt LOTI OF. LANDI 237 ACRE FARM!
100 ec!W ·mo,. or .laM li tillablat Large pond,
bam, 2'. stoiy home with 4 bedroom a, family
rooin, living rocim, aqulp~d kitchen, bath.

PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

RIVERFRONT PROPERTY! II This lovely 2 bedroom,

514 Second Ave., Gallipom, Oh. 45631
Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008
Joe Moore, Associate 441-1111

NEW USTING· REWARD YOUR SUCCESS

Nice r&amp;modolad &amp; rodocoraied farm home wilh cenlral air
&amp; heal, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, new vinyl covored
~rmopane windows, new ce.pret, vinyl siding, &amp; new
sh1nglad root. Lata of pasllJro land, woods. &amp; tillabla land.

New gu tankl, one ton truck
WhMie1 redlatora, floor mate,

Real Estate General

Vans &amp;

216 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614)992·3325

Auto Parts &amp;

BudgM Priced Trt~nsml ..lona,
UHd I rwbullt, ell typ.a, ... ,..
lng at $60; owner 814-245-5677,
61ii-J7V.293S, I&gt;W'19-2263.

7 ... 31 ... 94

1 I'
Real Estate General

.

..__....____.__.__....____._----~

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644

1431· Approx. 5 acres wilh frontaga on
Raccoon, baaulilul shaded lo~ house has 3
BR, balh, LR, kilchan, large unattached
garage. Oftars a lot of privacy and poaca &amp;
quiet

POMEROY· Lincoln Hill· A 1 112 story permaslone home
with hardwood floors , 3 bedrooms, full basement, 2 baths.

fireplace. carport. and has 3 iols.

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Extensive
ramodalad 1 1/2 siOI'f hom•, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, concreto drivo, I car garago. City
schools, 20 acres more or lass! Good location!
1622

$46,500

POMEROY· Lincoln Hill· A 2 story home wilh 3 bedroom ,
basement , big yard and view of the river.

$23,000

1475· BRAND NEW,
YOUR
CARPET, DEBBY DRIVE. 3/4 BRs, 2 balhs,
LR wlbeamed cail1ng, chorry cabinets in
·

FA, extra nice view.

COMFORTABU: RANCHI Roomy living room
&amp; kllchen, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Homo ia

approx. 3 years old. Over 2 aero lawn. Close to
Rio Granda, city school system. $59,900 1673
WANT SOMETHING A UTTLE DIFFERENT?
Taka a paok at lhis homo. Large living room,
dimng room and kitchen wl1ots of nice cabinatal
2 Acra lawn mora or lass, lois of fruit I!Ms. CaH
today, immediate possession!
1664

..

kitchen, family

homos that is ideal for rettoring for a nioe
home or lor condo~nvostmant pro~rty. Soma

CITY SCHOOLS! 10 acres, county water
8VIOiabla. Acreaga situated in Green Township.
Call today!
1634

WANT TO PURCHASE ACREAGE? ~n
consider this, over 47 acres. Good homa lllta
wooded setting, county water available. Calli.;
mora mlol
1633

rm.~

full

144D- ROOMY HOME IN TOWN·· homa
offers 3 BRs, 2 balhs, LR, DR, FR, kitchen,
I t20· LAND CONTRACT ·$29,500... $2,500 wolkshop, gas heal, cent. rur. Horne ~&amp;lilies
DOWN ... $296 per month includes !axes and lor Fn HA finWlcing. Call lor more dela1ls.
if\Surance .. .1 112 story with full basement.
L!cated &amp;124 Evans Heights.
1437· NEWER HOME AND I ACRE ... River
Valley
School Distric~ 3 BR, maotar BR
~TTENTION
DEVELOPERS AND
bath
w/garden
tub t 4x21, LR, kilchan, planty
INVESTORS...EXTRA NICE PIECE OF
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR PORTER... of cabinets &amp; closols, HP, $65,1100
larga lake wilhlaka front silas, mobil&amp; homa
1427· EXTRA NICE HOME ON ST. AT. 7
~n property at prasont time, oounty water,
SOUTH- 3 BRs, LR, HI, dining area, lull
entir&amp; tract oonsisls of 77 acres, m~.
baseman~ garage. Call today!
CORNER WOODS MILL AND SR
~ 33 acres, mn, $16,500. Fronts on
1441· OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
~n.
TO $49 900111 Ranch style homa ofle~ 3
BRo, 2' baths, LR, OR, kil, hp/cant. air,
1;.70.. 47 ACRES, HARRISON TWP., Elliott
garage
an~ 1.094 A.
Rd., all woodad, good hunting land, $16,800.
t4 1e- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD· Addison 1466-0EBBY DRIVE... all brick, now ca~pal
1'WP., 3B8 acn~larm, 3 ponds, tobaoco base, th1011ghout, naw paint, 3 BR, 2 balhs, LR,
kitchen, gao hoaUcent air, lull basement, 2
44x100 bam with concrota floora. May
car attached garage.
ctonaldor split (578)
1455- Ill acres, mn, Sardis Road, Madison 1446-GREENBRIAA AVE... Great homa tor
l)op, Jackson County, 40x56 bam, 2 ponds, tho lamily... 3 BRo, FR, DR/LR combo,
equipped ldlchan,
gas heaVcant
leilcad. Graat hunting ground.

a

units have had remodeling. Calllllday lor more
infoll1lation and your privata lou~

GREEN TOWNSHIP· Mobile Home &amp; t acra
mil with addtional mobile homo hook-up
oomplafll wilh ~eptic and walar. Call tor
complafll Ustingl
1671

1476- HEAD ROAD, 6 acres, m/1, 3 BR, 2 bath,

~

VIEW·TI·FUL HOME OVERLOOKING THE
CITY PARK AND THE OHIO RIVER! Spaciouo

446-7101 or 1-800-585-7101

basemen! Many other features.

1990-91 Newer w1rtng, plumb1ng, w1ndows,
carpet. fr ont porch. side decktng, blown-in
msulat1 on Forced a1r electric furnace in full

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- wallpaper, atonn
doon, roaring and complete
home repair, complete window
,.pelr, p'11UU,. washing and
mob11• home re~lr. For tr ......
11ma1e call Chat, 614-992-6323.

350 or 400 turbo tr~~nemlselone 1
uMd or ovwtl•ut.d, QUirllntMG
e &amp; JO doya. 304-4175~90. Pt
PINunt.

I

FIRST TIME HOMEOWNERS
MONEY NOW AVAILABLE!
7.99%APR

PRICE REDUCED U,OOO-BRAND NEW
STILL
UNDER
WARRANTY! Low
malntananca home (brand now). One alol'f
rench, 3 large bedrooms, dining room, living
room, kltchon, cathedral ceiling. 2 batha v.ith
tkyllghls. Ovor 1 aero lawn. Elactrfc hoat
pump.
1617

fl oor frame home that includes 2-3 BR's. 1
ba th. 2 car garage, outbu ildings, fenced yard,
ga rden area. blinds. NC, paneling, carpet,

.

I

Third Avenue, Gallipolis, 614446-2342.

2594 BULAVILLE PIKE· 83 Plus acres.
Fencing, pond &amp; buildings. 3 bedroomranch
stylo homo. Tobacoo allolmant.
1878

all handyman needs TH IS IS A MUST SEE
HO ME"
ASKING $74,900

NEW LISTING!!! NEW HOPE RD .· Nice 1

.

One fellow to another. "Boy
does my wife have an active
imagination! She can make a
mountain out of a molehill.·
"Yea," the other fellow laughed,
" but it could be worse. Her
imagination could be-- --- - ·

1~69 Doclgo Ram Vsn 60,000 1983 Honda CR 60 Good Shape,
lliln, $4,~00; Con Bo Soon At: $400, 614·368-a486.
Gaifipoila Dally Tribuno, 825 1987 Hilrley Sportster Good

TDC)OAISMAN'S DREAMt 75 Acres
mn. pond, 2 lakes totalling approx. 4 112 acres
stocked wilh plenty of fish! 10 yr. old vinyl sided
3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch style homo. 1 112 car
detachod oversized 1 car garago. Call lor
oomplete listing!
1668

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

1987 Aluma Ute XL Holiday 31
Ft. Ell:ceUenl Condition, Full
Bed, Al¥'\lng , Alf, E:lc, 614-3881364.

NEW USTINGI YOU BETTER HURRY! MAKE
YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAYI Super ranch
home with 3 bedrooms, extra nice kitchen,
family room, living room. 24'x30' detached
garage. tnground pool, Situated at 132
Adelaide Oliva.
1687

SUMNER RD .· Very nice Brick/Frame Spiil
jU S\ OUI Of

.

.___,T_U,...:J~N--=-E,..;K~-=--1
8
9
. I I I 1 1 .

13

ASKING $39,500

Home
Improvements

Unconditional lifetime guaran·
IN. Local refervncn fumlsh&amp;d .
Call 1~00.287-0576 Or 814-2370488 Rogers Waterproofing. Eatabllahed 1V75.

Accessories

Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-4

"NEGOTIABLE" Family
Modern, 4 bedrooms. What do you
This one has it alii! Four plus acres (surveyed).
Grassed lot, almost level. County walar. well or
spring walar. Livestock cemenl watering
!rough. Groat place lor childr9n, animals, pals.
Good bem, 36'x7rt. Joins Wayne Nal'l Forest·
Hundreds ol acres joining lol, Hunle(s
Paridise. As a gift, if needed, a lrailar pad wilh
all facilities in place. Localed on SIBle
Highway· Make your appointment ICKiay. »628

SYRACUSE · N1ce 4 bedroo m. 2 balh frame

SR 7

.

76

111111111111

OFFICE 992·2259
'-"-----.;..;.;..;

neoghborhood

I

c RRE
1--.--r.:-,7-r-l--,l,.--,lr----1
1
D0

$5300nog. 614·992-751M.

and a 1 112 story 3·4 bedroom
home. Nice view. Lois of fru~ trees, small pond,
tobacco base. Approximalely 38.5 acres more
or less. Some mar1&lt;.alabla timber.
1649

61

1982 Pallmlno Pop-Up New
Canvas, Stove, ftefrigen1tor,
Sink, Furnace, Sleepa 6, E~eel­
lent Condition, 614-446-1611 After 4 P.U. tt,BOO.

2fi58.

43000 actual miles, $4500, call
after 4 pm 614-949-28n.

Chevrolet, ford, Oodg• pickup
Mds. Short or long . No rust .

1981 Viking PoJ&gt;-Up Compor,

$800, 614-388-8898.

Fow Wlnda 1611:1 ft boo1 wfth
lnboord &amp; OU1boord. 304-882·

1984 Chevy 112 ton,shol1 bed,
fiber glaaa top , .t new tlree,

742-2357

992·6191

1088 Pacer,

ulllorJody.

E. Cleland Ill. 992·6191

Kathy Cleland •••••••••

882-3120 after 6 :00 PU.

2067 llondoy~rtdoy,

Tracy Brinager •••••••• J,49··74:391

Henry

1974 Star Craft runabout, 140hp

VO, wnrolior, $2,200. OBO. 304-

1979 Chevy Pick-Up $100, 614·
446-E9SB.

E. Cleland ..... 992·22

Sherri Hart .............

14ft. Starcraft, 50hp Mi~
motor, wl1raller, rune
,
tl200 negotiable. 304-t75- D2.

Mercuty oU InJected, 28 lb.
thru81, \llnnkOIIt trolling rwmote
control motor S3500, 614-102-

(Call for more information)
Henry

12h Jon boat wlcarpee, INta,
trolling motor 4hp Marcur,
trailer, SQOO. 304-675~38 .

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei- Page-07

Services

304-882·2247 0&lt; 862-2069.

1977 Ford Pic k-Up, 6 Cylinder,
Automatic, $700, 614·367-7230.

1987 Dodge Dakota, mld-slu,
new tires, 5spd., $2950. 304-6752949.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1981 Yellowetone Camper, l5h.,
wl2-4tt. expandoe, exc. cond .

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

WV

llborl!tsoo bon boa1, 10 hp.

$2600, 614-1192-4718.
1985 Otds Dona 88 Royolo, 4 dr.
Ill Opliono, 307
992-E118.

79

Motorcycles

Honda 250 four whMier, exc
cond, $2,000. 304-'?S-6113 after
5:00.

I

I u 0 y RAR

19n International Tandem cab &amp;
chassis, 671 Detroit llspd,
38,000 rears , $6000. 304-8823358 alter gpm .

11185 Buick Rivera, 2 dr. aport
one owner like naw, new
tlrea, every option, 307 V-1,

Hdan, extr1 nice, excellent
condition, one owner, low mllet,

74

I RE v As E I

cou~.

Hay &amp; Grain

WORD
GAME

Rearrange th e 6 scrambled
word s b e low lo make 6
simpl e w o rd s
Prinl !elfer s of
ea ch in ils line of sq ua res.

1984 Escor1 AUiomatlc, $450;
11179 Toyota Corolla, .t Spe.d,
$300, Aak For Rick 614-245o4912.

Stale Route 338, lA11rt Falla, OH -::--::--:--=::---:--;--:;:::-;:::;614·247·2532.
iltalta i'lay $2 per bale, 614-992-

...-.lo.

5 Speed, 83,000 Milos, Nlco Car
$850, 614-441.()837,

scg\\4UlA- ~ £~s~

0

MO P.M. 614·24&amp;-9555.

Beagl• pup 6 monthe; 614-992Cannlng
Buahel.
300711-614-:l37·1913.
Pick Your TOmetoea
Own Bring$3Own
Con- .;..:.:.;.,;.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

64

1081 Ford Tempo _LX 1 Loaded,
$2 650 OBO, 1986 uoage Omnl,

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galll6olls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN

Up; 1985 Honda Shadow Before

Livestock

Baagla pupa, 2 112 months; 1

1a1nor. Don Hill Farms, 49585

388-9733, 614-441.0215.

T:~~:t:~y

Real Estate General

1982 Bronco; 1980.. D-50 Pick·

Dna cow Nady to have calf; 1
halter duo to have calf; 1 heifer
calf; 1 Herterd Bull 2 yrs. old; 3

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

1981 Dodge Shadow, Automatic
lAC, Good Condition, $1,895 614-

2020 John Deere Wl1h Bush 1m Chrysler LeBaron, • good
Hog, $5 ,950; 850 Ford Wt1h Plow aha~. nlc. I ciNn, $600. :J04.
And Cultlvstor, $3,750; 814-~ 675-6219.

Star Gullar- ampa, gul1ara,
11ri ngs, keyboarde, drume. Alao
plano and guitar lnaona, 614-

58

Hrn Monte Ca rto,

1916 Dodge Aspen, Slant 6 Engine, Runs Good, $600, 61,..379-2Tl0 After 6 P.M.

Massey Ferguaon 35 TractOJ

1987 'Chevy Bluer loaded
$4,495. 1982 Chrysler convertJable, new lop, exc ahape $1,SOO.
New Goose Neck Valley Stock
Treller. Under New Management
Pet• Otlllngar, Scot1y'e Used
Cars, New Haven, WV. 304-882-

July31,1994

72 Trucks lor Sale

Am $2,595. 1988 Ford Ranger
$2,6115. 1991 Chovy S.10 $4,250. l04-E75.e266.

3752.

1974 Chev Nova, .t door, one
ownar, 81 K mlln, auto, good
cond, 304-773-9509.

DIHoi WHh Blade $3,850; !5600

1990 ford Aesta tt,595. 1990
Lumina Euro $5,995. 1987 Grand

3960.

402 big block,
show car cond., asking $5000
negotiable. 304-675-1338.

lntemallonal 250 Dle.. t Traet01
&amp; Bush Hog $2,950; 130 MF

dogs for sale. Aott &amp; Sheph•td
SIUd Servi ce, by appointment
onlv. 614-667-PETS .

367-0302, Cheshiro,

Olds.

Load~, full power, AMIFM,
Sterro. Casa., New Battery. New

Miniature SchN LUer, &amp;mo. old,
aU stlota, female, housebrob.

57

Eight

Regency
Brougfiman,
one
owner! Exc. Cond . 75,000 mi.

July 31, 1994

Real Estate General

2.2

f\ ow lo

Span iel , 614-446-IJ:at2.

Q.T.C o1 R&amp; G FEED

Autos for Sale

WV

M65-

•.

'·

·..• ,
'.

-

&lt;

., ' I '

garage &amp; pond.

1472
BLVD.. OOJ,&gt;NV,
112 baths, kitchen, LR, gas
1442· INVESTORS OR FIRST TIME attached garage, lanced ysrd.
BUYERS· $29,900 home localad at 25
Evans Heights, 3 BRs, bath, kitchen, FR, 1414· OWNER WANTS TO RELOCATE
firaplaoa,
heat, basement, woodbumar in AND HAS PUT THIS NICE HOME ON THE
FR, Washington Elamanlary School.
MARKET· Ranch homo oHars 3 BRs, LR,
DR, kitchen, 2 baths. attached garage, heat
1445· PRICE REDUCED TO $69,900.. pump, cent. air, &amp;Kim nice yard.
Vl.nton Araa, All Brick, 12x24 Fr, 12x12 1409· Four lois, 4 BR home, reduced lo
Kltchon, 15x 15 Or, Fireplace, heal $44.000 . 2 batns. LR. Dr. lull basemen\. gas
pump/cent alf, qerage, new carpel
heaVcenl. air. Corner lots.

11••

I;R, kitcha'n, gas heat, cent. air, Bx12 utility

/

ltldg.
,

1452· RIO GRANDE· 1 112 story brick homa
offers 4 brs, 1 112 baths, LR, FR, DR, full
finished basemen~ attached garage. Call lor
more dolails.
1432· MOM I POP OPERATION FOR
SALE· Small restaurant with two rental
houses. Pro~rty io locall&gt;d in Oak Hill, Call
lor more detail a.

consists at S acres or more . Call for

1429-0FACES, OFACES, OFFICES· Thah
Yotlallhis 3,000 sq/fi. building aHa~. Located
on SR 160 near Holzer. ldaallor many uses.
Call tor more inlonnation.

L.--------Ruiiitiiih,;B,;,arriiiii
...iii
...iii...iii...iii...iii...iii..i i""ii ""ii """ii "•.4 . 4 6 i i . Q i i i 7 • 2 • 2 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 :·:.:

baths.

$69,000

BAUM ADDITION· Beauliluiiaying 17BK117 lot rn a nice
1 Subdivision. TPC water and Columbus Southern Electric
avatlable.
$8,500

CHESHIRE· 3rd S\reel· A 2 slory frame with B room s, 3·4
bedrooms. finished basement one bath, front and side
porch, storage bu1lding and a big lol.
$38,!100

town, on a quiet street. This 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 story home is

jus! the one . II has a iol of hardwood floors, fireplace, 2 full
baths, 4 porches, cenlral air and a new FANG furnace. Sits
on a corner lot and the home is well cared for.
$37,500

MORNING STAR ROAD· A 1 1/4 acre lot wilh brick from 3
bedroom ranch home. 1 112 balhs, full basement , garage
and carport
MUST SEE $69,000
MIDDLEPORT-Hudson Street· A very neal 2 bedroom
home with aluminum siding and detached garage. K1tchen

comes equrpped . Call for an appointment

WILL TRADE FOR FARM • 27 EVANS
1447· OAK HILL, Iormor clothing HEIGHTS · $33,900 · 3 BAs, f 1/2 Sfory,
slot11 ... $27 ,900, comer lot. Call for mora New Bath, New Pain!, and Carpel, New Roof
in forme lion.
and Gutters.

$25,000

POMEROY· Lasley Street- A home lo grow in. If you need
more space this 4-5 bedroom, 3 story home is just for you .

Has 2 baths &amp; gas forced air furnace.

$43,500

LONG BOTTOM· Fanlaslic River view- This one slory, 3
bedroom home is almosl in the m1ddle o1 two bends of the
beautiful OhiO river. Has carpeting throughout. Immediate
possession . Home is furnished .
Must see $30,000

(jive V.s .9l. Ca[f. ..
Rue sell D. Wood, Broker.................................446-461 B
Phyllis Mlller........................... 256-1136 Martha Smlth........ ~........ 379·2651
J. Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2184 Cathy Wray .................... 446 4255
Tammie Dewltt ....................... 441·1514 Cindy DrDngowakl ........ 245·9697
Judy Dewltt ............................ 441-0262
Cheryl Lemley ............... 742-3171

S. Third - Gorgeous home with unusual
ornamentation on the top of the root and porches. Has 4
bedrooms. gigantiC living room . modern pretty k1tchen and 2

MIDDLEPORT· Hamilloo Slreel· Looking for a mce home in
1453· OHIO RIVER PROPERTY localed al
and of While Avenue oH Garfield. Several 1474· EXCLUSIVE RESIDENTIAL
lois $20,000.
BUILDING LOTS .. .naar HMC.

j;:JB. $17 000 Ewington area, 3 BRa, BAih,

/

,'

~sement,

MIDCILEPORT- Braodway Sl.· You'll need lo see this
gorgeous home in town but on a large lot having 4 spacious
bedrooms. 2 baths, family room, dining room, built-in-dish

washer, 3/4 basemen!, deck. garden spol, carport, storage
THE INCOME
iiESiiiEiiCii'::OiC1ie; home FROM THREE MORE... each unit has 2
has 2 sap. units or could be converted back apartments. Facing city park with all the
conveniences of in town living.
tot family dwelling. Faces city park.

•

building and low maintenance aluminum siding. All of this

priced right to sell.
DOTIIE TURNER, Broker ....................... :.. 992·5692
BRENDA JEFFER$ ..................................... 992·3056
JERRY SPRADLING .......................... (304) 882·3418
OFFICE ........................................................ 992·2886

�Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Contemporary Living

July 31, 1994

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

Peoples Bancorp reports second quarter earnings
MARIETTA - Robert E.
Evans, President and Chief Executive Officer of Peoples Bancorp
Inc.. hcad(juartcrcd in Marietta ,
reponed net 1nwmc for d1e second
quarter of $1,312,000, an increase
of 15.5% from 51,136,000 in the
second quancr of 1993. Net income
for the ftrst six months of I 994 was
$2 ,6 18,000
compared
to
$2.324,000 for the same penod last
year, a 12.7% increase.
Seco nd quarter fully -dilute r!
earn in gs per share reached $0.4.
compared to S0.39 in 1993, a

15.4% increase. Year-to-date fullydiluted earnings per share increased
12.5% from $0.80 for the frrst six
months of 1993 to $0.90 in 1994.
Previous periods per share informalion has been adjusied due to the 2
for I stock split issued to shareholdcrsofrecord on April IS , 1994.
Return on assets increased in the
second quaner to I . II %, up from
last year second quaner's ratio of
0.99%. Return on stockholders'
equity also increased, from 11.03%
in the second quarter of 1993 to
11 .76% this year.

The Corporation reported
growth during the ftrSt six months
of 1994. Total assets are
$474704,000 at June 30, 1994, an
increase of over $9 million from
$465,373,000 at Dec ember 31,
I993. Total loans continue 10 grow,
increasing near ly $16 mill ion to
$337,474,000 at the end of the second quarter. Total deposits grew
durin g 1994 to $388.382,000, up
from $385,639,000 at December
31, I993.
On July I, Peoples Bancorp paid
a second (quarter dividend of $0.14

per share, paying out $406,000 to
shareholders. This represents an
increase from I 993 's second quarter per share dividend of $0.13, or
$392,000.
The Directors have authorized
the continued purchase of additional treasury shares at prices not to
exceed $20.50.
Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a southeastern Ohio bank holding company with headquarters in Marietta,
Ohio. Banking subsidiaries are The
Peoples Banking and Trust Company with offices in Marietta, Athens.
Belpre, Lowell, Middlepon, Nel sonville, Newark, and The Plains,
and The First National Bank of
Southeastern Ohio with offices in
Caldwell, Chesterhill, and
McConnelsville.

you may win a $5 prize from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and
telephone number with your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned in to the newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. ln case of a tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Gallia County farm will be featured by the
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District.

I

Processed vegetable
acreage up 12 percent
WASHINGTON (AP)
Acreage for harvest of processed
vegetables increased 12 percent
this year from 1993, with tomato
production predicted to reach a
record high, the Agriculture
Dcpantrnent says.
Processors contracted out 1.49
million acres from farmers for the
production of five major crops:
snap beans, sweet com, cucumbers
for pickles, green peas and tomatoes. With the exception of cucum·
bers. acreage for each of the vegetables increased from the previous
year.
Tomatoes arc forecast to weigh
in at a record II million tons, an
increase of 14 percent from 1993
and 27 percent from 1992. Green
pea production increased 42 percent from 1993 to 474,490 tons,
mainly because last year's crop
suffered from bad weather.
The Agriculture Department
also reponed a slight decrease in
total acreage for fresh vegetable
harvested in the summer quarter
from the previous year.
Area for harvest of the 12
selected fresh market vegetables
dropped to 323,100 acres. Still, the
decrease from the summer quanter
in 1993 only amounted to 690 acres
lost.
Of the 12 vegetables, acreage
for broccoli, carrots, celery, sweet
com, head leuuce and bell peppers
increased. while that of snap beans,
cabbage, cauliflower, cucumbers,
eggplant and tomatoes decreased or
( .1\eld steady with levels from the
previous year.
Meanwhile, acreage for melon

By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
For AP Special Features
Are your house hold p;tpers a hopeless mess''
A home filing system is easy 10 eslahl ish and you will reall y apprcc tale 11
when you need Ill find documen!S in a hurry
A two- tiered system rhal separates your papers in aclive fil es and long-term

dec ide whelher 11has any value lo you. If 11 doesn "I, lhrow it away and go on
10 !he nexl ilem. If il does, choose a folder headmg fur 11, label !he fo lder and
slip 1n !he ilem.
For most house hold filin g syslems, laheling by su hJCCIJS usual ly the moSI
suitable mcl hod . Subjecl files are ncxihle; you can always re lillc, subdivide or
consolidate fol ders as necessary.
storagt: files is usuall y be~ l . II gives you ready access In current , routinely
Conlinuc by picking ur eac h successiVe i1em in !he slack and go mg lhrough
needed malerial while keeping val uable papers secure.
the same procedure . As you go along you' ll find !hal many ilcms will fil mlo
Organize the aclivc file firs! . Keep in il all lhc papers 1ha1 you accumul ate ex isring folders ralher !han requiring new ones. Keep !he con Ienis of folders
and need during rh c current year.
Ill chronological order by placing matenal with !he mosl rccenl date nca r !he
l11ey inclu de reccipls and other records necessa ry fur figuring 1axes. bank fran!.
Include a folder markeu ·· Miscel laneous·· for misfits in the slack !hal do not
and creuil card slalcmcnls, currcm msurance polici es. employee bencfil data,
ongoing medi cal currcspc ndence. children's repun ca rds. warranlies and deserve !hei r own folders. Also include a "To fil e'' folder lo 1empcrarily keep
owners' manuals fur appliances and papers relating tu home and automobile malerial so il docs nut gel los! if you can'! file it right away
maintcna1H.: c.
Arrange the fold ers 1n alphabe ti ca l order and slore !hem in a fil e cab mcl.
To creale !he file. gather all the papers and ducumcnrs !hal need lo he filed, desk drawer or sturdy ca non where they are easil y accessible.
along w1th file folders, labels, pens or penc ils and an cmply wastebasket.
As you go lhrough !he stac k, make a separate pile of any imporlanl papers
Arrange the papers and documents in a pile. Pick up !he lopmosl item and or documents !hal require long-term ur permanent swra ge or are difficulllu

good.

U.S . 2-3. 230-260 lbs., country
points 38.50-41.50.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 42.00-43.00, a few
43.50.
Prices from The Producers LivestoCk Association:
Canle: steady to weaker.
Slaughter steers: choice 63-&lt;J068.25; select 59.00-64.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.0067.25; select 56.00-61.00.
Cows: steady all cows 44.00 and
down.
Bulls: steady; all bulls 60.00 and
down.
Sheep and lambs: 4.00 to 4.50
lower; choice wools 75.50-80.00;
choice clips 77.00-80.50; feeder
lambs 70.00 and down; aged sheep
35.00 and down. ·

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
.
If you're considering buying a faclory -built home , bear ill mind !hal co ming
up with the cash for a manufactured house - be it a log home, panclized hou se
or modular structure- can be far more complicated than gelling a mortgage
on a house you 'd buy through a real eslate agent.
Before you even begin talking to lenders, you should know that you will have
to raise more cash than just the malerials supplied in the manufacturer' s kit.
You 've also got lo finance what the fa ctory doe sn't provide- such as
plumbing, electricily, heating and cooling systems, interior details- such as
cabinets and improvements to th e sile (water well and sept ic system).
For example, si te preparati on work. such as culling and removing trees.
grading the Jot, excavating a foundat ion, drilling a well and insta lling a septic
system can easily run $10,000 to $25,000.
If you use a general contractor who builds the entire house, including hiring
sub-contractors todoelectrical, plumbing and other work, you can add another
$30,000 to $50,000 in cos!.
Don't forget to add the cost of shipping the package to your site. A rule of
thumb here is aboul $2 per mile for each truck, and many homes require two
truckloads.
Of course, the actual cos IS you incur will depend on !he s1zc oflhe house you
buy, the quality of materials used throughout and the amount of site work
needed. A good rule of thumb is that a completely finished ready-to-move-into
house will cost you two-and-one-half to three limes the cost of lhe basic

ByPATWKAS
AP Newsfeatures
The lines of this contemporary
house are clean and lean, but the
home still enjoys custom touches
that make it special.
Design F-5, by HomeStyles
"SOiiilce'T'"'DeSTJtllt1tr' mtwork.
offers open living spaces that Oow
together to make the most of its
2,221 square feet
The exterior shows attractive
cedar lap siding and elegant, slo~
ing rooflines. A stately column
accentuates the covered entry. The
rear elevation features an abundance of windows that brings the
outdoors in. For outside enjoyment. a spacious deck sJians the
width of the bouse.
The entrance foyer makes an
ideal reception area. A handy coat
closet and a large storage area
keep things in their place.
The foyer offers a grand view of
the impressive great room. A twostory vaulted ceiling enhances the
room's already generous size.
Three walls of windows Oood the
room with natural light Doors on
either side of the room extend the
entertaining area to the deck,
which is large enough for plenty of
outdoor furniture and a barbecue.
A large fireplace adds cozy warmth
and the built-in entertainment center will enhance family nights at
home.
Open to this gathering place is a
sizable dining ami kitchen area,
where a trio of windows provides a
view of the deck. A large island
cooktop also functions as a serving
bar with room for three or more
stools. Generous workspace is
increased by a pantry and built-in
desk. A kitchen skylight is option·
al.
Just steps away from the kitchen
Is a powder room with built-in
shelves and a shower stall. The
nearby utility room includes a sink,
space for a sewing center and
access to the two-car garage.
The main Ooor master suite provides the privacy of its own wing. A

. ~~MilT ~ONORED • ~m. Dummitt, len, Snack Emperor
D1stnbutmg, an Independent diStributor for Little Debbie Snacks
has been named "Outstanding Independent Distributor or tb~
~ear'' fo~ fiSCal year 1994. The award is based on a percentage or
mcrease 10 sales and overall business operations. Dummitt was
also the recipient of the Snack 100 Club, Sunbelt 35 Club and volu~e leader ro.r Individual snacks for the third straight 'year. He
nmshed nrst 10 the Sales Max contest and second in the Smack
Attack contest. Presenting Dummitt the award on right is McKee
Fo~d R.eprese~tat.ive !'nd ~ist~ict manager Jim Oppe. Dummitt
res1des 10 Gall1pol15 with hiS w1fe Tammy and children Baron and
Kaitlynn.

HOLZER CLINIC
OPHTHALMOLOGY

HERE IT IS!

~ Howard Greene, MD. Ophthalmologist at Holzer Clinic ~
\ can help! Dr. Greene is now accepting patients at the
\Holzer Clinic of West Virginia in Point Pleasant, as well
~ as providing Ophthalmologic and surgical services at
\
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis

1995 CHEVROLET LUMINA
LS 4 DR. SEDAN
Fully equipped. See this family
sized sedan day!

1
I

~

.

--

Safe depesit buxc s arc uften sc&lt;licd hy court mdcr wtu:n th e hn.x h(l!drr dtl''-.
and this can render the Uocumc:nts in acccssihll' .

Next, use an electric drill with a hole-saw &lt;Jitachmcnt to bon.:" largr hnlc

lhrough the door for the cylinder assembly . which passes from" "'' _,ide uf Ihe
door to the other. A hole saw resembles a metal

c up

with u scrratt.:d nm .

_To use. dnll a pilol hole through the dour wilh an ordinary one-e ighlh -111 chchameter sJnl l bil. Then drill halfwa y lhrough lhe dour with lht· hole ,aw ;
wilhdraw !he Cool and fin1 sh dn ll mg from !he olher siuc. Thi ' lcchniquc
prevents splintering.
Wedge !he door open and dn ll a smaller hole inlolhc edge for !he htd t, uSJng
a flat spade bil.
BO!h holes in the door muSI bcprccisely homunlal and !he hole inlh e edge
must meet the bugcr hole at a nght angle . The best way to insure a...:curatc

drilling is lo use a drilling gu1de, available a! hardware stores. The gu ide
anaches to the dnll and hold' !he lool ag;unst the work a! any desired angle
Shdc !he bolt and anached moun ling pbtc mlo !he hole in !he doof"s edge
and trace around the plate wilh a sharp pencil Remove !he bo ll and carefully
ch1sel away a lhmlayer of wood from 1nsJde !he marked Jines so !he pi ale wil l
he flush with the surface. Then remscr11he bolt and fasJcn il to !he dlm Wilh
the screws supp lied.
Install the cylinder assembly hy fillin g each half againstlhe oppo"'' .s 1dcs
of the larger hole . The pieces mcelm !he ce nler and caplurc !he '"'cried end
of the bolt . Long screws fasten the assembly logcl hcr.
Retract the bolt, dab the end with lipS!i ck or chalk, then close !he lhlf and
turn the lock so the holt leaves a mark on the door frame . Dril l a hole fm !he
bolt into the frame, centered on the mark. Place the metal strike pi ale surpl 1cd
with the kil around the hole .
Trace the plale's oulline, then chi sel wood trom !he frame to fttlhc pLilc '"
you did when installing the bolt.
SIYUSH SIMPUCTIY Ia a hallmark of such dlstllll)ulehed contemponuy homes as this one.
coved ceiling in the sleeping area
heightens the feeling of luxury. A
large walk-in closet and a convenof habitable space. There is a ·
esign F-5 has a great room,
tional closet provide ample storage
garage;
a basement is optional.
dining
area,
kitchen
,
three
in the mirrored dressing area The
Doors from the great room lead to
bedrooms,
a
guest
room
or
skylighted master bath boasts dual
a deck. The overall dimensions of
den, two baths, a powder room and
sinks, a whirlpool tub, a separate
65'6"
by 64·s· include the garage.
a foyer, totaling 2,221 square feet
shower and a compartmen!Blized
toilet
On the upper floor, two additional
bedrooms, each with generous
closet space, share a skylighted
full bath. An additional room can
serve as either a den or guest
room. One side offers the option to
enclose the room or leave it informally open; the other side boasts a
DEN
wooden handrail and a striking
GUEST
UPPER FLOOR
view of the great room below. A
It X 12
linen closet is conveniently located
near the two bedrooms, along with
access to an expansive attic for
storage.
An optional basement provides
ample space for a recreation room,
workshop or additional storage.

D

(For a more detailed, scaled plan
of this house, including guides to
estimating cosl5 and financing, send
$4 to House of the Week, P. 0. Bm
1562, New York, N.Y. JOJ16-J562.
Be sure to includt tht number of the
plan.J

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Feoturn

Q: There are dark lines on the drywall ceiling below the attic in my
bouse. The lines ~oincid_e ~ith the ceiling joists. Someone suggested it is
due to the lackofmsulahon. However, we have 6-inch balls in the attic. Do
you have a cure for this problem?
A: Although you have insula! ion between the joists in the auic noor. !he lop
of the JOISts are exposed to the cold wmter temperature 1n the anic Since !he
wood joists are not effeclive insulalors, they act as thermal bridges. Con.sc ~uently, the temperature at the underSide of the JOists (at the drywa ll ce il ing)
ts cooler !han the adJacent scct1ons of the celimg wh1ch are covered w1th !he
msulatwn balls. Because of the lower temperature below the jois!S, condensa tion (however slight) tends to form along those areas. Over lime, the moisture
traps dust and also resulls in mildew growth which shows up as shadow lines.
To prevent this from reoccurring, first paint the ceiling. Usc a pain!
containing mildewcide. Next, install insulation balls over !he exposed ce iling
JOISIS. Ideally, the msulahon shou ld fill the spaces between the joists and cover
the lop of the joists as well. Thi s last layer of bans is uflen installed
perpendicular to the floor joists.
However you inslall the insulation, make sure lu use a type !hat dues no! have
a f01l or krafl paper vapor bamer. And be sure additional insulalion docs no!
cover sofht vents or recessed hght housmgs (unless the housings are JC types
rated for duect contact w1th msulation).
Q: We own a 19SOs-era house that has asbestos shingles on the sides and
back and vinyl siding on the front. The shingles are in good condition but
we are concerned that they would be a factor in selling our home. 1 the
shinjlles are removed, will their disposal be difficult?

VAULTED

~~t11

za/e x 1s

DINE

1

Home questions &amp; answers

i

II

To Order Study Plan

II

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

18/11tl1

~~~j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Call Holzer Clinic in one of two locations for
Ophthalmology services.

Fall rally...
Continued from D-1
&amp; Water Conservation District
Office in the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural Center. You might want to
consider picking up two or three
and passing them along to friends
or relatives. When posted by your
mail bo~ or driveway; ·they JUCBI)y
enhance the visibility of your
address for emergency vehicles and
who knows it might help to save
your life.
Patty Dyer is the Farm
Bureau's information coordinator.

hox.

Installing a deadbolt lock

Touches Enhance Personality of Contemporary

~\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\~

Utility she lves and large cnrto ns with tops make good m-ho usc ;..t(lragl' Yt 'u
can place accordi on folders in them tu preserve mate rial hke tax rl'turn .., ;uHJ
finan cial records that must he kept until the ir ~ t a t utcs of l!mJtat Jon-.. ru n till\
(Currenlly, la x rc!Urns shou lu he kepi fur six years)
You should also Include foldcrs cor responding to those: tn the ;IC IJ\ L' Ill~:
Each year, at tax time. sort th ro ugh the ac ttvc file antJ tran . ., fn ;my rnah.:nal tl1.1t
is no longer current but which yuu do nnt want tothtow away JOin the IP1l!! · lcrm
storage fil e.
Keep valuable and difficult -to- rcplac c documen ts m a hank &lt;,;tfc -dq)l '"- 11
box, sa fe or fir eproof stronghox. These include h1rt h ~nd marr1&lt;1~l' r n11 fJLilll'~ .
pa ssport s, sec uri! ICS, property rccor cl"' like mortgages, dt.:cd~ and t1tk'-. , a
~hotocopy of your will (the o ri gi nal s.hlluld remain with your law ye r). ;md an
mventory ofvaluahlc items in yo ur home, like furs. Je we lry. and l'(\ lln- tJh lcc. .
Do not keep life insurance policies or deeds to hu nal rloh 111 ;1 ..,;lft· -dq'lll.., 1t

package.
your home. MoS!hanks all ow you1odu !Ins '" a 'mcs Ill fllu r "' "' d"""· '''"·h
So that 1,700-squarc fee l log-home kit !hal sells for aboul $40,000 can of which is lied In completing a spec ific qage of Cilll'lrlll'llllll
actua lly wind up cosling anywhere from $100,000 lo $1 20,()()(\ complete Iy
finished . This includes the cost of site preparali on but no! the cost of !he land
itself.
Whi le it is possible to fin ance the land as well as !he res! nf !he house, the
whole process goes a Jot more smoorhly if you already own the land.• In moSI By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
cases. the land amounts 10 the homeowner's equily in !he projecl- lhe money For AP Special Features
you put up front. much like !he down paymenr on a regular mongage.
_ Jnslalling a deadboll luck, or deadhlll l - a ,oJid Slee l hulr 11"'' "I'""''"'
Many mortgage companies and banks have no real sysJem for fi nancing a Independentl y from a doo rkn ob - adds ant:xtra mt.:;Jsurc nf securit y h1;t hum e.
factory -built home . Generally spea king, you will probably need two loansBeginning carpenters usuall y can insta ll i l dcadhol t on a wooden dnor
·
a construction Joan and a home mortgage. The consrruction loan wi ll provide moderate to expert !'~ kill s arc needed if tht door 1s .\ let: I.
the cash you need for the kit il se lf. sile improvcmen!S and 1he olher expenses
Buy a deadbolt lock w ith a bolt that w ill ..:xtcnd an mch or mo re fro m the
you incur along the path from manufacturer's package 10 a complete home . door' s edge into the door frame. Dcadholts ha vt.: one m two luc k cvlimkr': a
Once the house is fin ished, !he cons Iruction loan will be paid off and two-cy linder model requires unloc kin g with a ke y on both s1dt\. ·
replaced by a long-term mortgage - the sa me type of Joan you would use to
In a door with glass panels it rrcvcnts a burglar frum rc;Jchin g throu gh a
buy a conven1ional home .
broken pane to un lock ~h~ ~oor. But beca use 11 hinders LJUick eme rge ncy cxtt~
Usually, you will get these Juans from separate lenders - !he cunstrucliun some local codes proh1b1t 1t s usc.
loan from a bank and the mortgage from a mortgage bank. such as a saVIngs
Deadbolt lock ki!S come with all !he paris needed. In cluded is a paper 11r
cardboard pallern called a lemplatc. wh1ch serve s as a gu1dc f,n dnllmg !he
and loan associarion or an institution !hal specializes in home mortgages.
"
While there are exceptions to the rule. very few home manufacturers offer required holes in the dour.
Follow the instruclions that come Wilh !he ki1. In mosl "'""s, swr hy
financmg. They 're in business 10- sell houses. not lend money . The most
important - and complicated _ pan of the financin g is arranging a schedule attachwg the template to the edge of the door at leas t (J inches ahmc tht:
that lets you tap the co nsrruction loan 10 pay the bills you incur as you build doorknob, and !hen prick the lemplalc wilh an awl or na1l to mark !he holes.

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

Do you or a member of you family have ........ ..
CATARACTS.......... DECREASED VISION. ... .
......... DIABETES........... GLAUCOMA ............. .
LAZY EYE.................. CROSSED EYES........ ?

replace.

Getting mortgage for manufactured house isn't easy

New-vaccine

Livestock report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Friday by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
cents higher; demand moderate to

MOSCOW (AP) - Ru ss ia 's
largest investment company con ceded it has nearly run out of cash,
but it continued to promise instant
riches to those daring enough to
invest.
Advertis e ments in Friday's
newspapers assured potential
investors that · •MMM has no problems," and television commercials
continued to show happy investors
basking in new wealth.
WASHINGTON (AP) - An
unprecedented bidding marathon
ended with a half-dozen compantcs
spending $617 million for national
licenses to offer an array of
advanced communications services.
The I 0 licenses sold Friday
include such services as two-way
paging and messaging . Twenty seven companies had competed for
the I 0-year licenses.

harvest is estimated to increase to
143,300 acres, up 7,300 acres from
last year's summer quarter.
Although cantaloupe and honeydew melon acreage is expected to
decrease, watermelon drove the
increase with a projected gain of
11.700 acres for a tO!al of 82,700.
Onion growers foresee a 6 percent gain in harvested acreage from
1993, buoyed by a spring harvest
of 35,400 acres, an increase of 16
percent. Total onion acreage projected for harvest in 1994 is
159,990 acres.

WASHINGTON (AP)
Researchers have created a more
effective vaccine for shipping
fever, a potentially fatal livestock
s_ cattle prodisease that costs u_
ducers around S I billion annually,
the Agriculwre Deparunent says.
Combining an immune booster
and purified bacterial component of
Pasteurella haemolytica, which
causes the disease, researchers
have successfully prevented infection in sheep, according to Agricultural Research magazine. Trials
also were done on callle at the
National Animal Disease Center in
Ames, Iowa.

July 31,1994

Home filing system: Valuable, easy to establish

Business briefs

MYSTERY FARM -This week's mystery
farm , featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Gam polis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

Section E

Clip this order and return label

Holzer Clinic
of West Virginia
2605 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

~

.

Holzer Clinic
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OR

446-5776

MAIN FLOOR

I

Encloaed Ia $4 for plan N o . - - - - - - - - - - - - Enclosed Is $4.95. each lor lhe booklet(&amp;) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Name'------------------------------------

•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

m~M.

675-4498
1616 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS
(614) 446·3672 or 1·800·521·0084

GRACIOUS VIEWS lnalde and out add 10 the comfort and appeal
of thla llft!Bt room.

111E IMPRESSIVE veat room Is posldoned as a natural Jllltberlng
place for dally acdvltlee and fonnal entcnalnlng. The dining area
eerves Btl a natural buller between the kltqten and the veat room.
The maatcr 11Uitc and the third bedroom 'liTer walk·ln cloaet8, and
a thlnl room on the second Roor may function •• either a den or a
pest room.

____________________________________

c~--------------------~--------State (ZIP) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

�' )
(

'·
r

Page-E2-sunday Times-Sentinel

July 31, 1994

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

Japanese-Americans leave lasting mark on community
EDITOR'S NOTE_ A Buddhistttmple'" tht heart of New Jersey's vegetable
growmg region tS one of the legacies uf a hea•y influx of Japane.e-Ammcans 50
years ago. Released from detmtion camp.&lt; where they were held following the
}apane.&lt;ealla&lt;·k unl'earl Harbor, rhty were lured to New lmey 10 help han-est and

~c:;E~:~' BURNEY

"We never regretted our deCISIOn,·' says Nakamura, 75, of Elmer.
·'We d1dn 'I know where to go. ' · says Mnsuko Omura, 75 , who came here
The cultural center, 111 the basement of the Upper Deerfield Township Hall, wllh her husband, children and seve ral other relatives. ·'So we ca me here ."
will mclude hundreds of photographs, ora l h1 stones and arllfacts. says
Charles Seabrook persuaded the federal government to budd t56 small
Nakamura. 1ts founder and chairwoman
·
apartments. a library , commun1ty center and d1n1ng hall Each Internee was
A reunion also slated for October is expected to draw former res1dcnts from g1ven $25 and a railroad ticket from the cam ps.
around Ihe cou ntry and a few from Japan. One former reSident IS bulld1ng a
They lived in cmder-blod, barracks-sty le :•partmcnts 111 Se.1brook VIllage
replica of Seabrook V1llage to be diSplayed at the gathenng.
- where most rem a1ned until the 1960s and 70s· He re they hcgan to budd a
Elder&gt; seldom talk abnutthCif mternment expenence. hut want to preserve se nse of commun1ty .
the11 hiStory for pustenty, Nakamura says. Too many oft he younger Japanese The Japanesc-Amcncans whorcma1ncd 1n Seabrook hccamc :• ~1 1111egral part
Amencans know l11tle about the11 hentagc , she says
of the commumt y. wh1ch today has about 6.ROO reSidents. I hw ch1ldren
Japanese·Amencans were stunn ed by th e hystena that swept the country exce ll ed 111 academJcs and athletiCS at publiC schoo ls, before leav1ng to seck
after the attack on Pearl Harbor. About 120.000 - the maJonty of them nall ve · bette r opp&lt;&gt;rtun111es
born Arncncan C1l1zens - were rounded up because ofthw Japanese ancestry
ReSidents traveled from house-to-house 111 the village relchratm g trad111ona l
"The only ques llon we had was, 'How come' We ' re Americans'" recalls Japanese holidays Recreational aCIIVIIIes were held lor youngste rs at the
Fusa Kazaoka. 64. a ret~red telephone compa ny worker who lives mSeabrook village commun1ty center .

A!aoclated Press Writer
SEABROOK. N J (AP) _ At the end of World War II , thousands of
Japanesc -Amer..-ans treed from deteniHJII camps came to thiS farming v111age
in sout hern New Jmey hop 1ng to rebuild thw lives
Some lcfl aftn earn 1ng enough money at a la rge vegetable farm and packmg
plan Ito move hc~ri- 10 the West CLml But seve ral hundred remained and left
a lastmg mark olllhiS huml1c commu n1ty about36 miles south of Phliadelph1a.
Ftfty yc.1r, laler. .thuut &lt;;()IJ Japanese-Amencails still live here and they want
thell 1111 grallllll rrmemheretl. They are work1ng to establiSh a muse um and
research faniiiY 1" dnllnlcle one of I he ugliest chapters m U.S hiStory -the
detenlll.lll of th~ HJ~anJs 11 f Japanesc-Amencans after the Japanese attack. on "They werc.trcatmg us hk.e we were enemtcs."
"It was a perfect place to grow up 1n," says Kazaoka, " It was a rea l safe.
Pearl Harbor '"' Dec 7. 1~4t
An order Signed by PreSident Franklm D. Roosevelt allowed the government comfortable kmd of place .··
The Scabrol&gt;k ldm al 10 nal and Cultural Ce nter, scheduled 10 open 1n to send Japanese-Amencans to mternment camps The government con tended
Hut the trans111on here was nut easy and the work was hard at1he Seabrook
Oeiuber. will cDmmemoratc the n1ght here by more than 2,500 internees who they were a threat to national security and detained thtm. without trials or plant.
we r~ frcctl from dd&lt;'nlion camps 111 the South and Wesl 111 1~44 and 1945.
appeals.
.
Seabrook prov1ded lodgmg, lun ch and uldtl1 es for SIX month s to the newly
·'The 1mpurtantlhlllg IS Ihat we tJon ' t want the same thing 10 happen 10 any
Today, a llngenng, but seldom-voiced b11tcrness remams. Some former freed Japanese-Americans In exchange. they had In agree to work 111 hiS
olher per&gt;on ... s.m J,,hn Fuyuu me, the cultural center's proJect d~rector. " We mternees refuse to talk aboutthw mternmcnt . saymg the memory was still too process ing plant and farm for SIX months
don 'l want them Ill he Incarcerated tor prejud1c 1al reasons."
pamful.
The salary was usually about49 cents an hour for me mal JObs at the plant
·1 he Japancsc -i\meneans were lured here by mdustnahst Charles F. Seabrook,
''Our parents arc the ones who suffered," says Rose Dodohara, 62, who was So they could take turns ca nng for their chdrtren . husba nd s and w1ves worked
who w.s seekmg a labor force for hiS vegetable farmmgand packmg ope ratwn, sent w1th her fa~.lly to a Japane&gt;e mternment camp m Texas m 1944. ·'Fur alternate shifts. harvestmg crops in the f1elds or packmg vegetables on the
Scabn•ok Farms. 1ha1 lli led huge government orders for the troops. Seabrook them II was bad.
assembly Ime .
becam&lt;· lhe Single Jc~tgcst employer of mternees.
It was notunt1l nearly four decades later that the country tried to make
" It was not an easy life." says John Fuyuume of the culture center, who
In Apnl 1'144. Ellen Nakamura, then 25, traveled here from a detention camp amends Pres1dent Ronald Reagan Signed legiS latiOn 111 19KH grantmg an worked at the factory as a hm e ke q~r superviSor ' 'Most fam1lles had to work
Jer&lt;&gt;me . Ark . where her fam1ly had been held for two years. The only apology and $20,000 restiiUIIOn to each of the eSiimatcd 60,000 hvmg ca mp 12 hours a clay, seven days a week
111
woman and the y11 ungest 1n a three-member relocation committee. she Ined 10 surv1vors .
Some Japanese -Amencans worked at the plant until11 closctl 111 19H I . Others
assess hov. JJranese -Amwcans would fare at Seabrook Farms.
· ' It 's better than nothmg. '' sa~d Kazaoka, who ca me to Seabrook m 1945 launched the11 own buSinesses nearby or pursued successful caree rs.
After v1s. ling Seabrook, Nakamura went from camp to camp persuading when she was t6 and still lives nearby with her n-ycar-old mother " It 's a
Only a few former mternees live mthe graff111-cove1ed vlllt~gc. nnw a pub he
other 1ntcrnees 10 make the cross-country trek. She even had to persuade her small pnce you get for everything you lost."
housmgproJect.Tholllage bearsllltleresemblancc tothcnca tlykcpt co mplex
fiancee. K 1y&lt;1m1. promismg tu marry him only if he would agree 10 move 10
Hustled from their homes and farms . the lapanese-Amencans were trans- descnbed by former reSidents
New Jersey
p&lt;Jrted by tram to the detention camps. The shades were drawn and the
Today. a Buddhist temple stands as one of the few V1S1hlc rcmmdcrs of the
Nakamura sa 1d the lush farmland in southern New Jersey was remmiscent passengers were guarded by military personnel.
Japanese-Amencan m1grah~n to Seabrook. The temple began holdmg scr·
of her nat1ve Tulare. Cahf. , where the fam 1Jy farmed vegetables before their
At the camp, hundreds of families were thrown toge ther, living 111 a v1ces m 1945 111 Seabrook\ illage .
detention
communal environment in cramped mihtary -sty le quarter&gt; w1th little pnvacy
"It helped out the Japanese co mmunlly. · · recalls Frances Ono. 72. of
" I was so cxclled. 1 couldn't tell enough about what 1 saw," recalls The remote and isolated camps were surrounded by barbed w~re .
Bridgeton. " It held the people together. ''
.
Nakamura. the flrSI Japanese-Amencan woman to settle here . " We'd have a
By 1943, the government gave the approval for most of the mternces 10 leave
The congregatiOn - members of the Jodo Shm sect-IS sma lle r today, With
new start here...
the ca mps if they had jobs and passed a loyalty test . Travel to the W~st Coast. only about I 00 members Once compnsed only of Japanese. the temple has
The couple marned in May 1944 and a month later moved to Seabrook. however. was restncted until the following year.
about 15 wh1te members with a wh1te priest at the helm .
Eventually, other family members relocated here, too.
More than 300 fa milies came here from the Jerome , Ark , ca mp alone. More
But the temple, located on a seven-ac re Sllc a few miles from 11s ongmal spot,
·' I thought there would be great potential for families," recalls Nakamura, came from camps in Utah, Wyoming, Anzona and Colorado, as well as still serves as acenter for spl!ltual, soc1al and cultural ac11v111es.
who eventually moved from the government-bmlt village 10 a 73-acre farm Japanese from Peru who had been sent by the11 government to a Texas camp
"It's hke an anchor," says the Rev . Rebecca MacDonald. the first nonseveral miles away.
The former internees welcomed a new start, although most came here With Japanese and first woman priest at the temple. " It 's been a very 1mportant part
Nakamura worked at Seabrook for nearly 40 years, filsI as a liaison between nothing but the clothes on their backs. Most had lost their land back mthe West, of the community. "
the company and the former mternees and later in the housing department. Her as well as their belongings, wh1ch were either sold or stolen
...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
late husband also worked briefly at the plant.
1989 CHEVROlET CAPRICE

Energy audit keeps tabs on heating expenses
: By POPULAR MECHANICS
. For AP Special Features
An energy audit of your home IS
: one of the best ways to insure that
. you 're getting the most from out of
: your heating dollars.
· Your local ullhty company can as. sist you in tracking down energy wast· ers, but there are many items you can
:check yourself. Here are some 1mpor: tant checkpoints and additional en: ergy saving lips.
,
One way to check for wall msula. !ion from the indoor living area is to
remove a switch plate on an exterior
. wall. Shine a flashlight around the
switch box to see 1f there" msulahon
: present.
: Better yet, make a small hole in an
. exterior wall (in a closet or other
. hidden location) and measure the in·
: sulation. Then patch the hole.
Adding insulation to the walls of an
existing home 1s costly and difficult
to do thorou~hlv. A contractor uses

special equipment to blow in insulation from holes bored in the walls.
However, 1f you plan to re-side
your house, installmg rig1d board insulationbeforeapplyingsidingiscost
effective.
lnsulat1on on the foundation of the
house, whether you have a basement,
crawl space or slab foundation, 1s
often overlooked. Insulation applied
on the house exterior to cover the
exposed foundation and to extend I
fool below ground level is effective.
Other energy conservation measuresforthefoundationincludecaulkmg the sill plate where the sill meets
the foundation blocks in a basement
and insulating the header above the
sill plate.
If your basement is unheated, insuJating the ceiling would make the
floor of the first story much warmer,
reduce heat loss and conserve fueL If
you do this, you must also insulate
any heat or water pipes in the base-

men I.
The energy efficiency of your home
depends to a large extent on efficiently operatmg heating and cooling
systems.
In winter, you should keep the thermostat constant at68 degrees Fahren·
he it during the day and 60degrees Fat
night. However, the elderly, infants
and people who are 1!1 w1ll reqmre
higher temperatures.
A clock thermostat, which automatically Jowers the heat when you're
in bed and ra1ses it prior to your rising
in the morning, aids in your comfort
and convenience. Check radiators or
registers to see that they are free of
dust and not obstructed.
If you have gas-fired heating equipment have the unit cleaned every two
to three years by a service technician.
From time to time you should check
the burner plates to see if the unit is
firing properly, because gas ports can
become clogged with rust or dust.

If you have a furnace, clean or replace a1r filters once a month during
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Have your water heater - the second largest energy consumer in the
home -drained periodically to remove bmlt-up sed1men1.
Insulate the hot water pipes and the
water tank. On gas and oil water heaters, be sure to keep insulation away
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Repair faucet leaks as soon as they
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Women in the Civil War: they
hid their sex, but passed muster
EDITOR'S NOTE - Amtrican
women in /994 have bttn given Con·

gressiotUJJ permission to go into combat,
,.iJh wmt limitations. Well, it now turns
out tlull hundrtd.s of women wtrt on the
· baltlefitld in this country's most trau-ic ""'• tilt Civil War. They lwd to
hidtthtir stx, butthty passed muster.

By EILEEN LOH
Auoclated Press Writer
CHALMETIE, La. (AP)- From
1862 to '64, a Umon Army private
wrote to kinfolk back home in New
York, describing strange Southern
lands, drills and duty, loneliness and
an itch to go into battle.
"I am well and tough as a bear,"
.Lyons Wakeman wrote. "I have got
so that I can drill just as well as any
,man there is in my regiment."
Wakeman died of dysentery after
fighting in Louisiana's Red River
Campaign in 1864. The 21-year-old
soldier was la1d to rest in Chalmette
National Cemetery, just one among
the 654,000 killed during the fouryear war.
Wakeman, though, died harboring
a secret guarded with the vigilance of
a sentry at post.
Lyons Wakeman was actually Sarah
Rosetta Wakeman, who left home at
t9to find the freedom in breeches that
she couldo 'I enjoy m a dress. She cut
her hair, bound her breasts, put on a
11niform, and in 1862 enlisted in the
t53rd Regiment, New York State
Volunteers.
Wakeman wasn't alone. Of the 3
million Union and Confederate soldiers in the Civil War, some 400
women are known to have posed as
men so they could fight.
"Probably many, many more" he
under graves bearing their male
~liases, says Lauren Cook Burgess,
Civil War historian andeditorof"The
Uncommon Soldier," a collection of
Wakeman's letters. "We'll never
know.''

There 's nothing to distinguish
Wakeman's grave from the other
I 5,000 thick stone markers at the
Chalmette cemetery,just outside New
Orleans. Her tombstone reads simply
"4066 Lyons Wakeman N.Y."
It wasn 't so hard for Wakeman to

keep her secret wh1le alive, either,
historians say.
The urgency for more so ldiers
meant that physical examinations of
new recruits were spotty at best.
Somet1mes all that was required of
an enlistee was a trigger finger that
worked and two opposing teeth strong
enough to rip open a Minie ball cartridge .
In her memoir, "Nurse and Spy,"
Sarah Emma E. Edwards, who posed
as Pvt. Franklin Thompson for the
2nd M1chigan Volunteers, described
her phySical entrance exam as" a firm
hand.&lt;hake. "
Also, so many teen-age and pre·
adolescent boys fought in uniform
that it wasn't unusual to see a small,
smooth-faced soldier with a high
VOICe .

Wakeman often sent money home
to Afton, N.Y., to keep the farm going, though her defiance so embar·
rassed her parents that they told siblings too young to remember her that
she was a boy .
"I am cnjoymg my Self better th1s
summer than I ever did before in this
world. '' she told them inJuneof 1Ml\3.
" ... I w1ll Dress as I am a mind to for
all anyone else (cares), and if they
don 'tiel me Alone, they will be sorry
for it.''
A younger sister, born after
Wakeman d1ed, found her letters in
the attic, along with her ring and a
dague"eotype of Wakeman in uni·
form.
It was the first time Cathenne
Wakeman realized her "brother"
Lyons was a woman, her great-greatgrandoiece, Ruth Good1er,ofChipley,
Fla., said in an interview.
"It wasn 'ttalked about," Good1er
says. "The younger ones didn't know
about it; it was just not discussed
because it was not the kind of thing
women did. They sort of brushed it
under the carpet."
Linda Grant de Pauw, president of
the Min'erva Center on Women in the
Military 111 Pasadena, Md., says,
''People said it was disgraceful when
the other side d1d it. But when their
girls did it, it was patriotism."

Goodier told Burgess about her
great-great-aunt when she read a newspaper article about the historian's own
gender conflict.
Burgess had been portraying a male
soldier in 1989 for a re-enactment of
the Battle of Antietam, and was spotted leaving the ladies ' room. Authorities at Anlletam Nat1onal Park in
Sharpsburg, Md., told her she couldn't
join any more livmg histories - because they wanted to preserve the
authenticity of the 1862 battle.
"I was taken aback," Burgess said,
explaining that "il was a pretty wellknown fact m historian circles" that
five women, posing as men, fought at
Antietam (two were wounded, one
killed). · She sued the National Park
Service for sexual discrimination, and
won.
Rosella Wakeman's letters -the
most important cache to date on female soldiers m the Civi l War show that she felt a deep responsibil·
11y toward her family, particularly
helping pay her father's debts. "I
knew that I could help you more to
leave home than to stay there with
you," she wrote.
·'We speculated in the family about
why she did 11," Goodier said. "We
decided she did it for the money."
Economics was only one reason
women gave up their identity to en·
list, Burgess says.
Like men, "they were patriots, of
course. They wanted to strike a blow
against the enemy ... The third reason
is for adventure, to gain a measure of
social and legal and economic inde·
pendence not available to women.''
Others accompanied husbands, lovers or brothers into battle.
Some were discovered when they
were treated for illness or wounds; a
few became pregnant.
"A corporal was promoted to sergeant for gallant conduct at the battle
of Fredericksburgh," wrote Union
Col. Elijah H.C. Cavins,· 'since which
time the sergeant has become the
mother of a ch1ld.''
Many women kept their d1sguise
successfully throughout the war.

:July31, 1994

Pomeroy

h

EDITOR'S NOTE - For
decades, Sioux City, Iowa, bad
three synagogues, a Jewish Community Center, a Hebrew school
and kosher butchers. Now the
Jewish population is about 560
people, down from as many as
3,000 berore World War II .
Social scientists say Sioux City is
tharacteristic or a trend the
decline or Jewish commu~ities
outside metropolitan areas.
By TIM KLASS
Associated Press Writer
SIOUX CITY, Iowa- The Jist
of the dead fills the rear wall at
Shaare Zion synagogue and
extends down each side of the
cathedral-like sanctuary.
A thousand names, give or take
a few , each in Hebrew and English
each with its own remembranc~
!ight, seven or more per household
m the dwindling Conservative wngregation.
Each year, more lights. Each
year fewer members.
Next year Shaare Zion, "Gates
of Zion," will be Mount Olive
Baptist Church.
Two blocks south and two
blocks east, faded yellow paint is
pcehng from the 93-year-old United Orthodox Synagogue, one of the
oldest in continuous use in the
upper Midwesl
Services are down from twice
daily to once a week. It takes help
from Shaare Zion to get the 10 men
over age 13 that arc required for
fonnal worship. Even with a cane
and a companion, Rabbi Saul I.
Bolotnikov, 87, can barely manage
the three blocks bet ween home and
shu I.
When Bolotnikov cannot anend,
there is no one to read the scripture.
Without him, the congrej!ation will
cease to exist and the c1ty will be
without an ordained rabbi for the
first time in nearly a century.
"I'm just about finished," he
says.
Catty-cornered from the Orthodox shul, immigrants speaking
Khmer, Lao, Vietnamese or Span·
Ish study English as a second language and send their preschoolers
to a Hcadstart program at the Jewish Community Center.
"Why not use it? It's just sitting
there empty," says Doris E.
"Dodo" Rosenthal. executive
director of the Jewish Federation of
Sioux City. "It's so good to see
some life in here."
Next year the 10,000-squarefoot building is going up for sale.
What was once the center of
Iowa's second-largest Jewish community is becoming a nondescript
tenderloin on the northern downtown fringe.
Shaare Zion and a smaller
Reform temple, Mount Sinai, are
merging into a dual-affiliation synagogue to be called Beth Shalom.
Community leaders are raising
$1 million to remodel the temple
and add federation offices, more
classrooms, a chapel and a mikveh,
or ritual bath. James Sherman, lay
spiritual leader of Shaare Zion, is
taking the combined pulpit. A
Holocaust memorial will be moved
from the community center to the
lemple grounds.
Tucked away in a residential
area two miles north of Shaare
Zion, it will be the last stand for
S60 Jews, the remnants of a community that numbered as many as
3,000 between World Wars I and
Most are over 65. Of the chil·
dren, few expect to stay.
Sioux City is an archetype of
America's vanishing heartland
Jewish communities, the quiet fadIng of a once-vibrant, often quirky
feature of the nation's small-town
social and cultural landscape.
OulpOSts of Judaism from a few
dozen to a few thousand souls once
slretclted from mining and logging

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In the 1880s, about 30 percent
of all U.S. Jews lived in Jewish
communities of fewer than I ,000.
the kind found mostly outside
major metropolitan areas.
Jews arc becoming more dispersed - a study found 90 percent
living in the nation's 30 largest
metropolitan areas in I 986, compared with 90 percent in the I 7
largest metropolitan areas m I 936
- but fewer are m outlymg areas .
In I957, Annerican Jewish Committee figures showed 90 percent
of the nation's teen-age and adult
Jews lived in urban areas w1th at
Jea.~t 250,000 res1dents.
Of the 5.8 million Jews in the
United States today, slightly more
than half live in center cities, 45
percent are in suburbs and 5 per·
cent are out~ide metropolitan areas.
The nonmetropolitan Jew is a
virtual nonentity in academic studies and downright invisible in Irving Howe histories, Philip Roth and
Saul Bellow novels, Neil Simon
and Wendy Wasserstein plays, television shows 'like "Seinfeld," the
humor of the late Lenny Bruce, the
zaniness of Jackie Mason and other
popular culture.
In the 1920s, there were more
than 400 Jewish communities with
100 to 999 people, 7 percent of the
nation's Jewish population.
In 1937, a JewiSh census found
9,800 U.S . communities of 100
Jews or fewer.
They and their descendants were
the least-likely in the country to
remain Jewish, according to a
Commentary magazine article m
1952, "The Disappearing SmallTown Jew," by Rabbi Lee J.
Levinger, a native of Burke, Idaho,
and veteran of pulpits in Paducah,
Ky., Evansville, Ind., and Wilmington, Del.
"Thus as time passes, it seems
that we shal I soon have to write off
most of the I 50,000 village Jews
from the roster of American
Jewry," Levingcr wrote. "True,
they are but 3 percent of our total
number. But they have included
many of our boldest and most
admirable spirits, and we can hardly be indifferent to their loss.''
Only in New England and a few
scattered areas with unusually
strong local economies are there
stable or growing Jewish communities in the hinterlands, sociologist
Goldstein said.
"The Midwest has been a major
Continued on E-4

I

wv

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page-E3

"

TO OBSERVE SOtb ANNIVERSARY ·A couple walk past the
memorial to the 1944 Warsaw Uprising in Warsaw recently. Two~undred thousand Polish lives were lost in the 1944 uprising, taklllg nearly five decades for Poland to regain self-determination and

set straight the ili.•torical facts about the re\Oit. Commemorations
or the 50th anniversary or the anti-Nazi and anti-Soviet upris.ing
will be held on Aug. I, in the presence or U.S. Vife President AI
Gore, German President Roman llerzog, British Prime Minister
John Major and other JIOiiticians. (AP)

Old-time storytellers coming to an end in Egypt
EDITOR'S NOTE -There
are only t.hree of them left now,
the old-t1me storytellers who
enthrall tourists with legends or
Egypt's pyramids, but the one
they call Champion seems as
much a rixture as the ancient
monuments themselves. When he
quits talking about the pyramids,
he says, he'd just as soon die.
By MIMI MANN
Associated Pres.~ Writer
GIZA PLATEAU, Egypt
The pyram1ds were their classrooms , the long-dead pharaohs
their teachers.
They didn 't have to read about
the legends that haunt the world's
most famous tourist attractions.
Their fathers and grandfathers told
them the stories, as their fathers
and grandfathers had told them.
Most never bothered to Jearn to
read anyway.
But now, with the advent of tour
books and glib guides, the last generation of old-time storytellers is
coming to an end. There were 200
or so left 20 years ago. Today,
there arc three.
None is more famous than the
one they call Champion. Seventyone, blind in one eye, limping
slightly on his right leg, he's still
filled with the mystery and history
of monuments that have awed
mankind since their creation 4,600
years ago.
"The day I stop talking about
the pyramids and the Sphinx is the
day I want to die," says Champion,
sipping mint tea before heading
hack to sec how the Sphinx is
doing, a minute's walk away.
He admits he can't read, but it
doesn't matter. "I've known socalled expens who've studied the
pyramids for 20 years," he says.
"They don't know a thing."
Hefnawi Adcl Nabi Fayed was 8
when he first scampered up the
massive blocks to the pinnacle of
the Great Pyramid of Cheops. He
got his nickname - Champion because he was the world's fates!
pyramid climber.
Kin11s and world leaders came to
Egypt JUSt to see Champ1on climb
Cheops. Nobody climbed the 452
feet to the t.op faster than his six
minutes.
But Champion's days of pyramid climbing are ov~r. Antiquities

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officials now turbid such
escapades, and anyway he turned
years ago to seeing pyramids from
gro~nd level.
"Do I understand them, the
pharaohs of the pyramids? Oh,
yes," he says. "Each time I go out
among them, I understand them
better. And each time I see Chcops'
Great Pyramid, it grows more won derful."
Zahi Hawass, antiquities direc tor of the pyramids and the Sphinx,
has known Champion since the
1960s, when Hawass frrst came to
dig on Giza Plateau. Many visitors
have two reasons to come to Giza,
he said, 1.0 sec the pyramids and to
find Champion.
"Champion is a national treasure," Haw ass says. "When 1 look
at the pyramids, it's his face I see.
If he weren't here, I don't think the
pyramids would be e1thcr."
It's difficult for many to imagine the pyramids without Champion. Robed in flowing gray cotton,
he's a living monument set against
some of the world's most famous
tourist treasures.
Until two years ago, when sporadic terrorism destroyed Egypt's
famed tourist industry, Champion
was in soch demand that tour oper.
alors booked him six months in

d

Toda

·

·

1
~o;~~~L~ 10 'Ji~~~
~:~~~patie ntl y

..
. ·
.
. The pyra"!~ds Without tounsts
IS hke death, Champion says.

..
·
d The. ~ph~nx .w 1 ~hout ~eople
ocsn t oo n1cc. ~;ryw ere IS
the feel of a cemetery.
Conttnued on E-4

ROBERT M. HOLLEY,

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camps m the West to antebellum
cotton and tobacco towns in the
South. They produced the hkes of
Supreme Court Ju st 1ce LoUis D.
Brandeis, escape anisl Harry Houdini and si ng er -songwriter Bob
Dylan.
From Sioux City cam~ advice
colummsts Ann Landers and Abigail Van Buren, notcwonhy diplomats, medical researchers, lawyers
and business entrepreneurs.
In a generation or less, only the
graves of t,hosc who stayed or
returned to be buried may be left
Around Iowa, once-thriving
Jew1sh commumt1es are down to
double or even single dig1ts in Centerville, Dubuque, Fort Dodge,
Keokuk, Marshalltown, Mason
City, Muscatine, New Hampton ,
Oskaloosa and Ouumwa.
Only in Des Moines , home to
nearly half the state 's 6,000 Jews,
and the university towns of Ames
and Cedar Rapids-Iowa City has
there been stability or modest
growth.
Nearby, Omaha and Minneapolis have had about 6,500 and
22,000 Jews, respectively, for
about 20 years.
"I think what you're seeing
there is certainly characteristic of a
number of small towns ... mos~y in
the Midwest and South," said Sidney Goldstein, a sociologist at
Brown University in Providence,

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H6 71:!3

�July 31, 1994

July 31, 1994

from E-3
0 f'd! - fl"me· ·~nunued
-----It seems a strange comment on a

place that has so much to do with
death . Most experts believe the
pyramids wefe tombs for the
pharaohs. Hundreds of tombs clus·
ter around the monuments.
But for ancient Egyptians, death
was a gateway to a bountiful afler·
life . The same eternal optimism
found on ancient tomb walls is
built into the fiber of Champion.
He prepares every morning to
greet tourists, whether any show up
or not.
The Sphinx still sleeps as
Champion gathers his energy for a
sunrise rendezvous with the
pharaohs. He's lived all his life in
the magic and mystery of the pyramids and the pharaohs who built
them. His house and papyrus shop
face the enormous smile of the
Sphinx in the pyramid village
Nazleu ei-Sammcn.
"The Sphinx and l will be wail·
ing for you," he tells a visitor.
Today, hundreds of new guides,
licensed and unlicensed. scour the
pyramids area, descendants of
tourist tipsters who have touted the
pyramids and the Sphinx for mm:e
than 2,000 years.
Mass tourism produced massive
changes in the way visitors sec the
pyramids. Many groups spend only

\

\

I

I

.I I.

I( \

T~xans

an hour or so with them.
Champion cherishes the days
when tourists took time to lislen to
~hat the old storytellers had to say,
ume to conlemplate the legacies of
the pharaohs.
"Rush, rush. They're killing the
tourists. Whoa!" he says.
Champion prefers groups who
spend all day, several days, at his
s1de. He won't hear of peering at
the work of the pharaohs from
inside an air-conditioned bus,
· e1ther.
His groups must walk and feel.
"Feel the stones that made the
pyramids," Champion says .
"Walk around the pyramids. See
and feel as I see and feel; know
them as I have le&lt;tmed to know
them all my life."
Dorothea Traub of Berlin was
among 20 German tourists who
spent three days walking and talk ing with Champion in early June.
Her group had come to Egypt to
meditate, to experience what some
believe to be enonnous energy surrounding the pyramids, temples
and tombs.
"It's his hean, not his head, that
makes Champion so special,"
Traub says. "It' s Champion I'll

By JOSH LEMIEUX
Associated Press Writer
ARROYO CITY, Texas - It's
a little past sunrise . The shimmer·
ing waters of Laguna Madre extend
for mile after mile of golden rip·
pies.
"Th1s is the Laguna Madre to
me, clear and shallow," says Mike
Farmer of the National Audubon
Society . Fish splash around his
boat. Bright-pink roseate spoonbills
swoop overhead to feed in nearby
wetlands.
Laguna Madre . The Mother
Lagoon.
The saltwater bay, stretching
130 miles down the Gulf Coast, is a
vast cradle of wildlife between the
South Texas mainland and the bar·
rier sands of Padre Island.
It's a rare environment only a
few feet deep, where hundreds of
marine and bird species breed, feed
and thrive. It's also worth hundreds
of millions of dollars to the area
economy.
But, increasingly, scientists say
the Laguna Madre is under threat.
• Underwater meadows of sea
grasses - the core habitat in the
food chain - are disappearing at
alarming rates.
• The brown tide, a mysterious
algal bloom, is spreading persis·
tently, clouding bay waters and
perhaps threatening fisheries.
• The Arroyo Colorado, the
largest source of freshwater into
the Lower Laguna Madre, is loaded
with pollution that may be feeding
the brown tide.
• Large tracts of wetlands and
tidal Oats, which provide fishing
areas for migratory waler birds and
shorebirds, have been lost to what
is called "spoil," a dark silt
dredged from the bay bottom.
The Army Corps of Engineers
dredges in the Laguna Madre to
keep the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway open for barge traffic between
Corpus Christi and Brownsville.
"The Laguna Madre syslem has
a series of insults coming into it,

Jewish ... _c_o...:..~t_Inu_e_d__,ro_m_E_-3_ _ _ _ __

•
'

0

•
LOSING JESSICA • Roberta D~Boer of Ann Arbor, Mich.,
poses with her new book, "Losing Jessica," last week at her home
in Ann Arbor. In her book, DeBoer writes about th~ custody battle
surroundin~ Jessica, the child Robert and Dan DeBoer adopted. In

area of loss of Jewish population.''
he said. "The Midwest has lost
population to every other region of
the country."
In the United States, Jews have
followed economic growth to a
greater extent than the general pop·
ulation.
"A few scattered Jews came
with the early pioneers in every
section of the country," Levinger
July, 1993, the DeBoers lost custody of baby Jessica to Jessica's
wrote.
biological parents, Dan and Cara Schmidt of Blairstown, Iowa.
In 1837, Alexander Levi, a
(AP)
native of France who settled in
Dubuque, became the frrst natural·
ized citizen in the Iowa Territory.
Twenty ,years later. Godfrey
Hattenbach, 44, a native of Darm·
stadt, Germany, and his wife were
were going to have a serious prob· the success ot tile tletmar reef over the first Jews to move to Sioux
Iem on our hands," said Belmar the next 18 months.
City, where Iowa meets South
The Avalon beach was 200 to Dakota and Nebraska.
Mayor Kenneth J. Pringle.
"We had no choice. If we want 250 feet wide afler sand replenish·
David A. Magee, a meatpacker,
a Jersey Shore, we have to take the in g. Areas on either side of the reef traveled 800 miles to Cincinnati to
place of nature and replace sand have lost most or all of that sand, be converted to Judaism so he
that is lost," said Michael S. while the beach behind the reef has could marry the Hattenbachs'
Bruno, director of the Davidson retained I 00 feet of the new sand, daughter, Adelia, in 1876. Six
Laboratory, a hydrodynamic and Bruno said.
years laler, he was elected mayor.
Another sign of the project's
Reform services in the 1890s
ocean engineering center localed at
the Stevens lnstitule of Technology success, Bruno said, was the emer· were held in a Unitarian Church
gence of marine life around the that was built with substantial Jew·
in Hoboken.
ish support. A Unitarian minister,
The Stevens Institute has been reef, including a seal.
The stale and local communities the Rev. Mary Stafford, sometimes
studying the I ,000-foot reef
installed at Avalon last year and the are paying the $2 million cost of conducted Jewish marriages and
900-foot reef completed recently at the New Jersey Pilot Reef Project.
funerals when a rabbi could not be
May Point. It will also
brought to town.
The trickle of mostly German, •
Westernized Jews was swamped by
devout, din-poor immigrants from
a tidal wave of 2 million who Oed
to the United States from pogroms
and oppression in Russia and
neighboring lands.
Mostly from villages in what is
now Belarus, especially Kapulie,
ncar Minsk, they came to a frontier
town booming with stockyards,
slaughterhouses and 100 passenger
train stops a day.
The Jewish community in Sioux
City grew from a couple hundred in
1890 to nearly 2,500 by World War
&gt;tJ.

New Jersey hopes to stem beach erosion
By NED KILKELL Y
Associated Press Writer
BELMAR, N.J. - Three hun·
dred feet off shore, a crane on a
barge lowered 21 -ton triangular
concrete blocks into the Atlantic.
Evcntually, they will form an artificial reef.
Onlookers hoped that installation of the final man-made reef in a
$2 million pilot project wili stem
beach erosion along the Jersey
Shore, protecting not only the shore
but also the region's economy.
Scientists over the next 18
months will study how well the
"Beachsaver" reef controls beach
erosion.
Based on the initial success of
two similar reefs Installed in Avalon and Cape May Point,
researchers, the reefs developers
and area politicians expressed confidence that the project will offer a
solution to a problem that has frustrated environmentalists. residents
and tourists for decades.
"There arc things we can do to
stop beach erosion," state Sen.
Andrew R. Ciesla said July 21 at a
news conference under a brilliant
sun.
"Real technology is available to
preserve an economy that is essen·
tial and perhaps synonymous with
the Jersey Shore." he added.
In the background, the crane on
the barge began lowering the Irian-

gular concrete sections to a team of
divers, who maneuvered the mterlocking pieces that will eventually
form a I ,000-foot-long reef along
the ocean noor.
The reef is being installed
between two jetties that border the
towns of Belmar and Spring Lake
off a beach that barely existed
before last April, when it was
replenished with 70,000 cubic
yards of sand.
Richard Cretcr, president of
Breakwaters International Inc., the
Flemington-bas'ed .company that
developed and installs the artJficial
reefs, said the Belmar reef will cost
$600,000 and should be finished
within a month. Made of specially
designed concrete, it should last
more than 50 years, he said.
The Belmar beach was consid·
ered ideal because of the area's
importance to the Shore's tourism
industry and its long history of ero·
sion, heightened by a series of
storms over the past three years.
A concrete sea wall that collapsed after being weakened by the
Halloween storm of 1991, the
northeaster of December 1993 and
extremely high tides last winter
threatened to let the ocean overrun
Ocean Avenue, which runs adjacent to the boardwalk. That would
expose a sewer line that runs
underneath the road.
"If we didn't move quickly, we

distasteful. As many of his contem·
poraries discovered years later, the
hippie subculture was more a dead·
end party than a social movement,
Ligammari says.
He put on his police uniform
Aug. 27, 1969. Soon after, he was
married to his junior-high sweet·
hean and raising a family.
"I was a little bit disenchanted
after Woodstock," Ligammari
says. "The 'movement' or the situ·
ation had just taken itself to such
extremes that it wasn't doing anything for me anymore.
"At Woodstock, I just saw pco·
pie who were there not because
they wanted to change the world
but to have sex and drugs and rock
'n' roll. It wasn't real pretty, and
that was alii needed to say, 'Yeah,
maybe I'll go and do the establish·
ment thing.' Maybe it was just a
matler of growing up."
It wasn't an easy decision. Old
friends called him a sellout and
turned their backs, and soon Lig·
ammari's only friends were cops.
At once point, he had an uncom·
fortable encounter with some high
school classmates: He had to fingerprint them after a marijuana
bust.
Seven years after Woodstock,
while arresting a burglary suspec~
Ligammari was shot in the chest by
an accomplice. He was critically
injured, but his badge deflected the
bullet away from his heart. The
bullet remains lodged between his
lith and 12th ribs; the badge his
old friends had no respect for may
have saved his life.
After a year-Ion~ convalescence, Ligammari quit t.he police.
He dahbled in other jobs. then went
to law school, workinl! as a prosecutor before going mto private
practice.

(EDITOR'S NOTE - Here's
a school established in the Ameriean West by a Buddhist scholar,
a place where the past meets the
present to crtate a future ct intellectual and intuitive thought.
Sound a little strange? Well,
come visit the Jack Kerouac
School or Disembodied Poetics or
the Emily Dickinson School or
Silent Scribbling.)
By MOLLY HALL
Associated Press Writer
BOULDER, Colo. - In 1974,
an exiled Tibetan scholar invited
dozens of artists and spiritual lead·
ers to the Colorado foothills to ereate a new kind of university, blend·
ing both Eastern and Western tradi·
tions.
Today, the Naropa lnstitule has
750 students studying everything
from Buddhism to African drum·
ming to t'ai chi ch'uan. The school
offers 16 bachelor and masters pro·
grams, including Buddhist Studies,
Contemplative Psychology, Environmental Studies and Gerontology.
Modeled after Nalanda, an
ancient Indian university which
emphasized the merging of intellect
and intuition, the private school
continues to atyract renowned East·
tim scholars and Western artists.
Over the recent Founh of July
weekend, the Naropa Institute
marked its 20th Anniversary with a
tribute to poet Allen Ginsberg, an
emeritus du'llCtor and co-founder of
Nampa's Jack Kcrouac School of
tlisembodied Poetics.
: Artists attending this year's
event included Anne Waldman,
t,awrence Ferlinghetti, Marianne
Paithfull, Ken Kesey, Gary Snyder,
lttilip Glass. and Meredith Monk.
: Ginsberg, who now teaches at
Jrooldyn College, remembers the
early days of the Naropa Institute
Is "energetic and outrageous."
: "It was about institutionalizing
at American Bohemia and
betan Buddhism, the crazy wis·
m. not fenced in," Ginsberg
l!ys.
: Naropa was founded by Oxfo~·
cated Chogyam Trungpa RIDhe and fueled, in part, by the
cination with Eastern religions
America among Beat Generation
ets and their counterculture

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RECALLS WOODSTOCK DAYS· Attorney Anoy "Pigpen"
Ligammari looks through his original program and some snap·
shots from Woodstock in the book-lined conference room at his
law firm in Niagara Falls, N. Y. recently. Ligammari may have
been th~ rrrst person to bail out of the Woodstock generation and
ease into the big chill. Ten days after sliding down mudhills at
Woodstock 25 years ago, he hosed himself orr, got a haircut and
entered the police academy. (AP)

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birds of prey _
Laguna Madre contain s the
world's largest concentration of
reddish egrets. It provides habitat
for endangered piping plovers,
peregrine falcons, Kemp 's ridley
sea turtles and an amazing array of
shorebirds and ncotropical migratory birds.
Most of the North American
population of redhead ducks winler
in the Laguna, feeding almost
exclusively on shoal grass, a
species of seagrass.
The underwater meadows aren 'I
only important to ducks. Seagrasses in Laguna Madre estuaries of
Texas and Mexico provide crucial
nursing habitat for Gulf of Mexico
shrimp, a $600 million annual crop
in Texas alone.
"Our policy is to protect every
blade of seagrass we can," says
Deyaun Boudreaux, coastal envi·
ronmcntal director for the Texas
Shrimp Association. "We are sitting here guarding the last system
that has scagrass beds.''
Studies by Christopher Onuf at
the National Wetlands Research
Center in Corpus Christi show a
drastic decline is shoalgrass: from
82 percent cov~rage of the bay bot·
tom in 1965 to 33 percent by 1988.
Manatee grass, which is less
nutritious for species such as red head ducks, has replaced much of
the shoalgrass.
The main reason for the decline
of shoalgrass has been the Corps of
Engineers' practice of dumping
spoil directly into the bay, Onuf
says. The sediment clouds the
water, reducing sunlight to underwater plants, he says.
Scientists, shrimpers and fishermen also worry about the brown
tide. The single-celled al~ae, which
first appeared in Baffm Bay in
1989, has gotten worse each spring.
The brown tide has been report·
ed as far north as Galveston Bay
and as far south as the Mexican
Laguna Madre, says Ken Dunton, a
researcher at the University of
Texas Marine Science Institute.
"No other algal bloom has ever
been recorded for such a long period," Dunton warns.
"In the Upper Laguna Madre,
light has decreased more than 50
percent due to the shading effects
of the brown tide, and consequent·
ly, sea grass growth and biomass

have decreased," Dunton says.
Scientists believe that if the
brown tide continues at its current
rate, it will eventually harm fi sh
and shellfish stocks.
"We are cenain that the arroyo
and everything that's gmng into 11
right now is fe eding th e brown
tide ," says Richard Weldon, vice
president of the Valley S(XJrtsmen
Club, which wants to -clean up the
Arroyo Colorado.
The 89-mile arroyo was a main
distributary of the Rio Grand e
before the mighty border river was
dammed . Today, the arroyo is
murky, slow-moving, and in many
stretches, smelly.
It serves as a drainage canal for
wastewater from more than 20
cities in the Lower Rio Grande
Valley, where the population is
burgeoning and some sewage treat·
ment plants are inadequate.
The Arroyo Colomdo also car·
ries into the Laguna wastewater
from Taiwanese-owned shrimp
farms in Arroyo City and the runoff
of pesticides and fertilizers from
Valley farms.
Although the arroyo didn't
cause the brown tide initially, its
nutrient-laden waters may be helping the algae spread, Weldon says.
Weldon proposes a series of aerators along the arroyo to increase
oxygen and offset the buildup of
organic matter. His group also is
seeking tax dollars for seuling
ponds to help cleanse the waler on
its way to the Laguna.
Weldon says he sees the politi·
cal momentum shifting toward
increasing protection of the arroyo
and the Mother Lagoon.
"The awareness is heightened
to a point where it has to change,"
he says.

AG's office
erred, now says
report was filed
CANTON, Ohio (AP)- A pri·
vate fund-raiser hired by t.he Ohio
Veterans of Foreign Wars had filed
a 1993 fmancial repon. t.he attorney
general's office said.
Robyn Ziegler, a s(Xlkeswoman
for the attorney general's office,
said the agency's computer erroneously indicated the form had not
been filed.

pens,"' says President John Cobb.
''Then 2,500 p~ople showed up
and they realized they had some·
thing going.''
The Jack Kerouac School of
- Disembodied Poetics was founded
by Ginsberg and Waldman the next
year. The name was a conundrum,
said Waldman, on the school's lack
of a building at that time and the
spectral presence of its namesake,
wriler Jack Kerouac, who had long
since died.
"So disembodied in the sense
that people were no longer here and
teaching in their bodies but there
was a sense of this alive lineage,"
she says.
In those frrst years, "Allen and I
were rooming together ... and we
stayed up all night designing our
academy of the future," she says.
"That it would be an international school and we would have
poetic chairs, ... the Emily Dickinson school of silent scribbling.
"We'd have a chair of Arabic

poetry but we'd fill it with a young
Israeli poet. You know, some idea
of really getting the world togeth·
er."
The writing program has since
been franchised, with a sister
school in Vienna, Die Schule fur
Dichtung, with regular exchanges
of both faculty and students.
.
Waldman recalls those early
years, when a handful of loyal stu·
dents met in classrooms without
heat at a school without accreditation. The school was accredited in
1986 by the North-Central Association of Colleges and Schools.
Naropa faculty members are still
paid less than at other schools, and
most have outside work. Waldman
says other struggles included the
lack of fax machines, parking
spaces and desks.
"So many of the faculty who
work here, do so out of inspiration.
vision, and real commitment to this
fled~ling projec~ and you have to
see U that way," she says.

Waldman says the rewards
include teaching in a tight community of thinkers and artists.
"A student coming in who
expects, 'I pay my money, I'm here
and this is what I'm gmng to get'
-that's completely shatlered from
da,Y one." she says. "They're
gmng to see our suffering, going to
see our heartbreak, the despair that
goes with being a creator.··
·
While Eastern thought perme·

.Honda now

u,..

-•
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•

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•

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• '

Doug Howard, left, and Darrell Peterson painted one of the
to the Flying Pig sculptur~ at Cincinnati's Sawy~r Point
Park last week. The bases are steamboat stack replicas and the
historic reputation as the meat
pigs are dedicated to the c'
packing or the world, or
" (AP)

b~s

IAL

"'!11·
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CCII IF WII ASSUR£0.

l

f'.':sThere was a lineage t.hrough
te poets such as Guy Snyder, and
~nly Jack Kerouac raved .a_bout
'u~ism in some of hiS wnnngs,
so it was very much in the air for
l).le," says Anne Wal~. director
of the writing and poetiCS program.
~ At the first session, Rinpoehe
~nounced Naropa would be a 100.
lear project, "where East meets
West and spaiks can fly."
•· "Most of the other people that
were around him at that time
-4ewed i~as. 'OK, we'll do it for
the summer and see what hap-

ates the Naropa atmosphere, Wald·
man says students arcn 't pressured
to convert
"Naropa itself has cut tics with
the church so to speak, so it's basically a secular school with a contemplative backdrop," Waldman
says. "Students arcn 't coming here
to be Buddhist."
The number of degree-students
has doubled in the past four years
and Cobb, a former Boulder

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1,000 students by th e year 2000 .
Both the writing and psychology
department.~ capped enrollment for
the first time in the school's history. Two-thirds of iL~ students come
from outside Colorado.
The school is largely tuition
dependent. but has been helped by
federal money and anonymous
endowments. And a recent Gap
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and to me it ' s at tre crossroads
right now," says Steve Thompson,
manager of Laguna Atascosa
National Wildlife Refuge, which
shares 12 miles of the Lower Laguna Madre 's eastern shore.
"Are we going to con!inue the
insults or slow them down?"
As Farmer guides hi s 16-foot
boat from the mouth of the Arroyo
Colorado into the open bay, he
points to large tracts of thinly vcge·
tated land that he says were once
part of the bay's tidal flats.
Over the years, both sides of the
rive r mouth have been used to
dump dredging spoil.
''Even the so-called contain ment sites erode into the bay,"
Farmer complains.
The Laguna Madre is one of
only three bays in the world that
are hypersaline - meaning saltier
than sea water - but still support
abundant wildlife.
The other two productive hypersaline bays are the Mexican Lagu·
na Madre, just across th e Rio
Grande from Texas, and the
Sivash, adjacent to the Sea of Azov
on the Crimean Peninsula.
Even though the shallows of the
Laguna Madre comprise only onefifth of the Texas coastal bay area.
the lagoon accounts for more than
half the state's catch of commercial
fin fish each year.
The wa~m waters are rich in
sport fishermen favorites such as
redfish, black drum and spoiled sea
trout. Robert Ditton at Texas
A&amp;M's Department of Wildlife
and Fisheries estimates that fishing
and other tourism activities that
depend on a healthy Laguna Madre
generate at least $400 million a
year for the regional economy.
Protected from overdevelop·
ment by Padre Island National
Seashore, the Laguna Atascosa
refuge and the sprawling King and
Kenedy ranches, the Laguna Madre
is the cleanest bay in Texas, and
the only one that retains extensive
seagrasses.
"In spite of all the abuse inflict·
ed on the Laguna Madre, it retains
an amazing regenerative capacity,"
says Tony Reisinger, marine exlension agent for Cameron County.
Biologists say the seagrasses
provide oxygen and a foundation
for t.he food chain, from microor·
ganisms to the largest fish and

,..--When pigs fly?----.

Past meets present in unique school for higher learning

YOUR IIN,..D II Oil lAY

WopAstock veteran had
speedy onset of 'Big Chill'
By DAVID GERMAIN
Associated Press Writer
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y.Andy "Pigpen" Ligammari may
have been the first person to bail
out of the Woodstock generation
and ease into the big chill.
Ten days after slidirlt~, down
mudhills at Woodstock, he' hosed
himself off, got a haircut and
entered t.he police academy.
Unlike the characters in the
1983 movie "The Big Chill," who
took years to grow jaded over their
t960s idealism, "I got chilly very
young," says t.he 43-year-old Li~­
ammari, now an attorney m h1s
hometown of Niagara Falls.
"I went Woodstock. barber.
police dep.artment. In that order."
Ligamman says.
.
Ligammari was 18 and JUSt
weeks out of high school when he
and some friends set off for Wood·
stock. Though he looked the part of
t.he Woodstock hippie, wit.h long
hair and ratty clothes that earned
him the nickname Pigpen, Ligam·
mari was not the typical flower
child.
_
He grew up in a conservative,
Roman Catholic household wit.h a
steady work ethic. At t.he time,. he
was working in a factory makmg
bulletprOOf vests for U.S. troops in
Vietnam and already had passed
the exam to become a Niagara Falls
cop.
But Ligammari had doubts
about police work, .considering t.he
anti-establishment ume m wh1ch he
grew up. A guitar plarer, he als~,
had a dream about bemg a mus1·
cian; Ligammari viewed Woodstock as a watershed event that
might steer him one way or the
other.
It did. He loved the music but
found the wild Woodstock scene

I, when the gates of immigration
slammed shut.
The first synagogue was Adas
Jeshurun which opened in 1899,
complete with ritual bath. Its intricately hand-carved Torah· ark,
made by an unschooled cattle trad·
er named Abraham Shulkin, is dis·
played at the Jewish Museum in
New York - a rare example of an
ornate, Old World aron kodesh
made by a Jew in the New World
(Jim Sherman is a great-grandson
of Shulkin).
Mount Sinai, which opened in
190 I, was as Reform as Ad as
Jeshurun was Orthodox.
Between World Wars I and II,
60 to 70 clubs, classes and organizations ranging from socialist
workers to Zionists met at the com·
munity &lt;;.enter in Sioux City.
There were two or three kosher
butchers, a Jewish bakery, delicatessens and restaurants featuring
Jewish delicacies, amateur Yiddish
theater and occasional stops by
touring Yiddish uoupes.
In 1944, a one-mile stretch of
West Seventh Street contained 22
Jewish-i!wned businesses.
Then came the end of World
War II. Of the 418 Sioux City Jews
in the armed forces in 1945, only
114 returned to stay.
For three decades, prosperity
masked a gradual population
decline.
A new Jewish Community Cen·
ter, built in 1950, contained a gym·
nasium. weight room. handball
court, pingpong and pool tables,
classrooms, meeting rooms, a canteen, kosher kitchen and mikveh,
Jev.ish teen-agers made it their
hangout during lunchtime and afler
classes at Central High School, two
blocks to the south.
Central High closed in 1972. BY
then the Jewish population was
below 1,200. The community center was used less and less.

!'

jl

rally to save rare wetlands

(EDITOR'S NOTE- On tbe
surface, it looks healthy enough,
even beautiful, but underneath
Ibis vast saltwater bay in Texas
are the seeds or its destruction.
Now caretakers want to rally citi·
zens and government alike to
protect the Mother Lagoon .)

remember.' '

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Page-E&amp;-Sunday Times-Sentinel

lead in NL
Central

America's oldest r----A/1 in a (12-hour) day's work
funeral concern
boasts of history
(EDITOR'S NOTE - It's
reputed to be America's oldest
funeral home, a former Philadelphia cabinet shop that more than
two centuries ago found a lively
busines.~ tending to the dead . The
233-year hi,tury of the •.hop mi~ ­
rors Amerira S changmg atta tudes toward death and funer als.)
1

lly TED ANTIIONY
AssO&lt;·iated Pres.s Writer
PHILA DELPHIA - History 's
broo m has swept away the names
of th e falkn Revo lutionary War
so ld ios rcs po nst blc for Jacob
Knorr's cabmet shop becoming a
collm factory on an October day in
177 7
Som e' we re Briti sh redcoats,
other&lt; Am eri can patriots fighting
und er Ge n. Geo rge Washin gton .
They clashed in the Battle of Germantow n, just up the cobblestone
road from Knorr 's firm . From that
day forward . the shop found its
livc!ICSl bu smcss '" handlmg the
dead .
Today. hum ans have found
more effi cient ways to kill each
other, and the world has changed in
other ways: AIDS and cancer, not
croup and con sumption. are the
killers pooplc fear .
But death remains death, and in
the comer cabinetmaking firm that
became Kirk &amp; Nice Funeral Home
- the mortuary that bills itself as
America' s oldest - is sull burying
Philadelphians, both renowned and
little known.
Through all those lifetimes, all
those thousands of funerals and
tears, the way Americans view
life's end has evolved as much as
the nation itself.
"The funeral itself hasn't
changed. It's the poople who have
changed," said General Manager
Joseph J. O'Keefe Sr., leading Kirk
&amp; Nice through Its ftrsl year ever
under non -family ownership.
Jacob Knorr opened his cabinet
shop in 1761, and initially coffinmaking represented only a shver of
his furniture business. But on Oct
4, 1777, the Battle of Genmantown
turned the fledgling community
into a killing field.
Washington's forces lost the
conflict, and Knorr's shop was
commandeered by British soldiers.
He built caskets for many of the
650 revolutionaries and 550 loyal·
ists who fell that day.
"More coffins were made that
day than any day before or after,"
Kirk &amp; Nice records say.
For the next lwo centuries, the
business - which evolved into a
full-time monuary - was passed
down. A Knorr married a Nice, and
in the mid-1800s, an apprentice
named Kirk was promoted to partner. It remained ·in the family until
being sold last year.
Today, the interior of Kirk &amp;
Nice- rebuilt more than once
after frres and decay - is boastful
of its history.
The bright, spacious anteroom is
decidedly unfunercal. The expected
chandeliers and candelabra are supplemented by unexpected touches.
Grandfather clocks stand in every
comer. A grand piano sits nearby.
and one table holds an old Victrola
and antique cylindrical records.
Happy paintings and old documents adorn the walls.
In one room, an 18th-century
oak cabinet has become a showcase
for cremation urns. Historical artifacts dot the place, from collections
of Liny toy soldiers to the frrst foreign-language Bibles printed in the
Colonies.
The feeling is more Den Display
Case than Last Stop Before the
Grave.
"From the moment people walk
through the door, there's just so
many things for them to keep !herr
auenlion on," O'Keefe says. "It's
a natural stress reliever for grieving
people."
Call them what you will undertakers, morticians, funeral
directors - members of the funeral
industry did not always worry
about relieving stress. For decades,
American funerals were staid
affairs with little room for improvisation or personality.
Until World War II, most people
died at home and funerals were
held there or in churches. But
smaller homes and apartments
ended that tiadiLion, and mortuaries
evolved into funeral homes.
Most services before the mid20th century were religious, conservative - and often numbingly
alike.
• 'Dad generally died before
Mother," says Ho~ard Raether, a
Milwaukee funeral tndusuy consultant who headed the National
Funeral Directors Association for
36 years. "The funeral director had
a record book, and when Mother
would die the family would come
in and say, 'What did we have for
Dad?' And Liley had the same service for Mother.
"Today, the funeral of the kid
who has been killed on a mountain
bike is far different from the octogenarian who dies from
Alzheimer's disease."
People today sing pop songs,

r

\

give informal eulogies and place
lavonte possessions inside the casl et - all anathema year s ago .
Mea nwhil e, th e proliferation of
coun selors, bereavement groups
and other support network s since
the mid -1960s ha s brought death
out of the closet
" Death to many is still a pornographi c word , but to more and
more peopl e it is not," Raeth er

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
712
Pick 4:
1397
Super Lotto:
9-12-14-16-38-40
Kicker:

Page4

937796

\·

Tonight, partly rloudy. Low
In 60s. Tuesday, cloudy. ftlgh In
80s.

•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 62

say s.
Early 17th -century coloni sts
buncd their dead in the bare ground
because th ey couldn't afford any thing cbc . The first eviden ce of
co ffin burial in America was in
1678.
By 1750. craftsmen specialized
in coffin -making as part of the
woodworking trade, and cabinetmakers became known as "undertakers. "
Into thi s environment came
Knorr, who opened his shop on a
Germantown comer that was then a
cow path. When it became a state
highway, the bu siness had to be
torn down and moved 15 feel to
accommodate automobile traffic.
Until the mid-1800s, the undertaker's job was only to build a coffin the length of a string used to
measure the deceased . But by
1875, the job included laying out
the body and tran sporting it to the
grave. Funeral services were added
a few decades later.
With three viewing chapels,
Kirk &amp; Nice still conducts 300
funerals annually, down from its
one-time high of 1,000 yearly, but
still a brisk business despite stiff
competition from more than 200
funeral homes around the city. It
opened a new location in Plymouth
Mcclin~. a suburb, in the 1960s.
As it evolved, Kirk &amp; Nice took
on the trappings of the eras it
passed through. The result: a place
that emphasizes the ways people
lived, not just the surroundings of
death.
"Not until funeral directors
actually said, 'Hey - this doesn't
have 10 be dark and gloomy all the
time,' did it start to change,"
O'Keefe says. "People come here,
and if nobody told you it was a
funeral home, you wouldn't
know.''

The body of John Heinz, the
senior senator from Pennsylvania,
passed through Kirk &amp; Nice in
1991 after he died in an airplane
collision over suburban Philadel·
phia. The city's legendary exmayor Frank Rizzo's funeral also
was held there.
The last relative, Mary Ann
Henderson. sold the family business in July 1993 to Stewart Enterprises Inc., a New Orleans conglomerate that owns hundreds of
locally operated funeral homes.
Henderson stayed on until February, then retired.
"We've seen a lot of changes.
The community has changed, but
the trust we developed hasn't,"
said assistant manager Bill Wilson,
a 17-year veteran retained by Stewart Enterprises.
Raether says he has come across
no older funeral home in the country.

The people who run Kirk &amp;
Nice say they're willing to change
with the times - a tiail, they say.
that has helped the business survive
so long.

Copyright I 994

1 S.CUon, 10 Pageo 35 conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 1, 1994

A Muldmodla Inc. Newopaper

Top state education officers get pay hik~
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - State government's top education officers head into the new school year with pay
raises at a time when Gov. George Voinovich is critical of local district spending on administrators.
But Voinovich is not complaining about the
$7,000 pay boost granted to Ted Sanders, superinlen·
dent of public instruction, or the $9,000 increase for
Elaine Hairston. higher education chancellor.
Michael Dawson, Voinovich 's press secretary,
said independent boards determine the salaries of
both officials.
The elected State Board of Education at its July
meeting raised Sanders' salary from $119,000 to

I

.I

work a 12-hour day and can finish several towers in that time.
(AP)

Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric workers painted an electric tower
near Miamitown, Ohio, last week. A team or eight painters

$126,193 . The appointed Ohio Board of Regents
rai sed Ms. Hairston's salary from $126,194 to
$135,000.
State law prohibits the superintendent's salary
from exceeding that of the chancellor.
"The governor is extremely satisfied with Dr.
Sanders' performance and thinks he is an outstanding
superintendent of public instruction," Dawson said.
Voinovich is paid $115,762, the governor's office
said. Last month, he complained that schools were
too quick 10 hire administiators and too slow to cut
costs.
Salary lists that school districts provide to the
Ohio Department of Education show 10 of the state's
714 school superintendents were paid $100,000 or

Mid-American town celebrates Little League
lly JOHN HANNA
Associated Press Wtiler
BAXTER SPRINGS, Kan. - If
Liule League baseball has a Yankee Stadium, it's here, along Grant
Street, between 14th and 15th.
The grass is even, green and
thick. The infield is a perfect red
clay. Local merchants' advertisements cover the outfield fences,
200 feet from home all around. A
breeze makes a seal four rows up in
the right-field bleachers as good a
place as any to see a game.
For three decades, Baxter
Springs has had a place in Little
League baseball in Kansas similar
to the one the Yankees had in the
American League during their
glory days.
The state Liule League champion is as likely to be an all-star team
from B~xter Springs as a team from
anywhere. The park has been the
site of just about every state and
regional tournament possible, and a
small museum is dedicated to the
boys who play and the adults who
coach them.
If you want to know why this
town of 4,700 people in far southcast Kansas has such a strong program, 9-year-old Michael Denning
has this observation: "It's cool."
Adults are crazy about the
game, and they wanl their children
to be crazy about i~ too. Men who
played 20 or 25 years ago now
coach their sons and nephews.
"It's a baseball town, Baxter
is," says Doug Garvin, father of
Cody Garvin, the 8-year-old second baseman for the Ozark Salad
team. "He'd be heartbroken if he
couldn't play ball."
The city has Senior League
'baseball for boys and a girls' soft·
ball program, but the Liulc League
program is its gem, run on a budget
of about $15,000 a year.
About 160 kids, ages 6 tluough
12, play in the program in its three
divisions, including T-ball for 5-

and 7. year olds and minor league
for 8- and 9- year olds. Regularseason games begin in late April
and end during the July Fourth holiday, after which older boys stan
Little League tournaments.
Since 1964, a Baxter Springs'
all-star team has won the state tournament 14 times,_ including eight
straight tttles stanmg m 1984. The
last title was in 1991.
Baxter Springs' teams have
been in their share of regional tour-

naments, too, but haven't won the
Lillie League World Series yet.
They came within one game in
1955.
The Lillie League program
began in 1956, after boys had
played in a league sponsored by the
local Kiwanis for years. The stadi·
urn was built then, though most of
the improvements came after 1969.
Nobody practices on the field ,
which is used only for games. All
of its bleachers, except for the ones

in left field, are covered. There is a
building for indoor balling practice
nearby.
The town's love of baseball can
be traced back for decades. During
World War II, local residents
would come in large crowds to
watch teams of teen-agers play
because it was the only real enter·
tainment during those years, said
Calvin Mishler, one of the league's
consultants. who has coached fnom .· ..
the beginning.

.'

,.OBACCO KING
''The King Of Tobacco

Prices~~

HONORING BIKERS - State Rep. Mark
Malon"e 0-South Point, presented the Meigs
County Bikers with a plaque for their service to
the community Saturday. The bikers rode about
70 miles to Albens and around the region to

Cigarettes By The Carton

Local News in Brief:

GPC •••••••••••••••••••••••• s8.30 After $3.00 ·~bate
BASIC .................... 59.30 AFTER $2.00 REBATE
KOOL 1OO's· •••••••••• 510.30 After $4.00 Rebate
lORAL •••••••••••••••••••• s8.30 After $3~00 Rebate
CAMEL•••••••••••••••••• 511.30 After $3.00 Rebate
MONARCH •••••••••••••• s8.30 After $3.00 Rebate
MONTCLAIR •••••••••••• 57.80 After $3.50 Rebate
PYRAMID •••••••••••••••• 57.90 After $3.00 Rebate
MISTY••••••••••••••••••••• s9.30 After $2.00 Rebate
COVINGTON •••••••••••• 57.40 After $3.00 Rebate

OK funds for plant's expansion
Funding has been approved for a 200-million-pounds per year
capacity expansion allhe SheU Chemical Company s Point Pleasant
polyester resins plant in Apple Grove, W.Va., the company
announced today.
The cost of the expansion was not released.
The expansion is expected to be completed by mid-1996 and wiU
bring the capacity of the plant to more than 800 million pounds per
year, including a 165-million-pound expansion completed in May.
The expansion is to meet a 20 percent growth in the need for
polyester resin used in soft drink bottles, said General Manager
Terry Persinger. The resin is also used to make food trays and other
clear containers.
Company officials said it is too soon to tell if the expansion will
create new JObs.
·
Shell Chemical Company is a division of the Houston-based
Shell Oil Company.

Police burn pot plants in Mason

Chewing Tobacco By The Carton
TAYLOR PRICES .............................. 58.39
LANCASTER•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s11.89

More than 4,500 marijuana plants, with an estimated street value
$8 million. were confiscated and burned over the weekend, the
Point Pleasant Detachment of the West Virginia State Police reponed.
Police Sgt. G.L. Clark said one juvenile has been arrested in connection with the cultivation and more arrests are expected.
· After receiving several phone calls, the police found the plants in
the Cornstalk Public Hunting Area near Henderson, W.Va.
Upon arrival, the police found one field of plants and requested a
helicopter. From the air, four more fields were spotted, the largest
having 1,400 plants.
Clark said the fields were surrounded with booby tiaps.
The bust could possibly be the largest in Mason County's history. Assisting the state police were the Mason and Gallia county
sheriffs departments, and the Point Pleasant police and volunteer
fire departments.

TROPHY ••••••,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 58.39
MAIL POUCH •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 512.49

REDMAN ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •12. 99
REDMAN (Golden Blend) .............. s12.49
LEVI GARREn .............................. s11. 99
PAY CAR•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s12.49
BEECHNUT ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s11.S6
STARR VALUE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s7.99

DISCOUNT

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Darwin man arrested on charges
A Darwin man wanted by the Athens Police Deparunent for an
incident at McHappy's in Athens was arrested Fnday ntghl, accord·
ing to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department reports.
.
Daniel Pierce, 36, Darwin, was transported to the county hne
where he was later transported to Lhe Athens County Jail, records
show.

Deer/car accident probed

SKOAL
S18.80 A ROLL
COPENHAGEN
s18.80 AROLL

A Syracuse man swerved to miss a ~eer Friday night and ran his
1988 Oldsmobile into a ditch causing light damage, according to a
Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
Scou Hubbard, Syracuse, was driving west on Pine Grove Road
when the accident occurred. No injuries were reported.
I

USE OUR CONVENIENT DRIVE TIRO

TOBACCO KING

I

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675·1698
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I

312·8214
370 WEST MAIN
RIPLEY

773-5645
2ND STREET
MASON

raise money for the county infirmary and the
county senior citizens' center. The annual toy
run will be held Oct. 5. Last year the bikers gave
toys to 525 children. (Sentinel photo by George
Abate)

I

Patrol tickets Pomeroy man
A Pomeroy man was cited bf the GaUia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol for driving under the influence, no operator's
license and failure to control following a one-car crash Sunday on
County Road 3 (Leading Creek).
The patrol said J3111es A. ~ond, 26, 141-1/2 B Bu~ternut
Ave., was westbound, 1-4/10 mtles south of State Route 124 tn Rut·
land Township at 10:15 p.m. when he came upo~ a nghl curve at a
set of railroad traeks. His car went off the left stde of the road and
went onto the traCks.
.
Leamond was not injured and the car was shghdy damaged, the
patrol said.

Protesters
greet health
caravan
By The Associated Press
More than 200 protesters waved
signs and jeered .~s the ': Heallh
Security Express bus vtstled a
union headquarters in southwest
Ohio to try to build support for
President Clinton's health care
plan.
The bus drove past the
protesters Sunday outside United
Food &amp; Com mere ial Workers
Local 1099 headquarters in Monroe, about 15 miles north of
Cincinnati.
Backers of health care reform
are traveling across the nation_ to
try to gain support. Erskm_e
Bowles director of the Small Bust·
ness Administiation, accompanied
the caravan on its southern Ohio
visit.
Reform proponents had lunch,
spoke at the union headquarters
and gave interviews to the medta ..
"There is no soluuon for !has
health care crisis without universal
coverage," Bowles said.
Other people described their
problems finding coverage for l'reexistin~ c~&gt;ndauons, say10g the sat~­
ation hmtted thear JOb opportum-

ties.
Protestors objected to any health
care proposal under which abor·
Lions would be covered. They also
said the government should not be
allowed to run the health care systern.
"I think ~~(re. going to do a
lousy job of ·~ S31d protester Pat
Cooksey.
The caravan slOpped later Sunday in Columbus, where it attiacted
about two dozen protesters and
supponers.

more in the school year that ended June 30.
Almost one-third of the superintendents - 2 15 were paid $70,000 and above. More than half - 431
-were paid $60,000 and above.
·
The statewide average was $64,988.
In each case. the figures represent base salary and
do not include benefits that vary among districts.
The American Association of School Administra·
tors said similar s.alaries for the nation's school systems, with enrollments ranging from 300 to I mil lion, averaged $87,717 in the last school year.
Why do superintendents in Oh1o appear to tra1l the
national average?
"Why don't you ask the governor who says we
have fat cat salaries?" said Bernard Dunnan, director

Rep. Malone creates
bill to aid firefighters
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Volunteer firefighters may gel
some much-nccdcd aid if a bill sub·
milled last week by Stale Rep.
Mark Malone passes, Malone
announced at a press conference
Friday in Tuppers Plains.
A $5 million fund would be set
aside as matching grant money,
making departments pay just 25
percent for safety equipment, fire
trucks and fire hall renovations,
said Malone, D-South Point
The smallest fire departments
would be eligible for this money those volunteer divisions in counties with less than 100,000 residents or townships with no more
than 5,000 residents, he said.
"When people are willing to
sacrifice their own lives we need to
be willing to help them get equipment so they can protect the laves
of local citizens."' Malone told a
crowd of about 20 fire department
officials. "I'm not generating new
taxes and that means someone else
will lose. It's going to take your
support in writing letters and call ing people."
The legislation is long ovcrdue
1 has
since recent government oouon
heaped more mandates and rural
areas have costly home insurance
premiums, Malone said.
"When you add it all up, the dis-

tance, the response time and lack of
equipment. there is no question lha.l
the area's volunteer fire depart·
mcnts sorely lag behind our urban
neighbors in the fare fighting business," he added.
In Malone's district - Gallia,
Jackson. Meigs and pan of
Lawrence - 36 volunteer fire
departments serve about I 00,000
people with outdated and limited
equipment.
For example, the Orange Township Volunteer Fire Department
only has 1wo tanker trucks that arc
1960 and 1963 models, fire officials said. The 30 volunteer firefighters must spend $600 each for
36 hours of training before they can
pick up a hose. said Jason Hager.
lieutenant with the department.
The department raises its money
through an annual chicken barbeque, Hager added.
Another area that sorely needs
protection is Bedford Township
that has surrounding departments
respond to local calls, said Dale
Brickles. president of the Bedford
Township V.F.D. Committee.
"We're out in the middle of
now here. We're on the botlom of
the totem pole," Bricldes said.
The 1,100 residents have raised
$8,000 during the last year to help
set up a dep&lt;irtment, Brickles said.
Area departments have donated old
CQlli'!llll(:tll which has netpeo.

SCOUT PROJECTS JUDGED - Nearly
200 projects completed by Meigs C?unly girl
scouts were judged Saturday at the fatrgroun~.
Here Aubrie Kopec, a member of Brownte
Troop 1120, Salem Center, displa~s her famil!
tree project to Dottie Bond, CoolvtUe, a coordt·

Personal income up
0.1 percent in June
WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans' income rose a scant 0.1 percent in June, the fifth straight
increase, and failed to keep pace
with a 0.4 percent spending rise,
the government said today.
The Commerce Department
reported that consumer. spending,
which represents two-thirds of the
nation's economic activity, was up
for the second straight month and
four of the last five. The June
increase matched the 0.4 percent

of lcgi slalivc services for the Buckeye Association of
School Administrators.
"When you have a situation in wh1ch we arc subject to voter initiated referenda for every dollar and
dime we can receive and spend, I believe that most
superintendents do not want their salaries to be the
lightning rod for a district when their career is on the
line," Dunnan said.
Dawson said decisions about salaries for admimstrators and teachers rest with local boards, although
the state sets a minimum level for teachers.
·'The salaries are 85 percent of expenses in school
di stricts. Obviously when you're talking about controlling costs that's one of the areas you need to look
at," Dawson said.

advance for May.
.
Income had risen 0.4 percent 10
May and the last Lime it fell was in
January, when it slipped 0.6 percent.
.
Disposable income - meome
after taxes - rose 0.1 percent m
June after a I percent increase in
May.
In another repon today, the government reported that construcu~n
spending inched up 0.2 percent 10
June.

The bill already has gained bipartisan suppon in the state House

and the bill could pass by next
spring and departments could get
money at the beginning of 1996,
·
Malone said.
This legislation would be the
first to include a funding mechanism for increasing demands, he
added.
"I think the pol would be big
enough so one community in every
county wouldgcl money every
year," Malone said. ''I'm assuming
people will not abuse this."
The bill already has 14 co-sponsors and could get about 50 cosponsors, he added. Next, the legislation must be approved in the
township and then the fmance committees.
All grant funding would be
administered by the state fare marshall, according to the legislation.
"We're going to keep it very
simple - keep it to one agency,"
Malone said.
This legislation is another building block toward auracting busi ness to the area by reducing insurance rate premiums, Malone said.
"If you own a business m rural
Ohio you are well aware of the cost
of insuring your inventory. For
those who do not. let me assure you
that the costs might stagger you
before you open the doors," he
added.

nator with the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council. Other judges were Pat Thoma, the Rn.
William Middleswarth, Carolyn Casto, Patty
Cook, Joan Corder, Bunny Kohl, April Smith,
Paige Cleek, Mary Tobin, Gail E. Hulette, and
Crystal Jelfers.

I

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