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Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

1

'Peachy':
On pies &amp;
county fairs
• Featured on page 81

Meigs livestock 'sale report
GAHS, Fairland scrimmage

Hi : 80s
Low: 60s

-Page 0 1
70 f)tr cent chance

- Page C3

of lht..rlde rstorms

Details
on Page ~~

•

lmts LEAD CLASS WINNERS- The Ci urs and
G iris Sheep Lead Class Show was held Wednesd:l~' afternoon in t he show a rena of th e fai rgrv unds. The first place winn ers in eac h class
are pict ured with th eir shee p. They a re, from

left, Rebecca Scott, j unior class winner; Alyssa
Ba ke r, pee wee class winner ; Mi chele Guess,
seni or class wi nner ; and Kelley Gruese r, fa ir
queen fi rst runnerup . (Sentinel photo by Amy 8 .
l'olt s)
'

Five top
state fair
steers are

Meigs budget board -OK•s deficit spending plan
HOG CHAMPION S - Overall grand and
reser ve champion hogs were chosen from th e
champ ion gilts and barrows. The winners were
also the grand and reserve champion barrows.
From lert ar e Fair King Chris Hamm , Fai r
Queen Michele Guess, Reserve Champion Mar-

'95 budget includes proposed 1/2% sales tax hike
ket Hog winner and Reserve Champion Da rrow
winner Amand a Wheele r, G r and Champion
Market Hog winner and Grand Champion Da rr ow winner Alliso n Pa tt e r son , and Swin e
Pr incess Leslie Parker.

bumped

ta x increase as reve nue si nce the tax has not been enacted.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Traces of
vegetable ml were found in the carcasses of five prize-winning steer
sold at the Juni or Fa ir Sale of
Champions at the Ohio State Fair.
The Ohio Expositions Commission on Thursday began procedures
to disq ualify the animal s. which
were among the top 10 steer exhibited.
t
Tests revealed that the oil had
been injected into the muscle tissue
of all five animal s. T he oil can
smooth out tissue irregularities and
IL T WINNERS -Grand and reserve
Champion Gilt winner; Jessica Justice, Grand
make a steer appear more attractive
champion gilt winners were named Wednesday
Champion Gilt winner; and Chris Hamm, 1994
to judge s, Commi ss ion er Paul
night at the fair. From lert are Michele Guess,
Fair King.
Mechling said.
1994 Fair Queen; Chad Hubbard, Reserve
The grand champion and reserve
grand champion steer auctioned ofT
at Tuesday' s sale were not
involv ed in the tampering . Liv estock exhibitors included youths in
The motion al so seeks internal
Th e de fense motion suggests
LOS ANGELES (AP) 4-H clubs and the Future Farmers Despite promises that race would documents detailing any infractions th at Fuhrman planted a bloody
of America.
not be an issue in OJ. Simpson's by Fuhrman or three other dctec· glove at Simpson's home after the
"I lind this practice reprehensi- trial , defense lawyers have filed a lives assigned to the Simpson case. bodies of Nicole Brown Simpson
ble. It jeopardizes the lon~ - stand­ motion portraying a detective who
Superior Court Judge Lance A. and Ronald Goldman were discov·
ing tradition of exhibiting ltvestock found a bloody glove at Simpson' s Ito said he would respond to the ered.
at the Ohio State Fair," said Fred estate as a racist who tries to frame motion on Aug. 31.
That glove. and another at the
Dailey, a commissioner and direc- blacks .
Simpson's lead attorney, Robert crime scene, were key evidence in
tor of the Ohio Departme nt Of
Mark Fuhnnan has " a propensi- Shapiro, declared in court last week the decision to order Simpson to
Agriculture.
ty to create fals e inform ati on that race would play not part in the stand trial on murder charge s.
The decision could cost the live aga inst African -American defen - trial. He said the same thing after Simpson, 4 7. has pleaded innocent.
exhibitors thousand s of dollars dants, .. said the 23-page motion. two magazines previewed the racial The trial is to begin Sept. 19.
each in prize money and sales pro- which seeks the detective's police strategy on July 25.
The defense claims that detec·
ceeds. They also could be required personnel records and psychiatric
"He stood up in court and said lives Phillip Vannatter and Tom
to forfeit all trophies and ribbons.
in front of the judge and the world Lange lied and concealed facts to
reports.
and be banned from future junior
Thursday's motion included that race was not going to be an obtain a warrant to search Simpfa ir exhibitions for at least three statements from a woman who said issue in this case ... then we see this son's estate, and that Fuhrman's
years , according to fair regulations. Fuhrman told her nearly a decade motion," said Fuhrman' s lawyer, partner, Ronald Philips, violated
Fair officials declared each ago that he wanted to burn "nig- Robert Tourtelot.
police procedures.
tainted steer to be contaminated, gers" and was di sgusted by interraThe motion also claims that
The motion is " a desperate act
meaning its meal cannot be sold for cial couples. and from a man who by a desperate attorney," Tourtelot detectives used inappropriate interconsumption. The animals were claim ed Fuhrman shot him six said. " I think it's outrageous he is rogation techniques when they first
slaughtered after Tuesday's sale.
times and helped plant evidence trying to poi son the mind of the question ed Simpson about the
Each animal had been judged as against him.
lcillingsc
public."
the best or second best of its breed.
"This is a sorry stale of
affairs," said Ruth S taclchouse,
commission chairwoman. "We at
the Ohio State Fair want it known
that we do not tolemte cheating."
The commission, which met in
special session Thursday at the
fairgrounds, identified the
exhibitors of the tainted cattle as:
614·992·6614
1·800·837·1 094
• Kevin Abt of Blanchester in
Clinton County, who had sold his
steer for $2,400.
• Trevor Jones, Harrod, Allen
County, $3,400.
• Jessica McEldowney, Ansonia,
Darke County, $3,200.
• Luke Powers, Fayette. Fulton
County, $2,000.
• Garrick Schaad, Beverly,
Washington County, $3,100.
A family member who would
not give her name said the Abt
family had no comment on the
findings. There were no listings for
Trevor Jones, Jessica McEldowney, Luke Powers or Garrick
Schaad under directory assistance.

ers, not necessari ly as a warning to tax payers.

Count y Commiss ione" ' President Fred Hoffm an told
Frank that the budget. as submiued. contained a hal fpercent sales tax increase as a message to other office hold"This budget shows what would have to happe n if th eir
budgets are approved," he said, adding that the commissioners used the budgets supplied by eac h in div idu al

Anonymous tip
on illegal'tips'?:
Commission rejects
question following
heated confrontation

•

TIED FOR FIRST - Pamela Rupe, pictured with her sheep,
tied for first place in the pee wee class of the Guys and Girls Sheep
Lead Class Show held Wednesday afternoon. (Sentinel photo by
Amy 8. Potts)

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel staff
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Board of Commissioners washed its
hands on the maner of an ano'ny mous tip on illega l 'tips' at the
Rutland America n Legion Pos t following a heated con frontation Fri day afternoon.
The post was c1ted Aug. 8 by the
Ohio Attorney General's Office for
selling illegal gambling tickets or
"tips" and members of the post met
with the commission on Aug. 12 and
asked the board to investiga te why
the Rutland American Legion Post
was cited whil e other places in Ihe
county selling ti ps were ignored.
Furth ermore, Andrew Phalin .
speaking for the group, repeated ru mors that Commiss ion President
Fred Hoffman , acting in concert with
Stale Sen. Jan Michael Long, had
conspired against the post.
Both Hoffman and Long denied
the rumors and Hoffman said he
would look into the matter.
Friday, Hoffman said he was told
by the attorney general's office that
they received an "anonymous tip"
concerning the post and was unable
to find out anything else.
Commissioner Robert Hartenbach
was even more blunt.
"I don ' t think it' s worth looking
into," Hartenbach said. "People have
said you have violated the law and
that it's not worth looking into."
Phalin asked Hartenbach if it was
the commission's job to listen to
complaints.
"Anybody should be able to bring
complaints before the commissioners," Phalin said.
"Not this type of compla int ,"
Contlnuea on page A2

Simpson defense attacks sleuth

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
POMEROY, OH.

SHOWMANSHIP WINNERS - Winners were announced in
the showmanship division of the 1994 Swine Show at the fairgrounds Wednesday night. Tbe winners, from left are, Robert
Harris, Reserve Champion Hog Showman, and Melissa Guess,
Grand Champion Hog Showman. (Sentinel photo by Amy 8 . Potts)

SUMMER SELL DOWN
1994 GMC
Y2 TON

Jelf
Cunt-~wa y

1
""

1994
GEO

1994
GEO TRACKER

METRO

WAS $13,774

NOW

$6999

$12,499

1985 FORD F150 4X4 ............................ '6995
Only 47,000 mllea.

A World Wide Pictures Presentation

See It Suaday, Aug1st 21,
6:00 p.m. at Syraose

G1rdJ of tile Nazll'eH,
St. Rt. 124, Syrame.

1992 S·1 0 EXT. CAB PICKUP ............ '1 0,495
1992 DODGE DYNASTY "nice· .............. '9999
1982 BUICK LeSABRE LAlw mD.., i.w.........'3495
1991 OLDS CALAIS. Hurry! ................... '6995
1991 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD ......... '13,995
1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME ........'8995
1991 CHEV. CAVAUER .........................'5995

"ttl

12664

Good Selection
of 93 &amp; 94
Program Cars.

Hurryl
They Are

Going Fast!

than those for the current year, including the co~lllt y
comm is.s tuners ·own spend ing plan.
T he co unt y comm issio ners have until T hurqlay to put a
sa les tax issue on the Nov . X hallot. In addil illn. the
l:Omm issioners can pass the tax increase on its ow n ;1s an
emergency measure without goi ng before vu tcrs.

nwpropo sed 1995 budge t contains fi gurc.s frum the
proposed sal es tax. which wi ll place abo ut S405.1X.Xl 1010
the count y coffers. Coun tmg the pro posed Increase, 1hc
co un ly ge nera l fun d will carry an esti maled ba lance of
$124.839 into 1990.
However. if the tax is not approved hy voters or bv Ihe
co mmiSs ion, the co unty general fu nd wi ll carry a clefi ~ i t of
about $2RO,OOO as of Dec. :l l. 1495.
Estimated receipts for 199\ as approved by the budge t
co mm iss ion, Iota! $2,86 1,82 1. Adding a one-half perce nt

I

-&gt;a les tax increase hr ings the total up to
$1.226,X2 1. Ex pc.:ndi t urt:~ ;m.: csti ma ted

al $l.14 1.YH2
Fra nk t:xpla1ncd th ;1t gmw th in
coun ty reve nue 1.., n o tl·a~c pin g up wi th
expe ndi tu res . The mn ncy needed fo r

expenditu res lu ~ hccn co m tn g from
shrinking su rplu&gt; funds carr ied over
fro m prcv itl ll." yc;tr'\. he -.a id.
If the tax i ~ n 't tt ppruvcU, the com·
mi ssioners will h11vc to wai t un til the
money isn't there and the n have tu
determ ine what c uts need to be ma de ,

Thursday to put a sales tax issue on the
Nov. 8 ballot. In addition, the commissioners can pass the tax increase on its own as
an emergency measure without going before voters.

"Expe nditu re..; h:1vt he en red uced,·· Fra nk commented.
" I ca n' t say th t: cur rent (hn:1 rd o f count y com mi ss ioners)
is spendi ng more moJH.:v .··
"It 's 1101 th,,t o ffic1al ~ arc spendi ng more ... he adt!ccl

"ll1e cost of run nin g ;111 ,1fficc ts gu tng up.''
Frank nnted that th L· cnunty ts dning well on its rea l
cs tt !c tax sc lll cmnlts. hu t ~t ddcd tiLt! the most of that
mon ey goes

to sch\ 1ols ;md not for ru n 111 ng cnu nt y go vern -

ment.

Equity funding:
Malone fires back in ongoing
press release battle with Carey

Friday gate receipts
at record high for
single day admission

By LARRY EWING

Times-Sentinel Staff
GAL LI POLI S - l ·hargcs olplay1 ng poli tica l gamcsmansh1pove r the issue
of eLi ucatiun and equ ity fundin g co nttnuc tony he twee n the incumbent state

reprcsc ntm1vc for the '!4th Distric t of the Ohio House and hi s Re publican
chal kngcr .

POMEROY- Gate receipts Friday were ala record high for single day
admission in the history of the Meigs County F" ir, according to Dan
Smith , president of the Meigs Counly Agncultural Society .
Smilh reported that $20,270 were taken in at the gates Friday.

Rep. Mark Mah&gt;ne. D-Soulh Point. took "slwr:g cxccpt1on" Satu rday to a
statement issued lasl week by GOP can didat e John CJrey, who labe led the

L1St yearisfor
the sa amegood
day re_c_
"Friday
always
I";e;ip~ls:_t:_o.:_la;le;d:_$:_1:_7.:_,0:_7:_5.:,.-----------==============~
day ," said Smith, "butthis year
it was a gre at day and set a
record for us".
The always-popul ar Meigs
County Junior Fair livestock
sa le in the show arena and the
truck and semi pull in front of
the grandstand were credited
with pushing up gales receipts,
·although those events are traditio nally held on Frida y
nights.
As for actual attendance,
Smith says it isn ' t possible to
come up with figures because
of the passes, so the fair board
just has to rely on gate receipts
for comparisonon crowd sizes.
Besides those paying daily
ACTIVITY AT THE 131ST EDITION ofthe Meigs County Fair continued a
to come onto the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds, more than 4,000 hectic pace right up until its conclusion Saturday night. Prior to the fair's close,
season tickets and over 400 people crowded the fairgrounds for a number of events. A youth reacted to the
mem bership t1ckets were sold. passing of an entry in the harness race (top) while his elders take in the action,
Nearly BOO Junior Fair exhibi- and the truck pull entertained audiences Friday (above).
tors and personnel had passes.
With the except1on of Wednesday, gale receipts, compared day to day, have exceeded those of the 1991. 1992 and
1993 fairs.
Monday 's gate receipts went from $9,41 5 last year to $10,440 this year; Tuesday's from $13, 150 to $15,285;
Thursday 's from $10,585 to $13,885; and Friday's from Sl7,075 to $20,270.
Wednesday's receipts dropped from $12,834 to $10,71 6.
Since the fair board first went from a five-day to a six-day fa1r in 1991, allendance ha s increased dramalica lly .
In 1991the daily gate receipts were: Monda y, $4.815; Tuesday, $11 ,5 21 ; Wednesday, $9,663; Thursday. $12,:140;
Friday, $1 7,215; and Saturday, $15,240.

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel StaN
PATRIOT - A loca l man who may not have much time left is playing the
wailing game. He 's waiting for a healthy adult with his blood type and body
size to die so that he may live.
Donald R. Colley, 435 Metzger Road, who doctors predicted would not live
past March , needs a heart transplant. He is
15th in line and carries a beeper so Ohio
State University Hospital can alert him
when a donor becomes available .
"Someone has to die so !hall can live," he
said. "It's a scary thing."
Besides the stres.,nfwaiting to see ifhe'll
have a second chance at life, Mr. Colley
said he also has to deal with the frustration
of not being able to help himself.
A former electrician, he was forced to go
on disability after his las! heart attack in
1985. Mr. Colley is having difficulty staying on lop of the financial tidal wave of
medical expenses.
"I feel like a failure, " he said. "If they get
Donald R. Colley
me that heart, maybe I can go back to work
again. 1don't want to look like I'm begging or anything, but honestly I need
help to make it."
Mr. Colley was born 46 years ago with small arteries which restrict the flow
of blood through the heart. Last October, a specialist told .him he would need
a transplant.
. Mr. Colley's heart has become enlarged because ofthe restricted blood flow
and is pumping at only 15 percent the capacity of a normal heart.
A former basketball and baseball coach for Southwestern schools, Mr.
Colley has weekly checkups and testing in Columbus and Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
When his condition drops, doctors at OSU pump medication into his heart
via an artery in his neck. The treatment costs $2,300 and may be necessary on
a weekly basis as his condition worsens.
Other expenses - such as medication and doctor visits - cost SI ,000 a
month.
Mr. Colley's ex-wife, Rose, plans to start a door-to-door campaign to collect
Continued on page A2

The county commissioners have until

Frank sa1d .

Meigs fair •g4

'Someone has to die so I can live'

$16,99'5

Connlt ·
St•llecca

Mosl office holders' requested budge ts fur I Y'l) hi~her

Man in need of healthy heart:

414

BREEDING BEEF WINNERS - The following winners were
listed in the breeding beef contest held Tuesday at the Meigs County Fair: James Chapman, grand champion angus; Anita and
Jeromee Calaway, grand and reserve champion chianina; Anita
Calaway and Stephanie Hoffman, grand and reserve champion
crossbred; James Chapman, grand champion hereford; Jeromee
Calaway and Jeff Rankin, grand and reserve champion limousin;
Jeromee Calaway, grand and reserve champion anjou; Janet Calaway and Robert Hoffman, grand and reserve champion simmental. Shown above are, from left, bottom row, Roberl Hoffman,
James Chapman and Janet Calaway; top row, 1994 Fair Queen
Michele Guess, Jeff Rankin, Stephanie Hoffman and Anita Calaway.

co unty office.

By JIM FREEMAN

Tlmes-Senllnel staff
PO MEROY - The Meigs Count y BudgctComn11ssinn
approved the count y's 1995 budge t submi tted by th e
county commi ss ioners. although it is technically a defi cit
budget.
The budget will have to be approved as a defici t spending plan beca use, as Treas urer Howard Frank , a member
of the budge t commi ssion explai ned, the com miSs ion
cannot consider money fro ma proposed half-perccn l sa les

tnt: um\1cnt \ rctmd PO r ducation as "ahysma\" and ca lled a rece nt legislative
tni tiatt vc ".tn elec tion yc;u tacti c."
c ·;J IIJn g (·:ucy's statement '' rcckk ,s'' ;m d
"thin ly veil ed polttica l games ," Mall)nc ";ti d the
Wc llstun mayur was " il l adv1 sed ID begin hi.s
rump;_u gn .. on

~ h ;;~ky gH llllll.l. ..

"The ma yor is 011 very shaky gruund when he

says l haven' t done my job on educat ional
issues,'' Malone: said in

i.l

press release.

In suppo rt of his posll wn. the incumbent
po in k d to hi s s upport ;md vote fnr •· ...a n a ddi -

tiona l $135 milli on for low -wealth sc hool districts in the slale budget lhat passed the Ohi o
Houst.: ... w ith a hip.::trt isan vo te o f J to 1. "

Malone ;liso pointed to hi s support of a $70
Rep. Mark Malone
millioncapita l improve ments programfor school
buildings in low -wea lth areas of Ohio, and noted his co-sponsorship of a
House resoluti on ca lling on the sta te not to appea l the Perry County court
dec ision that ruled Ohio 's sc.: hool fundin g system unconstitut to nal.
Malone s;ud he is "unclear as to what the mayor is alle ging."

Carey's remarks came in react ion to Malone's co-spo nsorship of a school
fundin g bill th at wo uld allocate an addi tional $1 50 million to the $135 million
in equity funds 111 the current state budge t.
Malone Sil id lh c additional fu nds would help 269 schools sys tems including 13 in his dislrict - 1dcn ti fied as underfunded. The money would
co me from an il llti cipated $560 million surplus in the state budget.
"What Malone fail ed to rnenli un aboul hiS bill JS th at the Oh1o House is in
recess and probabl y will not return until after lhe el ection ," C uey said.
" You ca n't ex pect things 10 happe n fo r an area of over 114.000 people
without working wi th both sides uf the aisle to fiml common ground," Malone
co un te red.

" Maybe the mayor should spe nd a li ttl e more li me th inking of proposa ls for
the benefit of1 he region and less time fig htmgag"i nst our progress and Ihe new
ideas we arc wu rking on in our part of the stal e."
State money for school s comes from income, sales and other taxes. Local

distncls produce most of their revenue through real estate taxes.
Inequaliti es lJCCu r hec£t usc so me: di stricts have more valuable property than

others. and identica l tax rates ge nerate different amou nts of money.

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

July jobless rates hold steady
GALLIPOLIS -Unemployment throughout most
of southern Ohio remained relatively stable between June and July, according to figures released
Friday by the Oh io Bureau of Employment Scr·

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 S&lt;etions • t58 Pages
Ohio

Business

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

VI CCS.

In Gallia County , the jobless rate increase d by a
Scioto
modest 0.1percent - from 7.5 percent to 7.6 percent
-during the period. While in Meigs County, lhe rate
Molga
held steady at 9.4 percent.
According tot he OBES, I ,OOOofGalha Count y's
estimated labor force of 13,5 00 were jobless in
July. In Meigs County, 800 of the county 's 8,500 ......,.
work force were unemployed.
The rates are unadjusted, meanmg they do not
Glllll
take into account seasonal adjustments in employment. The statewide unadjusted rate for July was
5.7 percent · up 0.3 percent from the June rate of 5.4
percent. The U.S . unadjusted rate was 6.2 perce nt.
Trumbull County 's rate of 10.8 percent was the
highest in the state for the month . Geauga County had the lowest jobless rate
for the month at 3.7 percent.
July unemployment rates for other counties in so uthern Ohi o (June rales
in parenthesis): Athens, 4.6percent (4.7); Jackson, 7.3 percent(7 .3); Lawrence ,
6.9. percent (7.8); Scioto, 8.9 percent (9.8); and, Vinton, 8.4 percent (8.6).
Statewide, rates decreased in almost half of Ohio's 88 counties.

Hospitals to combine administrative functions
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Cabell Huntington Hospital and St.
Mary 's Hospital agreed to combine their administrative function s to im prove health-care service for the Tri-State area .
Under the affiliation agreement announced Friday, the hospitals would
form a new organization called the Unity Health organization to oversee
planning and administration for both facilities. Unity would be financed at
$5 million, with each hospital contributing $2.5 million.
The hospitals would share budgeting, strategic planning, joint venture
managemen~ limited bonding ~utl\ority, chief executive officer selection,
approval of auditors and marketing, regulatory compliance and public
relations functions .

•

A7
84
03-7
Insert
A4
AJ
Ali
Cl-8
B1

A2

Juty 'M

Columns

SEOEMS employees
take request to NLRB;
hearing set Thursday

Fred Crow
Bob HoeDicb
Jjm Sands
Chuck Stone

JACKSON - Southeastern Ohio
CJ"'- "'""' '"'' .,......,c.
Emergency Medical Services employees seeking a unionization election are taking the request to the National
Labor Relations Board.
NLRB has scheduled a hearing fo r Thursday , Aug. 25 at II a.m. in the
Jackson County Courthouse.
SEOEMS employees want to join th e Office of Allied Workers, which is
affiliated with the United Mine Workers of America.
An election request has been fil ed with the Stale Employment Relations
Board. but a decision is pending until fall. .
Employees claim that while the SEOEMS board of directors have not taken
steps to block the election, its management consultants and anorneys have
instituted "a series of delaying tactics," OAW representative Anne Janks
charged.

--- -·- ------- •
"

�Page-A2-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

I

August 21,1994

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

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Aug. 21
Accu-WcaOic.- forecast for

by Bob Hoeflich

MICH

!Mansfield 174°

l•

'' '''•

•

,

lcolumbus!?r

I

WVA

Ra in

Flurries

Vis Associs f9d Pr9Ss Grapr11csNRI

Clearing skies to replace
wet weather on Sunday
By The Associated Press
Wet weather is in store for the
Buckeye State for the remainder of
the weekend.
Thunderstorm s will be likely
statewide Sunday as a cold front
slowly works across the region.
Heavy rains will also be possible.
: Highs on Sunday wiD be around
the 80 degree mark across Ohio.
: The record high temperature at
th,\: Columbus weather station was
Hll in 1983. The record low was
50 in 1977.
:Sunrise on Sunday will be at
6:49a.m. Sunset on Sunday will be

at8:21 p.m.
Weather forecast:
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of mainly -morning showers
and thunderstomns. Highs m1d 70s
lO lower 80s.
Sunday night. .. Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid 50s to lower 60s.
Monday ... Mostly su nny. Highs
upper 70s to lower 80s.
Extended forecast:
Tuesday through Thursday ... A
dry period with morning lows in
the 50s. Highs mid 70s to lower
80s.

Middleport River Festival
$1ates pet parade Sept. 17
: MIDDLEPORT - The second
annual Middleport Pet Parade will
be held on Sarurday, Sept. 17, during the Middlcfort River Festival.
The parade wit form at the comer
of North Second to Mill Street
Organizers of the event want
area children and adults to enter
their pets in the parade, including
unusual pets. Coswming of the animals and their owners is encouraged, and prizes will be awarded in
several categories. For more information, please contact Tim and
Eddie King at King Servistar Hardware, Middleport
The Pepsi 3 on 3 basketball
tourney is coming to Middleport in
conjuction with the Middleport
River Festival, set for Sept. 17.

Everyone entering the tournment
receives an offical Pepsi 3 on 3 Tshirt. Trophies and $1,000 in cash
prizies will be awarded to winners
in the toumment Sign-up is at Don
Tate Motors in Pomeroy.
Entry fees arc $40 per team for
17 and under ages, and $55 for 18
and older per team. If you and your
business would like to help sponsor
a team, please contact Roger Jessie
at Don Tate Motors. or Tom Dooley, president of the Middleport
Community Association.
In conjunction with the 3 on 3
Lournment and the Pet Parade, the
Middleport Community Association with the help of the An Council has expanded the festival's food
selection or this year.

Entry forms now available
for festival queen contest
MIDDLEPORT - Entry fomns

are available for the 1994 Middleport River Festival Queen Contest.
The contest is open to all single,
young women, age 16-21 (as of
Sepl 17, 1994), who either live in
Meigs County or attend school m
Meigs County.
The Middleport River Festival
will be held on Sept. 17 and will
include, in addition to the Queen
Contest, a 3-on-3 Basketball Tournament, as well as a wide variety of
interesting and fun activities to
appeal to all ages. The schedule of
activities will also include special
events for kids, plenty of local arts
and crafts and free ententainment
all day long.
The 1994 queen will be
announced on stage Saturday at
noon. She will succeed 1993 Queen
Penny Aeiker. The new queen will
represent the Festival and the Middleport Community Association at
various parades and events
throughout the area.
Contestants will enjoy a number

of activities together prior to the
festivaL Plans include fund-raising
events, such as a car wash and rafne, as well as a pool party and boat
ride on the river.
There will be a meeting for girls
interested in entering the queen
contest on at 2 p.m. today at the
Dave Diles Park on the river in
downtown Middleport. The meeting will be held at the shelter/stage,
rain or shine.
Entry forms are available at
many Middleport and area businesses, and from members of the
Queen's Committee. Deadline to
enter the 1994 Middleport River
Festival Queen Contest is Sunday,
Sept4.
For more information, contact
Merri Amsbary at 992-4247, Niesel
Gerard at 992-6736, or Penny
Aeiker at 992-2576.

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Get rested up now. There are a
number of festivals and observances coming up in the weekends
ahead. The philosophy of a lot of
us these days should be go while
you can and enjoy. Do keep smiling.

'Irritated state board -sets
meeting with AG Fisher
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Attorney General Lee Fisher agrees with a decision to include an unwilling State
Board of Education in an appeal of
a school funding lawsuit. But he
apologizes for not consulting with
the panel.
Fisher is expected to meet Tuesday with top leaders of the board
whose members are offended at
being included in the appeal after
voting against it.
"I've had a number of board
members call me, upset and disturbed about the course of action,"
Oliver Ocasek. board president,
said Friday,
The board voted 6-5 last month
against appealing the decision of
Perry County common pleas Judge
Linton D. Lewis Jr.
Lewis on July I found the cur·
rent system of funding education
unconstitutional because of disparities it produces in per pupil spendmg among the state's 612 districts.
Joel Taylor, the outside counsel
Fisher hired to represent the board
and other defendants in the lawsuit,
filed a notice of appeal Aug. 12 at

the request of Gov. George
Voinovich.
. The board, State School SuperIntendent Ted Sanders, the Ohio
Department of Education and the
state were identified as defendants
in the lawsuit that the Ohio Coalition For Equity &amp; Adequacy of
School Funding filed . Voinovich
was not identified as a defendant.

Healthy heart
Continued from page A1
funds and has also set out donation
cans at area businesses.
People have been generous, Mrs.
Colley said. But the money raised so
far is a mole hill compared to the
mountain of bills.
A recenl songfest at the family's
church msed $126; other donations
total about $300.
"I'm trymgto get as many people to
help us as I can," Mrs. Colley said.
"I've never been faced with this before and I'm petrified. We just pray
every day that he' ll make it a little bit
longer. I've had him for 27 years and
I don't want to Iuse him ."

Wreck injures two Gallia residents

RAW POWER -The annual truck pull sbowcased V-8s witb
more than 600 horsepower engines. Here, some of the earliest races
are held. One early driver's truck had to be doused by rrrefighters
because a wire caught on fire. More than 1,000 people pulled for
the men and women in these monster trucks who competed for
more than five hours. (T-S photo by George Abate)

VINTON - Two Gallia County residents received serious
injuries in a two-car crash Friday on State Route 325 one mile south
of Vinton. the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said.
Joshua L. Culp, 17, 875 Cherry Point Road, Vinton. and Randall
L. Edwards , 40.4761 Morgan Center Road. Bidwell. were taken to
Holz_er Medical Center by the Gallia County Emergency Medical
Serv1ce.
A hospital spokesperson said Culp was admined. but there was
no record of treatment for Edwards.
The patrol said Culp wa~ southhound and left of cemer at 7:45
a.m. and collided with a northbound car driven by Edwards. Both
cars were severely damaged by the crash, the patrol said.
Culp was cited for left of center and Edwards was ticketed for no
seatbell.

Fair's truck pull results
ROCK SPRINGS - Friday
night's annual truck and semi pull
blasted the ear drums of about
1.000 spectators. Both men and
women revved engines that exceeded 600-horsepower.
In the 6,000-pound, four-wheeldrive stock division the following
winnners included: first. Curtis
Clark of Letart driving a 1971
Dodge; second, Matt Smith of RipIcy, W.Va., driving a 1979 Ford;
third, Randy Lockhart of Ripley
drove a 1976 Ford; fourth. Jack
Waldren of Logan drove a 1974
Dodge; fifth, Mike Elliott of Gal lipolis drove a 1976 Dodge.
In the 6,000-pound, women's
division winners were: first, Stacy
Miller of Letart, W.Va. drove a
1971 Dodge; second, Sandy Anderson of Charleston. W.Va., drove a
1979 Ford; third, Tammy Plants of
Gallipolis drove a 1976 Dodge;
fourth, Pam Newell of Chester
drove a 1985 Dodge; fifth, Carissa
Bailey of Racine drove a 1973
Chevrolet.
In the 5,800-pound, four-wheeldrive super stock division winners
were: first, Dave Howell of Athens
drove 1973 Chevrolet; second,
Robbie Tubbs of Zanesville drove
a 1981 Chevrolet; third , Terry
Halasz of Coming drove a 1974
Chevrolet; fourth, Donnie Brown
of Eleanor, W.Va. , drove a 1986
Chevrolet; fifth. Harold Vance of
Massillon drove a Chevrolet
In the 6,200-pound, four-wheel
drive modified division winners
were: first, Gary Parsons of Mineral Wells. W.Va .. drove a 1985
Chcvrolc~ second, Roger Crawford
of Grandville drove a 1993
Chll'Vrolet: third. Jim Mootz of
Lynchburg, Ky., drove a Chevrolet;
fourth, Ron Sheets of Gallipolis;
fifth, Jeff Woods of Ashville.
In the 5,800-pound, four-wheel

drive modified category winners
were: first, Brent Parson of Mineral
Wells drove a 1985 Chevrolet; second, Roger Crawford of Grandville
drove a 1993 Chevrolet: thin!, Bob
Tubbs of Zanesville drove a 1981
Chevrolet; fourth. Terry Halasz of
Corning drove a 1994 Chevrolet;
fifth, Jim Mootz of Lynchburg
drove a Chevrolet.
In the 24,500-pound, semi truck
category winners were: first, Don
Gibbs of Crooksville drove a Westem Star; second, Michael Clay of
Bidwell drove a 1972 Ford; third.
Kenneth Hall of McConnellsville
drove a 1987 Chevrolet; fourth,
Everett Gilmore of Pomeroy drove
a 1988 International; fifth, Robert
Caldwell of Vinton drove a 1991
International.
In the 19,500-pound, semi truck
winners were: first, Everett
Gilmore of Pomeroy drove a 1988
International; second, Bob
Williams of Rutland drove a Ford;
third, Dave Trout of Albany drove
a 1987 International; fourth, Don
Ballrell of Albany drove a 1979
Kenworth; fifth, Mike Smith of
Gallipolis drove an Intcrnational.

Car-bicycle accident injures youth
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis youth was injured in a collision
between a car and a bicycle Friday on the 900 block of Second
Avenue. Gallipolis City Police said.
Joshua M. Watson, 15, 1148 Second Ave., was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital by the Gallia County Emergency Medical Service.
where he was later tre~ted and released.
.
Police said Watson was traveling on Second at 5:08 p.m. on a
bicycle and was struck by a car driven by Shari A. Wedemeyer, 32,
I 039 Mud Creek Road, Galhpolis, that was exiting the Columbus
Southern Power Co. lol
. Wedemeyer was cited for failure to yield to a pedestrian, police
sa1d.

Police apprehend alleged shoplifter
'

Deputies probe theft complaint

Illegal •tips•

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriffs deputies are investigating the theft of several items from a Patriot area residence Friday.
Ethel L. Myers, 1915 Smoky Row Road, infomned dcptuies that
her res1dence was entered around 2 p.m. by an unknown subject
through the from window.
Reported missing were cash, clothing, some groceries and a
bumper to a 1979 Chevrolet Blazer, deputies said.

Continued from page A 1
llartenbach responded, comparing
Phalin"s request to that of a person
arrested for drunk driving wanting
1hc board of county commissioners to
find out why they, and nut someone

City police issue 10 citations

else, wa.s arrested.

·· ws not our job,.'" Harlenbach said.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City PoUce placed four people in the
Galka County Jail Friday on charges arising from a disturbance at a
residence along Eastern Avenue ncar Hulton's Car Wash.
Jailed were Ray A. Smith, 40, 2306 Eastern Ave., for resisting
arrest and obstructing official business; Brenda J. Pruette, 30, no
ad!lress available, resisting arrest, obstructing official business and
assault; Donald E. Sheets, 39, Gall!~Jolis, assault. resisting arrest and
interfering with an arrest; and Timothy B. Queen, 31, 527 Jay
Drive, Gallipolis, disorderly conduct
Cited in separate cases by police Friday were Dennis M. Blackston, 39, at large, criminal trespass; Leah D. Murray, 23, 169 Omar
Road, GaUipolis, driving under suspension; Randall S. Green, 32,
8612 State Route 7, Gallipolis, driving under suspension; and Leah
D. Harrison, 23, 503 Quail Creek Road, Gallipolis, driving under
suspension.
Cited early Saturday by police were Timothy R. Swanson, 19, no
address available, underage consumption, and· Richard A. Hubman.
27, GallipoUs, domestic violence.

After the confrontation between
Phalin andHartenbach grew personal,
flartcnbach stormed out of the commissioners ' office, returning only after Phalin had left the meeting.

SOUTIIEASTERN Bl!STNES8 COUJ~'(;I~
Sprin§( Vallt'J 1'/a:a • Callipolis, O!tio

Is Proud to Auuotrllce 2 Nmt• Major,.,!

LEGAL SECRETARY
MEDICAL SECRETARY

Deputies jail two on charges
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriffs deputies booked Jeffrey W. CoUins, 23, RL I, Crown City, into the Gallia County Jail at
6:21 a.m. Saturday on a charge of domestic violence.
Deputies also placed Douglas E. Morrison, 18, 30 Neal Ave.,
GaUipolis, in the jail at 3:45 a.m. Saturday on a charge of underage
consumption.

REEDSVILLE - A Reedsville man was arrested Thursday
night on peuy theft charges, according to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department reports.
Shawn Rollins, 18, Rye Road, Reedsville, admitted 10 a camper
owner he stole a purse from the camper early Wednesday, records
show.

Times-Sentinel

/A3

•··

.(
~.

representin~ The Shangri Las, who did a comedy routine. Also winning a first place with no
representative pictured were four cloggers of the
former Shady River Shufflers. Second place
winners in the various categories received $10
prizes, and third place winners were awarded

TALENT SHOW WINNERS - Taking
rosettes and $15 prizes were these first place
winners in the talent show staged by the Meigs
County Junior Fair Board Thursday afternoon.
Tbey are left to right, Cassie Sigman represpnting the Satin and Lace Balon Corps, Peggy
Smith, a solo dogger; Alison Rosr, a vocalist,
Robin Pridemore, a vocalist, and Russell Reiber

$5.

Commission Fair's Open Horse show
OKs seeking winners' list announced
bids on guns ROCK SPRINGS - Winners of Karr.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Commissioners agreed Friday to
advertise for bids from firearm
dealers wishing to purchase .guns
remaining from the Robert D. Fife
senlement.
Fife, of Middleport, was arrested July 9, 1993 on one count of
trafficking in food stamps and two
counts of receiving stolen property
and agreed to forfeit cash and about
1,540 rifles, shotguns and handguns as part of a plea agreement.
In other business, commissioners:
• Approved an advance draw of
$300,000 from upcoming real
estate taJ&lt; settlements.
• Paid weekly bills o(
$82,466.94, consisting of 147
entries.
• Noted that a public hearing
wiU be held at II a.m. Wednesday
in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Courtroom concerning a new
liquor license application by Bill
Edward Buchanan. Tuppers Plains.
• Approved paying $1,860 for
extra work needed on the roof of
the Senior Citizens Center Multipurpose Building.
Approved transfers of
$8,736.36 and $5,768.37 within the
Meigs County Highway Depart- .
ment.
• Approved Sonny Gloeckner to
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Authority board of directors.
.
Present were Hoffman, Hartenbach, Commission Vice President
Janet Howard Tackett and Clerk of
Commission Gloria K.loes.

the Open Class Horse Show at the
Meigs County Fair hav e been
announced. Winners were, in order
by class:
Walk 1ro1 horsemanship (10 and
under) - Dawn Handley, Whitney
Karr, Mandi Knowlton, Stacey
Hills and Jessica McGuire.
Juvenile pleasure (18 and under)
- Jarrod Knowlton, Mandi
Knowlton, Dawn Handley, Tara
Grueser and Jessica McGuire.
Junior pleasure (4 and under) Lori Hayes and Deane Arrington.
Walk trot pleasure (youth) Jarrod Knowlton, Jessica Wheeler,
Dawn Handley, Whitney Karr and
Matt Milhoan.
Junior poles (4 and under) Sam Lewis. John C. Hanning and
Mark Roush.
Youth poles (18 and under) Jessie Childs, Holly Milhoan. Kyle
Ord, Sara Craig and Jamie Ord.
Open poles - Kyle Ord. Lisa
James, Kim Betz and Amanda
McGrath.
$50 open western pleasure guaranteed - Kay William s, Jarrod
Knowlton, Dawn Handley, Lori
Hayes and Terri Carsey.
Walk trot pleasure (open) Jessica Wheeler, Dawn Handley.
Jarrod Knowlton, Lori Hayes and
Kay Williams.
Open h_orsemanship - Kay
Williams, Dawn Handley, Terri
Carsey. Lori Hayes and Whitney

Commission to meet
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis
City Commission will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Gallipolis
Municipal courtroom.

EMS units answer 7 calls
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reported eight calls for
assistance Friday. Units responding
mcluded:
POMEROY
3:42 a.m., volunteer rue department and squad, U.S. 33, truck fire,
John DeMoss, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions- Ellie Lemley, Pomeroy; Oris Hubbard, Syracuse; Irene Davis, Middleport;
Ethel Mullens, Middleport
Friday discharges - William
Reitmire, Pomeroy; Gladys Walburn, Middleport.

RACINE
1:16 p.m., at station, Angela
Edman, Holzer Medical Center.
REEDSVILLE
I :08 p.m., State Route 681 East,
Craig Boso, SL Joseph's Hospital.
RUTLAND
3:03a.m., Meigs Mine 31, Terry
George, VMH;
4:20 p.m., Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Lindsey Houser. VMH;
9:41 p.m., Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Joyce Bevins, VMH.
SYRACUSE
12:04 p.m., Calaway Ridge
Road, Gay Fields, VMH;
I :22 p.m., Childrens Home
Road, Irene Davis, VMH.

Open Eng li sh pl easure _ no

entries.

Exhibition barrels - no win ners.
Small fry barrels (10 and under)
- no entnes.
Junior barrels (4 and under) John C. Hanning, Kyle Co unts,
Sam LCWIS, Autumn Walker and
Ted Craft.
Youth barrels (18 and under) K~le Ord, Courtney Counts, Holly
Milhoan, Daniel Young II and
Jesse Chilrls.
0
Ladies barrels - Jamie Ord
Beverly Lewis, Tina Reed Dcbbi~
Lewis and Kim Betz.
'
, $50 barrels open - Kyle
Co unts, Debbie Lewis, Beverly
Lewis and Mark Roush.
Mens barrels - Je rry Lewi s
Jesse Ch ild s. Kyle Counts, Kyl~
Counts.

Tawney Jewelers
422 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOUS, OHIO
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uled to run at near the same times
as last year. Questions related 10
the bus schedules may be directed
to the transportation supervisor a(
742-2990.
Students who were on free or
reduced price lunches last year will
remain on the li st until a date is scl
for new fomns to be returned.
Students will be bringing other
information home during the first
week of school. Emergency medical fomns, student accident insurance fomns, student handbooks and
free lunch applications arc some of
the fomns to be brought home. Parents are encouraged to read the
infomnation and return any informatiOn needed to the school in a
time( y manner.
. Questions about school bcgin nmg for the year may contact their
child ' s principal's office or the
superintendent' s office.

Man charged in camper theft

S2 Weeb...... .. ..... ... . . ............... ...$84.76

ll w..u .. ..

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City PoUce were called to the Hills
Department Store Friday and took into custody Wilham L. Roswall ,
52, Huntington, W.Va., on a shoplifting charge.
Police were informed by store employees that Roswall was
observed removing canons of cigarettes from the store. Police took
RoswaU to the station, booked him and then took his case to Gallipolis Municipal Court.

Hit-skip reported at fairgrounds

Call - -

MAILSUBSCRimONS

26 -u.......... .....

Disney has out a new video tape
which you might want to consider
renting in the near future.
It's entitled The Best of Broadway and features musical numbers
from Broadway shows during the
days of the late Ed Sullivan - so
they are nostalgic. Ed featured
casts from the popular Broadway
productions doing hit numbers at
the time on the his televi sion
shows, and the video is made up of
clips from those shows.

ltfled employ_ees should report to
thCIT work assignments.
. Students who are new to the distr1ct and have not registered for
classes should report to the buildmg m thetr attendance area as soon
as possible to pre-register. There
have been only minor changes in
bus routes, and the buses are sched-

Tri-County Briefs:---.

• Is conveniently located In comfortable facilities In downtown Gallipolis

MAIL SUBSCRII'110NS
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lddr Counly

I guess a lot of us arc into tradition and so on Sunday, Sept. 4, the
annual reunion of the Silver Run
Grade School will be held.
The reunion will be held on the
school ground "flat" beginning at I
p.m. and all former students, teachers, families and friends are invited
to be on hand. Everyone attending
is to take lawn chairs and memorabilia from their days at the school.
Soft drinks will be provided and
the Big Bend Cloggers will entertain in the afternoon. And, a photographer will be on hand for pictures.

POMEROY - The 1994-95
school year for students. m the
Me1gs Local School D1stnct w11l
begT~ on Mhon day, Aug. 29.
esc oo1year for teachers and
non-certified employees will begm
on Fnday. Aug. 26. Teachers
should report to .the1r bUlldmgs at
the1r regular starung ume. Non-cer-

• Is beginning Its 18th yelll' of educational service to Gallla, Meigs &amp; Mason Counties (A
22}
• Has grown yearly to over 247 students In grades KS-12
ug.
• Is distinctively Christian yltiiO!Mienomlnatlonalln Its curriculum
• Currently enrolle students from 54 different churches
• 75% of Its 131 graduates (13 ells-) have gone on to college like Akron Unlve lty Bob
·
University, Cedarville College, Liberty Unlvll'lllty Ohio Unlverslly Miami Ohl ~ '
Jones ·
• University or Rl9 Grande, Unit~ States Air Fore~ Academy, West' Point Acad:m te Medical School,
Ranked at the 87th percentile on the Stanford Achievement Test
Y
• Has modem Typing, Computer &amp; Science Labs and a Yearbook &amp; Band Room
• Has curricular and extracurricular Choral and Band programs
·
• Competes lntencholastlclllly In Soccer, Volleyball, Basketball, Cheerleadlng &amp; T k
• Malntalnaa100% Christian professionally trained teaching staff
rae
• Is a member of the American A810Ciatlon or Christian Schools &amp; the America Ch 1
International
n r stlan Schools

Member The AsiOCialed Preu , and the Otlio

r1

any designated hour. However, I
feel that there's always something
on the back burner for those who
can't meet the meal schedule.
The Middleport United Pentecostal Church people. following
tradition, were again on the
grounds to handle parking and I
admire them too. I mean, everyone
can't really park at the entrance
gate and sometimes the grounds are
filled, so they have a problem.
However, the church personnel
handle it well and I want to personally thank them for all of the consideration they showed me during
the week. I had to go onto the
grounds at least rwicc a day during
the week and they really took care
of gelling me in and out. Thank
you, Kathy and "staff."
So it's wrapped up for another
year, and the Rock Springs Fairgrounds in another day or so will
become again quiet and serene.

i

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN ScHOOL:

(USPS 525-1001

I)' C...-ler

Boy' I'll be a lot of you are
tired today after the week-long
Me1gs County Fair.
The weather was most cooperative and attendance appeared to be
mcredible. I didn't write the very
first song but I've been around for
a long time and I never saw th e
fairgrounds as packed as they were
Friday night. Not only were the
grounds filled with vehicles of fairgocrs but cars were parked beside
all of the roadways leading to the
grounds. T~ere was a huge crowd
on hand also on Thursday.
The annual junior fair Uvest.ock
sale on Friday evening - a fivehour event which started at 5 p.m.
- seemed to be quite successful.
There were a lot of buyers on hand
and 220 animals raised by Meigs
· County youngsters were sold during the evening. Dan Smith, fair
board president. handled all of the
auctioneer chores this year. Sometim es, Dan has some relief. but not
so Friday night. Jack Lyons, one of
Smith's assistants during the auction. noted thai every year Gene
Whaley has purchased the grand
champion rabbits, which always go
for a hig pnce. Howev.cr. for the
first time, Gene was outbid Friday
night, so tradition was broken.
And speaking of county fair tradition, for years on end the race
programs have been printed and
sold by the Quality Printing in
Middleport. And this year the tradition continued. The sellers of the
programs were Ben, 14, and
Nathan, 13. Weber. and Gabriel
Jenkins, I 0, all grandchildren of
Margaret Weber of Rutland and the
late Vernon Weber. who operated
the printing company for years and
it docs, of course, slill remain a
family operation.
I always fmd it amazing at how
many Meigs families camp at the
fairgrounds during the entire fair
week. They really make it a fun
week. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin,
several of their children and their
families are among the regulars
with the camping bit. It's nice to
observe how members of this personable family enjoy each other
and the fair activities. They join
forces for a lot of the cooking
chores and have elaborate meals
during the week. Most of them are
so busy, however, that the big
problem is getting time to eat at

Meigs Local sets opening date

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs County Sherifrs Department
reported a hit-skip Thursday night at the fairgrounds. No other
infomnation was available.

P\lbliatled each Sundoy, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Otlio, hy the Ohio Valley PubliihiDJ
Company/Mullimedia, loc . Second clan poataae paid at Galtipolil. Ohio 45631. E.ntcred u
HCODd clas&amp; mailina matter at Pomeroy, Ohio,
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New~paper

~-~A~ugu~st.=2~1,_:_19~9.:.4_-::~------------=R=-..:::...:::e~g~i:_O~D:.:_:3=l:_____________~su~nda)

Beat ·of the Bend ...

Ohio Valley Bank
Member FDIC

A FUll SEASON OF HARD·HiniNG ACTION
17 weeks of turf-pounding excita1Tl8nt- m ·e than 180
regular season match-ups, as many as 12 each
Sunday- Including the NFL's award-winning pre-game
show Thi$ is the NFL ho&amp;ted by Steve Sabol.

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Commentary

Augu st 21, 1994

I

.{

~unb~ ~imts • jenthttl
A Division of

eMULTlMEDIA.INC.
825 Third Ave., Gall ipolis, O hio
(614)

4~6 - 2342

111 Cour t S t. , Pomeroy, O hi o
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ROBERT L. W!NGF.Tf
Publisher
HOil,\ RT W! L~ON JR .
Ex.t.'tutlve Editor-

MAR GAR ET LEHEW
Co nt ro ller

A MEMO ER of The Associ ated Press, Inl and Dai l y Press
Assoc iation and the Ame rican Newspaper Publishers AssoCi atio n
LElTER S O F OPINION are welco me . Tho y shou ld be less than
300 worJ s lung. All \e uers are subjec t to ed iting anJ must tle signed wi t.h
name , add ress an d tclepbone number. No uns1gnt&gt; d letters wi ll be

pu blisbed. Letters should be in good las te,

ali Jrc~s i ng

iss ues. not

personalities

Lawmakers push for
no parole for cop killers
By M.R. KROPKO
Associated Press Wr iter
CLEVELAND - The recent slaying of a Garfi el d Heights police offi cer emphasizes the need for a proposed law banni ng pamlc for cop killers.
an Ohio lawmaker said.
" Our law enforcement officers put it all on the line for us every day, "
said Sen. Anthony C. Sinagra, a Republican and a former mayor of Lakewood. He is seek in g re-e lection against Democrat Dennis Kucinich,
Cleveland 's form er mayor.
Sinagra said that "criminals who shoot and kill a police offi cer more
than deserve the pun ishment this hill contains."
Police Sgt. Dennis Glivar was shot and killed Sunday at the aparuncnt
door of a man who allegedly had just gunned down a neighbor. Harry
Mitts, 44, was arraigned Wedncsdlly on two counts of aggravated murder
and two counts of attempted aggravated murder.
If convicted, Mitts could face the death penalty, or get a life sentence
with a possibility of parole in as little as 20 years, depending on how a
sentence is imposed.
A judge or judicial panel presently treats police killings as other aggravated murders. Possible penalties range from death to life in pnson with
no parole for 20 or 30 years.
Ohio's death penalty law took effect in 198 1 and no one has yet been
ex ecuted. The first person convicted under that law , Leonard Jenkin s,
gunned down Cleveland rookt e patrolman Anthony Johnson during a
bank rubbery .
Jenkins was convicted and se ntenced to die in the electric chair, but
former Gov . Richard Celest.e commut.ed his sentence to life in 1991. Jenk ins wtll become eligible for parole on May I, 2048.
Senate Bill 341 would make parole impossible for anyone convicted of
kill ing a police officer and not sentenced to death .
The bill al so would establish a policy for how relatives of a slain law
enforcement officer should be notified.
State Sen. Nancy Chiles Dix, R-Hebron, introduced the bill July 26 at
the request of Maureen Markwood, the widow of slain Lancaster police
officer Breu Markwood.
"We haven't received any opposition. We are getting good support
l rom both sides of the ai sle," said Kent Scarrett, legislative aide to Ms.

?i~hc

:
bill is part of crime legislation now in the Ohio Legislature.
·: The Ohio Criminal Sentencing Comm issi on, creat.ed by the Legislature
: ':lnd chaired by Chief Justice Thomas Moyer, spent four years to evaluat, ~ n g Ohio 's crime sentence s. Its I ,000-page report is before the Senate
Judiciary Committee, chaired by Sen. Barry Levey, R-Middletown.
Levey said hi s committee has its hands full trying to piece together
various proposed criminal law changes with the commission' s work into
one comprehensive reform measure.
" We have 140 bills in the committee," he said. " I' m trying not to do
. :it piecemeal."
· The Legislature is mirroring the attitude of the public about police
· being killed in the tine of duty , Sinagra said.
" This bill by Sen. Di• is right on target. If there's good reason to add a
circumstance or two to preclude life in prison without parole, I'm sure
we 'II get testimony on that,'' said Sinagra said, a member of the Judiciary
Committee.

Today in history
:ny Tbe Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Aug. 21 , the 233rd day of 1994. There arc 132 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
Fifty years ago, on Aug. 21, !944, the United States, Britain, the Soviet
Union and China opened talks at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington that
helped pave the way for establishment of the United Nations.
On this date:
In 1680, Pueblo Indians took possession of Santa Fe, N.M. , after dri vjng out the Spanish.
- In 1831, former slave Nat Turner led a violent in surrection in Virginia.
He was later executed.
In 1858, the famous debates between senatorial contenders Abraham
Lincoln and Stephen Douglas began.

to itself.
Forty years ago, a national baseball strilce would have unleashed a
national wailing and gnashing of

Chuck Stone
teeth . Today, the only national
reaction to the players/owners
squabble over how many millions
all of them want to walk away with
at the expense of the fans is a
coast-to-coast collective yawn.
Forty years ago, players did sensational things. Think of Willie
Ml!YS losing his cap while running
full speed, catching that homerunbent ball over his shoulders,
whirling and throwing the ball to
third base.
America decimated the German
war machine and brought Japan 10
its military knees. But the war of
. words has never reached an agreement over whether the Splendid
Splinter (Ted Williams) or Joltin'
Joe DiMaggio wa s the greater
baseball player.
The argument really threatened
to escalate into nuclear verbosity in
194 7, when Williams won the
triple crown, but DiMaggio won
the most valuable player award.
Yesterday, baseball players
played.for the love of the game, the

August 21, 1994

Riegle shows no mercy after his own escape
WA SHINGTO N - Sena te
Ba nking Comm ittee Chairma n
Donald Riegle, D-Mic h., who once
in vok ed a memory "disabi lity"
hr forc the Se nate Ethics Commitlee , ran now brag about sac king
so meo ne acc used of a graceful
dodge.
Deputy Trea sur y Sec-retary
Roger C. Altman's resignation last
week was the price he pa1d for misleadi ng Co ngress about con tac ts
betw een Treasur y and the White
House regardi ng the governme nt ' s
mvesligauon of Madi son Guaranty
Sav ings and Loan . Treasury aide
Joshua Ste iner memoriali zed the
moment in hi s diary last February
by desc ribin g how Altma n had
"g race fu ll y du cked" commi ttee

ten.
Riegle had been resolutely clear
that if ' 'an ybody ever tries to juxtapose fund -raising help with any
request to do some specific action
for th em, I would vie w that as
improper. " But Keating Five prosecutor Robert S. Bennett unearthed
piles of ev idence strongly disputing
that claim.
Don ald Rieg le me t Char les
Keating on Jan. 28, 1987. Notes of
the meetin g taken bv a Riegle aide
show that Keating - who knew
Ri egl e was in line to be the next
chairman of the Se nate Banking
Committee - offered to raise up to
$ 150,000 for Rieg le's re-election
cam paign. At the ti me of the offer,
R1egle was aware that Keating was
feuding with government thrift regulators.
On March 6, 1987, Rieg le met
with Edwin Gray , then the govern ment 's top thrift reg ulator, where
he began plann ing key meetin gs
between federal reg ul ators and a
group of senators. Shortly after the
mee ting, Riegle new to Phoeni x,
where hi s meetin gs with Keatin g
in cluded a heli copter tour of his
real estate empire, golf courses and
hotels. Be nn ett la ter mai ntained
that " the ev idence is simply over-

the dump-Aitman mov-ement. But
he carried it off with all the mora l
authority of a defroc ked pries t. A
review of Rteglc' s rece nt hi story

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
tells the story :
Back in 199 1, Rtcg le and four
colleag ues were hauled in front of
the Senate Ethi cs Comm itt ee on
charges of exerting improper inOu cncc on behalf of now-jailed sav ings and loan tycoon Charles Keating. Keatin g had been dolin g out
campa ign contri buuons to pol itician s who were willing to run inte rfere nce with the federal regulators
targeting his high-flyi ng thri ft.
Be twee n Janua ry and Ap ril
1987, Rieg le co llected more than
$77,000 in lega l campa ign contributions fro m Keaung and his associates . Later on, Riegle lwd onl y
fa int recollec tions of those months
milking the Keating connection. A
spate of meetings with Keating. his
lobbyi st, his acco untant and other
senators were convenientl y forgot-

q ucsuons abou t the conlacts.

During the grueling Senate hear ings on Wh itewater, Riegle afford ed Altman little mercy. Haranguing
and ho llering at times for the li ve
tel evision audience, Riegle ex hort ed: " We can't have a situation in
th e luture where any body in th e
execut iv e branches_ co mes befo re
thi s CO ITI ITi itt cC, Or Uny CO ITIITi l ltCC
of the Congress, and gives an evasive answer, an incom plete answer,
a lcss-than-the-full -trutlr answer."
Ri egl e ulti ma tely spcarh en dcd

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whelming " that Riegl e visited
Keating' s Phoenix headquarters for
fund-raising purposes.
Riegle's biggest payday came
during a March 23 Detroit fund raiser spon sored by Keating . A
week later, Riegle quietly arranged
the first of two meetings between
his Senate colleagues and federal
reg ul ators to di scuss Keating 's
company - meetings which later
became the focal point of one of
th e biggest congress ional ethi cs
probes in history.
In defending Riegle before the
Ethics Committee , Riegle ' s attorney appealed to senators to take
pity on his client' s poor memory:
"Pe rhaps it is un fortunate but. ..
Se n. Rieg le does no t ha ve a
dctatled recollection of his conversation with Keating or others, "
Thomas Green told the committee.
"Thi s general disability applies to
virtua ll y all of Sen. Riegle ' s past
acti vity, regardless of subject. "
Bennett wasn't bitin g. After a
17 -month inves tigation, Be nnett
strmrgly suggested that Riegle had
perjured him self. If there was no
linkage between Keating' s contri butions and Riegle's favors, Bennett argued, " why is there so much
substa ntial evid e nce that Sen.
Ri egl e was making an effort to
obscure his role?"
Despite Bennett's efforts , Riegle
walked away with a wri st-s lap
from his fellow senators. They
allowed him to retain the title and
trappings of the Banking Committee chairmanship, from which he
has hurled bricks from his glass
house. Come this January, Riegle
will leave the Senate , having
rec eived a loud message from
-Michigan voters. After a stormy,
18 -year career in the Senate,
Riegle' s swan song will be the
Whitewater hearings and the sacking of Alunan.
The irony of this has not been
lost on at least one former member
of the Senate Ethics Committee:
"It was surreal to watch Riegle
talking about Alunan not telling the
truth. I just think it shows you that
anything is poss ible in Washing-

COLUMBUS, O hi o (AP) Finding a grove of healthy, mature
marijuana plants is the high point
of Willie Pinman's day.
Pittman quickly pull the leafy ,
green plants out of the ground but
he has no plans to harvest them.
Instead, the special agent with
the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation confisca tes
them as part of the state's marijuana eradication program.
"This is my high - taking it
(marijuana) away from other peopl e," he said.
The program is organized by the
state attorney general 's offi ce and
the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation. It is funded
through the federal Drug Enforcement Agency and coordina ted
through th e co unty sheriff' s
offices.
Last year, authorities confiscated 70,030 marijuana plants around
Ohio . They have tak en abo ut
2 1,000 plants ,this year, Pittman
told The Columbus Dispatch.
Pinman was part of a convoy of

Our baseball historian , Mike
Roberts, Columbus, son of Robert
D. and Nonja Roberts, has submitted stories on several baseball play ers who arc natives of Meigs Coun ty.
The following is a story on Kid
Elb erfeld, as written by Mike
Roberts. Previously Mike had submitted a story on Benny Kauff.
Nex t week we will submit addi tional stori es of Benny Kauff,
Harley H. "Lefty" Dillinger, Walter
L. " Mother" Watson , Harry
Richard "Cy" Morgan , Thomas C.
Williams, and Thomas W. "Savage
Tom" Thomas. Before too long, we
will have additional stories on Bill
Wilson , Rolli e Hemsley and Mel
Clark .
"Kid Elberfeld, the "Tabasco
Kid"
Norm an Arthur Elberfeld was
born in (or ncar) Pomeroy on April
I 3, 1875 . He died January 13, 1944
in Chattanoog a, Tenn . Between
these dates spanned the life of one
of the most colorful (and probably
meanest) maj or leaguers of all
time. According to Allen Elberfeld,
son of Robert , Grandson of Jacob
II, and great grandson of Jacob I,
Norman was a son of one of Jacob
l' s brothers and therefore a fir st
cou sin of Jaco b II . Thi s is the
Elberfeld 's Department Store fami -

ly, of course.
Norman 's career spanne d 14
major league seasons. He broke in
with the Ph illies in 1898, played

Fred W. Crow
for Cin cinnati in 18 99 and was
traded to Detroit for the 1901 season following a year out of the
"Bigs." During the 1903 season he
was traded to the Yankees (called
the Highlanders then) where he
played each season through I 909.
In 1910 and 1911, he played for the
Senators. Out of the majors for the
two following years, he played in
30 games with Brooklyn in 1914.
Norman played most of his career
at shortstop, but also played second
and third base. His lifetime batting
average was a respectable .271. He
is listed by "Total Baseball Encyclopedia" in the top 300 players of
all time. Small in stature at 5'7", he
managed 10 home runs. His size
did not deter his aggressiveness. To
4uote the "Sporting News":
"Among the first ball players of
basebaU 's early years, "The Tabasco Kid" stands out as one of the
most peppery. The "Kid" not only
stood his ground at shortstop, daring runners to come at him with

loyalty to their team and affection
of the fans. Today, players play for
the size of their bank account, the
number of endorsements and the
value of their autographs.
Recalling my teen-age years, I
am amazed that black kids were so
fanatical about a sport that ostra cized them. My maverick predilections orohablv were haotized when
as a black Connecticut Yankee, I
was the only New York Yankee fan
in a New England city that placed
fidelity to the Boston Red Sox just
one step lower than devotion to
God.
We hovered around our radios,
listening feverishly to Red Barber
and Mel Allen, and if you didn 't
know who those two charismatic
vocal chords were, you were truly a
subversive un-American.
But in the uncertainties of 1994,
we are a different nation than we
were in our uncluttered innocence
of 1954. Our moral values have
plummeted. Our political ethics
would make Willie Sutton blush .
The pre ss, once univ ersally
respected for its consumer-friendly
compassion, is disdained for its
voyeuristic intrusions.
But of greater importance, base-

ball and the World Series are no
longer the only or the most important gam es in town . Today, the
Super Bowl, the NBA and even the
NCAA championships command
as much, if not more, interest and
feUowship than baseball.
The only cities with passion
about the World Series outcome
are those whose teams are playing.
A baseball strike is a doleful
reminder that baseball is no longer
the defining element of the American culture that described Sinclair
Lewis' middle-American Babbitt:
"A sensational event was changing
from the brown suit to the gray the
contents of his pockets. He was
earnest about these objects. They
were of eternal importance, like
baseball or the Republican Party."
Republicans are giving Bill
Clinton a legislative fit, proving
that they are of eternal importance.
Strike or no strike, baseball is not
Cbuck Stone is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communieate electronically witb
Ibis columnist and qthers, con·
tact America Online by caiUng 1·
800-827-6364, exL 8317,)

Thought for Today: "Old age is the most unexpected of all the things
that haooen to a llllln.'' - Leon Trotsky (I 879-I 940).

their spikes, he later poured
whiskey into the raw wounds on
hi s legs. He was notoriou s for
a llowing him self to get hit by
pitched balls, setting the AL record
in 1911 when he got plunked 25
times. He was repeatedly ejected
for arguing with umpires, and in
1906 had to be forcibly removed
from the field by the police when
he assaulted an arbiter and chased
him around the field! This aggressive, win-at-any -cost style of ball
playing made him a team leader
and a catalyst for the early New
York Yankees. In 1903, the Yan kees (Highlanders) played their
first season in New York . Elberfeld, acquired from Detroit early in
the year, helped the team to a
fourth place fmish . That year he hit
.301 and stole 22 bases. Kid was
the Highlander's regular shortstop
until I 908, when Manager Clark
Griffith resigned early in the year.
Elberfeld was hired as player/manager, but spent most of the year on
the bench directing the team . After
going 27-71 , he returned to fulltime play in 1909 .
This incident is described in
more detail in the book, "The BasebaU HaU of Shame" as follows:
Norman, "Tbe Tabasco Kid"
Elberfeld
Shortstop - New York, AL September 3, I906.
Kid Elberfeld was dragged off
the field kicking and screaming by
a squad of policemen in the most
disgraceful ejection ever witnessed
on a major league diamond.
There was a good reason why
the New York Yankees shortstoo
was called "The Tabasco Kid. 1'
Although he was only 5 feet, 5
mches tall and weighed I 35
pounds, Elberfeld had a king-size
temper hott.er than a jalapeno - that
labeled him the bad boy of baseball.
His most deplorable heave-ho
came during the thick of the 1906
pennant race in the first game of a
do~bleheader against the visiting
Philru!elphl3 Athletics. In the top of
the mnth mnmg of a 3-3 tie the
A's runner Danny Murphy ~tole
tlrird base on a close play. Immediately, the Yankees surrounded the
umpire, Francis O'Loughlin, and
protested the call. He quickly
silenced them all except for the
Tabasco Kid.
Elberfeld approached the ump
~ith _his ~siS raised, but O'Loughhn d1sdamfully waved him away.
The geslllre infuriated the Kid who
rushed at.!-he ar~iter and a~pted
t~ k1ck him. 0 Loughlin dodged
him w1th _the skill of a bullfighter
and then, m the same motion, gave
Elberfeld the thumb. In retaliation
the Kid gave O'Loughlin the finger. Wanting further vengeance
the wrathful player c~ the
all oveftthe mfield, trymg six futile

ump

times to kick him in the butt and
spike him in the fooL
When the alanned umpire final ly appealed to the police for help,
three cops raced out onto the field
and grabbed Elberfeld. Cursing at
the top of his lungs, he was hustled
ott to the dugout while the 20,000
fans at New York's Hilltop park
jeered him .
O'Loughlin refused to allow the
game to continue until the Kid was
removed from the ball park. This
only enraged Elberfeld more .
Breaking free from the policemen's
grasp, he charged after the umpire
again. Teammate AI Orth 11ied to
restrain him, but even though Ot111
had a seven inch, 65 pound adv:fiitage over th e Kid, the furious
Elberfeld still knocked Onh down
and continued his mad rush toward
O'Loughlin.
Once again , the beleaguered
umptre was forced to run for his
life until the cops recaptured the
crazed player and hauled him off
the field for the second time. When
the Kid was brought to the player's
gate , he wouldn't budge any further. Meanwhile, New York manager Clark Griffith feared the game
would be forfeited because the81ay
had been held up for so long. riffi th ran up to Elberfeld and threatened to kick: him off the team if he
didn 't leave. Reluctantly the Kid
finally shuffled off to the clubhouse with boos and hisses from
the crowd still ringing in his ears.
The Kid's nasty disposition is
further attested to by my business
, partner, Doug Veazey. His father,
Norm,_ attended Elberfeld's training
camp m Chattanooga in the 1930's
and the Kid signed Norm to a
minor league contract. Elberfeld
also managed the Fulton, Ky.,
mmor league team 10 which Nann
was assigned. Two years later, the
Kid cut Nann from the roster while
the team was on the road. Elberfeld
refused to let Norm 'ride home on
the bus, he had to hitchhike. Nonn
s1gned on the next day with the
rival Mayfield, Ky ., team. Fulton
and Mayfield met the following
day. Nann got a little revenge by
producmg the game winning hit in
the ninth inning.
. For further inquiries or other
mformation write or call Mike
Roberts, 682 Springwater Drive,
Akron, OH 44333-1459 or (800)
860772 I or home at (216) 6663659.
In God we trust.
Carryon.
Editor's note - Long-time
Attorney Fred W. Crow Is tbe
contributor of a weekly columu
for Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel.
!t~aders wishing to applaud, trltICIZe or comment on any subject
(except religion or polltiCI) are
~ncouraged to write to Mr, Crow
m care of tbis newspaper.

sheriff's deputies, National Guardsmen and undercover drug age nts
partic ipa ting in a recent tw o-day
raid in southern Perry County. The
group took direc ti ons from Dan
Kinse l, who new ove rh ead m a
helicopter.
They found seven huge marij uana plants hidden in a th ick stand of
trees olf a tow nship road. The
plants were protec ted by cht ckcn

\

CO LUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovich doesn't plan any
more deba tes tha n o ne a lrea d y
sc heduled for Oc tober, a campa ign
spokes woman said .
Roh Burch, Democratic gubernatoria l candidate. on Frida y cha llenged Re publican Voin ov ich to
seven debates that would take the
can didates into all ~ec t ion s of th e
SUlte.
" We've accepted a debate sponsored by The Cincinna11 Post an d
Cincin nau Publ ic TV in Oc tober.
We feel the debate sc hcdti lc for the
fa ll has been set," .s aid Caryn Can -

w1rc.

cli sky , Voino vich 's campaign
spokeswoman. " We don't expec t
thai to change."
Bu rch linked hi s in vita ti on to
the Abraham Linco ln -S tephen
Douglas deba tes of 185X.
" As we ce lebra te the IJ(, th
anniversary of the Lincoln-Douglas
deba tes . let's make 1994 a yt·ar for
all Oh io to remember," Burch .said
in a letter to Voinovich.
. " I ask yo u to travel to gether
wttll me and stand side hy side ami
compete in the arena of ideas, with
the winn er bein g no t the person
willlllle biggest checkbook, but tl1e
pc r ~ on

Steve Fealty, commander of the
Perry Cou nty Drug Ta sk Force.
nipped a police business card onto
th e overturned soil after he pulled
the plan ts.
" Thi s is to let them know we' re
onto them, and so they know who
got their stash," he sa id.
During the raid , Ki nse l spotted
79 plants, but he won't say how he
fi nds them.
"If they know what we' re looking for, th en they' ll change what
they're doing," he said. " It 's hard
to spot one or two plants, but if
they want to play that game, we ' II
still get them."

who has lhc bcq id&lt;':ts for

rile future of Ohio ," Burch said.
Not mentioned in the letter was
mdependent candida te Bi ll y Inmon,
who was 1n th e 20 th day of a
hunge r Stri ke today in an attempt to
Ioree Voinov ich to debate him.
Ms. Ca ndi.s ky said Frida y tha t
V o mov tch 's positt on on d ebating

Inm on had not changed. Voinovich
rei uses l o debate the form er Ohi o

S.talC f-~!lr manager , and di smisses
hun as a disgruntled ex -employee.

llur ch SClid In mon .s ho ul d be
in vited to all de bates , but also w:ts
a ~rec &lt;t h k h l lc:1vin g that up to 1he
"JX&gt;n sor s of GJC h event.

Burc h proposed debates in the
Cleveland area, Cincinnati, Colum·
bus, Dayton, Toledo, Youngstown
and south eas t Ohi o, poss ibly
Athens, Cambndge , Marietta, St.
Clairsvll le or Steubenville.
Burch said he knew Voinovich' s
consulta nts wo uld advi se aga inst
·
accepting the invitati on.
' ' I hope yo u wi ll rejec t thai
adv ice . I hope you will recogni ze
your greater obligation to go directly to ~ tc people and give them the
opportunity to participate personally m thei r cam paign for governor
of Ohio." Burch sa1d.

Patrol ends probe into weapon incident

H' C:~U J MRUS (A I') - ·n:e State
. Jgh " Y Pdtrol h.ts complet ed l l.\
tnvc st. tgatlon
·d
· · v mto· a gun · rel
, ated
', tcrcauon tn 1~ -m g _tn ~1epe nt1elll
f~tbern,llortal c.t ndlll ,lte 11 tlly
man. . ·.
.
,
.
A dec tston abou t whe th er .1n y
charges
· · 'thresult
h ·from the
. case now
res\-: WJ t e cuy prosecutor.
The case has been t u~:d ov~r
to the, Col um bus_ cny prosec utor s
offJC&lt;. . The prosecutor w tll now
I CVJCw th e case to dctemnnc 1..1J spo ·

°

sition and possi ble charges ," the
patrol sa id on Frida y tn a news
rc--1ca.se.
.
Trooper&gt; satd th ree people
approa ched Inmon ' s tent ou tside
the Statehouse at 2:24 a.m.
Wed nesday as he con unu ed a
hunger strike :
.
.
. In mon s;ud one person Jd cn tt ftcd htm sc lf as a homosex ual and
threa tened to unn ate o n h1m .
In mon sa td he feared h1s lt fe was m
dan ge r, and po inlcd a .38 -calibcr

·

"''ulvcr at the man.
No shots were fired ·md no one
· · ' sc ated the
"''" hurt . .rnx1pers confi
;: un later Wc&lt; lncsday.
Th e patsol said it consulted with
the h an kltn Coun ty Prosecutor's
l llftce before t· k1 h
Inmon • 47"
·e·;'beapon
..
, 3 \nVgIltl dru
USln CSS·
1nan, has been fas ung si nce Aug. 1
1n an attempt to persuade Republi can Gov . George Vo inov ich 10
debate him befo re the No v. 8 clcc -

Voinovich dismisses Inmon as a
disg runtl ed former state employee,
.
:urd wlil debate onl y Democratte
challenger Rob Burc h.
In mon, a se lf-described ultr aco nse rva tJ ve, tn ed to ban gayn ghts group s from dtstnbutm g
m·lt
eri al at th e 1992 fair that he
&lt;
considered obscene.
.
Wh e n Inm on announ ced h1 s
candidacy , he denounced homoscxuality as " unnatural and a perver-

l torl.

s1on."

Falhlgren severs ties over Burger chains

Fair cheating scandal
bothers top winners

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

Mike Roberts tells 'Kid' Elberfeld story

Sunday Times-Sentinel /AS

crops around Ohio

ton."

Baseball strikes out with fans
:. When I was a child, I spake as a
~ hild, I understood as a child, I
thought as a child: but when I
became a man, I put away childish
)hings.
- If you're a hot dog eatin~,T­
shirt wearing, bleachers res1dtng
)laseball fanatic and your baseball
card collection once filled three
hoxes then you know the answer
to thi; important trivia question:
Who was the last triple crown winner (most home runs, m_ost runs
batted in and highest batttng average)?
· Things have changed for both
the best and the worst in baseball
iiince the Boston's Curl Yastrzemslci won the triple crown in I 967
(althou~h he shared most home
iuns wtth Minnesota's Harmon
7(1Uebrew).
. More teams are playing big
league baseball. More fans are
~warming through the stadiums'
~stiles. More players are making
~ver a million dollars, and more
people couldn 'I care less whether
lhe players went on strilce or not.
· The once mighty national pastime thar transmogrified the grown
inen of winter into the little boys of
summer and brought the nation to a
massive standstill during the World
Series is administering the last rites

Ohio/W.Va.
Investigators try to
Burch
seeking
more
debate
dates
eradicate marijuana

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A4

attempt to make them look more
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Two teens are growing weary of muscular.
The top two anim als have not
the attention resulting from their
been
checked and will go through
success at the Ohio State Fair.
carcass
examinati ons and other
Joe Siegrist, 15, of Coldwater,
showed the grand champion, and tests for drug residue after the fair
Matt Miller, 19, of Arcanum , ends Sunday.
" !don't think we have anytlting
showed the reserve grand champi on steer in the junior competition at to worry about," Siegri st said.
Cattle exhibitors at the fair Frithe fair.
day
expressed di sappoinunent over
The animals sold for $34,000
the
tamperings
.
and $I 2,000, respectively , during
"It's
terrible
when thi s happens,
this week's Sale of Champions.
because
4-H
is
supposed to teac h
Instead of basking in the glory
of their achievement, the two are kids morals, values and how to take .
fielding questions about five steers responsibility," said Marsha Hatthat were tampered with in the field of Bainbridge.
Her daughter Holly, 14 , was
competition.
helping
groom the family' s cattle m
"Everyone's looking at us say the
fau.
ing, ' Huh . I wond er if he was
Cheating has been going on a
cheating?' " Siegrist said . " I'm
long
time at fairs, said Carla Holjust sick of it."
brook
of Baltimore. Holbrook was
The Ohio Fair Commission on
at
the
fair showing a French beef
Thursday announced it would dissteer.
qualify five of the top 10-ranked
"It's not fair to everyone who's
steers. The animals had been injectit right," she said.
doing
ed with vegetable oil , an apparent

PARKERSBURG, W.Va . rAP)
wars have forced an
advertisin g agency to cut tJCS with
its holding company, company offi cials said .
Fa hlgrcn Inc. said Thursday it
has reac hed an agree ment to bu y
it self bac k fr om the lnterp ubli c

~ Ham hurgcr

Group of Compantes Inc . of New
Yo rk, whic h pu rchased Fahlgren in
I ~ XX .

Fahl gren first so ught to end its
association in July, when lnterpuhli c acquired the New York ad agency Amm irati &amp; Puri s. The firm
handles the nat10nal acco unt for

Three arrested for
poaching mussels
C HAR LESTO N, W.Va. (AP)
- A federal grand jury wt ll consider charges again st three Te nnessee men arrested for allegedly
poachin g mu ssel s from the O hio
River.
Mark Anthony Eva ns, Christopher Lee Elli s and Bobby Da le
Vest, all of Camden, Tenn ., were
arrested Aug. 2 near Williamstown,
Wood County. A federal magistrate
ruled Thursday that there is enough
evide nc e to se nd th e case to a
grand jury.
Each man is charged with illc-

Burger King, sa id Fahlgren excr utivc vice pres ident Tom Crooks.
The move put Fa hlgren in a
pickle because Burger King is the
chief rival of Fahl grcn's btggest
client, McDo nald ' s.
" McDonal d's felt, and we felt,
it was a conf ltct of tnt eres t,"
Crooks .said.
I'ahl gren 's nine office in the
Mtdwcst and South east serve 17
McDo nald's ma rk etm g coopera-

uves that represent 1,250 restaurants in West Virginia, Georgia ,
Ohio, Florida , Kentucky and Virginia, he said.
Terms of the buyback were not
disclosed. Fahlgren said the deal
should be completed in a few
weeks.
Park e rsburg -based Fahlgren
reported annual corporate billings
of $150 million in 1993.

gail y taking and tran sporting mussels across stat.e lines.
Wildlife officers from West Virginia , Ohio and the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, found more than
300 musse ls in th e men' s truck,
said Emerson Gorham, a federa l
wildlife agent.
Mu ssels arc protected in West
Vi rgini a but not in Tennessee, said
Sgt. Harry Shaver of the West Virg ini a Di vision of Natur al
Resources.
Camden is a center for the sale
of mollusk shells, Shaver said.

Judge accepts settlement in case
The lawsuit was filed in I 974
CINCINNATI (AP)- A judge
following
a divisive meeting when
has accepted a settlement in a 20the
school
board reversed a deci year-old lawsuit alleging racial dission
to
bus
students to reduce segcrimination in the city's schools.
regauon.
The settlement approved by
Trudy Rauh, a lawyer for the
U.S. District Judge Walter Rice on
Friday ends direct court supervi- NAACP and the students and parents who brought the suit, said the
sion of city school operations.
seulement
points the right direction
The judge, based in Dayton,
for
the
district.
That dir ection
would get involved only if the dis "includes
some
real
accountability
trict and the National Association
from
teachers
and
administrators
"
for the Advancement of Colored
'
People cannot settle a dispute on she said.
Superintendenl J. Michae l
their own or with the help of the
Brandt
said the district has been
state education department.
working
on the assumption the setThe settlement sets goals in
tlement
would
be accepted. District
areas of staff and student racial
officials
will
meet
with NAACP
integration, student discipline and
attorneys
on
Sept.
I
2
to explain the
academic performance for at least
steps they have taken and discuss
two years.
what lies ahead, Brandt said.

Tom Mooney, pres ident of the
Cincinnati Federation of Teac hers,
said the union will appeal the se ttlement.
The CFf tried to join the case in
January, objecting that the settlement required m~Jnit oring how well
teachers managed class roo m
behavior but did not address other
fa ctors in discipline. Ri ce turned
down the union.
The se ttlement "just requires
that schools keep racial and gender
data on di sc iplin a ry acti o ns,"
Mooney sa id. "It puts the whole
blame for the c urrent sta te of
affairs on teachers, arrd that's irresponsible ... Teac hers will be
afraid, if th e y di sciplin e kid s,
they'll be threatened or intimidated
with disr:- :~Jal.''

Firm will store
waste outside plant
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) High-level radioactive waste will
be stored outside the Davis Besse
Nuclear Power Station near Toledo
late next year, a Toledo Edison
official said.
Space in the plant's water storage pool will run out in the fall of
I 995, forcing the plant to join an
increasing number of nuclear
power plants storing spent fuel outside.
William O'Connor, manager of
regulatory affairs for {llant operator
Toledo Edison, on Fnday said fuel
rods will be loaded into two stainless steel casks. Each cask will be
placed in an above-ground concrete
vault at the plant near Oak Harbor,
about 30 miles east of Toledo.

Lottery numbers
By Tbe Associated Press
The following numbers were
chosen in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 4-5-8
Pick 4: 1-1-2-7
Buckeye 5: 6- I 7-29-34-37
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$560,872 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers tolaled
$1,417,883.
The Ohio Lottery lost money in
its other daily game. Pick 4 Numbers playen wagered $308,653 and
will share $008,400.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$496,319.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto was S4 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 9-0-6
Daily 4: 3-5-2-4
Cash 2~ 2-5-10-15-17-21

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�Pomero~·-Middleport-Galilpolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page- AS--Sunday Times-Sentinel

August 21, 1994

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

--Area deaths-Joseph A. Blazer
G.\L U POUS- Joseph Arthur Blazer, 64, 1210 Cherry Ridge Road.
Rro Crandc, died Friday, Aug . 19, 1994 at his residence.
ll om Nov. IH, 1929 in Gallia County, son of the late Ernest and Gloria
KrJ us Blazer, he was a retired U.S .
Air Force master sergeant and retired
farm wof&lt;linator of Bob Evans Farms
at Rio Grande.
A membe r of the Simpson Chapel
Unitctl Methodis t Church, where he
se rved on various committees and the
ch oir, he wJs also a member of
Gallipoli s VFW Post 4464 , the U.S .
Air I'o rcc Se rgeant s Ass ociation,
Moflllng Dawn Lodg e No. 7 of
Gallipolis , Morial1 Council No. 32,
Rose Co mmandcry No . 43, Hillbilly
Clan No.7, the Gallipolis Shrine Club,
and
th e
Aladdin
Temple
AAO.N.M.S . of Columbus.
In Jddition. he was a member and
past patron of the Gallipolis Chapter
Order of th e Eastern Star No. 283,
serv ed as Junior Past Worthy Grand
Patron of Ohi o of the OES in 1992-93,
and was a member of the Order of the
Wh ite Shrine of Jerusalem No. 44. He
JOSEPH A. BLAZER
served on the board of trustees of the
Dr Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library from 1990 unliJ 1994.
Surviving arc his wife, Sarah Tucker Blazer, whom he married Jan . 25,
1952 in Rushville, Ind.; two sons and daughters-in -law, Joseph Arthur and
Sarah Blazer Jr. of Northup, and James Andrew Blazer of Rio Grande; a
daughter and son-in-law, Judith and Robert Loucks of Houston, Texas;
four grandchildren, Joseph Arthur Blazer lll, John Adam Blazer, Katherine
Jane Loucks and David Robert Loucks: a brother, John Ernest Blazer of
Keucring; a nephew, John Timothy Blazer of Enon; and a niece, Mary Kay
Kerr of Gal lipolis.
He was also preceded in death by a sister, Elizabeth (Belly) FrosL
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Simpson Chapel United
Methodi st Ch urch, Rio Grande, with the Rev . Jack Berry officiating,
assisted by Roy Turk, PGP, and Bernie Murphy. Burial will be in the
Calvary Cemetery, Rio Grande. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home Wethcrholt Chapel, Gallipolis, on Sunday from 2-9 p.m.
Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral home by Morning
Dawn Lodge No . 7 at 8:45 p.m. Sunday, followed by Eastern Star services
by Gallipolis Chapter No. 283 of the OES.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by Gallipolis VFW Post
4464.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Simpson Chapel
United Methodist Church Building Fund, P.O. Box 155, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674, or the Joe Blazer Memorial, OES Home, P.O. Box 309, Mount
Blanchard, Ohio 45867.

Purpose, goals discussed -by
Gallia County planning group

NAACP debates leader's future
By SONYA ROSS
Associated Press Writer
BAL TJMORE - Benjamin
Chavis Jr.'s freewhee ling style of
managing th e NAACP 's money
and venerable reputation has gotten
him into the fight of hi s activist life
with the civil rights group he was
hired to revitalize.
The National Assoc iation for the
Advancement of Colored People
debated behind closed doors Saturday whether Chavis will remain as
executive director, in light of a
$332,400 out-of-court settlement
that criti cs say reflected Chavis'
habit of making costly decisions
behind the board's back.
Chavi s emerged from the meeting shortly before 5 p.m. to touch
base with a crowd of about 200
supporters outside. Reporters were
not allowed with earshot. but one
s upp orter said lat er that Chavis
only reponed that the meeting was
still going on - and that no dcci ·
sion s had been made.
Wheth er Chavis stays or goes,
the NAACP is left with a budget
defi cit of about $3 million and a
taint that has alienated financial
supporters and, according to some
NAACP chapters, new members.
This is a far cry from the
NAACP Chavi s inherited, which

faced serious questions about its
perceived ineffectiveness and irrel evance to younger, angrier black
Americans - but had an intact
budget.
"1 don't know how on God's
green earth we got into this situa tion," lamented Benjamin Hooks,
Chavis' predecessor.
Chavrs has refused to resign for
settling unspecified claims of sexual di sc rimination by former
employee Mary E. Stansel. SUUlscl
has sued Chavis and the NAACP
for the $245,000 she contends she
is still owed under that seulement
because they failed to find her an
$80,000-a-year job.
Many board members also want
a re signation from Chairman
William Gibson who, while considered Chavis' staunchest defender
has said he would not be able t~
protect Chavis if other board members move to oust him.
Barbara Powell , pres ident of the
Hempstead, N.Y., chapter, said the
situation is becoming too expensive
and distracting .
"I was feeling a little bad for
Dr. Chavis but now I'm getting
tired of him," she said before the
board meeting. "It's always something popping up. We can't keep
fighting for Ben.''

According to copy ot the meeting agenda, three item s were to be
discussed: the Stansel lawsuit, any
other law suits pe ndin g or threat·
ened, and "the past performance of
the officers and staff of the assocration with respect to any such lawsuits or threats of lawsuits and di sclosure to the board of directors. "
Contending he has done nothing
wrong , Chavis said he wou ldn't
resist if the board moved Saturday
to take away his abilit y to make
persormcl, financial and other dayto-day decisions.
And he launched a last -minute
defense, saying he has documented
a conspiracy to oust him. On Fri day, he appeared with Susan Tis·
dale, a form er empl oyee who
denied that she wa s preparin g a
sex ual harassment case aga inst
hrm, as some Chavis critics - and
a memo to the boa rd - had
alleged.
What has incensed board members more than anything is Chavis '
handling of money. Th ey noticed
that Chavis traveled almost constantly and was driven ·around in a
Lincoln Town Car leased by th e
NAACP , two perks that Chavis
argued he needed to effectively
court financial contributions.
Chavis asserted that he was try-

GALLIPOLIS - Establishing a
purpose and developing goals were
the focus of discussion at the rust
meeting of the Gallia Co unty
Strategic Planning Community
Investment Committee held recent·
ly at the Stowaway.
Committee Chairman David
Shaffer said the committee wants
to offer educational opportunities
to high school students and young
entrepreneurs, in addition to people
who have had a small business for

ing to erase a $2 million deficit ICft
by Hooks. Hooks angri ly denied
that, sa ying he left a surplu s of
$600,000.
"Everybody knows the NAACP
was in financial trouble before I
arrived," Chavis has said.
Board anger exploded after the
NAACP's annual meeting in Jul y.
At that sess ion, a board member
directly asked Chavis and Gibson
whether there were any pending
lega l matters , and wa s told no.
Days later, Stansel's lawsuit carne
to ligh t.
In April 1993, the NAACP felt
it had found the se&lt;tsoned populist
it needed in Chavis. He sought to
broad en the NAACP 's ba se , 10
bring back black American s who
felt the NAACP wasn't interested
in front -line issues like drugs and
en me.
His supporters argue that he
came under fire because he mixed
poor' people and "street clements"
among the NAACP's middle-class
base. Hi s efforts to broker a street
gang truce last year and hi s over·
tures to Nation of Islam leader
Louts Farrakhan spawned worries
that Chavis was steering the
NAACP away from its integra tionist roots into a separatist stance.

STRATEGIC PLANNING COMMITTEE Purpose and goals were discussed by members
of the Gallia County Strategic Planning Com munity Investment Committee recently. On left,

Finlaw joins
Acquisitions staff
GALLIPOLIS · Tom Tope,
president of Acquisitions Fine Jew elry, announced the addition of
Steve Finlaw to the staff.
"S teve will be in charge of our
Jewelry repair and remount department. He has over five years repair
ex perience and does excellent
work" said Tope.
"Our long range plan did not
include a repair department for
another two years, but our business
growth has been so great we just
could not wait any longer."
Two separate rooms have been
built at the Gallipolis store to house
the very latest in remount and
repair equipment. An observation

Richard John Sisson

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Deaths elsewhere
John J , Bonica
SEATTLE (AP)- John J. Bonica, a renowned anesthesiologist
who wrestled professsionally as the
"Masked Marvel" to pay his medical school bills, died of a stroke
Munday. He was 77.
A professor emeritus at the University of Washington, Bonica
helped pioneer anesthesiology as a
spectalized field of medicine. In
1953, he wrote The Management of
Pain , a standard text on the subject.
Carlos Vieira Dias
LISBON, Portugal (AP)- Carlo s Vieira Dias, credited with
spreading the influence of Angola's
rhythmic Semba music, died Friday
after a long illness. He was 75.
Wendell James Franklin
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wendell James Franklin, who worked
hi s way from parking cars in the
NBC lot to guiding such talents as
Bill Cosby. has died of cancer. He
was 78.
Franklin, who became the first
black member of the Directors
Gui ld of America in 1960, died
July 22, his longtime friend Joe
Blccden said Friday.
Franklin served as stage manager for popular live television shows
including The ferry Lewis Show,
The Nat King Cole Show, Queen
for a Day and This Is Your Life.
He also helped direct McMillan
and Wife, Green Horner and the
1969-71 Bill Cosby Show, a situation comedy.
Linus Pauling
BIG SUR, Calif. (AP) - Twotime Nobel Prize winner Linus
Pauling, whose advocacy of larl!e
doses of vitamin C to stave off diseases was popular with the public
but drew skepticism from fellow
scientists, died Friday at age 93.
Pauling, the only wiMer of two
unshared Nobel Piizes, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1991
and had been in frail health for the
past year.
. .
Pauling won the Nobel Prize m
chemistry in 1954 for his research
on the nature of the chemical bond
that holds moiC&lt;:ules_together and

its use in understanding the struc·
ture or such complex substances as
protein and antibodies.
He won the 1962 Nobel Prize
for peace for his campaign against
nuclear weapons.

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Scripps retires
as chairman
of company
CINCINNATI (AP)- Charles
E. Scripps, who began his career as
a reporter on his grandfather· s first
newspaper, has retired after 41
years as board chairman of The
E.W. Scripps Co.
In a corporate change on Friday
that marks Ihe end of an era.
Scripps, 74, will be succeeded by
Lawrence A. Leser, who has been
elected chairman and chief execu·
tive officer. Leser, 59, had been the
company's president and chief
executive officer since 1985.
Scripps becomes-chairman of
the board's executive committee.
He also is chainnan of the trustees
of The Edward W. Scripps Trust,
controlling shareholder of The
E.W. Scripps Co.
William R. Burleigh has been
elected to succeed Leser as president, and will remain chief operating officer. Burleigh, 58, had been
executive vice president sinc.e
1990. He is a member of the board
of directors of The Associated
Press.

reduce the level of maleic
Ry LISA MEADOWS
hydrazide pesticide residue in flue·
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
cured tobacco - this type of tobacco
County Agricultural Stabilization is not grown in Gallia County.
and Conservation Service reminds
Price support on tobacco treated
tobacco growers that all pesticide with non-approved pesticides or
products used on their tobacco not used according to label instrucmust be approved by the Environ- tions will be withheld. If the price
mental Protection Agency for use support is withheld, a "No Price
·on tobacco, and must be applied in Support" marketing card will be
accordance with label instructions.
issued for the farm and all price
Pesticide sampling may be made support advances received during
on 1994-crop tobacco to determine the current year must be refunded.
whether pesticides have been misFalse certification case will be
used. Efforts are being made to referred for prosecution with high
monetaliy penalties and possible
imprisonment.
SE Small Business
Lisa Meadows is the County
Development Center Executive
Director of the Gallia
Agricultural Stabilization and
receives grant
Conservation Service.
GALLIPOLIS - The Southeast
Small Business Development Center has received a gram from the
small business administration and
the Ohio Department of Development to establish a mentoring program in five southern Ohio counties. including Gallia.
Lou Ann Walden, director of the
development center in the offices
of the Greater Lawrence County
Area Chamber of Commerce in
South Point. said the purpose of the
program is to match successful
women entrepreneurs with female
business owners whose companies
are ready to grow.
Lynn Angell of Angell Accounting Associates, Gallipolis, is servPRACTICE DEFENSIVE DRIVING.
ing as one of the fusl group of
Watch out for the other person.
mentors.
Far pointers on auto safety,
The women's network for
entrepreneurial training was creatme, your State Farm agen-,t._ _"
ed to link successful women busiIUtl .AIM
ness owners with women
aROU
SNOWP(N
entrepreneurs ready for business
342s.c.lllft. .
expansion through an ongoing
11115
mentoring relationship.
'•OW.290
n. 446....
INIUIANC~
~y local business interested in
Ho.446-4511
®
participating in the program should
good
neighbor,
State
Farm
is
th6rfl.
contact Amber Wilson, small busi8
ness consultant of the Southeast
Slate Fann Mutual Automobile Insurance Company
Small Business Development CenHOme Office:
, tmnota
ter, South Point

!;.,

IC2

GALLIPOLIS - The 12th
Farm City Day Pre-Tour event has
been scheduled for Thursday, Sept.
8 from 6-8 p.m. at the Charles
McKean fann. 556 Centenary Road
in Green Township.
The tour will provide the public
with a view of how an agribusiness
is managed, officials from the Galli a Soil and Water Conservation
District said.
With a focus on stewardship of
natural resources, the McKean
family has found a means or producing different crops . Charles
McKean operates a beef cow herd
and produces hay, along with such
truck crops as sweet corn. green
beans, potatoes, tomatoes, pumpkins and tobacco.
He is also in the process of pro·
ducing a crop of timber through
timber stand improvement tech ·
niques and crop tree management.
The procedure has also prompted
wildlife habitat enhancement and
total ecosystem management. Several conservation practices have
been installed by the Me Keans.
Directions to the farm are as follows: from Spring Valley on Jackson Pike, take Mitchell Road to
State Route 588. Turn right onto
588 and then an immediate left
onto Centenary Road to the second
two-story brick home on the right.
Signs will be posted.
A cookout and hayride is
planned for the pre-tour, SWCD
officials said.
For more information, contact
Lois Snyder, district program
administrator, at446-8687.

Whenever you're driving
and wherever you're bound...

Convenient Low Monthly Payments

CREDfT TEAIIS

window has been installed for customers to watch the actual work
being done on their jewelry.
Mr. Fin law owned and operated
a gun sa les and repa ir store for
three years in Belpre before being
sc hooled in jewelry repair. He
resides in Pomeroy witt) his wife.
Debbie.
"Our repair business has always
been very strong and now with
much faster service we look for
even greater demand. It is nice to
do business with local people you
know and trust," commented Tope.
Acquisitions has been in business four years. They operate stores
in both Middleport and Gallipolis.

Tobacco growers reminded
of pesticide restrictions

When sold

..-:~rn:::-::

your loved one. the time is now. Logan

time s ·available, but people just
don' I know how much they need.
Education and information could
be invaluable."
The commiuee plans to meet
once a month to work toward its
goals. It is one of II subcommittees worktng on the Gallia County
strategic plan . For more information , co ntact the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce at 446·
0596

Farm City Day
Pre-Tour set for
September 8

GALLIPOLIS - James Edward Marcum, 52, of the Scenic Hills Care
Center, died Saturday, Aug. 20, 1994 in the Scenic Hills Care Center.
Born March 16, 1942 in Fallsview, W.Va., son of Juanita Holstein
Marcum, and the late Opie Marcum, he was an accountant with AEP. He
served in the U.S. Army, attended the University of Rio Grande and graduated from its college of business.
Surviving in addition to his mother are a sister, Mrs. Mike (Debbie)
Rhodes of Gallipolis, and a brother, Don Marcum of Houston, Texas.
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in the Willis Funeral Home, with the
Rev . John Jackson officiating. Burial will be in the Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 6-9 p.m.

LIMITED EDITION

so me time and arc seeking to
expand.
"Many people would be suc cessful if they had some advice and
guidance," Shaffer said.
Additionally , the committee
hopes to establi sh funds to assist
small businesses in getting started
or expanding.
"Small businesses fail not from
a bad idea, but usually from a lack
of capital," noted committee member Bryce Smith. "Funds are ohcn-

from the rear, are Jay Caldwell , Bryce Smith
and Barbara Coleman. On right, from the rear,
are David Shaffer, committee chairman; Wayne
King, Judge Joe Cain and John Cornett.

James Edward Marcum

GALLIPOLIS - Richard John Sisson, 52, 271 McCully Road, Gallipolis, died Saturday, Aug. 20. 1994 at his residence.
Born June 22, 1942 in Gallia County, son of Wayne F. and Anna Belle
Rupe Sisson, he retired from Conrail in 1994 and was an Addison Township trustee for 12 years.
Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Evelyn Swisher Sisson; a daughter, Mrs. James (Annette) Clark of Gallipolis; a stepdaughter,
Mrs. David (Kristy) Woodall of Gallipolis; a stepson, Jeffrey J. Blazer of
Albcrrnarle, N.C.; four grandchildren; a brother, Robert Sisson of Rutland; and two sisters, Mrs. Carolyn Hart of Reynoldsburg, and Mrs.
Richard (Linda) Bradbury of Columbus.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Willis Funeral Home. with lhe
Rev. Ron Hammond officiating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire. Friends may call at the funeral home Monday from 6-9 p.m.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-A7

,,

•

NEW KFC TO OPEN SOON - The new
Kentucky Fried Chicken building, currently
under construction in the 2000 block of Eastern
Avenue, Gallipolis, is expected to be open for
business on Monday, Aug . 29, if all goes well.
The old structure at 1528 Eastern Avenue has

been the home ror KFC for more than 30 years.
Seating capacity in the new facility is 73. The old
establishment seated ~7. Drive through racilities
will be improved. Catering service will remain
the same at KFC's new location.

Livestock
report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Oh_io direct hog prices at selected
buymg pomts Fnday by the Ohio
Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
cents lower.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs., country
points 41.75-43.00; plants 43.0043.75, a few 44.00
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs .. country
points, not available.
•
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: 1.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 63.0067.75; selcct59.00-62.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 61.0067.00; select56.00-61.00.
Cows: 1.00 to 2.00 lower; all
cows 47.00 and down.
Bulls: steady; all bulls 58.50 and
down.
Sheep and lambs: 75 cents to
I .50 lower; choice wools 67.00·
73.00; choice clips 69.00- 72.00;
feeder lambs 69.00 and down ; aged
sheep 32z00 and down.

°

THOttDERittCi HERD FOOTBALL
MARSHALL VS. TEttttESSEE TECH
Peoples Choice invites you to
join us for a day of fun and
football as we hop aboard our
motorcoach for the short trip to
Huntington and the MarshallTennessee Tech football game
on Saturday, September 10!

.HUNTINGTON,
WEST VIRGINIA

We will depart around noon, and upon arrival we will have our own tailgate
party preceeding the game. We have reserved seat tickets for the game, and
will return home immediately afterwards-hopefully, celebrating another great
Marshall victory!

Get out your green and white and join the fun!

Call Mary today at 675-1121 to reserve your seat!

Includes
transportation,
PER. PERSON!
ticket and
refreshments.

ONLY

A

$39.50

FuU payment due immediately.

Peoples Choice. Choice travel opportunities and choice ftnanclal benefits for persons SO and over.
To learn bow you can become a member of Peoples Choice, contact Mary Fowler, Coordinator, at (304)
675-1121. Peoples Choice is a division of the Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant, Member FDIC.

,

I

�Page-A8-Sunday Times-sentinel

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

August 21, 1994

Cases concluded last week in Meigs County Court

POMERO Y - The following
cases were resolved Wednesday in
th e Meigs County Court of Judge
Patnck H. O' Brien.
Fin ed were: Steven Sanborn,
Athens, window tint violation, $20
plus costs; Do uglas K. Coen,
Guysvi lle, driving under suspen sion, $500 fine suspended to $100
plus costs, 30 days jail suspended
to 10 da vs suspended upon conditions of one year probation: defec tive exha ust. costs only; William
H. Bond, Coolville, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Gregory A. Scholting,
Louisvill e, Nc b , backing and startto g vio lat ions, $20 plus costs;
Jenny D. Fuller. Stockport, speed,
S30 plu s com; Brad Haggy ,
Pomeroy, SC&lt;lt belt, $25 plus costs;
Gary L. Cre means, Rutland.
drivin g uodcr the influence, $500
plu s cos ts, 10 days jail suspended
to three days, 180-day operator's
license ' uspcnsion, one year probation: cx r·ircd OL, $100 plus costs,
three day s jail concurrent with
DUI, one year probation:
Ronald G. Davis, Syracuse, DUI
(four charges) , first charge $500
plus costs. tO days jail suspended
to three days , 180-day OL suspen sion, one yea r probation; second
charge S750 plus costs, 30 daySJ31l
suspended to 10 days, one-year OL
suspen sion, two years probation;
third charge $1,000 plus costs. 90
days jail suspended to 30 day s,
three- year OL suspens1on, two
yea rs probation; fourth charge

$1,000.plus costs, $500 forfeited to
Meigs County Jail Fund, one year
jail suspended to 60 days , OL suspcnded indefinitely, 180-day veh•cle immobillllltion, five years probation, jail tirne. on all DUis to run
consec ut• vely. no OL (three
char ges), fir st charge $ tOO plus
costs, 10 day s jail suspend ed 10
three concurrent with DU I . two
yea rs probati on; sec ond cha rge
$ 100 plus costs, 30 days Jatl suspended to 10 days concurrent w1th
DUI; third charge, $100 plus costs,
90 days jail suspended to 30 days
concurrent w1th DUI; po ssess ion,
$50 plus costs; obstructing official
business, costs only:
Tammy May , Hurricane, W.Va.,
speed, $30 plus costs; John B.
Bachman, Beverly Hills , f'la.,
speed, $30 plus costs: Nellie E.
Wilson Reedsville, fa~ lure to yteld,
$20 pl~s costs: John M. Creighton,
Ches terhill , speed, $30 plus costs:
Jeffery A. Wood , Salt Lake City,
Utah, speed, $30 plus costs; Phyllis
A. Gray, Shade, seat hell, $25 plus
costs· Br.mdon S. Roush, Pomeroy,
rcc kl~ss operation, $200 forfeiture
to the Meigs County Jail Fund. $50
plus costs; failure to control, $30
plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Paula A. Clark, Pomeroy, passtng bad checks, $25 plu s cost s,
three days jail suspended upon payment of restitution: Harold E. Lawson, Mason, W.Va., no motorcycle
endorsement, $100 plus costs, three
days jail suspended, one year pro-

Ruling vexes insurers,
but consumers cheer
By KAREN GULLO
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - A California
court ruling that upheld tough limits on insurance rates traumatized
insurers nationwide Friday by raising the prospect of similar reforms
elsewhere, while consumer groups
expressed delight.
Insurance industry groups
sounded alarms about the ruling in
the nation 's biggest state, saying it
would have a ripple effect that
could hurt their profits and make it
harder for them to do busines.
"As California goes, so goes the
nation," said Steve Goldstein, a
spokesman for the Insurance Information Institute, a research group
representing 250 companies. "This
will likely cause other state regulators to determine whether they can
also be successful in trying to get
rebates or cap profits."
Consumer advocacy groups and
other state inswance regulators said
the decision , which will require
California auto and home insurers
that overcharged to refund $1 billion to customers and allows the
state to set rate controls, sends a
strong message that insurers cannot
gouge their customers.
"It's outstanding," said Kathleen F. O'Reilly, president and
general counsel at the National
Insurance Consumer Organization,
a Washington-based consumer
rights group. "It has wide implications for other states that have been
sitting on the sidelines waiting. to
see if they could do anythmg like
this."
Many states will adopt laws
similar to California's, predicted J.
Robert Hunter, insur.mce commissioner in Texas. He co-wrote the
California initiative when he was
president of the National Insurance
Consumer Organization.
"Now there's precedent,"
Hunter said.
Some regulatory officials said
the California situation is unique
because, before the state's initiatives , insurers could raise rates
without the state's approval. Insurers must seek permission from regulators before raising rates in most
states.
The regulators take into account
a company's rate and claims-paying his10ry, the size of its p~ofits
and its expenses when dec1dmg
whether to allow a mte hike.
Regulators said the California
court's decision to let the state have
broader control over setting rates
was extraordinary and has caught
their attention.
"They are trying to have a situation where the commission has
rate control over the companies,"
Florida Department of Insurance
spokeswoman Jill Chamberlain
said. "They are moving closer to
that and our people will be taking a
look at that."
The California Supreme Court
upheld a 6-year-{)ld voter-approved
mandate to roll back rates that
insurers had fought in a protracted
legal battle.
The mandate, called Proposition
103, was sponsored by consumer
advocates and won approval in
November 1988 amid soaring
insurance costs. It called for insurers to roll back rates on automobile
and homeowners' insurance, as
well as other property and liability
lines.
The California Supreme Court
upheld the mandate, and said the
state's measure for how much profit is reasonable for an insurer was
fair. The state said a profit equal to
10 percent of a company's C31lital
is adequate. Insurance commiSSIOner John Garamendi used the measure in determining how much customers' should be refw1&lt;led

bat ion; Robe rt L. Ritchie Jr.,
$50 plu s costs, $200 forfeited to
Racine, co nsumption in a motor
Meigs County Jail Fund, three days
vehicle , $50 plus costs; $ t 5 plus
jail suspended, one year probation,
costs: Angela M. Sharp, Middle30-day vehicle immobilization;
port, passmg bad checks, $25 plus
William R. Adams, Reedsville,
costs, three dars jail suspended
theft, $250 plus costs, 10 days jail
upon payment o resotuuon;
suspended, one year probation,
Debra K. Deem, Vienna, W.Va.,
restitution: Bobby Bolling,
DUl, $500 plus cost~. 10 days Jail
Pomeroy, theft, $100 plus costs, 10
suspended to three days, 180-day
days jail suspended, restitution, one
OL suspension, one year probation,
year probation; Jeffrey Marcinko,
three days jail and $250 suspended
Long Bottom, domestic violence,
upon completion of res ide nti al
$100 plus costs, 10 days jail sustrea tment program : left of center,
pended, one year probation,
$25 plus costs; Kimberly J. Fetty,
restraining order issued; Connie T.
Pomeroy wrongful entru stme nt
Higham, Racine, three counts pass'
•
,_.....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....,_ _ _ _...__....,

ing bad checks, $25 plus costs on
each, restitution; theft, $100 plu s
costs, restitution:
John Q. Clarke, Pomeroy, no
OL, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, $250 and
jail suspended if valid OL present ed within 90 days: Walter Lee,
Middleport, seat belt, $25 plu s

costs; Shannon W. Allen, Ortando',
Fla., speed, $30 plus costs; Dennis
L. Cahall, Georgetown, speed, $30
plus costs; Stanley W. Bates,
Cleveland, speed, $30 plus costs;
Michele D. Metzger, Pomeroy,
wmdow tmt v•olauon. $20 plus
costs; Norma J. Robert, Belpre,
seat belt, $15 plus costs.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF
SOUTHEAST OHIO
CIJ'.!!!dential Family Planning Services for females &amp; males
• MOOical exams
• Pap tests
• Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
• Thsts &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
• Anonymous mv tests &amp; counseling
•J11ethods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
Norplant-lmplant
DepoProvera-injectlon
Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee scale
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance

414 Second Street

509 S. Third Street

Gallipolis

Middleport
992-5912

446-0166

'

I'J{ CO'J.IC£10'

'ITiursday, Jlugust 25
7:00 P.%.

Along the River

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS
Over 40 Years Of Dependable Service

•Heating and Water Heating
~Lift Truck Gas Delivery
•Grain Drying and Cooking
•Construction Heating

U/alft ReliaJ/It'tjlllfr/ cfel'u-ice?

August21, 1994

A "peach of a day" during fair judging
Tips for
use of this
favorite
fruit
offered by
home
•
econom1cs
experts
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel StaiT
POMEROY - Everythingyou'd
ever want to know about peaches was
presented in a program at the 131 st
Meigs County Fair's "Peach Pie and
Country Fair" held on the hill stage
Thursday afternoon.
The stage was turned into a
kitchen for an hour with Cindy Oliveri, Meigs extension agent, preparing
several peach desserts which the
audience later sampled.
Highlight of the program, however, was the selection of the peach
pie contest winners and presentation
of cash awards from Veterans Memorial Hospiial to the winners.
And the winners were -Connie Quivey, Shade, first, with a plain
peach pie; Donna Jenkins, Rutland,
second, with a praline peach pie and
Sharon Riffle, Racine, third, with a

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL

Section B

•

!fe{Cowsfiip Cfiurcfi of tfie 'l{a.zarene
State 'R,pute 124- 'R.fufsviUe
}{cross from '.Forf;# 'JUtnState Park_

~imes- ientintl

PREPARING A PEACH TREAT - Cindy Oliveri, home ewnomics agent, prepared a tasty fruit salad using peaches, one of
several peach treats served later to those attending the demonstration at the Meigs County Fair.

THE WINNERS - Connie Quivey, lert, was
the top winner in the peach pie contest staged at
the Meigs County Fa•r as a part of the "Peach
Pie and Country Fair" program conducted by

peach crum pie.
like peachy-keen, being a real peach,
She also said that peaches are a
The pies were given the taste test having a peachy complexion, or engood
source of fiber, low in calories,
by Linda King and Sharon Smith, joying a peach of a day.
in their use, and easy to
versatile
Tips on selecting peaches - go
both nutrition aides in the Extension
preserve.
Sprinkling a little lemon
office, who judged them 50 percent for the creamy color with a golden
JUice
on
peaches
keeps them from
on flavor, 30 percent on texture, and undertone and remember that the blush
turning
brown,
according
to Oliveri.
20 percent on appearance.
on the peach is not necessarily a sign
Now
back
to
those
peach
recipes
"Non-typical use of peaches" was of ripeness- were given by Oliveri,
which
were
prepared
on
stage
and
how Oliveri described the recipes she who also discussed freestone and
sampled by the audience.
prepared for the show on the fruit clingstone which "mean just that"
There was a tasty fruit salad with
which is said to be the symbol of a
To ripen peaches she suggested
a
poppy
seed dressing, a pretty peach
long life and immortality.
they be placed in a paper bag, loosely
melba
trifle
(loaded with calories)
The extension agent said that the closed, and left at room tempcmture.
and
a
favorite
of many, a holiday
peach goes back to ancient China, The easy way to peel peaches is to
cobbler.
spreading from there to Asia where it submerge them in boihng water for
The Recipes
was called the Persian apple, then to 20 seconds and then the skins will slip
Fruit
salad
with poppy seed
Europe and fmally to America. Peach right off, she said.
dressing
As for determining measureseeds were brought to California in
A small bowl of sliced peaches
the late 17th century, according to ments for buying canning peaches,
and
grapes
(or about any other fruit)
Oliveri's research.
Oliveri said an average I7 pounds is
Dressing:
t/3 cup vegetable oil,
She spoke of the special smell of needed for a canner load of seven
2
tablespoon
lime
juice,2 tablespoons
quarts,
an
an
average
of
II
pounds
for
a fresh peach, of the fuzzy feel of its
honey,
1/2
teaspoon
soy source, 1/2
skin, and of the common expressions, a canner load of nine pints.

the Meigs County Edension Seryice. Her pl~in
peach pie took top honors, while the prahne
peach pie of Donna Jenkins, Rutland, center,
took second, and the peach crum pie of Sharon
Rime, Racine, won third.

teaspoon poppy seed, 1/4 teaspoon
ground ginger, 1/4 1easpoon dry
mustard and a dash of salt.
Combine all the ingredients and
pour over the assoned fruit.
Peach Melba Trine
I package instant vanilla flavor
pudding, 2 1(2 cups cold milk, 16
ounce.~ whipped topping, t/4 cup
orange juice, 6 cups angel food cake
cubes (about 10 ounces) I 1(2 pounds
fresh peaches, sliced, and 1(2 cup
raspberry preserves.
Combine milk and pudding. Beat
well. Fold in whipped cream and I
tablespoon orange juice. Place 3 cups
of cake cubes in glass serving bowl.
Sprinkle with two tablespoons orange
juice. Top with one-half of the peach
slices_ 1(2 cup preserves and half of
the pudding mixture.
Repeat layering with remaining cake,

orange juice, peach slices and pud ding . Garnish with preserves if desired. Chill thoroughly . Refrigerate
leftovers.
Holiday Cobbler
I package yellow cake mix, 1/2
teaspoon cinnamon, 1/4 teaspoon
nutmeg, I cup margarine, 3/4 cup
chopped nuts, I 21-ounce can peach
pie filling, I 16-ounce can cranberry
sauce.
Combine cake mix, seasonings
and butter in bowl. Cut in butter with
pastry knife or folk until crumbly. Stir
in nuts.
Combine peach pie filling and
cranberry sauce in ungreased 13x9x2
inch pan. Mix well. Sprinkle crumb
mixture over fruit
Bake 31350 degrees for 45 to 50
minutes or until brown.

Meigs County Fair
scene photos taken
by George Abate &amp;
Jim Freeman, T-S
staff members

For Rome, Farm, Business, and lndustr~

Complete Line Of Atlanta Heaters In Stoek!
•Normal L.P. Gas Tank
Installation With
25 Feet Of
Copper Tubing

I

All For The
•

Low..-ieeOf

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•Rent Free Tank
~ •200

vi

STRANGERS SPARED FROM RAIN- One jewel of tbe fair
is tbat it brings together new people for tbe first time. Roni
Newhart or Marietta, foreground, and Cathy Casto of Pomeroy

'

'

Gallons
of · L.P. Gas

J~'

.

secluded themselves from tbe drizzle one day. Casto said the rain
did not really bother her enough to stay away from fair events. In
the background, tbe draft horse feed run is held .

.

"WIII_IPPROVED CREDR

~JJJ~:
200.GAL OF PRO~AHE
.
_,.

.

'

-.

'•

OFFER EXTENDED THRU AUGUST 31,1994

LONGHORNS - In addition to being tbe only entrants in tbe
cow-calf contest in the Meigs County Fair's open beef show, Sam
and Michelle Scott's entry was even more unique in that they
entered Texas longhorn cattle. Mr. Scott said this is their third
.,
year entering longhorns in the fair.

I
RUTLAND, OH. - TORCH, OH. - McCONNELLSVILLE, OH. -THE PLAINS, OH.

(614) 742·2511

"J'amil~

Owned"

1·800·137·1217

FANTASTIC FAIR- Area youths plunged, whirred and spun
for many hours during tbls year's Me1p County Fair. Here, tbe
cbUdren kept cool in tbe cruising coaster. Everyone knoW!l tbe fair
is ror the kids, or the kid In au or us.

ROCKIN' UPWARDS- This brother and sister from Michigan tested their skiD in climbing Rock Springs clifTs at tbe Meigs
County Fair. Merrily LaRosa, 14, helps ber 9-year-old brother
Larry Reynolds up the biD. Their grandmother, Audrey Boichyn;
ronnerly or Racine, said sbe and ber grandtlds come back every
year to tbe fair and visit relatives. Sbe now also lives In Michigan.

More fair photos
appear on C6 &amp; 7

�Page-82-Sunday Times-Sentinel

August 21, 1994

ust 21, 1994

Po me

leport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2/$1.00 with sauce 3P1 .00 plain

RC Cola
PRODUCTS
24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

s

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

49

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD AUG. 21 THRU AUG. 27, 1994.

7-UI~ DR PEPPER,
HIRES ROOTBEER,

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

ORANGE CRUSH
2 LITER

c

STEVEN AND HOLLIE ARNOTT

Thomas-Arnott
wore a teal satin dress. Both wore

MID-DLEPORT - The Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church was
the setting for the July 1 double ring ceremony of Hollie Marie
Thomas and Steven Na thani e l
Amott. The Rev. Lcs Hayman offi.
cia ted.
Th e bride is the daught er of
Juanita Thomas, Middleport, and
the late Paul Thomas. The groom is
the son of Tom Amott of Pomeroy,
and Gail Suggs of Texas.
Given in marriage by her mother
and escorted to the altar by a close
family friend, Charles M. Walker.
Jr. , the bride wore a white lace covered sa tin dress ac ce nted wi th
sequins and pearls with a Victorian
lace neckline and ballroom sleeves.
The gown was fashioned with a fitted bodice and bouffant skirt which
extended into a train. She wore
pearl jewelry to coordmate with the
pearl and sequin wreath holding
her vei I. She carried a bouquet of
multi-colored carnations accented
with blue ribbon.
Wendi Smith, Pomeroy, maid of
honor, wore a floor length baby
blue satin dress designed with fitted bodice and puffed sleeves and
wore a lace and diamond necklace.
Bridesmaids Heather Thomas of
Long Bottom, was in a lavend er
satin gown with a lace sha w top,
and Erica Dowell of Middleport,

FORREST AND ANN RAMEY

Valentine-Ramey
GALLIPOLIS - Ann Kathryn
Valentine and Forrest Rom Ramey
II were united in marriage June 26
at Grace United Methodist Church
in Gallipolis.
The bride is the daughter of
Clarice and Leo Valentine of Gallt polis and the groom is the son of
Sharon Ramey of Gallipolis and
Forrest Ramey II of Gallipolis.
Musical selections were provided by Edie Ross along with solos
by Reta DePalatis and Jeff and
Robin Halsted.
The church was decorated by
vases of summer flowers, twin
seven branch candelabras, greenery
and pew bows.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride was given in marriage by her parents.
Her formal wedding gown was
fashioned of candlelight silk shantung highlighted by a portrait neckline. Seed pearls adorned the
bodice and edged the full skirt
which !'lowed into a cathedral
length train.
Her matching headpiece, created
fro m silk shantung was a large bow
with roses and a fmger tip-veil. She
carried a cascade bouquet of white
roses, irises and ivy decorated with
baby's breath and seeded pearls.
Christine Lazzari served as
matron of honor. Bridesmaids were
Laura DePa latis, niece of bride,
Shannagh Fraley, cousin of the
bride and Amy Yates. Flower gul
was Erin Moore, niece of the
groom.
Bridesmaids wore tea -length
dres ses of periwinkle blue silk
shantung featuring portrait necklines, felt bodices and full skirts.
Each carried arm bouquets of long

stemmed summer flowers and blue
satin strea mers. The flow er girl
wore a Victorian style ivory dress
with nora! printed accents and an
ivory lace collar. She ca rried a
white crocheted basket of rose
petals.
Kenneth Gollahon served as
bestman . Groomsmen were Tom
Valentine, brother of the bride, J.R.
Hendrickson cousin of th e bride
and Tom Olding. Chri stopher
DePalatis, neph ew of bride was
ringbearer.
The groom and groomsmen
were attired in a black tuxedo with
the groom's accented by pale pink
rose boutonniere. The ringbearer
was attired in a black tuxedo of
short pants.
Sahanna Priyanath was the guest
registrar. Tara Moore niece of
groom and Micha el DePalatis,
nephew of bride , serve d as
taperlighters.
A reception wa s held in the
church dining room . The four-tier
cake was embellished with summer
!lowers and ivy. Hostesses were
Angela Moore and Cherilyn Warner, sisters of the groom and Sahanna Priyanath.
The bride graduated from Gallia
Academy High School in 1989.
She earned her bachelor's degree in
chemical engineering from Ohio
University and is employed by
AKZO Chemicals of Gallipolis
Ferry as an environmental engi-

neer.

The groom is a 1989 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
received his bachelor's degree in
mechanical engineering from Ohio
University.

lace chokers with pearl accenLs. All
ca~ ri ed long
stcmmcd roses in colors mmching
their dresses.
Flower girls were Kayla Dowell
of Middleport, Sa brina Estep of
Harn sonville , Ariel Smi th , Jessica
Smith, and Jami e Smi th, all of
Long Bouom . They wore matching
multi -colored floral outfits with
white bloused tops and carried baskets of rose petals.
Ringbea rcr, Joshua Smith of
Lon g Bottom, wore navy blu e
pants wi th a white dress shtrt and
multi -co lored silk ti c and carried
th e rings on a white sati n heartshaped pillow.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a multi-colored carnation boutonni ere. Best man wa s Roger
Dowell who wore a black suit and
tic, and th e ush ers were Torn
Arnott and Rick Pridemore. All had
whi te carnation boutonnieres.
A reception was given by Tom
and Pam Arnou at their home followin g the ceremony. The bride's
table feat ured a two tiered cake
decorated in blue and topped with a
heart-shaped top tier with bells and
a miniature bride and groom.
The couple resides in Houston,
Texas.
of the attendants

Bookshop showdown in
November for Di and Charles
LONDON (AP) - Prince
Charles and Diana lomn al ly scpCharles and his estranged wife will arated in December 1992.
battle it out in the bookstores in
November, with new acco unts
from opposite sides of the fractured
fairy-tale manriage.
Ta bloid newspapers reported
today that Diana is the subject of a
new book by Robert Morton,
author of a previous book that gave
her side of a disintegrating marriage.
Michael O'Mara Books eonfimied that it will publish "Diana:
Her New Life" on Nov. 8, just five
days after Jonathan Dimbleby is to
publish his biography. " The Prince
of Wales."
Dimbleby has already scored the
royal scoop of the year by getting
Charles 10 admit he had not always
been faithful to his wife.

JERRY AND JANE HAWLEY

Gilkey- Hawley
MIDDLEPOR T - Jane Ann
Gilkey and Jerry Hawl ey, both of
Mtddleport, exc han ged wedd ing
vows in a doubl e- ring ceremony
June 17, at the First Southern Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
The bride is the daughter of
Ruth Gilkey and the late Clarence
Gilkey, and the groom is the son of
Betty Hawley, and the late Norman
Hawley.
The Rev. Lamar O'Bryant perform ed the 7:30p.m. cere mony .
Music was provided by Marty
O'Bryant, so loist and Joyc e
O'Bryant, organist. Fern and seven
branch ca ndelabra decorated with
peach and white roses wi th white
bows dewratcd the altar.
Escorte d to th e altar by her
brother-in-law, Darrell Bechtle, the
bride wore a floor length white
sati n gow n with a heart shaped
neckline, puffed sleeves, and open
back accented wi th iridesccnt.s and
pearls. The cath edral length train
flowed from a white sa tin bow at
the basque wai stline.
The brid e's veil fell from a
matching headpiece crea ted from
silk rosettes. She carried a bouquet
of peach and white roses with ivy
and lover's knots.
Judy Gilkey of Pomeroy, was
maid of honor and the bridesmaids

U.~.D.A.

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llawley . They wore peach sa tin
dresses with hair pieces to match .
Eac h attendant carried a bouquet of
peach and white roses with ivy .
Flower girl was Sand1 Gilkey,
ni ece of th e bride . She was in
emerald green and carried a white
wicker basket with rose petals.
Bruce Hawley, brother of the
groom, serve d as bes t man.
Groomsmen included John Bcch~e.
Bill Gilkey, Steven Powell,
nephews of the bndc. Chri s Gilkey
was ring bearer.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with tail s, peac h tic and cummerbund, and a single peach rose boutonniere. The attendants were in
similar attire with white rose bud
boutonnieres.
Guests were reg istcred by
Nancy Gilkey, sister-in-law of the
bride.
A reception was held at th e
American Legion annex in Middleport. A six-tiered fountain cake in
peach and white was top1x:d witli a
miniature bride and groom. The
couple took a trip to th e Smoky
Mountains and now reside in Middleport.
He is emp loy ed at Southern
Ohio Coal Co.

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Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

August 21 , 1994

Pomer6y-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

National lab guards paid to work out
ALBUQUE RQUE, N.M. (AP)
- Taxpa yers paid $ 2 million in
1992 for guards at the slate' s two
nati onal laboratori es to jog and
pump iron on government time some of them on oventime. .
A Department of Energy mvesli gation concluded those co sts at
Sandia National Laboratones and
Los Alamos Nau onal Laboratory

were too high.
Guards at Sandia are paid overtim e three days a week to exe rcise
for I 1/2 hours after their reg ular
workdays. At Los Alamos, a reguJar exercise program is part of the
standand 40-hour work week. Extra
guards are hired to cover during the
two I 1/2-hour sessions eac h week.
Officials at the resea rch labs

sai d DOE reg ul a ti ons require
gua rds to exe rcise and pass an
annual running test.
But the repo rt shows other DOE
sites with simi lar sec urity needs
have lower cos ts. At the Savannah
Ri ve r Site in South Carolina, where
nucle ar we ap ons mat enal s arc
stored, exc rctse cos ts Jess than
Sl ,OOO per guard per year.

Keep quiet about flies in the soup

Nationwide, contractors who
run DOE laboratories and factories
paid guards an estimated $15 mil lion in 1992 to exercise, the report
said.
The d&lt;l!Jartment's inspector genera! determined that Sandia had
been paying an average of$5,000 a
year for each guard to exerci se an
average of six hours a week .

Dear RerMkrs: I am on vacation,
bwt 1 have left behind some of my
[tlllorite coiiiJfiiiS tluJt you may haW!
missed thL fvstti!M arownd. I ho~
yow enjoy them. -- AM Landers
Dear Ann Landers: What should
a person do if he is dining in the
home of a friend and comes upon 8
foreign object in the food such as 8
hairpin in the souffle? This
happened to me recently, and I said
nothing, but it could have been a
serious thing.
Yesterday, I had a similar
experience, only it was a worm in a
fresh peach that had been sliced and
served over ice cream . I was
speaking to the hostess when I
noticed il I kept my wits about me,
continued to ialk and ate around the
worm.
If such 8 thing happens again,
what should I do? Do you feel the
hostess would want to know?
-- LOST MY APPETITE
DEAR LOST: Anyone who ean
eat around a worm and carry on a
conversation with the hostess at the
same time doesn't need advice from
Ann Landers. I don 't think the
hostess would "want to know." Keep
quie~ honey.
TERESA JACKSON AND WILLIAM BUSH
Dear Ann Landers: I read about
that wife who found out her
husband was cheating and decided
MIDDL EPOR T - Mr. and Springfield, announce the engageto make his life hell. I'd like to
Mrs. Ralph Jackson of Dayton and ment of their children , Teresa Lynn
suggest that she try to make it mae
Mr. and Mrs. Dar Comes of Mid- Jackson and William Nichola s
heavenly instead. Her old man
wedding is planned
dl eport and Charl es E. Bush of Bush. A
might stay home mae.
When I was first married. I was a
very unresponsive bed partner. One
day, my husband mailed me a poem.

------Meigs community calendar-----The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events . The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
rundraisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specinc number or days.
SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Film , "Eye of
the Storm", Syracuse Chun:h of the
Nazarene, Sunday, 6 p.m.
SHADE - Dorst reunion Sun day, Martin Dorst home at Shade,
Dinner at noon.
POM ERO Y - Hy sell Run
Holiness Church homecoming Sunday, 9:30 a.m. wiU1 dinner at noon .
Wors~ip at !0:45a.m. and spec ial

serv ice at 2 p.m. with evening service at 7:30 p. m.
TUPPERS PLAIN S - Benefit
dinner for Wilbur Windland. Sun day , Tuppers Plains VFW, eo-host ed by Coolville VFW Posl Auction
and other fund raisers in afternoon.
REEDSVILLE - Eden Church
homecomin g, Sunday , dinn er at
12:3 0, servi ce at I: 30 p.m. with
Re v. Pe ter Martind ale. Spec ial
singing by the Dailcys. Take covered dish.
MID DLEPO RT - Baptismal
serv ice at the Mic\jllcport levy Sun day at 2 p.m.. Middlepo rt Na1arene
Church. Rev. Greg Cundiff in vites
public.
RAC IN E - TI1e descendants of
Martin and Emm a Ro ush Sayre

wi ll mee t at noon at Star Mill Park.
MONDAY
MID DLE PORT - Vaca ti on
Bibl e Sc hoo l from 7-S:30 p.m.
Aug . 22-26 at the Wes leyan Bible
Holiness Church, 75 Pearl St.
CH ES TE R - Izaa k Walton
Leag ue. Mond ay, 7 p. m. at the
farm . Special guest, Dtane Moore ,
state president. Business meeting.
TUESDAY
RAC IN E - Rac ine Area Commun ity Organi za ti on, Tuesday ,
6:3 0p .m. Star Mill Pa rk . Ne w
members welcome.

ll EDFORD - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department
committee, Tuesday, 7 p.m., town
hall.
HARRISONVILLE - Har risonville Senior Citizens, potluck,
noon Tuesday, town hall.
RACIN E - Parent meeting for
first and second graders. Lciart and
Racine Elementary , 7 p.m. Tuesday, Southern Junior High school.
RACIN E - Racin e Masonic
Lodge 46!, F&amp; AM, special meeting, Tuesd ay, 7:30 with work in
third degree.

POM ERO Y - Me igs Hi gh
MIDDLEPORT - Bible school
School Athletic Boosters, Tuesday , at Wesl eyan Bible Holin ess
7:30p. m. at sc hoo l. Plans for Church, 75 Pearl St., Middleport, 7
upco min g sport s season . Public to 8:30p.m. through Friday.
invi ted.

Jackson-Bush

Gallia community calendar
DAVID AND BETHANY GAUL

Blaine-Gaul
length satin dress, a flor al wreath

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Church of Chri st was the settin g for th e Jun e 18 wedding of
Bethany Blaine of Pomeroy and
David Gaul of Ches ter.
The bride is the daughter of Sue
Fl oy d of Pomeroy and Mr. and
Mrs. Michael lllainc of Gallipolis.
The bridegroom 's parents arc Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Gau l of Chester.
Al Hartson performed the dou ble rin g ce remon y at 6:30 p.m.
Music was by Jane Wise, Rutland,
organist/pianist. and Am y Perrin ,
soloist. Selec tion s inc luded "The
Wedding Song," " The Lord' s
Prayer," and "Sunrise, Sunset."
The church decorations featured
fuschia colored impatients. A 28 branch candelabra centered the
altar area . Fern decorated with
white bows and white doves surrounded the unity candle. Acolytes
were M.T. Blaine and Brandon
Floyd , brothers of the bride. Ivy
and bow s dec orated the family
pews and the church bapti stry
dC(;or was a white carnation fl oral
arrangement in memory of the
bride and groom 's late grandparents.
The bride was given in marriage
by her parents and escorted to the
allaf by her father. She wore a formal French tulle satin gown fa shioned with folds 'coming to a V at
the neck. The bodtce, covered with
pearl s and sequins, was off the
shoulder with lace caps and removable lace gauntl et sleeves. The
basqu e waistlin e led to a full
French tulle skirt with satin edging
at the hemline and the back fea tured a large white satin bow that
trailed to a chapel length train .
The bride' s chapel length veil of
alencon lace feU from a pearl and
sequin wreath. She carried a bou·
quet of pink, white and fuschia silk
roses and wore a single strand pearl
necklace. pearl and diamond earrings and gold bracelet, a gift of the
groom.
Maid of honor was Ann
McDonough of Columbus. Bridesmaids were Daphne Dillard of
Columbus; Laura Salser of
Pomeroy; Tracy Lawrence, Paducah of Ky .; Amber Cumings of
Syracuse; Robin Chapman, cousin
of the bride of Crosslanes, W.Va.
They wore fuschia floor length
gown s of moire fashioned with
sweetheart off-the-shoulder necklines with capped sleeves and full
long gathered skirts, and carried
bouquets of silk sweetheart roses in
white, fuschia and teal. They wore
baby's breath in their hair, pearl
and fuschia necklaces and earrings
for jewelry, and white satin elbow
length gloves, all gifts of the bride.
Flower girl was Jessica Lyons
of Racine. She wore a white floor

headpiece, and carried a decorated
basket of assorted co lored rose
petals. Her jewelry was similar to
the other attendants and was also a
gift of the bride.
Best man was Mark Hall, brother of the groom of C hester.
Groomsmen were J.D. Bradbury of
Cheshire; Tom Smith of Racine;
Bob Martin of Wilmington; John
Porter of Racine, Ray Van Matre,
uncle of the bride of Middleport.
Ushers were Todd Clay, cousin of
the groom , Euclid ; M.T. Blaine,
brother of the bride of Gallipoli s;
and Brandon Floyd, also the bride's
brother of Rocine.
Ring bearer was Michael Blaettnar of Pomeroy.
The groom wore a grey tuxedo
with white vest, bow tie and grey
tailcoat. All of the groom's attendanL~ were in similar attire. Boutonnieres were pink sweetheart
roses with fuschia ribbon and
baby 's breath.
The bride's mother was in a
floor length satin gown of beige,
c hampagne and brown with long
sleeves and the groom ' s mother
was in a blue chiffon tea length
gown. Both mothers wore ivory
sweetheart rose corsages, and were
presented handkerchiefs as gifts
from the wedding couple.
Suzanne Clay of Chester, and
Kristen Chapman of Belpre, registered guests, distributed wedding
programs, and helium balloons of
teal, white pink and fuschia following the ceremony for a balloon
release as the couple left the
church.
The buffet reception was held at
Royal Oak Resort Club. A heartshaped ice sculpture with two
doves decorated the punch table,
along with fuschia carnations. The
table of the bridal party featured a
large brandy snifter with floating
candles and floral vases of carnations. The fuschia and teal colors
were carried out in the guest table
decorations.
The three-tiered wedding cake
had four heart-shaped cakes at the
sides. The tiers were decorated
with daisies and fuschia carnations
and roses. Cake servers were Gwen
Hall of Chester, and Debbie Zuspan, Mason, and Betty Van Matre
of Middleport, aunts of the bride.
The couple honeymooned in the
Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania. They reside in Chester.
The bride graduated from Meigs
High School and Hocking College
and is employed at St. Joseph's
Hospital, Parkersburg, as a registered nurse. The groom is an Eastem High School and Ohio University and is employed with Meigs
Local Schools.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non -profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
rundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days .

Sunday, Aug. 21

•••

PATRIOT - Homecoming
Salem Baptist Church 9:30 a.m .
Sunday School, 10:40 a.m. Ralph
Burwell and 12 p.m. dinner.

***

CROWN CITY - Crown City
Methodist Church I 0 a.m . with
Fred Shockley, Rev. Ronnie
Nicholas and singing.

•••

CROWN CITY - Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church 10 a.m .
with Rev . Monte Sheets, Rev .
Richard Unroe and singing. Bring
covered dish.

Free Group 7:30p .m. Episc opal
Church.

•• •

GALLIPOLIS - Chape l Hill
Church of Christ give away cloth ing from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

•••

Band Camp

•••

GA( LIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy Marching Band band
camp Aug. 15-19, 22,23 from 7:30
a.m. to 3 p.m . at Washington
School. AUcndance is required of
all members .

SUITS

I~

U'r-

Youth

Invasion

SALE!
•DREXEL 5 PIECE DINING GROUP
Reg.

SALE

... '1695

'699

.. .. .... '1150

'575

........ '1600

'640
'699
'899

Poster Floral 82 inch (Sherrill) .......... ...... .
DEIDRA LYONS AND DAVID HOUSE

Crimson and White Floral 82 inch (SheriII) .

Lyons-House
THURMAN - Rev. and Mrs.
Jack C. Lyons of Thurman
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter Deidra Gayle to David
Waync House son of Mr. and Mrs.
James A. House of Mechanic stown.
The bride-elect is a 1984 graduate of Southwestern High School.
· of Rio
She attended the
Grande and is em
at Big
Bear Groceries of

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Martin -Workman family reunion 12 p.m. VFW
fann.

***

Three izes, One Low Price!
King, Queen, or Full each piece in sets.

•••

The prospective groom is a
1985 graduate of Carrollton High
School and a 1992 graduate of the
University of Rio Grande. He is
employed by Southeastern Business
College
as
an
instructor/administrator.
The open church wedding will
be I :30 p.m . Oct. 22 at the Old
Country Church Tabernacle near
Oak Hill with music beginning at I
p.m.

Crow's on top of things.
Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past
Pinson's off the wall.
Freeman's out in the woods .

CENTENARY - Centenary
United Christian Church homecoming 10:30 a.m. with special
singing.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Sisson Family
Elizabeth Chapel Church 7 p.m.

•••
Monday, Aug. 22
•••

Times-Sentinel

THURMAN - Thurman Grange
meeting 7:30p.m.

•••

$15 PER NIGHI' .:.:,
A S•Ptr Low 1/att i• Myrtlt Btach, S.C.

~~U'"e

Tuesday, Aug. 23

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Operation
Liftoff 7:30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church.

SUNDAY thru THURSDAY

PHOTOGRAPHY

Professional Wedding Photography

(614) 446-6700

***

• EtncAtndM • OUtdoor POOl
2 A.dults/2 Cnildren • CtOH to Amuttmtnll &amp;. Nlghllft

SUNNY
VIEW tn1-100-141-9779
Aero• rrom
r.ean of Downtown
lhe Betth

lhl

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous Woodland Center
multipurpose room at 8 p.m.

•••

CHRIST ACADEMY NOW ACCEPTINC APPLICATIONS K-12

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.Narcotics Anonymous Clean and

When your children graduate
from high school, do you want
them to be well-educated,

CHRIST ACADEMY
ACHRISTIAN SCHOOL ALTERNATIVE
Blending Traditional and Modem Methods of Education Providi•g
ExceUenceln Christian Edacation since 1976.
I

11-12
College Prep and Gwnl Studies

··

lncllvlcl..azecllastructioll - E4ucalloaal Field Trips
Varied Musk Progr•- btr-tkllar Activities
Nae-Doch b:al - Nae-Discritlilatory
Admits stlllleats of .y race, color, cnecl, llllllo10l or ethnic origia.
Ct~t~vlllitJdly Old athadivtly located II Grist EpiscopDI Churct.
CAll OR WRm FOR ADDII10tW. INFORMAnON

CHRIST ACADEMY

P.O. lo1 224,104 M SL • P1111 Plea

11t. WV 25550

675-1559.675-1735

'1165

Mint Green Damask 84 inch (Sherrill) ...

PREPARE YOUR CHILDREN FOR THE FUTURE BY SENDING THEM TO

Cal U. Toll Froe

(&lt;)

Rose-Damask, traditional82 inch (High . Hse.)...

Christ-honoring graduates?

O.llitr ,.,......, itt
IHerHW. Prices

'(}s\ Co~

SOFAS

•••

Hyou are plahning a weddingr
then you should come see us at
Haskins-Tanner.
You will have over 190 styles of
tuxedos to choose from We have a
large eeleclion of the latest styles ·
and co~nmentary accessories for
thia special occasion.

Shape Up, Sophie
· "t994 . Los .O.ngeles
I took a leg from a iable,
T1mes Synd1cate and
Cre&lt;!IO!S Synd+ca te"
I took the back from an old chair,
!took the neck from a bottle,
From the horse I got the hair,
long, business-size tnvelo~ and a
I put them all together with some
check
or money orlkr for $3.65 (this
iron and some glue,
includes
postage and handling) to:
And I got a darned sight beuer
Alcohol,
c/o
AM Landers, P.O. Box
How to Recogniu 11, How to Deal
Iovin'
11562,
Chicago,
Ill. 60611..1)562. (1n
Than I ever got from you. -- Your Wilh 1t, /low to CoNI~' It" can turn
Callllda.
send
$4.45.)
things around. ~nd a self-addressed,
Husband
Just sign me -- NOT GETIING
OLDER, JUST GETTING
BETfER
DEAR BEITER: The name of
the game is communication. If more
couples would let one another know
how things are coming across (or
not coming across), there would be
many happier bedrooms in the
world.
Aug. 27-28, 1994
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a 17Ripley High School
year-Qid guy who needs to know
what to do. Right now, rm hurt,
Stadium
mad, insulted and mixed up. This is
my story.
Ripley, WV
I just phoned a girl I like a loL
2 day Event
We've dated some, and I thought she
liked me. When I asked her if I could
$15 registration
come over after supper, she said,
7:00 p.m. Evening
"Wait a minute." She thought she
had the mouthpiece of the phone
Concert Only
covered, and I heard her say. "How
ean I get rid of this creep? He wants
($3.00 Donation) -4.--,~~~~:;~~_.:::::~
to come over, and I don't want him
to."lllen she carne back on and said,
For Information Call : (304)
"I'm sorry, but I have to go
458-1645 372-4453
someplace with my folks.."

•SAVE STOREWIDE 20% TO 75%
OFF REGULAR PRICES.
•ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Crusade for Christ at Krodel Park 7
p.m . Aug . 22 through 27 with
speakers and singers.

PROCTORVILLE - Jeffers fam ily reunion II :30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Proctorville Women's Club, dinner
at 12:30 p.m.

•••

Ann
Landers

should I act? Should I let her lmow I
heard what she said? -- DOUBLE
EARS
DEAR D.E.: Act naiW'al Don't let
on that yoo heard her. Now that you
lmow how she really feels, keep your
distance and tum your attentions
elsewhere.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
life of a loved one1 "Alcoholism :

•SALE STARTS FRIDAY, AUG. 19

OFFER GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1994

GALLIPOLIS - Matthew Henry
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Good Hope
Baptist Church.

CHESHIRE - H.R. Johnson
family reunion Kyger Creek
Employees Club shelterhouse.

I can't avoid thiS glfl because we

are in several classes together. How

SEMI-ANNUAL

***

CENTENARY - Milton Brown
family reunion Raccoon Creek
County Park shelterhouse #I 4 p.m.

It changed my entire outlook and
saved our marriage. I hope you will
print it, Ann.

GALLERIES

Genealogy
exhibit set for
museum
IRONTON - The Lawrence
County Genealogical Society
(LGS) will present an exhibtt at
the Lawrence County Museum
slafting Aug. 26.
LGS President Barbara Rutledge and others will direct two
genealogy workshops each Saturday from l to 2:30 p.m. and from 3
to 4 p.m. on Sunday. Various
Lawrence Countians will given ten
to twenty minute talks on historical
eras or events.
The weekend of Sept. 30 and
Ocl 1 and 2, will feature applebutter making and a celebration of the
museum's sixth anniversary. From
2 to 4 p.m. will be a varied program of music by Peggy Johnston
and Sibyl Johnston-Adk:ins of ProctorVille of piano, electnc keyboard
and violinist

I

~.

OFF

•••

Revivals
BIDWELL - Three day revival
Apostolic Faith Church Aug. 19
and 20 at 7 p.m. and Aug. 21 at 12
p.m.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei- Page-85

.... ....... '1500

Beige, Blue, Burgundy Stripe, 84 inch (High. Hse.) ...

SAVE 20% TO 60% ON OVER 40 SOFAS

In pecan, 42 inch round table with 18" leaf, 2 arm
and 2 side chairs.
Reg . $3675
1 Only

$1188

•TILE TOP DINING TABLE and 4
WROUGHT IRON CHAIRS
Upholstered seats.
REG. $2440

Reg
....'1180
.............. '910
......... .780
.......... '650
....... '908

BARCA LOUNGER motorized massage textured Iabrie...
Barca Lounger-Recliner Rust name st1tch
Navy Swivel Rocker With special glide feature. ..
Basket Weave Design Club Chair green/white .....
Club Chair Olive and wine stripe... .
Lounge Chair Textured fabric ...

SAVE

... '783

20% TO 80%

5

895

•DREXEL PECAN OCTAGONAL GLASS
TOP COCKTAIL Outstanding Detail
Reg. $869

CHAIRS

1 Only

1 ONLY

$199

SALE

ALL ACCESSORIES

'399
'399
'199
'199
'250
'250

ON OYER 100 CHAIRS

Pictures • Including Oils
Lamps • Table Accessories

30% TO 50% OFF
An Additional 5% Off For (ash or (heck
(3% Off with Major Credit Card)

•ALL SHERRILL LEATHER
UPHOLSTERY

50% OFF

OUR BEST - LEXINGTON

PRE-SEASON

GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
-FAMOUS HOWARD MillER QUALITY-

40% OFF

CUSTOM

Window·
Treatments!
You choose from thousands
FREE
of
fabrics
with
decorating assistance. We
will measure, order and
professionally
install
to
beautiful perfection!

Drapery ....... REDUCED 25°/o
Mini Blinds REDUCED 40°/o
Verticals ••• REDUCED 40°/o
Pleated
Shades •••••• REDUCED 40°/o
-All Prices Include
Professional Installation!
•Residential or
Commercial•

lAYAWAY

FOR CHR ISTMAS WITH 20% DOWN

-PRICES FROM 1599-

'll"''t WICKER GROUP
54% oFF
Sofa, Chair, Ottoman in green/white lloral
plus end and cocktail table. $
REG. $3468

1600

AlL

LEXINGTON - CHERRY

5 PIECE DINING GROUP

"CENTURY"
UPHOLSTEREY AND WOOD
IN STOCK AND SPECIAL ORDERS

40% OFF

Mfg.

Retail

42 Inch Table with leaf
Plus 2 arm and 2 side chairs with rush
seats and arrow backs. Outstanding detail
with Country French flair.
REG. $2756

$1344

MISCELLANEOUS
PATINA WHITE WICKER LOVESEAT (Our best floral lab .) ......... ..... ... .. .$.1460
PATINA WHITE ROUND WICKER END TABLE . .. . . .. . .. ... ......... ... ... .. $425
DOUBLE DRESSER Wind Jammer Oak (1 Only) .. ...... .... ... ...... .. .. .. ...... ... $741

ALL CURIO Ci\BINETS IN STOCK
Christmas Layaway Program Now Available!

NOW REDUCED

35%

GREEN TWEED OTTOMAN Large 32"x45" ...... .
... .. ..... ... .... .... ... ..... $710
BEAUTIFUL GREEN ACCENT ON OAK BUREAU-DRESSER w/mirror .. . $2358
UPHOL SHERRILL LOVESEAT Floral, Excellent Comfort
... .... ... $1450

FURNITURE
GALLERIES .
SECOND AT GRAPE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•FINE FURNITURE
•CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS
·CARPET
•WALL COVERING
•FREE DELIVERY
•FREE PARKING

614 446-0332

$699
$149
$199

$199
$800
$499

I

�Page-86-Sunday Times-sentinel

August 21, 1994

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

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

August 21, 1994

Donation
made to PVH
endowment

116 units donated at Tri-State

Regional Bloodmobile visit

TO PERFORM . " Down on the F;1rm' ' gospel
sing will be held at llob Evans Farm 6 p.m . Aug.
27. The event, sponsored by Salem llaplisl

Church, is free to the public. Attendants should
bring lawn chair.

GALLIPOLIS · Officials of the
Tri -State Regional Bloodmobile
obtained 116 units of blood during
Thursday 's Gallipolis visit.
One-hundred and twenty-two
persons presented themselves at
Grace United Methodist Church.
Six dnnors were deferred.
The Gallipolis City Police
Department won a challenge con·
te st issued by Municipal Judg e
William Medley by havin g th e
high es t number of volunteer
donors. The municipal court had
th e highest percentage of staff
members turnout according to Mrs.
Richard James, Gallia County Red
Cross Blood chairperson. Judge
Medley will treat the department
heads of those two agencies to a
free dinner.
Volunteer nurses were Mrs.
Fred Stephenson , Mr.&gt;. Tom Hysell,
Mrs., Eul a Adkin s, Mrs. Michael
Pasquale. Mrs. Vernon DeWeese,
Mr s. Irving !'olden , Mrs. Mona
Vallance, Mrs. Merrill Johnson ,
Mrs. David Walker and Mrs. Keith
Brandeberry.
Cantee n workers were Mary
Lou Harrison, Sad1c Notter, Janet
Hughes, Virginia Wright and Mary
Clendenin. Clerk s were Mrs. Paul
Wilmouth, Mrs. John Taylor, Mrs.
William Smith, Mrs. Neil SanderS,
Mrs. Keith Suiter , Mrs. Charles

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

Accent.ls on Good Taste in Practical Solar Home
By PAT LUKI\S
AP N ewsfeatures

lland surn L· and pr&lt;Jctjcal comfort s.
a rt' built i1rt o thb ~a ss iYt s olar
hUlll l' .
(J es i,l!J l F - ~. by Homt'Stylt' s
"Sourn .. J" I h.. !- i.'[llt' rs' Network, is
-; lig-htly ar r ~l t' d ii i the r t'nl e r . rrt'-

ati vt.. ly all owinl&lt;! it to capture as
rnu c h s unlight a s possiblt' .
Er K'ofll l)&lt;iS~in£ a tol~tl 1.647 square
lt·t"t . th e widt"·ope:- n living s pan~·s
LTeak a rt"' laxed aud airy atmu sph~re .

both [or da y to·day livinJ&lt;

and mon: fonnal on :asion s.
Th e ru stil: ext erior. fini s ht&gt;d in
natural Vl-'flic al ct:&gt;dar planks and a
distin c ti\'~ stone veneer, requires
only a minimum of maintenance .
The home's ra&lt;lianl backyard arPas

are

de&gt; i~ned

to absorb the south·

ern s \111 , and an· t'asily otLTe s siblt&gt;
throngh ;ur abundanrt• of gla ss

walls tha t ope n from it s dazz linJ!
"ix-side:-d cnre:Sid t' lighh·d doublt· doors at !ht'
Iron! t'lllry opt:'n into an oulslandiu~ r t'Ct'pti l m rtrt·il . A now is lTt'al t•d ht· rt&gt; to 1hl"' s paciou s formal
art'&lt;IS around a J..rrand slate-hearth
fin: plan·.
The e x p;m ~ ivt" living roorn and
fomwl dining span.. l l lt'rgt· at llw
Ct'lller of thl' IHJI1ll~ . bt&gt;neath a soarin}.! 14 -fuol domed lTiling. An
aln:ady radiant expansl:' is furlht"' r
t'llhanct'd by &lt;I p&lt;.tir of t-leclronir;ll-

ly &lt;Jpt"rat cd s kyli~llt s.
h'rmal living an· as givt·· way to rt
fabulou s gla ss -t'rKios t'd sun room
and tw o l;trgt· backyard lnrart's.
Slid in).( j.!b ~s doors ope11 to t'&lt;trh of
tl w~t:· an· as. lnlh t' surmJortl, "oolhill~' t' Xh ;~t~ sl fan ~ are featun:d uvt-r

TilE AN GLED des!Jllt of this passive-solar homP enabh•s th&lt;' houS&lt;' to attracllv&lt;&gt;ly capture as much
sunlight "" possibll', and Pnjoy wid&lt;&gt; op&lt;&gt;n living SfJ'tc~ s. TPrran·s Pxpand living af't'as in good weatlter,
and they ill'(' msily re&lt;tched. Both a d&lt;&gt;n and a livinl( room are part of tbe ho~ allowing ample fonnal
and infonnnl

~athering

an•as.

lht · d11 ors to lht· !t•rr;H.·t'l\. Thi s
pr ;ll·til" ;tf ft-atun· automatirally
cools as needed, nmking- thi s cen·
tr&lt;il an·a pt· rfect for a grt:"'t'nh oust&gt;.

Foldilll!

doors "~"'"

[nmJ

t h~

[or-

mal dilliiiJ! room. f t'V t·flli!IJ.! lht'
1.." asual span·s of tlw holllt' . Hen· a
r ozy dPn also op~ n s to lhl' larger

-&lt;-

a d t· lighlful llla '-' f t' r bt· droom,
whirh boasts amph."' cloSI:'I spare. a
luxurim1s whirlpool hath and slidin}.! gla ss door s that o pen to a

secluded terrace Across the hall.
two St't:"ondary bedrooms share a
Cl)()\lt'llit"nt !mil hath .

(For a more del:tiled, scaled plan
of this house. includin~ guides to
~: s timating costs and f.nancinJ.! .
s e nd $4 to House of tht' w~~k .
P.O . Box 1562, New York, N.Y.
10116-1562. Be sure to indude the
number of the plan .)

IPrral'l:' . Tht' dPI! &lt;tdjoin~ the

an).!lt'd eat-in kikht'n, which ollt·rs
a ~ unny ~ink with front yard vit&gt;ws.
Nearby, a s t;tirwa y IL· ad s to the:
ba~t'IIH-'111. wltidt i:-. nplional. whitt'
a handy rnurl rnom includt' s a
was h e r and dr ~· t'r. ;t s tTVict'
t'lllranre and a dotlf to tlw lwt H. al
_.l!ar;l_l!t:' .

A J_.Jt'areful s ln·pinJ.! wiiiJ.! inrhu.k s

F- ~ ha s a living
room. dining
room.
kitdH·n . dell, sun room,
thrt 'l' hl'drooms . two baths and a
n · ct· pl i llfl :tn· a, totaling 1,1)4 7
squart' ft'" t&gt; l of hf"lhitable s p&lt;H"e .
Thnt' is a d!iuh le J.:-aragr , hrhind
wl1kh is a mud roum and lau1Hh)'

D

t•si~n

..•

Sliding glass doors lead from the
livin~-t

from

room to the sun room and
th~ den

to tire terrace. The

master bedroom also has aness to
a ll:'rr&lt;tce . Tlw ovt'rall dimensinns
of Ho'4" by 53'1'' include the
garagt' . 'Jl~t' ha semtnt i s opUonal .

.,

'

\

\

MAIN FLOOR
HIGH S1YLE ~lements of a domE'd ceiling, abundant glass areas
and a Ooor-to-ceillng fireplacP make the living room an outstanding
feature of this passive-solar home.

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/( Ranch Homes. 24 or the most popular from this
feature: Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common
problems: and. A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to House of the Week, The Sunday-T1mes Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10t 16·1562.

Enclosed Is $4 for plan N o . - - - - - - - - - - - - Is $4.95 each

for the booklet(s)

CELLULAR ONE

$99
Phone Spetial

Clip th1s order ood return label

Enclosed

WW MAINTENANCE Is yet another plus in the attracdve combi·
nation of vertical cedar ~lanks and stone In the home's exterior.

-------

Name _____________________________________
Street _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
State (ZIP)r ________________________________

•Fully Featured Phone
•3 Year Warranty
•Monthly Plans Starting at $29.95
•5 Counties to make local calla

NATE COMMUNICATION
614·441·1168
1502 Easter• Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mastercard • Visa

Webster, Mrs. Faye Wright, Mrs.
John Milhoan, Mrs . Don Car·
ruthers, Mrs . John Plymale, Mrs.
James Davis and Mrs. Bruce
McDonald.
Donors were:
Kitty Johnson , Ron Toland,
Darren Hoffman, Steve Voreh, Sr.,
Steve Vorch Jr ., Calvin Stewart,
Casby Meadows III, Lee Burcham,
John Jones , Shirley Eisnaugle,
Gary Eisnaugle, Raymond Weiher,
Keith Snyder, Patricia Elliou, Mar·
vin Francis, Connie Rces, James
Young, Carman Kruscamp, Roger
Brandeberry, Jeff Boyer, Beverly
Dunkle, Cheryl Hensley, CHarotte
Marrine, Richard Speirs and Bryan
Martin,
Paul Ward, Jon Rothgeb, Henry
Milam, Kathy Ohlinger, Greg
Shrader, Sherry Daines, Paulette
Hogg, Wayne Sweeny, Bernard
Goelling, Franklin Wilson, Mona
Valianc e, Mildred Daft, Debra
Bradley, Edward Midkiff, William
Medley, Amy Rhoads, Aaron Sea·
mon, Robin Payne Guy Guinther,
Roger Copley , Roger Walker,
Eileen Mink , Doyle Saunders,
Rhonda Glick and Richard Neal.
Belinda Broyles, Barbara
Collins, Eula Adkins, Jack Unroe,
Jan Coen, Hoc E. Eskew, Maria

Sloan, Candy l:laughman, Robin
Pasquale, Oran Barry Jr., Jerry L.
Burcham, Robie Syrus, Robert G.
Rothgeb , Mike Null , Myra C .
Williams, Vernon Burnheimer,
Henry E. Dillon, Lottie Harvey,
Vernon Harvey, Clarence B. Stout,
Barbara Walker, Lesa J. Caldwell ,
Andrew Lemley, Rachel D. Pullins,
Linda L. Toland and Tina G.
DeGarmo.
Maurice Delille, Glen Ward ,
Robert Mead , Donald Wothe,
Robert Hennesy, Mary Hcnncsy,
Debbie Rogers, John Roush, Roger
L. Saunders, Walter J. Pope, Kelly
Atkinson, Paul D. Niday, Sandy
Saunders, Lonnie C. McGuire,
Daryl Martin, Chris L. Glover ,
Diane Love, Norman C. Snyder,
Gary Fenderbosch, Paula J. Saunders, Debra A. Nibert. Jack
Richards, Barbara Epling , Dorothy
L. Perkins, Farrell A. Houck, Payl
S. Koch and Charles E. Swisher.
Carolyn S. Petrie , Car o l P.
O' Rourke, Phyllis Pope , Dwanna
L. Fraley, Twyllia Y. Conn ell ey,
Wanda J. Connell e y, Debra L.
O'Dell, Frank E. Naskey, Robert
Craft, Clinton Patterson, Robert J.
Jacks, David E. Clay, Harold M .
Saunders, James C. Fife, Sandm M.
Saxon and Teresa A. Davis.

POINT PLEASANT · Ohio
Valley Bank (OVB) has contribut·
ed $5,000 to the Pleasant Valley
Health Foundation's Endowment
Fund in memory of John McNeiU,
who passed away in September
1989.
McNeill, the rather of Samuel P.
McNeill, M.D., a physician on the
PV H Medical Staff, served as
director of OVB for 26 years. From
1986 to 1989, McNeill served as
director emeritus . "OVB was
referred to as the other family,"
recalls Dr. McNeill.
The foundation is continuing its
efforts to raise an additional
$500,000 to provide scholarships
and grant· in·aid loans to students
from the tri·county area who are
studyin!! for careers in healthcare.
"OhiO Valley Bank's donation
provides financial support for peo·
pie interested in pursuing healthcare careers, and will hopefully

Mexico changes with
the passing of time
By MAX TAWNEY
Guest Columnist
A few weeks ago l took my
grandson Jim Bob Scott to Old
Mexico. Jim Bob taught Spanish
this past year at M1ami University
at Oxford, Ohio, so l knew he
could talk to the natives. He spoke
so well that many of the Mexicans
found it hard to believe that he was
from the United States. Jim Bob
hoped he could get a job to teach
English at the Un1versity of Mexi·
co, but we found that the salary
was too low.
While we were there, we decided to go sightseeing. We rented a
·car and a driver and left Mexico
City: the largest city in the world. It
has over 20 million people and is
still growing.
It took us 40 minutes just to get
out of the city. But once we were
out, we visited Cuernavaca, Tolu·
ca, Taxco and many other places
throughout the country.
I have been to old Mexico
many, many times and this visit
made me realize how much things
have changed since the fust lime I
was there 49 years ago. l had taken
my wife Mabel and we had rented
a condo in Acapulco for $8 a day.
We had a maid who fixed our
meals, did the laundry and whatever we wanted done. Believe it or
not, the maid did these things for
one dollar a day.
Things have really changed.
This time, the hotel Queen Isabella
Sheraton in Mexico City cost $140.
a day, and in Acapulco at the
Elcano it was $100 per day. I must
say we stayed in f!,I'St class hotels,
but ordinary hotels were $50 to $75
a day. A big jump from $17 to $25
just three or four years ago when I
was there.
The American dollar is not
worth much anymore since President Carlos Salinas devalued the
peso. It is now three pesos to our
dollar. The last time l was there it
was eight or nine pesos to our dol·
Jar, and just a few years ago it was
16 to I.
It cost us $30 for a taxi from the
airport to our hotel on this trip.
Breakfast cost $12, lunch was $15
and dinner was $22.50. It was hard
for me to believe that our dollar
had depreciated that much. We had
to cut our trip short by three or four
days because we were running out
of green backs.
.
But now I wiU tell you what is
going on in Mexico City. It is just
like Hong Kong thousnads of peo·
ple every where. they are going to
have an election for the president

Sunday Tlmes-5entlnei-Page-B7

encourage those people to return to
the tri·county and to put their skills
to work in the community," Hartley
says.
Since making its fust awards in
1989, the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Health Foundation has provided 49
students from Mason, Gallia and
Meigs Counties with financial.
assistance toward their education in
healthcare related fields of study.

chairman and fundraisiog chairman, Dr.
McNeill, Mary Pullins, secretary/treasurer of
the PVH Health Foundation Board of Directors,
Jim Dailey, president and CEO of Ohio Valley
Bank, Morris Haskins, director and member of
the Ohio Valley Bank Executive Committee and
Jeff Smith, executive vice president and chief
operating officer.

Scholarships and grant-in -uid
loans totaling nearly $100,000. rep·
resenting the interest earned on the
principal in the Scholars Endow·
ment Fund, has been awarded over
the past five years.
Opportunities exist for dona ·
Lions at all levels of giv ing from the
Sc holar's Cluhs including
Patrons, Sl to $249), Associates
$500 to $999), and Benefactors

$1,000 to $4,999- to tl:~ Founda·
tion Roundtable, which rccognw:s
donors of $5,000 or more.
Those needing more information on h6w to join "Education
Today for a Healthy Tomorrow,"
or to learn more about the Founda·
tion Scholars program , call the
Pleasant Valley Ho spital Health
Foundation at (304 ) 675-4340 ,
extension 326

Custom Order
Upholstered
Furniture Sale!

EARL AND MILDRED SHULER

60th to be observed
RACINE - Earl and Mildred
Shuler of Racine will observe their
60th wedding anniversary Aug. 29.
Mr. and Mrs. Shuler were married in the Pomeroy Methodist par·
sonagc by the late Troy E. Maness.
They arc the parents of three children, Nancy Carnahan and Richard

ENDOWMENT DONATION· Ohio Valley
Bank recently made a $5,000 donation to the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation Scholars
Endowment Fund in memory uf John McNeill,
an OVB director from 1960-1986. McNeill, who
passed away in September 1989, is the father of
Samuel P. McNeill, a physician on tbe PVH
Medical Starr. On hand for the presentation
were, left, Charles Lanham, foundation vice-

Shuler or Racine, and Ellen Swart·
wout of Baltic, S.D. They also have
eight grandchildren and three great·
grandsons.
Cards may be sent to the couple
at 46620 Morning Star Road,
Racine.

Bob Evans continues Great
Seal preservation project
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans els and include art, history, math
Farms in conjunction with Ohio and English learning activities;
fourth -graders is continuing the suggestions for in~class y1s1tors;
"Preserving Ohio's Past for the ideas for related f1cld trips; and
Future," project, an education and instructions for fundraising efforts.
functraising campaign to raise funds Fundraising materials include a
for the restoration of the stained collection bucket for pennies or
glass Great Seal of Ohio in the educational bookmarks students
State Capital rotunda. The program can sell.
was implemented during the 1993Bob Evans will select a fourth·
94 school year to raise funds for grade class to visit the State House
later in the year and part1c1pate rn
the restoration .
More than 200 fourth-grade the creation of a life-size replica of
classrooms ,partnered with Bob the seal which will be used in the
Evans Restaurants in Ohio and .State House Educational Class·
raised more than $1 d,OOO for the room.
restoration during the 1993-94
All classes participating in the
school year.
.
efforts this fall are eligible to be
An additional $7,000 Js needed selected.
The Great Seal of Ohio is an
to complete the restoration. All
funds raised during the campaign official state symbol. The seal will
are donated to the Great Seal of be restored in stained glass in the
Ohio program.
skylight of the Capital rotunda by
Fundraising efforts will be con· spring 1995. State House restora·
dueled around the state in Novem· tion will be completed by the
ber 1994, and interested teachers spring of 1996..
.
must request materials by Sept. 9.
Those needmg more mforma·
• Bob Evans Farms will provide tion about participating in the edu·
educational and fund-raising mate· cational and/or fundraising portions
rials to interested fourth-grade of "Preserving Ohio's Past for the
teachers in Ohio. The education Future," may contact Tammy
materials , which can be used Roberts Myers, public relatiOns
throughout the school year, are tar· manager, Bob Evans Farms, 1-800·
gctcd to fourth-grade learning lev· 272-7675, extension 4954.

MAX TAWNEY
Aug. 21 their pictures are every
where through the country. lf you
want to find out about them just
ask the taxi drivers here is what
hey told me. They are both crooks
and will steal millions of pesos just
like the other presidents have done.
There are many beggars on the
streets, but none in Acapulco. It is
safe to walk the streets at night in
Acapulco, but that is where the rich
live. Some of the homes are out of
this world. Many movie stars live
there, and many Mexicans arc in
the drug business. They make mil·
lions. Most of the drugs come out
of Columbia and they are smuggled
very easily across the border.
I met an American on the beach
at our hotel. In so many words, he
told me that he was in the drug
business. He pointed to his home
across they bay and told me he paid
$2 million for it. He also told me
that it was useless to work six days
a week and pay taxes when you can
make it tax free and be where if I
would land in Texas from Mexico
City. When I returned to U.S., l
told him Houston. He said he had
many friends there and asked me if
I would like to meet them. I knew
what he was leading up to so I
looked at my watch and told him I
promi~to meet a friend in five
minutes
I to k off. I did not want any
part o what he was trying to get
me int . But the drug business is
wide ope.n in Mexico: especially
cocaine.
Max Tawney, longtime Gal·
lipolis merchant i~ an occasional
contributor of columns to the
Sunday-Times Sentinel about his

Gadget helps biologist dig up
underground information
By MICHELLE LOCKE
Associated Press Writer
LIVERMORE, Calif. (AP)There's a mole burrowing after
secrets at one of the nation's most
sensitive government laboratories.
No, this isn't some deep-cover
foreign spy ferretmg out nuclear
weapons secrets. This mole does its
spying underground on the burrov.:·
ing owl and the San Joaqum kit
fox.
MOLE - short for Miniature
Optical Lair Explorer - is a
remotely controlled robot. It's
proving to be a valuabl~ tool for
checking out bashful ammals that
may be living in harm's way at the
Lawrence Livermore National Lab·
oratory's 7 ,000-acre conventional
explosives range east of the San
Francisco Bay area.
"It's a real decision-maker and
that'·s what I'm interested in, being
able to say, 'Hey, this requires
some protection,"· said lab

travel~.

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wildlife ·biologist Jim Woolleu.
MOLE is a vehicle about5 inch·
es long that rolls forward or back·
ward on rubber tteads and carries a
television camera the size of a roll
of film that can be swiveled 360
degrees.
.
The robot, designed by lab engineer John Christensen, sends back
images from inside animal lairs
through an 18-foot·long cord.
MOLE allows Woollett to
bypass the laborious process of
looking for tracks or meal lefto~ers
at den entrances or settmg up mght
surveillance equipment to study
nocturnal animals.
lt can cruise underground bur·
rows during the day, when the residents tend to be at home, and deliver instant data.
Woollctt is careful not to send
MOLE barging int':' badger _dens
since they're notonously pnvate
animals. "I think they'd probably
try to take a bite out of it''

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�Sports

Entertainment

August 21, 1994

Peqple in the news
BURBANK, Calif. (AP) Bobcat Goldthwait will atone for
setting the setofthe"TonightShow"
ablaze by going on TV to talk about
the dangers of playing with fire.
Under a plea agreement.
Goldthwait agreed to videotape a
public service announcement and
pay restitution.
The 32-year-old comic will
plead no contest to one of two misdemeanor counts of illegally setting
a fire, Deputy City Attorney Roben
Walter.&gt; said Thursday. He had faced
up to a $1,000 fine and six months
in jail on each charge.
Goldthwait poured lighter
fluid on a chair and set it on fue
durin~ a May 6 appearance on
Bobcat Goldthwalt
NBC s 'The Tonight Show With
Jay Leno ... Leno and guest Lauren
Hunon doused the fi.'l: with cups of water.

By MIKE HARRIS
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)Ernie Irvan, one of the brightest
stars in NASCAR 's elite Winston
Cup stoCk car series. was in criticial condition Saturday following a
devastating crash at Michigan
International Speedway.
The 35-year-old Irvan, a native
of Salinas. Calif.. hit the wall nearly head-on at the exit to tum two
on the two-mile, high-banked oval
during practice for today's GM
Goodwrench Dealers 400.
Witnesses said the incident apparently was caused by a cut tire on
the right front of the Ford
Thunderbird.
He had been running laps at
about 176 mph.
NASCAR officials said Irvan.
who now makes his home in
Rockwell, N.C., sustained multiple
injuries, including a skull fracture.
Other unofficial reports said his
injuries includoo collapsed lungs, a
throat injury that required a tra·
cheotomy, a broken arm, a severe
cut on his neck from his seat harness,leg and internal injuries.
He was airlifted to St. Joseph
Mercy Hospital in Ypsilanti, about
50 miles away.
Irvan was quickly joined at the
hospital by wife Kim, car-owner
Robert Yates and crew chief Larry
McReynolds, all of whom were at
the track when the ace ident
occured.
lrvan joined Robert Yates
Racing last September as the full·
time replacement for Davey

The Olympic champion said Thursday he signed a four-year
contract to become a "special am·
bassador" for ski resons in the
Jackson Hole area. He will only
have to work there 14 days a year.
Moe, who won a gold
medal in the downhill race and a
silver in the Super-G, has been heavily courted by Rocky Mountain ski
resorts since the Winter Olympics.

NEW YORK {AP)- Call it closure for tuxe{!o magnate Harvey
Wein1tein.
'- Weinstein marked the fust anniversary of his release by kidnappers
by returning to the 14-foot-deep pit where he was held for two weeks.
Weinstein. 69, said he suffers no ill effects from the bizarre ordeal,
but he did not want to go to the pit alone. So he asked the two detectives who
arrested his kidnappers and rescue{! him to come along.
"I would have never suggesled bringing him back there, but I know
he needed to do it for himself," said Detective Ruben Santiago.
They went to the site Tuesday, a year to the day after Weinstein was
freed. Kidnappers had held him in the dark hole with lit~e food or water,

TO PERFORM - Mark O'Connor, multi Grammy Award
instrumentalist, host ofTNN's American Music Shop and CMA's
musician or tbe year six years in a row will perform at the
Paramount Arts Center as part of the Troubadour Concert Series
Saturday 8 p.m. Aug. 27. Tickets are available a the theatre box
office. Those needing more information may call {606)324-3175.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum draws controversy
EDITOR'S NOTE- Controversy is no stranKer to Dennis
Barrie the director or the Rock
and R~ll Hall of Fame and Museurn scheduled to open next year
in Cleveland. Once tried and
:; acquitted on obscenity charges,
he knows a rock museum is likely
to draw stones.
By MARY CAMPBELL
AP Newsfeatures Writer
The director of a $90-million
shrine to rock 'n' roll music to
open next year m . eve land fitgures
his involvement tn an obscenny
trial helped him land the job.
He is Dennis Barrie, 47, an out·
spoke n defender of First Amendment rights and a devotee of rock,
which he claims has changed the
world.
.
"They say the fall of the Berhn
Wall was because of the arms
buildup," Barrie says. "That's
nonsense. It was because of Westem culture seeping over the wall
and creating expectation levels and
rock had a big part to do wuh
that."
Barrie was head of the Contemporary Ans Center in Cincinnati in
1990 when a controversy erupted
over an exhibition of photographs
b Robert Mapplethorpe depicting
h~mosexual acts.
Indicted on obscenity charges.
Barrie was acquitted in a jury trial.

·a

Two years later he resigned from
the museum and started his own
company to develop travehng art
exhibitions.
Now Barrie is director of the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum in Cleveland, housed in a
building designed by architect I.M.
Pei and scheduled to open on Labor
Day, 1995.
Had it not been for the Mapplethorpe nap, Barrie says, the rock
museum wouldn't have heard of
h.•~;
. ,
Rock n roll has often been
the subject of First Amendment
battles," he says. "Rock music is
always under attack. I thmk that
was very relevant for a lot of the
··
akers who chose me 'ror
dectston-m
the).ob.
.
If you really look back at tiS
history, you know it has always
been controversial. The music tJ_utt
now seems nostalgtc was constdered dangerous stuff when tt c~e
ouL Elvts Presley, Jerry Lee Lewts,
Ltttle Rtchard, were constdered
dangerous_by parents. Lynes were
controverstal. Rap and heavy metal
are still rebellion and the music of
you~ger people, hard. for older generauons to deal _w•th. .
.
The rock shrine, Bam~ says, "IS
such an emung pro.JCCt Ulured me
back mto the museum world.
••1 think popular culture has

been one of the most powerful
forces of the last 40 or 50 years and
11 has accelerated in the last 20
years. It's the most accessible of all
popular cultural forms. All you
need is a radio or a cassene player.
Rock is 60 percent of all the music
sold in the world, probably higher
in the United States."
Barrie's calendar lists 48 rock
concerts he hopes to attend this
summer.
"We try to get bands to come
down ~ th. e construcbon
· stte,
· .. he
says. Pmk Floyd came down .
They were blown away by the scale
and scope of it. T~ey're going to
g1ve us some of therr stage props."
Other acquisitions include Jim
Mornson
·
•s c ub Scout umform
·
,
Jimi Hendrix's handwritten lyrics
to "Purple Haze" and one of Keith
Moon's high-school report cards
which said he was "doing miserably in everything except music
appreciation."
"The museum wants to portray
rock 'n' roll and its impact on society in an honest way," Barrie says.
··That means we won't skin over
the controversies. We want to deal
with how it affected our political
and social structure and racial relationships."
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
began holding banquets in 1983 to
honor people who contributed to

the mu sic. An annual announcement that the museum will open the
followmg year had become a JOke
at the banquets.
Cleveland was chosen for the
museum site in 1986, principally
because of the willingness of the
city, Cuyahoga County and the
state of Ohio to raise money for it
Money also came from the recording industry.
''Cleveland disc jockey Alan
Freed popularized the phrase rock
•n• ro11 •". Barrie says.. "He pIayou
-"
the mustc. But the mam reason for
the museum's location is that the
city pursued the project with a
vengea~ce. Ctvtc. leaders really
wanted 11. for tounsm. They orga·
m"zed a camprugn,
got popu 1ar support a.nd found the money. &lt;?.ther
CLUes JUSt talked about money.
The building is going up in a
$300-million complex in downtown Cleveland on Lake Ene, tiS
tow~ nsl!lg out of lhe water. The
area IS bemg developed wtth a setence center, aquanum, arnphttheate~.and parks: .
Our mtsston ts to tell the story
of rock 'n' roll," Barrie says.
.. we·re trying to pay attention to
all different scenes and streams of
rock and make sure we represent as
many ~ey figures and movements
as posstble.
"We've got lots on rhythm 'n'

blues and blues. Rap continues a
long tradition in black vocal groups
and speaking forms .
''We want to make people
aware that the streams co me
together and split and come togethera a·n C
t
.
morll!k~ r~~n~J. m~stc s~und;
rock does..
ay an a 01 0
One
lar
. th
urn w.11 h u roo~ 10 h. e musef
rock ~usic a~: ~;• 0 ~tory 0
0 st eldan a v•deo
of st·multa
neo us wor events on
the olher side.
"There'll b
h
.
about how rock e ~not er sectwn
and self-ima c } B~d ha1r ct;,ess
much was i;n·
d ~ sahs. S~
and st le of ukcnce .. Y t e 100
Y
roc mustctans ·

cin:

"Some think it 'll be a kind of
Disney World attraction. While it is
going to be very exciting and fun to
be there, it's a substantive museum ,
with archives and a library.
"Among my old friends from
the museum world, 90 percent
think !his is an exciting job.
"They're all closet rockers anyway."

TOP SINGLES
Copyright 1994, BillboardSoundscan Inc.· Broadcast Data
Systems.
1. "I'll Make Love to You,"
Boyz II Men {Motown)
2."Stay (I Missed You)," Lisa
Loeb &amp; Nine Stories {RCA) (Gold)
3." Fantastic Voyage," Coolio
{Tommy Boy) (Platinum)
4. "Wild Night," John Mellencamp &amp; Me'Shell Ndegeocello
(Men:ury)
5."1 Swear," AII-4 -0ne {Biit2z)
{Gold)
6. "Can You Feel the Love
Tonight," Elton John {Hollywood)
7."Dorr't Tum Around," Ace of
Base (Arista) {Gold)
8. "Funkdafied," Da Brat {So
So Del) (Gold)
9. "When Can I See You,"
Babyface (Epic)
10. "Stroke You Up," Changing
Faces {Spoiled Rotten-Big Beat)
TOP ALBUMS
Copyright 1994, BillboardSoundscan Inc.
1." 'The Lion King' Soundtrack," (Disney)
2.' "Forrest Gump' Soundtrack," (Epic)
3. "The Sign," Ace of Base
{Arista) (Platinum)
4. "Purple," Stone Temple
Pilots {Atlantic) (Platinum)
5."Regulate ... G Funk Era,"
Warren G {Violator-RAL)
6."August &amp; Everything
After," Counting Crows {Geffen)
(Platinum)
7. "Candle box," Candlebox
(Maverick-Sire) (Platinum)
8. "Dookie," Green Day
{Reprise).{Gold)
9. "Voodoo Lounge," The
Rolling Stones (Virgin)
10. ''Superunknown, ••
Soundgarden (A&amp;M) (Platinum)
COUNTRY SINGLES
Copyright 1994, BillboardBroadcast Data Systems

1:;preaming With My Eyes
Open, Clay Walker (Gtant)
. 2."Love a Little Stronger,"
Dtamond Rto {Arista)
3."Be My Baby Tonight," John
Michael Montgomery {Atlantic)
4.''Hangin' In," Tanya Tucker
{Liberty)
5. "Whisper My Name," Randy
Travis (Warner Bros.)
6.' 'Half the Man," Clint Black
{RCA)
\
7. "She Can't Say I Didn't
Cry," Rick Trevino {Columbia)
8. "What the Cowgirls Do,"
Vince Gill {MCA)
9. "XXX's and OOO 's {An
American Girl)," Trisha Yearwood
{MCA)
10.' 'The Man In Love With
You," George Strait (MCA)

5."You Mean the World To
Me" Toni Braxton (Laface)
6."Anytime You Need a
Friend " Mariah Carey {Columbia)
7."i Swear," All-4-0ne (Biil2z)
8.''1'11 Remember," Madonna
{Maverick)
9."Don't Turn Around" Ace of
Base {Arista)
'
IO."Love Is All Around" Wet
Wet Wet (London)
'

AND

FRI. THRU THURS.

MEL GIBSON, JODIE FOSTER,

WALT DIINilY PlCTUollll'l;

JAMES GARDNER

THE

IN

LION
KING
........... -" ...

MAVERICKPG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

fi;lo.
~.

ADMISSION 12.00
·~3

R&amp;D SINGLES
Copyright 1994, Billboard
1."1'11 Make Love To You,"
Boyz II Men (Motown)
2."Stroke You Up," Changing
Faces {Big Beat)
3."Any Time, Any Place-And
On and On," Janet Jackson {Virgin)
4."Funkdafeid," Da Brat {So
So Def-Chaos)
5."1 Miss You," Aaron Hall
{MCA)
6. "I'd Give Anything," Gerald
Levert {EastWest)
7." When Can I See You,"
Babyface (Epic)
8. "Never Lie," Immature
{MCA)
9."The Right Kinda Lover,"
Patti Labelle {MCA)
IO."Sending My Love," Zhane

ADULT CONTEMPORARY
.
SINGLES
Copyright 1994, Billboard
I. "Can You Feel The Love
Tonight,'· Elton John (Hollywood)
2."1f You Go," Jon Secada
{SBK)
3. "Wild Night," John Mellencamp &amp; Me'Shell Ndegeocello
{Men:ury)
4. "The Way She Loves Me,"
Richard Marx (Capitol)

~~~~~~~~~4

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMU,y PRACTICE

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HARRISON fORO

(IIItown)

reports.)
I." Basket Case," Green Day

{Reprise)
2."Einstein on the Beach,"
Counting Crows (DGC-Geffen)

GLEAR AND
PRESENT DANGER
MATINEI'.S SAT &amp; SUN

IT
CouLD

1:00 l:4S

HAPPEN

~myou
7:10,9~ lO DAILY

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style that loo to numerou s crashes
and, eventually, a drivers' meeting
apology to hi s fellow competitors
at Talladega. Ala . in July 19'11.
Since then, his style on the traCk

has toned down and his star has
risen consistent ly, both on the
tmck and off, with lrvan becoming
one of the most popular dnvers m
the series.

CRITICALLY INJURED- NASC.&lt;\R driver
Ernie lrvan is lifted into an ambulance helicopter
at Michigan International Speedway rollowing his

The first of his 12 Winston Cup
victories came at Bristol, Tenn., in
August of 1990. lrvan addoo a VICtory in the 19'11 Daytona 500 and
was on his way.

wreck in turn two during practice Saturday afternoon ror today's Goodwrench 400. lrvan suffered
several injuries as a resu lt. (AP)

· ·-

to bounce right a few times. you've got to avoid
injury. There are just so many variables that arc really
hard to control."
Quarterback Tommie Frazier leads 13 returning
'Husker starters {seven on offense, six on defense). A
junior, Frazier is a Heisman Trophy candidate. He's 6foot-2 and weighs 205 pounds.
Last season, Frazier completed 77 of 162 passes for
1,159 yards and 12 touchdowns. He was Nebraska's
second best rusher, gaining 704 yards. The option QB
ran 126times, averaged 5.6 yards per carry and scored
nine TDs.
"His running skills have always been quite good,"
says Osborne about Frazier. "This year he will probably be even a more complete quarterback. He's shown
steady improvement"
Behind Frazier will be super sophs Lawrence
Phillips and Damon Benning, a pair of !-backs.
They're expected to offset the loss to the NFL of
Calvin Jones, who was the Big Eight scoring champ.
All-American linebacker Trev Albens is now a pro,
too. His replacement? Dwayne Harris. He's a senior
who may be even bener than Alberts.
Osborne is also counting on his returning all-Big
Eight giantl - offensive tackle Zach Wi.egert (6-5.
300 pounds) and defensive tackle Terry Connealy {65, 275)- to daunt Nebraska's fe, fl. foes.
West Virginia is one of seven bowl teams from

1993 that the Comhuskers will face this season. The
oth ers: Texas Tech {Hancock), UCLA {Rose),
Wyommg (Copper), Kansas State (Copper), Colorado
(Aloha) and Oklahoma (Hancock).
But Osborne knows enough about football to get
the job done.
After playing quarterback for Hastings (Neb.)
College, he spent three seasons (1959-61) in the NFL
- two with the Washington Redsldns and one with
lhe San Francisco 49ers as a flanker.
Then Osborne began his 32 seasons on the coaching staff at Nebraska. He spent II years as an assistant
to Bob Devaney before succeeding him in 1973.
Now the 'Huskers have NCAA record strings of:
32 consecutive winning seasons; 25 consecutive seasons of nine wins or more; 25 consecutive bowl bids;
and 13 consecutive benlts in New Year's Day bowls.
They've also been in the AP rankings for a record
206 weeks in a row.
"Nobody has shown the consistency that Nebraska
has," Nehlen says. "Tom Osborne should absolutely
be a walking genius and god out there."
But the Huskers - whose only national ti~es were
produced by Devaney in 1970 and 1971 - have a
bowl record of just8-13 under Osborne.
Will he make the most of his shot at the top in
1994?
Osborne admits: ··The ball's in our court"

What are they doing without baseball?

IPG- 1 l)
7:00,9:4S DAli.Y

SICOLASU~E

Earnhardt after a 17th-place fmish
three weeks ago in the Brickyard
400 at Indianapolis. In that race,
lrvan was battling eventual winner
Jeff Gordon for the lead when he
had a tire denate with just five laps
remaining.
Last week, lrvan finished second 10 Mark Martin at Watkins
Glen. On Friday, he qualified 19th
for today's race. The Yates team
was expected to withdraw from
today's event.
lrvan began his Winston Cup
career with five starts for D.K.
Ulrich in 1987. He continued driving for Ulrich the next two seasons, then, after three races with
Junie Donlavey at the start of the
1990 season, joined MorganMcClure.
In the early years of his
NASCAR career, lrvan was criti·
cizoo for a too-aggressive driving

Osborne. "We run some option football. Mix in the
By HOWARD SINER
NEW YORK {NEA)- Tom Osborne wants 1994 play-action pass. And both play good defense.''
The 'Huskers and West Virginia each went 10-0 in
to be his favorite year.
To open college football's I 25th anniversary sea- 1993 before losing post-season games on New Year's
son, the head coach at the University of Nebraska is Day: Florida State edged Nebraska. 18-16, in the
Orange Bowl to win the national title; in the Sugar
determined to win the Kickoff Classic.
Osborne hopes to wind up on Jan. I with another Bowl, Florida crushed the Mountaineers, 41-7.
So those who had clamored to see Nebraska vs.
bowl triumph - perhaps after going undefeated durWest Virginia for all the marbles have a right to be
ing the regular season for the second time in a row.
That likely would clinch his ftrst national champi- wistful about the Kickoff Oassic.
"This is not last year's game," warns Nehlen.
onship ever.
"We'll just bave to see how it all shakes out," says "Nebraska's a different team and we're a different
the 57-year-old Osborne. "But potentially we can team."
have a good team. We think we're going to be pretty
It's not that the Comhuskers- who frnished third
(behind FSU and Notre Dame) in last season's rankgood on both sides of the ball."
No wonder, of course. Osborne, who's spent his ings- seem any less imposing now. But West
entire career at Nebraska, is America •s winningest Virginia - sixth in last year's USA Today-CNN
active coach. His 21-year record {20647-3) features a {coaches) poll and seventh in the AP {writers) pollvictory percentage of.811, which is lOth on the all- might not be among the Top 25 of 1994.
"Nebraska is a great team," says Nehlen. "They
time coaching list
Beginning their '94 campaign, the Cornhuskers will could very easily be the top team in America. They're
play West Virginia on Sunday, Aug. 28, at the certainly one of the top one, two or three.' •
Osborne isn't shy about Nebraska's pursuit of the
Meadowlands in East Rutherford, N.J. The season
opener for college football will be telecast nationally national crown.
He says: "I think we have enough good athletes to
by ABC at 1:30 p.m. EDT.
Nebraska and coach Don Nehlen 's Mountaineers be in that position. But to say, well, you're going to go
out and win II games- you know, it's very difficult
have a lot in common.
"We both emphasize a strong running game," says to do that. Because you have to be good, the ball has

COLONY THEATRE

"****
RRIJo:no,owo

Allison. who was killed in July
1993 in a helicopter accident That
was the second major blow of last
season for NASCAR, which also
lost 1992 Winston Cup champion
Alan Kulwicki in the crash of a
private plane in April.
The 1994 season then got off to
a tragic start in February at
Daytona with the deaths of veteran
Neil Bonnett and rookie Rodney
Orr in separate crashes during
practice for the Daytona 500.
But, in the ensuing 20 events
this season , there had been no
other serious injuries until lrvan's
crash.
The last bad accident at MIS
was in August 1992 when Clifford
Allison, Davey's younger brother,
was fatally injured in a crash during practice for a Busch Grand
National race. He is the only racing
fatality at Michigan since the track
opened in October 1968.
Since buying out the remaining
year 18 months of his contract with
Morgan-McClure Racing for a
reported $400,000 in order to
move to Yates' P"tent black No.
28, Irvan has won ftte of 29 starts
and has 21 top-! 0 finishes.
He has been among the most
consistent competitors this season,
finishing in the top 10 in 15 of 20
races and in the top five 14 times.
Coming into the weekend. Irvan
trailed Winston Cup points leader
Dale Earnhardt by just 27 points.
lrvan has led the points for 13
of the 20 race weeks this season.
most recently losing the lead to

Nebraska looking to begin march to national championship

KATIMEKS SAT ol SUft
1:10 1:20

MODERN ROCK TRACKS
Copyright 1994, Bill board
{While the other charts are
based on retail sales, this list is
compiled from radio station airplay

August 21, 1994

In Pigskin Classic encounter with West Virginia,

.J

Billboard magazine ranks top selling music
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.):

Section C

lrvan critically injured during practice for Goodwrench 400

demanding a $3 million ransom.
"We lookoo down in the hole, .. Santiago said. "It was like the same
day a year ago."
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP)- Tommy Moe has skioo his way to an
easy $60,000.

MIAMI {AP)- The man
known as Don Francisco has been
accused of sexual harassment by a
former model on his Spanish-language TV variety show.
Francisco, whose real
name is Marion Kreutzberger, was
sued Wednesday by Ana Gomez.
She says Kreutzberger exposoo
himself to her and auempled to rape
her in a Miami hotel room in 1989.
She said she didn't come
Tommy Moe
forward sooner because she was
afraid of ruining her career.
Her lawsuit alleges Kreuuberger fondloo her at various times,
including in the Univision network cafeteria and in front of visiting advertisers.

~imes - ~tnlitttl

Despite plans ·for a
player-owner meeting
this week, there appears
to be no end in sight to
the baseball strike, which
is already past one week
old. •

COtll IMC S00tt I
JOKM CANDY In •wAGONS EAST"
GIFTCEATlFICATEB ~VAtLABLEI

RIVER VALLEY B.S.
A'rBLE71C BOOS,.ERS

It's affecting different
people in different ways.
For average Joes and
Janes struggling to make
a living off the national
pastime, it can mean the
end of the fat season. For

others more fortunate,
it's a day at the beach.
Here are two examples
of the bad and the good
that is coming out of the
eighth suspension of play
since 1972.

ANNOUNCES TilE

INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESSES

GOLD
CONTRIBUTION OF $100
NAME IN FOOIBILL &amp; BASKETBAll PROGRAMS.
NAME ON PUQUE IN SCHOOL LOBBY FOR 1 YEAR•.
ACCESS TO UIDER ROOM AI HALFTIME.

SILVER
CONTRIBUTION OF $50
NAME IN FOOTBAll AND BASKETBAll PROGRAMS

BRONZE
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINr PLEASANT MEDICAL CENmR)

25TH&amp;: JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675
(

r

CONTRIBUTION OF $25
NAME IN FOOTBALL AND BASKETBAll PROGRAMS
For more Information contact any of the following Booster Club Members:
Maurice Toler: 388-9991
Mike Roe: 446-7668
Peggy Rucker: 256-1546
Janet Stephens: 388-8460
Dwight Uoyd: 256-1601

BUPJIOR1' 1'D JIAIDEU, JOIN I'ODAYr

I

'

THE TRICKLE-DOWN THEORY of business
growth may mean a growth in debt for Abd~l
Alsalahl, owner or the only op,en stadium so~vemr
sbop ia New York, irthe week-old strike cootmues.

Alsalabi, who used to bring in anywhere from $400
to $600 daily in merchandise sales, is lucky to get
$20 to $30 per day. {AP)

THIS ISN'T SO BAD! -The Los Angeles
Dodger5' Mike Piazza works with actress Pamela
Ail~er~on during .~lming of a s~ene for the N_BC
sertes Baywatch on a beach m Santa Momca,

Calif. The baseball players' strike gave Piazza a
chance to render a cameo appearance for tbis
episode, which is scheduled to air in October. (AP)

Deion Sanders' first stop on tour of NFL teams takes him to Dolphins' door
By WILL LESTER
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) - Free agent
Deioo Sanders strode to the microphone at the Miami Dolphins ttainmg camp Saturday and wasted no
time answering the big question.

"First I'd like to announce that
-Prime Time was in fine form.
I've come to terms with, uh ... the
The versatile defensive hack and
Miami Hooters," said the two- kick returner made the lateSt stop
sport star, flashing his multimil- - on his grand tour of the NFL to
hon-doUar grin as the mom full of land the best contract and a trip to
reporters broke up in laughter.
the Super Bowl. He was aa:ompa-

nied by his good friend, the rap star He also was going to the Dolphins
Hammer.
. game with Tampa Bay Saturday
Sanders, also the Cincinnati night.
Reds center fielder, got a tour of
Dolphins officials were not
training camp, met with Coach Don immediately available Saturday to
Shula and quarterback Dan Marino. talk about Sanders' 15-minule talk

with Shula. But Shula said earlier
this week he admires Sanders' talent and might want to oller a multiyear contract, dependin~ on his
plans and interest in Miarnt.

�pag~2-sunday Times-sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport Gallipolis, OH

Point Pleasant,

wv

August 21, 1994

two dead heats happened in one day. (rimes-Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Fund raiser brings in $16,000
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande was the site of
a contest held on Aug. 13 in which' 40 prizes worth more than
$16,000 were given away.
On hand to take part were Bevo Frdllcis, Wayne Wiseman and
Gallipolis native Jim Noe. all of whom were Rcdmen basketball
stars.
The biggest winners were Gene John son of Gene Johnson
Chevrolet-Oids-Geo of Gallipolis, Mary Evans, Rick McNelly of
McNeliy-Patrick &amp; Associates Insurance of Jackson, Doris Harrison
and Rebecca Wilcoxon of Gallipolis Chiropractic Clinic.

On Friday, the last day of harness horse racing in this year's
Meigs County Fair, the number of
local drivers was limited . But a
number of the 10 races proved to
be interesting.
Jane's Image, driven by Rocky
Stidham, won both the first and
secon d heat of the three-year-old
ftllies. Snap the Trap, driven by
Brett Ellion. placed second in both
heats.
In another three-year-old fillies
category, First Breath won both
heats. This horse was driven by
Du.ane Lowe. Finishing second in
both heats was native Meigs Countian Don Spencer, driving Booklet.
Terry VanRhoden, who set the
track record Thursday, won both
heats of the three-year-old fillies
driving Name It Something. Prim's
Lucky Gal placed second in the
first heat, while Fairleas Hea1her
finished second.
Terry's son, Ty VanRhoden ,
drove to two victories with Terrcscort in the Ohillco pacing series.
Special Red placed second in the
first heat. while Ornery Barney finished second in the second heal
Blackberry Jam, driven by 75 year-old Walter Young, won the
fifth and last race in the Ohillco
trOlling series. Macs Dillon, driven
by Carl Harness, placed second in
both heats.

Football season in Gallipolis
began Saturday morning at Memorial Field where the Gallia Academy Blue Devils edged the Fairland
Dragons by a 2- I count in a preseason scrimmage.
Pre-season scrimmal!es are
designed to help the coachmg staff
and players to work against a group
of new faces from another school.
Coaches stay on the field with the
players, punting is permitted, but
no kickoffs take place.
In the main scrimmage, where
the primary players from both
teams oppose each other. the Blue
Devils scored flfSt on a quick strike
70 yard drive in just four plays .
Three of the plays were on the
ground, including the touchdown.
Fairland 's offense features the
pass. and it was a wide-open 12yard touchdown pass that put them

with MIKE
BARTRUM

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - River Valley High School will
offer all-spans cards for the 1994-95 school year.
The cards, which cost $35 each, will allow their owners admission to all River Valley home athletic event.&lt;.
All senior citizens possessing a Golden Buckeye card will be
charged $1 admission for all home games.

1!ool hours posted

HTAB to meet Monday
MERCERVILLE - The Hannan Trace Athletic Boosters Club
will hold a meeting on Monday at 7:30 p.m. at Hannan Trace Elemenlllry.
The business of the meeting will concern discussion and planning for the 1994-95 school year and electing the club's officers.

RVHS Boosters to meet Tuesday

Sports briefs

The River Valley Athletic Boosters Club will hold a special
meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 23 at 7:30p.m. at River Valley High
School.
The focus of this meeting is to get sponsors for the football program guide.

Horse racing
DEL MAR. Calif. (AP) Lykatill Hi!, $9, ran down pacesetter Tossofthecoin in the stretch to
win the $61,400 Windy Sands
Handicap by I 3/4 lengths at Dei
Mar.
CHICAGO (AP) - - Evansville
Slew, $3.20. drew off in the stret.ch
to capture the $32,100 Honest Pleasure Stakes at Arlington International Racecourse by 2 1/4 lengths.

Eastern-Meigs preview Friday
POMEROY - Meigs will host Eastern in a football preview on
Friday, Aug. 26 at 7:30 from Bob Roberts Field.
The reserve team will play a two-quarter scrimmage first. After a
30-minute intermi ssion, the varsity teams will clash in another twoperiod scrimmage.

. The Kansas City Chiefs head
Into their final week of training
camp th1s week with 1wo exhibition
games .on tap.
. On Monday night the Chiefs
will host lhe Chicago Bears on
Monday Night Football on ABC.
while on Friday the Chiefs will
travel to Buffalo to take on th e
AFC champion Bills. That game
will be on local cable on TNN.
. Mike Bartrum (Meigs '88) contmues to be a vital part of the
Chiefs offense. The 6-foot-5 245pound tight end started the flr;ttwo
exhibilion games before the Chiefs
signed starting tight end Keith
Cash. Bartrum was assigned to the
second team.
Bartrum has played the beucr
part of a half in each of the three
pre-season games. He has also seen
extensive playing time on specialty
teams. Last week was the lim time
in game competition that the Chiefs
threw to him.
. On the first pass, he couldn't
fmd the handle. "I didn't keep my
head on the bali," he commented
from the Chiefs' River Falls training camp. "I caught the next two
passes they threw to me . Even

thought they were called back by
penalties, it boosted my confidence."
Bartrum went in to camp with
the reputation of having the best set
of hands on the Chiefs roster. As a
mauer of fact, head coach Marty
Schottenheimer has been quoted as
saying 1he Bartrum has the one of
the best sets of hands in the National Football League.
"Camp has gone real well,"
Bartrum said. "I have learned a lot.
l have also made some mistakes,
but I have learned from those mistakes. I wanted to turrn to block
better. l really feel that I'm blocking real well right now."
Among the Chiefs' pre-season
games was a trip two weeks ago to
Tokyo for a game against Minnesota.
"The trip was great," he said. "!1
was about a 12-hour night. We
learned a lot of the culture and how
they live over there." Bartrum went
on to add with a laugh that he
dido 't want to go back. "It was
very hot and humid while we were
there." His wife Jennifer was able
to accompany him on the trip to
Japan.

man is the oldesi harness horse race driver in the
state. (Times-Sentinel photo by George Abate)

The Meigs Marauder golf team
opened up the 1994 season with a
lOth-place finish in the tough Lancaster Invitational held last
Wednesday at the Valley View
Golf Course.
Waverly scorched the course
with a tournament-tying 307 to win
the tournament, 16 strokes ahead of
Ironton and Marietta (both teams
finished with a 323). Other scores
were Sheridan, Washington Court
House (both 326), Alexander, Jackson •. Logan (aU 331 ), Athens (335),
Me1~s (336), Lancaster (337),
Ch1ihcothe (338), Hillsboro (341),
Greenfield McClain (342), Miami
Trace (344 ). Frankfort Adena
(353), New Lexington (355), Warren Local (373), Huntington Ross
(384) and Portsmouth (403).
The
Marauders'
Adam
Krawsczyn had an out.~tanding day
wtth a 74 to finish two strokes
behind mat.ch medalist Ed Roberts
of Waverly, who carded a 72.
Krawsczyn finished runner-up in
the I 00 player field with his three
over par score. Other Marauder
scores included Reggie Prall (his
81 put ~im at 20th individually),
Ben Ewmg (88), David Anderson
(93) and Jarod Warner (103).

PIITSBURGH (AP) - Several touch with their player representaPtttsburgh Stcelers have this advice tives and the union . By contrast, he
for striking major league baseball said NFL players were kept in the
dark throughout the NFLPA's laboplayers: Don't accept a salary cap.
All-Pro cornerback Rod Wood- rious negotiations with manageson questioned if NFL players real- ment.
"Nobody really knew what was
ly knew they were accepting a
salary cap when their union agreed going on," Stone said. "(NFLPA
head) Gene Upshaw and, I guess, a
to a seven-year labor deal.
"! think the ·baseball players are lot of lawyers were doing all the
doing the right thing, the smart negotiations. But when it carne out,
thing," Woodson said. If baseball a lot of players were against it and
owners get a cap, "it's going to some were for it."
Several Steelers said they
happen the same way it has with
the NFL: They're going to lose vet- wouldn't have a problem striking if
eran players."
. they were baseball players.
Woodson, John Jackson and
Dwight Stone and several other
Steelers wonder if the NFL Players Gallia Academy's
Association actually ratified the
1994 cross country
agreement.
"If we OK'd it, why don't they schedule
show us the ballots?" Woodson
said. "Some got ballots. Some Date
Opponent
guys that were here didn't. A lot of Sept. IO .........at Warren Invitational
guys didn't vote. Most of the guys I Sept 13 ........ SEOAL at Rio Grande
talked to voted 'No.' It makes you Sept 22 ....... .at Jackson Invitational
wonder because they say we voted Sept 24 ......................... 31 Lancaster
on it. And I never got a ballot. A Oct I ........ .Rio Grande Invitational
lot of guys never saw anything Oct 8 .............................. .at Piketon
until the final vote came out."
Oct 15 .......SEOAL championships
Stone is envious of major league ...............................at Warren Local
players, who constanlly are in Oct 22 .........SE District (site TBA)
Oct 29 ............ regionals (site TBA)

Meigs County motocross results posted
or

DAVE HARRIS
T1mes-Sentinel Correspondent
: ROCK SPRINGS - The 1994
Ohio County Fairs Motocross
Championships made its annual
stpp at the Meigs Counly Fair this
past Monday. The race is sponsored by American Motosports
Inc., and is one of 32 races held at
vanous county fairs throughout the
state.
: A large crowd was on hand as
106 riders hit the track in 19 different classes for 16 races. The top
three finishers (in order of finish)
in each class are as follows:
125 cc pro: Tommy Coller,
Chuck Reed, Mike E. Blair
250/500 cc pro: Chuck Reed,
Tommy M. Coller, Mike Morgan
· Micro 4-7 (no ei~ht-year-olds):

Troy A. Stuart, Jerad M. Burgess,
Bradley D. Bartl ell
Micro 4-8: Christopher W.
Robertson, Michael L. Willard,
Travis L McEifish
65 cc 7-11: Willy A. Browning
II, Christopher R. Wbit.craft, Cody
Chris Kovach
80 cc 7-11 Mini-Jr: Brian
Barlleu, David M. Whitcraft,
Corey R. Arnold
80 cc 12-15 Mlni-Sr: Mark
Burkhart, Raben L. Welch, Clinl
A. Tolliver
Schoolboy 12-15: Mark
Burkhart, Scan McMillin, Jason B.
Frecker
1258: Jason B. Frecker, Scott
McMillin, Douglas R. Ainner
125C: Chuck A . Kilkenny,
Lenny Tennant, Jason E. Mont-

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Team

Arit.ona............. 1 2 0 .333 33 47

· International League
standings

Oall11 ............... 1 2
N.Y. Oianu ...... I 2
1'\Woddphio ...... 0 2

Wuhingtcn ..... 0 3

Euttrn Dlwtdon

Tea..

W

s,..- cr....

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:14
l .........62 64

1'1..-..:ltot (Boc.) .......73

Pd. GB

.:575

-

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1o.s

O..wo (MIL) ............62 ~
llocl&gt;oouo (Bok.) ...... .58 67

.411

SavoiOO-W-8 {I'IW .)52 74

.413 20.5

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11
14

Wa&amp;ern Dlmlon

Olatl-(0...) .......70
Richmond (All) ........ 69
COLUMBUS (NYY)68
Norlolk (NYM) .........63
Toledo (D&lt;o.) ... - ......54

Eutun Dlvldon
W L T PF PAPd.

l6
l6
58
6l

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J52
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Central
OU.cap ............ 2
Ocuoll.............. 2
Groen Bay ....... 2
Minne&amp;Ola ......... 2

0 .333 36
0 .333 62
0 .000 30
0 .000 42

D1vlll0111
0 01.000
1 0 .667
1 0 .667
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Tunpa Bay ....... I I

42
64

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57

2B 6
57 45
51 47
47 43

To)cdo 7, ~wmcbl S
Syracwc 10, Sc:nn&amp;ort--'Nilka-BUM 3
Otuwall,~l

COLUMBUS ot Clouloae, p¢. ;.;.
Richmond I, Norlolk 0

Tbey played Saturday ·
Pawtu.c:kel" OJLUMBUS,6:0S p.m.
7p.m..
Scruaton-Wilke~~ - Bam~ al JlochC!IIter,
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0 .000 33 51

Dc:uoit1A, Aril.ona 16
a..EVElAND 21, Atlonla 7
Groen B1y 13, New Odoana 10

Tbey played Saturday
lndionopolio 01 p;!Ubuq)o. 6 p.DL
Tamp,alla7 at Miami. 1 p.m.
MinnCIOW at Soaule., 1 p.m.

NEW 1994 HISSAN ALTIMA GIE

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Powtuckd "COLUMBUS, 6:05 Pnl·
Scunton-Wilktli-8UN at Roch•tu,
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Blll!olo ............. I
N.Y. lOll ........... I

L
0
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01.000
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Eighth grade coach - Gordon
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Seventh-grade coach - Angie
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(Unless otherwise noted, all
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Head coach -Keith McGuire

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Racquetball coon reservations
can now be made one day in
advance by calling 245-7495 locally or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
All guests are to be accompanied by a Lyne Center membership
. J!older and a S2 fee .

461 SOUTH THIRD

1993 FORD ESCORT LX 2 DR. SPORT

down. nop:t)'llll'lll\ and no inll'l"l'\1 fm qtlalifil'd
hu~l' f' ou Torn\ RL'\ !lh in g Cllargl' PL111
• Tom Wlu:c l l1orse · tnH:Ior' have hn·n ;111 AlllL'riL-t~n l;:tvnritc
f'or OVl'l" -~() )'.l'iiP\.
.
• Stnp in ;uultesl drive one tod&lt;.ty whik ~ck·l'tion j, at ih h(''t.

I

n1o11L'Y

cards.

Cd
1om IINvll

and they look forward to this
scrimmage with your kids (GAHS) ,
because they always learn a lot that
makes them a beller team in the
real war."
Harri s noted that 15 seniors
graduated from the good 1993 Fairland team, but he is optimistic
about the upeommg season.
Gallia Academy will hone its
sk ills to prepare for the next scrimmage, scheduled for ne&lt;t Saturday
at Vinton Counly High School in
McArthur at 10 a.m.

scrimmage or the season for both teams . The
Blu~ Devils scored twice during the 90-minute
sessmn.

FAIRLAND SCORES - A Fairland receiver
eluded GAHS defenders rOt' six points on this
play during Saturday's pre-season scrimmage
on Memorial Field. It was the first controlled

·~J

'

Notes: A Lyne Center membership is required to use the facilities.
Faculty, staff, students and administrators are admitted with their ID

(814)

Bibbee

I

Date
Opponent
Aug. 30 ..... .. at Beaver Eastern-5PM
Sept. 6 ................................ Marieua
Sept. 7 ................................ Oak Hill
Sept. 8 .................... at Jackson-5PM
Sept. 12 .............................. at Meigs
Sept 13 .............................at Athens
Sept 20 ....................Beaver Eastern
Sept. 21 .............................. at Logan
Sept 28 ..........................at Oak Hill
Sept 29 ...........................81 Marieua
Oct 4 .................................. Jackson
Oct 6 ....................................Athens
Oct.l3 .................................... Logan
Oct. 17 ................................... Meigs

Pool
Today- closed
Monday - 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
Saturday -1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 28- 1-3 p.m.
and 6-9 p.m.
Free-weight room
Today -closed
Monday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Tuesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Wednesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Thursday- 3:3~8:30 p.m.
Friday - 3 : 3~8:30 p.m.
Saturday -1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 28-6-11 p.m.

pletions.
" We need some ex tra work on
our blocking and to sharpen our
defen sive secondary, but I feel we
arc ahead of last year in our firsl
scrimmage game ," Saw1ders said.
"We arc still a liule ra gged in all
departments, but that Gallipolis
hnc had a lotio do with that" Fairland boss lack Harris about his
re building team. "We have to
improve quic kly, and I know we
will. because every one or our kids
came to play. They like the game

Gallia Academy's
1994 junior high
volleyball slate

RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the week of Aug. 21 28 at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
Fitness center,
gymnasium
and racquetball courts
Today - 1-6 p.m .
Monday - 8 a.m.- II p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.- II p.m.
Wednesday-Sa.m.-11 p.m.
Thursday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday - 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Saturday -1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 28 - 1-3 p.m.
and 6-11 p.m.

Tonb!bt's game
DemiCJ at Dallas, 8 p.m.

0 .SOO 23 45

Friday's scores

Friday's scora

CINCINNATI

2.9% APR

p.m.
Buffalo va. ~ at San AnlOnio, I
p.m.
N.Y. Oianu It N.Y. Jcu.l p.m.
LA. Raidcn at L.A. Rami, 10 p.m.

46

Wetl.ern Division
San francisco ... 2 1 0 .647 57 44
Allanu .............. 2 2 0 .~ 71 89
L.A. Rama ........ 0 2

gomery
2508: Tom H. Hawk, Aaron
Ridgeway, Donnie A. Urban
250C: Chuck A. Kilkenny,
Roger M. Weaver, Rodney Weaver
17-24 (no A riders): Douglas
R. Flinner, Billy Jack Tolliver
25-plus A&amp;B: Mike Morgan,
Wayne R. Bayha, Gene Onail
30-plus: Tom H. Hawk, Gerry
J. Bennett, Kelly M. Sullivan
40-plus: Gerry J. Bennen, Bill
Blaney, Charles Hawk
QUAD 2-stroke: Jimmy D.
Byrd, Javan M. Bylaw, Scott Miller
QUAD 4-stroke: Man D. Martin, Paul Bradbury, Gabriel M.
Weaver
Women's class: Kimberly
Leach, Jennifer Schultz, Tiffany N.
Reed

into the end wne.
The final GAHS score featured
a sohd ground attack, capped by a
five yard run for the touchdown.
Following the hard-fought conte st, GAHS head coac h Brc nl
Saunders laud ed lh e Blue Devil
defense for the constant pressure
agamst th.e Dragons' passing game
m1xed w1th sohd defense against
the run. The Blue Dev il defenders
intercepted two pa sses, knocked
down five others, had six quarterback sacks and permitted six com-

Meigs golfers
finish 10th
in linkfest

Several Steelers tell strikers
not.' to accept salary cap
OLDEST OHIO RACER- Walter Voung
won the r.fth and lOth races or one-mile trotters
\Vitb Blackberry Jam Friday. The 75-year-old

Sunday Tlmes-Sentinei-Page-C3

pAHS beats Fairland 2-1 in scrimmage

On the
warpath

All-sports cards offered

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Municipal Pool will remain
open each day from noon until 6 p.m. until Monday, Sept. 5.
Tuesdays will feature Family Night from 7:30 to 9:30p.m. on
Aug. 23 and Aug. 30.
The pool is available for party renlal for $150 until Labor Day.
For more information, call Canaday at 446-DIVE during regular
pool hours or call the P&amp;R office on weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. at441-6022.

..

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

Area sports briefs

Meigs County
Fair harness
racing ends

FINAL HARNESS RACES- This year's final
horse harness races were held Friday afternoon.
Earlier in the week, a track record was set and

August 21, 1994

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�Page---c4--Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

·Hannan Trace football
campaigns remembered
by Jim Sands
Special Correspondent
Football at Hannan Trace High
School began in 1958 when the Wildcats. coached by Bill Priddy. lost to
Rio Grande 34-0. The school's first
win came later that year against Eastem ( 12-6).
In Priddy's
next two years,
Trace won two
games, both over
Hannan, W.Va.
Thcrivalryof the
two Hannans
lasted from 1958
to 1986, with each
winning team win~
ning II games. The only tie was 0-0
in 1973.
Trace changed head football
coaches five times between 1961 to
1967 - Lowe, Arthur. Dudding,
P uncan and Marc us - and they had
a combined mark of 3-50-3.
: The three wins were in 1962 over
Hannan( 12-0). 1964over Soul~ westem (16-8) and 1966 (12-6) over the
GallipOlis "B" squad.
The 1964 victory over Southwest-em was also Trace's ftrst homecoming. The Wildcats blocked a punt at
J.he SW ftve-yard line with Harold

Montgomery later scoring.
Mike Harrison then returned an
intcrccption and ran in a touch down
from 76 yards in. The win broke a 14garne losing streak. Hannan Trace
had six big losing streaks ( 17, 14. 23,
23, 12 and 17) in its history.
In 1969 when Trace broke a 23gmne losing by beat Green 26-0.
coach Noel Heister and assistant Tom
Belville were carried to the showers.
The 1969 team also beat Southwestem 36-8.
Wayne Queen gained a combined
448 yards on 43 carries during the
two games. He even scored a touchdown on a pass after a faked punt.
Hannan Trace's first two-win
season was followed in I 970 by a
three-win season. The Paul Dilloncoached team beat Symmes Valley
26 -0. Sou th ern 40-8 and Sou th·
weste.rn 46-0.
In the Southern game, Queen
gained 247 yards and scored four
touchdowns. From 1971 to 1973 the
Wildcats were I-22-1. beating only
Symmes Valley in 1973.
The 1974 team won twice, once
against Symmes Valley and in a dramatic comeback over Southwestern
when Kevin Swain ran an 18-yard
touchdown with 24 seconds left.

From 1958 to 1978 Trace was
21-143 -6 . Thi s hardly prepared
Wildcat fans for what was to come
in 1979, wh en coach Larry Cre ·
mcens led t.hc team in a 9-0-1 sea son winning th e school ' s only
Southern Valley Ath letic Conference title.
.
Memorable games that year tn eluded a 0-0 tic with North Ga llia in
a mud-filled match , a 26-16 comeback win over Eastcrn.a 9-7 win over
Southeastern (Russ) on a last second
field goal by Jay Bray, and a 13-6win
over Kyger Creek behi nd the 134
yards rushing by Bray.
The win over Kyger Creek was
the first ever for Trace after 21 tries.
On the all-league team from Trace
were: Kerry Ours, Archie Meadows,
Tim Wright. Tim Beaver. Jay Bray
and Todd Sibley.
The 1980 team went8-2 and just
missed a title. In a 45 -6 win over
Hannan that year, Todd Sibley scored
five TDs (a kickoff return. two long
punt returns and two scrimmage runs).
For the year, Sibley gained 1,138
yards. Eastern's 13-6 win in week
eight snapped a 19-garnc unbeaten
streak. In 1981 G.reg Webb scored 4
TDs and rushed for 20 I yards against
Southwestern.

Christmas trees in Turkey Creek Lake make top angling spots

FINISHED 1-6 IN 1959. The 1959 Hannan
Trace rootball team, coached by Bill Priddy, finished ~-6. Football at Hannan Trace rrom 1958
In 19R2 Trace came from a 27 -6
deficitagainstSouthwestem and won
44 -27. But the Wildcats had losing
seasons from 1981 to 1984. They
were 6-4 in 1985, 4-6 in 1986, 6-4 in
1987 and 6-4 in 1988.
Some or the leading players in the
mid-1980s were Dekc Barnes, Steve
Jarrell, Dave Bartram and Phil Bailey.
From 1979 to 1988. Trace had a
53-41-3 record, pulling them ahead
of Kygcr Creek and Southwestern for
those I 0 years. They were 4-5 -1 with
North Gallia in that era and 0-20-1
berorc 1979.
The 1987 team featured the passing combination of Grady Johnson to
Scott Rankin who led routs over both
North Gal lia and Kyger Creek.
The last three years of Trace football were not good. A record of 1-28

coach Lynn Sheets. In the second row are David
Wright, Jason Coburn, Chris Wasch and Ryan
Canaday. In the back row are John O'Brien, Matt
H
dB p
enry an eo ope.

GAHS golfers to start season Monday
GALLIPOLIS - With four
returning lettermen on hand, the
Gallia Academy golf team wtll
begin play Monday with a road
match with Athens.
The Blue Devils, who in 1993
ftnishcd second in the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League behind Marietta. second in the sectional and
ninth in the 16-tearn Southeast DIStrict, have senior lettermen John
O'Brien. Eric Roderick and Dav•d

Wright as well as sophomore Ryan area in the 15-17 year-old class.
Here is a list players and their
Canaday - he is the only nonqualifying scores.
graybeard among the lettermen David Wright, sr., 331; Eric
to help them go a step fanher than
Roderick,
sr. 327; John O'Brien,
in 1993.
sr
..
341
;
Ben
Pope, fr. , 374; Matt
O'Brien and Wright, whose
Henry,
so.,
384;
Ryan Canaday,
qualifying scores put them in the
so.,
385;
Chris
Wasch,
so., 394;
team's top three. panicipated in the
Adam
Bush
,
fr.,
396;
Jason
Ratliff.
Tri-S tate Junior Golf Circuit, held
so,
402
;
Cory
Wilson,
jr.,
406;
in June and July at several courses
James
Harmon
,
so.,
434;
Jason
in Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia. Wright was second in the Coburn, so., 452; Morgan Saunders, so., no score given.

COLUMBUS . Ohio (AP)Here is the weekly fishing repon as
provided by the Division of
Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
Natura l Resources:
Southeast
TURKEY CREEK LAKEThe 210 discarded Christmas trees
placed into the lake in 1989 serve
as good fish attractors. Bluegills
can be taken on larval baits and
small night crawlers. Usc four-inch
plastic worms to take largemouth
bass. Channel catfish is a favorite
garnefish here and fishing success
is good to excellent with weights
ranging from five to 10 pounds.
VETO LAKE - Night fishing
with traditional baits at shallow to
moderate depths produces good
catches of channel catftsh weighing
four to 12 pounds. A large number
of discarded Christmas trees help
attract the presence of largemouth
bass and sunfish.
Southwest

to 1991 produced under 13 coacbes a record of
75-212·9. The best team was the 1979 team tbat
won the SVAC and finished 9-0-1 overall.

was achieved from 1989 to 199 1. The
last Trace team surrendered 314
points, I 08 of them in the last two
games against Oak Hill and Symmes
Valley.
In 34 years of football, Hannan
Trace built a combined record of 75212-9. The most victories against an
individual opponent was II (Hannan). They won 10 times over both
Symmes Valley and Southwestern,
seven times over Southern and six

Dale
Opponent
Aug. 22.. ...........................at Athens
Aug. 23 ........at Portsmouth-5:30PM
Aug. 26 ..........................at Wellston
Aug. 29 .......... ..SEOAL at Cliffside
Aug. 31 .....at Albany vs. Alexander
.........................and New Le&gt;tington
Sept. I ..... ................... ..... at Jackson
Sept. 6 .. ............... horne vs. F.
auIand
............................ and Point Pleasant
Sept. 7 ............ ........ at Warren Local
Sept. 12 .......... .................... at Logan
Sept. 13 ........ .home vs. Chesapeake
..... .. ............................. and Wellston
Sept. I 5.....Rivcr Valley at Cliffside
Sept. 19 ...........................at Marietta
Sept. 22 ........................... at Fairland
Sept. 27 .......................... Portsmouth
Sept. 28 ..................... at Chesapeake
OcL4 ..................... at Point Pleasant
GAHS GOLFERS_ Members of the 1994
Gallia Academy golf team, which will begin its
'th road match with Athens
season Mon d ayw• a
'
are (front row, L-R) James Harmon, Eric Roderick, Adam Bush, Jason Ratlirr, Cory Wilson and

against both Kyger Creek and Ironton St Joe.
There were 13 head football
coaches over the years- Don Saunders coached the final team before
the county high schools consolidated
into River Valley.
James Sands is a special correspondent oft he Sunday Times-Sentinel . His address is: 65 WiDow
Drive, Springboro OH 45066.

(EDITOR'S NOTE: - A celebrated avian research center
belped save the heroic bald eagle.
Can it now rescue the lowly
prairie bird? To naturalists, the
cause Is at least as Important But
some major contributors, their
patriotic juices less stirred, are
telling the bird researchers to go
scratch.)
By TED BRIDIS
BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP)
- Each day, in summer's smothering heat or winter chill, a small
army of bird-watchers roams 800
acres of Oklahoma outback to
check on the "barometers of our
environment.''
That is how Steve Sherrod
describes Southwestern prairie
birds, which are vanishing.
Sherrod is the director of the
George Miksch Sutton Avian
Research Center. The center won a
measure of acclaim some years ago
for its part in repopulating American bald eagles across the Southcast - a project so successful that
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
plans to remove the bald eagle
from the endangered species list.
Now, the nonprofit Sutton center , named for a prominent
ornithologist and bird artist who
died in 1982, describes itself as
endangered.
"The bottom line is, we need
money," a desperate Sherrod says.
While his current five-year project of tracking prairie birds is
more important, he says, it lacks
the glamour of the eagle project.
That cause - saving the national
symbol - stirred the patriotic
juices and opened the pocketbooks
of contributors.
Blaming a drop in private and
federal funding, Sherrod has
announced that unless the Sutton
center raises $250,000 quickly it
may shut down.
"The best I can tell you, we are
exploring every opponunity possible. Every nickel counts, he says."
'The center's researchers, in the
late 1980s, were among the ftrSt to
successfully fool wild eagles to
"double-clutch," or lay a serond
set of eggs, by climbing to the massive nests and stealing the first

LAST WEEKI
For Fall League Sign Up

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(Unless otherwise noted, all
matches start at 4:30 p.m.)

New Owners, New look, New Attitude
Give Bowline A Tr~- Aeain
Call 304·773·5300 or 614·992·5551

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SOUTHSIDE, W.Va.
Kanawha Valley Dragway Park
featured a $2,000 purse for the
winner in the Pro Division on Aug.
13.
L.G. Daniel of Whitesville took
the win with 1987 Chevy !ROC by
defeating Tim Klopfensaein's 1991
Dragster. Klopfenstein is from
Xenia, Ohio.
In Modified ET, Steve Meadows
of Gallipolis, took first in his '80
Chevy Monza with Chris Lockhart
or Proctorville, OH, taking second
in his ' 71 Ford Pinto. Meadows is
sponorcd by Two Rivers Auto
Repair and Plain Valley Auto
Repa~.
.
Meadows is currently qualified
to attend World Bracket Finals in
Norwalk, OH, in October. Other local drivers currently in a position to
attend arc Keith Smith, Jerry Halley. Trent Harrison. and Greg
Thomas of Gallia County, Oh1o.
From Mason County are Sheldon
Gerlach, Ray Livingston. Chuck
Sanders, Tim Casto, Glen Wauerson, and Richie Gerlach.
_
These drivers will have to retatn
there poiniS standings through the
next five races in order to go to
Norwalk. Out of 99 drivers currently in the poiniS competition at
the back, only the top 30 get the
opportunity to lllend finals.
In the street division, Leslie
Malone of Jackson, OH, grabbed
first in his '72 Plymouth Duster.
Scott Kimes of ReedsviDe, OH,
finished second in his '82 Capri.
The troPhy winner in the junior
Dragster division was David Gandy
of Nitro, WV. Chad Smith of SL
~s. WV, was runner-up.

states.
The work of tracking prairi e
birds is a bit more gritty.
It en tai ls fending off chi gge rs
and fiddleback spiders and ticks
that sometimes afflict researchers
with Rocky Moun tain s po tt ed
feve r. It also requires competing
with other environmental groups and other causes - for the elusive
dollar.
Major contributors and environ-

eggs.
Those ftst-sizcd eggs were
returned to Sutton to hatch in incubators, where handlers turned them
every three hours 10 keep embryos
from sticking to the shell s. A week
after the eaglets emerged, workers
used a hand puppet for feedi ng
behind one-way glass. In all, 275
Oedglings were released in Florida,
Mississippi and other Southeastern

WILL AR-D RESE RVO IR
Drift we ight -forwar d sp ln llC"
tipped with n1 ght c raw le-rs \v ho:n

fish ing for walleyes. Usc spreaders
tipped with mmnows fi shed alo11 g
the hottom to take ye ll ow perc h.
Smallmou th ba ss, bu ll heads an d
channel cat rlsh also o rru good
f1 shmg opportuniti es.
Northeast
ATWOOD RESERV OIR
Usc large imitalion crank ba its or
drift we ight -forward sp1nn ers
tipped with night crawlers in dee p
wa ter when fi shing for sa ugcycs.
Surface lure s and four-mch pl:t&lt;tJc
worms fished m areas with vege tation and subm erged structures pro·
vid e good ba ss fi shin g. Crappi es
are numerous and average seven to
ni ne inches.
BERLIN RESERVOIR - Troll
large imitation ba its duri 11g til e
morning or eve ning at depths of si.,
to 12 fe et whe n rish in g ror

mu ~ ki es.

A 40 - tn c h minimum

length limit for mu skies is in d fed .
Wlutc ba ss can be found in open
water towanl the center of the lake
and arc quite num erou s with

length s from eight to 12 in cl1cs.
Smallrn uuth ba ss , crappi es and
walle yes arc also found in Il erlin .
Lake Erie
In th e ce ntral ba sin . wal leye
3n£lc rs contin ue to have good .success wh en trollin g dipsy di ve rs and

menta li st s who work ed close l y
with Sutt on were shocked when the
center announced its crisis.
John Wes t of th e Phillips
PetrOleum Foundation. wh1ch gave
the center $25,000 in March. heard
about Sutton' s money problems
from reporters. So did Steve Torbil,
sen ior scientist with the Na ti onal
Wildlife Federation in Bo uld er,
Colo., who describes Sutton's eagle
work as " marvelous."

spoons at depths of 40 to 65 feet
two to eight miles off the nonheast
Oh io shore! in e. An occasiona l
steclhead trout is taken when fish ing for wa ll eye s. Some ye ll ow
perch arc being caught off Cleveland about one to three miles offshore.
In the western basin, walleyes
can still be taken in the island area,
th e reef comp l c~ and along the
international border.

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merged tre e stumps arc good places
to fi sh for large mouth bass . Usc
night crawlers, rooster tai ls or surface lures for best result,_
INDIAN LAKE - Fi sh at mght
in areas wi th slow- moving current
to take channel catf1 sh. Shrimp,
sort craws. mght cmw lers and prepared baits work bes t. Minnow s
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Northwest
LA SU AN AREA - Th e 13
lakes on th e La Su An Wi ldlife
Area in Williams County offer
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to introduce beg inn ers to rec reational fi shing.

Non-profit research center as endangered

MASON
BOWLING LANES
NIGHTLY MIXED LEAGUES
TUESDAY AFTERNOON· LADIES
THURSDAY LATE MEN'S
ALSO SATURDAY KIDS

Head coacb - Lynn Sheets

PAINT CREEK LAKE - Try
fishing around the points and dropoffs which are adjacent to Oat-bottom areas for saugeyes. Weightforward spinners and crank baits
work best. Saugeyes measure up to
26 inches. Flathead catfish, sometim es weighing over 20 po unds.
can be taken at night fishing along
the bottom with cut baits.
GREAT MIAMI RIVERLots of rock bass, blucgills, carp
and suckers arc found throughout
the entire length of the river . Good
opportunities exis t to take small mouth bass in the deep pool s below
riffles and low head dams from
Sidney downstream to Hamilton.
Cen tral
DELAWARE LAKE - Night
fishing with cut bait or soft craws
along the bottom in the upper hal f
of the Jake is productive for channel catfish anglers. The submerged

In effort to save prairie birds,

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Ohio fishing report

Gallia Academy's
1994 golf slate

·'

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August 21, 1994

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�Sunday Times-5entlnei-Page-C7

Page--&lt;:6-Sunday Times-sentinel

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

Lowery leads
International

Junior fair sheep entry awards
ROCK SPRINGS - A number
of ba-aa-aa-ad animals were at the
fair Thursday night.
Sheep that is.
The JUnior fair featured sheep in
more than seven categories. Each
of these categories had grand and
reserve champions, but most of
them also had rankings for each of
the lambs.
Ewe market lamb grand champion is Meg han Haynes, reserve
champion is Christy Drake.
Standings were ewe market
lambs: R7 -93 pounds, ftrst. Mendy
Guess; second, Michelle Bissell;
third , Derrick Fackler.
100- 105 pounds, first, Aaron
Yost; second , Patty Nally; third,
Kelly Dalton; fourth, Michel e
Guess; fifth. Nancy Nally; sixth,
Step hanie Wilson; and seventh,
Jessica Janey.
106-109 pounds, first, Rebecca
Scott; seco nd, Kim Ritterbeck;
third, Shannon Enright ; fourth,
Amanda Upt.on; ftfth, Kacy Ervin.
113 -1 18 pounds, first, Meghan
Hayne s; second, Chri sty Drake;
third, Mary Nal ly; fourth, Rilc.i Barri nge r; fifth , Mi chelle O'Nail ;
sixth, Joseph Rupe.
120-126 pounds, first, Sara
Erv in; second, Whitney Karr; third,
Erin Harri s; fourth, Derrick Bolin;
ftfth. Stephanie Jones; sixth, Stacy
Wil son ; seven th, Macyn Ervin ;

eighth, Jamie Hupp.
Sta ndins s for Suffolk ewes
127-133 pounds, ftrst, Theresa were: yearling ewe, first, Christy
Baker; second, Heather Dailey; Drake; second, Meghan Avis; third,
third, Brook Bolin; founh, Rrant Michelle O'Nail; fourth, Rebecca
Dion; fifth, Tyler Johnson : and Scott. ewe over two years, first ,
sixth , Ashley Hager.
Rebecca Scott; second , Ch ri sty
Wether market Jamb g rand Drake. Rebecca Scou earned grand
champion is Christy Dmke, reserve champ ion, while Christy Drake
champion is Michele Guess.
took reserve in this category.
Standings for wether lamb were:
Standin gs for crossbred ewes
85-96 pou nds, ftrst, Riki Barringer; were: under two years, first.
seco nd, Mendy Guess; third, Jonathan Avis; second, Patty Nally;
Mic hell e Bissell; fourth, Derrick third, Nancy Nally; fourth, Mary
Fack ler.
Nally. Jonathan Avis earned grand
I 00-105 pounds, firs t, Kelly champion while Patty Nally took
Dalt on; seco nd, Whi tney Karr ; reserve.
third. Jessica Janey; fourth, Mary
In the open classes, not nearly as
Nally.
many lambs competed.
II 0-112 pounds, first, Christy
Grand and reserve champion
Drake; second , Stephanie Jones; ram lam b was ea rn ed by Rex
third, Joseph Rupe; fourth, Patty Robin sop.
Nally; fifth, Kacy Ervin.
Black Tic Suffolks earned grand
120-125 pounds, first, Meghan champion ewe two years and older.
Haynes; second, Rebecca Scott; Rex Robinson took reserve cham third, Brook Bolin; fourth, Stacy pion in this category.
Wilson; fifth, Amanda Upton;
Black Tic Suffolks earned one
six th , Nancy Nally; seventh, year and under ram grand champiMacyn Ervin; eighth , Aaron Yost.
on.
128-132 pounds , ftrst, Mi chele
Rex Robinson also won grand
Guess; second, Erin Harris; third , and reserve champion ewe one year
Theresa Baker; fourth , Heather and under two.
Dailey ; fi fth, Sara Erv in; sixth,
Aaron Yost won grand champiStephanie Wilson.
on ewe lamb, while Rex Robinson
135-140 pou nd s, first, Brant took the reserve tiUe.
Dixon; second, Tyler Johnson;
Black Tie Suffolks posted grand
third, Jamie Hupp; fourth, Michelle champion fl ock, while Rex RobinO'Nail; fifth, Derrick Bolin; sixth, son t.ook the reserve tiUe.

CHAMPION JERSEYS -Mike Grueser of Shade and Mike
rarker or Pomeroy bad the grand and reserve champions jerseys,
respectively, during the open class dairy show at the Meigs County
Fair.
OVERALL C HAMPION LAMBS Meghan Haynes, left, captured the grand champion for market lamb and ewe. To the right of
Haynes is Wool Princess Riki Barringer and

- --

Christy Drake, the reserve champion for market
lamb and ewe. At far right is Fair King Chris
Hamm.

Sports brief
Horse racing
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.
(AP) - Roam in Rachel , $6, closed
on the outside and passed the tiring
pacesetters to post a I 1/4-length
victory in th e $108,400 Grade I
Ballerina Stakes for fillies and
:mares at Sa_rat.oga.

I

DEALS OF THE
SUMMER!!
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PREMIER EX HIBITOR/BREEDER - Holter's Holsteins of
romeroy won premier exhibitor and breeder at the District 6 Holstein Show Thursday. Shown here are, from lert, Tricia Davis,
Zach Davis, Ben Holter and Roy Holter.

1991 Fo rd Tauru.t
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River Valley's 1994 golf slate
•
CHAMPION WETHERS- Chistry Drake,
left won the grand champion wether title, w bile
Mi~hele Guess, second from right, took the

reserve title. Guess also is reigning as fair queen.
Also pictured are Wool Princess Riki Barringer
and Fair Kiug Chris Hamm.

Date
Opponent
Aug. 22 ............................ .at Athens
Aug. 24 ,.........................at Wahama
Aug. 29 ............SEOAL at Cliffside
Sept. I ...................... .......at Jackson
Sept. 7 ....................at Warren Local
Sept. 12 ......................... .. ...at Logan
Sept. 15 ............ SEOAL at Cliffside

'1

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HAMPSHIRE EWE CHAMP - Michele Guess also earned
grand champion Hampshire e~e. Also pictured are Wool Princess
.
Riki Barringer, at center, and Judge Dan Westlake.

1989 Pontiac Gr. Priz

Sept. 19 ...........................al Marietta
Sept. 29 ..........................at Waharna
Oct J ......... at Riverside Invitational

'1

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1988 Cluw. Cor•ica

'1

By JOHN MOSSMAN
CASTLE ROCK, Colo. (AP) Happiness is never having t.o write
a "5" on your scorecard.
Steve Lowery enjoyed that rarity on Friday, carding seven birdies,
including all fo ur of the par-5s. in a
hogey-free round to take the lead at
the halfway point of the International.
Lowery, showing no fear of
sand, earned 14 points and had a
two-round total of 21 points.
" It was one of the best rounds
I've played all year," said Lowery,
33, whose best finish in seven sea- sons on the PGA Tour was a secCHAMPION AYSHIRES- The Parker Family Farm presentond at San Diego earlier this year.
ed the grand and reserve champion ayshires during the open class
On three of the par-Ss, he h1t his
dairy show at the Meigs County Fair . Here, .lim Parker, left dissecond shot into sand bordering the
plays the grand champion ayshire while Mike Parker displays the
green and got up -a nd -down for
reserve champion.
birdie.
"I wouldn't say sand play is the
strength of my game," Lowery
said, " but it was good today. I was
fortunate that on all of those bunker
shoL~. I had room t.o land the ball.
'·'Making se ven birdies, obvious ly I was putting well, and I
drove the ball really well, too."
Equaling Lowe ry's plus-14 as
the day's best score was Dave
Stockton, who has a two-round
tota l of plus-20 along with Mike
Reid. Keith Clearwater had 19
po ints , Tom Lehman 17 and Tom
Kite 16.
Hale Irwin , thanks to holing out
a pitching wedge at the par-4 15th
hole for an eagle worth f1ve points,
was in a group at 15.
First-ro und leader Bruce Lietzke, who began the day with 16
JUNIOR HOLSTEIN CHAMPS - Melissa Risner of Minford
points, lost two points and was at
and Walk Tall Holsteirni of Shade present~d ~he grand a~d reserve
14.
champion holsteins, respectively, at the DIStract 6 Holstem Show at
Masters champion Jose Maria
the Meigs County Fair Thursday. Shown here are, from left,
Olazabal vaulted into contention
Melissa Risner 1994 Dairy Princess Kristi Warner and Stace
with an eagle and two birdies in a
span of four holes - worth nine
Robinson of Waik Tall Holsteins.
points- to finish at plus-13, along
Sports brief
with 1986 International champion
Cycling
Ken Green. U.S. Open tiUi st Ernie
PALERMO, Sicily (AP)
Fabrice Colas and Frederic Magne Els had seven points Friday for a
of France captured the tandem title plus- 12 t.otal.
Defending champion Phil Mickat the World Track Cycling Chamelson,
mllying from zero points on
pionships. lngried Haringa of the
Thursday,
had II on Friday. Tom
Netherlands won her fourth consecWatson
and
Fred Couples were at
utive world title in the women's
nine and eight, respectively.

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RACE WINNERS -The first place winners
of each race in the horse show won a SO pound
sack of feed from Chapman's Feed Store. The
winners are shown wilh representatives frnm

MONTHLY PAYMENTS BASED
UPON $1 ,0/JO.OO DOWN OR
EQUAL VALUE IN TRADE-IN

the store. They are, from left, Stacy Mills, Kelly
Chapman, Jessica Wheeler, Kandi Hysell, Brandi Hysell, Holly Milhoan, David Banks, and
Missy Chapman.

Winners named in horse fun show

BAlANCE FINANCED THI&lt;f/1

ROCK SPRINGS - A 4-H
Horse Fun show was held Thurs day morning at the fairgrounds.
Youths competed in various races
and the winners of each race were
awarded a 50 pound sack of feed
from Chapman's Feed Store.

All totals were also added
together to determine a high-point
pony and horse winner.
The ftrst-placc winners in each
category were: Jessica Wheeler
egg and spoon race; Kandi nv:«:11.
drunkards paradise; Brandi ny;&gt;vll,

.•
SHOWY BREEDING LAMBS- The grand champion breeding showman was won by Michele Guess, at left. Also pic~ured are
Wool Princess Riki Barringer and Nancy Nally, at nght, the
reserve champion in this category.

Just Oreat Prices

dollar bill race; Holly Milhoan,
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SUFFOLK RAM CHAMP- The grand champion suffolk ram
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Jacke paces Packers to exhibition victory
By ADAM NAZIMOWITZ
A P Sports Writer
In a game reminiscent of last
seaso n, Chris Jacke outkicked
Morten Ander.;en to give his team a
preseason victory.
The added incentive of the twopoint con~ersion had no effect on
this exhibition game as the Green
Bay Packers defeated the New
Orleans Saints 13-10 Friday night.
Jacke's two fourth-quarter field
goals, including the garne-w!mting
36-yarder with 3:13 rematntng ,
made up for Andersen's only kick
in the third quaner as the Packers
improved t.o 2-1.
.
. .
Jim Everett, maktng hts f~rst
stan in the Superdome as a member
of the Saints, gave New Orleans (03) a 7-0 lead seven plays into the
game. Everett passed for 56 yards
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Everett completed 10 of 16
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" I think we took a step in the
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Brett Favre completed eight of
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He sprained an ankle on the play
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" I felt good. We did a lot of
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Lions 24, Cardinals Ui
Scott Mitchell completed 12 of
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at the Silvcrdome.
Derrick Moore scored Detroit's
other touchdown on a 1-yard run,
and Jason Hanson kicked a 42-yard
field goal.
Browns 28, Falcons 7
Cleveland capitalized on five
turnovers and 16 penalties by
Atlanta to improve to the best preseason mark in coach Bill
Belichiek's four years.
The Falcons (2-2) got good performances from quarterback Jeff
George (114 yards , one touchdown) and running back Erric

Pegram (20 carries, 84 yards), and
outgained Cleveland (3-0) 271-269
yards.
Redskins
New coach Norv Turner is faced
with a tough decision as Washington has no returning quarterback
for the frrst time in team history.
Veteran John Friesz, signed as a
free agent from San Diego, completed six of eight passes for 53
yards and an interception in the
first half against the Patriots on
Thursday.
Heath Shuler, the third pick in

this year's draft, was 5-for-8 for 38
yards. The former Tennessee star
led Washington to a field goal
while playing much of the second
half.
Patriots
Steve Hawkins had a most
impressive NFL debut in his ftrst
game as a wide receiver.
Hawkins, a free safety from
Western Michigan who was drafted
in the sixth round, caught a pair of
touchdown passes in the fourth
quaner against Washingron. '

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OVERALL WINNERS - Tbe high-point winners of the 4-H
Horse Show in the pony and horse category were announced
Thursday. Kandi Hysell, left, was the win,ner in the ho~~ ~tegory,
and Brandi Hysell, right, was tbe winner m the pony diVISton.

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Page--C8-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Livestock ·sales

August 21, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

After baseball strike ends first full week

Selig-Prieb expected to join owners' negotiation team
By RONA&amp;,D BLUM
NEW YORK (AP)- While six
more teams announced cutbacks,
ba~eball owners chose their delegation for labor talks when they
resume this week, a group likely to
include Bug Selig's daughter.
Wendy Sclig-Prieb, the Milwaukee Brewers' vice president-general counsel, probably wiD be joined
by Chicago White Sox owner Jerry
Reinsdorf, Minnesota Twins general manager Andy MacPhail, Toran·
to Blue Jays president Paul Beeston
and Philadelphia executive vice
president Dave Montgomery, a
management official said Friday,
speaking on the condition of
anonymity.
Selig-Prieb, 34, has taken over
many of the Brewers' day -to-day
operations over the past two years
while her father has been acting
commissiOner.
Management negotiators will
rotate from among a group of at
least 10, according to the source.
Others in the group are Colorado
Rockies owner Jerry McMorris,
Boston Red Sox owner John Harrington, Houston Astros owner
Drayton McLane, Atlanta Braves

president Stan Kasten and Seattle
Mariners chief executive officer
John EUis.
Bud Selig wouldn't divulge
names and said the final selection
has not been made.
"I know that people are specu·
lating on lists, names, but the
answer is that it hasn ' t been deter·
mined yet," he said.
Earlier in the day, before the
management officials were known,
union associate gen eral counsel
Eugene Orza said he hoped the
group would be diverse.
"The suspicion already is grow·
ing that the one thing they will
have in common is their ability to
sing as a chorus," he said.

Owners haven't appeared at the
bargaining table since 1990. But
federal mediators said Thursday
that owners would come when
talks resume. Orza said the selection of owners could be significant.
"Theoretically," he said, "it
matters in the sense that a represen·
tative sampling of clubs would
include small markets, big markets,
those who aren't interested in busting the union, those who are, those
for whom salary caps arc a reli ·
gious proposition and those for
whom 1t is not."
As the walkout completed its
eighth day, canceling 17 more
games, teams announced more lay·
offs, and the Kansas City Royals

said they wouldn't operate an
instructional league team this fall
because of the walkout. The strike
has wiped out 103 games, the sec·
ond -most of any baseball work
stoppage. In the 50-day strike of
1981, 712 games were lost.
The California Angels, Cleve·
land Indians, Houston Astros, St.
Louis Cardinals, San Diego Padres
and San Francisco Giants
announced layoffs or forced vaca·
lions on Friday. A recording at the
Giants' publicity office said three ·
members of the department "will
be unavailable until the current
labor dispute is settled."
Meanwhile, players found new
activities. In Culver City, Calif., a

softball team led by M.ike Piazza
and Eric Karras of the Los Angeles
Dodgers played several innings
agamst a national championship
fast-pitch team of 9- and 10-yearold girls. Karras doubled and sin·
gled, and Piazza hit a double.
Cincinnati Reds manager Davey
Johnson shot a 78 and was 10
strokes behind first-round leader
Ken Harrelson at the $125,000
Mobil Celebrity Golf Invitational at
Ballymead Country Club in North
Falmouth, Mass.
Negotiators from both sides
planned to take the weekend off.
Union head Donald Fchr and man·
agement negotiator Richard Rav·
itch went to their homes in subur·

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day night. Pictured are Fair Queen Michele
Guess, Fair King Chris Hamm, Swine Princess
Leslie Parker, Patterson and Sandee and Roscoe
Mills. (Photo by Brian Reed)

BY JULIE DILLON
T -S Correspondent .
ROCK SPRINGS - Home
National Bank, Racine-Syracuse,
was the largest single buyer at the
annual Meigs County Fair 4H-FFA
Junior Livestock. Sale held Friday
mght by purchasmg 28 animals.
The second large st buyer was
Farmers Bank and Savings Compa·
ny, Pomeroy, with the purchase of
25 animals.
The grand champion hog was
purchased by Don Tate Motors of
. Pomeroy and McDonald 's of
Pomeroy and Ripley for $11 per
pound, up slightly from last year's
sale. The animal weighed 243
pounds and was owned by Alyson
Patterson.
The reserve champion hog was
purchased by Home National Bank
for $5 per pound, down $3 from
last year 's sale. The animal was
owned by Amanda Wheeler and
weighed 256 pounds.
In the poultry division the grand
champion chickens were purchased
hy McDonald's for $550, up from
last year's sale. The animals were
owned by Melissa Kirk and
weighed 12.1 pounds. The reserve
champion chickens were purchased
for $460, also up from last year, by
State Representative Mark Malone
and State Senator Jan Michael
Long. The chickens were owned by
Harmony Thobaben and weighed
13.11 pounds.
Vaughan's Cardinal of Middle·
port purchased the grand champion
steer for $4 per pound from
Jeromee Calaway. The price was
down slightly from last year's sale
price. The steer weighed in at I ,275
pounds.
The reserve champion steer was
purchased for $2.10 per pound by
Big Bend Foodland from John
Collins. The I ,370 pound steer
brought a slightly higher price over
last year 's reserve champion steer.
The grand champion pen of rab·
bits was purchased by Tom Peden
Chevrolet of Ripley, W.Va., for
$900. That price was up an incredi·
ble $500 from last year's price for
the grand champion pen. The pen
was owned by Amy Smith and
weighed 12.13 pounds.
The reserve champion pen of
rabbits sold for $645 and was pur·

chased by WMPO . That price is
also up a considerable $545 from
last year's reserve champion pen.
The rabbits were owned by Jenny
May lc and weighed 12.60 pounds.
Whaley's Auto Parts of Darwin
purchased the grand champion
lamb for $ 15 per pound fr om
Meghan Haynes . The animal
weighed 115 pounds and brought a
SI per pound igher price than last
year's grand champion lamb.
The reserve champion lamb was
purchased by Ridenour Gas of
Chester for $7.30 per pound from
Christy Drake. That pri ce was
slighUy down from last year' s [&gt;rice
uf $9.25 per pound for the reserve
champion lamb. The animal
weighed 118 pounds.
LiltU are aeller. price paid. and buyer. tn that
order for the ule.
HOGS
Priccali5lul per pound.
Alysoo llattenon, G.C., S II, Don Tile Motor!l
and McDmal d'• of Pomeroy and Ripley; Amuula
Whee.lcr, R .C ., $5, Home National Dank., JC~~~t&lt;:a
Justice., $2.30, Bani. One; Olad Hubbard, $1.50,
F~nnen Bank ; l.elllie Patter, $2, John Carey. tan ·
dtdate for alate rcpreaentativc; Lori l!.ma, S2,
BobD Lumber of Muon, W .Va .; Chad !lubhud

$2.70, Do'NI!irlg-CiU.Icb -Mullc:n-Mu.ucr lnsunmn~:
Sllcie Walloo. $230, famlly llm~er;; Sum Wat
wn, $2 .20, Mead Paper Compmy ; Chm lla rnnger, $1 .75, GllltpoW Tob.lcco and C•ndy·: We~~
Sanders, $2 .15, lllwk'a 76 St.at.ion ; T r~n~ Lnd WtCt, $2, Flrmers Bini.; Nicholu Detw lllcr
S2.50, Jay Hall Jr.; K1y Hunl, $2.50, lhwk '• 7~
Station ; Erin Ttylor, $2 . 05, C row' a hmdy
Re.taurant; Dobby Knauff, $2. 10, J1 y IIIII l r.;
Dlad Whcc.lcr, Si .95, f-ruUI Phanmcy; CoJe llilg·
geny, $2. 10, Dis Hend Foodland; Ali cia Walker.
$1.90, Fannm Bank : David Rankin, $110, Mead
P.apc:r Producta; Sherry Burke, $110, Middlcpon ·

J&gt;omeroy Ruuy Club; Erin Taylor, SL90. Fmn en
lhnk; Cole lhggerty, SZ.IU, Uernud Fuh:r:
Robcn Harru, S\.85, Home Natimal Bank: lhlhe
Io Welsh, $2 .05, Forat Run Re~dy Mi~; Alicia
Walker , $1 .80, N(lrr\J: Nurthup Dodge·Chrysler-

Plymouth ; Gary Cooper, $1.80, Bm:hfidd Funeral
H&lt;rne: Nicole White, Sl.85, Br:acm Citgo; Adam
Sanden , $1.90, Fumen Bulk; Mel issa GuesS
$1.90, Tri Count y Meal&amp; ; Andrew Rollins , $2:
Holter'• llobtcins ; Andrew Reed . $2.15, Ervm's
Glass of Muon , W .Va . ; Billie Jo Welsh $1 90
R&amp;G Fcc.d; Dobby Kauff, $1.85, Jay Hall'; Ja~~
McKay, $2, Home National Bank; Aric Patten ~X~
$2, Vdley lumber; Adam Sanders, S1.80, 11om~
National Ban.k; Leiter Parker, $1 .80, Home Na ·
tiona) Bank : Suey Williamson, $1 .90, Farmen
Bani.; Kay\1 Gibbs, $1 .95, Hawk's 76 Station ·
Aly,un Paueraon, $2 . 05, Banks Constructio~
Comp10y; T rnil Lodwick. $1 .70, Waid Cross and
Son!; Nicho1u Detwiller, $2 .45 , Dr . Ha rold
Brown, D.D.S .; Jeasi ca Bartnm, $1.85, Jeff Warn er's Nationwide lruunmce and Mike Canon ; Greg
Buri:e, $1.!10, Ridcnow's Gas: Jonathan lla ggeny,
$1.90, Farmers B•nk; Jonathan lllggeny, $2,
Mom's Smorgubord; Melind• Clark, $1 .70,
Rose's E~c 1 v1tin~; Leslie Parker, $1.70, !lome
National Dank ; Kriati Warner, $1.90. Mud P•per
Pmducu; later Parker, $1.75, Vr:tenna Memorial
Hospita l; Christie Copper , $1 .95 , Forest Run
Ready Mu;; Greg Burke, $1 . 80, R&amp;R Club
Calve1; Mary Rankin, 53 .60, Home Nat ion• I
Bank ; Jeuica Bartram, $1.70. FoD:ed Ru n SportJ: ·
man Club; Lori llama, $3 .10, East Ohio Lurnbc7
Company; Meliua Gues1, _$1 .90, Sayre Produce;
Chnny Rlley , Sl 80, Ketth Otler Deer Shop;
Shawn Rollins, $1.!55, Hawk's 76 St11tion; Wu

Sanders, $1.75, F1m1er1 Bmk ; Ch mty Riley.
Si.70. ] ()hn K nauff cand1d1te for uate l metllr·
.\'1cole Wh1tc, $ 1 75, AMP Ohio of Wat.aViUe:
Alya.u /Iuffman, $1.80, Mom'• SmorJ!IISbord:
Alyua Hoffman,$ ! 85, !lome C reek f:.ntcrprise.'
Mary Rankm. $3.10. Whaley'• Auto Sale.; St.ev~
Kruff, $2, BoOb Lumber; Kayll Gibba, $1.70,
!lome NatJUnal Bank; Robert Harria, $1 .55,
~?owmng · Child 8 · Mu llen · ML15ser lruuran ce; Rcuy
Sheet•. $1 65. ll nl7er Clinic Meig~~ Branc h; David
Rank-In, $2, Mead Paper Product•; Amand1
Whc:eb, $1 70, Frcy 'a Piz.u 111d Ribs end DanTu of Tuppen Platm, Jessie • Justia, $1 .85, Dr .
Doo_g lu Hunter, Josh llaga. $1.65 , Mciga Do nc.cnllc Pan y, Jennifer Goe.slein, $2.0 5 , Weum
Contt.ructlon; Andrew Rolli~. $1. 70, Home Na Uonal Bulk; Came Shec:tl , $ 2, Poor B oys Ttrea,
Muon, W.Va .; l01h llaaer, $1.65, 1om Peden
Oie':mlct. A ric Ptttenon, $1 .85, Bank One; C'hM
Bunnger, $!.65, Home National Bank; Drandun
IJ obb, $3 . 10, Wcatmorel1.11d F1mily Care; K.i.m
Mayl e, $2, Dr. Ha ro ld ltrown, D .D.S .; H10mu
M c Ka~. $1.85, llaffclt'1 Mill Outlet; Kay llunt ,
$1 QO, Wheky'a AI.UO PartJ:; Melinda CLirk. $1 80
II once end Dorolhy Karr, Curie Shoets, SI .8$:

Chc:ster Agri Service; Shawn Rollins, Si.65,Jiaf.
felts Mill Outlet; Mmhew Justice, $1.95, fjttJe
Sheeu and Warner Attorneya; Andrew Reed :
$1 80, Home Nl tJo nal lh n lt; Hn ndon Robb
$J 50, ITuplca !lank: Michael Klein, !l 70, Uu ~
SIC Au to Glau; J(ttn Riley, $1 90, Dr. Mel W~e ·
Steven K1uff, $1 70, llupp Landscaping. BetaY
Sheela, $1 65, I lome National Bank; 011d Wheeler. Sl W, Btblx:e Auto Salca, Sherry Bu rke $11&lt;0
Jtm lh ll'! RPof Athens.
'
'
POULTRl'
Pnc« per unit.
Meluu Kult , G .C.. $550, McUo nald ' a of
Pomeroy: llan-nony Thobabm, $460, Stile ~cprc­
sentattve Mark M1l o ne end State 5enato 1 h u
M1chael Long; Stephen McDaniel, $1 50, Jeff
Thom10n, Matthew Kut. $150, Facot~yer r .umber
Products: Od1e Karr, $19 5. Peoples B1nk ; Kerrie
ll ct7.er, $150, Tn -County Meat; Bob ll offma n,
$ 150: Mc Domld'a; !3edy Karr, $200, Peop!ea
Bani., Alban Salser, $210, H&lt;rne Nat10nal lhnk
les! rca Amon. $165. Jnhn Knauff. canditl:1t1"
rute serutt

fo;

· sn:tRs

\'rices

•n per poond

Jerom~ Calawry, G_c_,$4, Vaugh an's CardJn&amp;l of ~idd!eport ; John Collin.-., R.C., $2 .10, llig
Bend f"ootlland. Ja~on Pullin~. $1.60, Facemyer
Lumber; Ale~ !Jro"';t, _SI . lia. llipol!! Elks. Muon
1nd Me1gs; lo!h b v1n. $1 IS, hnnen Danlt ;
Myca Haynes, $1.05, Sugar Run Mills ; Tyson
Rose, $\.35, llcmud Fulll.; Janet Ca.lsw1y, $1.05
J1ck Wamsley Truck.tng; JulLe Hrown, $1, lhun;
l:urn~r: Waley Kt rr. 11.30, Sur 81.01t , Ren1ard
l·ult 1., Lmd a W1rncr, Candace B 11n t mg, $90
Farmers Hank ; Ch•ncc Wat5un , $.85, Fa rmer;
Dank; L.aura Brown, $.75, D&amp;il L.rmou~in~: Liu
Hoffman, $."16, Chesler Agri Service; Anit1 Calaway, $ .88, Wu a1n Construction; Willie Bu rke,
$ .74, Gas-t~n Logg.mg; Joe Brown, $.76, Ridenour
On; HJ bv1n , Sl.l 0, llome N1l iona\ Bank ·
Randy Burke, $.775 Wesam Conll.ntction ; JeremY
Hupr. , $.85, Sw,Kher md L~h1e Drugs ; Robe rt
II of man, $.:6 . llome N u10ru l B an k , hm ie
Drake. $.78 , I-anners Rank ; Stephtnie Ho ffman ,
$ .56 , Midw ay Macme Incorporated; Alism RMe,
Sl. !lorace and Doroth y Karr. Juon Frvin , $1 03
Holzer Med ical Cente r, Mau l: van.1, $ .86, litlln~
Nauonal flank; Jenica Durin.8CT , $.87, Fanners
Bank.; Bnndon Bu ckley,$ 9\ , Mc Donald' s ·
Oruudy Jude. $.95. Tri Coumy Fnrd : h~ llupp'
$1, Jlupp'• l:-ndac•pU18; Andy Mras. $.8l, llu~
"R" lndu!tnea; Shawn Dailey, $1 .65, Ve teran•
Memomllle«piU) ; James Ch1prmn, $1.15, Noni..s
Northup Dodge Chry,)cr Plym&lt;AJth ; Rillie Butcher, S 89. Whaley 't AUio Paru; Muth ew Kin ,
$ .96, Wamsley Truck111g ; Urian Hoffman
l~oltc r Clin!c Metgs Jl n~nch . lhllee Pooler: S!:
1-ac emye r l·o re5t Produc1_1; Chnstopher Jude
S.975, Jay Hall; Jeff Rmkm, $ 9S, V.al son I .oR~

sf

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GRAND CHAMPION LAMB - Whaley's
Auto Parts purchased the grand champion lamb
for $IS a pound from Meghan Haynes at tbe 4H Junior Fair Livestock Sale Friday night. Pic-

lured are. Marissa Whaley, Gene Whaley, Fair
Queen M1chele Guess and King Chris Hamm,
Meghan Haynes and Wool Prioress Riki Barringer. (Photo by Julie DiUon)
·

GRAND CHAMPION POULTRY McDonald's or Pomeroy and Ripley, W.Va.,
bought the grand champion poultry for $550
from Melissa Kirk at the 4-H Junior Fair Live·
stock Sale Friday niebt. Pictured are Sandee

and Roscoe Mills, Poi1ltry Prince Mike Guess
Poultry Princess Melissa Guess, Kirk, Fair Kin~
Chris Hamm and Fair Queen Michele Guess.
(Photo by Brian Reed)

• SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS- The follow.
mg 4-H members were awarded cash and prizes
in the dairy sweepstakes Friday at the Meigs
County Fair: Tricia Da"ris, $ZOO; Chuck Parker,
$150; Krist! Warner, $US; Chris Parker $100·
Rachel Chapman, $90; Ben Holter $80 and
Zacb Davis, $70. Shown here are, irom' left:

front - Chris Parker, Rachel Chapman, Ben
Holter and Zacb Davis; rear- 1994 Fair Queen
Michele Guess, 1994 Fair King Ch• i.s Hamm
Mike Parker, Trisha Davis, Chuck Parker, Beer
Princess Krlsti Warner and advisor Ed Holter.
(Photo by Jim Freeman)

Brand New CheQ

River Valley's
1994 volleyball slate

(Unless otherwise noted, all
matches start at 5:30 p.m.)

888

GRAND CHAMPION HOG - Don Tate
Motors of Pomeroy and McDonald's of Pomeroy
and Ripley, W.Va., purchased the grand champion hog from Alyson Patterson for $11 per
pound at the 4·H Junior Fair Livestock Sale Fri-

(All matches start at 5:30p.m.)

Head coach- Sharon Vannoy

828

Doc._ OoMncl'

Head coach -Jackie Knight

Date
Opponent
Aug. 30 ...........................at Marietta
Aug. 31 .............................. .Fairland
Sept I ............................. at Jackson
Sept 6...................................Athens
Sept 7 .................................... Meigs
Sept 8 ....... at Ohio VaUey Christian
Sept 13 ............................. .at Logan
Sept 15 ..................GaUia Academy
Sept 20 ................. .at Warren Local
Sept 21 ............................at Eastern
Sept 22 ..............................Marietta
Sept 27 .............................. Jackson
Sept 29 .............................at Athms
Ocl 4 ............ Ohio VaUey Christian
Oct 5.................. .at Meigs-5:55PM
Oct 6 .....................................Logan
Oct I 0 ............................at Fairland
Oct II ...............at GaUia Academy
Oct 12 ................................ .Eastern
Oct 13 .......................Warren Local

Friday night. Shown are Julie Brown, Candace
Bunting, Beef Princess Chastity Jude, Pam and
Don Vaughan, Fair King Chris Hamm, Fair
Queen Michele Guess and Calaway. (Photo by
Jim Freeman)

84Month

Gallia Academy's
1994 volleyball slate
Date
Opponent
Aug. 29 ...........Oak Hill (triangular)
Sept ! ........................Warren Local
Sept 6............................. at Marietta
Sept 8 ................................ Jackson
Sept 12 ..........................at Southern
Sept 13 .................................Athens
Sept 15 ....................at River VaUey
Sept 19 .............................. at Meigs
Sept 20 .................................. Logan
" Sept 2l ........................... at Fairland
Sept 27 .................. at Warren Local
Sept 29 ..............................Marietta
Ocl 3 .................................Oak Hill
OcL 6 .. ..............................at Athens
Ocl IO ......•.........•...•........•..Minford
OcL ll ..................... Hannibal River
Oct 13 ...................................Logan

Vaughan's Cardinal buys
grand champion steer

~f !:,

GRAND CHAMPION STEER -Vaughan's
Cardinal of Middleport purchased the grand
champion steer for $4 a pound from Jeromee
Calaway at the 4-H Junior Fair Livestock Sale

lEAR Ill/

August 21 , 1994

Home National Bank top buyer

ban Westchester County. They are
scheduled to meet Monday with
federal mediators, and the talks which broke off the day the strike
started - probably will restart on
Tuesday or Wednesday.
Some owners are convinced the
season is over and the World Series
won't be played for the first time in
90 years. George W. Bush, a Texas
Rangers managing general partner
and the Republican candidate for
governor of Texas, was asked
about the World Series by a young·
ster at an elementary school.
"I hope I'm wrong, but I doubt
it," Bush said. "It looks like it's
going to be ... long, extended labor
negotiations."

Anderson's
request
to leave
OSUgranted
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Junior Derek Anderson was let go
from the Ohio State basketball
team Friday after asking to be
released from his scholarship, the
university said.
Ohio State sports information
director Steve Snapp said Anderson
made the request during a meeting
with athletics director Andy
Geiger.
Snapp said he did not know why
the 6-foot-6 guard/forward asked to
leave. Earlier reports indicated that
Anderson wanted to transfer to
another school because of recent
problems in the Buckeye basketball
program.
Since the end of last season,
Charles Macon was dismissed from
the team for academic reasons,
while Gerald Eaker was dismissed
and Greg Simpson was indefinitely
suspended after run-ins with the
law. Nate Wilbourne transferred to
South Carolina.
There are eight players remaining on the team , Snapp said.
There was no answer to calls
placed today to Anderson's
Louisville, Ky., home. Messages
were left at the offices of head
coach Randy Ayers and Geiger.
Anderson's uncle, George
Williams of Louisville, had said
Anderson would be interested in
playing for Kentucky, Syracuse,
Providence or Pittsburgh. But the
Louisville Courier-Journal report·
ed Friday that a source close to the
Kentucky basketball program said
the Wildcats do not want Anderson. The newspaper did not identi·
fy the source.

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GRAND CHAMPION RABBITS - Tom
Peden Chevrolet of Ripley, W.Va., purchased
the grand champion rabbits for $900 from Amy
Smith at tbe 4-H Junior Fair Livestock Sale Fri·

day night. pictured are Bunny Princess Jeanie
NeweU, Dunay Prince Josh Roush, Ed Lawson
Amy Smith, Fair Queen Michele Guess and Fai~
King Chris Hamm. (Photo by Brian Reed)

�Page-D2-5unday Tlme&amp;-Sentlnel

August 21,1994

Pomeroy-

Middleport-

Gallipolis, OH-

11

BULLETIN BOARD

Polnt Pleasant, WV

Help Wanted

3 whhe mala klttensL 2 long hair.
NOTICE OF SALE OF
C.n H• 120S VIand :;)t, Pt. 'Ph .
EQUIPMENT
Notice Ia hereby given Cute Kttttll8 To Good Home
that Tha Boord of TruatHa One M lie Out Rsceoon Road:
of Columbia Townahlp will Brown Houst On Lth, 614-&lt;4468196.
oHer for aale 1 480C Caae
Female kitten, litter lralned, 304Oleaal
tractor
6 75-111113.
bachoefloader.
Blda will be received by FJ"'I abandoned/dumped black
Co I u mblo
Townahlp and while puppies, 614-185-3311.
Truateee until September 2, Kitten, To Good Home 614-3791994 at 7:30 p.m. and 2585.
•
opened regular meeting 9-2Older Upright Plano, 814-441&gt;1994 appolntmantto lnapect 3539.
may be made by calling
614-698-6735. Pleaoe write 6
Lost &amp; Found
" TRACTOR 810" on the
outside of bid envelope.
Found: 6 month old long halr.d
Blda may be mailed to labby~ypo cal wllh bushy tall,
C o I u m b Ia
T ownohlp Pomeroy bualnesa dlstrlc1, 614-

==-:--c-=--:-,..--:

T

ruttltl, Rt. 3, Box 82,
Albany, OH 45710.
Truateea reaeNe the right
to reject any or all bide.
(8) 14, 21, 28; 3TC
Announcements

992-6n&amp;.

LOST drive shatl from hay tel·
ter, a304~95-3833 .
white mala Pekingese
adoplod from Molgo dog pound,
lamlly~t, reward'!. 614-443-5416,
614 94 2957
•
even ngs.
l.os1 -

Yard Sale

Announcements

Adoption:
happily
married
couple wtahle to help you and
provide your Infant wf1h a
secure loving home, full-time
mother. MedlcaVIogal expenses.
1-800.883-0302.
Pirate~ Cove Featuring Plua
Special: TWo 12 Inch Plzze'a
With Everything, S12.9i. Fr..
Local O.llvlry, 814-388-N23.

4

Giveaway
3 glr1 pupple8, 8 wka old to a
goOd homt, mother/father Co._
nes,

304~75-6204.

Porter Road, August 19th, 20th,
21st,9A.M. ·?

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time •uctlonHr, complet•
auct lon
service.
Ucenud
166,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304m-5785.
Wedemayer'a Auction Service,
Gallipolis, Ohio 614-379-2720.
AuctlonHr Cot. Oscar E. Click,
License 1 754 -94 &amp; Bonded,
30H9S-3430.

9

,------...!.-or E.Wanted to Buy

:-::-::-::-- , . - - - -- - -- 1 Complete Household

7

3

Comer Of Clark Chapel And

tatatl Anu Tupo Of Fumtlure,
' '
Appliances, Anllque'e, Etc. Also
Appra
. !sal Avallabh~l 614· 37'92720

Any shape or condition 30
caliber M~ carblnt &amp; M1 Grand
30-06 ctllbar, 614-7112-2124.
Clean Lata Model care or
Truekt, 1987 Models OJ Newer,
Smhh Buick Pontiac ~900
Eastam Avenue, Gallipolis.

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

Doeontod 11:onawart, wall tel•
phones, old l1mpa old ther·
ALL Vard Sales Muat Be Paid In mometel"', old clock., antique
DE AOLI NE : 2:00 p.m. tu mIt ure. Rl verne
1
Antiquea.
"
Auvance.
the day bator. the ad ll to run. Run Uoote, owner. 614-992·
Sunday edftlon • 2 :00
252EI. Wt buy e8talee.
Friday. Monday edition •
p.m. Saturday.
Don't Junk hi Soli US Your Non.
Working MaJor Appllanc81,
If Rain Will Be In Gan~ge. Pots &amp; Color T.V.'s,
Refrlgeraton,
Frwr:era, VCR's, Microwaves,
Pans, 2 Drnsea, Dlshle, Air Condltlonore, Waahera,
Clothes, Mlac. hems&amp;- 1127 Sttte Dry!_~.~, Copy Machin... Etc.
Routt 141 • Across ,_rom VauH 814-~1238.

J I O'e Auto Parta and Salvage,
also buying junk can &amp; truda.
304 -773-5343.
Late Model GM Station Wagon,
Or 4 Door, Sedan From Owner,
614-256-6332 L.aave Message.
Wantod Buy: Good Used Air
Compressor· For Sale: 1953
Chevy Truck Par1a; VW Bug,
614-441&gt;-4217.
Old cigarette lighters, milk bottles, fountain pans, ellverwar•.
m•rblas, _,onawal"', magazines,
Slar Wara and Star Trek Items;
Oaby Martin, fi14-9Q2.'JIW1.
WantiKI To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call
Larry Lively. 614-3811-11303.
Top Prtcoa Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rlngt, Silver Coins,
Gold Colna. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Wanted to buy: used mobile
homM. 614-446-01'75
Employment Services

11

Help Wanted

ASTRO-GRAPH

your lnendsh1p may open a new door of
opportuntty lor you
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Your
insttncts won't be sendtng you false stg·
nats today if you ·re starting 10 feel more

~'Your

W'Birthday
Sunday Aug. 21, 1994
Collective endeavors tn the year ahead
conta1n the seeds of success. II will be up
to you to nur1ure them and produce the
harvest.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You have enormous resolve and resourcefulness to draw
upon loday, so don't get discouraged or
tnttm1dated 11 you have to contend with difficult circumstances. Leo. treaJ yourself to
a brnnday grh. Send for your Astra-Graph
predictions for the year ahead by mailing
$1 25 to Astra-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
P 0 Box 4465. New Yorl&lt;. NY 10163. Be
sure to state your zodiac s~gn .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Make an eHort
to participate in social activities today _Try
10 meel new people and draw them into
co nversation . YOur chart indicates you
mtght encounter someone extra -special.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A substantial
po rtoon ol your efforts loday mrght be
devoted to helping others . This is your
proper course , because your gains could
be linked to thetrs .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Persons whO
lake themselves too seOOUslv could make
you feet very uncomfortable today .
Conversely , however. being around those
who have carefree outlooks might produce
the oppos~e effects
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Two srt·
ualton s that had been identifted as
unpleasant m1ght be resolved today 1n a
hdppy . unusual lashron . Stop fretting
about their outcome.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Socoal

lucky matenally than usual. Capttalize on
these fcehngs and act out the panern they
dtclate.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Close com pamons who have harbored doubts as to
where they stood regardong a cntocal ossue
m1ght approve of your position today and
ltne up behind you .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Someone
who •s presently obligated to you m1ght not
come to your ass1stance ot his/her own
volrtron today Thrs person should respond
to a gentle remtnder.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Your genuone
warmth and good will IS capable of pene·
tra!lng even the hardest ot hearts today.
Sonce you 'll see good rn everyone , they'll
see the same in you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Compelrtrve
situations can be handled today tn ways
that will enhance your reputatton. When
you win . you 'll do so with grace. If you
lose. the loss wrll be trivoal and temporary.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You r selfesteem mtght be given a boost today
because of your ability to salvage something that was too tough for others to handie .
Monday. Aug. 22, 1994
In the year ahead, you mighl become
involved in an e)(citing endeavor that has
impressive potential . This cou ld work out
well lor you. provided you're methodical
and patient .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do not squander
your resources on frivolous purposes at
IhiS lrme . especially if they are earmarl&lt;ed
for something serious. It could put you in
a bind down the line. Major changes are
ahead for Leo in the coming year. Send
for your Astro-Graph predictrons today.
Maol $1 .25 to Astro-Graph c/o this newspaper, P 0 Box 4465, New York, N.Y.
10163 Be sure to state your zodiac sign
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Regardless of
how hard you try today, there could be

Applications are btlng accepted
for In-homo caroglvera. The
successful candidate• should
have hom• hMith aide cer11flca·
tlon and two yul'll exptr1ence
In providing direct torJice caro
tobl older aGuila. Must
have rall1
a e traneponat on and telephone In the home. Applications
are available at the Meigs
County Multipurpose Senror
Cenler,
Mulbeny
Heights,
Pomeroy, Oh. An EOE employer/
provider of earvlcu.

Dental Assistant Needed To
Join OUr Family Pracllca, Ell·
ptritnce
Necessary.
Sand
Rnuma To: CLA 325, c/o GalllpoUs Dally Trlbu"! 1.82s Third
Avenue, Galllpolla, UH 4583t
[)IET•RY TECHNICt•••. 100 ~
'"'
-..
.,_.
akllled lacllhy II accepting 1p.
IHicaUone tor a part-time Dfetary
Technician. AppUe1nt muet be
~letered or Wllllna to btcome
r.otatered. Responalbllltlea lnclud• MOS. and car~n
c..:_c...::.:::...::.:..::..::..:.:.:= - - - - 1documentation; partlclpete In
AVON I All Areal
Shlrtev carltPI•n team mMtlng• and
Spears, 304-6~1429.
monhor
lmplementaiiOn ol

several individuals who seem impossible
to pleas e . The fault is not yours, II'S
theirs. so don'tlay the blame on yourself
LIBRA (Sept. 23.oct. 23 ) In order to
h
ave peace of m1nd today , you must take
care of your responsibilities before 1nvolv·
mg
your se 11 ·tn l1 ght e r pur sull s You
shouldn't run away from yow dut 1es.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Take pnde
1n what you do today by d01ng your very
best on all situatrons Voctory wrll have a
hollow nng if you succeed by default.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec . 211
Obrect1 ves mtght be 1ather dttficult to
achieve today. but not for the obvtous
reason s . Guard agarn st allowrng your
imaginatton to assume someone 1n power
is deliberately blocking you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) Be care ful how you pllrase your cnticism Ieday .
because you moght sa y thongs more
harshly than you tntend. Th1s could tnvite
a hostile reaction
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19) Your probabilities lor turning a proftl look hopeful
today , pr ovoded you don't ma ke any
tinanctal deals unltl you 're ce rt ci tn yo u
have all the facts Be del1be1ate and thm ·
ough .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) There moght
be an adversary 11stenrng 10 what you
have to say today. Don't speak of things
that can be stored away now and used
against you later.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) If you are
narrow·minded today you could deprive
yourself of some useful informat1on
passed on to you by a_ person whose
opinions frequently conflict w1th your own .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You mrght
find yoursell in an awkward position
today, due to false hopes raised by a
friend who couldn 't produce all he/she
promised.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Just because
an obreclive was not achieved by an
associate doesn't mean ~ ts beyond your
reach . Whal was hard lor him/her migh1
not be for you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you criticize someone in front of others today, bet
your bonom dollar that he/she will later
take a shot at you in public.
Cl l994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Fleet turns corner in lending
discrimination dispute
lly ROB WELLS
AP Business Writer
WASHINGTON
Fleet
Financial Gmup Inc. , once portrayed as a vicious loan shark 1ha1
ripped off minority homeowners,
turned the corner lasl week in
resolving a longslanding dispute
over lending discrimination.
Flce l, New England's biggest
banking company, agreed to pay $6
million to settle a class aclilln lawsuit in Georgia that its finance
company arm faced in connection
wilh comroversial mongage lending practices.
And 1he bank closed a $1 billion
acquisition of Sterling Bancshares
C orp. of Waltham, Mass. - a clear
signal that regulators will not let
Flccl's pas1 problems hold up its
merger plans. Bank analysts say
rumors are widespread that F1ee1
may ye1 combine with another
large bank, The Banlc of New
York.
The Fleet saga began in 1989
when a lawsuit filed in Chicago
charged 1hat the bank's finance
company, Fleet Finance Inc., dealt
in : home equity loans with decepli ve tenns, excessive in1eres1 rates
and fees.
Although Aeet denied wrongdoing, similar lawsuits were flied in
Georgia and ' . b8lllll, where auorneys said Fleet Finance muscled
some borrowers in10 foreclosure.
A eel's name also
in abusive
lending cases in Massach~ts and

arose

Michigan.
One of the suits alleged Fleet
and olher mongage lenders sought
oul low-income black customers
who could least afford double-digit
loan rates, some of which exceeded

20 percent

Al1hough regarded as a banking
industry innovator, Fleet's problems tarnished its reputation in
Washington and elsewhere. Two
congressional hearings in 1993
drew busloads of anti-Fleet
activists to the Capilol. One group
lhreatened a sit-in in the Federal
Reserve Board's venerable board
room unless regulators cracked
down on Fleet.
The negative publicity came at a
time when regulators faced new
pressure to crack down on banks
with discriminatory lending
records.
Boston housing aclivist Bruce
Marks, one of Fleet's most mililani
critics, urged regulators to block
Fleet's mergers or acquisitions
until the bank resolved the issue.
The lending controversy raised
uncenainties about Fleet's ambitious expansion plans.
"To make the acquisilions they
wanted to make, they would have
to clean the slate," said Frank
Barlr:ocv. who follows Fleet for the
investmenl banking finn Adves1
Inc. in New York.
The bank began striking a series
of settlements in 1992, but the process gained momentum last year. 11

Branch llbl'lrlan needed. Dutlu
Include : Chlldron'e S.rvlc..
rofarenee work,
clrculatlo~
dutlea. Experience W'Ofklng with
chllclren and/or library back·
ground neconary. Ubf'arian will
work
approximately
20hra.
weekly at Mason Chy Branch.
Appllcatlont tl"' avallab4e at
Maaon County Public Ubrary.

----'-------

:~~=~~====~~P~Io~n;I,;Tu:":·~W~od~,T~h~u~"'~·::::+==~=~====:.~========~
en count ers m1ght pr oduce hidden divi ·
dends for you today . A pal who values

ACTIVITY DIRECTOR- Overbrook Center 11 tccepllng applications from qualll*f Individuals lor the poshlon of AJ;.
tlvllln Olrvctor. Quallllcatlooe:
working know1edge of MDS+
ayatem, lnterdlacfpUnary Care
PltnNng &amp; Documentation. Su·
perviM and IChedUII ICtlvhiH
department. Individual mull1
work well with the public. Will
be responsible lor achedullng
and supervising voluntears.
Schedule and sufrvlae group
and
lncUvldua
actfvttlea
programs for 100 ntSidentt ol
varfOus ekllle and abUIU...
NCCAP cerilleallon prelornMi.
Ouallflod applleonta pteoaa
apply to Overbrook Center 333
Pogo Stroot, Middleport 'otoio
457'60. AHn: Unda Briggl~ NHA
EOE
'
.

complelely restruclured · Fleet
Finance, bringing in new management and refusing to buy the con troversial home equity loans, which
were made by companies with
questionable backgrounds.
The process hasn '1 been cheap:
Since 1991, Flee! has agreed to pay
$282 million in settlements and aid
relating to the mongage controversies, a figure that includes the setllement announced this past week.

foodidrug lnten~ctlon and workearap.lane.
of
Ing
knowledge Knowledge
of lab val~ el·
fee-tid by diN. Qualified epglleanta
must wortttnd
cloaaly
wttn
letary Manager
Olttlclan
to develop qualtty meal eiH'VIce
tor rnldents of Overbrook c.n.
lor. Ouollflod appllcanla pteaao
apply to Overbrook Canter, 333
Page Sti'Mt Mldd8POf1, ottlo
45160 . Attn: l.Jnd• Brfgagllre' NHA.
EOE

11

11

Help wanted

11

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

AVON $$ SALES
Potanlial 1200 -$2,000 Monthly.
Fantutic Olscountal Baneflta!
FJaxlbla Hours. Tarrttory OpUon.t. 1~0.742-4738 .

An AppUet~llon &amp; Ettm Information Call 1· 21!J..T36-4115, Extonsian P6432, 9 A.M.-9 P.M., 7
Days .

Attention Galllpolle
- ~OI!Iitll Jobs-·
f12.26 Per Hr. To Start, Plus
Benefits. Postal Can1era, Sorters . Clerks. Maintenance. For

NORTH

8 10 9-1

•Q J 5 4

BRIDGE

'f 74 32
• 7 3
•Q 6 5

PHILLIP
ALDER

Wf:ST

EAST

• I0 8 3

• 9 1 5 2
'fi086
e I0 5 4
4K B 7

'fJ

tAKQ6 2

•J 9 4 3

D1d you kno w that Planned Parenthood o'
Southeast Ol uo 11 1 Galhpohs prov•aes
conlident•al l am•tv ptann.ng serv•res to 600
Ga ll1a County rcs•dcnts c;;ch year B•r1h
Cont rol Serv•ces 1ncluoe &lt;l pn'fSICidll
e ~a m •nat•on
cancer .-.creemng flrhwilll;)n
and birth cont rol supplies Women and rnen
ruCJ y rece•ve tests ana trC&lt;'Itmcnt lor c.ew all y
transmmf!fl d•sease and anon•tm cu.;; HIV
tests Sl•drng Fee Sta le. Pr1 v ate Insurance
and Med 1C.1 C1 &lt;He nccepted
P1ann1nq
pre\'Bn l s un1nter1ded pregn ;mcy For ar1
il pp1 cal l (6 14) 44 6 OI GG

G RAHAM 'S UP HOLSTERY
Why buy new furnli ure w he n we
ca n mak e your furn1ture as good
as ne w
REU PHOL STER "
We oHe r a full seleclr on o f
beaultful fab ncs _ New fo am , and
exp ert wo rkm anshop Cal l for a
fr ee es t1mate
178 Hilltop Drov e
Gallopolrs . Oh
6 14-446 34 38

SOUTH
•A K
'fAK Q95
t J 9 B

Heavy with honors,
light with tricks

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

4 A I0 2

Vulne r abl e: Both
D eal er : South

By Phillip A ld e r
P.G. Wod ehou se wrote sever al fun ·
ny lin e s in d e sc ribin g peop le wh o
we re ove rweight 1No t that he him sel f

was ex actly slim .J For exa mple, "The
Righ t Hon was a tubby lilli e chap who
looked as if he had bee n poured into
his cloth es and had forgo tten to say
'Wh en !'··
I n brtdgr•. sometim es you have honor ca rd s ~ver y w h e re . lea v i n g yo ur
contract in no apparent jeopardy. But
i f you don't have th e ent nes to r each
somf' of t hose winners , ra r eful plan ·
ning might be needed.
In today·s de" \, how would yo u try to
land four hearts, West allackin g with
thre e top diamonds'
South didn ' t like lo op e n tw o no trump with frv e hearl s, b ut to start
with on e heart wa s less app ealing .
Apart from the prospect of a missed
g ame if il w er e pa ssed oul. h e might
have had troubl e descrtbin g his tru e
stre ngth later rn lhe aucti on. Luckily,

.

Sou1h

West

North

f:~st

Pa:ss
Pass

3 "'
4•

Pa~s

All pa ss

32x40 Metal
Storage Building
For Rent
614-446-3824

Can cel led/ R e Je cted
• DUI • N o P r ior
In s ura n ce

Ope ning l ea d : • K
North was able to use Sl ay man and locat e the heart fit
You appe ar to have 10 tri cks: four
spades. f1ve hearts and th e clu b ace.
But the re is a snag: the spade suit 1s
blocked. If vou ruff th e third tri ck in
the dummy 'and the trumps bre ak 3-1,
not 2-2, how will you gel back into the
dummy? You wil l have to hope thai
West holds 1he club king.
Ther e is a much bett er tine avail able . At trick thr ee, di sc ard on e of
dummy's low clubs.
If the defenders ptay a fourth diamond, discard anot her cl ub from th e
dummy . And if the y switch, win in
hand, draw trumps. unblock the A-K of
spades and lead the heart fiVe to dum·
my's seven. Then you can cash th e QJ or spades in peace .

All Ag es, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone'
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phon e

BOOTS
All le ather W eslern Boal s
Reg. $1 49 .00
Sale Pnce $59 00
Lar ge Slock
Engoneer .................. $49.00
... $49.00
Wellrngton
$50 · 55
Log g ers ..
Harness ..
... $59 00
Car oli na-Geo rg ia- H&amp; H
Insulated. Sal ely Gortex
Swarn Furnoture 62 Oli ve St
Ga llopol1s
A ll U .S. Mad e

7 30 - 4 30 M o n -Fn .

SR-22

2 NT
3•

Pt. Pleasant
Rotary Golf
Scramble
Sat. August 27
Riverside Golf
Course
Call 773-9527

N O TI C E'
Anyo n e with a Bur ltl e O il Co.
P ro p a n e Tan k that n eeds
pa m ttng . p lease ca ll ou r o ff1 ce
at 446 -41 1 9

Th a nk

you

Food la n d

lor

O ht o

Va l le y

buy 1ng

my

marke t ho g .

you

Amy Hutc h tns

f or

U p si d e D o wn

(61 4}446 -6 111

buying

Bellet. Toe. Tap , J azz . Baton.
and Flag Classes
Gallta Perform ing Ar1 s
22 Locust Si . Gallopolrs
PaMy Fellure 1-614 -245 -9880.
446-0526
Bree Ramey 1-614-3 67 7893

H ome c o m ing Serv 1ces
LIBERTY C HAP E L
S und ay . Au g . 21

10.00 a. m .

Morni na S pea ke r ·
R ev. Btll Pa yn e
A lte rnoon S p eak e r :

Want e d People lo Pick

R ev. Jack R a nkin
S in9 1n g a ll day by G e n es is

P e ppers also help with
Tobacco .
A utomotrve

Baughman Farm

A IR C ON D IT IONING

256-6535

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-7
ACROSS

1 Pilot' s place
6 A grea t deal
10 Lackin g freshness
15 Lrghl -ray devoce
20 Lessen
2 1 Vt oltn name
23 Synth eloc frber
24 Fal
25 Autom aton
26 C uis rnlo cubes
27 Sets ajar
28 A leavenrng
29 Avoids
31 "- - Yellow
Ribbon ..."
32 Exrsted
33 Fasllalk
34 - AVIV
35 Frost
37 Religiou s pamphlet
39 Path
4 1 Lennon's widow
42 All 's opposrte
44 Drapery fabric
46 Brown ish shade
48 - drem
51 Ravrne
53 War god
55 Period ol rest
59 - Khayy am
61 Makes tractable
63 Outdoe s
65 Asserts
66 Lawtul
68 Pa1n11ayers
70 Sail1ng ve ssel
72 Read s
73 Rarse
75 Frnnrsh poem
77 Group of bees
79 II not
80 Make lranqurl
81 What ro ll ing slones
lack
83 Amennd1an s
85 Indeed'
86 Eye part
88 Caught sighl ol

90 Open rngs
92 Spring
95 Baton 97 Condemn
98 Crty rn lialy
102 Wal let rtem s
104 Krngdom
106 - and
Ci rc umstance
108 Draw
I 09 Oflicoal decree
111 Kmd of wave
113 Aches
11 5 Bird of p rey
116 Diners
118 Famous
120 Steady and sober
122 Salty drop
123 Worlds
125 Large : prefrx
126 Conceals
128 Trave led way : abbr
129 Vetches
13 11'he Nile, e.g.
134 Depaned
135 Jet letters
138 Satrates
140 Playing card
142 Sun . talk
143 Workroom, for short
146 Porcelain item
148 Monk's hood
150 Image
152 Dwell
t 54 Kitchen gadget
155 Rober1s ol "I Love
Trouble"
156 Weaker. as an
excuse
158 Rose oil
t 59 "- - ear and out
the other"
160 Prayrng frgure
161 Extra
t62 C ombrne
163 Nuisances
164 Not wordy
t 65 Upprty one
t 66 Saccharine

DOWN
1 Werght unit lor
ge ms
2 Ove rh ead
3 Towe r ol 4 "Believe - - not!"
5 Openwork fabric
6 Boy
7 Lea ve out
8 Implied but unsaid
9 Directs
10 W1nt er dnv1ng
essenlials: 2 wds.
11 Krnd
12 Watchful
13 StandoHish ones
14 Letters
t 5 Faithful followers
16 Support
17 "From - - shining

sea"
18 Crty in Germany
19 Back: prefix
22 Newton or Azrmov
30 Talent or Girl
33 Hookahs
36 Intertwine
38 Grumpy one
40 Gas: prelix
43 St. -'s fire
45 Lunches and
dinners
47 Swi«ly
48 Warsaw natives
49 Writer Zola
50 Went quickly
52 Twe lvemonth
54 Packed
56 Boot-shaped
country
57 Taut
58 Leiters for plurals
60 Competitor
62 BaHie
64 Fly high
67 Spud
69 Hair net
71 Holier-than -thou one

74 Male srnger
76 Bar legally
78 Intended
82 Bend
84 Outpourrng
87 Animal fat
88 Not very oflen
89 Bovary and Laza ru s
91 Jack who ate no fal
92 Precrpitous
93 Bicyc le part
94 Actress Ekberg
96 Profit
99 Beer
100 Brilliance
101 Cubic me1er
103 Odor
105 Alma 107 Gist
108 Stage whispers
110 Sets high value on
112 Make laws
114 Brad
117 Belt
119 Letterman,
familiarly
121 Put oH
124 Rigid
127 Brooks
130 Safe
132 Wicked things
133 Summaries. for
short
135 Sunset or Gaza
136 River in Paris
137 Mexican food
139 Olthe sun
141 "- - rs an island"
t 43 Bnlrsh measure
144 Saying
145 Cap
147 Penny
149 Is vrctorious
151 Fiddling despot
t 53 Cook in juices
155 Iota
157 Johnny -

Service And Repai r

you

French

City

HUNTINGTON - Champion
Industries, Inc., announces that
earnings for the third quarter for
the current fiscal year increased by
12 percent over the third quarter,
1993. rising to $544,000.
Earnings one year ago were

$486,000.
Champion lhus continued its
record of increasing quarterly earnings over the previous year in every
quarter since going public in Jan-

steer

&amp; market

Jamie Thevenir

Thank

446-2282

hog .

you

Dan

Davies Candidate for
Auditor for buying my
1994 market hog.
Stacey Mills

LOOKING FOR CHILD CARE?
CCRN .Child Cal"' Rnourca
Network Ia A FrM Community
S.rvlu Which Would Asslat
You In Locating Care To Meet
Your Naeda . Call HI00-577-2276
To Soo How wo Can Help.
NNded Immediately Recepllonlst,
Bookkeeper,
OHica
Man~ger. Mu8t Hav• Computar
Knowledge, Salary Plua Cornmlulon,
Banetita,
Send
Reaume To Cl.A 324 c/o Gal·
llpotla Dolly Trlbuno 1.825 lhlrd
Avanue, Galllpolla, OH 45631.

LAYNE FURNITURE
MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE
Regu la r ..
.... .. . .. ... .. .. $85
Form ..
..... $95
Ex tra Form
$ 1OS
Ort ho ped ic
Krng Size Sets .. · ... $350 &amp; Up
Q ueen Srze Set s . $295 &amp; Up
Bunk Maltress . . .... $ 48 &amp; Up
Bed Frames ..
. . $2 5-$35 -$50
Murr lhru Sat 9·5 p.m 446·0322
3 miles out 8 ulav1 ll e P1ke
FREE DELI VE RY

Cardinal Fralght Cordero Inc. Ia
experienced
hlring
owner/operator.
tor
the
nlfl bod dl
va at
vision, prolhable
PlY program, accurate weekll
Mt11ementa, medlctl Ina. aval.
aiHI, rider progr•m and time
home, no up front money to
lease on. Cali Boyd, 1..f101)...220242t

Tho Chy Llmlla, Roslaura;;t&amp;
Bar, Now Accepting Resumes:
Bar1endere, Walters, Waitresses, Housekeeping, Security,
Cooka OJ, 6 OoUvery Person .
Sand to Tha City Llmlta 578 N
Stalo Route !J Galiipot\s" OH ,
Pereonnel Onlce, No t-'hone
Calls.
Thl Melgt Local School District
Ia ...klng qualified applicants
to tranapor1 an SBH student to
athens, Ohio (Richland Avenue)
on a dally ba.ls. Applicant•
must havo e chauffeur's license
and mu111 ahow proof of ad ...
quat• Insurance coverage. In·
ternted person• should contact Wendy Halar at 614 -9922153.

Yard Sale
2416 S tate Rt. 218
Monday, Aug . 22 . 9 -4
Clothes (chi ldren &amp; adulli .
e xerci se bike, dishes. cart op
earn e r, prom dress es (s ize 3)
w/ shoes elc

C ROWN EXCAVATIN G
5885 St. Rt. 2 18
Gallrpolis, Oh 4563 1
(614) 256 -6456
frh ank you for buying my 1994
m ark et la mb.
C HAD !'&gt;LONE

Thank you Midget Press for

Th a nk

yo u D&amp;W Homes.

purchasing my market hog

Elliott for purchasing m y marke1

at the Gallia County Jr. Fair.

h og a\ the G alli a County Fair.
Nicl10las William s

Jason Williams

Koun try Kritter s

Kountry Kritters

Thank you R1vercity Farm Supply
and Evans Cattle Company for
buyrng our 1994 market sleers at
th e Gallia County Jr Faor.
Bnan and Brad Shadle
Hope's Helprng Hands 4-H Club

Jim

Spring Valley Storage
Adjacent to Spring Valley
Car wash on Jackson
Pike (old

U.S 35)

Now renting al l sizes

5'x5' - 5'x7 ._ 5'x1 o·
1O' x 10' -1O'x20'.

So . Ohio Peace Officer's
Training Academy

By the month

will be conducting basic
Peace Officer's Training
Academy beginning
Mon . Sept.

13
==--l_n.::s.::u_r.:_a_n.::c.::e
_ __
AMERICAN
NATIONAL
IN·
SUAANCE
VtCKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AliTO [)15COUNTS

UFE &amp; HEALTH

304-586-4257

Diploma or

18, High School
GED, Valid Drivers

License, No crimtnal record,

hr.

3

Store Downtown Vinton .

160

Hwy. Building Sold .

Moving Sale

$5.00 a

50%

off

or

Card of Thanks

Wo would llka to
expreaa our gratitude to
all thoae who were a
eource of comfort and
help during our recent
loea. Thank you to all tho
lrlando and nelghbora
who viaited, telephoned,
brought food and/or oen1
llowata. Spacial thonu
1o: Dr. John Wade and
otall;
Dr.
Randoll
Hawklna and a1aH; Galllo
Coun1y EMS; Holzer
Emergency Room teamj
Bonnie Slmmo; Wlllla
Funaral Home; Amyf'a
Floral F. . hlono, ond
Reverend Allred Holley.

3

Announcements

months- Get 4th month

9 A.M. Til?

Freel

August 27

Call

441 -0440

owned

Now locally

&amp; operated .

females encouraged .

Willow Valley Mission Thrift

1

access available. Fall
storage specia l Pay

5

tone Pay, 814~82-6613.

The lamlly of
Dean R. Evans, Sr.

24

18

W

whereabouts of Lucenia "Tena"
Sa unders . Contact : K. Milhone ,
P.O . Box 68, Lewis Center,

OH

Nureery

School.

Chlldcare M-F 8am~ : 30pm Age~
2-K, Young Sei-&lt;lol Ago During
Summar. 1 Oayt per Waak MinImum 614--44&amp;-3657.

The Whole block
Is Having A
Wildwood Estates,
Fraak Rood,
Pomeroy, Oblo

5

Happy Ads
_ _ _ _:_c...::_ _ _ __

Quality Cleaning Affordable
Prices, One Time /Weekly
/Biweekly, Years Of Experience,
Free Estlmaru, 614-319-2199.

Homes for Sale

2 Large Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
La rge Uvlng Room
Large
Dining Room, For S.te
Owner, 34 VInton AnnUli Ga llpollo, 614-441&gt;-1625.
'

Bl

Btdrooma, Partially Remodeled,

Very Largo Doublo L.ol, On \linton Stroll, Galllpolla Can Ba
PurctlaMd HouH And Lot Only
Or Wlth Additional Acre Or 2.S
Acree Total, All Zoned COmmar·
da lly, 614-446--9777.

3 Bedroom ~ouH, 614-682·7S45
l Bedroom Ranch 6 112 Mlln
North On 160( Vary Nlc• Home,
Good Condit on, 155 ,000 6l43BB·91N6 .

I

3 bedroom, 111 IIKtrlc tlom1
Avenue Po11141roy:
Spring
$30 .00(1, 614· 992·2913, or G1~
~92-n04 .

l Bedrooms, 2 Batht, Heat
Pump, Gas Furn~ca, 1 Acra
Garage. Will Consider Slngl8
Wide On Down Payment Ad.
dlson ArM, $62,000 614-367·
7267.
'
3 bedroom nnch, Gallipolis
Feny, call tor details. 304-875332 8.

4 Bedrooms, 1 Bath Khchen

LR, DR, In Good Location, CioN
To Schools, Buslnel8 Section,
614·446- Tl25,
304-7'66-7619
$35,900 Negotiable.
6 Room Brick With Full Baa.
ment, And Central Air, In Gallipolis, Price Reduced 614-&lt;4461828.
'

5

Happy Ads

.,

( Ymn llJc;d

fl appy 40th

tla ~ ll

man)

is SO nnw,
Su if you St't' him give

him a s mile.

Stup ilnd say you

DCl·vid nnd

8

hf11rr slow down, your
at the lop of I he hill
and y ou may r"ll

down .

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

General Maintenance, Palnl!ng1
Yard Work WlndOWI Wasnea
Guttere Cleaned light Hauling,
Commerlcat, Residential, Steve:
81-H4&amp;--4148.

Prohlsslonal Tree Service, 30

Page-03

2 Story Brick Hom•, 7 Rooma, 4

-:-=-a.,.n_t e_d_t-::o-:D,_o--::7
~
Chrtstlln Lady will Car• For
Chlldrtn, Any Shift, Near
Elizabeth Chapet Church ·, oH
218 8 • ••1
· ~-- ·1467
Expertaneed LPN Wanta Privata
Duty, Dayshlfl, 614·256--6106.

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
M a rn St. Vint o n . Ohi o
Augus t 2 6 . 19 9 4 7 DO pm
Partral lisl rng . D ish 's, glassware. la mps . books . slo ne
bowls . Avon bolll es , occu pre d Japa n Plates . 1964
M edrcal Encyc lopedra Set. G.B . Antenna. bug she ild .
bird cage, barbe que grill , toy s. lots of tools .ne w set
ho use numbers , 3 g~rls bikes . sofa &amp; ch a1r. odd chairs .
sola chair. roc ke r, coHee tabl e, many more rle ms to
num erous l o m entron &amp; more co mi ng rn befor e sale.
Auctioneer: Finis " Ike" Isaac
Phone (614) 388 -9370. 388 -888 0. 6 69-61 5 1
Licen sed &amp; bonded Ohio #3728 IN #72 48
Not resp on srble for accrde nls or lost rtem s.
Term s Ca sh or approve d check.

W111 cart lor elderly persona In
my homo, country Httlng,
lovtng cara. 304~QS-3840 .

WUI do backhoe work, 614-9925858 or 614-992-31TJ.

2

In Memory

In Dewing Memory

Lowell M.
Gothard
To all of you
who have a dad,
Love him&amp;
show him you
care.
For you never
know the
heartache until
he isn't there.
Happy Birthday,
Dad

8/20112-8117/90
Daughter,

Phyllis Stewart.
3

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT. AUG.

27, 199410:00 A .M.

Thrs is the personal property of lhe lale Glen (Bill)
Rob rnson . Lo cated on St . Rt. 681 N. of Tuppe rs
Plains. Ohro. Watc h for srgn s on St Rt. 7.
FARM EQ &amp; MISC
N . H. 7' Haybine, M .F #9 square baler. Ford 7' finish
mowe r. Ford 7' c uller bar mower, 3 pt. whee l rak e, 3
pt hyd . wood sphMer. 16. bale eleva to r. ele ctri c . 3 pt .
blade. 3 pt. 5 disc, JD 3x16 3 p1 plows, Ford 3 pi 2x1 2
pl ow s , A.C. Forage Harvesler, Kools Srlage blower
w/prp e, 1959 Ford Dump truck W/ 10 bed. Homehte
150 chain saw &amp; McCullough #4 1 saw. &amp; eel.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Three Gulf gas pumps w/29~ gas pri ce , Vi ctor crank
record player. old records . orl lamps . krtchen clock.
china hutch . Jenny Lind bed . co rn sheller, chi cken
coops, nail keg , upnl c piano's, DaviS paper roller ,
rocking cha ir &amp; ect.
"HOUSEHOLD "
2 pc . living room suite, col or TV. recliner, rocker,
stands, lamps , misc . chai rs , Kelv in alor aut. was her &amp;
drye r. Grbso n bro wn fr ost clear re lngerat or. double
metal cabrn et . table &amp; charrs, mic rowave &amp; stand
single bed. dresse rs, chest of drawers , wardrobe:
bed s, misc. pots . pan s &amp; d1shes &amp; eel .
"M ISC
8 HP Wheel ,Horse lawn mower, set of Tedelo scales
pot b ell y stove , mrsc . drrlls. mrsc. new chain , hooks:
light bulbs, dampers . va lve craft tab le saw.
Wilber Rob rnson and Marlene Donovan
Dan Smith- Auctioneer #1344 W. Va. #515
Refreshments by Alfred U . M . Church
Cas h
Posrtive 10
"Not respons ible for accidents or loss of p roperty"

s·

of

Yard Sale

Seekrng rnfo a s to

Vatlay

Jane Ann

trac-- Years Experience, 614·308· 9643,
tor TraiJar Drive,.. (OTR) Excel- 614-367-7010.

by the

year. Gated access or

Call 446-3332 for more info.
Must be

or

Su n

31

WBGS am 1030, WBYG 1m 99.5
Managor,
Announcers-Board
Oporalora,
Soc..Computer
aper~~lor, S.la persons, News
peraons. late summer/fall. Sand
resume to CE.O WBGSfWBYG,
P.O. Box 470, Point Pleasant ,
wv. 25550 .

Owner/()pert1o,..
Cardinal Freight Carr1tra Ia
hiring experiencecl OTR'I to run
flatbed, um percentage of
groa revenue pulling company Gtorg11 Portable Sawmill, don't
haul yow logs to the mill Just
fr~llara or pulling own trailer,
ha.aHh Insurance wldental &amp; vt- eoll304-675-1957.
alon available, base platH Handy man, Interior/exterior
available, bob-Call lneuranee painting, light hauling &amp; cartvallable, fuel card syatem, pentry. Auto body worli: &amp; paintw•kly
aettl•ments,
rldlr Ing. 304-895-3630 or J04-675program, tlmt komo. 1-80().2207595,
2421.
Oak Hill Trucking COmpany

Announcements

11

Help Wanted

43035

bag.

COMPUTER SYSTEMS
ADMINISTRATION &amp; SUPPORT

Shear Pleasure
Hair and Tanning Salon

Cuslom C,D-ROMs and Musir COs

Wendy Long
to their staff!

446-4442
Call 446-2342
or 992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

CIISIGmCD's

Color ScannjnR
S.niu

your Compuler

Upw 2400dpi
Your Photos Put
on CD-ROM

made from

Da11, Souod

Pil&lt;s cxisling
· C0s. or
C1aldtes

Computer uoega ot Hollar Clinic contlnu• lo grow. Our
wide areo network connecta ovar 300 termlnolo, PC.
and Prlntero In 7 locaUono In Ohio
WV. Hordwore
lnclud• Dlgllal, VAX, Novell and IBM RS6000.

a

would like to Welcome

The board of directors of Cham-

1994.

Llc.nsad Practical Nur... :
Would you llka to have the belt
or both worldl? Join an lnnova11ve leading health care team. 11
y:ou enJoy variety In your
achedule and a... ready tor a
challtn!l', then we hne tt.Job
tor you l CartH1van of Pt.
Pluaant • 68-bed akllled nurelng tachtty ott.rs quaiiUed,
prot...ional and caring Hrvicn In total rehabilitation and
long tarm nuralng cart. Pt.
PIM88nl hu t p,ar1-llme LPN
charge po8hlon tor qualltled
appliCa.nle. Must h.ave a valid
Will Virginia LPN lleenH. It
you have the right credtnllala
and trw up tor • challenge, contact: Ca,.:W.van of Pl . Pleaunt,
Jill Bumgardner, AN, DON , Rl. 1
Box 32&amp;, Pl . Pleasant, wV
25550. 304-875-3005. A Glenmark FacUlty. EOE.

Needs Experienced" Stml

uary, 1993.
pion also declared the company's
regular quarterly dividend of 5
cents per share. The dividend,
voted at the Aug. 15 monthly meeting, will be paid on Sept. 23, to
shareholders of record on Sepl 2,

s id e Down

Wanted to Do

Plnecreat Cara Centar Ia LookIng For An Enthuslaltlc Director

New Terminal

Sm ith Buic k -P o ntiac Gallipo li s

Foot Clinic for buying my

Pa~n

18

Domino'• Pizza In Pomeroy now Of Nursing Whh Excellent
Financial
accepting applkallons.
l.aadorahlp Ability, CommunicaDriver COL OUallllod 1 Yen tion Skllle, And Supervisory ExVeritable OTR . lmmedlata Posi- perlencn. Knowledge Ot State 21
Business
tion tor 1 Ortvw run witt, a taam. And Federal Regufillont And
Home WNkanda, Health Care Abll11y To Apply lhem l o Tho
Opportunity
OaUy Management Ot Raaidant
Plan, t-800-36 2- 5685.
C.ra And Per.onnel Issues Is
INonCEI
Earn Thousands Stufllng En - Requlrtd. The Ability To Stimu- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
late
Coo.,-rallve
Tum
Work
velopes. Ru t h 1"1.00 Nama, Ad·
ttcommanda that you do busidress Stamped Envelope To : And To Uonhor All Aapecta Of ness with people you know and
Rnldent
Cal"'
Program
Are
Hall's Entorprlsea, P.O. Box 152.
NOT to tend money through ths
Doairod. COntact l'he Ad- mall until you have ln vHtigated
App&amp;egrova, W1s1 VA 25.502.
ministrator, PlnocrHI Car-. Cen- the offering.
E.am up to t1000 woekly stuffing tor, 170 Pinecrest Drlva Galannlopea at home, stan now, lipolis otllo 45631 , 6'4-446-71 12. Bu s1ne$S For Sale : Beauty
no-.xperlenct,
lre•suppllea, Must Apply Before September 6, Salon &amp; Tanning Buslnua, Pt .
Ploa sanl, fully st ocked
4
tn.-Information, no-obligation. 1g94_E.O.E.
Send SASE : Caacade O.pt-60
station s, 2 tanni ng beds. Sand
POSTAL JOBS
lettur of lnt1nes1 : Box R-n, cJo
P.O. So• 5421, Son An~lo TX
1111102.
~ •
Stan $11.41 !Hr. For Exam And Pt . Pleasant Register, 200 Main
Application Info. Call (219) 76~ Sl ., Pl. Pleasan(W V 25550 .
E• pa riCM'lCed
Ba kar
fC.a ka 8101 Ext. OH581, ~ A.M . .g P.M.,
Decorator Needed. Morrl&amp;on'e Sun -Fri.
VENDING ROUTE: Won 't Get
Hospll•lhy Group, Unlvershy Of
Rich Quick. Will Get A Steady
RNI
~ala
Career.
Prolanlonal
Rio Gr.nd•, 6l4·245-5660 Or
Cash Income. Priced to Sell. 1·
training. ERA Town &amp; Country 000-l!20-6782.
St~ By ~udam Cant., Annex
Real £.tala, Broker, Beckie
M- 8 A.M. _.P.M. EOE .
Stein, 304-675-5546.
Gallla Ae~~ demy High School
Real Estate
Student to Babvstl Alter Sch~ Rtgletered long-term care Nu,..
lng Al81a1ante needed tor partM-Th 614-44S-Od2ti.
time rotating ehlfts 68-bod skUHolp Wanted: Retail Jewelry lad nursing faellily, EO£ . 31 Homes for Sale
Salu, Par1 -Time To Full-Timt CaraHnen of Pt . Pleasant, Rt. 1,
Experienced Preferred But Noi Bot 326, Pl . Pleasant, WV 2 Bidrooma At Eureka River
Required Applications Takan 25550, 304-675-3005.
VI ew, New Root, Siding, Storage
Mon ~rt. 10 A.M. ·1 P.Y. AI k ·
Building, $27,500 (Malta Offer)
Somoone
To
Help
Build
Fen
ces
,
qulahlona Fine Jewelry, Gal·
614446-4033.
614-441)..2845,
304-.675·2385.
llpoll•, OH No Phone Calla.

All M akes
Thank

$ 25 .00 REWARD'

Champion
Industries earnings
show 12 % increase

my

Travi s Hut chins
U

SUNDAY PUZZLER

S h ake

hog .

Gallipolis

Help Wanted

To Llv•ln Houaeworit &amp;
slbllltlas aqual y our capabllltlet, Cooking,
e
Deys
Week
frw product with algn~p . Rar.rencet Required 614-44~
41126.
.
Marilyn 304-382-2645 or 1-800All areas. AVON earning poa-

992-6358.

Help Wanted

11

Sunday Tlmes-5entlnei -

!SO MBa
dal.a ... 63

Do you h•v• experience In two or more of th•
following?
oolligltal VAX VMX oparating ayotam
&lt;Novoll Network Admlniotration and Support
•PC Hardware Application Soltwore Support
-Micro110ft Windowo lnalallotion and Support
-Medical Cllnlo or Hoopltal Computar Syotamo

a

mlnuUod
audiooo 1
co•

Poaltion requlr81 Bocholor or A.aoelota DegrM and a
minimum of 2 yeoro ol oxperlonca. Addltionol relevant
axperlan.. will be conoldared In llau of a degroe.

BBS
614-256- 1339

Salary oommenourll• with axperlance. ability and education. Mall rHuma to Human Reao ..cao, Holzer Clinic,
110 Jackson Pika, Galllpolla, OH. 45631 .

�Page-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Scram-Lets on Page D-7
B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SCRAM -LETS
TIRADE
INFIRM
NOUGHT
BIGAMY
GROWER
ENJOIN
WAITING ROOM

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
HOUSEHOLD AUCTION
WED. AUG. 24 AT 6:00 P.M.
Take US 50 &amp; 32 west of Athens and exit onto 50 west
towards McArthur. Auction is quarter mila on left . Signs
posted.
Two refrigeralol"ll one w/dig~al clock side by side; 2
chest deep freezers; 3 pc. bedroom set ; 3 pc . watarlall
bedroom su~e ; glass top table and chairs ; chrome 7
pc. dinette set; washer and dryer; like new matching
womens and mens 10 speed bike; baby bed co"'4Jieta;
table saw craftsman; lawn boy mower ; couch; sofa
bed; hide a bed; coHee table; drop leaf gate leg table;
floor model TV wringer washer; portable dishwasher;
other furniture; hand tools; pots and pans; dishes;
throw rugs; bedding more itmes coming in from
basement and garage . Furn iture is clean and in good
condition .
Terms : Cash or check w/posi1we ID. Food available.
Taking consignments for our Sept. Anlique Auction .

SALE OR RENT 3 l&gt;odroom

""'- oil oloclrlc, l.alart, WV.
$300. plua ~ - 30U82-3121.

Sm.ll, 2br., tumlehsd howe,

part u111Hioo pold, $100 dopooll.
3Q4-j17il.atll2.

AH real estale advertlsng il
lh ~

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
MASON, WV
nJ-5785
AUCTIONEER; RICK PEARSON
OWNER: DENNIS PALMER
Terma: Cash Or Check With I.D.
Not Reoponoiblo lor Accidenc. or l..oao ol Property
Uconaed &amp; Bonded In Ohio, Kentucky &amp;
Weol VIrginia 166.

ES-rA-rE
AUC-riON

nowspoper ~ oubjed lo

!he Federal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 wlllch makes ~ llogal
lo advertise "any preference,
llrrVtaUon or dl~naUon
ba.secl on race. color, relglon,
sex !amiNal st&amp;Ju s or national
origin, or any Intention to
make 8froJ such preference,
Umtlatlon Of' dscrtnlnldlon.•
This newspaper wtl not
knowilogly a&lt;x:ep1
ad\iertlsements for real ealate
which Is In vlolallon of th8 lfllw
Our reader.! are hereby
Informed thai all dwellings
advertised In lt'is 06wspaper
are ava.Nab6e on an &amp;quaJ
opporturily basis.

THURSDAY, AUG. 25, 1994
10:00 A.M

LUNCH

:

&amp; ca..n, no pets,

carpeted

=-~'"-

6 room houH, 75'x:140' lot. 1981

lor Rent
2 Bod._, Air, Calllo lval~
al&gt;lo, Overlooking Tho Ohio
River, In KlniiUgtl. O.poelt,
Rtferencea Required . Foeter'e
UobUe Home P•rk. 614-446-1602.

Champion RV, aloopo 10, 25h.,
27,000ml. Bol" raal n ice. 304-

862-24119.
8 room

hou•. can

be 2
apartmsnts 011 converted tor
storage aree, $14 ,500, 80% lin·
11nclng avallabl .. 8%, 129 But·
tomut, Pomeory.

3 bedroom mobile ·

tor rent In Autl•nd,

$275/mo.

8028.

44

~ua utltltlu, 814-992·

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmanta ,
tumllhed and unfurnished,
Meurtly depoalt required, no

1 Bedroome, 1200/Mo.; 2 Bed$250/Uo. FrM Water,
S.•u-; O.~lt FOf Both R•

poll, 614-1192-2218.

2 Bedroom Mobile Horne For
Rent, Befa.my Lane, 614-446-

$200/llo. All
614--44&amp;-7733,
-5:0CI.

room•

qulr.d, Country Solllng, 614245-01104, 814-258~1101.

117511.

room -

nlahod,

llopooft,

· Ga111polla, FurNo Pola, $350/llo.

e14-7'117-43-45.

2 Bsdrooma, Potter ArM, 14160,

Dopoalt I Ralanncoo Raqulr.d,
You Pay All Ulllllloo, 814-388-

9182.

2 Rooma &amp; Balh, No Kllchon,
Ulllllloa Included,
Betw•n

lumlahod,

Excellen1 Location On Second
Avonu1, Whhln Walking Dislance Of Downtown, Large
Living Room, Olnln~ Room,

KHchan, UIIIHy Room, Bath
Roome, Gerage, 3 lhrM Bedrooma, Urgtt B•ck Verd. Muat
Bt S11n To "lpprKlatt. C.lt 8144-46-3857.

For Salo By Ownor: 3 BR., 1 11:2
Bolh, 2,100 Sq. Ft. Ranch, 2
FlrepiiCH, Gu Hllat, C.nl. Air.

LAriat Drlvo. Walking Dlllanco
To HMC, $85,000. S'-n By
Appolnlmonl, S14-446-1208.
Baaulllul 7 Room Homo 1
M or L, 114-,.511·1307, ~or

-

""'"I
Detail.

MASON, WV
n:l-5785
AUCTIONEER; RICK PEARSON
OWNERS: CECIL end MARY SAYRE
Terma: Caah Or Chack With I. D.
Uc-ed Bonded in Ohio, Kontucky
w..t Virginia 166.
Not Aeeponalbla for AtdclenC. or I.Doa of Property

a

8:30

In 1own. Appllcallona a\llllablo
Village Croon Apia. 1-40 or
cal1814~-3711. EOH.
35 Woat Apt. 2br, 1 both, polio,
c1011 to arocery •~ • MopII:

neighborhood: oftlcloncy
apanment located In Meigs
County, lolally tumlahed wllh aU
utllltiM pakt For mor1 lntonna114-HZ·UiZ,

...n

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR ................... 446-1897
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR .................. 446-6806
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ................. 245-9575

-23 LOCUST ST.

$67.000

hlrmont.

garden tub,
front porch. SH by eppolntment
ont)'. el4-388-8193.

N968. ACREAGE, ACREAGE - ready to bULid on 101 that
dream home or tor huntmg purposes Pr1ced a1 a low
pnce ol $58.500 00 l or 123 ac res

1985 Nuhua mobllo homo, 2

1950. OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL OR TRADE lo• a

throughout,

loaded

pando

wllh
atove,

,..trjgentor

•rtras,

w..h.,.,

cerflrol air. Sol up In Ouol Cl8ak
on comor lol. WKI no1 0111 on
land conlroct. $18,!!00.00 8142~3

1988

Oak Wood molbla homo,
14x7U, 2 bedrooma, er:c cond,

304~75-41653.

HUD approved
mobiM home,

2 bedroom
111
electric,

$250/mo. anct dopoan, 814-1112·
2014.

UMITED OFFERI Now 14K8C
only

mek1 2 paymenll, no
piymenta 1fter 4 par11l lrao
dellv.ry &amp; Nt up, owner I nenc-

1982. RIO GRANDE - 1'/, story 3 bedrm. home. '/, ac.
MIL. gas &amp; woO&lt;l heat v111age sewage &amp; waler. pa tm . 2
car garage. Also. 1973 Champ1on MobLie Home w/3
bedrms Close to the College Rentals are very good m
this area . This property can be sub -d1v1ded . Home and 101
$46 ,000. Mobile Home and Lot $20,000.
1966. COUNTRY HOME/GREEN TWP. - 3 bedrooms.
1'/, story home. garage &amp; outbuildings 5 acres all fenced
Remodeled wllovely kitchen cabmels . lg LA &amp; DR . new
heat pump &amp; good roof
1943. NEW USTING - Home &amp; INVESTMENT - Can be
bought together. New 3 bedroom ranch home w1th large
rms .. large rooms throug hout Loads of oak cabmel s 1n
kllchen. 2 car garage, 2 ac more or less home
1974. NEW USTING- 3 bedroom mob1le home and 4 ac
m/1 land ls fenced &amp; spr 1ng on property Great place tor
kids. 2 car garage &amp; bu ilding $20's MAKE OFFER

lng avallalllo. 304-755.a&amp;B.
NEW BANK REPOSI Qnly 4 loll!

Never livid In, e11U hu new
homo wananl,, , _ dolvory I
1o1 up, flnandng oval~
ablo. 304-755-71111.

Nlco 3br. lrlllor, aU oloclrle,
II replace, A.C 1+IC. corner lot
wfexc. well. Prlced to eell. 304.~76-2661 .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
For salt! 42 acr• of hunting

ground tor dMr 6 wUd turkey,
614w867·3718 call ..rty momlng
or late evsnlng.

lnv11ton And O.velopen: 2.1
COmmorlcall, Zonod Acroa

WHhln en, Umna, Galllpolla,
Ohio. 614-446-IIT77.
W•nted 1o buy· two or more
acroa, oullol&gt;lo to build on and
cloM lo a blacldop ,_, 11141140-24111.

1965. SECLUDED HOME - B1g in everytt11 ng but pnce 4
bedrooms. 2'f, baths. 24' hving rm w/fireplace. 18' din•ng
rm . eqULpped kitchen . full basement. 43 acres MIL of
PARADISE Trails throughout the woods Mm eral rights
and the boundary IS fenced Large barn &amp; outbUtldmg
Also a mobtle home w/elec . water &amp; sep11c $89 .000.00
Ca ll V1rgin1a 388·8826/446 -6806

J 1947. NEW LISTING - KING SIZE FAMILY HOME or
use lhLs super n1ce 5 bedrm for PRIVATE HOME CARE
3 baths , 3 ac m/1 V1rgmia L Sm llll 388 -8826

IN, 60 ACRES - 81 -le\lc l bnck &amp; vinyl
home. 3 bedrms , 2'f, baths, LA. lg eaHn kit Lower level
• w/lam rm, kit , bMrm . bath. utility rm . garage $65 .000
wailing to be restored . Large barn &amp; shed 1t 7 Ac M/L
crop land &amp; paslure &amp; wooded . Close to Holzer All
utilities available

IV59 . COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Olive Sl. 16' door &amp;
ceiling w/lofl for storage . 210 &amp; 220 elect . water &amp; sewer.
6' cement 10 load &amp; un load in fronl. 30)(80 build.ng ,
approx . 3900
ft block &amp; frame . $45,000

,953. OWNER WANTS SOLD YESTERDAY. Call

Camp Conloy, 3 l&gt;odroorn, 2
bllha, $300. pluo dopooll, 1 yr
10110, 304-875-3812.
For ronl· In Rutland, rot.
&amp; clop. roqulrod, no poll, call
614-Jii2-26e1.
,... condllan, 3 *oam1, ret,
clop, no poCa, 304~a.
h

Pl. P-111,

HOO/mo.

:!!!!:, 1 112 both

304'r..,._1201

101wi

e

• I P.ll.l14 245 11:151.

KaniiUQII, 614-44~i786,

USED

245-5053. $110.

Aeg ... ered

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. , 02
Olive St., Galllpolia. New &amp; UMd
tumtture, healers, Weatem &amp;
W11hlr, Cryer, Color T.V.,
Mlcrowavs Stove, Freozer, Air

53

Antiques

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:
FINE ANTIQUES- Amorlco n arl,
china, art gl11e, sliver, furnitur e,
McCoy Roseville, etc. COLLEC.
TIBLE"S· prtnta, posters, tools,
poHery, crocb, bona, Jar~l. bot·

pt1renl1 on premiMs, eh.ampkwl

CfA Roa,._ Himalayan KHtlftll, 2 -.Ius Polnta &amp; 1 S.el
Point. 614-441-G'771.

Baro &amp; Trailer
Poraonal OrLTC C1ealc

Floh Tank &amp; Pol Shoe&gt;, 2413
Jackeon Ave. Point pte...m.

Eloelrle

1973. CLOSE TO TOWN. Thts 3 bedroom mobile home
with '/. acre and a blacktop dnveway. Very lovely fCK U1e
new couple Sdrtmg out or Jne ret~rees Can today Just
can afford
reduced to a 1 thai

BRUCE TEAFORD
Broker
614-992-3562

:IIIU~.

IIIIo umbrollo Cockaloo, $800
Incl.- axtra largo wrooghl
Iron eooa. 114-902-&amp;1114.
Pomeranian pupplao biondo,
rod, block. 304'at$-39Ze.
Prolallionoi Dog Grooming, All
Bro- Rouonablo Rlloa. No
Tranqulll~«e. C.ll Max's Your
Doga Frlond. 28 Yoa.;, e:.pa!Onco, 114--4 II No

LIS- WITH JACK AT HAYES REAL ESTATE

Real Estate General

Raalatorld Dolmallon pupploa.

Septic

1-800-585-7101

Tri-St111 K-1 Academy, Tuppera
Plaine- bale obldMnct, 18w en·
fotcement, PlnOMI protection

Jack-

klnnol aomco, pupa and

y;:S

heatalor
grtte
Fireplace
w!blowar, $100; large bag of
girts size 3 clotha•, $25; Willow
furniture ; 614-843-5453.
Garden Mums: Yellow, Whhe,
Orange And Purple. Taylor'•
Berry Patch, Karr Road, 614·245-

Sunqueet
028
ProfMsloMI
Tanning Bed, Excellent Shapek2
YA,.. Old, 2 Face Tanne,.., Ta •
0~~4~~·"'·· 32 @ $10l51,
61
3.

Super Single Black Race C.r
Watsrbed, $150, 614-24U518.

9047.

Traadmlll &amp; Exart:IM Bike, Now,
814-388-0261.

Garden tlllers, Bhp Troy Bitt, Shp
Gibson, both good cond, a304·

Truck Topper For Shorl Bed
Chevy. Power Rick Lea Prau

773-53311.

Anct Squol Rack 814-44WID5.

New Commsn:lal, Home UnHa,

From $1111.00. Lampo• l..ollono,

Acceaorla. Monthly ..1yment1

motor, V-1; 83 Monza bed; sat of
hub caps tor 1CJJI Thunderbirdi
topper tor email pick-up ; Cll~

lll2-3032 or 814-992-5880 .

1986 Wizard rtdlng i1wn mower,
naoda work, $350. 304-675-5456.

Eplpltono Shorolon QuHar Sam~
Hollow _ , Good Concflllon
~50; Hall Slock Amp. lllrahail
. _ Laney 4112 Cal&gt;lnol 1850,
611 ue 0010 lnar 5 P.ll.

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER riiDb=,
Cheryl Lcmlcy .............. 742-3171 ~

55

Spinet-Cone all plano. Wanted,

NEW LISTING! LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT?
THEN CONSIDER ONE OF THESE:
#I
4.507 acres m/1
'9,000
#2
4.615 acres m/1
10,000
#3
4. 702 acres m/1
9,000
#4
3.661 acres m/1
8,000
#5
4.190 acres m/1
5,000
#6
5.442 acres m/1
10,000
#7
6.148 acres m/1
6,000
#8
10.320 acres m/1
11,000
#9
7.253 acres '!!II
7,000

1---~345.

Trumpet w/caae, mulle atand

and cloonlng ilruoh, $350 OBO.
304~75-3128".

58

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Canning lomaloea 1 pspper8.
TornatoM $3 a buahol, llorahall

Adorna, lola~ Falla, 814-24721168,

Building

Supplies
D. C. Metal Sales, Inc.
Cannelburg , Inc. 45719
Specia liZing 1n Pole
Bu rldings
Designed lo meel your
needs Any size
CHOI CE OF 10 COLORS
FREE EST IMATE S ON
Post Buildmgs and
Package Deals Save
Hu ndred s, even Th ousa nds
of Dollars.
Local Sales Representat rve
WESLEY MULLET
141 Ballow Rd .
Palrioi ,Ohio 456581

JUSTUSTED
8 room Farm Homo. Large bam on 58.5 acres. Minerai
rights go with proporty. Approx.10 miles from Gallipolis
and in Citv School Dislricl To see h - is to love it Celt
Today.
1721

rnponallllo party lo maka low
morrthly DOYmonll. Sol locally.

NEW Color Catalog. 1-1100-4112·

800-287-6308, 614-446-6308.

1978 4x4 Chevrolet; warm mornIng heatsr, &amp;5,000 BTUi Hoover
portable washer; 1i8V Nluan
4x4; 83 Toyota tor p1rts; 83 Nleaan 4x4 tor parte; 2 flat head
Ford motorsj 197'6 International

1104.

91117.

61~308.

814-448-6308.
11 Inch RCA Color T.V. WHh
Mapla Stand ~ ; LAwn Boy
Gaaollna Waedoalor $30, 614446-2316.

Conn lromboue with c:ue vsry
good condHion, $121, &amp;14.1192-

I.Dw Ao $18.00, Call Today FREE

1 Copportone Stove Top, Oven,
Dlshwaahsr, Double Bowl Sink,
Range Hood, 1...U00-2B7oo630fl,

ao~ed Slzaa,

Musical
Instruments

MEIGS COUNTY

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

Anawer KMp Trying.

Gallons

Evans &amp; Jenning• Electric
Wheelchair &amp; Charger, Good
Chair, Like Naw, 614-4'l6-820l

SHERRY RIFFLE
Salea Agent
614-849-2540

Real Estate General

ag2·2403 992-2780

30ol"-11711.&amp;553.

Merchandise

WaH proportioned &amp; is exciting and thought provoking as
any homo available today, in a very desirable area close
to stores &amp; Rl 35 By-pass. This Colonial slyle splil-leval
home has baen extensively rBmodaled &amp; redecoralad
ard is extramely walt kept. A large entry Ioyer provides
accasa to the attaclled 2 car garage with room for froaz'" &amp; to lho uppor or lower level of this home. Lower laval
includos a formal living room, dining room, large updated kitchen, family room wilh HW floor, fireplace &amp; Buck
Stove i2sert, a utility room wilh '/, balh. Upper level
includola·a nice silting area, 4 large bedroom a, one with
deck. Outside includes a large lol wilh patio &amp; open
countr; view. Two sloraga bldgs. You must ..., lhis
homo on lha inside lo appnociala its BEAUTY Be lha
first to phone for appointment.
f71B
KENNETH AMSBARY· REALTOR PH. -245-5855
CLAUDE DANIELS, REALTOIH'H. 388-11612

PLACE LIKE HOME! Aluminum sided
ran ch home. Den. 3 bedrooms. lull basement, lots ol
attic stor age could be easily 2 additional bedrooms, 1
car attac hed garage I 50'x200 '1ot m/1. CENTRAL AIR'
#656
NEW LISTING! 33050 NEW LIMA ROAD! 1 1/2 story
home. family room, living room . 3 bedrooms, eat-in
kitchen . 30' x 30' 1og building and a 12"x24" del ached
garage . 1 acre more or less lawn . Priced $30's #697

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

NEW LISTING! GREAT LOCATION! Texas Road . oil
Flalwoods Road . 22 acres farm with a 2 story home ,
#700
barn and sheds . $65.000 00

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

LACKBURN REALTY

PH. 614 -25 6-16031

~ 514 Second Ave., Gallip~li~·, Oh~ 45631

Real Estate General

IJ.l Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phon~: (614) 446-0008

Wood Realty, Inc.

Joe Moore, Associate 441 .. 1111

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446-1066
Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Redor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Rea~or- 256-1745
Tim
Rea~or-446-2027

LOT TO RIVER-- A 12 x 65 Mobile home, 3 bedrooms,
1 balh, t car garage, front &amp; back porch. Pricad at
$25,000.00.
HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE- 2
bedrooms, a baill, 2 dacka, new root. electric heat, 1 112
acras, mora or lese. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

$60.000.00
N939. TERRIFIC FOR THE OUTDOORSMAN .

J
bedroom mobile home and a 3 room log cabin au on 25
acres. all for the low price ol $38,000.00

HOUSE, BUILDING a 8 ACRES MORE OR LESS,
located in Lawranoa Co., 2 bedrooms, lilling mom, dining
room, kitchon, bath, lg. garage 24x40. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENTIIf

1950. WILL SELL ON TRADE. for a home in the
Gc.olipolis area. Owner amdaus to move to Ga llipolis
Lovely 2 story. 3 bedroom wilh 2 car garage and a garage
apartment lor exira income in orlt! of the nicer areas in
Albany. Call today for mOfe 1nlo .

GARAELD AVENUE- 3 bedrooms, ~ving room, kitchen
ard balh, wilhin walking distanoa of storas ard schools.
Call to see.

1962. FRESH COUNTRY AIR is what you'll have in this
new 3 llec:1room 1611'80 motl1le home on 3 acres with a
large pond and 2 outbuildings. m a n•ce area •n Rio
Grande. Don't hesitate on I his one

HOME ON ROUTE 1 r • · 1 112 balhs, family
room in basamii ·
~J\t'modeled, new carpet In
tiving room, I&lt;»
t , lanced back yard, 12x20 deck.
Cailto108t ~

t432· MOM &amp; POP OPERATION FOR
SALE - Small restaurant with two rental
houses. Property is located in Oak Hill, Call
lor mora details.

1441· OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
TO S49 900111 Ranch slyle home oHer11 3
BAs, 2' baths, LR, DR. kit, hp/cent. air,
garaga and 1.094 A.

1477- LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTS OF
OFFICE SPACE AND GARAGES FOR
TRUCKS ... frontage on Thhd Ave. and Grape
Street CaU lor deta~a.

1461 - EXCELLENT LOCATION, DAIRY
BAR BUSINESS all equrpmenl s1ays , bldg.
approx . 624 sq . ff ., 3 hall balhs. elecl.

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUAUTY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL STORES. SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

1452- RIO GRANDE- 1 112 otory brick home
oHora 4 bra, 1 1/2 balha, LA, FA, DR lull
6nished basamant attached garage. eai1 tor
mora delails.

STREET RESIDENCE .. older home

14511- A HOME MADE FOR A FAMILY.

2 sep units or co uld be converted b ack

1 ramrly dWelling. Faces cily park
VINTON AREA._Very nioa brick v.
, LA, FA, kllchon, DR, HP, cant air,
and unattached garage . Rental
on prop.

31.50 ACRE8- home on property
5 BRa, belh, LR, kilchon, new fumaoo,
burning atovo, aiding, ooma new
• ••,,..., Bam on property.
OAK HIU. former clothing
l:~~~i~~:900, comer lot Call lor mo"'

1473- BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
offers 63.75 acres, mn, moody paature,
tobacco base, 40x60 bam, 22x44 block
milkhouse. 750' road frontage for possible
bldg. sites.
1409- Four lots, 4 BR home, reduoad to
$44,000, 2 baths, LA, DR. lull baaament, gaa
heat/cent air. Comer Iota.
UVE IN ONE AND HAVE THE INCOME
FROM THREE MORE . each unit has 2
apartmenls. Facing city park with all lhe
1478- HEAD ROAD, 6 ac18a, m.1, 3 BR, 2
belh, kitchen, family rm., lull baooment,
garaoa &amp; pond.
147~ 47 ACRES, HARRISON TWP., Elliott
Rd., a1 wooded, good hunting land, $111,800.

1454)- $12,100, 17.5 acroa rnA., Greenfield
Twp., b e - Pottt RD. and Jackoon Co.

14111- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD· Addioon
Twp., 386 acra farm, 3 pondo, tobacco ba•
44xt00 bam wilh concreto llooro. May
consider split (578)

line. vacant bt.
1428- CHERRY DRIVE- just atlhe edge of
10wn. 2 BRo. 1 bath, LA. kltcllen. Gaalteat,
city watar, good invostmont property.

1453- OHIO RIVER PROPERTY located at
and of White Avenue off Garfield. Several
lola $20,000.

U.rge home offers 4 BAs, 2 B, LR w/FP, DFi,
"!""• kitcllan :_2 car allacl1ed garal':, cent. air, hoat

,_,_ ~
1111111111
111111 111111111111111
INVESTORS OR FIRST TIME

_____

conveniences of In town living.

VACANT LAND • Approximately 10 acres IOCII)_ed on
Bob McCormick Ad. Call for mora information.

m

heaUc13nt. air. city water

1411· LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
·,clreav,.UIET- This could be It 49.66 acraa
"'
Ad., 8 yaar old homo with 3 BRa :i
ga•aga
LA, DR, FA, heat pump, 2 dar
•
plus 24x48 detached garage.

ACREAGE FOR SALE- t6 acraa mora or leas localed
clou to Rio Grande. PRICED AT $64,000.00 Realtor

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
HIOO-II!M-1066

1475· BRAND NEW, PICK YOUR OWN
CARPET, DEBBY ORIVE, 3/4 BAs, 2 balhs,
LA w/baamad coiling, charr; cabinets in
kitchen, FR. extra nice view.

1466-DEBBY DRIVE ... ali brick, new carpet
lhroughout, new painl, 3 BR, 2 balho, LA,
kitchen, gas heatlcanl. air, lull baoomant, 2
car attaclled garaga.

LOT IN GRE~N TWP. FOR SALE- t56X100 city water
ard Mwar, electric to pole laval. Priced $14,000. CALl.
FOR INFORMATION.

TO BUILD - 2 lo 5 acres more or less Dnve to White
Ad . to Charolais Lake Or., to Lakeview Ct. Offer~ng llat to
rolling lots ,- variety of trees and beautiful view of tl'le lake.
All amen1ties available . Rural water. underground
electricity, aerato r systems acceptable . Restrictive
covenants apply. Close to Holzer and shopp1ng . FARM
VIEW ESTA:fES LOTS. 2'J, Ac, MIL. $15 ,900 10
$18,900.00.

WE NEED YOUR USTINGSI
CALL TODAY, WE'll BE WAITING.

614 448 4283 Uoro lnlormallon.

Owned.

H'Tt.
·
I
I
newly
ca rpeted lhroughout and fres hly pamled. Read-y to move
1nto and you will lo11e how 1t 1s decorated Tills one w1u go
last so bener hurry.

Usting- Need a greal building silo on 15 1
along Wllh a gas well and free gao (and
i
on merkel ard woo't lasllong. Could be 3 or
I DlJIIOina silas. You can make soma money hero. Cell us

MOBILE HOME LOTS- Racine an&gt;a . Wonderful
location . Aro you looking for a place lo pul your mobile
homo? The&amp;e lots coma wilh saplic system, waiAlr
lines and lap. alectlic pole &amp; sarvice 10 pole. Those
lots will help lake the worry out of buying vacanl land .
Prices var;. Cell for moAI information.

$75, &amp;M-388 1511.

$10 Each, 814-245-507&amp;.

54 Miscellaneous

1938. GREAT PASTURE LAND, 50 acres levello slightly
rolhng with a 4 bedroom !arm hou se . Pr1ced at

1!164. LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION, A CHOICE PLACE

ID•IIR'WIII- New

Full Blooclocl Colllo Pupe, Salllo
&amp; Whla, I Tri-Color. Roady

King Woodbumer, Coal Or Ulod Solo'a For Saia1 .S50, Call
WoOd, 2 Speed Blower, $250, 614-379-2720 Allar SP.M.
liM, llookl, loya1_!lc. AlwAYS 614-446-4680.
WATER LINE SPECIAl: 314 Inch
BUYING ARROwHEADS. Top
dolllr paid. ona ploca o&lt; ono LIMITED
TO
$2,500. 200 PSI $11.05; 1 Inch 200 PSI
hundred. APPRAISALS, 40 Autographed O.J. Simpson Pic· $32.50; Ron Eva,. Enter'Pflln,
yHrs expert.ncs. Buy or Mil. lure Plaque With Certlflcato 01 614-286-51130 Jackaon, Ohio
Authenticity. M 50·15 Mickey
PINH Clll &amp;14-992-2822.
Thompson Strut Tim. Used SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEDS
One Weekend, 614-')12.3118.

I

with plenty of space . Here it is t 7 acres , more less , with
3 bedroom home that includes· living room. kitchen. 2
baths. ulilily room , 2 .;ar detached garage, barn . small
outbuildings. tobacco base. A must Ia see at $55 ,000.00.

Boxsr

Cockal..l AI : Bumlll Ra.d Or

Cloaa 3 Rooao

RIVERFRONT PROPERTY· 2 badroom, 1 balh
mobilo homo situated on approx. 1.538 scAla. large
wood deck overiookmg the scenic river. Newer 16'x16'
outbuilding. Approx. 115 fl. of riverfronlag&lt;l. You'i fail in
love wilh lho view.
ASKING $35,000.00

pupo,la- and ilrlnd1oo, bolh

F - lllce 6 IIIIo Homa1oro

Concert Tk:kats: 4 Tickets To
Wynonna In Akron August 30th,
Concrete &amp; Plastic
300 Thru 2,000

AKC

Well Flarw For Ford

APPLIANCES 256-6832.

story with new roof. vinyl siding and fur'nace. Priced' to
sell. Owner anxious to sell so ca ll us today.

1167. GREAT FARM LAND. 100 acres of greal 1arm
land just waiting to .be farmed wtlh a beautiful 4 bedroom
bi-level that's sure to please the woman olthe house.

NEW USTING- Beautiful 3 badroom , 1 balh homo
located in Pomeroy. All carpeted. Nat gao F.A.
lumace. Alum . siding Shingle roof . 18'x24' inground
pool.
Laryo
wood deck. PRICED TO SELL
QUICKLY!
ONLY S35,000.00

cloga for aola. Ron I Sho
Sllid Sorvlco, 11'1 appolntmonl
only, e1We7-PE111.

a nd

1975. LOOKING FOR THAT COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE

ready Ia build your dream home. Now is the 11me Priced
right at $58.500 00

nla Waterbed S.ml Wevele•
MattrH• end Liner Only. 614-

Commodore 128 Wlth Okldate
Prlnlar, Koyboard, Disk Drive,
Computer Desk. Several Disks,
Included The Print Shop, 614·

Household
Goods

King Sin Walerbed, Mirrors,
C8blnllls, $200; Step Machine
$25, 614-379-2410 .

ranch wilh 4,000 sq. tt commercial bwlding aUon 4 acres.
more or Jess. close 10 Gallipolis.

fireplace. On acre m/1. Only $45,500. 388·8826

1!168. 123 ACRES IN THE OAK HILL, JACKSON area

3711-2n8.
· - -- - - auoon Slza, Soh Sidor Calllor-

C.ller 10 box, 14 memory, brand

&amp;00~!n-3499.

CALL VIRGINIA L SMITH 446-6806 or 388 -8826

reso - tonviin~'"'
Fr:~~~,~~~;~~~
ranch w/new kil. &amp; bath . Lg. family rm

Hll4. NEW UST1NQ, 1F YOU LIKE UV1NQ NEAR THE
RIVER, you must see this one . 4-5 bedrooms. large living
room with fireplace . with 2 acres and priced to sell quick
So hurry on this one. Call Wilma .
·

or eedar ltaln $3.90 g•l. Paint

$200; Dump Tal&gt;lu, $25
614-446-3539.

dryefl, refrigerators.~
rtngn. ::;kagga Appll ancu, 7b
Vln• St....t, c.u tl14-446-n98, 1-

Two story home. lull basement and garage has a great
deal lo offer Designed lor great liv1ng. First lloor has
formal entry with open stairway. formal living room wLth
fLreplace. formal dining room , Cherry cabinels line lhe
wall ol the extra large kitchen. Breakfast room and
powdor room Second floor offers lour bed rooms and
IJath Bedrooms are k1ng size . carpet over hardwood
floors , bath has all new fixtures and Love Tub
Basemen! has huge fam•IY room w/llreplace . bedroom .
exerc•se area, laundry room and storage room . This
home •s of superb quality as th e plumbmg has been
replaced All new a ll covenng. beautiful new carpel
throughoul, new winc:1ows mstalled Spac ious kitchen
wllh cherry cabtnels. island for Jenn ·An range
pnvale showing wLII dec1de !he value is here.

41945.

Tllllge.

Ronc Or Louo: 3 Bodroorn
No Poca, f400/llo.
, RoMnce AoqUirod,

l..annox Fumace 150k BTU $75 ·
Yellow Electric Rang• $45 1981
Lincoln $2,000; 1978 Rabbit

W11herw~

take a look at this lovely b1-1eve1in Grandview Estates 4
bedrooms. full basement with a mce treed lot and privacy
with a beautiful view .

4 llodn&gt;Oma._! 112 Bolito,
llooldanllol - . CiOM To
44f-2056 Evanlngo.

Mobile Home Lola On State

7.

poln1 $7:1l9 gal. LAlli rldwoocl

2278.

Bl1lard-11la pool lal&gt;lo $1000
llrm. 304-382-Jm alter Spm.
Bluo Hldo-A-Bed $65, Older

GOOD

1931. Owner ANXIOUS TO SELL TODAY. Ca ll and make
your otler on 1s 4 bedroom. 2'/J baths, tam11y room. lull
basement. ranch in a nice neighborhOOd

1873. OLD PLANTATION HOME - Bu&lt;ll·&lt;n 1800 s

•ble S.plemDif" lth, R...,..nc..
And llopooft Roqulrad, 114-38811081.

FERERS We Provide That Rare
Com modhyl Not On Clean But
Also Fruh Alrll Thru Oxidation
&amp; Ionization. Dust, Smoke Pollen, Fumu, Mold • No Mossy
Flharsl Amazing Tes1imonloa Local Allergy, Asythm1 Emphez.emy, Etc. Suf1oren FinancIng. Ask How You Can Eam
Payments On Purifier 614-446-

BUYERII Cora Mill Road, county echools,
nice 3 bedroom wilh t car garage, now root in Juno,
situalad on an aero lot MiL. CALL FOR MORE

•983. LARGE STEEL BUILDING wl15.750 sq " MIL.
bath . snack bar, loading dock. fenced, 6 ac . M/L. Well
water. counly water ava ilable Propane gas heaters
Owner may lease w/option to purchase . Can use as a
trucking term1na1. storage lockers. bOat storage, or maylle
a barn dance hall This can be a real money maker

304-675~ .

Big 3/41c. lot, Mt. Ano area,
blacktop road, aU utilities,
.chool bu1 route, S75Jmo. 3048e5-3568.

51

tile tloor, new rubber roo!, 200 amp . 3 phase eleclnc
dnve lhru w1ndow. 5 ton heat1ng &amp; coo ling unll Wi ll sell
or long term lease . Vug1n1a 388-8826

$894. JUST RECENTLY REMODELED 4 lle~room 2

.

new, $43.95, 614·992~166.

1935. COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 940 sq M. quarry

1916. LARGE HOME IN VINTON - 5 bedrm . 2 stones
LA . DR . k1l . !am rm . enclosed porch, 3 bwlding Sales
o«•ce .
bwlding, fenced . black top Onve &amp; palio
Great

2 Bodrooma, In Thunnan, Alllll-

Holplal, Excellenl CondiUon,
~II. $1100ot10. 614-

AKC Aeg'-tered WehMr'ILner
pupploo. :J04-j~r&amp;-TJIIO.

Merchandise

M978. NEW LISTING, 14 acres m/1 m Groonl ield Twp
Barn. dnlled welt . spring. elec ava•lable , beautiful trees
4 Ac ••mber m/1 Long road frontage . A great place to
build a new home Connec ted to Wayne National
Forest

.848. SUPER BUSINESS DEAL, 3 bedroom white bnck

41 Houses for Rent

SocurHy

Queen Size Waterbsd $150, 614-

Route

1874.
HOME with full base ment . appt 1710
llvmg space . oas heat. cent a1r, 2 fireplaces . 3 bedrooms.
2 baths. 2 car delached garage, 30x16 shed , 2 small
outbuildings. small frame home w11h 2 BA and 1 ba lh, 2
homes and bwtc:1ings Sllualed on 5 acres more or less
Priced •n the $70's

Rentals

2 Bedroom N- N.G.H.S. Slovo,
Ralrlgoralor. Wllor And Truh
Paid $321 Plua $325 Oopooll,
114-388-11681.

pocllg-, 814-JII2-220ll.

150,000 BT\J Gas Furnace,
80,000 BTU Gas Furnacs, 1
UHd 3 Ton Package Air Con·
dltloner, 1 UHd Elec1rtc Furnace, Metal Door Fram•. As..

_.955. HOME W/RENNTAL UNIT. Also 2 mob1 le pads
Home can be reverted lo one lg lamLiy home SA i 60
Call lor turther information . $65,000 00 May lradc

· ·

Pl .. , 304-675~084 .

1980. CATTLE FARM Woods Mill Rd . - 50 AC M/l. all
fenced . ILne water, tobacco base , 'J, m1te rd . frontage ,
water tao . septiC . elec &amp; telephone ava1lable Holdtng
lol w/load•ng dock Call for more Information

ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAUT'I'

)04...675-4084.

AHonllon -;-H;-:A-;:Y- :FC:EV"'E
:::R
: -SU
- F--

100,000 BTU Gas Furnacn 92%.
EHiclency, 80% Efficiency, 1·

1976. CUSTOM BUILT HOME - Very neat 3 bedroom '/,
story home w/2 balhs , 3 ac m/ 1 The Lnler•or is mos t
unusual finished 1n beautiful wood The LA has cathed ral
ceilings &amp; loft The wrap-around deck IS a great place to
sw mg &amp; rock 2 car garage &amp; building

P•lnt Plua,

2 booulllul molo BNglo pupa
Ovor 60 PaHomo Khchon Carpol out of poraonol h...lng dog,
In Slock, 30 Pallllina Vinyl In $35. IICh. 30W7.5-3424.
Stock, Mollohan Carpal, AI. 7 N.,
614-446-J&lt;I44.
lKC Gorman Wlro Hair Polnlar,
male, 10 wka okt, otA of hunllng

614-446-6591.

priced.

216 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45 769
(6 I 4 )992-3325

10110118 dog kannal $11111 06

Plnsburgh Pelnts * t ceiling

1f630. APARTMENT BLDG. - 7 Units. Well mamtamed
&amp; ct'OLce locabon overlooking the Ohio RIVer

'956. GREAT FOR THE CAMPER LOI w&lt;lh a 22 rool
camper. with deck and awning 1n Big Fool Park
Campground Just 55500 00.

3Q4·-j~82-37:10 .

dartl-alze w indows, plua 1 small
porch
ewnlng,
raaaonabty

614-1192-U37.

446-6806

home •n he Galhpolos area A 3 bedroom. 2 stoyr w1t h a 2
car garage and garage apartmenl tor extra 1ncome 1na
nice area m Albany $75 ,000 00

grooming, bathing, aU brooda.

0 aluminum awning~~, lh1 llln·

814-44&amp;-2631 Or 614-446-2512.

2 . 180 sq 11 . block bldg bath 1 ac. mll Equ1pment
extra Locate don SA J88·8826

1V71 llobllo Homo 2 Bodraoma,

Pamp.rtld Pete by Sonya, dog

Sl..plng Rooms $15 Per Day.

3 Room Offlca Suite With
Privata Toilet In Modern Flrt
Proof Bldg. Clll Morris Haskins

,944. NEW USTING - PRIME POTENTIAL CORNER.

remarkable
spac•ous home wLth v1ew ol the counly Itali an t•le toyer.
cathed ral ce1hng w11h balcony. 3 BA. 2 '/, balhs. ILVL ng
room w1th woodburn mg ILreplace . equ1p k1 tchen,
breaklasl room ha s a lg wmdow. stereo spea kers
lhr oughout . brass light fLxt ures and much more 2 car
altachec:1 garage. aniC storage . 2 acres m/t Th• s Muse IS
mamtenance tree or besl quality Make your appoLntmenl
and see Ll you don't agree

deliver,
wr.
$300.
1121urot

Plano, $1100· Sola ll.DYI-1 llock, $250. 30W7.5-3424.
$300; Enlor11 1nmanl Conlor $45; I :-:=7:":.:..:.:..:.:..:....::.::..:.::.::...__
ComptAer,
Compo!•• 1650;
...,...., mi.., &amp;nol. old.
LAmpo $10; Twin Bodo $15; S14- 304-ji~!!U bolw_, Unoon441-1203 Aftar 5 P.M.
&amp;pm.

46 Space for Rent

~~

~ ~MLs l

JAMES WILLIAMSON, REALTOR ........ 446-6806

w111

Pets lor Sale

Rooms tor rant ·week or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.

304·71'3-5651, Muon WV.

qt,
r/mat
~

WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR .. ....... 441·0632

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

gray mull••· 814-8411-2263.
1987 Schuh 14'x1U' Wllh EJ&lt;.

67.5-51114.

lreadmlll,
guaranty,

56

8 Ft. Truck Topper, Sears
Treadmill, Gibson Guitar &amp; Amp

LAundry, 614-388-9729.

~

VIRG~~!~!:~!!'::~~~~~E388·8826

Comer of Holloway' &amp; Sye.mor~

SxB lilt-bed utility trall1r. 304-

Condlllonar, Iliac. 614-256-1238.

1981. SPRING VALLEY AREA - Remodeled 3 bedrm
ranch. 2 balns . slate Ioyer emry to the LA . tam11y rm
wtwB f ~replace . lovely carpet throughout . ul1hty rm . pat10.
2 car garage . 24 ' above ground pool w/deck Th•s •s a
very neal Immaculate home and 1s ready for occupancy

TownhouH

Furnished
Rooms

Sl..plna rooms wltM cooking.
Aleo trailer apace on rtver. All
hook-upa;. C.ll attar 2:00 p.m.,

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

3br.,
1
bath,
c:ompletely
rwmodeled. new vinyl aiding,

""'il'

ennlverary ring, lize
. 304-675-6937 .......

4

Worlc boola. 014-446-3151.

Vary nlco, 1 floor homo olf..tng
now
now lurnac:o, $49,500.
Walaon aally. 304~75-3433.

Otll br. tumlahed apt. In Mid-

2 pe living room ast 2 llvln
room chalra, coffH table &amp; an3
tables, 2 twin bedl mise homa

House

Construction Workers Welcome,
Efficiency
Kitchen,
FrN

lng Opporlunhy, 614~41-1608 .

Real Estate General

New non-molorlzed Jane Fonda

Small

61~i580.

meaage II no •niWsr.

Equal Housing Opportunity

ping c..,fsr, wet.,., ..._.,., truh
provided, $285Jmo. EqUII Houe-

2 C.metary tota, Kirkland
Memorial Gardena, $900 tor
both . Huntington, 304..S23-7'0&lt;W.

45

992-6419 or 949-2012
TOO 800-750-0750

laundry

$275/mo. • Utllhl. ., ParklnJI :ti~

St, Henderson, WV.

~

room t.cllh'-, doee to echool

Merchandise

Qulol

c•ll

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

dleport, S2451mo plus dap, 614lm-6225 or 614-1192-5304.

Route 124, Syracuse. Ohio
Senior Disabled Handicapped, one bedroom
apartments, range, refrigerator, air conditioned,
Fully carpeted, energy efficient. Community
room. on ~ite laundry. Water. sewer, trashproject paid. Electric paid by resident.
Rent based on 30% of adjusted monthly income.
2 apartments with rental assistance.
2 apartments at basic rent of $269 or greater.
Hurry in &amp; apply now! 4 apartments available.
FmHA
HUD accepted

New HouH For Sale By Builder!
3 Bedroomal On 3 Ac:r.. , Rur•
W111r, 5 M nu111 From Park.
$58,000, 614-3711-2240.

bedroom, 1 balh MW urporl,
tight gray sxterfor whh dark

LUNCH

814~6-1!111.

8232-$3&amp;8 . Call 1"-1192-8850.
EOH.
Nlco 3 ilr. apl. In Mlddl"'l&lt;&gt;&gt;t,
814-1192-5858.

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS

2bdrm. apta., total electric, ap...

pllancoa

Raqulrod.

Manor
and
Rivenlaa
lplirtrMnta In Middleport. From

Uon

54 Miscellaneous

Pall. Call Befo,. 7 P.M. 61
0336.

room •Pirtmen• at VIllage

FOR SALE BY OWNE A

tem

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

8~

homoa In Mlddlaport, 614-11112!1858.

Trailer

Evening~.

Fumlahod 3 Roomo 6 Bllh,
Dopoall

roqulr.d,

42 Mobile Homes

514-446-0577

Clean, No Pete, Rsference &amp;

Ferry. •Iter

14x1U, CA. All aloe., 11orao aya.

GUNS: 30-30 Wincheator pre 84, 870 t2 gauge pump
lhotgun.
mUCK WIU BE OFFERED AT 12:00 NOON WITH
RESERVE.
1i75 FOfd F100, 302, automatic, wllh camper. Recently
overllauted.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: Thla Ia one ul the boot auc·
Ilona you will attend lhl1 year. Evorythlng Ia nice &amp;
ct... &amp; ready eo put rlghlln your home. Don't' mlaa
thlo onal
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

a

Unlurnlahod 2 l&gt;odroom howe,

Aftar 7 P.ll.

O.yt~;

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

Apanment
tor Rent

Furnished

Q...:loua living. 1 and 2 bod-

NOW RENTING

6:00P11 30U7H335 or
4075.
Nk:e 2 I

Ptltl, Oepos11 Ancf' Reuarences,
$400/Uo., Wuhsr, Cryer; 2 Beef.

a

.

382t.

2 Bodrooma1_Gal11polia1 lit:, No

1182

more.

446~416

Mobllo homo complllaly tur-

mo.

MISCELLANEOUS: Pro-painter sprayer
. TOOLS
· machine, belt sanders, Stlhl-o3t AU chain saw ard four
· extra cllaina, Craftsman li&lt;ii saw, Rocket air compressor, bench vlca grinder, old tool boxes, miecilianeoue
tools, some antique !oola, lew hand tools, ramps, road
ftare kit, antique block and tacklee, cherry teed spraying
outllt for orchard, amall anvil, 14 H. alum. atep ladder, 24
· n. ext. alum. ladder, Simplicity garden lractor, Ford Y.T.
16 HP Hydroatach cruise control 42" cut tractor plua

rooms, $295/Mo., Utlllll11 Peld,
101 Fourth Avs., G•lllpoUa, 814-

wv,

Both, OutbulldlnQI, Gorogo, l.tll

Located 11 mllea aaat of Point Pleaaant, WV, on
Sandhill Road or I mile west off Rt. 33 on
Sandhill Road from Latart, WV.
Mr. and Mra. Sayre have sold their homa and will
be oelllng the lollowing:
HOUSEHOLD a MISCELLANEOUS: 3 pc. Schwelgor
soia, love&amp;eat and chair, 3 pc. coffee and and table so~
two matching blue swivel rockers, Tiger oak library
tabla, brass and glass end table, modem roil top de6k,
rocker, Zenith 25" ramote color console TV, Zenllh ramole VCR, Zenith t9" portable color TV, antique child's
ladder back rocker, round oak table with ciawlaet, 4
modem pres8back chairs, 2 oak bar stools, 2 pc. hulch,
5 bar stools, cllevel mirror, walnut VIet. marble Insert
dresser with carved pulls, matching pair lull size brass
beds, extra nice 3 pc. queen &amp;lze oak finish bedroom
suite, oak treadle sewing machine, old steamers trunk,
baautilul glassware, hobnail milk ~aas, knick-knacks,
punch bowl, Comingware set with browning dish lor
microwave, owls, matching oil lamps, beautiful Gone
with the Wind lamp, 2 matching Iampo, blue lamp, 30day clock, picture lrames, several plecas of Home
Interior, cente~plecea, books, small kitchen appliances crocl&lt;po~ toaster, food processor, can opener, 80 cup
coHee pot, pressure cooker, pressure canner. pots,
pans. 3 pc. copper pan set, kitchen tools, nice linens,
comforts, bedspreads, Sears AMIFM 8 track stereo, old
square dance in 45 records, turntable, Hlllon speakers,
tripod, tape recorder, P.A. microphone, slide prolector,
Christmas omamenla, arrangements, and tree, copper
apple bunar kettle, large a&amp;&amp;ortment ol canning jars,
green canning jars, grantte canner, fan, electric heater,
exercise bike, 2 sets ol fireplace tools, Kenmore dehumidifier, Coleman lantern, Shop Vac, Donkey omamen~
antique Bissell sweaper, metal lawn chairs, redwood
lawn lumiture and more.

:

HoiQhla, $300/mo., call 814-1192-

BEAUTlFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

44

Apartment
for Rent

44

Socond Avo.&lt;Galllpolla, 814-446- ESTATES, 538 J•ckson ~)Ike
from $222 lo $24~. Walk lo ahop
4416 Ahor 7 ~. II .
&amp; movlaa. Call 614-416-2588.
Fumlahod EHiclon&lt;y, 701 Fourth EOH.
Avanuo, Go111polla, $186/llo .
Utilities Peld, 614 448 H16 Alter Fumlahad 2 Bedroom AJI"rl·
7 P.ll.
mont, Al:rooo From Park, CA. No
Pet., Rale,.ne• &amp; O.poah A•
Fumlahed Ap.artment 2 Bedqulr.d. $350/llo. 814~8-8776

Mobil homo oullklrll ol Handoroon,
ulllhloo paid,
$275/mo. piUI $!10 dopoall. 30467&amp;-5641 aflor &amp;pm.

Of An """· $20,000, 814-446-

SATURDAY, AUG. 27, 1994
10:00 A.M

Utilities P.kl, Share Bath, 807

42 Mobile Homes

nl~1 Glttlpo&amp;la

bedroom houoo, Un&lt;:oln

~

ES-rA-rE
ADC-riON

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

i

Fumlahod EHiclency $150/llo.

for Rent

llceneed and Bonded In Ohio
Bualne.. Partner Frank Hutchinson 614-592-4349

a

4!

Two woman were seated outside
the doctor's office . One woman
turned to the other and sighed, "The
doctorhasaddedyearstomylife Too
bad so ~any ofthem have been used )
Silting In the doctors WAITING
ROOM!"

41 Houses lor Rent

31 Homes for Sale

Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson 614-698-6706

Located 6 milee eaat of Pomeroy, Ohio on Rt. 124
at Racine, Ohio. Watch lor aigna.
Mr. Palmer haa aold his home and will be selling
tha following:
ANTIQUE MISC.
9 pc. Mission oak D.R. suite, oak drop-leal table, oak
lowboy, oak sewing machine, chair, metal !win bed, oak
mirror, refrlgerator, like new Whirlpool washer &amp; dr;er,
Maytag wrlnger washer, beautiful antique Gone with the
Wind lamp, Aladcin lamp, fancy chandelier, Roseville
vase, Hull art vase, plus other glassware, 2 old prlnls
&amp;lgned, silver plate ftatware, Burrou!11o adcing machlno,
luggage, Wagner skillet, exercise bike, jars, slone jars,
cast Iron pola, granite ware, old crates, and more.
TOOLS &amp; MISC.
Homellle XL tD1 chain saw, Rldgld pipe die set, saws,
meat saw, hand tools, brace &amp; bits, binders, cords,
chains, seed spreader. shovel&amp;, rakes, garden ho6e,
ladder, tOO ft. '/, Inch rope, mowing scythe, push plow,
Homellte weed eater, B&amp;D hedge trlmmers, 32 sheets
of tin, push mower. Troy Built Econ horse tractor, Murray
1t H.P. 38' cut lawn tractor, 8 H. truck racks, 14 ft . bass
boat w/trolllng motor, plus more.

S(C'\'-~~-~ttf'S8 ~ 2 1 ~9

TO

ANSWERS

Apartment
for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rent

44

August 21,1994

August 21, 1994

1442BUYERS· $29,90D home located at 25
Evans Heights, 3 BAs, bath, kilchen, FA,
fireplace, gas heat. basement WO&lt;Xt&gt;umor in
FA, Washington Elemeniary School.
1438- $17,000 Ewington araa, 3 BRa, BAih,
LA, kitchen, gas heat, C&lt;lnt. air, 8x 12 utility
bldg.
1427- EXTRA NICE HOME ON ST. RT. 7
SOUTH- 3 BRo, LA, FA, dining araa, lull
baaamon~ garaga. Call today!
144&amp;-GREENBRIAR AVE... Oraat home lor
ihe lamily... 3 BRa, FA, DR/LA combo
equipped kltchon, garage, gu heal/cant
'
1455- 10 ecr.., m.1, Sardio Rood, Machan
Twp, Jacklon County, 40x56 barn, 2 ponds,
loncad. Oraat hunting ground.

1474· EXCLUSIVE RESIDENTIAL
BUILDING LOTS ... naar HMC, ail lots
consists of 5 acraa or mora. Cali for details.
WILL TRADE FOR FARM- 27 EVANS
HEIGHTS· $33,900· 3 BRa, 1 1121lory, new
balh, new point, and carpo~ Now Roe! and
gutlllrs.

~~n~~ :::rand .505 ° an acre of lawn.

1472 LeGRANDE BLVD., $53,900, 3 BR, 1
t12 baths. kitchen, LR, gaa heat cant. ai•
allacl1ed garage, fonced yard.
'
1440- ROOMY HOME IN TOWN- homa
olloro 3 BRe, 2 balha, LA, DR, FR, kilchto~
workshop, gaa heat, cant air. Home ~lies
for FnHA financing. Call lor mora deialia.
1.Ut· Approx. 5 acrao wilh frontage

on

Raccoon, baautilul ahaded lot houoo hao 3
BR, bath, LA. kilchon, large unaHachad
garage. OWer11 a lot of privacy and peace &amp;
quret
1465- CORNER WOODS MILL AND SA
325- 33 acres, mA, $16,500. Fronta on

Raccoon.
1477· LARGE BUILDING W1TH LOTI OF
OFFICE BPACE AND GARAGES FOR
TRUCKS... frontaga on Third Ava. and Grape
Straat. Cal lor dotaiis.
142~ LAND CONTRACT- $29,500 ... $2,500
DOWN ... $298 par monlh includeo taxao and
WlsuranC&lt;I ... 1 112 ator; wilh lull baument
Located at 24 Evana Heights.
·

1401- NEED A NEW OFFICE+ A RENTAL
APMTMENT"' 250 S.C. Avo. Nioe olfioe
down11111ira and IPB-1 and elorage

up.

''

�Page-06--Sunday Times-Sentine l

Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant,

------Re_a_I_E_s-t a-te_G_e_n_e-ra-l- - - - -l

71

Autos lor Sale

19114 Chryoler E-Ciau Good

61 Fann Equipment
Ratley whMis. 3()4..87'5--5135.

tloft.$3.500, 114 441 0871.
6~ -

Elac ••~ Gravely, aq her baler,
dlao, a -nelilrd aqor.., 1-..g
- 304-4175-2288.

1f1111ntomatlonal Mldwoet grwL'

1988 FOrd F-150 XLT Supar Cob

Pono. B~II1 .

8'

llaaey F.rgu1t0n 130 Dlo..l

condhlon, 6'J4..992·7316.

11o_, Fo111uaon SOC Backhoo

Pool Halo Digger, 13,1195; 135
Mauey Ferguaon DleNI, Whl1

1480- 2.01 A C R ES, MIL, B ulavi lle Pike, extra
nice hom e offe rs 3 B Rs, LR, k itc hen, bath , lull
basemen! co uld be FR and ext ra BR , cent.
air.2 1x28 garage. Call now!!

RAN NV BLACKBURN, BROKER 446-0008
.

JOE MOORE, ASSOC.

441-1111

q

448-2412.

Two

livestoc k

did Cab, Sit Loaded, Excellent

nn.

Condhlon,
CruiM, Balance
ot War n~nty, 614-446-6491.

19111 S-ID Tahoo, loodod, blk on
bll&lt;, 4.3 l, 614-367.0122 ohor
4:30,

Rr J 'l c!t Vjj1' t - 4 46 f,/106
2J LncUJt St
(;a ll tpnl tr . nlu o 4 )0 Jt'

73

U rmd
~/ (&amp;Me

Hauling,

Mood1y, Call

Creek Truc king, Chuc k
llam•, SM-245-5096.

I

COVERED PATIO OFF THE FAMILY ROOM IS THE
PERFECT PLACE TO ENJOY WARM SUMMER
EVENINGS. LARGE BRICK HOME HAS 3 BEOROOMS, I
112 BATHS .. BASEMENT WITH 4TH BEDROOM ANO
RECREATION
ROOM.
2
CAR
AITACHEO
GARAGE. .CONVENIENT LOCATION IN THE VILLAGE OF
CHESHIRE.

IMABGY
7

_
1

I_

I

18
_ _

1Q811 S..ray f7 R. Boot And
Tral..,, E1&lt;011oro Condition'- Inboard, Outboard, After a ~.M.

WV

S unda y

control rnclot, 13100,

2017 Mondoy.frldoy,

ook lor Jody.

_

0

VACANT LANO APPROX. SIX ACRES. LEVEL TO
GENTLE SLOPE. CALL SOON THIS PROPERTY IS
PRICED TO SELL.

_

_

NN

II
_

_

I
_

_ _
E

1

11 I 11
0

Kop(, I

1112 Ccechman pop-up caml*,
614-1112-71142.

For Solo: 1f111 Holiday Romblott
Compor Troller 24 R., Roo!, Air,
Fully So~ ConlalnedL Awning,
S l - Six Or Moro ",000, Or
Bool Ollar, Soo AI: Gallla
County Campground Bohlnd
Falrgroundo.

82

Home

Plumbin g &amp;
Heatin g

Improvements

F ,_m~n '1

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Uncondltlonol lllllllmo guarontM. Loco! relorancM lumlohOd.
Coli ,.-.281-0tl18 Or 814-:z:IJL
0488 R - Wetarproollng. Eotabllohod 1!1111.
81
Home
CIC
Oorwral
Homo
Improvements
Mllr..nance- wallpeper, llorm
"-"· ,_ling and comp!Oio
Ron'o TV llorvlco, ._lallzlng homo ropalr, complala w l JRIIIU" wuhlng end
In Zonhh oloo MrYictng moot l'lptlr,
mobl.. horM ,.pelr. For tr• Mothar brondo. Houoo calla, oloo tlmale
coli Chal, 114-lltl2-t323.
OO&lt;M II&gt;PIIanco ropalro. WV
304-4178-23118 Olllo 014-4~2454 .

Real Estate General

HMtlng And Cooling.

lnolallatlon And Sorvlco. EPilo
Corllllod. Aooldonolal,
dal. 114-2Y.1811.

84

Corn--

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

. _ PIIIIPO, Air Condhlonwo,
Fumocoo llolllor Eloclrlclon
&amp;14

ue e3oi, 1~2B7.e308.

304-411S-11111.

Real Estate General

114-092~

~•

Howallan Punch 22 R., Dey
en.... .... Boat 480 Ford
olotOYIIIor JVC CO Player, \000
Won Audio Sylllom, Tondam
Axle Trailer, MuM Sell, $4,500,

Am. 814-lo41-01135.

76

Auto Parts

Accessories
B - Priced Tranomloolono,

u..a •

rebuilt, all typea, 81art·
lng 11 $8ti owner li4-24&amp;-ae7T,
814-:rnl-21135, 614-3711-2213.

N8W gu tankt, CHW ton truck
whetla. r~~dlttorw floor rna11,

_

_

r

I'

r I' r 1· r r r

2.38 ACRES-St. Rt 588 Area
Mostly all wooded! This would
make a stately home srte.

ale. D &amp; RAul.:o:(play, WV. 304'
312-31133 .. I

Reducod to ($53,0011)
STATE RT. 588 AREA

NEAT AS CAN BE lovely country

Lovety home, maintenance free.
Clo0&lt;1 ID city. Lot is partially wood-

ed. 3 bedrooms, Iorge living room,
Iota of windows, ·full basement.
CENTRAL AIR Priced in SO's.
BUHL MORTON ROAD
35 Wool Araa, 5.66 acres. Blaclctop
road , excellent neighborhood .

Priced 20's.
HOUDAY HILLS - Lot-JlEDUCED
$3,500. For camping trailer or
mobile homo.

home. 9. 749 Acre s more or less

w/pond lo wa ter cattle or horsee.
400 lb . tobacco base . 24x2B
detached garage. 12x24 storage
shad. Very nice 3 bodroom homo.
Large counlry kitchen wllots of cabi nets .

Li ving

roo m.

Den

w/

woodbumer. Shown by Appll Priced
40'0.

CITY-lOTS-VACANT- Ready to
build on. Call lor mora inlonnation.

tn'll329.

Complete th e chuck le quoled
by Iii ling in t he missin g wards
• you d eve lop lrom step N o . 3 below .

_

&amp;

(Reduced $1,000.110)
ST. RT. SS WEST AREA
In a oorono neighborhood! Homo
faaturea 3 bedroom s, 1'/, baths, din·
ing &amp; kitchon. Homo is in excellent
condition! CENTRAL AIR and in ·
ground SWIMMING POOLI You can
conquer lhe heat in lhis homo. Price
in70'a.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

B ~ 21 ~ 9

tJ3ig tJ3entf !R!a{tg, Inc.

Wil·

Special FMder Calf Sa._: Satur·

day Augual 21th, AI 1 P.M. All

c.n.., &amp; Spring CalvH

YNrtlng

Real Estate General

Ac-tod, All C.Hia May Be
Brought In After 4 P.M. on

OPEN HOUSE
1:00 - 4:00
SUNDAY,AUG. 2l , 1994

Friday. All Contlgnmenlt Are

Welcome,

H•ullng

614-8118-35ll,

Available,

614-592-2322,

Athent llvntock S.l11, Albany,
Ohio.

64

Hay

Real Estate General

74

516-22311.

2 homes for tile plice ol one. Channing 3 bednn ., L.R., O.R.,
kit.. lull basamant. Garage. 2nd Home: 2 badrms . remodeled

HANDYMAN'S SPECIALfll If you like a
challenge, !han lhio houu is for you. 3-4
bedrooms with poton~al for mora. Large lot
clo0&lt;1 to grado school. At !he low price ol
$17,500, you can aHoid !o make tha naadid
improvomon!a.
1220

gra... 30Hi75-3Q80.

Real Estate General

Autos lor Sale

OFFICE 992-2886

tt2-252t, INW m..Age.

75 Boats &amp; Motors

Motorcycles

for Sale

•

BUSiNIESS

OR RESIDENCE OR BOTHII
Locatad along Bulaville Pike,. !his home can ba

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

usad as both a businass and residence. Plus,

lhe18 is a ren!al unit v.ilh saparata utilities. Buy
as an investment or use as ~&amp;sidence wilh help

qive 11s .91. Ca[[. ..

Russell D . Wood, Broker ................................. 446-4618
Phyllis Mlller ......... ................ .. 256-1136 Martha Smith . ................ 379·2651
J . Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2184 Cathy Wray .................... 446·4255
Tammie Dewltt .... ........ ........... 245-0022 Cindy Drongowski ........ 245·9697
Judy Dewltt ....... .... .... ...... .. ..... 441-0262 Cheryl Lemley .............. . 742-3171
Ruth Barr ................................ 446-0722

Henry E. Oeland .•••. 992-2259

on payments . Good location for either.

Tracy Brinager..... "••949·2439

Residence has 2·3 bedrooms, living room, eatin kitchen. Easy to heat.
1210

1m Cadillac Coupe Deville,

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

1118 Pontile Trans Am 400 En-

Henry E. Oeland Ill. 992-6191

RueonaDiy Priced Or Trade For
Gu,., 1!114-t46-8635.

gino, Au,.. Good $1,500, Nagofloblo, ~-·1888 .

Kathy Cleland ......... 992·6191

1871 Chn. Seontdatt 10, 4
good ahapa, $1200. :JOol516-2155.

m.
REA l l O R

2240.

Squtlrt baJa. $1.25 to $2.00 per
b,ale, atfllfl, clover, orchard

1m Ford Plltlo1 loW mileage,
vary good condh\011,
$1100, 6l4-

74

=:&amp;,

and ready to mo ve into.

Transportation

Motorcycles

446-7101 or 1-800-585-710

t981 Ylmoho 650k, runa good, 1987 Nl;t BOO, Low Mlias,
needs some wor $.22.5, 614- $3,300, 6 256-413111.
985 ~235 btfa .. 2:30p.m.
i5 YlS 600R Gonala twand ,_ 1118111111. Ah loo Pontoon boat ,
1988 Honda XA 250 $915, 614- In Juno, $5,700. 3~5 .
EYWirvdt, drive on trailer,
245-6886.
. 30W75-4483 after 8pm.
Molorcycl•, KXSO $500 , 614-:J71.

1154 &amp; 1154'/z SECOND AVE.

&amp; Grain

Hay-ltrgt round balM, ml xocl
gr111. Square bales, orchard
9,..., ltraw tnd alfalfa. 304-

71

Answer to Scram-Le18 on Page D-4

Real Estate General

NEW USTlNGI SEE THIS FOR
'
bedroom ranch, 1 112 balho, living room, &lt;~&amp;t-in
kitchen, ba10mant, Culligan wa!er oyatom .
Nowar roof and oome carpeting. Nice lawn baing
approx. 2.75 ac..a mora orlo...
1m

~.

LARIAT DRIVE Nice
.
.
Close to hospital and shopping. 3 ba_d room
brick ranch is comple18 With eat-1n kitchen,
living room , 2 balhs, family room and more.
Nico patio, large flat lot. Pnced at $77,500
1200

11183 Pontiac 1000 limbed edition, 2.5 lour cyl, $400. IQM
Chov Chovll SS"...l, door good
cond 12,500. 304-'r r.t-5738.
18M C.labrlly Slatlon Wagon
WHh TIN, CNioo, IMIFM ca..
Httt, Hew llolor, New Struts,
P00111C

rteru,

Motor, 12,200. 814 U6 8253.
1ge Codlllac: O.VIIIa, Good
Condhlon, 114-388-11081.
1e85 0«11 Cullaao 350 Chovy
llolor 12,000 OBOL Pro 12 MTX
Spoakorbol lllonln Old 1300,

THE KIDS WILL BE SO HAPPY livinjlthia clo0&lt;1
to the pool and Mom or Oad can enJOY the golf
couroa. L.ocatad In a nice countJy utling yet just
mlnu!ea !rom town, !hie lovely 2 elol)' offaro 3
bodrooms, t bath, living room, diinong room .
Enjoy the utling from the patio area or one of
the porchao. Priced o! only $47,000, you can't
affoid not 1o call Carolyn today.
1600

611141!1 1001.

111111 Fonl Tampa, 4 &lt;!y., 2 door,
auto, oxcollanl condftlon, 61462·7158.
Qdo S/W, high mllaoga,
uctl'-nt ruMing condhlon,
$1500, 132 Butternut, Pomeroy.
-

a4H8116.

Auto, 89K Mlle1, Excellent Con-

dHion, $5,200, 114-245-5817.

1i87 Plymo,.h ROllant 4 Door,
Excellont CondMion, TIN Whool,
Ctulaa, Hloh Mileage, $1,750,
1!114 446 85611.

1187 Trw,.. Am GTA Bright Rod,
350 Tune Poll, Full lnloctlon,
Loaded, 2 Door, Automotlc, Loao

Than &amp;Cl,ooo Mil•, 1!114 416 4816.

191111 C.vollor RIS, 2.5L, A,.o,

AC, Power l.Dck.t, Tllt, Cruln,
CaAIIte, Alum. Wh. , $2,800,
614-446-4365.
1988 Ford Escort Wagon Air
Condttlonlng, Low Miles, Good
Condition, $"3,300, 1514-t46-4095.

1988·Ninely
Eight
Regency
Brougf;man,

Old1.
one

owner! Exc. Cond. 76,000 mi.
Loaded, full power, $6,800, 6,._
446·1000, LNvt M•. .gtl

I

Thrae
, t
ranch will family
room, Nt~n kitchen and living room with
fireplaca. Locatad In GIHn Townlhip, thia home
offers immadiall poasaasjon. Call Lora!la loday
for an appoin!ment to - Iilia affordable homa
plicad at $48,000.
1500

BI-LEVEL - lmmaculataly
maintained homa offere m0111 than most in lhls
range. Consider 3 bedroomo, 2 baths, Uvlng
room, family room with firoplaca, garage, pool,
deck, hNI pump/CA &amp; comer lot. On top of
tha~ ire all in grat lhapol Priced to sell at
$59,900.
1215

11682

OWNERS
TO $47,900
Remodeled 1 1/2 llooy home conoiating of 3
badmojmo, 1 1/2 bathe, living room, dining
room, ldtcltan and mora. Over 41 ac..o, bam
and farm pond. Nice quie! plac4&gt; to live, call
today for an appoin!mand
1612

POMEROY- Bailey Ru n Road· Approx . 53 acres with free

garage.

REOUCED $29,900

RACINE- Main Slreel· A 19BB Clayt on double wide sr«ing
on a 75x 115 level lot. Home has 3 bedrooms and 2 baths.

ASKING $26,500
RT. 143- A 1 1/2 slory, 4 bedroom, 1 1!2 ba1h home lhal has
a beautiful stone fireplace between liv1ng room and dining
room. has spacious eat·m k1t chen, a larg e 2 car garage with
wo rks hop, cell ar w/sto rage above. and is aU sitting on

approx. one acre.

$49,500

HYSELL RUN ROAD· A spaciOUS ranch home w1!h free gas
s1ning on approx. 11 acres. Hom e has 3 bedroom &amp; 1 .112
bath s Also th ere is a garage and above ground swtmmmg

pool.

$86,500

POMEROY- E Main Streel- A 2 story home wilh 3
bedrooms and one bath . Front &amp; rear parches

$26,900

MIDDLEPORT- S. Third· Gorgeous Hrstoncal home with

damage, 83,537

mllu, 5 ap., black wlgray lntor-

$69,000

lor, PS, PB, PW, AC, $1700, 114-

949·2600 dar• or 614-Mt-2644
IVtnlngt.

19BQ Fl10blrd, loaded, T-Topa, V6 1ut0, $7,000. llC cord, 3()4..
61S-1874.
Oodg• Carav1n, nice
$4495. 1990 Lumlno Euro,
$5995. 1939 Dodga Sh.adow,

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY- A 3 car garage now being
used as a used car lot. Could be mechan1cs garage.
Weld 3rs· elec &amp; gas and air compressor. Has 14x65 Holly

Pa•• mobile home also. With mobile homo $100,000
Without mobile home $90,000

1990

vood ecnoo1 car $1895. 1981

Chavy Corsica LTZ, $4285. 1ill1
Chavy S-1D, $4250. 1939 Ford

WONDERLAND- Redwood home • old log
cabin- hunting cabin-worftehop/garaga-bama78 acres,
The quiet beauty of woods and
unique landscaping make on ideal 0&lt;1tting lor
lhie oya appealing ruatic ranch homo. 3
bedrooma, 2 batha, epaciouo living room,
28132 family room with woodbumor or
fireplace, glaasad in sun room. Log cabin is
approx. 150 yaaro old or mora and hao fuel oil
'"mace, fireplace in0&lt;1rt in Jiving room, 2
bedroome, balh. HunWig cabin ("''prox. 20x32)
lo nasllad in the woodo olfering hv111g room with
woodbumer, bedroom and kik:han. Garage Ia
32x48 wilh a!lached 24x32 heatad wol1&lt;1hop.
Bolh have concrell floors wilh 12' oeiling8. All
ol thie ia located on 78 .86 acres, m~.
completely fenced, tobaa:o ba.., stocked
pond and 3 vary wall maintained bama.
Blacktop road. You hava to i! to baliava
how nice ~ 1118.11y lal
1101

mn.

LOTS FOR SALE· Located on Jackaon Pika
and old Rt. 35, lhia property io private and
convenient Priceo atart o! $6,900. Cal for more
information.

HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IL. And your
heart will leU you to mak• thio houM your
home. Romodolad I 112 llory home incfudoa
all the chann of your gl&amp;ndmothar'o home--just updatadl 3 bodroomo, living 100&lt;11, Nl-ln
kitchen and dining room . Bonuo: lafVe block
building with polenlial for many uooo. $52,000
1214
AFFORDABLE RANCH Very nice brick &amp;
cedar ranch etyJa home In good nai~rhood.
FNturao 3 badroomo, 2 lull batho, kil&lt;:hon,
dining room and living room with finlplaca. 2
car garage. lafVe rear patio. Call Dav• for
mont info. $86,500
1233
·omCE SPACE FOR LEASE- Nlca offioo
buildng dolignad opacifically lor offioo apace.
OWnere a.. ftexibla on !enna and lp8C8. Aa
much at 3600 oq. fl. available. Good location
oil Rt. 7 clo0&lt;1 to bridge. Call Dava for more
information.
·

1223

OWNERS AHXIOUSIII Beautiful Spring Valley
home. A muat home lha! you'll juat fait In
love with. Outstanding faatur"" include custom
oak kil&lt;:han, ramodaled balhroomo (2), living
room wilh attractive warm fireplace. 3
bedroomo and cozy dannamily room. All in top
nolch condition . Plue full ba0&lt;1mant, 2 car
garage and a vary large traa lhaded deck in
lha bad&lt; yard Col lor appointment 110'1 1211

AFFORDABLE BRICK RANCK- Vary nlca 3
bedroom home offara much mo.. than most at
thio price. Large living room wilh filliPiace,
fonnal dining room with china cabinet, Nl~n
kitchen, dan, pluo full ba~ement with family
room and...,, room. IJ&lt;IIY prlvalll backyard willl
lnground pool and Ia~ patio. 2 car garage,
gas heat and central atr. Newer 1001. Priced to
move quickly at $70,000.
1401

POSSIBILITIES ARE ENDLESS I Over 14,000
sq. ft. of offica, warehouM &amp; garage apace .
Naraly 1 1/4 acre land in the h&lt;IBrt of town with
322' of st1'1Mt frontage on 2 differan! atreo~ts .
Over 21 ,000 ~- ft. of pall&lt;ing lp8C8. Muchm
much mora. Blnldlng in vary good ..pair. Call
Dave for more dotaifat

WELL CARED FOR SPUT LEVELl L.ocatad on
At 160, thio homo hao bean well malntalnad and
io In move in concition. With a slightly diffaranl
lay out than your average ranch, thia home
o~oro 3 bidroomo, 1 112 baths, living room and
eat-in kitchen. Lot maasurea 100x300 allowing
lor plenty of backyaid fun. Priced at $64,900.
1218

TaunJs ehow car, $56i5. 1887

Cllovy Blazor, $44115. 19H
Plr'""'h Fury, 32,000ml., 1100.
1981 GEO Metro, 191195. Valley ttock trallar, $411'15. Uud
6 horoa trailer, $1000. ScoHy'a
Uted C.rw, New Haven, WY.

304-1182-3752.
1990 Dodga Drnoetr LE, V-41,

euper cl.. n. 1187 Chrywler
t.Baron, eharp. loaded. 31)1..

POMEROY- Crew Ad - A large I 1/2 acre lot with a

19111

back deck, and much more.

675-8247.

Oldomobllo

Cullan

Sup,..rne Excellent CondiUon, 1
Owner, PIW I Door Locke, Tin,

Cruloo1 Air, 4Q,OOO Mllaa, 21,DOO
Mit• Lelt On Warrtnly, $7,iOO,

814-448-11281.
lill2 4 Door, Honda Accord, Elcollont CondHion, 5 Spaod,

Barrington doublewide, sinmg o.n a full baserryent. Home has
4 bedrooms. dining room, fam1ly room and m-ground pool,

RACCOON CREK FRONTAGE &amp; 10 LOTSI
wil conlidor oeling on land conaact 1o
qualified buyer. County walar available!
Owrt~~r

LOCATED ON BULAVILLE PIKE- Thlo 2 atooy
home offero aflordabllity. 3 bidroomo, t bath,
living room, eat-in k~chan and full baMmonl
Deck ovariooking nica olzid lol $3G,900 1205
OLD-FASHIONED CHARMII Thla opadouo 2
slory home was ramodaled only 2 yea111 ago,
with exceptional quality In mind. N•w wiring,
drywall, carpet, all:. Offoro 4 bidroomo, ba1h,
utiUty room, large ldlchan with new oak cabinets,
range, raflige!Btor &amp; dilltwalhar. Uvlng room
with wood palat olove, formal dining room, vinyl
oiclng. 1 car garage. AI of thio and MORE wilh a
scank: river view.
1102

FULL BASEMENT· lor storage or play araa for
the children. Thio 3 bedroom, I 112 bath 111nc1t

MUST SEE $49,900

bedrooms, dining room, hving room , kitchen, and new bath
on th e first floor. Th ere is a large finished room in the
base ment Has 2 porches, carport, and a large new deck.

.

Tl-, 35 MPG, 87,000
Hlg-r Mil•, 114 446 0021.
IH3 Pontiac Grand Am V-41,
Automollc, Loadod, 1~000 Ulloa,
19,250, 614-258-11111 ur 814-256-

$25,000

DO TilE TURNER, Broker .......................... 992-5692
BRENDA JEFFER$" ................................... 992·3056
JERRY SPRADLING ......................... . (304) 882-3498
OFFICE ............. ............. .............................. 992-2886

I

NEW USTlNGI WOULDN'T IT BE NICE TO
HAVE SOMEONE ELSE PAY YOUR
MORTGAGE PAYMENTS? Than let !ham, buy
thia home with ., additional mobilo holM that
hao on axcallont view olthe Ohio River. Frarn•
home hao newer gao '"mancalcantral air
conditioning, 14'x70' mobile home with 2
bodrooma and 2 full batho, nlca deck and 2
storago buildingL Approx. 1/2 acra fo~ minulla
1111111 town, oily ocltoolol Unbaiawabla price of
$37,900.00. Callladayl
1681

COIIIERCIAUII IIULTIPLE USE QALOREI
ldNI lor many typea ol bulineoal Uating too
nume111111 111 man!lon In thlo edt calf for mora
informalonl
111113

POMEROY· Union Ave .· A one story home wilh 2

Loretta McDade· 446·7729
Garnes·

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1007

1687

UN
RANTYI il&gt;w
maintenance home (brand new). One etory
ranch 3 large bodrooms, dining room, living
room ' kil&lt;:hen calhedral cailing. 2 balhs v.11h
akyli!ihts. Over 1 acre lawn . Electric heat
punnp.
1617

.

LOOK $15,000 OR make an offer. Vinyl siang
home conaiating of 2 bedroO&lt;na, living room,
bath, kitcltlln. Nica lront porch . Level lawn.
1588
ACREAGE- t 2 plus acrosl Road frontage,
CO&lt;Jnty water available. Nica homooi!e. 1635

IISTORIC HOME OVERLOOKING TliE CfTY PARK AND TliE OHIO RIVERI Spacious homes that are ideal for
restoring or a nice home/condos, or simply just Investment property. Some have been remodeled. Call today lor your
own private tourl

EVERYTHING YOU COULD WIN, AT A
PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD..: 3 bidroomo, t
bath vinyl lidad ranch on a lafVe lot. Offe111
large lving room &amp; kitchen. Full unfinilltad
~~ will a 2nd balh that you can finillt 1o
lUll your Mada. F..lltly ptjnlld on tho lnllida.
Juot llalld at $411,000, don'! miN outl Call
carolyn.
1605

faa!u ..a a new family room, ..placornant
wlndowo and aana new ca~p&lt; ting ao w81t.
Don't dolay, call today!
ISQZ

-

YOU BETTER HURRY! MAKE YOUR
APPOINTMENT TODAYI Super ranch home
wo1h 3 _badroomo, extra nlca kil&lt;:hon, family
room, hvong room. 24'x30' detached garage
lnground pool, si!uated at 132 Adolaido Orive'

SYRACUSE· Nlca 4 bedroom , 2
ranch atylo home with ceiling radiant heat
back patio area, lltad, hardwood floor and
carpeting, attic apace, un~ air, cable hook-&lt;Jp,
.30 acre. Located at Ruotic Hille. Nice
nalltlborhood.
ASKING $39,500

PARK &amp; RIVER VIEWI Choou from one of
lhiM propelllaL Beautiful location ovariooking
city pall&lt; and river. Each property varies from
ba1ng remodeled lo noading soma remodeling
dona to lham. All have lrrasistibla chann and
old-fuhionad character. lnveolmont
opportunio/ for ..ntals or condominiumo. Call
Oavid W11eman lor mora details! Oon't
hesjta!el
1224

AUII Stereo Ca...tte, AC,

~:Z.

income producing property. Two - 2 bedroom
apartman!e pluo ra!ail area. All unite pra~ently
ranted. Clo.. to downtown area. Comer of
Cedar and Thiid. Call lor mo.. inlonnation.

RUTLANO· McCumber Road- Approx one acre wilh a 1973
Kirkwood mobile home. Has 3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen .
and Iron! porch.
$22,500

unusual orn am entation on the top of the roof on porches
Has 4 bedrooms, gigantic living roo m, modern pretty
kitchen. 2 baths and above ground pool. Many more extras.

198V Dodgo O.ylono, drivoro
finder

WHAT IS IT? FIVE ACRES ALONG THE OHIO
RIVERI Owner haa just reduced the plica to
$59,9001 Newer 3 bedroom doublowido home,
large bam, detached garage, plus on additional
mobile homo.
1666

gas an d royalties. A one story small house, and a one car

1987 Honda Accord LX, 4 D-.

fronl

uu-•--•-•S9

Middleport, OH

n.uum

Iiiii Oldamoblla Cullan Clorra,
Good nr•, No R'--t , hklng:
$1,800, 614-245-111711.
Iiiii Rod C.naro $1,200, 814-

mn,

REWARO YOUR
i extra
large custom brick ranch on a large 1.25 acra
lot. 6 bedrooms, formal dining, ~ving room, lull
finished basement. Rolax in the hot tub
situatad on a 16'x30' deck. 3 car garage. Clooa
1o !own location.
1685

205 North Second Ave.

804--.7820.
1184

Office ..................... 992·2259

COMMERCIAL LOCATION· Building on 1.10
aero,
in Bidwell. Property conoiete of large
building wilh show room lor your bulinass. Two
apartment• and an unfinished oecond Hoor.
CaD Lonttta for more lnlormation.
1503

AFFORDABLE FOR YOUR
BUDGET! $36,500.001 Ranch atyla home
consjsting of foyer, living &amp; dining room~,
kitchen, alactric heat pump/central 011
conditioning. Newer oltingle roof, 2 car da!achod
garage wirod lor 220.
16118

NEW L18TINGI PERFECT HUNTING
QROUNDI 50 Ac,..·S17,500.00f Mootly all
-..1 land, llituallcl at • paved oounty road. Old
log cabin &amp; 2 bama. County wallr avaiablol
f70Z

PLANNING ON BUILDING THAT . NEW
HOME? Hare is 9 acres mo.. or lou sotuated
in Gllllll Townlltip. County wa!er availablai&amp;n
NICE WORKABLE FARIIII Over 70 ac..o. 2
Siloo, 40'd0' lhad, 20'x28' bam, ta'x42'
mllkhouN, plua •v•ral oth•r bulldlngo.
Fencing, pond, -•ral IMt of lllld frontage.

Neat 2-3 bac*oom home. ldMIIocatlon. KT7

NEW USTINGI COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE! 3
bedroomo, over 2 acrao. Home hao vlnyllliding
and dock. Partial basement.
16113
NEW LISTING! GROWING ROOMI Eight
acral, mo.. or laM, of uncrompid opacal PLUS
a ttrao bedroom, 1 112 batha, living room, dining
room, laundry and kitchen. Detached 3 car
gatege.
Mn
NEW USTINGI 11 ACRES OF VACANT
ACREAGE! County wa!er available. Situaled
oft George• c.... k Road. Within mlnu!eo of

GalpoliL

1690

'

Rleldl,.lal
or
comtntrc ltot
wlrtng, new MrYk:e or repel,..
Miller UcwtMd elec:utcll n.
Rldanour Eloctrlcal, WV000308,

11138.

E)

1

MHOIIl

81

Times-Se n tlnei ~Page-07

1981 Four Wlnno Boat 11 112 A .
Long 1~ ~~ Low Houre Gorago

I
I
I
I I I 1J I
9

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

11188 Pecor, 18 117, Til-Hull
flborgluo
· 70
llorcury oil- lnloctod,
28 hp.
lb.
thNII, Mlnnk.otl trolling r.mota

Two woman were seated
· outside the doctor's office. One
woman turned to the other and
sighed, "The doctor has added
years to my life. Too bad so
many of them have been used
~i~~~.9 in the doctors - - --- - - -

_

Muoc Soli: 11194 Modol Compar
Trail• 30 R. Soli-Contained,
Roo!, AlrJ.S-. llany Eitraol
IIO,SOOJ._':II'~Iolll Ollor, Soo AI:
19 A . HI Lo All llalal C.mpar, Oollla .........,. Compg1'0111\d Bo12,100, 114-367-78111.
hlndFolrgroundo.
11117 Slcylarlo, 18 112 ft, good
~Ilion, phone aher 5:00, 114Services

79

114-3117-4880.

I
I

E

WR 0 G R

BRICK RANCH ALLOWS YOU TO S·P·R·E-A-D OUT. 3
BEDROOMS ON MAIN FLOOR. 4TH BEDROOM, FAMILY
ROOM
WIHOT
TUB
IN
BASEMENT.
NICE
KITCHEN/DINING AREA. REAR DECK, AITACHED
GARAGE PLU S SEPARATE WORK SHOP/GARAGE..ONE
ACRE LAWN. $87,000 (Ageot Owned)

A DREAM PLEASERI ELEGANT ANO CHARMING 3 BR, 2
112 BATH BRICK HOME HAS FAMILY ROOM PLUS REC.
ROOM . FORMAL LIVING ROOM. 2 FIREPLACE S.
CENTRAL AIR COND. IN GROUNO POOL... MUCH, MUCH
MORE... RIVER
VIEW. .. PLEASE
CALL
FOR
AN
APPOINTMENT ANO ALLOW US TO SHOW YOU THIS
BEAUTIFUL HOMEI

Trlpple

I

uN
6

5

LAND, TREES AND SUMMER BREEZE ... YOU WILL
WANT TO UNGER ON THE SECOND FLOOR BALCONY
ANO ENJOY THE VIEW. UPDATED HOME HAS
HARDWOOO FLOORS AND FIREPLACE IN LIVING
ROOM. OPEN STAIRWAY.. LARGE FAMILY ROOM.
CUSTOM OESIGNED KITCHEN ... 3 BEDROOMS... 2
BATHS .. 2 CAR GARAGE. .MUCH MORE. ..NEAR CITY.

ALL LOCAL REAL ESTATE USTlNG, IN COLOR, IS NOW
AVAILABLE, PLEASE STOP BY OUR OFACE FOR YOUR
FREE COPY.

1888 Toyota 4x4, $4,500, 814-

Anytime,

I

wftralltr, 10 H.P., "$~utrat,
OJCOIIonl oondhlon,
, 6141192-7024.

G0 T H

~-"·.~~~Gil

448-6868.

Anywh•re . Producers, Hillsboro

Every

•• c:.uiADAY. - - -

..._.,
NEW FREE QUAUTY HOMES BOOK SHOWING NEARLY

Wlndowa, 12,700. 614-258-1618,
614-258-1252 .

388-1136e.l

I

I
MFO
Coprico
lnloutboord, -.p llo"""'u,
open bow, full white canvu
co-, w~ral... 304·713-11540.
11185 24' Hanio pontoon boat
17112

I I I I I 1~
I'
I_I I I I I _

.

1188 Dodge Caravan v-e.
Automatic, Delivery Van, No

Tr11d1 For FMdar Ca lves, 614-

1

3

de•

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Cowt And Cllvn For $.a la Or

I

FRIMIN

pd . . . . .

h ....

2

for Sale
614-37t-2233.

I
I

DIET A R

75 Boats &amp; Motors
12 A . Aluminum Flohlng Boat
Oood
Trolling
BOilary Tral._,
LJio ...._,
1'00- Firm,·

Rearrange lhe 6 sc ra mb led
w o rd s be low 1o make 6
Pri nl lellers ol
11rnp le w o rds .
eac h in 1ts line of sq uares .

rdd

u,.., (mourited),

Baby Plga, 614-245-9249.

uv..tock

~

....

Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant,

GAME

0

I

$4,000, 614-Mi-2083.
Chovr01111, Ford, Dodg• pickup
bode. Shor1 or Jong. No ru8t .
304-675-8288.

Real Estate General

4215.
Two 1700 BIJI;hal Bahlan Com
Cribo, S!andlng 1800 Each, 814-

63

1091 OMC Sonome 4 x4 Exten·

mat &amp; 2 wlntN

NH 7ft hayblnd, NH 351 grinder
mlur, International Fannall 806
tractor, all good cond, 304-213-

lOad With Aool, 614-245-9212.

•

•

WORD

Edilo d by CLAY R. POLLAN

1

BQ Ford Ranger with loppar bod

Loader, $8,350; 614-286-6522.

New 1-folland Silage
Wawona Power Taka Oft &amp; u-n-

........... 'C
0

1990 Chevy 4S4S9 Excellent
Condhlon, $13,SOO, 51 M MIIH
Phone: 811J.245-588B.

-

AHTBOim

bed wlllbtrglu • lopper;
72,000 miiH, lollded, excellent

llaeeey Fer;ueon T03S Tractor
With Buoh Hog, And Blade,
~.ISO; M-oy Fo111u10n 6S
With P~ And Cuttlvator, And

446•3636

bed WICIInle racka and dump.

304~N.:Z238.

Ford 8N Tractor &amp; Many Extra

Or.t For Snow Remov.l Thla
Wlntor, ,i,800, 8,_IHISII1.

Real E state General

Realty

oa:J5.

Pomeroy-

T~~~;~~~y 'O© R4tl~ - ~tlr~®

Canaday

sr.··

2 Axloo 5 &amp; 2
427 Gu PS,
Sol Up to-Or Mobl o Home &amp; Fifth
Whaal, SIMpor $1,500, 814-441-

2 1, 1994

21 , 1994

'•--~---------------.-•
r '' " ~ir

1976 Chev~ene C65, 2 112 Ton

Choln Sow boro I chalna 10 lh
almoM My .... Beet prkee In
arM. Sldera Equlpmanl, :JOole7S·JII21 0&lt; H00-2TI-31117.

1522.

Real Estate General

72 Trucks lor Sale

1043.

Trodor, U ,t95_j 3,000 Ford 8
Speed, Llva PrO, S4,Q50; 1030
CU. Whh Plow S4,6SO; 614-2JI6-

August

WO&lt;k, Cor ti,:ZOO,
814-448-11253. II
FAST CAR
1m Z-28. N•w 350 engina,
CAM, ohlft kh, I'OSI, Corvallo

11188 4 fiorw Goooenock Trailer,
5 Flnlahod O..Oolng Room,
Seporalo leek. Excellent Condl5 A. Buah Hog $125,

August

wv

SIMPLY BEAUTIFUU Really nice 10+ acres
(correct atiiOIJnt of acreage to ba do!ermined
by survey), pond and 1992 14'x70' Manaion
mobile homo which consioto of 3 bedroom• &amp; 2
balhs. Cily echoolsl
t686
GUESS WHAT? Thia 3 bedroom, 2 bath homo
hao over 7 ecreo. Fully equipped kitchen. 2 car
a!lachad garage. All this and mora aituatad in
G""'n Township. Cily achoolal Priced in the
SO's. Won't laot long!
1688
QUIET SEmNG FOR THAT NEW HOMEI
Nice building lot approximately 1OO'x300'.
County wat•r available. 17 ,ooo .oo

1681
CHECK OUT THIS PRICE? $34,000.001 3
badroomo ranch, ,..,.r 1001 &amp; vinyl windowo
iving room, &lt;l&amp;t~n kitcltan.
drive
car carport. Sto..ge building! Call for yoor
BPPDI'I!mant todayf
1680

eonc...

1

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

Page-08-Sunday Times-sentinel

Bodine
captures
car race

Small grain cover crops should
be planted by mid-September
GALLIPOLIS - Farmers are
now in the process of making their
fall seedings of legumes and grasses. Th1s should be accomplished by
the middle of September to assure a
good chance the seeding is strong
enough to survive the winter.
Although this is a busy time of
the year, now is the time to think of
planting cover crops. Any time you
have a low amount of ground cover
going into winter your soil will be
subject to erosion . Harvested
tobacco, com stage, and many vegetable crops will leave too little of
this protective cover.
Wheat and rye are two of the
major cover crops seeded in this
area. Wheat can be seeded anytime
after the October 4th Hessian Fly
date . Wheat seeded before tltis date
could be subject to Aphids and
Hessian Fly damage. This damage
may not be severe for those wi1o

Your Gallia Soil and Water Disusc the cover crop tor plow down
as is the case for many tobacco trict has a 10' Tye, a 6' Tye, and a
growers or those who plan to bum 5' Truax no-till grain drill ror rent.
the cover crop for no-till , However Just call the district office at 446if you arc planning to harvest the 8687 for drill rates or any questions
cover crop as grain, stage, hay, or you may have.
The United States Department
by grazing the fly safe date should
be observed . Wbeat harvested of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits
before or as the heads emerge can discrimination in its programs on
make a very good forage for cattle.
the basis of race, color, national
Winter rye can be seeded from orgin , sex, religion, age, disability,
the I st of September thru the 20th political beliefs, and martial or
of October. Rye has been used suc- familial status. (Not all prohibited
cessfully for most of the same pur- bases apply to all programs). Perposes as wheat. The earlier seeding sons with disabiliues who require
date may make it more popular for alternative means for communicasome farmers.
tion of program information (
If choosing to harvest the cover braille, large print, audiotape, etc.)
crop, the field can be double should contact the USDA Office of
cropped to soybeans or a later com Communications at (202) 720-5881
crop or left fallow and sown to a (voice) or (202) 720-7808 (fDD).
legume-grass in August There is a
Submitted by Buz Mills, Gallot of flexibility with a good cover lia County Soil and Water Concrop.
servation District.

Empty mailbox means empty wallet
Money Ideas
By Bruce Williams
I work for a state agency.
Because I am based in a field
office, I receive my paycheck in
the mail. My problem is the check

is chronically late. I am told direct
deposit is not an option, bull feel it
should be. What are my rights? I
am a dependable employee who is
always on time, and I would like to
have my paycheck on time. M.S .. Cedar Falls, Iowa

Dollar-cost averaging
Investment Viewpoint
By Mark E. Smith
For investors who rely on CDs as
safe dependable investments, moving funds direcUy
into higher risk
stocks and bonds
can be unseuling,
even if the retools
are potentially
higher over time.
With a variable
annuity, one can MARK SMITH
ease into equity investing. Initially
funds can be moved into the fixed
account of a variable annuity where
the principal is guaranteed and the
current rate of interest is between .5
and one percentage points higher than
present CD rates.
Then, as the investor feels comfortable, a set amount can be transferred at regular intervals into any
one or combination of stocks bond or
money market portfolios available
through the annuity.
Consistent investing generally
results in an average cost per unit that
is lower than the average price per
unit. Although a profit is not a.~sured
and these is no protection against loss
in a declining market. One's own
fmancial circumstances should determine whether to continue investing regardless of price levels. This
approach is known as dollar-costaveraging.
The flexibility gained enables the
investor to achieve maximum earning potential because the money is
not locked into any specific rate of
return.
Instead, the return will depend on
the performance of the portfolios
chosen. This approach lets the investor capitalize on investment opponunities with prospects for higher longterm returns thatareconsistent with a
level of risk willing to be taken.
Other benefits to consider:
• Professional management.
Each annuity portfolio has its own in-

DEAR M.S.: While I can
empathize with your circumstance,
I don',t think there is very much
you can do about it. You say the
check is chronically late, but you
don't say how late. If it's a day or
two, I doubt if there's much you
can do.
Likewise, if it's posted on time,
and it's just a question of the U.S.
Mail being on the slow side (why
wouldn't I be surprised?), there is
little that can be done.
I don't know of any way you
can force an employer - public or
private - to begin a direct-deposit
program. As I say, I am sympathetIC, but I suspect that if you make a
major issue of this, the problem
will be "resolved" by terminating
your employment.

vestment objective and risk level.
The portfolios arc professionally
managed by an experienced, independent money manager, whose goal
is to produce the best total return consistent with the stated objectives.
• Safety. Since a variable annuity
is an insurance product and today
there are questions about insurer
solvency, it is important to understand that the funds invested in variDEAR BRUCE: I financed a car
able annuities are kept in a separate for five years, but, consistent with
amount entirely segregated from the your suggestions, I paid the loan
off in a little over three. When I
company's general assets.
Separate account assets are in no made what I thought was my final
way affected by the liabilities of the payment, the fmance company said
company's other business. Thus, I owed them an additional $290.36.
those funds are off limits to their When I recovered from my shock, I
funds, if desired. In addition, one asked what that was for. They said
should consider annuities only from it was for a two -and -one-halfinsurance companies with the high- month period when I dropped my
collision/comprehensive insurance
est ratings on financial strength and on my car. They replaced it a1 that
operating performance from inde- cost
pendent rating services.
It is true that I did take the
• Tax advantage. Under the cur- insurance off, because the car
rem law, any dividends, interest and wasn't running properly, and I saw
capital gains earned in a variable no point in insuring a car that was
annuity are not subject to income not on the road. The finance comtaxes until funds are withdrawn or
pany tells me that I didn't have the
payouts begin. Over time, the effect right to do that - but how come it
of tax-{(eferred compounding can costs so much? It is about six times
the cost of my regular insurance.
mean considerable extra return.
• Guaranteed death beoent. Re- - R.T., Waco, Texas
DEAR R.T.: If you read your
gardless of the performance of the
finance
contraCt, you will find that
portfolios selected, most variable
it's
required
that during the period
annuities offer a death benefit that
of
financing,
you must have colliprotects the beneficiary from any loss
sion
and
comprehensive
on the colof principaL
lateral for the loan at all times.
• Income optioos. At the time .of They have the right to insure the
payou~ you call receive a lump-sum
car if you do not
payment by surrendering your conThe cost of the insurance $Uptract or elect monthly income pay- plied by the finance company is
ments for varying periods, including high for reasons we haven't the
income guaranteed payable for life.
space to go into here. Tbere is not a
Variable annuities are sold with a question in my mind that you do
prospectus, whichdetailschargesand have to pay it, and they will not
expellSt'..s. Be sure to read it carefully release your title until you do.
before investing.
Like most of us, you probably
didn't read your finance contract,
Mark E. Smith is an investment but it is seldom a good idea to sign
broker for Advesl, Joe., ofGaUipo- something that you haven't read or
lis.
don't understand.

Vaughan's... _eo_m_lnued_rrom_o-_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
gi.ng and Trucking; Bobbie Butcher, $1.01. Bob
William• and Sont: Loggin&amp;. Linle. Sheell and
Warner, and Jeff Wamcr Insurance; Dezn Wrikoman, $!.IS, Southean &amp;juipmcm.
RABBITS
Pri""
""' I""G.C., $900, Tom Peden O.evroAmy Smith,
let; Jenny Mayle, R.C., $645, WMPO; Ann K.au.ff,
S2SO. farmcn Bank ; Keny Allat, $22.S, ~lei
Bank; Suun Tobin, S21S. Kina ScrviocStu lfud.
ware· Elaine 1\un•m, S220, f1cemyer Forest
Prod~cu; Suah Oruc8c::r, $200, Mclk.nlld'a.
LAMBS
Pri&lt;co.,. p« pooNI.
Me&amp;han H•ynu, G.C., SIS, Whaley'• Auto

P~ru ;

Chriaty Dr•lc:, $7.30, Ridenour' a Gaa;

Quilty Onke, $2SO, Rutland F\Ltrliturc; Micllcl.e
Guca~. $2.05, Stale Repracnutive Ma::dt M•lone
and Stile Sr:n~tor hn Micb•d l...«lj'f. Sua ERvin,
$2.10, Fannen 81nk; Meah•n 11ynea, $2.20,

hnnaa Bank; Rebecca Scott, $3.25, Homo National Bank; Kdl, Dalton, $2.25, StaLe Represent• live Mark Milone; Auon Y01l, $21S, G&amp;W
Pl.utia; Brant Dium, $1. Ohio Valley Plwnbina

1nd Heatin~t Thereu Baker, $210, Fumn Dink:

Riki B•rrlnser. $2.30, Tuppcn Plains Citgo;
Mendy Ouca, $3.20, Middltport Citgo; Whitney
K11T, $2.75, Pcrlan1lind Louina; Stephanie
Jonea, $2SS, Bank One; Kim R.iuczbock, $2.60,

Kroger anployca; Rcbccca Soon, $2.20, Valley
Lwnbcr. WhitAey Kan, $285, Home National
Bank; Patty NaDy, $2.15, Farmm Bank; Erin Har·
ria, $3.25, Hcn1d Se"Vico Compeny; Heather Dai-

!Mn-

le)', $3, Vcunu Manoriallhpi.W; Tyler
aon. $3.10, HomcNnimll Bank; Midtdlc Bia&amp;cll,
$27l, T_.c ford: M&lt;n&lt;ly Ouca, $3, - ' "

Bri; Erin llarria. S3.20. Hcnld'a Service Cunl""f-.1~ ::s;2.60, Fum.,. Bonk: Shannon
"""""- ~·1.10, . t.. Bonk: B - Bolin, $3.10,
Vau&amp;)lon a C.
: Muy Nally, $3.0l, Fam&gt;en
Bani; Ja:aica Janey, $4.10, Williarru Louing;
K.dly Dalton, $3, Homo National Bank; ThCrc.a
Baker, $2,6S, Southom Oil Wii!ll Supply and
Southern Hcsatinaand Coolina; Brook Bolin,
SJ.2S, Meill County Bar Aa1ociation; hmic

Hupp, $3.05, lfomeNatiooal Bantr.: llarick PAck·
ler, $3.2S. Fannll!m Bank; Michelle Bilaell. $3.10.
Bank Oao; Derrick Bolin. $3.20, F1nnen Bank;
Pauy Nally, $3, Birch.fidd FWleral Hune; Am•nda Upton, $3.80, Hawk'a 76 Station; Stacy Wil1011. $3.20, Heme Nati«tal Bank; Riki Barringer,

13.20, Stni&amp;)lt-Tuckor and Rouab Fu•....t Home;

Mary Nally, $3.20, Olelttr Agri Service; Michele

Chaeu, S3.10, Bank On_e; Heather ~y. $3.10,
Fmnc:n Bank; Brant Dixon, $3.30, Bill Buc:klcy;

Michelle O'Nail, $2.75, Home NatiDnaJ Bank;
Derrick Fackler, $3.20, Mom'l Smorgubard;
Stephanie Jon01, $3.20. Holier Clinic Meiga
Branch; Kacy Ervin, $3 .60, StraiJht-Tucker and
Rouah Funeral Home ud Hupp Landacapins;
K..cy Ervin. $3.80, Yeaup Fum Supply; Aman-

da Upton, $3, Bank One; Michelle O'Nail, $3,
H001e National Bank; Nancy Nally, U, Farmers
B1nk; Sua Ervin, $3.Hl, Whaley'• Auto Paru;
Tyler Johnaon, $3.)(). Hom8 N1tional Banlr.; Durick BDlin, $3, Fumct1 Bmk; Stacy Wilaon, $3,
D&amp;M PiZZI and Suba and Oanccy 1 Food Man;
Nancy Nally, $3.05, Home Natiooll 811\k; Josq&gt;h
RLape. $3.05, Bank One; Stephanie WU.OO.. $3.05,
Home National B•nk; S~.ephanie Wilaon, $2.95,
Don Swiaer Aahlanci Bulk Plant; Aahlcy llaacr.
Sl80, Home National Bank; Aahlcy Hager, $2.85,
Kcn'a Applimcc; Macyn Ervin, $4, Lilllc, Shceu:
and Wamcr •nd Judge Robert Buck; Macyn F.rvin,
$4.15, Fanncn Bank; Jcaica Janey, $3.60, Sweet

Greeting• Bike Shop; Jamie Hupp, $3.60, Home
Nation•l Bank; A.uon Y01t. $3.40, Ohio Valley
Plumbinaand Heating and Hupp Landacapin&amp;-

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil aod 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 Gallipolis Daily Tribuoe, 825 Third
Ave., GaUipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

•

Farm Flashes

you mar win a $5 prize rrom the Ohio Valley
Publishmg Co. Leave your name, address and
telephone oumber 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. eacb Wednesday. In 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.

Corn crop estimates up 45
percent over 1993 figures

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - The August
USDA Crop Production repon is
the first official estimate of the
1994 com and soybean crops based
on survey procedures. All earlier
estimates are based on estimates
fed into "computer models." The
com crop is estimated to be 45 percent larger than the 1993 crop
when flooding destroyed crops in
much of the mid -west. The state
average yieiJ for Iowa is now estimated at 145 bushels per acre. Dr.
Uhrig, Purdue University Extension Economist, says that there is a
strong tendency for large crop estimates early in the year to increase
with later estimates. He expects
cash com prices for the 1994 com
crop at harvest to trade in a range
of $1.80 to $?..50 per bushel at
county elevators. The soybean crop
is estimated to be more than onefourth larger than last year's crop.
The nationwide mid year cattle
inventory confirmed that cattle
numbers are increasing. The July I,
total cattle numbers arc increasing.
The July I, total cattle and calf
inventory was estimated at 112.5
million, the largest mid-year inventory since 1985. The 1994 calf crop
was estimated at 2 percent larger
than in 1993. There was estimated
a three percent increase in calves

mold to beCome a significant concern at this late date . Dr. Nesmith
advises tobacco farmers to disk
deeply to kill remaining stalk and
root immediately after harvest. By
immediately killing the plant pans,
the further buildup of disease
organisms such as Black Shank,
Black· Root Rot and viruses would
be limited. Mark your calendars for
the Gallia County Pride In Tobacco
Annual Dinner meeting on the
evening of October 13. The Ohio
Tobacco Festival will be next
weekend, August 26-28.
Members of the Athens area
Grazing Council will hold their
monthly meeting/pasture walk this
Thursday, August 25, 7 p.m. at the
Jim and Jesse Boggs farm in nonhem Gallia County. Others Interested in learning more about grazing
dairy cows arc welcome to attend.
Dr. Ed Rayburn, West Virginia
University Extension Forage SpeCialist, IS also expected to visit Gallia County earlier that same day to
view various demonstration fields .
tickets are now available at OSU
Extension Offices for the Ohio
Farm Science Review (Sept. 20,
21, and 22). The advance tickets
will be available through September 19 or until supply is exhausted.
Edward Vollborn is Gallia
County's Agriculture Extension
Agent

and yearlings outside feedlots. It is
estimated that cattle feeders have
average losses of over $90 per head
during May thru July. Feeder steer
calves (400 -500 lbs.) in Missouri
were selling last week in the $91
per hundred range compared to a
year earlier at around $104.
The 1994 Gallia County Tobacco crop, except for some hail damaged fields , looks real good. The
tour to southern Indiana and western Kentucky last week revealed
that some of the best crop is here in
southern Ohio. A highli~ht of this
tour was the demonstration of the
new cutting and spiking machine
being developed by engineers at
the University of Kentucky. The
machine, utilizing two men to operate, accomplished their goal of 240
sticks per hour on some easy to
harvest crop. The machine, in its
third year of development, may be
released for larger scale manufac~
turing next year if field trials work
out this fall. It is estimated that the
machine will sell for $16,000 $18,000.
Strong blue mold activity was
reported la.~t week from east Tennessee, southwestern Virginia, and
isolated cases in a few locations in
Kentucky. Dr. William Nesmith,
Plant Pathologist at the University
of Kentucky, does not expect blue

TH'E BIG
COUNt;, :D'OWN
. IS ,d~ ••
All ' 94 , Mole Is Have To
Go, Regardless of Price!!!
,.

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(CEUs). Qualified graduates
of the course may be offered
job inlerviews wilh H&amp;R
Block but are under no
obligation
to
accept
employment.

For more information
about the H&amp;R Block
Income Tax Course
please call:
1-800-TAX-2000
or
675-1632

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Pick 3:

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4-Bonnevilles
7-Grand Ams
4-Sunbirds
1-Grand Prix Coupe
1-Grand Prix Sedan

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2685
Super Lotto:
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Kicker:
867939

Low tonight In 50s, dear.
Tuesday. sunny, high In lower
80s.

1 Sec11on, 10 Pageo 35 cMta
A Multimedi• Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 22, 1994

New landfill in Jackson County will
take pressure off Gallia's facility
State Environmental Protection
Agency approval of a new landfill
in Jackson County will relieve
some of the pressure on Gallia
County's facility, the Gallia -Jack-

son-Meigs -Vinton Solid Waste
District has learned.
GJMV Executive Director
Lance Wilson told the district's
board of directors last week that

HOUSE DAMAGED· Tbis house was damaged when struck
by a semi truck Saturday evening. The wreck was investigated by
the statge highway patrol. No one in the house was injured. Two
Long Bottom motorists were injured in the three-vehicle accident

Two injured in
U.S. 33 accident
Two Lon~ Bottom residents
were injured man accident involving three vehicles Saturday on U.S.
33, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol said.
Thomas M. Parker, 25, 37123
New Hope Road, refused treatment
at the scene, the patrol said.
Carol D. Parker, 25, also of
37123 New Hope Road, a passenger in a tractor-trailer driven by
·Thomas Parker, was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Meigs EMS, where she was treated
and released.
The patrol said Thomas Parker
was driving the rig, owned by Paul
Mercer Sawmill Inc., McArthur,
eastbound at 7:05 p.m. in Salisbury

Township when a car driven by
David B. Baurn, 36, 769 Brownell
Ave., Middleport, pulled onto 33
from a private driveway into the
path of the truck.
To avoid collision, Thomas
Parker's vehicle went off the right
side of the road, swerved over to
the left side, and then went off the
right side again, striking a parked
car owned by Matthew W. Hammel, Parkersburg, W.Va., and a
house.
Damage to the truck was severe,
the patrol said, and moderate to
Hammel's car. There was no damage to Baum's car. The accident
remains under investigation today,
the patrol said.

Residents in the ponion of town east of Mill Street no longer
have to boil their water, a village official said. After a water main
break last week these residents were suggested to boil their water.

Police solve hit-skip
A Pomeroy woman was arrested on hit-skip charges, according
to the Pomeroy Police Depanment reports.
Robena J. Edwards, 21, Pomeroy, was charged with failure to
maintain control, no operator's license, leaving the scene of an accident and no insurace, records showEdwards' 1980 AMC Eagle bad light damage to the front end
after she pulled wide from Butternut Avenue onto Main Street at
10:17 a.m. Friday, hitting another vehicle, reports stated.
Mark Friend, 30, Pomeroy, reponed moderate damage to the
driver's side of his 1994 Pontiac Grand Am, records show.

Pomeroy man cited in accident

OEPA is in the final phase of
approving construction of a new
landftll in Milton Township.
The landfill will be built by
Sands Hill Waste Systems Inc., the
Jackson Journal-Herald reponed.
Wit son said he learned that
Sands Hill's application for the
landfill was approved and signed at
OEPA's regional level last week.
Tbe paperwmk has been submitted
to Columbus and requires the direc tor's signature to become final, he
added.
The application and approval
process has taken 44 months, Wilson said.
Gallia County's landfill, leased
to Mid-American Waste Systems
Inc., is in the process of getting an
expansion pennit from OEPA. It is
currently the only operating landfill
in the district.
Don Graves, Mid-American's
manager at the Gallia site in Margan Township, said earlier that
without expansion, the landfill's
life will be shonencd.

The landfill would run out of
space by March 1995, Graves told
the GJMV. However, he said an
application for a venical expansion
would be submiued by Sept. 8 and
a review would be completed by
Jan. I.
While Wilson said Graves was
engaging in "wi shful thtnking"
gtven the length of OEPA reviews,
Graves said he had assurances on
that timetable from the agency's
engmeer.
The board learned that the city
of Jackson and the village of Oak
Hill, which use Gallia's landfill, are
considering switching sites because
of a price increase, the JournalHerald reported.
Graves said prices have been
increased to reduce the volume of
trash coming into the facility.
Wilson said he was told by
Sands Hill officials that once
OEPA approves the Jackson landfill, construction will begin immediately and it should be operable by
spring 1995.

Crime bill clears House
WASHJNGTON (AP) - Wbite
House Chief of Staff Leon Paneua
said today it would be "a disgrace
to the country'· if opponenL~ of the
House-passed crime bill are able to
block its passage through a filibuster in the Senate.
The bill cleared the House 235195 in a rare Sunday session, after
key Democrats and moderate
Republicans bargained until dawn
and 3 a.m. the two previous nights.
It now goes to the Senate, where
Democrats must find the same lcind
of help from moderate Republicans
that rescued the $30.2 billion compromise in the House.
"I think the Senate is going to
act to get this passed," Panetta said
today, calling "the issue of crime
the fundamental issue that most
concerns Americans."
Panetta said on NBC that opponents "may try procedural blocks.
They have the filibuster available
to them. But I think it's going to be
a disgrace to the country if the Senate at the last minute decides to ftlibuster a major crime biU."
Sen. Joseph R. Biden, D-Del.,
chainnan of the Judiciary Committee, said debate should begin today
on the bill designed to: help hire
100,000 new police officers; build
new prisons; and, much to the consternation of the powerful National
Rifle Association, ban militarystyle assault weapons.
With the outcome uncenain for
hours, a crucial preliminary vote
Sunday flashed. the results of deals
that cut $3.3 billion from the earlier
bill, mostly from crime prevention
programs.
Forty-two Republicans supported the motion to allow consideration by the full House, compared
with II when a similar move failed
I0 days ago. The Aug. I I vote sent
shocked Democratic leaders and
Clinton into a tailspin, forcing them
to negotiate with the GOP moder-

ates - and causing a potentially
devastating delay in the timetable
for health care reform legislation.
"In the past few days, we on
our side have had to reach out to
moderate Republicans. It was
painful," said Rep. Charles E.
Schumer, D-N. Y., chairman of the
House Judiciary subcommittee on
crime.

''Many of us had to give in
ways we haven't had to give
before. But it will produce a bill
and it is the way we should go in
the future ."
Democrats will have to go that
way in the Senate. Majority
Democrats have 56 senators, some
of whom are likely to defect, while
60 are needed to hurdle procedural
obstacles that Republicans threaten
to erect.
GOP senators, like the Republicans who opposed the House compromise, beheve the House-passed
bill still spends far too much on
prevention instead of punishment.
"This fiJtht is far from over" in
the Senate, Clinton said after the
vote. He lauded the bipartisan
House cooperation saying, ''This is
the 'way Washington should work,
and I hope it works this way in the
future."
But Sen. Orrin G. Hatch of
Utah, senior Republican on the
Senate Judiciary Committee,
warned, "It still may collapse."
Hatch vowed to fight "soft, fluffy
language that will not do anything
against crime."
Hatch said the House bill falls
shon of the money needed to build
more prisons, reach the goal of hiring 100,000 new police officers
and combat gang v1olence. He also
wants faster deportation procedures
for illegal aliens who commit
crimes and harsher mandatory minimum sentences when ftrearms are
used in criminal acts.

TOP TRACTOR PULL - Grand champion heavy-weight
puller Stacy Smith sits on the miniature tractor. Also pictured are
second-place Malt Krawsczyn, at lower lert, and Wayne Roush,
upper left, and Brent Zirkle, upper right. (Sentinel photo by
George Abate)
·

Kiddie tractor pull
contest winners named
Two grand champions pulled
their way to the top at the kiddie
tractor pull Saturday afternoon.
J.R. Hupp won the light-weight
division, from 35-55 pounds. Stacy
Smith won the heavy-weight division, from 56-75.
Placing second in the lightweight division was James Will.
While in the heavy-weight division, Matt Krawsczyn pulled to a
second-place fmish.
The weeks' winners were:
-Monday, light-weight J.R.
Hupp: heavy-weight Stacy Smith

- Tuesday, light-weight Deanna Pullins; heavy-weight Kacy
Ervin
- Wednesday, light-weight
Joshua Smith; heavy-weight Jeremy Ferguson
- Thursday, light-weight James
Will; heavy-weight Kevin Butcher
- Friday, light-weight Samantha Jones; heavy-weight Ryan Stoban
- Saturday , light-weight Josh
Hayman; heavy-weight Matt
Krawsczyn.

A Pomeroy man was charged with improper baclcing and going
the wrong way on a one-way street Saturday evening, according to
Pomeroy Police Depanment records.
Denzil Prater, 24, Pomeroy, had no damage to his 1994 Ford
pickup truck after he backed into another vehicle at 6:08 p.m. Monday, records show.
Mary Morton, 22, Pomeroy, had light damage to the passenger
side of her 1986 Mercury.
TOP TRACTOR PULL - Grand champion ligbt-weighl
puller J,R. Hupp sits on the mioiature tractor. Also pictured are
second-place James Will, at lower Jell, aod Wayne Roush, upper
left, aod Brent Zirkle, upper right. (Seotloel photo by George
Abate)

Stolen truck recovered

---JUST ABRIVED---

164

Vol. 45, NO. T7

Copyright t 894

Officials lift water boil request

6-(enturys
3-LeSabre Sedans
1-Road Master Wagon
1-Roadmas.ter Sedan
1-Park Avenue
1-Skylark Sedan ·
1-Regal Sedan

~

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I

A pickup truclt: stolen Aug. 13 from Pomeroy was found abandoned Sunday at a local supermarlcet, the Gallipolis Police Department reported.
An officer investigating a complaint of an abandoned Ford F-250
at Kroger supermarket, Silver Bridge Plaza, ran a checlt: on the vehicle and learned it bad been stolen.
The truck was secured and held for the owner, Judith A. Smith,
138 Buuemut Ave., Pomeroy.

Zedillo claims victory

Driver cited in Sunday accident
Tbe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Higbway Patrol cited Billie J.
Cunningham, 27, 40140 Hemlock Grove Road, Pomeroy, for
assured clw distance in a two-car accident Sunday on Stare Route
7 at the intersection of Salisbury Township Road 196 (McGuire).
Tbe patrol said Cunningham was southbound at II :05 am. when
Cunningham's vehicle struck the rear of a stopped car ahead of her
driven by EarlL. Reynolds, 42, Ravenswood, W.Va., causing mod·
crate damage to both cars.
.
Reynolds was stopped for a vehicle ahead of him that was waiting to rna1t:e a left turn when the crash occuned, the patrol said.

;

ARM WRESTLING - The arm wrest11o1 eveot at the Meigs
Couoty Fair Saturday was moved lusltle followt.g a tlluoderstorm
that eveolng. Here, Nelsoo Fisher, left, aod Chad Daolel square orr
io tlle first arm wrestle of tile evening. Daolel woo the bout.

MEXICO CITY (AP) Ernesto Zedillo, the candidate of
the party that has ruled Mexico for
65 years, declared victory today in
presidential elections that his opponents charged were unfair.
With nearly one-fifth of the ballots tabulated, official results
showed Zedillo of the ruling PRJ
pany easily ahead with 47 percent
of the vote. Diego Fernandez de
Cevallos of the conservative PAN
pany was a distant second with 31
percent in the most scrutinized
election in Mexican history.

'

While exit polls indicaied Zedillo with lilcely to win, the election '
Sunday was considered a crucial
test of Mexico's democracy and it5
stability after an Indian uprising in
January and the assassination of a
popular presidential candidate in

March.
Turnout was sharply higher for
Sunday's vote- 70 percent to 7S
percent, compared to the last IRSidential election in 1988, when just
50 percent of the elegible voters
cast ballots.

I

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