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                  <text>Thursday
July 1,1-

Weather

NBA draft roundup, Page 4
Ann looks at female, instincts, Page ·8
Investigating railway killer case, Page 3
•

fOUy: P, Cloudy
High: lOa; Low: eo.

romorrow; P. Cloudy

High: lOa; ~: 70.

outduels "tl•
Big Unit" In Reds 2.0
w1n over Allzona
-Page4
ftnA

•
Meigs County's

I

Volume

so.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Number 19

·

"·
'-

r

·. Single

.._,

,_.

....,~

Co~-

~.......

•

""~

Order halting Priddy auction to be appealed
ByJIIFREEMAN

Sentinel ,.._ Std
A decision Tuesday hallina ~- 'sale of items 'confiscated from Fred M.
Priddy, 47, Rudand, will be appealed, ac:c:ording to Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Jolin R. l.entes.
·
· ·
·
Common PleiS Court Judae Fred W. Crow Ill granted a tcmpotlly
restrlinin&amp; order requested by Mr. Priddy and his wife, Blrbara, saying the
state, represented by l.entes, did not have the authority to take Priddy's property other than throu&amp;h Ohio's criminal or civil forfeiture proc:as which wss
not followed.
Oow decided th:t an out-of-court agreement between Lentes and Priddy,
in lieu of civiJ · ~ngs for forfeiture, did not give the state authority to
sell Priddy's belongings which were seized in April. Priddy pleaded guilty
and was.impisoncd lilt month on a charae of JXlSSelsion of marijuanL
.
At stake arc literill~ thousands of items which were to be auCtioned begin""" ning Tuesday. They included over 75 vchicl~ 1-60 guns, 150 pocket knives
and other,. knives, motorcycleS, tools and other antique and roll eCtor items
Including a rare four-of-a-kind 1967 Plymouth Hcmi GTX. ,
Aa:ordina to Assistant Proiocutor Chai'les Kni&amp;Jit, any orders outside the
acopc of the heating. that is anythina other than the Priddys' request for a
lemporary restraining order, will be appealed to the Fourth District Court of
Appeals.
''
'
Meanwhile, Leiites said he wss surprised by Tuesday's action because of
Priddy's cooperation in the forfeiture process and in providing information
about other dru&amp; traffickers.
··
"He wss very cooperative in giving us information involving other drug
cases, giving us names and places," Lentes said. "That's why it hit us out of
the blue."
"We're disappointed ~o decision wun't based on Jcgllstandards," said

and in which agents-found pounds of m.,-ijuanL'
Instead of a'forfciture; it was "an igrecment.in lieu of civil proceedings for
forfeiture", Kni&amp;Jit said, explaining that the matter wss simply setded out of
court.
·
· "If the court fec~s it is important to protect these drug assets and give them
back to these Criminal individuaJs, that is not my call," l.entes said.
· "(Priddy) was a drug dealer for along lime, if I put him in prison I've done
my job," Lentes said, "Fred is in prison and that's the important thing."
·
"~ will comply the best we can," l.entes said, adding "we will try and
make sure Mr. Priddy and his family do not profit from drug dealina."
"This is not going to discourage us from pursuing other large drug dealers." ,
"It's important that we did this locally and didn't have to have the big boys
come down an~ do it," Lentes said. Priddy hss an earlier f«!cral dru&amp;-related
conviction and wa the subject of an earlier federal forf~iture, he explained.
"Fred indica~ to us he would have preferred the federal people prosecute
him because .list lime (in federal prison) he played cards with Pete Rose,"
Lentes commented,
•
·
AUC1'10N CANCELED- .Thta algn reading •lluCtlon Cllnceled .
Meanwhile, the prosecutor's office and others have been besieged by pco- .
by or$r of Judge Crow" gi'Mtad people hoping tO' attend the pic calling over the canceled sale. A sign outside the prosecutor's..OtfJOC, and
.... of lteme conftiCIIt.d from Fred li. Priddy of RuUand who · at the entrances to the Meigs County Fairgrounds where the iOads have been
Hrhr pl•ded guilty to 1 felony
of poaa...lon of marl· closed, informs people the sale wss stopped by order of Judge Crow.
Juana. Judge Fred-W. Crow Ill hlltM the auction Tueaday mornReportedly, people have driven hundreds of mjles ·to buy items only to be
Ing ruling the ..... luld no authority to Mil the Jterna. Roada turne,d around at the fairgrounds.
·
la.dlng to the ,.lrgrounda, where the 8uc:tion wa to be held,
"~'re disappointed of the inconvenience to the people who wanted to .
were clo11d to traffic. .
.
.
buy items,'' l.entes said, adding the Meigs County Fair Board and the Shade
Kni&amp;Jit, referring to Oow's order.
.
River Coonhunters Club have been very cooperative with the agencies
He said the hearing was only about those itell)S requested by Mrs. Priddy,
"We will get the items off the fair grounds to not inconvenience the fair
one of which included the Olevrolct Impala for which she did not have a tide board and coonhunters," he said.
·

cl\.,..

Experts say 'leave fireworks to professional-s'
- By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel N..a Stllff ,

more
.1611. • •
f ROuae
•_. 33 proposaI
rue
IBi8 0

.

LUMBUS (AP)- More time is

~ceded before a final

decision is

flll!de on whetber to ao ahead with a sn million project extending u.s.

33, a transpOrtation oft'iclal said.
. ..,
· citizen commi~ ovcrseeina new project funding is ischeduled to
&amp;p~IO\re a finaiJfat·:fiir c:Onatruc:tion on Friday, but Ohio Department
Tralwcqlion Director OonJon Proctor wants the.. .-ci to continue
revilwilll die •r
thi• S\IRIIIICf•·
·
.
"\\\ hiVe rec.civcd comR!~ts. sipatures and petitions represcntina
t-mn,.. than 5,000 people reprding this project," ProCtor said Wednesday.
"lt'is far lllld away the most controversial projeCt the panel is considering.'·'
,.
·
· · Proctor said he will recommend forming a subcOmmittee to work this
summer on revieWing the issues raised about-extending U.S. 33 12-miles
from "Athens to Darwin. The subcommittee can report back to the panel
this fall with a fillal recommendation.
Supporters of the project say the hi&amp;Jiway is needed to address safety
conccrri's and promote economic development
•
But members of the Coalition Against Superfluous Hi&amp;Jiways believe
the hipway will damage the area's beauty. Both sides have gathered hun.dleds of signatures on petitions supporting their position.
Athens Ia 6S miles southeast of Columbus.

••ion

)'(~mmr AIJU'mlfril'lnr.·union

r.sctJ tentative contract

HA.Ri.ESTO.N,
C
W.~. ('l\P) A tentative four-year contract bill been
.
reached by. nc~o_liators !o~. ~ntury, AluR!inum and the United Steel

vented if people- including adults- simply le.ft
fireworks tolhe"professionals.
As Independence Day q~ickly approaches,
Last year, emergency rooms treated 8,500 peapublic safety experts are advising revelers to
pic for injuries ~aused by fireworks. ss percent of
leave the fireworks to the professionals, especialwhich were burns to the hands, eyes, and head .
ly if children arc involved.
.
Nearly 40 percent of those iniured were under the
Seemingly .. ~armless devices like sparklers,
age of 15, and boys arc three times as likely as
boUle rockets and other novelty fireworks cause
girls to be injured by fireworks ..
thouaanda of injuries to children· and adults each
Of those fireworks-related injuries, 12 percent
year, often resulting in lifelong scarring. lacerawere caused by sparklers, the least expensive and
tiona and severe injuries to the hands, eyes and
most readily-available fireworkS novelty availhead.
able.
,
The Obio Fire ManhallptepiZICI three ldnclll
The NFPA adVises parents and other adults to
of fireworks: trick and noY'elty fireworks. such as
instruct children to avoid fireworks, and tc
sparklers, smoke bombs, snfps and other novelbehave responsibly around them.
ties sold in supermarkets and discount stores,
:'There is simply no safe way for the average
1.30 fireworks, called display ..fireworks, and
citizen to usc fireworks," Gary Keith of th~ NFPA
· 1.40. fireworks, cons~mcr fir~works. · · · . · never .,.. fireworks without adult aupervl- ~aid. "In the han~. of amautcurs, fireworks ~
Displ~ flfOWorks mclud.c Items such • senal alon. J:tere, Mary Naaae of RaCine llgh.. JUS!. too ~ang~rous.
shells that arc fired from a hcenscd manufacturer, aperldera for two of her grandchildren Ben
Pubhc d1splays are the safer way to ellJOY .
wholesaler or ~xhibitor. ~~y can only be dis- and C.ltlln N••· Better yet, aa,..Y oflicJala fireworks. Aside (rom safety, they're mlmost
ch~ by a h.censed cxh1b1tor. Consumer fire- augsaaet, juat l•ve fireworks to the prOfea- al~ays m~c spectacular ,than anythm&amp; else you
. ~ works 1ncludc 1tems such as firecrackers, botdc alonala.
. ,
_ m•ght see m someonc's backyard."
••
rockets, Roman candles and fountains. These can
.
•
- .
Hamburg Fireworks of Lan~ttr will assume
· only be sold by _a licensed manufacturer or wh9lc- • be~ of fireworks-related injuries each year are the the responsibility ·of disc~araing fireworks in
slier. Anyone· over the age of 18 may pu_n:hasc result of consumers discharging novslty fireworlss Middleport on Sunday. The fireworks will be delthese items, bur:they miiSt sian a form stating that · a:nd consumer. fireworks at home, while only. a onated from Masan County, W.VL, to ensure
• they will transport the .firework'S outside the state small percentage of injuries occur at 'public dis- safety, according to Middleport Council member
within 48 hours (or 72 hours for non-residents of ~ plays, where those discharging the fireworks ar~ Beth Stivers. The display will begin at 9:30p.m.
.. Ohio). These fireworks cannot be legally dis- . specially trained.
Rutland's Independence Day celebration, to be ·
ch~ged in the state by anyone.
.
.
Children account for a large share of fireworks held on Saturday, will conclude with firewarkS at
· Public safety experts say that the )~est num- injuries, and most .of :!hose injuries could be pre- 11 p.m.
.
·

Monda)"s agreement w
ched in ChariC$~on with the aid of a fedcral m~atot.
"The federal mediator certainly played· an important role in it," said
By BRIAN J. REEDThe bill provides incentives for Ohio utilities "I am .extremely pleased that this measure
Tiin Dean, a staff representative for the Steelworkers.
·
to bum Ohio-mined coal. Requirements of the received unanimoiiS bipartisan support.''
AI Posti, a spokesman for Century Aluminum in Monterey, Calif., said Sentinel N..a Staff
The Ohio House has passed a bill providing federal Clean Air Act have put the Ohio coal
Last month, Meigs · County Commissioners
he couldn't comment on the negotiations. Neither side would disclose the
"
incentives
for
Ohio
utilities
burning
Ohio
coal.
industry
in
jeopardy,
according
to
Carey,
and
the
Jeffrey
Thornton and Mick Davenport met with·
. .terms of. the agreement, which will be voted on at the Ravenwood plant~~
gates Friday.
·· .
The bill was sponsored by Rep. Larry Household- new legislation helps alleviate the burden by pro-. State Rep. Joy Padgetto~ R-Coshocton, who is
er, R-Oicnford, and coaponored by Rep. John viding a tax credit to utility companies to offset expected td be named the Director of tl)e Gover. The union represents 1,600 workers at plant.
por.'s Office of Appalachill. abou( th~ ccon~mic
The previous contract expired May 31. "!Jnion leaders decided nof to go Caley, R-Wcllston, who represents Meigs County the cost of burning Ohio coal.
If approved by the governor, the new legisla- . ii)lpact of the new fedetal rcquircmci)ts.
, '
on strike and continued worJqng under a temporary extension. The last Ill! a·part of the 94th House District.
The
bill
cleared.
the
Ohio
Senatt:Jate
yesterday
lion
would
increase
the
tax
credit
from
$1
to
$3
·
Davcnp1rt
said
after
_
the
Columbus
meeting
,
labor dispute to hit the JacksOn County plant occurred in 199Q when workafternoon,
according
to
Ohio
Sel)ator
Mike
Shoe;
per
ton
of
0hio
coal
consumed
by
an
Ohio
utility,
that
along
-with
the
800
mining
jobs,
some
500
ers were off the job for '20 months.
maker, 0-Boumevillc. Both the House and the would deqeasc the percentage of Ohio coal need-· mining-related jobs in the area could also be
. United Steelworkers ~ 5668 voted down the previous off:( from
the company on June 11. The workers apparently did not like the terms of ·· Senate pssscd _the bill unanimously, and it will ed. to be used by Ohio utilities from 90 percent to threatened if the bill is not approved. The, comthe hcalth-QI'C plan, which would have req!:lired them to pay deducliblcs now go to the governor's office for approvll, zero to gain the eredit, ~d includes other mea- missioners siped a letter pledging their support
which is expectecfsomethne next week.
. sures designed to promote the use of Ohio-mined · of the legislation during their meeting with Padand co-paymcn~ Posti said.
""
.
Shoemaker
spoke
befor:e
the
Senate
on
behalf
. coal.
gett
·
.
Last Fridiy, company officials niadc a new offer to the union during
of
the
bill's
pasu,ge,
he
,aid:
·
The
Ohio
coal
industry
is
estimated
to
have
a
Padgett,'
and
several
other
legislators
neaotiations in Pittsburgh, he said.
'
.
"This is a matter of survival for our area," $2.5 billion impact on the state's economy. Some .signed a letter to. ~v. Bob Taft urging his S!Jppoit
"The changes to the medical plan went out The local decided not to
Shoemaker Said. His district includes several min- 800 miners arc employed at' SOCCO's Meigs of the bill. A spokesman for Rep. Carey's office
prescnt.thC offer to the rsnk-and-filc for ratification." ·
ing operations, but he said that the Southern Ohi9 operation in Salem Township.
' ·
said,Thursday that Taft is expected to sign the legarrested
Coal Company's M~igs division is tiic largest
"This bill is a lifeline to Southeastern Ohio for islation, since it passed unanimously in both
ONCINNATI (AP) - . Two city residents have filed a civil-ri&amp;hts law- mining operation in the district.
the continuance of the coal industry," Carey said. cham~rs. '· _
suit against ttic city, arresting officers and automated teller machine ·customers for wrongly identifyina them as robbers of an ATM.
Mark A. Ward and Ronald Culhbertson, whose ages were not available,
\
sUch programs could read the digits "00" • 1900
Further changes agreed to over five days 'Of ncaOtisaid the only thing they had in eommon with the robbers was that they Bv J!M ABRAMS
A*xl
1
d
"
'
wrtt1r
instead
of
2000.
.
&amp;lions
ending Tuesday appeared to fibally win White ·
were young black mc.n.
WASIDNGI'ON
(AP)
L.egislltion
aimed
at
Vice
President
AI
Gore,
who
has
strong
ties
with
.
House
appoval.
'
Olarges against Ward and CuthBusiness groups and the hi&amp;h-tcch indJISIIy; warnbertson, who had becli held in cus- · avoic1if1a lcpl aftashocb from Year :DX&gt; computer the hip-tech industry, which badly wants the lcgislaproblems
headed
for
a
final
we
in
Congmss
IOday.
lion
and
played
an
active
~
in
aafting
the
final
proding
of billions of dollars in lawsuits from ~
tody for ci&amp;ht days, were dropped
The
While
House
said
the
president,
a&amp;r
Jaigthy
uct,
told
The
~ated
Press
\\t:dnesday
he
undercaused
by axnputcrs that can't differentia the y~
after police arrested three juveniles
negotiations
over
consumer
)X'OICclioils.
would
sign
stood
there
were
some
last-minute
problems
in
putting
:DXl
from
1900, lobbied hard for the Iegislalion: .
oal!tv·A
in the robberies, attorney Kcnl)cth
the
bill.
the
deal
in
writing.
But
he
said
there
WIL'
I
a
"90
percent
Gore
conceded
he waS caught between the intercsls
l Sectlonl ll Pllaa
Lawson said Wednesday.
" ..
The bill aimed at slemn'ling a flood of lawsuits chance" they would be worked out and the bill signed. of two strong Democratic constituents, the hi&amp;h-tcch
The lawsuit filed in U.S. District
from
pa!Sible computer breakdowns WIL'I assured of a
c:icR said he WIL'I generally satisfied with the legis- industry that wantal the biU and trial lawyers who
Court seeks unspecified·damages.
"bi&amp;
victlJry
in
the
House
today,
followed
by
another
Jation.
"lt'sacompromi9eoukXlmethatovcrallscrves opJXl!iCid il
. .
It claims police investigating robstrong
show
of
approval
in
the
Senate.
the
interests
of
the
nation,"
he
said.
.
Bqt,
he
said
the
pressure
WIL'
I
"no
more than is frcberies at an ATM in the Corryvillc
Presidcnt
Ointon:s
signalilre,
which
appeared
solid
Republicans
511
:
55cd they had an agreement~
quendy
the
case
when
you
have
differing
legitim•
nci&amp;Jiborhood on April 27 mistakafter
IIIWIIIllkas
said
Thesday
they
had
reschcd
-.,comwere
done
negotiating.
Sponsors
of
the
original
HoUse
points
of
view
that
have
to
be
reconciled."
•
enly focused on Ward and CuthbertThe bill would give axnpanies 90 days to fix Y2Kson evep though neither their promise agteemcnt with the Uninistration,. appeared bill, Said Rep. Bob Goodlattc, .R-Va., "had to make
a
litdc
shakier
Wednesday
after
the
White
House
ii\di·
tremendous
concessions"
to
win
White
H&lt;iuse
support
related
problems before lawsuits can be filed and by
physiq~ jldr clothing fit descripcited
it
still
had
some
problem~ with the bill.
and
in
the
end,
"tlic
Congress
writes
the
legislation
.
encouraging
mediation. .
·
tions broadcast by police, Lawson
But
White
House
5p1kcsman
Jake
Siewert
said
.
and
not
the
president"
It
also
.would
set
punitive
damage
caps
for
small
said.
The White House rejected the original Holac- businesses, make it harder to file class action lawsuits
Officers also were looldl!g for today the president will approve i~ "We "think this bill
is
critical
to meet a national priooty and the president · passed bill as being too pro-business and to the disadand provide that, in most CIL'Ie5, a dcftnd111t can be
youths on foot and Ward and Cuth~ _the proportion of damaae actually
bertson drove into a nearby parking is prepared tosi&amp;!' it i~~;&lt;&gt; ta:-v bccau~ it is ~ly tai- · vantage of oomumers taking legal acti?R to recover held liable
lorcd
to
deal
With
litigation
dealmg
With
the
Y2K
Ja;ses.
.
caused
by
the
mdividual
or axnpany.
3: 0-8-1; Pkk 4: 7.()..2-8
area where they could sec at least
poblcm."
·
.
The
Senate
bill,
written
by
Sen.
John
McCain,
RIn
the
final
negotiations,
some changes wore made
IS.per Lotto: 3-11-17-21-33-41
one parked police car, he said,
.
The
:Vc.
2000
problem
~
also
called
Y2K
and
the
Ariz.,
with
the
hcl~
of
Dem6cralic
Scm.
~
Wydcn
in
the
class
action
'llld
proportionate
liability ledioos
IKJc:ker: s.o-3-S-6-8
Officers used excessive force and
millennium
bug
occurs
because
some
computer
of
Oregon
and
Ouistopher
Dodd
of
Connecticut,
WIL'
I
to
better
pro1cc1 consumer interests, and tNt won owr
ipored requests to check video surS-0-0; Daily 4: O-S-4-4
veillance tapes at the ATM and his ~ especially older ones, might fail when the modified to address consumer concerns, but the White such influclltial Democrats as Rep. John Conyem of
date changes to 2000. Because the programs were House said that it too WIL'I one-sided and would receive Michigan, ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Com0 1999 Oliio Volley Publlllllq Co.
clients' alibis, Lawscin said.
written to rccognizc only the IIL'It two digits of a year, ·a veto.
mittee, who opposed the original bills.

N·ew incentives for coal industry pass both chambers

Carex

Pair

In robbery file legal sctJronl

House, S.enate to vote on V2K lawsuit bill;~linton will sign:
0

Good Afternoon

Sentinel
0

onir

,·

-

..

�- ,

•

Thursday, July 1, 1999

Commentary

PlloeA2

Justice Department to .investigate
INS' handling of railroad killer case

111unc1Q, July 1, , . .

8y UAEN GULLO
Au a clallld PrMa Wrftar

The Daily Sentinel oJms seize issues, but trail for 2000

By IIOrtoft l«&lt;nc!I*Cke
4st week, Senate Democrats bogged down
On the other hand, it could be si~ficant that
Democrats . have succeeded
consideration of the Agriculture Department last month Bush allowed a Texas bill to become
"' '
in seizing the propaganda iniappoop&lt;iations bill with amendments and speech· Ia~ that allows
'? be sued after a 'pretiative in Washington this yell', ·
es on ,patients' rights, including one horror story scnbed ~~ of.arbltnllon.
, ..
111 Court SL, '-oy, Ohio
but
it's
not
clear
whether
it
will
after
another
about
HMO
denials
of
needed
care.
Bush
wd
1n
h1s
message
on
the
b1ll,
I am
740 882-215e • Fax: 1182·2157
•
enable them to win the 2000
Republicans are trying to cope with apparent concerned that this legislation h_a s tbe potential to
elections.
public demand for regulation of HMOs by offer· drive up heal_th ~ COSU and mcrease the num·
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
They made gun control
ing their own House llld Senate bills due for noor ber of la~su1U:. agamst doctors and other health
Topic A for several weeks. Last
debate after the July 4 recess.
.
care !""ov1de~. ,
.
ROBERT L wiNGETT
week, they shifted focus to
Democrats deride the GOP proposals as~·~·
Stdl, he_d1dn t veto the measure because. 11
' ·
Publisher
patients' rights. And then, Presquate, setting up what the Democrats thmk IS overwhelmmgly passed both houses of the le11~·
..-:.1 .
ident Clinton unveiled his
another "win-win" situation: Republicans either lature and, he sa1d, ."many _Texans _l!ave expen·
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Medicare proposal containing a prescription drug will cave in on key provisions or hand the enced problems . w1th getting tbetr HMOs to
DIANEHIU
· General ........
Controller
benefit for all seniors. .
Democrats a 2000 campaign i~ue.
approve or pay for health care trellment they
Still, in the latest bipartisan Battleground surThe basic differenCes are that the Democratic believe they need."
.
vey,
Republicans
and
Democrats
are
tied
at
39
bills,
sponsored
by
Dingell
in
the
House
at~d
Sens.
Bush's
..
words
may
well
be
quoted
back
dunng
no.Sentlnel
·
_ _ , _ _ , _ _ . , . _ _ .,..,..
percent on the generic Congressional ballot, an Edward Kennedy (Mass.) and Tom Daschle debate. The Texas b1ll actually could embody the
-'"'""
,_
, ........
(.IIIII..,. .. _ .. _EodtdNftoreo
....•p&amp;Jt!llhw'.
_
_ ,_,..,_
_fit_
.....,...
improvement' of 10 points for the GOP since Jan- (S.D.) in the other chamber, permit stale lawsuits basis of a bipartisan ,agreement .. if thert is any
• , we:, and'*""'* pltoMIIUII'INr. ~ • . , . " , . , .•• • ,,.
ro • , .
uary. In the presidential raee -- which m'!)' have against HMOs and require patients to gel any care will to have one. .·
.
.
~
l'hS.nHnel,
111 Cout!Sf.,
to
do
with
who
controls
Congress
than
any·
that
a
doctor
deems
a
medical
necessity.
,
The
same
dynlll'mc
commences
on
Medicare
as
more
p.,.."K Olalo ...-; w. FAX lao 710 ..,.,f67.
thing else .. Texas Gov. George W. Bush..(R) is
Republicans, assisted by ads taken out by the well, with Democrats holding out for .• prescripbeating Vice President AJ Gore, 50 to 35 percent. ·HMO induStry and employer groUJl'l, assert that lion benefit for all seniors and Republicans offer·
Congressional Democrats, with assistance · Democratic proposals would significanlly raise ing a means-tested one. .
·
from 'the White House, are doing their utmost to health insurance premiums and increase the numRight now, according to the Battleground surset the publicity agenda, though.
ber of uninsu\ed Americans.
vey, Democrats enjoy a 29 pe~nt advantage
The Democrats' strategy is clear: Define issues
A poll conducted for the American Association over RepublicanS on health care 1ssues and Gore
in terms that Republicans find impossibletosatis· of Health Plans by GOP pollster Whit Ayers also enjoys a t2point lead over Bush. _
• • ·
fy ·- and when they don ' ~ use it as a 2000 cam· bolsters the GOP case, showing that only 14 per·
.On Medocare, Democrats lead by 24 pomts and
paign issue.
·
cent of voters over age 45 think HMO reform Gore leads by 13 percent. In v1ew of these num·
By George R. PlllgMIZ
.
On guns, Democrats insisted on a. three-day shOuld be the nation's to~ health care priority.
bers, !t's hard to see why Democrats would com·
When William Moon was traveling the back roads of the country gather- waiting p:;riod for backg,round checks at gun
Fony-six percent say that saving the Medicare prom1se.
·
.
.
· ing·,material for his best-selling bOok on ·rural America, "Blue Highways," shows. Republicans, with a strategic assist from system should.be the top priority; and 29 percent, (Morton Kondi'IICke Ia -ave editOr of Rail
he came across an old farmer.
Democratic Rep. John Dingell (Mich.), pushed covering the nation's 45 million uninsured.
• Call, the _.peper of Cllpltol HIH.)
During their conversation, the farmer said to
through a 24-hour limit•. Democ- r-----:-----·:..
· --:---;:-_.;,,......___-===:::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;:;;;;=:;;~-~----,
Moon, "Mind if I swear?" Score it as a rare victory
rats ihen defeated the bill, includ"
for ~ncy in a world that seems to have lost its
ing a sa(ety·lock provision t\ley'd llllQH
.
l,llllll 'lllat
sense of 14Ste;and common courtesy.
sought
'
·J
,
Before smoking beoame unfashionable, it wils .the
' . Gun control is still alive in a
·- polite thing, to ask "Mind if I smoke?... if you w01:e
House-Senate conference, but it's
aboUt to light up in the company of others.
likel'y lo end up as a 2000 cam'
·Do you think it would dispel the swirls of profan·
paign iss~e. nota law on the books.
ity engulfing our society if, like the farmerin Moon's
Democrats claim that the issue
story, we asked permission before cutting loose .with
works for them -- especially '
a string of profanity?
,
among suburban women ·- but in
In Michigan, there is an 1897 law still on tbe
,the latest Wall Street l,ournai/NBC .
:. .
books that makes it illegal to swear in ·front of women and children. The law poll, I;Jempcrats lead on ·the gun .
was· recenUy tested in the courts when a 25-year-old factory worker was issue only by 29 to 24 yercent
·,,
among all adults, with 23,-percent
· found guilty of breaking the law.
The man lost conb:OI of his tongue when his canQC overturne&lt;j and preferring neither party's handling
dumped him in the river. A sheriff's deputy, seeing women and children in .a of the issue.
·· ·
.• neartly boat being subjected to the barrage of obscenities, arrested .the wet .. . Moreover, despite all the negaand irate boater. '
.
·live publicity Democrats have tried
Of course, the American Civil Liberties .Union was in court to defend tho · .. to heap oti the National RiDe Asso·
.man with the foul mouth on the grounds that the Constitution's guarantee of ciatiop, a recent .Pew Research
· free speech ·gave the man the right to say what he pleased. The jury dis- Center poll shows thai 46 percent
· agreed and rendered a guilty verdict.
·
of adults have a favorable ,view of
• My only fault with the Michigan law is that it doesn't include men in the the organization, and 45 unfavor· .
· · list of those protected from profanity.
·
able.
.
· ,
When he was commissioner of baseball, the late J'ldge Kenesaw Moun·
Democrats may have better luck
lain Landis had patrons thrown out of the ball park on their ear for shouting with health .maintenance organiza-•
obscenities -·and not only on Ladies Day! There are many men who object lions, the target of their agitation
to being subjected to dirty talk.
.
for patients' rights legislation.
With profanity as widespread as it is.... even among women &amp;nd ministeiS
The Pew poll showed that 52
, .. ~caring has lost much of its impact through oveiuse. No longer effe~tive percent of the public has an unfa"as a tool,of speech, it lingers· on mainly as a bad habit..
'
· vorable view of l:fMOs and only 38
Isn't this one of the things Wl'l)ng with swearing, that 'it adds nothing .. percent of people have a favorable
•
. .,
view. The poll also showed that the
not even emphasis or shoe~ anymore?
· It is hard to believe that "d;5n" was once consideted a swear word. TheJe public favo~ Democrats on the
is a comedy skit on ali ol~1ctrola 'record called, "Uncle Josh and Aunt issue .of regulating HMOs by 40 to
Nancy Put Up the Kitchen
ve."
·'
.
30 percent. ·
·

'£st468.slid ln.1948

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ The
Justice Department's top watchdog
will investigate why the lmmigra·
tion and Naturalization Service
detained a Mexican national wanted
for questioning in connection with
several murders but let him go, the
INS sa_id Wed~y..
_..,INS Commissioner Doris MeissiTer said the agency's failure to iden·
tify Rafael Resendez-Ramirez, a 39·
year-old drifter chlllged in two mur•
ders and linked to six olberslayings.
"has raised serious questions about
the INS' knowledge of the case and
procedures used in encounters
with" him.
"As a result of these questions, I
have referred the matter to the JUstice Department's Office . of the
Inspector General," said Meissner
in a statement.
·
She also said the INS' offii:e of
internal audits was reviewing INS
procedJJres "in an elfort. to avoid
any similar situation in tile future."
The inspector general's office
· investigates waste, fraud and abuse.
The , INS arrested Resendez.
Ramirez in the.'EI Paso ,area during
the week of June I for being in this
country illegally and deported hirri
la Mexico later that day, the FJJI
said.
1\vo days after his June 2 release,
authorities. believe he killed a 73year-old woman west of Houston.

Ohio weather

•

Friday, JulY 2

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•
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·
Lam.entI ng t e /'
· nc·y
decII•ne of.dece

f' -

.

..

Bi II .and AI the ·siamese··twins

!:~e~~~:.~g~~~i~g~m ::::i~i~e~p~~~r-~~~~:;·.~~~~~~·~n~i~

,·.: Aunt Nllllcy rcphes, ." I'll help you, but you needn't.s)Vear about1t."
..
,
.• Those people who say they "see nothing awfully wrong" with swearing ,By,Chrle Mltlhewe
• .
.
may be right. But can't the decline of standards and the virtual disappear·
WASIDNGI'ON -- Few sights are
ance of good taste in·our SQ!:iely be traced 16 this ~ah() of ours to accept any- more ghastly than that of two con·
·thing as long Ill! there is "nothing awfully wrong" with it? ,
joined, or "Siamese," twins fighting
' · The fact lha,t there is nothing awfully wrong with something doesn't with each other.
mean it is elevating, and until we are more concerned than we are with eJe,
You can wait and catch this unset·
vating our speech and actions, our civilization will .continue itS downward tJing spectaCle in "1\vin Falls Idaho,"
1
slide.
-"
which was recelldy shown at the NanTo make matteFS worse, this cultural depravity we are w,allowing in does- tucket Film Festival. Or you can watch
n't stop with swearing. We soil everything we touch. A 1995 book by the ongoing struggle between Bill
· Christopher Hitchens about the sainted Mother Teresa is titled "The Mis· Oiriton and AI Gore.
sionary Position." There is no longer any hallowed ground,.
·
·
Each is a p0litician with his own
·· Copyrlghl11188 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A~SN.
soul, his own personality, his own.
I"
interests. Yet both share the sam~ pol it-·
iqt) blood supply. If one becomes ill,.
the other fears for his life. If one dies; ·
lly The AaiOCJ~ .PrM,. ... - ·· ·· ·
.
· ·so does the other.
: Today is Thursday, July 1, the 182nd day of 1999. There are 183. days left
Talk about human melodrama ·•.
- in the ycllr. This is Canada Day.
Just weeks ago, Ointon spotted a
·: Today's Highlight in History:
· ''
. . fatal weakness in Gore's campaign.
: On July I, 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion of,&lt;;Jreai
·; Britain as the British North America Act tool!; effe~t.
··

"Jio'day
' In H sto ry"

On this date:

...

.

·..

-{

CoUld a J·ew be elected president iri the United States?

.

In 1863, the Civil War Battle of'Gettysburg.began.
'
•
_ In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Theodore Roosevelt ani! his
~·Rough Rid~rs" waged a victQrious assault on San J~an Hill"in Cuba.
~ In 1943, "pay·as·you-go" income tax withhol,ding began.
..
• In 1946,1he United S,tates exploded a 20-kiloton atomic bomb near Biki:ni Atoll in the Pacific. .
~··
·
·'
. · · In 1961, Diana, the future Princess'ofWales, was born near Sandringham,
. • England. (She died in August 1997 in a car crash in"Paris at age :16.)
In 1963, the U-S Post-Office in~ugurated i.ts five:((igit ZIP codes.
In 1968,the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union.and 58 other nations
-signed ihe. Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
.
·
In 1969, Britain's Prince Otarles was invested as the Prince of Wales.
In 1980, "0 Canada" was proclaimed the national .anthem Of Canada.. ·
.In 1997; Hong Kong reverted to Chinese rule after 156 years as i British
colony.
.
.
..
:·
·Ten years ago: "Playboy" magazine founder Hugh Hefner njarried Kim·
· berley Faye Conrad at his mansion in Los Angeles·. (fhe couple seplll'ated
fiost year.)
.
·
·
• ..'Five years ago: PLO chairman Vasser Arafat drove from Egypt i ntG Gaza,
'returning to Palestinian land after 27 years in exile.
One year ago:' Speaking in Sh~nghai, President Clinton urged his Chinese
hosts to open markets, battle corruption and .clean up the environment.
, Today's Birthdays: .Actress Olivia de Havilland is 83. Actor Farley
. Granger is 74. Actress-dancer Leslie Caron is 68. Actress Jean Marsh is 65.
Movie director Sydney Pollack is 65. Movie producer-director Claude Berri
Is 65. Actor Jamie Farr is 65. Comedy writ'r Pat McCormick is 65. Blues·
.)'llan James Cotton is 64. Actor David Prowse is 64. Cookiemaker Wally
Am&lt;Vs 63. Singer-musician Delaney Bramlett is 60. Dancer-choreographer 1\vyla Tharp is 58. Actress Karen Black is 57. Actress Genevieve Bujold
is 57. Gospel singer Andrae Crouch is 57. Rock ~in8!'!,:1Ctress Deborah
HllfiJL-is 54. Movie-TV producer-director Michael Pressman is 49. Rock
sinter Fred Schneider (B-52's) is 48. Actor Daryl Anderson is 48. Actor·
Trev'?r Eve is 48. Actor' comedian Dan Aykroyd is 47. Actor AJan R~ck
("Spin City") is 43. Actress Lisa Blount is 42. Olympic gold medal track
star Carl Lewis is 38. Country singer Michelle' Wright is 38. Actor Andre
Braugher is 37. Actress Pamela Lee is 32. Rock musician Mark Pirro (Tripping Daisy) is.29. 'Rock musician Franny Griffiths (Space) is 29. Actress Liv
Tyler is 22. Actors Andtew and Stephen Cavarno ("Party of Five") are 7.
Thought for Today: "Americans are benevolently ignorant about Canada,
. while Canadians are malevolently well-informed about the United
States.''- J. Bartle! Brebner, Canadian historian (18~5-1957).

:·

.

'

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I'

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·
'
,
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style. Feiuing that his own legacy · of last year, he can't forget how much ment Every whisper of criticism about
stands in jeopardy, he worried publicly he wiD need him next year.
his stiff campaisn style will raise
about the problem. This caused G6re
· 'As much as Ointon mi!SI fulfill ])is Gore's hackles. Every coded reference
to fake offense. Doesn't Oinlon know obligations to his .wife's Senate cam· by Gore to "faniily values" will be"''
how much ·damage this public hand· paign in NcW'York, be must recognize instantly and angrily decoded Ill(, Bill
wringing does to him, joined-&amp;!iihe- how much this distracts resources and Ointon. Every Gore attempt to iepahip as he is?
attention from Gore's efforts to suc· ra1e himself will stir a nasty reminder ··
Last week, it was Gore who acted ceed him·in the White&gt; House. As much from the president that it was he, Bill .
superior, saying he found. Ointon's as (lore may resent the first lady's Ointon, who put Gore in the positioh
conduct With White House intern ambitions, he can do nothing to offend where he is.
Monica Lewinsky to be "incxcus· her husband (or her!).
This ~ the Cruel limits of the
able." Ointon retorted by putting out
The battle between Gore and Oin- .ainton-Gore slf!lggle. Ukc conjoined
word how upset he . was IJI Gore's ton is geing to get more ghastly as we twins they strain and push at the other.
attempt to separate himself. Doesn 'I he aPProach the election. Gore will need , Threbuey....can whispe~, words_of anger and
know tbe tWo are in'this together?
Ointon in California but not want to be
,_
That, of C:ourse, is the problem. As ·· see~'with him in O)Jio. He may wanllo ·
BUt Ointon cannotharm AI GaR
much as Oipton may di~ain Gore's appear Ointon's twin in hip Santa without harming his o,;;n prospects of
abilities as Campaigner, he canno1 ~ Monica but his. distant. Democratic a presidential legacy. And AJ Gore canso cribCal as to disaedit him. As much cousin in heartland Columbus.
not sepe.rall: himself from his Siamese
as Gore maydisdain Ointon's conduCt
This is bound to stir $01llt resent· twin without destroying himself.

By Pen Wittenberg
'
The protagoni~l 'of Leon Uris' new 'novel "A
God.in Ruins'·' is named Quinn Patrick O'Connell.
He is.running for president. And a few days before
the election he discovers he's Jewish. Therein
hangs the tale.
, .
.
Which brings us to an old question, with a contemporary 11A!ist: "Could a Jew be elected president in the United States?"
Catholics make up 26.percent of the American
poputation . .Out of 42 presidents only one has been
Catholic (John· F. Kennedy). Jews today make up
about 2' percent of the population. The 1964
RepubliqiR candidate Barry Goldwater was born
o.f a Jewish father, but not raised as a Jew, prompt··ing the late Harry Golden to remark, "I always
knew the first Jewish president would be an Episcopalian." Anyway, Goldwater lost.
In 1974 Stephen Isaacs, then with the Washing·
ton Pos~ now a professor at the COlumbia School
of Journalism wrote "Jews and Am~oli tics.·: His point was that wbile Jews were heavily
involved as appointed officials, Political staff, and
in fund raising, it was rare and hard for them to
win elected office. In the U,S. Senate at that time
there were two Jewish senators, Jacob Javits from
New York (a liberal Republican in a state with a
Jarge J.ewish population), and Abraham Ribicoff (a
moderate Democrat from Connecticut). .
It was an interesting thesis. But within a decade
there were not two but eight Jewish senators,
including Jacob Chic Hecht, a Republican from
Nevada, a state with a big Mont! on population and
slightly niore Jews than walruses. Today, of the
I 00. members of the Senate there · are 11 Jews,
including lwo women from California (Boxer and
Feinstein); two from Wisconsin, a state with a tiny
number of Jews (Kohl and Feingold); as well "'I
senators who are Jewish from Michigan (Levin),
.
New JetSey (Lauten be rg), 0 regon (Wyden ), MIR·
.

nesota {\vellstone~. Pennsylvania contributions to our society, eeonomy and culture.
(Spect&lt;;r). New York (Schumer) But those who seek entry 'now,' whenever 'now'
and Connecticut fLieherman, of "happens to be, are viewed at besl with ambiVJ·
whom more in a m,oment). But lenoe, and more likely with disttust and hostility."
who's counting? .
~·
f1be data above are 17 years old; a somewhat
What's going .on? Hy 1982
similar 1997 Princeton Survey/Pew poll shows the
Gallup poll offered a clue:
same sorts of n:sults, wilh Koreans and VietQuestion: •"lmmigrants who on namese moving into positive territory, ·52 to Z6
balance have been a good thing or and 41to 36 respectively.) ·
"
" a bad thing fQr the.country.'' Here,
In 1992, after he wrapped up the· nomination,
by nationality, are the "gOod" versus "b'!d" rates: Gov. Bill Clinton sent Warren Christopher out to
English 66 percent to 6 percen~ Irish 62 to 7, Jews talk to pOtential vice presidential running mates,
59 to 9; Oermans 57 to 11, Italians 56 to 10, Poles including Sen. Albert poie. O!ristopher asked
53 to 12, Japanese 47 to 18, Chinese 44 to 19; and Gore how Joseph Lieberman, who is a Modem
those with. higher negatives than positives, Mexi- · Orthodox Jew and holds the ·sabbath sacred,
· cans 25 to 34, Koreans 24 to 30, Vietnamese '20 to would play in a state likt Tennessee. Gore paused ·
38, Puerto Ri"!'ns 17 to 43, Haitians 10 to 39, and for a moment and said Lieberman would likely do
Cubans 9 to 59.
·
very well. Voters in Tennessee, Gore said, admire
I do not believe that·there has ·ever been a &lt;;oun- people who are God-fearing and religiolls.
try which regards its Jewish population by 6 to I
If you're a regular reader of this colul'!'n you'll ·
favorable, (That includes Israel.) Could America guess what I'm up to. Lieberman, representing the
be the first philo-Semitic nation in history? Irving· right wing of the left wing party, would be the
Kristol says, speaking broadly of the Jewish expe· strongesl Democratic candidate for president-- or
rience.in the Diaspora, "They used to want to kill vice president. On the assumption that Gore is the
us, now they want to m~rry us."
Democratic nominee (he is not among my top
BUt it's not only Jews. In earlier times, and not three choices) he should chose Lieberman as his
so much earlier than 1982, Irish, Italians, Poles, running mate.l\fter all, the Je~ish candidate wins
Japanese and Chinese had been scorned by many Uris' fictional election.
fellow Americans, and regularly excoriated in the
And one more thing, before you start nagging
public press and the academic community. Many me at my new e-mail address, Watmailaol.com.
early·l900s sociologistS were big into a theory Like William Tecumseh Sherman I am not a cancalled "scientific racism," and were able to didate for presi&lt;lent. Or vice president. But unlike
'"prove" · that Italian, Slovak, Polish and Jewish Sherman, if nominated I will run, in either party. ·If immikrants to 1\mericawere "morons:" ·elected I will serv.e.
,
.
.
Immigration historian Rita Simon explains it Copyrtghlttn NEWSPAP.{R ENTERPRISE ASSN. ·
this way: "The American public's attitude toward
Ben W.Uenberg, • aenlor fellow lit the Artier· ·
immigrants... (is seen through) rose-colored glass- lean Enterprlae !~lltltute, Ia the author of "Val·
es turned backwards Those immigrants who uae Mlllter Most and Ia the host of the waekly
ca;.e earlier wheneve; earlier happens to be are public ·t...vlalon program "Think Tank." You
· ed as h• avmg
· mad e ·omponant
·
aend commante to him via •mall:
v1ew
an d. pos1:,.1ve may
mallaol.com.
· Wat·

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i~~ ·-·~-~

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Cloudy

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Hot, humid conditions on
tap for holiday weekend ·

Tbe following day. !bey believe be
killed a '26-year-old Houston
schoolteacher at her home. His fingerprints-tlleo were found June 15
in Gorham, Ul., at. the scene of tbe
murder of an 80-year-old man and
his 52-year-old daughter.
INS officials said tliat when
Resendez-Ramirez was in the custody of the Border Patro.J on June I,
they· didn't have any information on
his criminal records or of any out~·
standing warrants ...
But Me1ssner sau:! the INS had
multiple entries on Resendez~mirez in a photo and fingerprint ·
database tbat provides Immediate ·
identification of aliens apprehended ·.
1\y •Border Patrol.
The syS!em became widely avai I·
able in 1997 and 1998. Prior to that
INS relied on ·a text database of
names.
INS first encountered ResendezRamireZ in 1976 after he was arrest- ·
er;J in Michigan. He was returned to
. Mexico, but since thattime has been
: ·deported from the U.S. on . three
occasions in 1985, 1987 and 1991.
He was also apprehen~ed by Border
Patrol agents eight times between
January 1998 and the present.
Meissner said the Justice Depart·
ment will look at why Resendez· Ramirez "wa~ not detained and
whether INS knew about Resendez· .
Ramirez criminal .activities after
being contacted by local law
enforcemen.t earlier this year."

Announcements:
Middleport street cleaning scheduled
The Middleport \blunteer Fire Department wi II be sprayin_g down Sec·
ond Avenue Thursday evening. People are asked to pari&lt; their cars on side
streets if possible.
_.

Eastern Athletic Bopsters to meet
EaStern Athletic Boosters will meet at the high schooltonighl at 7. AJI
parents of athletes grades 7·12 are/'rged to anend.
.

Racine Village Council meeting set
Racine Village Council will
building.
·

m~et

Monday. 7 p.m. at the municipal
_
'
,

Boil advisory lifted

. ·

A boil.advisory issued for.Tilppers Plains-Otester Water District customers on Manuel, Apple Grove-Dorcas and East '-&lt;;tart mads in Letart
Township has been lifted. ·
·

Vacation Bible school slated
Vacation Bible school will be held Monday through Friday, 6-9 p.m. at
the Harvest Outreach Church in Chester.
·

Blood drive to be held

A blood drive has been scheduled at Middleport Church of Chri~t on
Monday, 12-6 p.m. The church is located at437 Main Street. Red Cross
hopes to collect 55 productive units of blOod at the blood drive. AJI blood
types are needed, with a special request for people with 0 negative and 0
positive blood types.
-!.,

Planned Parenthood closed Monday
The administrative offices and clinics of Planned Parenthood o{ Souih-.
east Ohio will be closed Monday in observance of the Founh of July holiday. Regular scheduled hours will resume Tuesday.
·

Scipio Township Trustees tp meet

.

The, Scipio Township Board ofJ"ruS!ees will meeting Wednesday; 6:30
p.m. at the Page ville Town Hall.
·

Salem VFD ice cream social

The Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department will hold its annual
ice cream social on July 17, with serving from 11 a.m. to 7p.m. Tlie fire
I de[la111i11en1 is !otated on State Route 124 in Salem Center. •· .•. · .
The menu will consist of 10 flavors of homemade ice cream: roast beef
sandwiches~ pies, 'potato salad, macaroni salad,.baked beans, and hot dogs
.
p.m. Wednesday.
and
other items. David Stiffler will perfo·rrn al 4:30 p.m ., the Midnight
The sheriff's office said the vicCloggers
at 5 p.m., and Dwight' Icenhower, Elwis Presley
tim had already been pulled from the
impersonator,
at 5:30 p.m.
·
water by the time medics arrived ·
and was pronounced dead at the
Annual fish fry scheduled
scene.
The Salem Township Firemen's Association will hold its annuli! fish
Hensley's death was under invesfry on July 31 from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. The fish fry will take place on the
tigation by ihe Montgomery County
square in Wilkesville.
•·

Authorities Investigate gravel-pit death

By The AasocJatad p,...
·
·
Hot and. sticky wea.ther is being forecast for Ohio over the Fourth of
CAMDEN (AP) - Investigators
July w~ekend .
'
· · ..
were trying to determine today what
But conditi&lt;?ns should be good for fireworks displays a d other outdoor
caused the death of a mali whose
activities as high presslite clears the skies following a un~ showers
body was pulled from a gravel pi!.
and thunderstorms tonight.
The ,l'reble Coun.ty sheriff's
office identified the victim as
Highs through .Monday will be 90-95, the National eather Service
~
.
.
,,. Michael Hensley, 31, of Hamilton.
According to the sheriff's office,
il
us weather staThe record;high temperature for this e I
tion 'was 98 degrees in 1~53 while the record low was 44. in 1988. Sunset
emergency crews ;were called to the coroner's Oftice. .
Round and square dance Saturday
Camde.n is about 20 mile$ southtonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:07 a.m.
Wysong gravel pit just s6uth of th.is
TuQpers Pl~ins VFW 9053 will have a round a'nd square dance on SatWeatber l'oRcut:
if
,
western Ohio ·community qt 7~50· )Wesl Qf Dayton,
urday
from 8 lo 11 p.m. True Country will be the band JICrforming, and
' Tonigbt;..Partly cloudy and breezy with a chance for a shower,\lf thun·
Ronnie Wood will be the caller. The public is inyited.
derstorm. Lows from tbe upper 60s to near 70. Southwest wind 10 to 20
mph. chance of rain 40 percent• . · · .
. .. .
·
Friday...t'artly cloudy, warm and breezy with' a c~ for a thunder·
storm. Highs 85 to 90. Chance of rain 30 percenl.
·• .
·
, D,6.UAS (AP) - Mimicking :a demonstrate what he . had done,
Friday nighi ... Partly cloudy. Lows in tl\e lower 70s. • .
wrestling move he had watched on backed up,.about 10 feet and ran
..
· . Estellded forecut:
television, a bQY accidenJaiiY killed towa_rd a police detective who ~as
.
.
.
Saturday.:.Partly cloudy and hot. Highs 90 to·95.
his younger brother dunng horse- holding up a doll about the same s1ze By JEANNINE AVERSA
. The Federnl Reserve, worried that
Fourth of July... Hazy, bonnd hu.mid. Lows in the lower 70s and highs
play, investigators said.
as the 3-year-old.
Aaaoc:lated PrtiU Writer
the 'economy was not slowing quickly ;
in the mid 90s.
· '
.
1.,' /
The boy, as he neared the. doll, .· WASHINGlON (AP) -. ConStrue- enough to keep inflation under cootrol;
·The. 3-year-old victim died from
. Monday... Mostly clear and continued hot. Lows in the lower 70S and
brain swelling. His 7-y.ear-old broth· thrust one ~ out at shoulder level lion spending fell·in May for a second announced Wednesday it..wios increas~ighs in the mid 90s.
·
·
· ...
.er will not face any criminal charges, and forcefully struck the 'doll at its · straight month, the.first time that 's hap-. ing short-term interest rates by a quar·
law officers said Wednesday.
, .. neck, knocking it ... backward, said pened in,.two years, indicating one of ter point.
"·
"He said he pushed his brother Detective Dan Lesher.
the economy's sirongest seclo
_, However, the Fed, in a pleasant sur,_.. arid said he'd ~n it on
Dr:'Ji'ffrey Barnard, Dallas Coun· ing to slow,
prise for financial rilarkets, si8naJed
n~ght down
wrestling on 1V," said poli\:e Lt. Bill ty's chief medical examiner, ruled
The . Comme
ent .said this increase may be enough to slow
DES MOlNFS '(AP) - People five reguiar number:~ but missed the. Walsh.
·.
the May 2.? death an accident caused today 'that spending dropped by 0.9 economic activity to a more Sustainable
The
older
brother,
asked
to
,
by tral!ma to the ~ead..
peteenl in May, after,falling by 2 per- · rate. •
.
,
standing in . long lines around the Powerball. '{hose tickets are worth
&lt;;ountry helped push the Powerball $100,000 each.
·
cerit in April.
I
In .a second report, the ' 4bor
The declines were · f~irly wide· Department said tOday the number of
jackpot to .$150 million, tbe third
The largest Powerball jaclcpot
highest ever.
ever won was $295.7 million on July
spread, with decreases reported in sin- · Amencans filing new cloimsfor unem.
· ·
That jackpot was won by a player 29.
gle-ramilyhomes.apanmentbuildings. ploymentbenefitsdroppedlastweek.
in Minnesota who successfully
Tbe winning ticket was sold at a
AKRON (AP) ~ Two teen-age,
Juvenile Court Magi&amp;traie Marie hotels and motels and big government
The construction report showed that
malched' a! I .five numbers and the gas station in Richmond, Indiana, and girls w~o di\1 volunteer work. at Kostoff asked .for psyc:holog1cal construction projects.
Spending on residential building fell 05
.; : Powerball'number. .
.
wu bought by 13 machinists who Akron City Hospital have pleac;led evaluation.. of both girls.
. The decrease . was not .expected. Jl"'?'nl in May to a seasonally adjusted
· Winnfrig num~rs drawn·Wednes· worked tOjJether in WriSterville, Ohio. guilty to ' delinquency charges that
No one. was injured in the fires~ Many analysts had expected construe- armual rate of $320 billion with both ·
day night were 5, 10,12, 20, 40 and . Players in the multi-stale lotto they set fires at the hospitaJ.
and hospital:services were uot inter- lion spending to rise by I percent in .single-family homes and apartments
Powerball 3. .
. game select five numbers from a field
. The girls, ages 15 and 14, have rupted. In each case employees put May:
· . showing declines.
In addition to the jackpot, there of one to 49 and a single Powerball been held at the , Summit County out the fires.
Home building and other construe·
Construction' spending for all prj:were 49 tickets sold that matched the from among the numbell one to 42.
Juvenile Detention Center since
City Hospital's student volun- lion activity, driven by low mortgage vate building p!Ojects fell 0.7 percent, .
their arrests June !6.
tects, called candy .stripers, must .be rates, were a key contributing facto• .lo the second straight month of decline,
Each pleaded guilty Wednesday at Jeast14 years.old and a freshman thestrongeconomicgrowthinthec;arly something that has not happened for.
·1 Co
· h' h h 1
partoftheyear.Salesofnewandexisl- . three years. Spen9ing on f~ctories,
in Summ!l County Juvem e uri to 10 1g · sc 00 •
ing homes had hit record highs during .hotels and hospitals all saw declines.
Units of the Meigs County Emer· . tation Center, Pomeroy, Diane Walk- · four
counts of aggravated arson.
An Akron Fire Department arso~
gency Medical Service recorded five er, Pleasant Valley Hospi!al;
Sentencing is scheduled for next . investigator said the two girls the winter.
··
But spending. on office buildings
calls for assistance. Wedn~ay.
6 p.m., state Route 681, Tuppers ·week. Each girl faces further con- e&gt;iplained . they set the small fires
But The pace of borne sales has showed a gain·. ' ·
Units responding included£
Plains, AJian Barringer, treated at finement, possibly up 10 age 21, in because they w~re bored.
cooled in recent months, reOecting risSpending on gcvernmen! const111c·
" 'CENTRAL DISPATCH
the scene, Tuppers Plains squad
ing
mprtgage
rates.
Sales
of
new
homes
tion
projects fell 1.6 percent in May, the
0
the custody of the Ohio epartment
fell 5.1 peteenl in Ma~ and
. sales of third straight monthly decline, the first
1:13 p.m .•. Rqcksprinp Rehabili~ l!SSi~led. .. ,
of Youth Services.
.
&gt;·
·
'
· POMEROY
,
• .
"
existing h~mes dropped 4. Pen:cnt.
time that has happened in eight years.
8:5~ a.m., volunteer fire depart·
ment and squad to Children's Home
Road,
automobile fire, Cathy Hay213-He) .
IPRIIIG VAlli 'I rlllll.\i\
• ComntUntt,.IUSPS
. man·owner, no injuries report~d. . ·
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Third .and Elm streets, motor-vehicle
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Police: boy accidentally .k ills little
brother with wrestling ~ove ·· .

Constructidn drops
second straight month

50 million
before being won Wednesday

1ieen h OS pi•ta I vo Iu n·.·,t' .eers
p Iea d QUI"I ty to sett"1ng f"Ires·

-.Meigs EMS logs 5 calls

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The Daily.Sentinel

·•
'

. ·

Reds down Arizona
2-0, record ninth
consecutive victory'

. No. I overall pick, Brand said: ':Not

.

-

at all. I didn 't have the slightest idea.
ond lime this yw-, gi•ing up season
I feel blessed." .
·
highs of nine runs and II hiK
Brand, 20, was the first player
Brown lefi the ballp;d withoul
ever to leave Duke~ an undcrclasscomment.
man and the first member of the Blue
"I hate to lca&gt;e my ~in lhere !O
Devils to be cho""n first overall.
gi•e up nine lUllS," Dodgers managFrancis played in college at
. By BEN WALKER
er Davey Johnson said. "1bat's what
AP Baubltll Wrllet · •
Clippen. ·
Maryland. averagi_n g I 7.0 points in
Kevin Brown and Randy Johnson kills me."
1be bad teams got the best players 'his only season for the Terrapins. 1be
both fell frusttaled beyond words.
AI Cincinnati, Randy Johnson put
Wednesday on a night when the 22-ycar-old was a first-team All·
1be San Diego J&gt;adres banged on an o•erpowering- performlltCe,
NBA draft dido 't go exacdy as pre- ACC ""lection last season and was
around Brown once again, beating striking out 17. But he also lost as _
dieted and there were almost as many widely considered one of the most
their former ace for a team-rel:ord Cincinnati pitchers Ron Villone and
exciting college players to watch. ·
long faces as happy ones. '
I 2th straight victory, 11 -2 over the Scott Williamson combined on a
Da•js was taken third by the
" Hopefully, .when I wake ,up
Los
Angeles Ond~e" on Wednesday one-hiller to beat Arizona 2-0, the
tomorrow, I'll be happy. " said 1-fornets, who said theY would grab
.
·
. Reds' ninth-sttaighl win.
-night.
Francis, whO buried his head, in his the UCLA guard if~ was still availReggi~
.
Sanders
homered
twice,
In his previous start, Johnson
hands when . h&lt;;; heard that .'the able. 1be 20-year-old left the Bruins
chasing
Brown
with
a
three,
run
shot
14, but lost 1--0 when St.
fanned
GriZzlies chose . him second overall. after a sophomore season in which he 7
in
the
seventh
innin~
at
San
Diego.
"I feel relieved now more than averaged 15 .9 points and 5.1 assists ·
Brown Jost to the Padres for the sec while still recovering from a tom
i!appy."
_ _
Also relieved were those around anterior cruciate ligament suffered
the NBA who thought Jeny Krause during the 1998 NCAA tournament.
The 19-year-old Odom had a
might pull off some combinatioli of
FIRST IN THE DRAFT - Duke's Elton Brand (left) get1 congrltv·
draft day deals -that would speed ~p bizarre predraft experience, making lations from NBA commissioner David Stem alte!; the Chicago Bulls
the rebuilding of his dismantled himself eligible. hiring and then fir- made Brand the first pick in· the NBA draft Wnclnesday night In
dynasty. l.lstead,, Krause simply ing an agent. trying to get reinstated Washington D.C.
stood pat with the No. I pick and at Rhnde Island and then missing a
selected the college player of the predraft physical before NBA scouts vacancy left by the trade of Mookie and Foster. of South,west texas St&lt;lle,,
Jllaylock to G,o lden Stale on went 21st to Golden State and then
year.
_
in Chicago..
·'
Tuesday.
·,
was traded -for the rig his jo•
" We never got to a point ~here
Those were only the latest travails
Cleveland
.uSed
its
second·
first
Cumming~.
.•
'.
we were ready to move the No. I . It involving Odom. wtro alte~'ded three
round
.
pi~k
.
'
l-Ith
'
overall._
to
take
Kenny
Thomas
of
New
!\lle&lt;ico
never got that serious-, " Bulls coach high schools ~uring his senior season
Tim Floyd said. " The more we and planned to enroll at UNLV Duke seniOr Trajan Langdon. a 6-3 went 22nd to Housion. Devean
George of Jjivision III Augsburg
thought about it. the more we before the validity.. of his entrance shooting guard_ The
Raptors
selected
center
(Min
n. ) went 23rd to the Los
watched film. the more we became exam scores was 'brought into ques,
Rfulojevic
12t!J
m•craJI',
Angeles
Lakers, Andrei Kirilenko of
Aleksandar
knocked out that this could be the tion .
taking
a
chance
on
a
7-~
giant
from
CSKA
Russia
wa.' picked 24th by
guy."
··some decisions I made may not
Montenegro
who
has
tieen
playin!l
Utah
.
a
nd
the
Miami
Heal selected
Only a few trades were mad . have been· the best at that time:·
only
a
few
years_
•
,homegrown
forward
Tim
James &lt;If
basketball
for
with (he biggest one sending Corey Odom said. "I 'm 19 years old. I'm
Maggeue
went
13th
to
Seaule
and
Miami
with
pick
No.
25.
Maggene.the 13th pick, from Seallle thankful I didn't•• make ' those misJones went 27th to Atlanta and
to Orlando. along with Dale Ellis, takes when I' m 29 and it 's too late:" Duke point guard Wii!iam Avery was
pia,~ed
14th
by
Minnesota.
Avery's
then
~as traded to Philadelphia for a
Billy Owens and Don MacLean, for
At Rhode Island, he averaged
mad!'
Duke
the
first
school
fUiure
No. I pick, Sc!!ll Pa4geu ,of
selecrion
t'Jorace Grant and two future No. 2 17.6 points, 9.4 rebounds and 3.7
10
ha•e
.four
players
taken
in
the
first
Kentucky
was picked 28th by Utah
picks.
assists . - numbers that had many ·
round
in
the
same
year.
and
Leon
Smith •of M&amp;rtin Luther
Toronto agreed tp send the fifth player personnel directors t~ling
The
New
York
Knicks
picked
7-"·
King
HS
in
Chicago. was the final
picl, high schooler Jo_nathan Bender, him the most talented all-around
foot-2
"Frenchman
Frederic
Weis
pick
of
the
first
round by the NBA
to Indiana for Antonio Davis. That · player available.
.
the
15th
pick,
bypassing
homechampion
San
Antonio
Spurs. He
with
tra&lt;!e will be finalized Aug. I.
Toronto, selecting fifth , took the
grown
guatd
Ron
Artesl
of
St.
was
later
traded
lo
Dalla.S.
Atlanta traded Jumaine Jones, the rail-thin , 205-pound Bender, . of
Evan Eschmeyer, a 6- I I center
·27th _pick, to Philadelphia fora future Picayune, Miss., who scored 31 John 's, w~o went 16th to the Bulls.
of
Old
from
Northwestern expected to go in
Atlanta
chose
Cal
Bowdler
No. I. And Golden.State sent the 21st points in the ' McDonald's All-.
Dominion
17th,
Denver
took
James
the
first
round, lasted until No. 34,
pick, Jeff Foster, to Indiana for American game. breaking Michael
HEADING FOR HoME _: The Cincinnati Rflda' Dmitri . Yaung
Posey of Xavier with the 18th pick,' when he was taken by New Jersey.
Vontcego Cum~t~ings, who went Jordan 's record by one.
heflda
tor home attar hitting a aolo homer off ~;~andY Johnaon'ln 1M
26th.
Bender, 6-foot-10; was chosen Quincy Lewis of Minnesota went Lee Nailon · of TCU and Todd first Inning of Wfldlleadny night's Natlonlll league game In
All in all, it added up to somewhai ·higher than any high school entrant 19th to Utah. Dion Glover of MacCulloch of Washington also Cincinnati, where the' Reds' 2'-0 victory •xtendfld their winning
of an anticlimactic night after so since Kevin Garnett. who went fifth Georgia -Tech went 20rh to Atlanta dropped late into the ,..,.ond round.
strenk to nine games. (AP)
;
·much lrade falk in the days leading overall to Minnesota in 1995.
up io'the draft .- 'much of it involvWally Szczerblak went ·sixth to
i)lg the Bulls.
.
the
Minnesota Timberwolves,
• "We considered trade offers ' in becoming the first senior selected.
ieveral directions," Krause said.Richard Hamilton went seventh to
~What we didn't want to d9 'is·get in · the Washington Wizards. He left
a situation where we lost Elton. He 's Con~edicul after a junior seaspn in
jot'·the makeup and physical ability which he averaged 21.5 poirits and
\O be a building block for this team." led the Huskies to the national title.
Brand, a 6-foot-8 forward, was He could move right into t/ie starting
~hosen by the Bulls after they took a lineup if the Wizards lose Mitch
serious last look at Rhode Island's Ricl\mond to _free agency.
The Cleveland Cavaliers, who
Odom, bringing him into Chicago for -coveted Szczerbiak, had to se!lle for
a workout on the eve of the draft.
Francis was chosen second, Baron Utah J&gt;Qint guard Andre_ Miller, ~
'·Davis went third to Charlotte and first-team All-America.
c;ldom went fourth to the Clippers.
. Shawn Marion, a 6-7 forward
- "I didn' t know where I was going from 1JNLV, went ninth overall to tlte '
• I
tP fit in this draft. I did want to be l~e Phoeni&lt; Suns, who acquired the pick ' ._
'N o. I pjck,'' B_rand said. "I feel I am from Dallas a year ago in the Steve
the .best phiyer and I can improve a Nash trade. J
. ·
lbi . .lthirik I can be the co~rierstone in
. · The Atlanta Hawl&lt;s selected •
theirrebuilding."
'-.
Ahzona point guard Jason Terry with
. Asked if he knew he would be the ·the lOth pick, quickly filling ' the

National League
roundup

...

CLEVELAND (AP)
Eric
Milton felt like he could JCI anyone
out e•en Cle•cland Indians
cleanup hiller M11111y Ramirez with
the game on the line in the ninth. •
.Bu1 Minnesota manager Tom
. Kelly wlsn 't 'IOjlling to take ~
chance. He tobk Milton out aftcr:an
tmpresstve 8 13 lnnmgs and Mtke
Trombley JOI the last two outs as the
Twtns beat · the Indians 5-3
Wednesday night.
"You put . faith in people and
· sometimes they go out and get the job
done." Kelly said. "We did that
tonight -with Millon and with
Trombley.

'
- Louis rookie: Jose Jimenez pitched•a
no-hiuer against the Diamondbacks.
Asked how the Big Unit was ha!ldiing his l1!ld luck; m8nager Buck
Showalter said, " I would think not
·. very well. In fact, I know he isl)'t."
Once Showalter finished, public
relatto"s direetor Mike Swanson said·
of Johnson, " He isn't taking il so
well that he's got nothing to say." ,
Brown (9-5) lost for the seventh
stra_ight time at San Diego - two
this year. one in the World Series,
. : . one in the NL championship ""'ies
and three in the 1998 regular season.
· Sanders pump&lt;!~ his fists as Ile
·rounded first base after his homer off
Brown, and ti~ his cap to the

:·1o suppon allegarions about the loan.
But the "NCAA fS&gt;Und the· l011n 'was
unsecured, given to a playef with no
.credit history and lacked a cosigner.
· The NCAA began a preliminary
inquiry with interviews at the school
in the summer of 1997 and expanded
it in March 1998.
_
By that time, Purdue had already
disciplined assistant coach Frank

1o cenlcr,

ence," lhrgrove wd. "I told Kosc I
thought he made the wrong call. He
told me I was full of it.,.
..
. Wright y~lded five runs on eoght
hits over ""ven innings. He struck out
seven and walked five.
•
Neles: Hargro•e and general
manager John Han. expressed con-cern with the inconsistency or starter
Dwight Gooden. Both said the righthander's next stan. Frida) agamst
Kansas City. will be "imponant:• __ _
Hart confirmed that catcher Sandy
-Aiomar wtll begm a rehabolitauon
assignment .next week in the mi~or~ .
Alomar has not played sinte Ma, II
and had surgery on his left knee ." ·

and RBI sinsle by Diaz made it 4-3.
Ron Coomer's RBI single put the
Twins ahead S-3 in the third.
HarJiOve was ejected .in the
Cleveland third after a bauer's ini&lt;I'ference call on Robeno Alornar
resulted in baserunner Omar ViliJlXI
being called out. ·
·
Alornar struck out jlS "· Viz.quel
broke _for s«boo base, ~lamar's rotlow-througll'sent him over the plate.
hif!~rlng catcher Steinbach's throw
ro ~- Umpire Greg Kosc ruled
Viz.quel out. then tossed Hargro•e for
arguing .
"I didn 't think it was interfer-

..

\ I

from Page 4) .

crowd of 44.965.
.1
a perfect ninth for his -lOth save.
Wllh President Clinton watchi~g the president a blue Cubs jacket. and his 15th homer and an RBI single
In his last two starts, Villone has in the owner's box at Wrigley Field. they traded autographs_
Marlins 4, Mets 3 .
" I was just"ltoping that it-stayed
fair, because I thought it was going to given .up only two singles in 15 Sammy Sosa hit his major league Brewers poicher Jom Abb&lt;;ott had
Mark K_otsay _homered with '"' o
go foul." Sapders said. "When I saw scoreless innings.
leading 30th home run to lead two--run single for his second major outs in the bottom a f the lOth mmn g..
that, I practically jumped out of my
·."1 can't figure - it out," Villone Chicago over Milwaukee.
league hit _
lifting Aorlda over-New York.
shoes. . It was a _good feeli(!g."
said. " I'm just going up there with I After a making a Medic;u:e speech · Astros II', Cardinals 3
,, Ko!Say connected off Arm~ndo
. 1be P~s Jx:oke the_&lt;!rub record ,. confidence now. I feel strong_anc! the ._in Chica11o and spea)&gt;inl!; to Britis'l_, Corning off a. no-h1iter in his last Benitez (0-2). Marlins hillers were 0- -of H , stra1ght wms set, tn 1_982 ~nd g,uys· are pla~nji well behmd n\e . . Prtme Montster Tony _.lllaJr about the • outing, Jimenez was in trouble right for-22 a!!ainst the hard-throwinj!
Mets reliever before Kotsay home,,
matclied last year. Unul •ti\IS _stnng, I ve got a good feehng now and I Nonhero •Ireland peace talks. Cli.n ton from the start at the Asu-ollome.
the NL champions had not won more wain to keep it going."
changed out of hi s b~siness suit and
Jimenez gave up songles to Craig red _ ·
~ ~
than ,111!'0 in a row this season.
In other NL games. Chicago beat rushed over to the 'l)allpark.
Biggio .and J:?erek Bell to start the
Pinates 9, Phillie5 I
The Reds, meanwhile. kept up the Milwaukee 5-4, Houston 4efeated St: , . Clinton arrived in the fifth inning first inQ,ing , and Houston weni on to .
Bnan Giles hit a 457 -fOot homer
'streak that has put them in first place Louis 11-3, Monlreal ralli ed past and was halfway through a hot dog score four runs.
and AI Manin hit a bases-loaded
in the NL Central.
Atlanta 7 -5, San Franci sco dO\\ ned when _Sosa hit a tiehrcaking homer
Jimenez lasted y nl y 4 ' inmngs double as Putsburgh scored eight '.
Vil!one (3-2) held Arizona hitless Colorado 4-1, . Pittsburgh to pped over the left -field blea10hcrs and onto and was roughed' up for se\'en· runs times on the founh inning at Three
and seven hns7 .
- Rtver. Stadium _
until Tony Womack singled cleanly Philadelphia 9- 1 and Florida oc~t · Waveland A' cnuc.
with two outs in the sixth. and left New York 4-3 in 10 innings.
,,. Clinton and Sosa talked · for about
St. Louos roukte Joe McEwing
It ~- as scoreless until the Pirate ,;
after the eighth. Williamson pitched
Cubs S, Brewers 4
20 minute s aftenhc gaine. osa_g:ive extended his hitting - streak to 2 1 erupted for their biggest inning of the
games. Jeff Bagwell hit his ' 25th season. with Giles and Manin each
hOmer.for Houston .
drivmg in three runs.
&lt;Continued from Page 4)
Expos 7, !lraves S
Bobby Abreu homered 'for
In December 1996 Burke said- . Orlando Cabrera's double-keyed a Philadelphi a.
·;
The. NCAA . ·which did not menKendrick for meeting· with thenGiantS 4, Rockies I
recruit Jarnaat Davis in tbe summer- tion .Kendrick by name in the report. Keady and Kendrick 'inadvenently ."five -run comeback in the eighth
Pitcher Russ Oniz homerJOd and
or 1996 during a period when coach- said an assistant coach involved in . violated NCAA ru lcs h)&gt; making 15 mnmg as Montreal ovenoo,f Atlanta
es are barred from contact with . the recruiting violations would be telephone calls to Davis. who later for the seco~d stra1ght lloght at doublcd ·· as host San Francisco sent
_
Colorado to its season-high ~eventh
recruits.
s ubject to NCAA "show-cause" signed with the Boilen11akers, but did Olymptc_Stadoum.
..
·
Kendrick '('as fined an undis- requirements for one year. The penal- not play as a freshman because of _ A day after the Expo• scor&lt;ld five straight loss .
Davis
played
umes
10
the
nonth
for
a
6--5
won.
they
Oniz
(9-5)
pitched
seven
effective
academic
ine'ligibiliry.
ty
allows
the
commiuee
to
determine
closed sum and forbidden to recruit
off campus for 10 days during the whether the individual's athletic in 12 games._, a sophomore last-sea- broke _loose _agamst rehevers Kevon innings _as the Giants moved into a tie
. Wllh Anzona for the NL West lead.
official recruiting period that began duties should he limited for a speci- son. then quit the team in December. McGhnchy and Rudy Seanez.
·
Vladimir
Guerrero,
whose
three·
'
fied
lime.
in November 1996.
-·.
ron horner won Tuesday 's game, hit

a

Hi.WSIOD (Uma 11-4) It ONCINNATI (Parris S- managn. pubhc rdat1ons .
I), 7:05p.m.
.
SAN t\mONIO SPURS: Trade~ tht rights,ro F
' Adlnul ~ll 7-5) at Nt• Yor\ (Yoshii 6-6). Lroo Snu th 1u Dall;u fOf lhc: rip:h1s 10 G Gordon
7:40p.m.
' ,
, •
Gincck .and a fururr Sttond:round drafl ?iek .
SEATTLE SUPERSON ICS: Traded rhe ngh1 s 10
Arilona (ADdeisQQ 1·1 I at S1. louis (Oliver 4-.S ).
8: 10.p.m.
~
...
.
, F Con=y Maggene and F B1ll y tlv.'ens. G Dale Elhs
s.n Dieao (Hilchrock. 6-6) 111 Colorado (A:5ta:io ' ~ F Don Mad.ean 10 Orl:mdo for F t-loroce Gram
1·6). 9:05p.m/
and 1wo fulurr ttcond-roond draf1 ptoks
~ FrancUco (8roCk. S-6l at Los Angeles tC .
1
' ~
Perez 2·8). !O:lOp.m_ _

~·-

lila

". l!lslemD,I""""
.. ,',8: L fJS.

'Iii

48

2
&lt;ih

.429
32 44 .421

14
lo&amp;\

Hew Yon .......................'........ 29 .61]
Borton ········ ·· ····~·-···
32 .SB4
Toror~~o _________________
____··-·_____····__ ···-•s
____ ,, 41

T...,. Bay .._._.... : ............. _.. 1J -44
&amp;JI:j~_:: 1•••

..

'

.

. ..........

12\

is

·o.uo;o ................................. Jl' 4l .42)
.'~ ... .... 32

44

.01

, Minnriota,.... ,............... ........29 47

.382

.......

Tr:r.as .......................................~ 33 .sn
Seaulc:: ..........................._•.... TJ9 38 .306
Anahrim .. :...

.. 31

........ 35

.455

1..

Wedaesday'ucores ·

.
,- !!: L fJS.
NewYort .............................. -5 ~ .71&lt;l
~·,
•01-tudo ..................................S J .62S
7'1'
Decroil ....................... :,....'.L.:.S
4, ,5S6
9\ • .~ ., ........... ,r......., ...... ~.. J - S· .31S
CLEVELAND.........
2 ·1 .222
Washing1on .............................2 · 7

Detroit 8. New York-i!

... -~......_.. ............................6

,Minnesota S, CLEVELAND 3
Otic.go 10, Kansas Cily 9 ( 10)
Tcxu 18. 1\Rahtim 4

MiiWIOta ........................
1 • Los AnreJes .......... ---~ '••--~-Phocrlia
. ____ . &gt;..· ·-·~
. U1ah .
... ··--- --~- ..•..

_.

Oakland 14, Seank s

Today'§ games

·,Baltimore !Erickson

~-8)

·

li.ll"'

·-

I

.

2':

•

.222

I

Houslofta-................... ___ ___________8

Toronto 10, Baltimore 9 (10•

....

Hockey

National Hocby Luf:•

Wesl&lt;rn Conlor&lt;nce

Tampa Bay II. Booon 10 (10)

....

'

'

.\

--

.S11

Rate Plans

..5SS
5 ..'75
6 HO

.2

$15
$ 20
$ 25

Tonight 's games ·
Plloentll a1 N('.,.. YOfk. 7 :.~0 p.Kl
Los Angeles ar Minnesota. 8 p.m
ClEVElAND at Houston. 3:.10 p.m.

,Friday'~ 'games
Los Angeles 111 ~it 7:30p.m.
Sacramento ill W;uhingiO ~. 8 p.m.
ClEVELAND at Utah. 9 p.m.

'

Ka~a Ciry (Rosado S-6) . ac CLEVEL~ND
{Gooden 2-3), 1:0S p.m.
•.
s~t';""'"' cJJoo..~· 1-21" New v..k·cco"' s•. ·
3). U5p .m.
.
.
BOJtoo (Martinez 14-2) al Chibio &lt;Paniue 8-5).
·r
S:OS p.m
·
~
- Detroi1 (Weaver6-4) tu Minnesot:!.."&lt; Hawkins 4-8). lllam

IOJ5 p.m.

...

.

29

.\4

~

20

11 . 16

New Eftaland ., .... .......... 1 8 J
TampaBay ......
.. .......... 6 9 3

.

.

.'

NL standings

•

..

,

~~cd-::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::!1

.603
..564- "'((

i!· .S26
~

Monlreal ............................... 30 , 44
_florido
....................... 21 ~I

CmlraJ Didlkln

G

.40S

IS·

20

.SSI

Houscon ................ :: ............ 44

. ~19

Pinsburah ............................ .39 37 .Stl
17 .soo
St. Louis .............................. .37 40 .481
Oiicqo ................... ...... :...... 31

Milwaukee ..... ................... JS 41

---.......... 510 3

Minrti

................ 41 2 2

.460

Arizooo. .................. ,..............4J .U .551
San Francisco ............ :..... .....43 35 .551
Saa Diego ....... ..................... Jl ]8 .493
40
41

\

~

6_

7'~

.459
.4S3

4 1~

7

t~

1·4

Today's aames

·

IPc-rwn 1- 1J t1l P1tt sburj!.h \ Rn~· hie b.

- + '

-

piMs

ftf szo

w........
~

t,

\"-''i1tti~~~G'~I

~His at ChiCIJO, 8~~ p.m
•

. •

Transactions

~wpdi•..,,_JIItlli ·

sz5 ~~·•lk-tlllilt

'

IWi' . _ fw just t-791 ~ .. ,.,.. . .,, . ""

Baseball
AL: Reduced the suspension of Deao,i l1igrrs C
Brad Ausmus from two games to one'. but relaint=d
the SSOO fine 11gains1 him. fJifftin11led the SSOO fine
aga.irtSt Detr_oir ffiiU'I.aler Lany hrrish. bu 1 1etained
his IWo--Jamc suspension f01 bu~inJID um!JH~ in a
May J I same.
~1
BOSTON RED SOX: Pl~~tcd 38 John Valemin
on 1he 15-day disabled list , ~roactive lo June 26
Recalled JB Wihon Veras from Trenton or 1hc

..,_ , . bit.. . .. ..
.

'

~

all

'

!!I' . . . . . . . . . . . . .

llllilttMr. ........ c....- One ••~~eng fllr ... rldL

SEATTLE MARINERS : Sen1 RHP Me lv in
Bunch oulris;hllo TBCOffill of I~ PCL. R('cn ll~ LHP·
Dnmaso Marte frqm Taco ma of the PCL.
National I..UJUf
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Plorcd C Greg Mvcn
on tile 15·day disabled Iii !. rctro:ll: tt vr In June ' :!')
Rel·nl lcd RHP Carlos Alm.1n~ar frOm Las Ve.)!n\ nl
1he PCL

FREE Activation

ALL $
for ·
startat

...
~~--

.

•

+

Phones $~99
$4.911 (hJnft M!RO,.IIW'IIIi.

R.bP., niiiMlrin; not WlduW.

National 81Skrtball r\ssod11tkm
ATLANTA HAWK S Tri!dl'\1 the ns hts W I

.

• $25 Pre-paid phone card

only

Eascem t.e.,ue.

Jumatill· Jones lo Ph!ladelphiB for :1 fu ture firSHi&gt;umt
C INCINNAT I 1IT1•u,~ l' I.
drilfl p•~·k Tr01dcd the n~hts tn f .G ltohetH•
,,_ . Bc'lcrst n to Portland tor cash
·
~
GO lD EN STATE WARRIORS Tmded ' lh~·
Friday '!i games
01k.ago (Mulhollnnd 4-.l ) at Ptulatlelphm (Won r1ghts1o F-C Jell' Fos1er w lndt.ana fOf ti l\' n11hu "' G
VontcCIJO Cummtng$ :md a fu lu l'(' first-round dr,tH
\-0). 7:05pm
ptck
,
Monu-eal (ll1•rm.1n .\-;'i) at ANidll (SprniJer \.
MI NNESOTA riMU ERWOLVES Tra~;k.•d th~·
9) . 7 05 pm
ngh ts toG Lout s Bol hx·k w Orl anl-iu fur c ;~~h
M1lw:wkr-e (KArl 6-7) 111 Pittsburg h (ConiovJ .\.

- __.I

YooowntheM

New York-New _k rJe)' 2. Tampa Bay I, SO ·'
COLUMBUS"· San lote 3, SO

Basketball

··••

Amer,kan Ldpe

Adamo (Giav_ioe 6-7) at Mon1rc1l (0, Smith 1· 2),
1:35p.m
St. Louis (Bottenfield 11-.l) at Houston (HOII J.
7). l ·.lS p.m.
Milv.:11ukec (Noma 6· 1) at Chu:ngo (Tr:-.chsell 10). no p m_
Colorado (Kilc 4-51 n1 San FrandSI.' O (Estes 4-5).
] ~3 ~pm
. ..
Los Angdes ( 0rdfurt6~6) al San Diego (Cieiuent
-'·h .'i :OS p.m
'
New York (Dulel 0. 1• at Florida (Dempsler -1-.').
bJ . 7·05 p n1
Arizona (O;m l 7-4) at
4 ). 7 05 p m

.'

1

Friday's game

Monueal 7, Allarua 5

Philadel~na

Prepaid Cellular

29

IS

R 19 '32

No games lonlghi .-

9

florida 4. New York J (10)
Pinsburgh 9. Philaddpbi• I
CINClNNATI 2, Artr:ona 0
Houston 11, Sr. Louis J
San francisco 4, Colorado I
~ Dieao II. Los Angeles 2

7· 0.~pm

''"

Wednesday's sca~s

Milwaukee: 4

r

21
24

12
16
l..Qs Anjeles ..... ~: ......... :.. :.... 'il 6.. 3 21 16 II
SanJose .............................. 9 7 7 13 22 '29
KanwCity ....... ,................ J II 0
9 IS 23
NOTE: Thtte points for vicrory, one poinl for
shbocout win and zero points for lou. Shoorollt
(SOW) is a sub_Sd of wms.

Wednesday's S&lt;ores
Chicago~ .

9

Weslern Conference ,. . .

Wesltm Division

Color.tdo ................... ............ J-4
Los Angeles ......... ,......... 34

20
12 18
IS

Colorado ..'......................... IO J 2 26 .26
O.llas .. :......... .................... 1-? 7 I ~ 2S 27
ao"4o ............................. .7· ' J 0 21 22

J
6

.l46

CINCINNATI. : ....................4) )I
32

NY·NJ

• '·

M: L fJS. ' Iii

Philadejphia .......................... 40

......... dO l

;, me plans.of S20 and higher

'

Eastern Divilion

Itl1il

24

.. .. II ~ 2

COLUMBUS

•

70 cellular minutes
120 digital minutes

until NCM!mber 1999

!!: UOWPIA lif liA

D .C, .

Anaheim (Sparb 3-5) at Onklanp (Rogfh 4-]),

•

•

FREE Weekends

Eastern Conference

Stanle &lt;Moyer !ttl •• ~te,as I Helling 6--7), !:l5

p.m.

.

60 a!llular minutes
80 digital minutes

b

MLS standings

•.

.

150 cellular minutes
180 digital minutes

Soccer

.

-

&lt;l

68 , Charlottt"' li l
Hous10n 78. Umh 68

Tampa Bay (Rupe 4-.\) at Toron1o (~obar 7-5).
'~r- ~

__ 4
..S
3

Wash1n~ton

St!mk tFRodn~"lkl 2-!J at Oakland 1Haynr1 5_6). -1:05 p.m. ~~
Mi.nne.$01a (Mays 1 -2 ~ at CLEVELAND !Colon
6-~•- 7:0S p.m _
1
Tampa Day /".4.1va~z .•Vit ill Boston tCho 2-01.
?:OS p.m.
,
Od:roir {Miicki -'·7) at N~ York (lrnbu'4 - -'~- ]'.\5
p.m.
,
ChiCago {llaidwio 3-8• at Kansas'Ciry {Sululo ().
21. 8 :0~ p.m. ·

Friday's-cames ,

.889

J .667

'
Wednesday's
scores

.

afToronto (Hamilton 1-

5)~-l :OS p.m. -

8:05p.m.

PHOENIX COYOTES: Uerriscd lhrir op11on
conl~ts of RW Rick Tocchet. LW Greg
A:darm. IJ Orad Tiley and 0 Sean McCann.
TAMPA BAY ~
IG · 1NG . Tralied F Rob
Zamu!ler to tilt Otta · Senators r"' LW Andreai
Johanssoo and a fui rt second-round draft pick as
ComperlUtiOII for the Signing or general m:magq
Rick Dudky.
·
, 'Iii

9n the

..

Eutern Coatereace

lila

,_

40 '.481

42

ft

ANAHEIM MIGHl)' DUCKS: Signb::l F Paul
Kariya1o a.thttt-year llontract.
All.A.NTA THRASHERS: Namtd Scott Grcc:n
1rainer.
"·
CAROLINA l:fURRICANES: Stgoed C Ke111
Mander-vme fQ .a mulliyear contract
,
OITAWA SENAlURS . .A___gc-eed 10 1cnns With
Pmy Peml. assistanc coach. on a mulllyear contract.
PHILADELPHIA FlYERS : Agreed 10 tenns
~ith C Eric Lindros on a ont-year contra~?t exteMion

WNBA standings

18
21

w......,DI.-

Oakland ..... -······· ... ''

Foolball
·
National F01tb4111 Leacue
·
.
BAlTIMORE RAVENS · Ag!Ud ro terms with
OG Jeff BIOCks~ill,rO n a: tivc;-year connact exlt'nuon
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Waived WI{ Brian
Manmng. TE Rod' lewis and WR Pat 'Palmtr

Basketball

Cml:niDI•....
CLEVELAND ............... ....... .SO 26 .638
OUcqo ..... ............ :..............37 38' .493

KaMas Ciry .!.. : . ..

NEW YORK KNICKS~ N:~rncd Bnan Fhnn

J),-7:0SP.rq.

Bas ebal l

\

puts two-y_tJar
prQbation on Purdue

•

a

.Thome liir his lith'~

Scoreboard

~CAA

I

the heart&lt;! the plate. He'~ a vcceran
hitter and tOok advantage of it."
After an error- by first baseman
Richie Sexson helped load the bases.
a nm scored on a throwing enor b)'
catcher Einar Diaz. Steinbach then
hit his third homer into the fust row
of S.:ats in the left.
" It's rough 10 give a team five outs
in an inning. Minnesota did just what
they shoold h"'~..done, they scored
four runs, .. I sal~ Indians manager
Mike Hargrove. "It took a couple
innings. but Jaret got his composure
back.''
lim Thome's two-run homer
keyed Cleveland's three-run second.

Milton. who tied his season high
widt seven strikeouts, said he fe~
comfonable pitching asain t the
Indians. who own baseball's best ·
=ord (S0-26).
"Early in the season I was struggling, but Thm Kelly rold me to keep
plugging away and I have." he said&gt;
"Tbe last four starts. I have felt goOd,
confident. And now I am heing
~gn:ssive." .
"
-,.
Teny Steinbach's three-run . sh01
. capped a four-run first inning on:
Jaret Wright (6--5).
"It just wasn' t a very good pitch,"
Wright. said. " It was fastball o•er

";Purdue gets probation••.

Keady cleared of major violations ·

'ment. Swank said that includes rev' KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) --'- ~nues from appearances in 1997,
-·. P,urdue was placed on probation by 1998 and 1999, a total of more than
'the NCAA Wednesday for two years $340,000. ·
foir majof"· violations involving an
He said the commiuee also recassistant men's basketball coach and om mended Purdue . collect only 10
two others close to the learn.
·percent of ·revenues from possible
The NCAA cut a scholarship from tournament appearances the next
the team, limited recruiting visits to three seasons.
tlie school and recommended the
Swank said a decision _on that matNJ:AA force Punlue 10 pay a penalty ter most likely would be delayed
of more than $340,000.
•
until ne&lt;t year if Purdue appeals the
The Boilermakers were spared decision within 15 days.
Also, an assistant men 's basketbans from posjseason tournaments or
restrictions on television appear- -ball coach was banned from off-camances. The NCAA did not cite bas- pos recruiting for a yeat, and the
' k~tball coach Gene Keady.
Boilermakers will lose a scholarship
"The head coach may have. been for the 2000-0 I and 2000-02 acade- ·
involved in one secondary viola- mic years, limitigg the men's basketlion." said Oklahoma law professor ball team to 12 scholarships for those
,
David Swank, who chairs the NCAA seasons.
Comminee on Infractions. "But as
The· university wil! be limited to
fq as the major violations, there was four paid recruiting campus visits
ne evidence presented that tle was · during the 1999-2000 and 2000-01
irivolved in these violations in any seasons.
W)ly."
All team and individual records
Purdue had no immediate com- from the 24 games during the 1995ment on the NCAA sanctions. The 96 season in which an ineligible athscltool scheduled a news conference lete participated will be •acated, That
laler today.
includes the NCAA tournament
_ The NCAA Commiltee on appearance that season.
lqfraclions said the university viola!The commiuee penalized Purdue,
eli rules regarding recruiting, extra in part, for a 199~ loan that an ass isbenefits and ethical conduct. There tant coach arranged for a prospective
were also several secondary viola- player to receive $4,000 through a
lions by the NCAA champion university representative .
' women's' basketball learn, though
The loan was never repaid, mininone was considered serious and no · mal effort was made to collecl lhe
'sanctions were leveled against the balance and eventually the loan was
pcogram.
charged llff by the bank after the
• As part of the school 's penalty, the player len for another institution fol commince recommended thai the lowing the 1995-96 academic year.
Last fall, athletic director Morgan
NCAA force the school to repay up to
90 percent of the revenues generated Burke said Purdue found no evidence
from the Boilennakers' appearapce
in the 1996 men 's NCAA lourn• (See PURDUE on Page 5)
'

oomins up lhere. Anytlody but him.
Manny scares the heU out of me. But
Trombley got him."
.
Milton (3-7) used an amoy of off.
speed pitches to' limit Cleveland's
(&gt;OWerful offense to fi;e hits and
nebred 13 consecutive batters -from
the third through seventh innings
before issuing a w · " -.
.. He pitched a .. -tale of a game,"
Kelly said. "To strike out a hitter like
David Justice in the. ninth inning
shows he had a .lot on the ball."
"Of course, then Mr. Genius then
goes and takes him out," Kelly said,

'

.

.,

pokins ·fua_athi~lf.

"I might have kcpr Milton out

lhen: ia the nilllh if it Wlllll'l Ram~_z

NL contests... (Con~nued

,.

E!Y JR ROSS ·

The Daily Sentinel • Pilge 5

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

, Min.nes~ta Twins _capture 5·3 victory over Cl~veland Indians

P1114
~Y· Julf 1., 1119- -

Padres notch 12th stnllght win

Chicago Bulls make
Puke's Brand first
_p-ick.in NBA dra~
By CHRIS SttERIQAN
. WASHINGTON (AP) - Elton
Jinlld became the cornerstone of the
Oticaao Bulls' rebuilding plan,
Stc'VC Fnmcis wasn't happy about
_b cing picked by Vancouver and
Lmnar Odom dropped to No. 4 and a
aew life ,with the Los Angeles

Thuraday, July 1, 1999

~ M:lnat- ~
loll
~~In:!~~~

'

CE~LULAR·

wireless
that works. ••
for you

�)

.._. 8 •lhe Daily Sulinel

Williams
defeats
.
Kournikova; Courier
falls UK's Henman

to

• I..UCE A DEEJll&gt;"

I

•

TJW

'

lidded a seuoa-high 16 poiJIII aMI
seven
rebnom ts for die Mystics, who
roundup i~vcd
their leaJuc-worst .-d
to 2-7. Washington outscored die
ClfARLO'I"rn, N.C. (AP)- Thp Sli"'44-30 in the plint and had 1 3S-

WNBA

year.

ond straight
In another ·key women's match,
18-year-old qualifier Ale1andra
Stevenson
overcame
fellow
Amencan Lisa Raymond, 2~. 1-6
By S I &amp; HEM WILSON
(9-7 ), 6-1.
•
WIMBLEDON, England (J\1') Avenging ·,~ five -set defeat to
Centre Court was the stage for com-· Courier in the Davis Cup in April,
· pelling theater today - Boris Bec~er Henman saved three match points at
made an ein9tional farewell to 5-6 in the final set and p~vailcd, 4-6,
Wimbledon and Tim Henman pulled 7-5, 7-5, 6-7 (7•5)•.9-7. '
out 1 dramatic live:set. win over Jim
lbc match lasted a uxal of 4 112
Courier:
.
•
hours, ranking among the longest in
Becker's illustrious Wimbledon Wimbledon history. It w.,S the third
·. 1=areer came to an end with a 6-3, 6- straight five-selt(r for Courier, who
' 2, 6-3 loss . to Australia's Patrick' wa5 hospitalized for dehydration last
Rafter.
. .
Friday' after .a third.round win over
· jle;;ker, who won Wtl"bl~on ~ Sjeng SchaJken. ··
17-year-old 1n 1985. added twq more , · '"(I spent) tOQ much time spent on
titles'" 1986 and 1989, and was run- court \O g~t fo the fourth round,"
her-up four limes.
Courier said. " I must work on shon: '(he Gennan announced two years ' eni"g the matches ... 1 wish 1 were
ago ,after a def~at to Pete Sampras bei'ng paid by the hour out there,''
thm he wo uldn t be back. But he
Henman was ,up 4· 3 in the fourth
changed hiS mmd and returned thiS set · when the match resumed, but
year for o ne l.St hurrah.
Courier foueht back to win a tiebreal
After leaving the court today to a and force
decisive and thrilling
rousing standing ovation. Bec ker fifth set.
·
confirrned his Wimbledon career was
. Henman was up a break at 4-2.
defimtel y o~er.
. but the American broke bac k for 4-4.
" The last time I said 99 per&lt;eril. ·· After Courier sa'·cd two break pOints
· he ~&gt;d. " ThiS umc, I say 100 per~ ~ held for 6-5. he gained three
cent.
.
1. •
•
match points against Henman 's set\'e
After c ursory. handshakes with in the next game.
· · •·
Rafter and the chaor umpore, Becker
BuLHenman saved the first with a
pa~ked his bag _and ,bowed to tHe servic~ ·.Winner. On the second. he hit
Royal Box for the .last time. He then a gutsy second serve followed by a
stopped . . P.~t dpwn his bag. and backhand volley thai lande.d near the.
raiSed hts ' arms and clapped to baseline and forced Couoie.r 'into an
acknowledge a &lt;tanding ovation .
~rror. On the third, Henman slammed
RETURNS VOUEY- American Venu. Wllllati'MI retuma I volley
Bec ker stopped to sign a few a 130 mph ace down the middle .'
to Ruaal•'• A-riiili Kournikova during fourth-round action at
autographs, shook hands with referee
Henman held for 6-6 and made Wimbledon Wednesday. 'Willl11111' lhrw-MI victory put ·her In the
Alan Mills_ at tbe back of the court the decisive breakthrough in tlle"l5th quartlrflnals for the second atraight Y!!J'. (API
and then dosappeared tnlo the locker game, . breaking Courier with a Chjsters. Graf won the final two quarterfinal.
·stretch. forehand volley from mid- games to win 6-2, 6-2.
..
. -·
Lucie will now play cighth-seedroom .
" lt was a nice way to say good- court. On the previous point,
Stevenson. playing as a prp for cd Nathalie Ta~at .of France, last
bye, " · h~\aid.
·
' •
Henman hit a volley that landed near the first time, wilt now face another )'eat's Wimbledon: 111nner-up, who
Describing his 15-year relation- the b~line. Courier' argued t~at the · qualifier, 16-year-o!d Jelena DOkic downed No .. IS Domini'q ue Van
ship with Wimbledon , Docker said: ball \~!as long, gelling a warntng for of Australia. That means a quahfier·· R~t of ~elgtwn 6-3, 3-6, 6:-3.
"It was a great love affair - like verbal abuse.
will rea&lt;:h the ·semifinals for the first . • Becker surprised even himself by
nowhere else in the world. It made ·• On the changeover, Courier ~on- time in Wimbledon history.
getting to the fourth rmind, biit lie
me who am I today. "
tinued to complain. tossing a cup
lg ..a duel between two of the was no match on tjlis day for Rafter,
, Barely had, the crowd had' time to over his . s~oulder in disgust. biggest server.~ in the _g"'£!e, No. 7 the two-time U.S. ~~ , champi~n
sal~!~ Becker, than local favorite Henman, unruffled. served out -the Mark Philippoussis slammed 25 aces who overwhelmed btm wtth .a clasSic
Henman tOok the court to face match at love in the next game. . "·
to beal Britain's Greg Ru5e$ki, 2-.6, displa}l of ~rve-and-volley tennis.
Courier in the ' resumption of a
Williams, who dropped the first 7-6.(7;4),.(&gt;-3, 6-1. Rusedski had 12
Becker was let down by his
fourth-round match
suspended four games. gradually worked her double faults and .only nine aces.
biggc~st
weapon, the serve. He had ,13
because of rain Monday.
·
way back into the match and took
Three-time . runner-up Goran dou.ble · Its 1111d slruggled repeated· ·
As play finally resumed afte1 two command when she broke for a 3-1 Ivanisevic, who lost to Sampras in ly wi his first serve.
·,
days of rain: Pe.te Sampras •. seeking lead in the secoj'ld set.
. · the 1994 and 1998 finals, was ousted · Rafter broke Be.ck~r eight times,
hos stxth Wtmbledon ·ll. ~le on seven . From then ·o n , Williams kept by Todd Manin, 7-6 (7-3), 6-3, 6-4. including in the: .final game of .the
Pioline, a finalist in 1997, matcll.' On the seciorid match point,
. years, powered ,'mto,!he quaners by Koumikova on the run with punishbeatmg Canada s 03!i•el Nestor 6-3 , . in'k ground strokes and attacked on reache4 the ,quarters by overcoming Becker sailed a low backhand volley
6-4 .. 6-2 .. Sarnpras •• wtthin thre.e ' short balls to charge the net for put- Karol Kucera in.five sets, 6-4,5-7, 7- wide.
,
wm~ofhts 12th Grand Slam champo· away volleys and smashes. ''•
6 (7-5), 4-6,.6-3.
;
"I wish 1 would have gtven a betonsl)ip.
Williams will next face Seven'
In the completion of another rain- . ter match," Becker said. "I left my
. Jh a match between two of the time champion Steffi Graf, who interru~ted match: Croati~'s 17-ye"!'· serve athome ot;:,I don:t know where.
btggest _teen-age ~tars '" tennos, needed JUSt etght JlllnUtes to com- old MarJaria Lu'i,IC beal 'Thmland s Every ume 1 served, 1t was a strugVenus Wtlhams ral~ed to beat crowd plete her rain-delayed rnat~h against Tamarln~ Tanasugaril, 7-5, 6-3, to gle. He outplaye4,. mC today, so it's
favonte Anna Koumtkova, 3-6, 6-3, 16-year-old Belgoan quahfier Ktm advance· to her first Grand Slam lime for me to go. '
6-2 , to reach the. qullflers for the sec._
·

Wimbledon
update

The O.lly Santlnel• Page 7.

POIMI•• Mlddllport, Ohio

N011llNG RUNS

Mystics,
. Comets win

.

•

Thur•1 y, July 1, 1999

Pomet oy • Middleport, Ohio

WNBA d111ft choice Chamique
Hold.sclaw
scored ' II
of
Washington's 1151 1_9 poin~ and the
Myslic:s broke a pur of lostng $kids
with 1 68-63 victory over the
Owtottc Sting on Wednesday ~i ghJ.
HoldsC'iaw finished with 21 ,poinfs
and 1 season-high 14 ~ as
Washington won for the first time in
· six ganteJ UICI got its first victory in
•six giUIIeS ~~gainst Charlotte.
Alessand111 Santos de Oliveira

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

28 rebounding qe.
Owl-'s Dtlwn Staley had IS of
her 22 points in the secoild half and
added si1 assisu, but·the Stins lost
. for the third lime in four home
. .
games.

.

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Sheryl S'IIOdpee:~ 1 can:er-high
29 -poi'ts. iaeTIIdiftt an 18•f001
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SUnclar. July 4

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.
.
The action continues next week,. Middleport C.C............ :......... ..... I-4
when First Baptist and Fellowship Vinton Baptist.. ............ ............... l-4 '
· Chapel's !!len fight' it out for third Elizabeth Chapel.. ........ ................().6
place in the men's standings. The
~aces in both the women's and men's Women'S ' standings
standill$S 'are heating up with the
tournament only ,lwo weeks away.

Poll~rd was · 3-for-4 to le~d Fir~t
Baptist
"
Twyllia Connelley and Becky
Polinsky .combined for five hits to
pace the "' Faith Baptist Offense.
By ERIC WHm . .. ,
Connelley . was · 3-for-3 and Becky
Week 6 of the Galli a County Poli~sky went 2-for-4 with a home
Church Softball Le·ague featured run. ·
.Iram
~
First Baptist ..... ............. :.... ..... ,... 6-0
several key matchups . In men's
In the men's :game. Faith Baptist Men's standings
Nazarene .... ...... ....... ..................·..4-0
action. first place Faith Baptist to6k posted a big soxth inning and held on
on third place First Baptist an'd sec·\ · in the top of the ~~venth to earn the ... ~
·'
,'
~ Rodney Methodist ............. .. :.. .,.3·1
ond place 'Gallipolis Christian WJ n, 18-17. Rocky Swam we'nl 3-for. h B ,· '
.
0 Fellowship (:hapel... ..... ...... ....... .3-1
Faitli Baptist. .... ... ........:...............4-2
matched up · wilh . fourth plac~ 4 with 'two· home runs to pace Faith .. a' t . a,.P'c"~· ··:· ·: ... .............. .... .... 6Rodney MethiJ&lt;!ist. ,
.
Bajllist. Alex Saunders we~t 3-for-4 0Fa11'';;' ts nnsuan.,,...................5-0 Vinton Baptist ... ................. ......... 2-3
· h h"
d D c
trst apust ...... ...... .. .......... ........ 4• 2 ' Middleport C.C ...... .......... , ......... 1·3
At 0 .0 . Mcintyre ~ark , Gallipolis
.
f
d R
M hod '
w,•t ha omde run an
on arrnen . Fellowship Chapel .... ............... .. A-2 Gallipolis ChristiaL ... ............... I-4 ·
Chmtian ace
odney
et
lSI. a so omere
Rod
M hod '
2'
ln"the WQm.en's game, Rodney hit the .
Tim Tohompson went 5-for-$ and Ch nehy feGtod lSI .......... ...... .... .. . 2:3~ Church of God ... .!.. .................. .'.. 1-4
Elizabeth Chapel .. ......... ...... , . )i!..0~6 '
ball well&lt;&gt;n its way to a 10-3 victory.' Eddie Nehus 'was '3,for-3 for First
urc 0
............ ....... .. .. . , ... .
Valerie
Spence .•; .led
Rodney Baptist,
· · Nazarene .. .. .... ... .......... ............... . l-3
Methodist at the plate.
·.
At th~ . Cliurch of God's field,
_.,..______________________,
1
In the men 's game, Gallip!i)lis Church of God face&lt;! Middlepon. In
Christian posted · a · 23- 13 victory.. the women's game, Middleport casiGallipolis Cliristian's top five hitters ly defeated the·Church ofGod, 22-2 '
combined .for 16 of their 23 runs. In the men 's game. Middlepon
Eric Whitt, Dale Whitt and Larry picked up its first victory ofthe seaWest went 3-for-4 with tWO singles •son with a 20-17 win .
· .and a double,~acJi.
,
.
,.
Vint!Jn Baptistto ok·on Fellowship
·
A.t the Faith 'Baptist field , Faith Chapel ai the Vinton Park '· Field.
·
Baptist took on First Baptist. In the Fello~'ll&gt; Chapel won in both the
'1-'(
·
women's game, First Bapt ist women's dnd men's games by forfeit.
., ·
remained undefeated with a 21-7 vic,, The Church ofthe.Nazarene men and
. tory ov~f Faith. Tracy Stanley ~nil ' won\en also picked up.for(eit ~ictoSheri Davis both 3-went-3 and A.my · ries·.
.
·
.

Local church
league softball

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CLEVELA.ND (AP) - Walter
Johnson, a 12-year defensive lineman for the Cleveland Browns, died
Tuesday after suffering a heart attack
at his suburban Cleveland home . Hs
was 56.
'
Johnson is the second former
promirjenl Brown.s player to die in
the past few days. Hall of Farner
Marion Motley, 79, died Sunday at
his sons · home in Cleveland after
fighting prostate cancer for more
than a year.
,
Drafted in 1965 out of California
State-Los Angeles , Johnson, a 6foot -5, 265 -pound "tackle , once.
played in 167 consecutive games
before retiring after the 1976 season .
He in sisted on playing in the
ent ire 1969 title game despite suffer·

. Noh.: hitlg the lowest score ever
in ·a 72-hole LPGA tournament, Se
Ri Pak won the 1998 Jamie Farr
Kroger Classic with a 23-underpar 261.
·

~

&lt; .

'

ing frozen fingers in 8-degree weather in Bloomington, Minn. Minneso1a
· beat Cleveland 27-7.
·
Johnson, who wore No. 71 with
the Browns, ai!Chored a defensive
· line which also featu.red Pro Bllwler
Jerry ·Sherk. .
.•
.
·As a rookje, Jqhnson learned from
startef Dick Modzelewski and took
Modzelews,ki 's.spot on the line when
he retired in 1966.
Johnson ' was born in Cincinnati
and graduated from the city's Taft
High School.
. , .
Funeral arrangements for Johnson
at R.A: Prince 'funeral' home were
pending Wcdnesday .l'light
•
Motley's funeral service will be
held Thursday at Mt . Sinai B!lptist
Church. Fellow Hall of Famers -Lou
Groza. Paul Warfield , John Henry
Johnson, Ollie Matson. Bill Willis
and Leroy Kelly have been flesignated as honorary pall bearers and p'lan
to · ·attend the funeral , according to
Motley 's son , Raymond Motlty.

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, Wba1 hoppened "' G"i
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THE BEST OfRIVAlS:
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Irwin were COI'IfCmporaries on
ihc United SlatCS Auto Club
open-wheel cin:uila. In 199S,
Slewart bccoll.e doe only dJI.'
yer ever to Win three USAC
tidco (midpi; sprint-car,
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Irwin never ""'" a title but
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road..facing course in .
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Altt,Air CHlltltttl.., c•...

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•••••••••••••

Us 'IIvia

4112,·4.0 ¥6, aato, A/C, cess

Ror1ald Hanning, A. Ph.
Mon. thru Fri. e a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sat: 8 am-e pm
Sunday ,10:00 a .m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
. PH. 992·2955
E. Main
Friendly Sarvice
Pomeroy, .Oh.
Week
1ill

"

J'a · J.!!ike

Col, I doo) booM&lt; Nyb&lt;
b«::IMU k U ow oflM s{ianl'
bigat JltU!?

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~FlO:

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Heart attack kills 1960s-era·
Browns
linf3man
.
... Johnson at·· 56 .

.

S.tuodoy, July 3

Dar

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•,,,1:.

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Sf k f

'

'-/mites

traciiJ, 200

. ..

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Ilfl

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.'

OLD SUNGLASSES? , '·

.,,

Cai992·21SS
.,.. Ext. 104 .
Kdy (Jt.~OS

Mile, West 411is, Wis. (1-mUe

' · mph, July 4, 1998 ·
Mille Wol'-8,
Cl&gt;ewol8t. 100.999 li\ph, July
'2 , 19!M
'

-.:iiliCII==-=
. ==-==0"'· - -

Jutr 3

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Middlepbrt.. women ·d efeat GallipQ/is . cOG
.
'

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•
High Speed·Internet
Access With Cable
Modems!

CABLEVISION

ATTENTION

ADVERT~SERS!!
Advertise on this page

Call 992-2155
'

Dave Ext.
104
.
.
Kathy Ext. 105
FQr more information

C 0 M M U N. t C A T 1 0 N I

•'

•

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�. I

.,... 8•The Dally S111tlnel

Public Notice

reactions to my ann. Now. at age 6,

she answers their questions. saying,
"Thai is how God made hei, and my
mom can do anything .~~ -· S.R ..
MERAUX, LA .
.
DEAR
S.R.·:
What
a
wondetfully
Gnd
positi,·e attitude! Some P&lt;ople
would see the cup as half empty. but
what happened. 1· explain that God
in y~1ur case, II IS ove rll ow mg .
makes each of us different. Some .
Thanks for writing.
people have brown ·. hair. · ~o rne
Gem of the Day: A 3 year old
blond: some people are tall. some boy went with his father to see a Iilare short; some people have twu ler o f kittens. On· returning home, he
hands, some may have only one. But breathlessly mfon11cd ·hi s mother\
each of us i~ special in our own way. "There wen: two bov kin~ns and two
Sometimes. the children lfluch g:JTI knte n s _·~ "HuW did" you know
my arm or want to see me d~;&gt; lhin.g s that''" hi s mother ·"ked . "Eladdy
1.\:llh my arm \hey alway s want to picked·.them up and lc•okcd undcr'
know how I can dri \c w1th one _neath." ,he replied . "I think n·s printhand . I. never take offense 10 1hc1r ed on the ooltum." . ' questions. I simply hope' they learn
Planning a weddmg '1 What' s
that we can all be and do whatever right ? \Vhat' s .,wrong! ··TffC'i nn
"'e want -- if5 .~1hout ahtllty. not d•s- Landers CuU.Jc ' fm Bndcs'' will
ahility ·"
.-.'
rclicn~ your an xiety Send a ~elf

I awn: I am a 39
year 'o ld woman who is writmg w1lh
the hope of help' other women.
Fbur years ago,
was diagnosed
\ililb uterine cance
only had one
symptom a little 11 f bleedmg afler .
intercourse. I w
for my annual
Pap smear, and t
results Y..erc
abnormal. My doct r then d 1d a
biopsy. but e'vcryth" g showed up
normal.
My doctor. told me I prohably had
a cer;ical infec tion. He also sa~d I
. had a prolapsed uterus , whic'h was
no surprise .Hter having· five ~.: htl ­
dren. He recommended a hyslerecwmy but said there was no rush -· 1
Some purems arc cmharras~cd
could wa1! a year, or two.
when their c~ild asks a qucs1 ioi1 . hut
I told my doctor I felt somelhmg [
\'e c tllldf~ 'n shoui.J r~cl trc~ n1
else· was wrong and insis1cd on a ... -:o,...-esuons so toni! as thl!v do ~o
lilel .-HO'w e lse ar~ lhe) h; learn .'
hystereelomy immediately.
He sL:hcduled me for surg~ry lhe
was worried that my ~aughlcr
followJn&amp; week. The s urgeons di s- would he upset by other chiiJrcn s
covered a tumor and told me the
ca ncer had already progressed to the
~cond stag•. I went through all the
radiation treatments, and luckily. ·it
was caught m time . I am now a four

addressed lon g husincss sw: enve lope and a ch~..:k or mo ney order for
$3 75 (tim. mdudc s poStage and
h:~ndling ) to : Bndc1 clo 'Ann ,,Lan d&lt;rs. P,O. Box II ~o2. Chicago. III.
600 11 -0561.

-~a\.'\'\

~
~

year cancer survivor.
Ann, please tell youneaders thai
tqe doctor is not always right.' If you
have a gut 'feeling . something IS ·
wrong, it probably is. Listen to your
instincts. And don't ever be late getting a Pap smear. I was only o ne
month past my regular appointment
•
when I got mine .
· I asked my doctor whe~~ I would
be if I hadn't insisted on the· hys. terectomy. He replied, "You would
not be here,right now".. LUCKY
INTEXAS
.
DEAR TEXAS: I hope your let- ·
ter will encourage all women who
read this Column to trust their
instmcts. I am concerned about ,the.
lab work that showed everything
was "nonnal ." That . Iab shoultl be
looked' into. It sounds hk&lt;;. someone
is ~Ol doing his orher job. '
-. Dear Ann Landers: I was mterested in the letter from "Up front in
Vermont," who taught her children
to ask questions rather th!J.n just stare
al people who are different. As a
person who has had a disabtlity
since birth, I was especially pleased
thai you printed it.
·
Growmg up; I was hun rar more
by people who · gawked and made
comments among themselveS than
by those who asked me quest1ons .
· · ·My nghl arm ends just below the
e lbow. and when I see children. looking at il cunously, or when they ask

~.f/A.P~.1..\.\.\.'QIIB .

Burgundy 8 Brass· ~ · Florals &amp; Gifts

.

·

Ra;ji ;:;ce9;;,:73

~
~

·

~

if

~
~
s;

On all items including
, · . Bea.qmqnt Potterv
Pilg-ram Class
· Dreamsicles .·
· Porcelain Dolls
ftl
lovelite Candles
:=: . . All' Swa§s &amp; Wreaths
".
Floral Arrangements

conflrmttlon ol oalo.
James M. Souloby, ahorlll,
Meigs Cou!Jiy, Ohio
Donn It Reimer Co., L.P.A.
By: Donn Ia Rolmor (Rag.
100311091
.
Adll!l L. Oro I I (Rag .
-100553921
·
Attorney• lor Platntlll
P.O. Box 988, 98116 Rovenna
Rd., Twlnaburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(6) 24.
(711,8

~

Special~

~-

Sole dcies not include Amish Furniture &amp;
Items
~'~41!f"~\.\\.W' '.W.f/1'1'4*'11,.1\.\.\..a~

Public Notice ·
NOTICE TO
C.ONTRACTQ,IIS .

Sealed propoalt for the
lntt.llmlon ol 51,100 LF ol
Une l!xl8nllon, a.te

pvh cardia kickboxing
.

Vatvu, Wilterllne extenalon

..
•

All A's
Grade Four: Sara "Boston, Tyler
Lee. Erin Weber: Grade Five: None:
Grade Six: Brittany Barnell. Derek
Baum , Cody Dill. Jon Dillard, Carrie
~lberfeld, Jess ica Kchl. Bryan Minear, Casey Smith .• Morgan Weber,
Krista White. C hel sea Young : Grade ·
Seven: Jessic a Boyles. Briuan·y ·
Hauber, Alyssa Holler, Grnde Eight:
None.
,•
AlB Honor Roll
Gfade Four: Bnnany B;ssell, lillian Brannon. Samantha Brown.
Justin Browning, Damelle Carroll ,
Kimberly Castor. Kayla Collins,
Ryan Davis, Robe!l Gwinn. Georgana Koblentz, Nathaniel McGrath,
William Owen, Jesse Price, Derek
Putman , Tnsta Simmons. Amber
Willbarger: Grade Five. Jeremy
Basham, Brian Castor. Cassandra
· Colhns , Christopher E&gt;avis, Nicholas
Kuhn: Ashley McCaman, Herbert
Mcintyre, Jesse Nutte,, Shawn Reed,
Sara Wiggms , ·Amanda Windon :
Grade Six: Kenneth Amsbary,
Christopher Carroll, Abbie Chevall&lt;r,
Chari s Colhns , Andrew Franci s,
Andrea Grueser. Jennifer Hayman ,
.
' Holter, Kalio
Joshua Hayman
, Ross
Hoxsie, Sara Pore, Jaime Reel. Dar- ·
ten Scarbrough : Grade Seven: Kassandra Lodwick. Tia Prall, Stacy
Sm1th, Rebecca Tayl or : Grade
"Eight: Joshua Basham , Miranda
Buckley: Brent Buckley, Carne
·. Crow. Cacy Faulk. Cody Fau lk, Tara
fisher, Sonya Frederick. Beth Gregory, Nichol Honaker., Enca Lemons
Ryan Wachter, and
. CmTic Wiggin&lt;.
.

take it to
the limit

Starts
.
·.
JUIV5

• Instructor: Bryan Hoffman, BA

'

{lntemationall;iiness,Trainers of America Certified}''

• .Mondays &amp; Wednesdays INoan_&amp; 5 p.m.!
• Wellness Center Activities Room
• $.4/class for non-members
} 3/class for memb~rs

.

aolvenl bank In the amount

·

• Early Bird Sign-up {Receive t-shirt with payment!
- $30/non-members 18 sessions!
- $22/members 18 sessions!
9

'675-7222

Public Notice

County Court · Houae on

Frld1y, Aug. 6, 1999 1110:00
CASE NUMBER 99 CV 005 A.M . of oald day, tho
BANKERS TRUST, AS
following deocrlbed real
TRUSTEE, Plalntlfi·VI•
ottoto:
JERRY BENTLEY, tl at.,
Situated In tho County of
Molgo , Stoto of Ohio and
Dtllnclanto
C~y C!l Pomeroy, bo~ndod
COURT OF COMMON
llllEAS, MEIOS COUNTY,
and deacrlbld •• followa,
to-wit: Thll part of Lot No.
'
0~10
'
In pureua~ of an Order Four (4) In tald City of
of Solo to mt directed from Pomeroy, I I' followa :
oald Court In tho obovt Commenclr.g aeventy·flve
entitled action, I wlll•xpoae (75) 'l eal from tht corner ol
io oalo at public ouctlon on Spring ond Condor Stroot
tho front otopo ol lha Melgo on Spring Str11t; thence
E9TATE

I

Public Notice

runntne otong Spring
towlrd tho river twtnty·flvo
(25) !ttl, end runntng bock
at the width ol twonty-11••
(251 feet, perallol to Condor
Stroot IIKiy·fiVI (651 laot ;·
end being tha umo lot
davlaod to Fanny Wlridon
by
William Rod!ord ,
deeeaaed; ••• recorda of.

Willa , Molga County, Ohio
.VOlume 3, Page 281.
Aloo the following
deacrlbed rell eatale
oltualld In tho County ol
Malga , Stolt of Ohio and

,. •
bloundery ohfthe Eibarfol~
0
~I 1 ~ 1 "nto~
h:l; :',.~.,:or
on•
11 11 the Intent 0 ( the
grontor and gronleao that
the Nil boundtry 01 lhlo
one-htll ocro lot ohall not
bo within 10 1811 01 tho
concrete wall wlllch tetalno
the parkfng loi on the
Kathryn A. DoldgoloL
Reforence Deed: Volumo
324 , Page 125, llolgti
County Deed Rtcordo.
Au-·o Parcel Number:
tiHI0415.1J90.

. Public Notice

City of Pomeroy, and
bounded ond doocrlbod 11
lollowo: VIz: That part of
Lot No. 4 In Pomeroy, Ohio,
deacrlbed aa "roll owe, to-wit:
Commencing

et Spring

Stroot one hundred

(10~

feet from -. lhe corner of

Spring and Condor Strett;
thence running filly (50) foal
lu•thor SAVINGS and
EXCEPTING that part of Lot
No . Four (4) deeded by
Phillip Miller and wile to
Caleb Smort by deed doted
May 15. t858 and r~corded

.:.:V

'

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

'

u

",

1

'' • '

, nI

fT,
M '

BepiiM

'

Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

!'

·(7COJ 992-3131

,HILL'S

ROllO .ISSELL

SELF STORAGE

•New Hom"
•Garages

29670 Buhln Rold
Racine, Ohio 45771

. ...·...

~:

FREE
ESTIMATEES

. 985-4473·

Yard Sale
July 1st and 2nd
1 Mile South of
Tuppers Plains on SR 7

Pomeroy Eagles

. Spring 0.. Specid

Thu.-.clays

2areas S4S.OO
311111! S54.9S
4antnS69.9S
SartaS$84.95
.Solislllllion Gtiaronleld
2room llliiiinum

AT 8:30P.M.

'

.•

4th of July
with

:"

D.J. JOE ..

.

Rockin Down
at
GOOD TIMES

'

Serving ;!.I 11 :00 am
Homemade ice cream and ·
desserts will be available.

, Garage Sale

AGSE.RVICEU

July 2-3 (9·3)
Rustic Hills Syracuse
Collectibles • Clothe's
Misc.

''

'

............,

:

lumm111?
'

_THE MAPLES
Mwt be 50 years

100% of the controC1 price.
No bidder may wllhdrtw
hlo bid within thirty (30)
days after the IC1uol dolo of
the opening tharool. Tho
Molgo
County
Commlsalont.rl reetrves
the right to waive ' any lnfor·
malltloo or to rojtcl ony or
all blda.
Janet Howard, prolldent
Meigs
Counly
Comml11lant11
(6j14, 22

of age &amp; meet
HUD income
guidelines.

In Loving

'l'({ Mut ')Ou ~t
~ !l(jver.•

'

4 '

ING.ELS CARPET
Now ~lockillg

• S\\ltnP,.

Gtl~~~~g

_..;Ho•t- "

. 20 Yrs._ Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
J •'

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

tt~"'' ~ 2111"". ·r~/.

Complete Line Of 4-H ·
Feed &amp; Show Supplies
And Sullivan Show
Supplie·s

~If~ {}el';~? t~wee-

Cal. 98S·383I

740-992-00.38
..

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

"Linda's Palntlnl

•Deep cleans safely
.
•DEODORIZES leaving carpet
smelling fresh ..
•bifts maned cal!l•l pile
•"Dry" cleans sa you can use
carpel righi8Ntay

992-7021
175 N 2nd, "!iddlepon, OH
ANNOUNCEMENTS

. We deliver .ALMOST anything

Call for details

New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutten •
Siding • Drywan •
Painting • Plumbing ·

of painting, and let
me do It for you.

FrH Estlm•t••

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

Take the pain

out

' INTERIOR ..
· Before 6 ·pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

PABft

WICKS
"fiULIHG IHC.

All Makes Tractor&amp;.

We Deliver.

Equipment Parts
Factory' Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 Soulh
CooM/It, OH ·45723

Limes.tone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

7401187..111

740-992-3470

DIPOYSAG

005

Personals

Cheater, Ohio
1.............

DATING

QUALITY WINDOW
SYSTEMS
•

2 5 yr• exper.

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

·992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

740-9 92-7022 for.

740·742·8015
877·353·7022

futher information .

(toll,free)

Start Dating To nlgh ll Have fun
playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1-

800·AOMANCE. extan - n 9681 _

30

·Announce

nts

New To You Thrift hoppe
9 West SIIOlSOil, Athens
740..592·1642
Quality clothing and househOld
Items. $ 1.00 bag sale every

I

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

9 00·5.30.
PUBLIC NOTICE
re:qu1r.ed by grant regulat ions,
a copy of the Title V Block Grant
Application lor the Ofrlce of Ma ternal aDd Chtld Health has been
placed in the public IIDrary in
each county seat ana the Secreta ry o l S1ates Olf1ce lor review
and cement Comments sho uld
be forwarded to. OMCHr 14 11 Vir·
g1nla St., E . Charleston. WV
25301 +301'3

Credit • Slow Credit • Btnk~uptcy
Repo • Divorced

ISTOPI WORRYING!!!

No Embarrassment ...
You're Tr•atld with Respect!

STOP YOUR HAIR ,LOSS . Buy
PROPECIA Over The Phone. 1·
407·859-~051

~·'l"'l~ for lns•ianl: Approv1

Doctors

Are

Standing By For Men OnPy t
WEIGHT LOSS I Lo Gt 90..Pounds In 6 Month sl I'll Help You
Reach You r Weight Loss Goals !
Tot/ Frae 886-781-9624

40 ,

Giveaway

2 Fre'e Kittens : 1 Male, 1 Female,
7-40·388-0173 , After 4. 740 -3677187

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACfORY DlR'ECf PRICES

6 Week Old Puppy Female . Very
Fr iendly. Long Ha 1r, 7-40 ·446 6790.'

"'ree Eilimatea
I

P.M. \
Baby Items &amp; More, 8 Miles
Down 21 8. thursday, Friday July
1st. 2nd. 9-5.
Fnday 712nd ; tO·Dark, 70 Lake
OriiiJ!I, Rio Grande, Baby -Big Slz·
es, HouseMid, , Oider Beanie$ ,
SPorts Cards, Collectables.
·
Friday June 2nd , 346 A~dison
P1ke . 9-~; Rain Cancels.

For Garden Of -My' Hearl Holy Ta·
barnacle, July 2nd, 9·00 A.M AI
14728 State Route 554, Bidwell,
Crafts, Baked ltsms. Clothing, EIC

'

"'wOO

Saturday. 9am·'1 Longaberger
baskets, furniture , gl8saware aM
household goods! 2100 .C.tri'oll
S~eei.SytOCUM

wOOds Rd .. Pomeroy. Ohio. 5a1ur·
ctay. July 2. e:00-4 .00. Clothes,
h.Jrniture.' misc. Rain or shine.
July 1·2, four family, SA 248 , bottom at cnester hltl
July 1St trHu 5th , acro66 from

Bashan lira hoo&amp;e
July 2- 1 1wo !amity, second hOuse
h om corner of Rockspr ings &amp;
Flatwoocl$. Ftrst sale this year!
•
July 2 · 3 . 9am -4pm - 37070
Bashan Ad , 7~985-337fi .
July 2· 5 . Main Street. Aa cin e,
laren Wolfe residence Children's clOthing, 0.14 , misc. items

li.sed turMure (wa te rbeds , chest
of drawers , tnterta tnment cen-

Be your own bpss Work at home.
241'10ur me~sage 877·267-4403.

CNA , LPN, needed Good PB'f',
hourly, bonus lor weekend work
Must be l1c ansed in wv Call
CapiWI Nurs1ng, l -BQ0..57&amp;6348
Compute r Users NeMeo . work
Own Hrs $25K -S80KI 'f r 1. 800 _
476-8653 X nn. W"NN tewpcom

0riY8f
CONTINENTAL EXPRESS
COL Class A Wnh 6 Monlhi
Exper. Orlving School Grads
Considered. No NYC -. Home
Most Weekend$
Regional &amp; Lorlg Haul

EOE
800-293-0700 Or 800-695-447'l

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE :

Carrlef.

SA 124, long Bottom Lots Ot nice

clOthes ano other items
'Yard sale - 456 Beech . Middle port, July 1·2
'

Pt Pleasant ·
&amp; VIcinity
Yard Sate: 38 Burdettli Add ition.
F~day &amp; Solurdoy, 8AII· ?
5 Fal]'ltly Yard Sale, 2728 L1ncoln
Avenue . Pt. PI . Saturday /July

iOth

Jewelry, .Hqnd Toots. Lawn Mower, VCR . Sweepe r. Odds / Ends ,
·Much Morel Frtday, Sa.!urday,

July,2nd. :lrd, 9 A.M. ·5 PM. Park
Lane Trailer Park, 57 Jay Drive ,

Class B QTR:

Team S!ralght Truck. late Model
Freightllners With Sleepers. Must
Have A tr Brake Endorsements ,
800 \Miie Radius, Home Deliver·
les.

Both PosiUons:
Atleasl 25 '$art Ofd
AHeast 2 YeafS Experience

Good MVR-

•
Weekly P!iy
Health lnsurarn::e Availatip
Work Well With The P~ic

3rd . Books . Beantes. Baby For More Information Call 800··
Hems, Furniture, Clothing)' MISC .. 437·a7GJ, HIS 8·30 AM. -5 P.M.
8AM-2PM.
l
Ea'rly tntervenUon Parent CoOrdiAnefll lon Overstocked Sale
nator. Pari -Time To Provide SupRam or Shine Every Thursday /
port Ser v1ces To Parents 01 lnf·
Friday Lowest Pric es Anywhere ants !Toddlers Witl'1 D1sabilltltis .
on New PlayStat1on Games. DVD . Tt11s W111 Include Parent_EducaMOVIeS , Disney Mov ieS , MUSIC tion. Personal Contacts And Lrnk·
CO's, Beanie Bab1es, To o Much age With Other Resources . Qual·
~ To l iSt 2nd HOUS9 on Right ,
ll!caflons To Be Willing To Obtain
Blailie Lane , Gall ipolis Ferry.
Know ledge About Laws . Pal'tnts
wv (304)675-4493 .
R1ghts And Procedura l Sat.·
guards Related To Earlv tnte rStock Yard Slit 2600 Jefferson
vent•on :~ Parent Of A"Chi'd Wlltl' A.
"ve July 2.! 3 8 ·00 · ? Ret ir ed Otsab tHty In Gall!a County, Abi~ty
oaan ies.bean le poles , !urn .
b!kes . books. hous ehOld items .
hot dogs beginning at10.30 .

. Estate

Sale . Thur ./Frl.fSat .
Sacred Heart Churcl'1 Hall . 2222
Jackson A\18n.Je 9·00·5 00.

To Efle clively COmmunicate W1th
i=am1!1es And Are Professionals .
Please Send Fl&amp;sume By JulY 9 "'
To Ganla County Early lnterven·
110n P 0 Box 94&gt;3, Gallipolis. OH
456~1

FrL Sar, Sun locust Ad 1st
.Trailer on right. alter you 1Urn out
Locust Ad

FILM !TV INOUS.TAY. lOC"LlY
HI RING · No Exper ience NecSs·
sary. Wor k Beh in d Scenes. Produ chon Ass istant. Set Constt uc-

Garage Sale. July 1s1, 2nd. 3r d
Infant,&amp; Utile girl items &amp; m1sc. 3
m1!es back ot New Haven,W'l,

tlon. 323-857..(}954

on Umon Campground Road , 1
m1le Past,Unlon Campgrou(ld
Garage Sale: Tt1u r~f Fri/ Sat .
9 :00AM ·?· lyons A4,.dition , M_et·
son. Bake·Sate, Crafts/lamP .
, Womens Cto~s . Carfferas. 'Ram
or Shine.
Jerrys Flun' ,Rd •. 3 112Mi18'S out
July 1. Clothlng / e11 sizes , O ld
OlshesJCrock . Rugs, Humidistat
&amp;Mo~

J~ly t .2.3, ThursiFrVSat 9AM·? 1

Yard Sale : lots of baby Items .
men . women , and baby clothes
Exercise' bike , lots misc. 1 mt!e
from VoCatiOnal S(:hool on AI. 62
N Fr. and Sar. 8-t2·'oo

fill

July Hit. -2nd . 2 mlltBS ba ck ol
New .Haven on ,, Unlon Campg_ro'und Road. Rain Cancels.

7 M11es ·Nbrth! Route 2 . Fr iday,
"''S·oo-? Bathroom vanity &amp; Stnk,
Sewing Machine &amp; Many MISC

Yard Sale : Fair Ground Road ,
Beside Trl·~o~nty Sports. July

2-3.

•

large Sale · lots · 01 O i s~es,
Cookware, T.V , Air Conditioners,
443 Mitchell Road. ju l~ 1st. 2nd.
Aaln /Shine'
. ·

SO

Large Two Fam•IY: Cloihes, Bab~
11ems. And tots More l 712M. 7f
3rd, 338 Third Avent!. - .,. ·

8 111 Mood1spaugh Auctioneering .
Complete Au Ctioneering Servic-

Auction
and Flea Market

es Co nsignment a Jc t lo n· Mdl

JOB LISTING ASSEMBLY· AT
HOME !! Cfafls 1 Toys, Jewelry,
Wood .. Sewing . Typing ... Greet
Payl CALL 1-800-795-0380 Ext
1201(24 H~ )
Local Trucking Company Se&amp;lung
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benefits. Send Resume
To Dr iver, P.O. Box 109 Jack·
son, OhiO 45640, Or Call 1·740-·
286· 1 463 To Schedule A!\!_nter·
VI8W

Monday June 28th. Thru Frida~
Ju ly 2nd . Clothes. Too ls. Crafts,
2623
Shutters, Toddler Bed Dishes,
Curtains. St'IOes. Boat Seats ,
Name Brano Jeans.:\Bathroom
Sink Alld CaQ inet lounger. 1914 .
State Route 141. Gallipolis.
Tupperware , LOngaberger Bas kets, Spmett'l/'ng For Everyone!
Lilne ReS 1522 SA 141 , Tnursday '6ttst. Frtoay 612nd

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

4 fa mtty yard sale· July 1 ·8. 8am
t ill e~e nm g Dishe s. ctott;ling,
tools, lots more. Pierce reside nce.
t/2 mile north of Portland Park on

740·698·6212.

Need an hOnest , dependable .
person to live m with elderly gen tleman . Some pe rsonal Care
,n\eded . Room. B oar d . Sala ry

suppl;od.( 304)895-3942.
OUrDOOR CAREERS
"Employee Owned ComjJreny
•Competitive P.y I ~neflt1
•Osmate Work• In 49 Statts
Mus t EnJoy Phys ical Outdoor
Wor ~. PoSsess 'Strong
leaderShiP Sktlls. Have
A Good Qriv1ng Record . And .
Be Fleiible To Travel To '
Vanous Work t.ocatiOn S:

OSMOSE, INC.

www.otmose.c:om
OWN-' COMPUTER?

Wedemeye r' s Auct1on Ser v1c e.
Gallipolis. Ohio 740-379·2720

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sil-

ver And G old Corfts , Prootsets ,

t :OOpm

Frldoy.

Ca rport ·sale- rain or shme lead·
ing Creek Ad at Clonch VCR Repair t !it. 2M &amp; 3rd 8 30 - 4·00
Lots ol good things.

Flrtt time thl• year l Large m·
door/ou tdoor yard sale July 1-3,
9am-5pm . Out At. 33 on CA t9 ,
Peach Fork Rd . Watch for s1gns
Ram or shine Women s and kid's
ctothtng. lots o f n ew and u.sep
merch a ndi se .
Re lresl'1ments
se(ved Don 't miss thiS o ne t
Somertllng lOr fi'VSryone
First time yard sate· SA 248 , 2.6
m1!es from SR 7. Fo llo w ~ l gns
Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Jul~

1-J 9arA-4pm

Fnday. 133 Butternut New heater,
tool cabmet . car ramps . des k &amp;
Chair, hobby hor se sew1ng ma Chme. vanity &amp; bench. cab1ne1s.
lawn lurruture . collechbles. teal
blo~,&gt;;er .

much more

D1amonds . Antique Jewelry Gold
Rmgs , Pre- 1930 U.S. C unency,'
Sterl1ng. Etc, A CQUI'SitiOMS Jewelry
- M TS. Com Sh0p.1 5l Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740..446-.2842
Ant1ques . top pi-tees pa1d. R1ver:"
ine Ant iq ues . Pomeroy. Ohi O,
Russ Moore own8r , 740-992·

1

'

Clean Lare Mode l Cars Or
Tr ucks . 1990 Models Or Newer .
Smith Buick Pontt ac. 1900 Eastern Avenue1 Gallipolis.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

.Help Wanted

12 ,000 WEEKLY ! Mailing 400
BroChures! Satisfaction Guarameedl Pos1age &amp; Supplies ProVfdeQI Rush Sell - Addressed
Stambed Envelope! GICO. OEf&gt;T
5. Bo" 1438 , AN TIOC H, TN .
370t t -1438.
All stude'nrs ~ full and p ... . tune
openmgs 1n cus1omer serv1ceJ
sales dep. $t 0 ..35 per hr appt. No
ex:peneoce- will train. Conditions
apply Mu st be 18. Call 30-4-4854300 www wo rk forst udents.com/

on

Call For Information •
Toll--Free 24 Hrs n Da)s
EOEMIF!DN

auction
service
L1censel!j '
1t 6B.Oh10 &amp; West VirQima , 30-4773-5785 Or 3CI&lt;l·773-5447.

2526

,•

Vlalt Our Webl~e At

,112. 10 AM. -6 P.M , .
7/310AM.·4PM .
7/4 I P.M. ·5 P.M.
Aucllof-17/4 ·7 PM .

8 Famtl y yard sale-July 5, 6, 9·5.
Skate· A·Way 140·985-9996. mi·
crowave , range hood . warer heat·
t?r. lam.ps, stereo. TV;'s. furniture.
tools. truck tool box . Aaw leigh
Products, Avon, clothes. misc.
Y~rd Satet Muat &amp;e Paid In
Advance . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday · edition ·

...,

t...an-&amp;7~731

SA 124.

All

·

Musu;: ians - looking for gu itarist , ,.
vocalis t to dQ. lead aliJd harmonies ' ·
lor oldies. rock and C.'ountry. John,

FLEA MARKET

A1ck Pearson AuclioM C.ompa ny.
full lime at.Jctloneer. comp,lete

90

"

wv 25550

• r'll

Anel Theatre
426 Second Avenue. Gallipolis: ·
Arlet Fu!'\d·Aa1ser "No Dealers
Wide Variety Of Used Treasures
And A Few Anttques . •
Donations Welcome _
Call 740.446-ARTS
For Prompt Piek·Up.

,~omeroy,

•

Medica~ .~ssis tanr or LPN . neeaed for o'octor·s Ofhce lor te mporary emp loyment Send res ume
r_lo 'EB22. Pt. PleaSant Reg1sl,;.
200 Ma1n Street. Pomt Pleasant,

. Stree f. Middlepo rt . Thu rsdays .
Ohi o License i7693 . 740-989-

3 fam ily yard sat.e- Fnday &amp; Sat·
urday. duly 2·3. 9-5, S. 2nd Ava .
Middleport. large women 's cloth·
mg. lots of women's jeans all slz·
es. other m1sc

.

Three family- Ju ly 1· 4, 9·ooam5:00pm. t/4 mile west of For ked
Run Slate Park on SA f 24 .. 63092

Sale. July t:;~i.

9 A.M. To Dark, 3 Mtles SOuth Of
R1o Grande, To ce:nterpomt Road .
2n0 House F9ttow Signs

ClassAQTR:

IBrs). many other trams.

Bu rdetle .Addn . Pt. Pleasant ,
WI/. Pte1ures arid Misc. Items.

Huge Yard

Proc:tue1s· Start your own In·

Home Bus in ess Work F lex ible
·Houri . EnJoy Unlimited Earnings.
, -888-561 ·2866

Single Oriver, Late Model Ken ·
worths With Reerers. West Coast

Huge Multi·Family Yard Sale: An ything You Could Be Look ing For
ln clu'd lng Furn it ure , Chlldrans
Items , Etc Thursday, &amp; Fridlr~, 8· ·
6:30, Route 7 , Just Below The Ka·
nauga OrNB Inn.

TONIGHT!

Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gtes In Your Area Call For More
lnformatiM . 1·800-AOMANCE,
Ext. 9735.

CREDIT

JE'VE

cOOai-

Ammana 20.000 BTU Air
lioner, Queen Size Waterbed Etc
310 Sailor Road. Vtnton, 740..245·
9306, 7/1St , 2nd, 3rd, 8 A.M. ·5

I, Watter C. Smt1h, will b8 respons ible tor no debts but my
own onty.

As

•

• 10:00 1.m. Seturdly.

lot •28

rhe l~odiJ1g !fn:
carpet cleaner

,.

'

Connection

EHO

99Z'Z7S3 9fZ-1J:OJ.

• "tt\ttl

Bryon Re...,eo
Swan
. Rene•

FORMERlY OF II 0 COURT STREO, POMEROY
IS NOW lOCARD STATE Roun 33
6 MilES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18

TOM STOBART
t.oday II

Ifoliin WilSon Jr.

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING I

Your
.

Remember -·
Quality Is Job 0!141

740-742-~411

Concrete
.

Call

Memory of

~ - · ~·--

985-4422

Apply now for

and performance bond for

--- --

Agricultural Ume,
Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Caal ,...

requlr•m•nta, r

-- ..

*New Homes
*Additions
"
*Remodeling
Call today about •pecial
price• thru July o,.
Quality Built Hou•e•

Will deliver

Ellimaleo'

Ftldoy. Monday edHion

Windows, From Old Hou_!ie, Mlsp.
Items. Aoute 160 Ewnlngton.

. SMITH'S .
CONSTRUCTIO

· TREE SERVICE

..

11 to run. SUnday
odlllon • 2:00 p.m.

Furnace. Furn iture , wood &amp;

JONES'

Coblntll

""day - t h o ...

Friday, Saturday. .9·5, Franklin

,.

s..naetBama
Free

6122!99 1 mo

,STAAT

•

~

IC!IClUl.Swu~tHoln8.com

VInyl Sldlng-Roofo.Dtcill•
Giragao

614-992-7643

SHADE RIVER

51645 Blaley Rldae Rd., LOna Bottom, Ohio

A~lng-Kitchon

(No Sunday Calls)

.

740192-33M

pans •

C•stracll•
Now Conatruction &amp;

. FREE ESTIMATES

·are

Business

pd.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacemeht Windows
• t;loom Additions
..
• Roofing

'

THE APPLIANCE MAN
985·3561
• _We service aU ma1res • Used AppUances • We sell

Road . Plus Stze Womens Cloth·
IJ1Q 1 Men 's . Childrens Clothing.
Housa~ld Items, Misc. Items.

'

740-992~52!2

Ken You~ Former Owner of
KEN'S A .PLIANCE SERVICE
Now
'

,.,u,
,,,
,,,,,,,,

I

Under New Mgmt.

INC.

Chicken BBQ
Sunday July 4th

t!'tence along Lln.coln Street

. •.Jfandicapped

COMMEROAL and RESIDOOIAL

'

Racine Fire

Care for Elderly

Doof On Right Off Route 7. Bladen

Be Paid In Advance.
DEAQUNE: 210;0 p.m.

33 795 HilaniJ Rd,
Pomeroy, Ohi~

BACK"

711&amp;1. 2nd, 3rd, 9· 4, 1st

AI.L. Ylrd Sel!n Uue1

.High'·&amp;Dry
Self-Storage

740 742-8888

''I~M

~mily:

.

Over 40 yrs experience·
.'

4

740·698·3290

Now Renting

Huge 3 family yard aale, Friday &amp;

141

.,

Friday, July 2 , Fifth &amp; Ma1n,

Ranger, Schennu Tractor, K1ng.
Cutter Dress Mower. And Much
Morel740-379-2851 ,

975 Addison P1ke , July 1sr, 2nd ,
Furniture. Gas Stove. Relr1gera·
tor, large Trampoline , C lo thes ,
Plus Sized Unltorms, MISe

Horse• &amp; Tack
New &amp; Used Saddles
Also riding iel!sons

&amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
Rut nd, Ohio
•

3 Families! July 1st. 2nd : &amp; 3rd.
. Wagoner Road , Off 233, Toys .
Clothes, 1987 Dodge Aries, 1993

80lt Por1er Road. J ~ly 2nd, 3rd,
41h.
•

Hoof Hollow Farm

·· Mon - Frl 8:30 :. 5:00 .

ROME

.
..
.,
..
'
.- BISSELL BUJLDERS,

.•

sao.oo

ELIM

5/25199 2 ~·

-

Pamerpy,OH

$300.00 Covet'IH
1500.00 St8rburet
Progreulve top Une.
Uc. I CJ0.50 un-

Ohio

...

Truck seats, c seats. headliners.
truck tarp§, co verttble &amp; vtnyl .tops,
Four w eeler eats, motorcycle seats ,
.~ boat covers-, carpets, e_tc .

. per game

378-6438 992.0077
l-871·626·3693

Alf~any, _

11

'

Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

•

Main St.,
Paying

1·800·311·3391
Free. Estimates
Contractors Welce11e

your 4th of July
with
SYMMES GREEK
"live band"
at
WAYNE'S PLACE

~

Club Bingo On

·s;~;,, ·' S-#lil

u

I

.

2 Family · July 2nd . 3rd. 411\ 46
Burnen Road , Kar.auga

II
PH: (7401 992·2772

ORAINAGE SVSTQIS INC

CHIVALIII'S
CARPEl CLWIIIG

WILLIS'
·SEAMLESS
GUnERS

..

I

7

..

6'IIJIJIIT mo. pel

NOTICE OF SALE
' By vlrtuo ol Order ol Solo
loauoCI out ol the Common
Pleoo Courl ol Molgo
County, Ohio, In tho cell of
tht City Notional Bonk,
Pltlntlll, VI. Thomoo R.
Spencer aka Thomae
Spencer, It 11., Dettnda"'-,
upon o Judgment thoraln
rendered, being Caae No.
11!1-CV·32 In sold Court, I will
offor for tole ot the front

,. . ..A.

~·~~~~~~~~--­

\' 112 Price On Remalo lng Items
-Barga1n Day! 1914 Sta t e A oute
• 14J , Ga!lipOits.

James Keesee

R~.9"om-?

AVON has a place ior your Jotn
the •1 beaury company! Enjoy
your own busmess Buy your own
products at cost . Call 1·800· 4·
AVON or 740-594-4354 .

Friday. July 2. eam-3pm

NeighbOrhood yard sale· 3 miles
our SA 143 on Wolfe Pen Rd. July
I, 2 &amp; 3. 1999. Clo1hing, lots or

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

.eVinyl Siding ,
•Roofing &amp;Seamless Gutter
•Reploce[llenl Windows
.•ConCiele
•Room Addi~ons •Gnmges '
•Deck's &amp; Boot Docks

Tuppers Plains, OH

I00' - I000' Rolls I" &amp; 3/4" 2110#'Woler Une
lull hnu of-Gas Pipe &amp; Raguloktll Waler Sto~age Ton.ks

.

J &amp; LInsulation
&amp; Siding ·

a• Gmellmleach

Stop &amp; Compare

Yard Sale

70

• 38782 S,umner.Roa.d,
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

Culve_rts: 4~ - 4B" in stqck

Remodeling • ·

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 1o• x 30•
"Houri
7:00AM·8PM
----~="'::•:::.•.:::-~·Col

FREE ESnMATES
.
.

' 740·985·3813

•Compl~e

740-~9·2~.17

m

22 yn. Local

Sl. Rl. 7

Cllli 741l-99Hno.

STETHEM@EUREKANETCOM

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

CONSTRUCTION

Lost·l 35mm camera &amp; case . betw8en Bob' s. Market , Mason &amp;
McDonald's, Pomeroy. reward.

JEFF ~TETHEM
"PHONE: (74'0) 9$5-4218
EMAIL:

' 740·992·6215

I·7.40·985·3949

3111/1111 TFN.

tost Or St olen · Toy Pood le , ·
Needs Medicine . II ~ound Return
To 1601 CI\Jy Chapel Road,
Crown City, 740-25&amp;-6579.

' EqUip~ Cleaned &amp; Degrea!M!d

Eeti~UIM '

V.C. YOUNG

'""' pd

•

Caldweii-Baum

F,..

Found . ta rge furrY dog . Chester
area , mostly bla ck wilh tan
she~h erd markmgs. 740 - 992·
3422 0( 740-667 ·3545

T(Ucks -tractor
Trailers- decks - driveways

• ~---·R-Ing

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
Site Preparation
Septic Systems
ROD.N EY KELLER
Owner/Operator

Reasonabti Rates ·

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading -Se11lic Sy11enu &amp;

CARPENTER SERVICE
·-Otregee
• Elee1rlcol &amp; Plumbing
• Rooftng &amp; Guttero
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pllntlng
• PtUo &amp; Porch Decko

Found: Clarion cemot e, Pomeroy
Post Oltlce vlciMy, can 740·992...~
"5333
.

TRI·STATE MOBILE
POWER WASH

SMIOy Spom, :l04-67~1&lt;42V.

'ljJJge li~e family yard sale- Flat·

60 "Lost end Found

949-2168

·YOUNG'S

EXCAVATING.

Hauling
Umestone &amp; Gravel

Se,ice•
House &amp; Trailer Sjtes

Utilitie•

K·ca

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Brdldo2er &amp; Baelcl.oe

TERMS OF SALE: 10%
cartlllod Iundt doy ol ule
and balance within 30 dayo.
Jameo M. $!!)110by, Sherlft
Meigs CountY, OH
,
Stephan 0. Mllao, 18 W.
Monument Avanua, Doyton,
Ohio 45402, Attorney
(6) 24 . .
·
(71 1, 8 3T

provlolono, ond the requiremanto lor a payment bond

'

.(74o) 843-1252

R8g 11lered Australian ShePpard,
approximately 3 yrs old , Red
Mor10.13CJ.I)675-7911 ..

Help Wented

AVONI All Areas! To Buy or StU.

Middleport
A VIcinity
eo..rt L.ono. Mldjloj

388-1.

FREE ESTIMATES

750 East State Street P.hone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701 "A Better,.,Wa
6129/mo.

Poltland, Ohio

.-

Public Notice

•,

740·

. Pupplolr! O _ .. okl, pan eoo·
gle. 7.40·985· 3662 or 1'-40· 985·

Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

•

535410 S. R 338

.

.'

ROOFIIIG
IIEW·REPIIR

•

•,

Bacon
Wagee,opportunity
varlo'u a
various equal

(7) 1 3TC

Sfop In And See
Steve Rif(le
-"' Sales . Represeiltaiive·
Larry Schey

..

98HI83.

Howard L Writasel

. 110

Pomeroy,

Giveaway

Cut• kittens to g iveaway,

Bovlngt
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, ,......,.,
lho right 1o bid 11 thlt-1111,
and to wtthcl..- lhil . ooltotertl priOr to uta.
•Furi!Mr, The F......,...,.
and Sovlnga Company
re11rvea the right lo reject
any or oil bldo oubmlfted.
Further, the a - collll•
ei'iirwilfbe aold In the con-·
dillon It Ia In, wllh no
txproao or Implied worrantloo given.
For lurtller Information,
contoC1 Shannon 11 742·

11••

Federal Labor Standarda
Provlolono 'l/ld Dsvto.'

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

40

a

~.=:1o'f:::.~"'!'.~

The Daily Sent.inel • Page 9

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

Public Natlce
- i W I - k h odtdto .PROPERTY ADOfiESS:
be _,.eyed-by NuaWI J. :zet Uncoln Hill, Pomeroy,
Doldgo te~ Kolhryn A.
.,_
Daldgt !1Y deed r.. a dtd _ln OHREAL .
EST AT£
VOlume 213, Poge 575, API'IlAIIIED AT:.-o,OOO.OO.
llelgo County Deed The reol eat.!• cennot be
Rtcarda, , ...,.,.,. 1o wlllch told l o r - _ , -thlrdl
II hereby mode.
lho approlald VOfUI,
EXCEPTING lrom the TERMS OF SALE: 10'Wo
a - dttcrlbed real down doy cif ulo, balan&lt;:e
lof lrom the welt part ol on delivery ol deed. Sold
lho Kathryn A. Dolcf91 retl aubject to occru'd roll
ootote, Beginning tl on Iron e-e taxll.
pin In the northNII corner
ol oald Ktlhryn A. Doidge , _ , M. Souleby
tot, which Ia olto tho (8124
boundory corner ol the (7) 1,8 3TC
Kothryn l!o· D_oldgo ond I:=J~~~~~~=
Otrtld E. and Elton J .
Public
Rought toto; thence oouth
25" 17' 21" eaat 131 lett 5
PUBLIC NOTICE
lnchel to . a tttko; thence
NOTICE' le lwNbr giVen
oouth 211.15 lett more .or lhol on Sttunlly, July 3,
1 - to 1 tttko on lho oough 11118, 8110:00 a.m., I public
boundary ol the Kl!thryn A. oale will be held at 211 Woe!
Oolclga lot, ond tho north Second Street, Pomeroy,
boundary ol tho Vlvlon ·K. Ohio, The Farmer'o' Bl'* .
ntuo' lot; thenco north 25• ond Sovlngo Compony.
1r 21 ' 1o&amp; lett and 5 pltrlclng lot. to oelllor cull
lnchea to ~n Iron pin; the following call...,_.:
theriCt _.u, eo• 25' 8' aall 1111
KtWINkl
Nlnjt
21 1.115 lett 1 1ong lh8 woo1· 101JC:1401111711the Fonner'o· Benk and ·

packet, Particularly to the

lntura~ce

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

of that amount.

ol not leao thin 10% of the lliUih 69" 38' 36" WOII
bid amount In favor of the 21.1 .84 faet to lh• ploco of
aloreoald Melga County beginning, conlllnlng 1.827
Commlsolonero. Bid bondo aem.
'shall be ~ccompanled by
Tho above boorlngo ora
proof of Authority of the baoed on,north eo Indicated
official. or agantslgnlng the by the oubdlvlolon plot of
bond.
Pomeroy Vlllege In Volume
Bldo shall be aaalod and 2, Page 17 ol tho Melgo .
marked aa Bid for ".Dexter County Plat Rocordo and
Water
Line
Extension ora uood to denote inglto
Project Bid" and · mailed or only.
delivered tci:
Tho above doocrlpllon
Melgo ·
• County woo prtpored by Eugene
Commlaalonere Trlpplatt RS 6716 and lo the
Courthoull
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of blddoro Ia
called to all of the require·
menlo contolntd In thlo bid

.

1

Public Notice

11rvlct In Rutland and
Salem Townehlpt, Molgt
County, Ohio, will b4o
received · by tho Molgt
County Comml11lonors at door of the Courthouae In .
thtlr
olflco
tl
the Pomeroy, Molgt · County,
CourthouM, Pomeroy, Ohio Ohio, on tho 30th day of
45769, until 10:00 A.M., July July, 118f,,at10:00 a.m., the
12, 1999 ond then 11 1:00 following Iondo ond
P.M. at the told office ttnemonta, localld at 289
opened and read aloud lor Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, OH
45769. A complete logal
the following:
Tho lnotallttlon 01 opprox· deocrlptlon 91 the reel
lmately 58,900 LF ol eolllt It oalollowo:
Sltutled In the VIllage ol
polyvinyl chloride (PVCI
water linea and oeeocllled POIMroY, County of Molgo
values, 2 'boaater pumpa, ond Sllto ol Ohio, bounded
hydronto, and retldontlal · and deacrlbed ao followo:
Being known 11 Lot 533
iorvlcoa. The project locilion will be tho community In the Vlllogo ol Pomeroy,
ol
Dexter. In
Stlom and btlilg In 100 Acre Lot
Township, Melgo County, 303, Town 2, Ronge 13 al
Ohio, oo well oo CR 14, TR Ohio Compony'o Purchoeo.
148, and TR . 1447,1Wp. 328,
Beginning 11 an Iron pin .
Roads . In Solem ond at the aouthwut corner of
Rutland ·Townohlpa.
·
th•
property herein
Plano, Spoclflcatlon~. and doacrtbed; lhance olong the
bid lormt may be secured boundary ol tho Vlvlon K.
at the offlcs ol Triplett ntua property north 25" 17'
Engineering, 112 1/2 Court 2t" well 358.85 feet to an
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. A Iron pin; thence olong tho
payment ol One Hundred boundary ol the Elbol1eld
($100.00) (Non-refundable) Roalty Company property
dQjlaro will be required lor north 60" 25' 8" not 211.85
each eel of plana anti apec- 1011 to on lrpn pin, poaalng
lllcatlono, chock . 1111de on Iron pin ot 181.85 laet;
payable
to
Triplett thence
along
tho
Engineering.
bo1mdarloo of tho Gerold
Each bid muot be tocom- and/or Ellen Ro~ght
ponled by tllhor t bid bond property, tho Paul G. and/or
.s In an amount of 100% of the
Graci C. Elch property and
bid amount with a auraty the Oon L. ondtor Ruth L.
eatlolactory to th~ alorsoald Carter property . south 25"
Molgt
. County 17' 21" aut 384 loot 1o
Commlaolonero or by certl' Lincoln' Street, paaalng an
fled check, cashltrt check, Iron pin at 60 feet end 1 1/2
Or letter of credit upon a Inch Iron plpo 11 301.37 lett;

'

Eastern
Elementary
has
·announced the final honor roll for the ·
school year.

SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL

•

Th!Jrsday, J11ly 1, 1999

Slwillf'ls.leol- E In VOlume 20, pege 521 ol OtMral Code, Sec. 11111
the Recordo ol Deedo oncl R - Codo, Sec. zsze-28
- - H foltow.: The
The Statll o1 Ohio, lilelgl
following reol · -· wlllcll County.
11 part ol LOt No. Four (4) In
u n - - ol-.lca.
Pomeroy, Ohio, IC!•WII:· .Piolntlllw. Tlmollly J. King.
Beginning on the north line o.tenc!llll
ol Phillip Mlller'o l~nd, In
No. 11-CY-074
uld Lot No. 4 In Pomeroy, In poirouoriCt o1 on Onder of
Ohio olxty (601 fnt from Stle tn the obovo entitled
Sprtng SII'Ht; thence Iouth acaon, 1will-lor 1111 at
-en (7) lnt; lhenco 1811 public auction, (1) 11 the
forty (40) loot on Uno door ol the courthouot In
porallol with oold Mllltr'l Pomoroy, In the obovo
north line; thence north named County, on thl 30th
11van (7) feet to tho comer clay ol July, lilt at 10:30
of oald Mllltr'a part of uld o'clock "'-M.. lho 'following
lot; thenco will on oald - - N O l - o Miller's .north llno forty (4!)) In the County ol M!llga tnd
feet to the place ol Slate of Ohio, and In the
beginning.
Townohlp o1 c - toowff:
Also that other place ol
The following doocrlbed land deeded to Phillip Miller reol eotllo altuated In the
by Caitb Smart tnd wile
allto ol Ohio, county ol
doo'd datod Moy 11:5;·~=~~ Melgt, Chootor Townthlp,
and bounded tnd cl
Stctlon'12. Btlllnnlng, •• •
ao lollowa: Tho lollowtng point of rale.renca, It lhl
real•- wlllch lo 1 port ol lntoretcllon ol County Rqod
1,01 No. .Four (41 In the Town
orPomoroy, ond dncrlbod 20 and County Rood 25,.
as follows : Beginning at a ~nee with County Rood 20
point on uld,Lot No. Four S. 27 Qog. or 13" w., 302.31
(4) In the Town ol Pomeroy loti to a P.K. In tho centor
which lo one hundred (100) ol oald road and the truo
feet from Front Stroot and ' piece ot beginning lor thlt
fifty (50) loti from Spring description. Thonco,''wlth
Str~.et, . which lo tho tho -center of County Rood
northwall corner ol a part 20, S. 30 deg. 48' 35" W.
of aald Lot No. Four (41, 1112.33 - t o 1 P.K.; thoriCt
which-. said Caleb Smart s. 51 deg.,09' 48" E. 200.70
bought ol S.W. Pomeroy f~t to an"'tron pin; thence
and H.S . Horton ; thence N. 33 dog. 13'14" E., 240.70
south nlnetean (HII feat; lett to on Iron pin; lhenca
thence wntttn (1 0) lett to N. M dog. 41' 36" W.•:ZOV.M
the place ol beginning.
feet to , tho ploco ol
Currant Ow~er Name: beginning, conlolnlng 1.01
Jerry Bentlty oncl Donna D. ocreo. oubjtct to oil logel ,
rlghlt ol woy, and baing 1
Bentloy.
Proport't Addreoa: 105 port ol lht real eotott
Spring Avanut, Pomeroy, deocrlbod , lrr Volumo 274,
OH 45769.
Page 207 Of the Doodo ol
Permanent Porcel No. 16- Record.
01402 and 16-01403 ~
'Sold Promlooo Located at
TERMS OF SALE: Caoh, 36212 Rockoprlngo Rood,
Connot ba told lor leu than Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Sold P11mloeo Appralaed
2/3rds of tho approload
value. $1,000.00 down on 11 $58,000.00 and cannol be
day olula, coah or certified sold lor ltll than two-thlrdo
check. balance due upon

.,_
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Honor roll posted

Public Notice

..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

wo·men should trust instincts conce/ning

. Dear AM

I

•·

l

P\JT IT TO WORK!
$25 -$75 (Hr PTIFT• ·
• H88-894.f401
www1 work -lrom-f1ome net11ur1n
r

Plumbers And Ptp elltters L.U
lt5 77 Will Be D1sir~buting Appren·
tice ApphcaliOns Beg mn1ng June
28th Through Ju ly 91h Appj1C8·
t1ons Can Be PICked UO AI 1236
Gallt a Street. Portsmo uth, Oh io
From 7.30 'A M U ntll 4 00 P,M
$35.00 Application Fee EOE.

s

Pos tct l JOos to tB 35!Hr.. , Inc
Benel 1!s . No Expen8nce For
App . and E:-.a!"' Info. Call 1-800·
813·3585, E•1 8826 , 8AM-9Ptwt. 7
Days IOS,IOC
.
POSTAL JOBS To $18 .35 hfR
,INC BENEFITS, NO E)(JtEAI EN qE . FOR APP. ANO EX~M
I~FO . CALL t -e00 -81 3· 3585 .

EXT ill4210 . 8 AM . -9 PM ., 7

·DAYS Ids me.

Scen1c H1ll !i Nurs ing Center, Is
Currently Seeklnlf Peop le Who
Would ' like To Attend , CNA
Classes For Employ ment
Scenic HillS , In AU Ou~ Oep'art·
ments. If ln1erested Come In Par·
son To Ob t9 1n An ApplicatiOn · At
31 1 Buck:rldge Roao. Btdwell.··~o

At

Phone Calls Please!

SIG N-ON BONUS OF $500
FOR RN POSITION ON 11·7
SHIFT Aockspnngs Rehabilit atiOn Center. a Skilled and intermed iate lacH1ty ol 100 Deets, has an
1mmedja1e opening for the right
ca nd ldat~ We have an excellent
benefit packag~. 401K and com petitive satery Th is is an eKce tlent opportunity to oecome part ol
a stable nursmg team lhat P'las a
comp11ance hl5tory or lixceuent
surveys and care issues. Submit
your application to 36759 Rock springs Ad . Po meroy, Oh io
45769 . Or call Carol G reening ,
DON at 7 40-992·6606.

SINGERS! GOSPEL OA CL~ AN
COUNTRY Call Now Toll Free I ·
800-339-4204 Or 1·615·367-61.53
For Appoi ntment To Come To
Nas,hville , TN And Auditi on Fer
Major. Record Producers.

�.•

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Pomwoy • t.'ldclleport, Ohio
'

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The r;&gt;ally Sentinel • Page 11·

PomJH"OY • Middleport, Ohio

· Th&amp;nday, July 1, 1999

Thursday, July 1, f~

ALLEY OOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

BIIIDOII:

·--12.,. __.........,.
toa-

11

=
'
n
7&amp;.....

llolp'N,
Pool, 7
Ul:!llt-,l*For~

Eoclt. Coi111M-~51M.

ndtr ol Suftlmor. C304)342·

882-3m.

~

360

Tilt 8ovltiorn LD\:ol SchOol Oto·

:\1:

-hifta

posMioo of

tioot Mot~ltsh

Ett~DIIthtd

lawA mower shop,
complete tnventorwo. beautllul
home and ren~ an on I)M Prop-

avail·
! tiM 18119· 2000 ochool
yoor. llloo. Ute oupptomonlll pollloftl Of 1-..c dlretiOf, varsity
!54;io

etty,

or

will

bll COICh IN IWIIIabll. All IU~
ptementllt eppllcanrs must pos••• or a~uire • sports mach~ cllpl ~ilte al'(f a CPA card
Phone' 740-~9-2669 for further
• ~Jioo-1 PleaM send rrqulrloo
to Mft Jtimes Law,.nce , SuperlnSouthern local School&amp;.
Box 176, Racine, Ohic 4517 t.
SLSD is 8!' Equal Opporluntty
~

For &amp;ale - th'rlvlng young llortsi

and gilt aD~ . centra,lly located .
Parktng a•ctll»nt IAany ftM giha.
L.ocaJ:ed h• newly re.stoted tntortcal building Priced to aelt. 740·
843-5281 . •
"

"'*"'·

FRITO L"V / PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE. $t ,OOO+
WEEKLY
POTENT,AL
CASH
BIJSINESS.
PRIME, J..lC
LO·
CAL StTES.' ON GOING SUP·
PORT. SMAll INVI!S.lMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS . 1·800·
731 ·7233 EXT. 2603.
'
IT'S
HOT.IT' S
GROUND
FLOOR•IT WORKS! Become A
M.ETABPLIFE 356 )m Distributor
Today! Fastest Gro'I'IHnQ Dietary
Supplement AvaWable . Free lnfor·
matton, Free•Call' 888·863· 8859
META80LIFE 1m INDEPENDERT
Approyal
DISTRIBUTOR
IN345!5081599.
..
Need A Loanl1l'y Debt Consoli·
. $5 ,000 • $200,000 . Bad
O.K FH. 1-80D-77D-0092,
215.

Three upertenced tlwnber cutters,
-two experienced skidder opera·
tors, must have experience.
985-4465

,.,.o-

Truck Driver For Local Area,
Must Have Class 8 With Humat
&amp; Tank Endorsem&amp;niS, Good Pay,
l!onoflts, Weekends a MajOr Hoi~
days Off, Send Replies To.: CLA
477 c/o GalltpQ!lS Oalty Tribune.
• 825 Third Avenue, Gampons, OH

45631 .
Wlldllf&amp; Jobs to $2 1 ~60/Hr. Inc .
Benefits. Game Wardens, Secur·
ny. Maintenance, Park Rangers.
No e.cp . needed. For App and
Exam lnlor. Call 1· 800·813 ·
35lt5,Ext.8827, 8AM·9PM, 7Daya

For tale· Atwly restored, two

tdllne.

story, Nstorical brick bultdii'Q Located two blocks trom the Ohio
River. Perfect to start .your oWn
business wilt't beautllul living
quarters upstairs Priced at
$114.0tlp 7.t0-&amp;43-5281 .

WILDLIFE JOSS To $21 60 /HR .
INC. BENEFITS GAME WAR·
DiiNS,
SECURITY.
MAIN ·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NE~DED FOR APP. AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1-800·813·
3585, EXT. •4211 . 8 A.M. ·9 PM
7 DAYS tdl. Inc
.

220 ·Money to loan
SS$ OVEAOUE BILLSI!t COnsolidate Debts! Same Day Approval.

· Schools
Instruction

NO APPLICATION FEESII 1-BQQ·
883-9006 En. 938 "Mo- Bot·
tar Business Bureau• .ww.halp·

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bacneior&amp;,
Miitera, Doctorate, By Correspondorce ·Based Upon Prior Education And Short Study Course.
For FREE InformatiOn Booklet
· Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t.aoo-964-8316

pay-.c:om

Approved MastiH Licensed EleC'· ~ - ~~~~:,.,..:_,-..c.._~
frlclan , WV025958, Free Est!·
malts for Residential Sefvkes. CONSOLIDATE DEBT. Reduced
13041675-7927.
Monthly Payments 20 ·50%. Save
Thousands Of Dollar~ In Interest.
E &amp; S Lawn SOrvlco: Design, lrn- Nor&gt;P)Ofll. TCC 800-758-3&amp;1&lt;1.
plementallon, and SIJ\"Ice.
Avallobll 1or Spring Ctoon up ,- . CREDIT PROBLEMS? VISfo
lltrtMiztng and p&amp;inttna. Free e'sti- CARD • Guaranteed AJ!proval •
metea. Satltfaetlon guarantHd.
No Credit Check • O'!f.APR. Rt·
Grog Mlltoan· 304187S-46:!8
qulramon11' 18• US t;IMzon, Have
cnecklng Alcount. PhOne ApproGeorgea: Portable Sawmill, don't
val. 1·800-737-0073. issued By
hall your logs to the mtll just. call
Merrk:k Bank, SLC, UT.
304-&amp;7!!-1957.
•
lntMior &amp;
Ex · DON'T
Management
(Not -For
BORROW Club
MONEYI
The
perienced,
Can Pay Your Debra And
able Rates For Free
You
• Have To Pay Us Back~
740-~1 .
• EVERt Send S"A~E To· DMC •
Dept 4320 P:O Box .4332 Vanay
J lma Drywall &amp; Construction ~ Vtltage, CA 91617 8,8-763-1000
New Construction &amp; RemodeiJ
Drywall. Sldlnu. RootS, Addi· EXI. -'320·
Ilona, Painting , etc . (304)874·
Ae23 or (304)67(.0155.
• ·

~~~~~~~~~[~

.· -lnlo

Need A Home For Yo'ur Loved
FINANCIAL
SERV . CASH
LOANS, Aulo loans &amp; Mort·
gages . Bad Credit O.K. i-800·
471 ·5119 Ert 45 .

car.? 7~1-12:18 .

Sltruba Trimmed, Mulching,

Painting; ate. can 8111. Len•
11 IEJI (304)17~7112.
Will babylit for any age ,avail·
able anyllme. have good rater call30+773-5ol35.

'

Houae Cleaning. Have
References and Experience!
C7(0)·388· 8421 or C1(0)·446·

. ........ Moseago.

Prof-lonal •

TUFINEDOOWNON
' SOCIALSECURITYISSI?
No Fee Unless we Wtnl

IHOTK:EI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
recommends that you do bullness with people you ~now, and
MOT to sand money through the
mall until you have lnveatigated

CURRENCY DAYTRADIHG
Earn Big $$$ Tr ading On Your
P.C Far Bener Than Stocks /S&amp;P
Make S$$ II Market Goes Up Or
Downl lmmed6ate Income! 1·800-

www.""'"""'-·"""'

525-~
DISC6UNT TOBACCO PRO·
DUCTS Volume /G roup Rates,
Manufacturer Coupons Accept·
ed. FREE SAH In Continental US
W 13+ Carton O rders, Toll Free
-945-o&amp;l2.

t-en

r~~~~~~=-===Three bedroom house lor sale.
one and 112 baths. fully furnished.
nice yard . close to park, 477 S~camore Street. Maddleport, call
7 367 7000
40•
.
Two bedroom bride home wtth full
basement, two story. two car ga·
raoe. corner lot In Mldd~port,
740-1!92-2333

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale .

3 Bedrooms, Basement, 2100 Sq.
Ft. Fireplaces , In-Ground Pool ,
Large Lotk. S.R. S88, Gallipolis
City Schools. Raducedl 7-40-«6·
7438
; ; ';

&amp;.
1

;;;;;jj;;;;~;;;;t

1990, 14x85 Buddy by Skyllrie, 2
bedroom, stove. refrigerator, un·
derplnhlng, new air condllloner,
19.500. 140-94~2452 .

~:S·e=~·~ :;.~ ;:
(740)44&amp;-3&amp;93 '

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•J,_

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no1

State Route saa. 1 Milt
Wast Of Rodney, Alex Acord-;740-245-9015.

MERCH \NOISE

Clean nice ~ br. ttasamentlgJ·
raga , rtn ttap. no pet11 304·67S~
Sl62

510

House for rent 1-Bedroom,
$300 .Uantt'l . $250 Deposit. 2References No Pets! ~740) 446

9342 '

·

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HoUsehold
Goode

30" Electric Range, 4 Months Okl;
24" Etee1rtc Ra~• Good Condl·
lion, 740-388· 0173 , 740 -4-4674+1.

•

House In City, Gallipolis, 3 Bed· ,
rooms, EIJra Clean, Quiet Neigh· Air Conditioners, Uloid O(flerent
borhood, 1'Sbry, 7~
Sizes , Guaranteed I 740·816·
I

"""""unity balls.

1 Yaar Old 3 Bedroom Ranch
H Ome. 2 Bath&amp; , 28x30 Attached
Garage, 69 112 Acres , Will Sell
All Or House Ant . Lot. Meigs
Count)' $150,000. n., , lnformalion
can 740-992·3.537

650 Seed

560 , Pets fOr Sale
314 Woll &amp;"t/4 Huskey t yr. old.
$50 Needs room to run Good
~- (304)675-6178.

14x70 two bedroom, total Mectnc,
121160 two bedroom, 10111 etectrtc;
$250 morith piUs $1 so deposft, no
pots, 740-742·2714.

(74C~388-jl173. (740r«&lt;-N+I ' .

To Everyone: Galua, Mason ,
Meigs Area. Stop By, See Pete
Ptclt -View Our Beauttlul Homes
Beside Auto~ . Gallipolis, 740-

-3093

.

Repo Ooublewlde Sa'le Thou sandsl1 -800-383--6862

330 Farms tor Sale
26 Aero&amp; Mil, 6 Stall Horse Bam.

2 lOts In Middleport· JUSt off Soutf1
Third A11enue. Utilities available,
ancl existing gas tap , $12,500 loJ
both, 7o40-992-9.

5 5 Acres Frontaga , Garfield
Avenue , Clly Utllilies , $49,000 ,
Send Re sponse : CLA825. c /
oG ell ipolls Dally Tribune . 82 5
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. OH
45631.
lUCRE&amp;
HORSES ARE WEI.COME
OH SR 141 , West Gallia County,
LOIS 01 M..-, With New Sheds
!Barns And Fencing. Ready For
A~mats LOIS ol ROad Frontage
IOACRES
Great For Recreation /Hunting ,
Wooded , With R:: 1d To Wayne
Nallonal Forest. Make Me A
Oeall S% Cown Land Contract
With App roved Credit. Free
Maps. 1-eDo-213-83115.
.
!~RES
Near Vi nton , SR 32 5. 7 M1les
Past Oanvrlle. 15 Miles From FUo
Grande. Perfect Home Site. COunty Wate r, On Paved Road Nice
Neighborhood . Only $10,500
S1,000 Oo'ltn. Land Contract. No
Slnglewldea. Anthony Land Co.,

LTD l ·eDo-21 3-8365.

.

1.

1 BR Apartment For Rant In Point
Pleasant. (304)675-2117 .

And Pre-ExJsting
Cov-.
er'rldo.
Choice 01 Conditions
Centis! 1. 888
227·3752.

t BR. A/C, Near Holzer, ' ts1
Month Free With 1 Yr. Le8se,
Quiet Location. No Pets, 1279/
Mo.. Plus Utilhies, 740446-2957.

AMAZING METAIIOUSII
Broakthroughttl Lose 10·200
Po unds . Easy. Quick ," , ,Fast
Dramatic Resulls , tOO%" Natural ,

675-

. Free Sam-

1 Room &amp; Bath AcfO&amp;s From Col·
lege. 1200/Mo.: All Utilities Paid, '
888-IHQ-0521 .
•

2 bedrOom aPartment In Middle;
port, we pay water, sewer &amp; traSI'l,
you pay gas &amp; llectrtc, $200 per

(304}875-4548.

month , $100 deposit, 740·992·

Monthly Payments. Good Credit
Requorad, 1·800·718·185;1.

7806.

COOL DOWN

Dtposh. No pets (:).)4)675-5162
2 Rooms &amp; Batl'l , 2251Mo , In·
cluctas Utlillies, No·l&lt; ltchen : 1
Bedroom &amp; Balh Includes UtHities,

Central Air Conditioning Addad
To Your Furnace. Complete Duct
Systmes 6 "Furnaces. Heal
Pumps Cerutted Installer. 11 You

s

No Ktlchen. 740-446-2477 .
2bdrm apts .. total elect ric . ap pllancea lurnlsiled. laundry room
facUrtles, close to school 1n town .
Appllc~tlons available at: vmage
•• ,., 149 or can 740·-.,..,.,·
Groan ,..,...
371 1. EOH.
'
Aparlment for ren1 1n Middleport ,
no pets, 7.C0.992-5858.
BEAUTIFUL APA~TMENTS AT
BUDGET PRjCES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Orlve
from 5279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies . Call 740- 446·2568
Equal HouSing Opporlunlly.
Christy's Family Living , apart·
ments , home I trailer rentals,
740·992·4514 , apartmenll available, furnished &amp; untumisnt&lt;l.

DlscounfMoble Home
Parts &amp; Su.........
Huge lnven;;;
Vinyt Sklr1lng Klls $299. 95• 5 Gatlon Aluminum Fibered Roo! Paint
$25 21 ; 5 Gal White Aoor Paint
$57.89; An chors $5 ; DOOfS &amp;
W1"ndows, Gas &amp; Eleclrlc Water
Healers , Plumbing &amp; Ele ctrical
Parts, lntertherm, Miller &amp; Cote·
'!lan Air Conditioners &amp; Heat~
Pumps. Bennetrs Mobile Home
Supply. -740-446·9416 Gallipolis,
Ohio.
"
Formal bridal gown , long train,
beautiful, alze 18. matching veil,
bolhi:JrS3QQ, 7 -·2915.
FULLY
LOADED ' .PENTIUM
COMPUTEAS. Poor Credit O.KI

OOWNJQWN APARTMENT

1-II00-520-83!H.

FOR AEHl
AD ElectriC, Ideal For Senior Per·
so ns. No Grass To Mow, No
Lawn, First Floor. For An Ap·
polntment TC1 VIew, Phone: 740·
446-~9 .

For Rani·· Mason-2 bdrm.

tll!aon~·t~C.~It~U~s~W~o~Bo~th~los!:._el
0,
t.aoo-29Hl098. _7_;4~

garage

apl. Nice . $350 .00 plus utilities.
$350.00 deposit. references req.·
ptt.C3041675-t91t .

Good used downftow 110,000
BTU natural gas forced air fur~

nace, can 740-992·2974

GOT A C AMPGROUND MEM ·
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? Wo11
Take Ill Ameri ca's Moat Suc cessful Campground And Time·
&amp;hare Resale Clear1nghouse. Cell
Reaorl Sales lnternadonlil. 1-800423-5967 24 Hoxn.

) I· ..

.

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~~------~~-----Gambler Intimidator ~0 tt. b1111 ~..
boal. dual conso~a zoo hp:
evlf)·rude motor, fuRy equip.
bought new in .18, u.ed approK· '
lmately 10hra. priced wen under

· 304-773-59116.

.·

r

Wl\ffi \o.IE WEI.f. fl~~~ Mt-U.I£0,
'fW U5W TO ::.t.,'( YOO 1l\OU6\I,I
Of IN:.~ YOUtz:. 'Cl..NQ( KolT '!
001 Sl'lU. ~t-IC&gt;YOOOf t'Jr-\?

'

Aulo Parts &amp; • ·.. .

760

~

Accessorlaec

if"
·~ ~·••

IMC ~
I

1990 Uncoln Continental, Black
With Black Interior, Moon Root:
S3.00D, 740-2(5·5858. '

1990 Lumina Prtced: Befow Loan
Value , 1900 In Part&amp;. 93,000
Mn01. St,750. OBO 740· 4461127.

.

1993 DOdtiO $hldOw 5 S9eed, V·
Loadtd, Nice Slereo $2,600,
060 740-256!d034

e,

1972 Coachmen $1500 Located ...
At Gallia County Fatrgroundi • .'

- ~

740-441...()681 . ' '

1973 Cobra 15th Wfieet TralleF-. · ~
New Awning, New 1'lln1, Root Air, .,
New Upholstery, Everything ~
Workst Extra GoOd Condition! · ,
740-256-806' .
l

i

:,990=""a-""""'eu=-.-:.-.,-,.-.
..
-,.:-.mpor--.----.

eew

triC front j8ck,
twin batlltrlel, I
2_0 ' awning, T~ stereo ay1tem. ~
mlctowavo; (001 olr, 1oor - 6 pty ,

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Non•

2t'
3•
5•
61
Pass

Easl

Pass
Paaa
Paso
Pass
Paaa

'

.';oo ~!&gt;T

tlnos, $7500, 7(1!-742·2228 .....,. ,
lngs.
• ,

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Musical
Instruments.

~"""'

Dual 15" With Horn Main Speak·

r;~S6~0~0~P~r~,
J(2~)~Pte:o~vo~y:F:H:·
~I
Horn Low
End Cabinets
Pr. Contact

one--.

19114 GL 1'aurus, 59,679 miles,
silver w/maroon interior. ale, am/
fm cassette, cruise, good tires,
$5,200 OBO, HD-.1192· 1506 day&amp;,
740-949-26+1ovo&amp;.

eo system, microwave, roof air,
1100 bedroom,
bathroom with shower and tub,
sleeps 8 people , asking $7000
fifrm, tm::elkmt condtHon, 740-9&amp;92178.
.

~~~5 Chevy Blazer LT, Leather
Interior. loadild ~ ACIPWJPOL,
CDPiayer, Towing Packabe. AI ·
loy Wheels, Power, ~e'ats .
(304)67s-m6.

1998 Dutchman 33 Ft. wun Expanda In LMng Room, Voity Good
Condition, R•ady To Gol 740·
446-4287, After 8 P.M.

1998 Buick Century Custom, 4
Doors, $14,000 ; 1997 Chevy
Blazer L$ $18,000' 080, 740-31170157, Or -2809

Walls ParCh 0 2 OHMS $275;
(1) Peavey 15· 10· H 3 Way
Sn.o:aoaker $150; (2) Fender 2· 15-H

1998 Pontiac Trans -Am , ' Fully
Loaded! Price Reduced to
~2~.500.00 Great Graduation
Glftll (74C}-+164548. .

F I &amp;

'·

PEANUTS

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You'" biJIJd o brg rotn tgg wh•n

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'

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~ ~- I'M 'Strn!ID 1&lt;\1)6() uP wr~
Til~ TIM~; wt OOT IIIAS!IiD bNtl 'IJW\
10 SloiO ' ~ ~ S SOC&lt; EN ' : .

..

'

I

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

'

·Home'···

•
'r

BASEMENT
'
WATERPROOFMtB
'
Unconditional lifetime gUarantee. :
Local references furnished Ea- '
t-Iled 1975. Cal 24 tm. (74C) '
~46·0870, 1·800·287.0576 . Rog- .I
ors Watorproollng.

Seized Cars From $500. Sport,'
Luxury. &amp; Economy Cars, li"uct;;s,
-4x4's Utility &amp; More For Current
Llsttnos Call 1·800·311 ·5048 Ell:l. ~j,ptlance P"'' And Service. AH
1183.
Name Brands Over 25 Yeara EM·
parlance All Work Guaranteed.
720 ·Trucks for Sala
Fr,nch City Maytag , 740 -4-46•
779!5.
..
'
1991l Dodge 0 · 150, Plck·UP 318,
Automat ic, LWB , Dual EMhaua1, C&amp;C General Home MainAir, Good, Shapel $3,900, 740· tenance· Painting , vinyl aiding,
+IIHIS68
carpentry, dOors, windows ~ batns
1990 F;350 crew cab dually {XLT mobile home repair and more. FeN
Lanat), d1esel , auto, goose neclc free estknale call Chat. 740-992· ·'

610 Farm Equipment
2.000 Ford Oiesel 1 Tractor,
$4 ,895; 960 Ford' $2,495i T035
Ferguson $3 ,695 ; 1020 John
Deere Diesel, $5,995; t010 Jonn
Deere 13.295; 7-40:-286-6522 ..
June Used Hay Equipment Sa te·
~ 9% Financing With John Deere
c Cre~it Approval , JD1219, JD7:i!O,
NH .. 74. NH489, NH488 Hayblne,
JD335. NH630, NH650, MF 1560,
NH851 , Round Balet's. New John
Deere Round Balers, Mower Con·
.diUoners, 0% 12 Months, 2. 75 %
24 Months, 3.'75% 36 Monlhs.
4 75% 48 Months , 5 5% eo
Months. Carmichael 's Farm &amp;
lawn. Inc. 1· 800-594-1111 , GatiJ .
pols, OH Wo Dollvo ~

hll ch, bedliner. 123K miles, blf

gray, $8 ,000, 740·992-1506 days,
74().949-2644 ews. e
19 9~ S-10 LS, Exlended Cab, 4
Cylinder, 5 Speed, Air, $6 aoo,
74()-.446· 1968, 740-388·8637. '

1985 Ford Pi ck-Up F- 150, Short

Bad, 300, 6 cyt 4sp. !16,000 mtlos,
Above Average Condi tio n! 740·
388-0148

Ca t-553 Sheep Foot Aoller$31 ,000 Cat· 215 Tra ck Hoe
$31 ,000 45ft PariS ,tllidltr $1 ,800;
16~ Treht Box $3,000. 2,000 Gal·
lon Watet Tank seoo.oo, 427
Chevy Truck Motor,$750 .00
Misc.: Steel Beams, Prpe, Vibrat·
lng Tamp fils 416 Cat Hoe. 16ft
Trent Box $3,000 00. (7401·643·
26U Alle r 6 P.M ., after 5 00
C74C)-643-29t6 .

,
1986 KW One 1988 West·
ern Slar Dump Tru cks, Goo d
Asphelt Trucks, Call Aller 6 P.M.
740-446-4257

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDI

See The New John Deere' 20 0
Series Skkl Steer Loaders, 7.5%
JOC Financing , Carmichael ' s
Farm &amp; Lawn. Inc . 1· 800-594·
111 1, Galtl&gt;&lt;lll&amp;. OH Wo DoiM!rl

6323.

l ivingston's 'Ba sement Water ,.,·
Pr oofing , all basement repairs •
.done , tre e estima tes, ltfellma
guarantee 12yrs on job elCperl· · ·
once. (304)895-3887.
• •
M&amp;R General Contracting · &amp;
Electric, Carpentry, Porches,
Tra iler Set -tJps, And Air Condl·
llon ing, Also, Maintenance 740.
+IHI193
'
Aet-Bul~

Build n&amp;w or repair otd , no job
too small or large . Major cred/1
card s .
tWV029582 .
CAll .
(3041"58·1049. BP 1528·8092

1977 Ctlevv 4 WO. For Sate Or
Trade. For S· 10 4 WO, Of equal
Value, 740-367 - 71t7

840

19~2

ResldentraJ or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs. Ma&amp;ter license d electrician . Rid enour
Elect rical , WV000306. 304-675 ·
1766

Ford F· 250 414, $2,300

080, Has New R99se Hitct'l, Very
Tough! 74 0· 245-5949, 740·703·

rna.

r
•

Electrical and
Refrigeration

•

)'OU 19"

wrtlo the c/ossifitds

.'

·1THURSDAY .

II

I

FACTORY WHEELS, Alloy, Rat~.
Steel. Buy, Sell. Acker Wl'leel 1·
800·994·3357 . Worlds Most
Complete Inventory www.acker·
wheel.com

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cipher .w.dl for~ Toa.y'I.:::W V ~ L

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CH · UDAT
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Melo:td}' is a form o1 remembrance . It must have •
quality ollnovilabllily in our earo. - Glan.Callo Menottl
(c)1-byNEA,tnc

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"Remembet students," thf
. . . . . .
teacher told the . class
"Yo,..,
.----...,.,.;_--.., can often change thtngs if you
change your- ---.-- -."
. G E' N 1' U M

I-""'TI"'7~,;,·8,;.;.,;1;...;:,l..:.:_..,lr--1 Q Compto1e
I'-'-'·--""·L......L.--.1.--.J.L.....J.1 by ~fllhng
PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SOUnES
UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

'"

.

ASTRO·GRAPH
Friday, July 2, 1999
Basic changes in all your finan·
cial endeavors should begin to show
an improve1J1en1 in the year ahead.
Although these advancements may
come about in a gradual manner.
they will produce positive results.
' CANCER (June 21 -.Jq.ly 22)
Make an effort today to manage
events instead of letting them manage you, especially concerning matters that are meaningful to you personally. Success is possible under
your direction . Get a jump on life by
understanding the influences that'll
govern you in lhe year ahead. Send
the required refund farm and for
your Astra-Graph predictions by
mailing $2 to Astro· Graph, c/o this
newspaper, .P.O. Box 1758, Murray
Hill Station, New York, NY 10156.
Be sure to state your Zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23-Aug. ~2 Don ' t
take it personally if you
relegat·
elf today to a minor rol in a joint
venture. It 's just that another person
see$ a way to viclory that could be

'.

equally as gratifying for you.
dependiryg solely upon yourself,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
AQUAR!US (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Should there be ~n agreement you'd Anything having lo do with money
like to make or some documents to should be attended lo al this time,
be signed, atlend to them today. All because financi al u ends are likely to
matters of a legal nature look excep- be more stable for you now than
·.tionally promising now.
_tHey at a later date,.
,o
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Keep '
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
your shoulder lo lhe wheel loday, You'll be especially adepl at accom·
because something for which you 're plishing your aims today, even th e
presently slruggling ' is worth the most difficult ones, .so focus your
effort. It's yield could exceed your energies and efforts on that which .
expeclalions.
.
you consider to be your mosl signi f·
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. ·22) icanl endeavor.
Allbaugh Lady Luck may put limits
ARIE.'S (March 2 1-April 19)
on her dispensations, she tends lo Don 't write off two enterpri ses on
.favor you ldday. Operate within rea· · which you worked very hard in the
sonable bounds and this could be a past, even if they haven't as yet
better than average day for you.
yielded whal you expected. Th ere's
SAGmARIUS (Noy. 23-Dec. life in them ready to spring forth.
2"1) Even if you have a differc:nl way
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
of doing things, don't be resistant to · Look to a special fri end to be sup·
changes effected by' someone in portive of your hopes today. This
your family today. Things could won't be the fi rst time this pal was
work out better than you thought .
prepared"logo to bat for you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
GEMINI (May 21-Jun e 20)
Goals of -a material nature can be ,Don't hold back any longer. a trump
achieved today through ambiti on card you've bee n keeping at bay
and persistence. It'll prove that you concerning a d&lt;jal you ' ve been anx·
can make your lo! in life easier by ious to pull off.

.

JKXLP

the
in

thuckl~

quoted

rhe miutng words

you develop from step No. 3 be~.

I

SCJIAM.LETS ANSWERS '

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'

Home Grown Sweel Corn And
Tomatoes For Sate , 10 Miles
From Gallipolis, OH On State Ro·
lM 141 , 740-379-2501 .

1'1

by Lula Campos

... -'"""__..,..,... _ _,...,.,._,.

1

,

8'x38' Furnlohed ea..,... On P~- -\'
vate Lol 50' ~C100'. Central Air &amp; :
Heat. Water, Electric, S.Wer, Ott
Baar Run Road , $15,000, Phone.
Call 740·4(6·1203, 7(0·4•~'

810

&amp;dl

•

~

SERVICES

Green Beans, ,.$20 . ·sushet.
(304)882·3826.

~"-at::'*'"

f9

'

245•9316,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,N

VOl! CAN TAKE OFF
THE MASK .. WE'RE NOT
601N6 TO CAMP .. '

1996 Sunlln• SoUorls Catftper
Sleeps 6. Dual A1le Gaa, A/C. r
Bath /Shower, Ona OWner, 740- . •'

4349.

ru Is
Vagetabla,,

,

Mark Twain claimed, " It usually
takes more t~ an three weeks to prepare a good imp,Pmptu speech."
Well, it has taken three days to cover
the basics of ruffing losers' in. the
dummy. Here is the l.St stage. In this
deal, hdw would you,plan the play in
six spades? West leads the club king .
South starts with a strong, artifi·
cial and forcing two-club opening
bid. North's three-spade raise
promises something useful ; with a
useless hand he would either jump
to four spades (which ought to
include four-card . support) or start ·.
with a double negative of two no-·
lrump (!lr lhree clubs, if he is a tournament player). South drives to slam
via Blackwood. Aggressi"e bidding,
but the final contract is good.
Check those •losers. You have one
t-lE.VE.tz:. 0\'-U&lt;oE 1t-110""'
in
clubs, and a problem in hearts.
f..N'&lt;TI'.IMC. I
This will be no difficully 1f the .six
missing hearts divide 3-3, but what
if they are 4·2, which is almosl twice
as likely according to the percentages table? It is unlikely you can
safely ruff two hearts in the dummy.
· You get home with a laser-onloser ruff-lransference play. After
winning trick one with the club ace,
cash the ace-king ,o f hearts and ruff a
heart with dummy 's spade king. If
the hearts split. 3-3, draw trumps and '
claim. Yet when East discards, play . ,
a diamond to your . ace, then lead
another heart and discard dummy 's
·remaining club. This serves two pJir·
poses. First, "Y,our last heart is established, and ~econd , you can ruff the
club five in the dummy with ,no risk
of an overruff.

.

199"J Oldsmobile CUtlass Sulnn1brook Travel Traltet.
premo Sl. 3 I V-&amp;, 12(000 (IIIIlS.
I ,Ownttrt Non Smokers, CiA, Ttl&gt; "
$5,300.j304)67s-3954
'I
2 Bclima., Oueen Slia
Sh&gt;OWtlf &amp;·Tub, Awning 6
1993 Thundorbhd. Under 100,000
Deck,
System , Call after Miles, Perlecl Inside And Out;
· • r
1915 Ford F- 1(50 4 WD, 'Make s ·~ pm. 740-~1 7M.
Oflor, 74D-«6-1800.
1993 Sindplper 30' Clmplf, Iter- 1

BIG SCREEN TV. Take On Small

2 BR. WIO Hook-up Relerencesl

.

C31M)n:J-58011. '

-

1990 Cougar, high mHes, runs
great, looks good, V-6. $2100,
7(1!-IM~2838 or 740-94~2045 .

NOW Peavoy XR 1200 0 -~
Srerao Mixer With 128 DlgUaf Ef·
laC1a On Boardll 4 dand Eq, And
4 Aux Sends PerCh 300 Walla
Per Channel 0 4 OHMS $750;
Peavey MD • 8 Stereo 8 Channel
Mixer With Reverb Srereo A·B
And Sum Monitor Outs. $200;
QSC -MX 700A Pwer Amp, 350

580

1898, _2,.Ft. Pontoon Boat. wllh .•
Traflar. E~t Condition. Ca· ;
-TO!&gt;. 50tiP Fol&lt;:e Moklf wiWI I
Prim. Porl·'a·P91!Y, Fish Trecker, '
LIYI Well, Mafli1e Stereo. Life ~
Jlcktll, ~ More, 111 ,700 ."'

4 cyl. auto,

P.A. Equipment For Sale: Lll(t

Pets. 740-«6-260.2

...;_

'

1111£:1
.Tempo,
bOW· . "QWML ,.,...

(www.happyjacl&lt;lnc.coml

Affordable osn1al Plan With Act A
1 •
cess o mer cas Largest 0 enlal. Nelworks About $3 Per Wee~
No Deductible, No Waiting Period,

4

Equal vatu•. 740·-448·

til7'i.lDyota MR·2 5 IP sport
coupe. ~0011 rooJ $2,200. OBO
;!Q4-G71'14t4 anor 6.30 pm.
·

Systemlc.Polsontng. JD NORTH
PRQDUCE
740·41!6·1933.

wv.

or

.,,;o•. t·

EJ.ui, :UW. i Mllu Without

2 Office Desks, $150 Eacf't ; 1
Computer Desk', $99 , &amp; OthaF
ilemS, 710-245-5009.
.

Ext. +120

• :

_____ ___,._... :

1100,

19811 foubaru Good Body
terkH'. Needs Engine WQrk
74~10, 74C U6 9322.

What' s So Dtfterant About The
HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·
LAFI?: IT WORKS! Against

Jr

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

IBn Collla 17 1/'Z R - Like :
Will Trade For A Pontoon •

1970, POnttac Lemans Wllh 350·
Rocket Motor, $600, Call After 5,
304-875-5612..
• ..

31~3323

aach . .

18" Dlf'8TV Sltellht Systemt$69.00, $100 of lnHI JlfiJ!lf"mmlng.
Limited time oller. call 1-800-779-·
8194.
'

42 tllbllcal

By Phillip Alder

.

8515.

Pollee. Impounds, And Tax
Aepo's For Listings Call t -800·

Flah, 61rds, Pond SuppltBf'.
Sun . HPt.l, Mon .·Sat. 11AM·
6PM. Fish Tank/Pet Shop, 2-413
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant.
.
(304)675-2063. •

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;
Regrlgerator lnctuded, 74Q-446-

=:

11 . . .
12 Dwla

TOOK II

1992 Searay 220 Mtnt Cancmtoit. ~
Maat EMtrasl Low ,
Hours, 740·:188~1 , 740·36,. •

1ieo ·11111 CARS Fllqjl $lOG

AKC -Registered Black La~ Puppies. 7. Wk Olds Have been
wormed( has had 181 shots.
$200. aach. C304)675-6048.

510

DOG!!

IT'S
,ALREADY

TAKI YORI
SlAT II

: ~:-

· ~or -Sale

Honda' s Toyota·a.
Chevy•.
Jeeps, ~nd Sport UtUitiea . 8oo.
n2-7410; EXT 7832 -

AKC Lab;.Pupples, Very Loveable
&amp; Frlondly. 74D-367-o659

woOif4

440

·~··

-=~':""
nat deuce

Ruff in the dummy,
mark three

7!50 Billlt&amp; &amp; ~en

'86 troc Z, 305 lunod portluol In·
/acted, automatic, whitt wlttl red
Interior, 71.000 actual miles,
b+ack-out on front and back. nJf'lS
ea:ceHent, S3500 OBO. 7-40·742·
3142.
•

AUTOMOTIVE ' CARS

~ Au•tral~ shepherd p~. •
okS Ready lo 00 ,YY"11Mh.
Come reseNt your puppy! 740·
742·3304.

2583.

Single Parents Program $499
Down, Limited Offer. Call for de·
"tall$. (300)755-7191 .

2•
2•
4NT
5NT
6•

12.900'. .-

0861 cotloC1.

$!!0,0 &amp; UP. POLICE, IMPOUNDS.

AKC Shelfte puppies , sabl&amp; &amp;
white , trl , sable merles, vet
checked, excellenl pedigrees ,
S350. 740-696-1085
.

Mollohan cafl)\i; Room slzl Dar·
pets OFive·a·Litllt Save a Loll
202 Clark Chapel R&lt;iad. Porter• •

&amp;. Farti~~Jef

'S6700. 7ofb.ll92-811.

12x05 2 Bedrooms, EMpando,
$350/Mo. , Plus Otposu , 10x16
Worlo ShoP. Country Se«lng, 740446-1692.
'
1\,

lime

wv,

YOU LATE THIS
TIME?

•

TH'
BARLOW

Wanted· old motorcyclea, any ~
condition, cash , call 440-248- ,

'94 w,.ltl Grand PrNt SE Coupe,

AKC Boxer, Female, 3 Years Old,
Brindle !While, .Hou,atratned,
Proven Breeder. $150, 740•256·
6162

AKO Registered ~llow Lab Pups,
§hots &amp; Wormed , Ready 4th Of
.!illy, 7oll)-256-6336 .

.

800-383-6662.

'

Wheeler.
Asking
(304~ ·3323. .

710 Autos for Sale

Male Rat-Terrier 8 w~s . old
(304)675·7946. bolore 9 pm. S75.

GooQ selecllon of used homes
"A.ttlh 2 or 3 bedrooms Starflng at

'

SO II WHO MADE

Cuddy c.bln &amp;

420 Mobile Homas
for Rent

Assume
of$499
S239Down.
mo (304)755·

Homee,

5980

TRANSf'CRTATIGrJ

Block, brick , sewer ptpes, wind·
. owa., lintals,, atc . Claude 'l(tnfers,
. Alo Grande , OH Celt 7-40· 245·
5121.
•
•
.

3tea.

only at Oekwood
Nitro, wv. (30")755·

!

'fobacco Planta F.ar. S.l•.
C304)89s-:l740 Danny [lowloln1.

CFA Registered Himalayan Kit·
tens , 7 Weeks Old, 740·H8-

Umtt•d

1115. POIIrii ,SJCra..-blei, good

Square Bales of Hay For Sale.
C3041675-S072.

AKC,JI:Iale Collie. sablit &amp; white ,
normal eyes, young adult, $200,
740-696·11l85.

1991 toiltio72ft Sfilnglo ROell, Vonyl
S1dlng, EKceltent Condition ?
St6,500.00 (74C) +1&amp;-8113

.

· I!Goalll
• A Q J 10 9
•AK6 5 2

'

-:-:-:-::--:=c-:-:--:--:-"'
1996 Honda 30D, 4 -Tracll:l, ..., ~

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Thre'e bedroom home In Cheater,
'4Jda;tas, new furnace.. references Apphancee
Recondllloned
and deposit, 614-501 -8338 after ~~Wraas ho,~•,••.•• O
;~(ryen., Ranges. Refri·
6:00.
•
~
90 Day Guarantee!
Moytag , 740-446·

10

• K Q9
10 8 ? 4 3

•

• KQ J 9

Soulll

Building .
Supplle• .

550

3211oUM.a.g.
341111cebalaved
35E..35F-bkL
37-lump

Vulnerable' Both
Dealer: South

..-n

Also , Has Expando, Very N•ce,
Must Sell! Asking $14,000, 7-40388-8335.
.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

This newspaper will not
knowoogty accet&gt;1
adver1isemef111for reatoslale
which Is tn violatiOn o1 lho
law Our raaders are ho&lt;el&gt;y
lniOJ)TI&lt;Id thai "" a.ve•r~~~•
adveltlsod in lhJs naw~paper
are availabte on an equal

ca........ ' "" par10
01 - · ollor :J~M-875.&lt;~383

•Q108 4
•J105 Jp,

30 Blq'Cie pert

• A
11&gt; A 5

Watel11ne Speetel · 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 1 00; P 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 1001 All Brass ComFlnlnga In Skxi&lt;
~VANS ENTERPRISES
AOhio. 1·800-!37·9528
•

1988 Redmond Danville f·h70

736-3409... •

• 6 3

1996 Harloy Dovlii&gt;n 1200 Sport· !
ater L9.. Of Edrul 4.000 MKel. ...
7~773 .
. ..

•

8-L.().W 0-U-T
$499 Down Ali Singles. $999
Down Dou.bles, Super Low Pay·
menta, Limited Time, Oakwood
HOIJlBS, Barboursville. '('IV. 304·

~

1984 GMC ~Jmnty SLS, LOIMd, ·.
4DR .• Eltoelent Condition. 11tQh :•
Mlloi. $9,400. Cell bl.foro IPt.f, ,
1304:tl75-7906

2- 11'1 Dodge

East
• I 75
" J 9

West

cond. 1111 than 20 ~al. gaa ran ,
througll M $S,Il00. OBO 304-875- •

baths, Fireplace, New ~ C•rpet ,

3 Bedroom House, Fence, 740388-8504

All JBOI astalo odve~lslng In
this newspaplf ts subject 1o
the Fadaral Farr Hous6ng Act
of 1968 which makes It !legal
to advertise "any preference,
lli'nltation or discrimination
based on race, COlO&lt;, rollglon,
sex tamiHal status or national
origin, or any lnu:n:IDn to
make any such preference,
limitation ()(discrimination."

LlvHtock

tn.s-. 630

Llr1JOM piiMI
21 Aunt or unclo
Cabbr.l
271'11run*
20

:Dtna .....

• 6 2

'

Crlldll Clfdoc

0047.

REAL ESTATE

BAKE CUSTOMIZED COOKIE

BUS. OPPT $ 1,000+ WEEKLY
WORKING FROM HOM.EIII Re ceive $4 00 Per Envelope Proceasad, Supplies Provided!
Guaranteed Program! CALL
NOWI 24 Hours . FREE INFOR~AJlON I 31 0-5 14-4892 Ex t. LG-

R'ctored V~to&lt;lan h\&gt;ml ollualad
on 12 acres, VjHage Mlddlaport,
secluded a~d prjvate, appoint·
, _ caM 740-992 5686
'
.
.
•·
Three bedroom house in Pomer, newly remodeled, country set·
air and heat pump, oalbuild·

New Bank repos only 2 tert we
finance caa 304-722·71-te

-2371~W.

ss.ooo-

410 House• tor Rent

HOMES. FROM SS,OOO. Fo(e·
closeel And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Paymenl Credit {rouble 0 K. For Curreru llsdng 'tall
Ht00·3II·5046. Ext :t86S
By Owner: Excetter.i .L.ocattOn,
Very Attractive Pr'f4 $80's.
Please, Call • From 8 to 11 PM .
(304)675-48011 01'675-3991 .

1-888·582·3305

ses.ooo Netl· 740-3~21135 .

f23t,

740· 992·9012

"
Now 38R Uet down, · lt19
Month. OnlY Oakwood Home• 1 1
Ntoo,
C304)755-6815.

3 Bedroom Ranch HOme , 1850
Sq. Ft. 24x48 Garage Shop, 18
Acres , County Water , 11 Miles
From Galtlpolis, CA, 6ultl In 1991 ,

Now &amp; Rebulll

MOtoracoo1er ParJ• (Cushman
preferred}. Conta"'· D. Mttohell,
556&amp; 80th PI No. :Pinellas Park,
FL 33781, 727-4£.1.7408.

COl Ron EWOfll, t.aoo-!137·9!128.

RENTALS

t BedfOOI!l FUrn1shttd Apartment,
Downstairs 1 1/2 Baths, Air Con dltlonlug. AJI Utlitles 'Included E.ccept Electric, Prtv&lt;\,te Parking, No

S33-34153.

llopo~&lt;o&lt;~.

en.. 1'11. PW, SS.200. 740-245-'

11 v.niiiM

, 7 3
• 8 7 6.4 3 2

R•pld W,lgh( Lon! FEN· PHEN
Co'mblnalion 100% Sale Only
$24.95 9ul' 2 &lt;lot I FIHI U. 35 Pounds A Week As Sein On
T.V. Cellal•ne, H.Yiagra Also
AvaUable . Call unneo Pharma·
ceutlcall ffow For Into 1-800733-32N COD'S /Pre-pay /Major

New Bank flopo's Only 3 Left, 1·

1275-311. Free Deflnry. 1-too-

Bu81nOpportunlty

Banks And Financial tnstilutlons
Eam 60'11. 0111\olr Profits Trading
Foreign Currency. For Your Free
Report Call 1·800-39.f-0843
Required
'

,

Co.

1111~
.., l · !!!~ioru~·c~k~d:·~~~va:•v~c~al~t~74:oSIONS: POrtobto Signa _ , _

310 Home• for Sale

GIFT BOXES Seriously Wanting
A Business? Our kleas , Experience. Materials But Completely
Your Own Busines s Not A Fran chise INo R(1fallles Details 1-en.
7£.1.~ ITOI.L FREEl

-Land

JET·
AeRATION MOJ"Df\S

-sing Oj&gt;por·

Olct Motorcycles, Motorscootei a.

llannJ end

11~-

07-GI ·"

• . !( ' 2

Tna, 7~-eP.M.

1989 FO«&lt; lkonco E - Bower, •
:102. SUtndant, at.OllD Milll. A•• •

620 Wantad to Buy

Grubb'&amp; Plano- tuning &amp; repalrt.
Problllma'l Need ll.mtd? Call . .
plorlo 0&lt;. 740 U6 ·~

Good- .

N01111

19&amp;1 4 lifO Duolly 1111111\ Utility ;
8tod, 1.2 llloMt,

WI Pay Caah. 1 -800 -21 3 ·8~65 ,

1 Bedroom ApL S275 lflonth ,
ulltltles patti . 706 Viand Strael 1. ,
Pl. Pleasant,
(304)736-55!1&lt;1.

FINANCIAL

ADULT INTERNET
•
Prepaid Actau Carda. Hoi lleml
' No Comc&gt;etillon "Real SS$ Maker
'Oislri&gt;utorshlp Star-Up 1499

71--

tor and Trelter. Camping Ttalitr,
12 H PMurrey Mower. {304)882·
2:293

•

~m;en~t~w~ll~·~b~l~lh~,:no~w~c~a:rp:OI
llr, t..aut"ut

5885

.

... ol1erlng.

tunities.

E ~'"'

1104o182·

32(513CJ4-182:2017.

"90" Motorcycle, Boa! Mo-

-

room &amp; belli, base'

230

WIH Aepa)r lawn Mowers, Farm
Ti'actora And Machinery, A.lso
light Welding , Call Evenings,
7~1.0199 • • '

210

kllchen. u1ll1y

Clearance Sale. All Displays
Mual Go. OownPayments as tow
as $4M. lnltflil as lOw. as • ·" ·

scotrs Office Cleaning, 740-- 367_

' Will. do
-

992·5()&amp;0

bldiOOiil. flmily rtiOn', living J00m1

MONEY PROBLEMS? Wo Can
Help! Up to lOOK. No Fees! Low
Ratos. Quick ResUlts Call 1-871·
746-9009.

ServiCes

Will do all typos al painting, ~tort­
or and uterlor. Can do new addon&amp; and remodeNng. Also will do
740-992-7950.

Ext 1109.

Real Estate .
Wanted ·

Cothllleltty ,.modeled ttoust, 4

•eA.

Ono In Quiet Homo .With 24 Hour

. ,om-·

3H~3323.

r

WI BUy Land: 30 · 500 Acres ,

1 ·5 Bedroom Local Govtrl'rntnl
&amp; B'nk Forecloautes. Financing
f&lt;)sslbte. For Lhillng&amp; Call 800·

apartmenrs at Y1lll~ Mano" nd
Riverside ¥aftm8rl'i In Mi~le·
poll. flom 5249·$373. Call 1(0·

~~~~~i~~:~::~~~.:~~;ti
. l~mants28~,
1~

Mlasy's Cleaning serv•ce Home
. Or Ornce Years Experience, For
cat1740-2(!!-5052.

'

Buy Homes From SIO.oOo

••credit Card DEBT.. Debt Con· t973 Ramada .1211:65 Moblla
solldalion Stop Collection Calls , H&lt;&gt;ma
Bod
~RedUce Payments &amp; Finance ·•·
2
rooms, \Allntral, IJC,
Charges Avoid Bankruptcy 1·
$5,000. EvenBoo-270.9884.
1977 Govenor" 12 Fl. .c60 . Ft.
Bid Credll?. Starl. GaUing Ap · Good Condition, 13.000, 7-40-3117·
And Loans To- 7088 Or Call Barry, French City
In 7 Days. t · Homos.7~.

-. . 180 Wanted To Do

..·

Brtck Hom., Nk:e -.armly N.algh·
ta.orhood, ~ Miles Fitrn Hospflat.
Oft Of Jackson Pike, App t To

seu 811tefYII'tlnQ 8liCIIPI see. 740-tl1-o641 ,

""""""Y. 740-94~2$)6 . •

; Dis,.. co.ch, and varslly soft-

150

Gracklus l iving. 1 .aftd 2 betlraom

.Building site IUSI off RT 33, 14-4
h I 3Q2 11. I aero $tS,IXH1. 30of.

-..; l&gt;t. P,leaaant. ''" ....

&amp;ilat.----

Furnished lJI)&amp;I,alra two bHmom
apa rtmern. l!itg• living room &amp;
&gt;•chen, nteo iiilcli;!Nn, 740-11112·
3418
•

Water and Etectrtc A..dy For
~oOil-Up. Nlco lot-. ti,OCIO.OO

~--~~-yard ol 1107

111C1 IIIIIIMI

soo c. ._ sa.oo -

Gravely Tractor, {2) Mopeds.

Wonlod To.
Ground
' Or Daytlma.

or

--.

U~to

•

poat J2 25 each

...

I tn . . -.cl

ALDER

Locuat baH

- --

ACROSS

PHILLIP

6'30""99

Always· Quest- Scarf- Gypsum· STEP.AWA Y · ·
Rags to riches may take some t1me, but the path back
to rags aga1n is often just a STEP AWAY.

JULY t.l

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�,.

.'

. Th&amp;nd8y,July.1,1't ll

Pomeroy • Mlddlafl011, Ohio
•

•• •

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 70s

James and Mary Belh Home o(
Obeu announce lhe binh of a boy.
James Matlhew, onJune II ,81 Grant
. ...
Hospital in Columbus.
He weighed I 0 pounds and ~
ounce. and has a brother· at honle.
John Christopher. Grandparents are
Alice Home of Obeu and John and
Barbara Weeks of Pomeroy.

URG Meip Ce•ter to bold strond
Kids Collep
The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community
College Meias Center ;n Middlepon
is flolding its second KidS College
· with college courses nonn.ally
taught only on the main campus.
Courses "111..designed to be both
educational and fun. and all youths
between the ages of 8 and 13 are
welcome to enroll. Enrollmtnt is

...
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a:

Curtis named to DAV post
·Denver 0 . Gurtis of Bidwell was
elected !IS an executive comnlitteeman at.the Disabled American Veterans State !¥&gt;nvention held June 11ll
Curtis has been Ninth .District
Commander ' ~Qr nine · counties i.n
solithem Ohio. The· Ninth District
took first place in the state for mal&lt;-

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 70s

Other surgeries, and lransfusions to
newborns continue tlwouJh the summer, and must be supported by blood
donations. ·
Blood donations typically fall
__ when people are busy witlt summer
activities. Other contributing factors
Blood doaon autled
for lower blood donations are vacaHiJh temperatures and lo.wered . lion schedules at businesses and
blood donations are realities the schools being closed. "It may take a
American Red Cross faees during little e&gt;&lt;tra eff,nto make lhe time IQ.
the summer. The combination can dor~ate, but the time spent will save
muh in an i~uate blood supply lives."
for hospil81 ~ents.
A blood drive has been scheduled
Acconling't o Cheryl Gergely, at Middleport Oum:ll of:Christ on
supervisor of communications at Monday, 12-6 p.m. The church is ~
'In-State Regilift Blood Services, it '· . located al 437 Main ·Street. Red
is imponant for people tb donate .Cross hopes to collect 55 productive
units of blood at the bloodcdrive. All
during the summer. . ·
"More peop,le are engaged in out- blood types are needed, with· a spedoor actitivies- and travel. Thi, can cial request for people with 0 nega·
~ . more accidents, and tra"umas • live and 0 positive blood types.
have lhe po~ential , to usc high quan,
. To be a blood donor. individuals
tit!"~ of blood !Jefore ~ patient ·is must be at le"'t 17 years old, weigh
sW,Jiltzed.:' &lt;Jeiiiely .wd. In addt· • at least 110 pounds, be tn good gentian, on-going 'jJi-oced...,s such as eral heallh, and oot .have donated
cancer treatments, open liean and blood within the past 56 days.

Meigs
Cwtlty Chapter .53 took
place
in Division mfor membenhip.

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·-e
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Swedish study suggests genetic
contribution to cervical cancer

.

DeDcioUI

Home

to perform at Gallipolis River
Recreation festival Saturday on main stage

CORN

'"" ...._Ripened

"Red Haven"

PEACHES ·TOMATOES

IJfaskets

~

.....

•

At the Charl eston Stcrnwhe e l Reg ana . the gro up has ope ned for the
Ternpl alt o ~ s ( 1984), the Comm odore s ( 1986), · Lo uie Louie ( 1990),
Jefl erso n Stars hop (1994) and Blessed Uni on of So ul s ( 199.5). Addi tional openin g ac t ned its in clude Regin·a Bell, Martha Ree ves and the
,Yande llas. and Chubby Checke r. In con cert, its mu sic offers a variety
·o r so ul , pop. funk , and rh ythm and blues.
·

3

RACINE - Big Bend Farm
An tique Club. will hold an antique
tractor pull Sunday, 2 p.m. at Star
Mill Park in Rac ine.
MONDAY
RACINE

.,r

Rac ine Villa ge,

-~

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•• '

r9£etions: ·.
114 Mile Off
2400 Eastern Avenue

~omeroJ'/M11son

Bridge.
Phone: 304-773·5721
Open 7 days a week

Gallipolis
Phone: 740-446·1711

•

.

Meigs County's

Offic~aJs

..

Hometown Newspape~

r,, ,CJdr:c ;:JO rt. Pomero, OhiO

Volume :&gt;0 ~&lt;c, n'tl 0 ' JC

Sing le Copy. 35 Cents

see evidence of potential Serb ·moves against Montenegro

" To the extent that he is conranplaling otlter mijitary action, I would
WASHJNGTON (AP) - Yitgc51av ~dent Slobodan hope and trust \hat the Sail people
Milolevic is taking stqlS to bolster his authority over Moo- would express their oppositicn to
. lategiO; the smaller, V\tst-leaning partner in ~ Yugoslav anylhing that he might have in mind
fedmlion, and he may be .contemplaling "making moves" in the way Qj any further agwaagainst the Montenegrin government, U.S. officials said
sian," Cohc:n said
,
I U.S. Atmy Gen. Wesley Oark. the top NATO &lt;l011\111a11·
The State Dcptnment rccendy
der in Europe, said Thursday he has dctec:t«&lt; "a paltetit over l&gt;ftttioned Belgrade agaimt making
sevenlweelts" by Milosevic to move mili~ reinfon:e- anymovesagaimtMontenegJO.bulil
ments into M'J'IIategr!l and to Install mon: etlinic Selbs alsomadedearthattheUnitedStales
~to oppose Montenegrin ~idenl Milo Ojukanovic.
does not support Monlellegrin indc· "Alllhese are _preparaloly stages." Oark told a Pmtagon pendcna:. President Ointoo met with
IIC\liSOOitfaau. Hedidnotpn:dictanyowcomebutindi· OjukanovicinSiovenialastmonthto
caled that NATO and lhe United States are.d&lt;JIICIY rnonilllr- discuss the futune of the Ballcans.
ing developments.
...
• · ··
a In 1991, when all olher former
"I tltln1t: ~idcnt Milosevic is calculating what iS to his . YllgOlllav tepubli&lt;:S sec;cded from
best advantage in terms of. inaking moves in thai. ;uea," · Yugoslav federation, Monlellegro,
Oarksaid "And I wouiOO't want -todiSC\SS any (lroSIJtXtive wilh a . lArge. .Serb JIOpulatiQn,
,
, Of hypothetical military poosibilities in. that wnnection."
mnained, along Wilh the' republic ·of Serbia. Kosovo is a
Defense Secmary WiUiam Cohen, speaking at the same province of Serbia. ·
news conference, did not give a clirecl answer wben asked "
Oark also said Milosevic retains firm control of his
wbelher the United States or NATO had decided how it army and is trying to' rebuild a political base. .
would respoild if Mil&lt;isevic tried to ~ the Moo- ·
· "~losevic retains formidable power in Yugoslavia ilnd
. tenegrin govanment, which openly blamed Milosevic for he's an expert at dividing the opposition," the four-star
the oonOict in KosoVo.
general ·told the Senate Armed Services Committee 01J
•

By ROBERT BURNS

'·

AP Military Wtl..t

.

assassin John Wilkes Booth's bulBy EVELYNE GIRARDET
'l tts at the Ford Theater had not.
TO RECEIVE EAGLE RANK· Shawn White of Pom«oy Boy Scout Assoo:iated Press Writer
Troop 249will receiV• his e.gle Scout rank during a ceremony to be
Testing on the cloak anct abm!l
CHICAGO (APl - For •years.
held Saturda1, 6 p.m. at., the Middleport First Baptiet Church. Hla 11\e hlood-spallered velvet cloak a dozen other items, including the
Eagle Sc~ project w.. donafructlon of an Osprey nest as an envi- that Mary Todd Lincoln ' is; sheet thought ,to have come from
ronmental project at the G•vtil Power 'plant in Cheshire. He Is " - believed to have worn on the .Lincoln ' s death bed •. &lt;;ould evenson of Danny and Adell White. His scoutmaSter 11 Don Frymyer. The night .President Lincoln was shot tually help to authenltcate much
ceremony Is open to all.
·
has mostly hung untouched.
of the society's collection. ·
·But with recent developments
While existing documentation
in. DNA testing, researchers say supports the specimens' origins,
. the garment could reveal SQme of it is not always reliable, Buenger
tile mysteries surrounding the said. She noted that the society
health of the nation's 16th presi - had to put away a suit- purportdent .
ed to be the one Lincoln wore at
. History buffs at the Chicago the time of his assassination Historical ,Society acknowledge, after evidence sur(aced that
however. . that testing could another museum may have the
· destroy a valuable relic of history real ganncnt. • .
1nd prove false some of the stoBuenger added that many of
ries and myths about Lincoln.
the objects came from the collec"The ·question at hand is what tion of Charles Gunther, a tumvalue would DNA testing have of-the-century Chicago candy
and would it be worth the risk,o; of maker .whO donated "a mixed
losing a historical specimeg," . bag" of artifacts, including obvisaid . Nancy Buenger, textile con- . ous hoaxes such as.the skin of the
. . servat\f at the society. "We ~lso snake from the .Garden of Eden.1
· · have lQ uk: 'Do' we want to
Even with DNA testing, she
, kno,,.-~ . Do we really want all
.said, ptoving the blood was LinNANCY BUENGER, TElmLE ccinaervator · .t tile Chicago Hll:these ' wonderful
'PHteries coln's would be difficult since no
tarlcal Soclaty hoki• • sample of tha blouaa worn bY Klran Launt
solved?"'
· .
samples have been taken from his
Kline, who held tha hMd of Lincoln •fter he - . .tlol it Ford's
A group of ·scientists, conser- remains and there are no living
-rt.b•. Plcturwcl l*llncl Mi. Buengw Ia tha ...- ukl· to h•ve.
vators and historians met at the descendants of Lincoln.
bMn worn ~=::TIXI._d UI!Coln on IMt aama nlgllt. ~~
society Monday to debate those
Dr. Rohert ·Gaensslen, director of tM ~
. W Olhlr IIMnll ...!IC..lld wilt! tilt
.
,.
issues, and recommended that the of Forensic Science at tlie 'Unindcln of Uncoln mljjht prove . n s - . to many itorlit and
··
surrounding tile 11th pteakllnt.
.
·
·
1
,
·.
versity
of
Illinois'
ai
Chicago;
BAND TO
"'"'• Every , Thursday, 8 band from institution h&lt;ild off DNA testing.
"
Ravenswood, W.Va., will pertonn Sunday, 2 p.m. at Star Mill Park In ... The society said it would proba- who participared · in the confer' tremendous," . said Dr. Darwin
ence, said the cons of testing still before we cut," he silid.
Raclne as part of the village's July 4 celebration. The band Is com- bly j!',i,?e by the panel's recornoutweigh the pros.
Notve_veryoMne kagr.eeks .
d
Prockop,
a
gene . therapy '·
prlled of John Coanhour, Don McClure, Bud Dorsey, Mel Connors, men atwn .
1 0 r. tctor c ustc , a me ical researcher at Philadelphia's MCP
Gaensslen
said
current
rneth·
John Tabor and Willard Coqper.
Testing could sellle a long running debate on whether Lincoln ods to extract DNA include cut- geneticist at John Hbpkins ·Uni- Hanhernann University. "People
whl) .has pushed
suffered from Marfan Syndrnme, ting specimens or removing blood versity
.
. for PN'.A are fa•ct'
'. nated by ht'm"
·
a genetic disease thitl makes peo - •from them, while in ten years te~ttn~ ?~ Ltncoln arufa~ts, satd . · Tesung the cloak, Prockop.
· time scientific.:' development.; sctenttftc developments have said, "could answer an important
ple susceptible . to blood clots.
"The syndrqme could account mighr mean a:.- harmless scan:·· co~e so far _that tesung ! ould historical question that could gQ
onlr, cause mtntmal damage . .
fai in helping those struggling
for Lincoln ',s gangly appearafice . could provide the same results.
"We : have to be cautious
'llle tnterest tn ftndtng OUI IS with the disease today."
h ·'could also have proved fatal if
,.
By WILLIAM McCALLSwedish cancer registry. which oon Associated Press Writer
tains records of all cancer diagnosed
A study of Swedish women offers · ' in Sweden between l95S and 1993,
:4; "II- ; ..
some of the b~sl evidence yet that against the Swedl'sh naiional registry
'.
·.:·
heredity plays a role in c crvio~l can· of parent.s of people born after 1940.
,,,
' cer, a disease· blamed , rn~tly on
The study looked at nearly
The Community Calendar .. is
p.m. , fir~ house .
infection. by a sexuall y transmitted · 127 ,000 relatives of 71.53':1 women published as a free service · to
..
virus.
with cervical Cancer. It tracked non -profit groups wishing to
ALFRED~ Orange Township" .
Scientists know that the human mothers and daughters in the same · announce meetings and , special
Trustees regular meeting followpapilloma virus can lead to cancer of families, and distinguished between events. Th.e calendar is not
ing budget he'a ring Tuesday,1 7 :30
fraction of biological a'nd adoptive relatives.
the cervix in a smallr~designed to promote sales or fund
p.m. at i~e home of Clerk Osie
cases._But they· have long suspected
The reSl!ltS showed a strong link raisers or' ahy type : Items are
Foil rod .
... •.
that genetics plays a rol.~ in at least in the risk of .cervical cancer printed only as space .permits and
some ca~s .'
between' women related biologically. ·cannot be gliarant~ed to be print·
The research'ers looked at public '~ "This study doesn 't tell us what eo "a specific number of days ."
health records on mothers and gene it's on, or whether it:s multiple
·.
daughter~_ to reach their conclusion.· genes, but it's very' exciiing," BrewFRIDAY •
Th&lt;fY did not estimate what p¢rcent-, srer said.
POMEROY '-. Meigs County
age of Cervical cancer cases might
The study also indicated that Pomona Grange, regular session
be attributable tq heredity,
. women aie at risk for cervical cancer at Star Grange Hall, 7:30 p.m.
. The ·study published . in today 's at a younger age if they had a moth- .. Inspection will be ·held, and the
issue of lhe journal Nature was led er or, sister wilh the disease. 'I'hat degree of Pomona will be exemby Ulf Gyllensteri, a geneticist' at the (ypically is true of most types of plified. Star Grange ._.ill be the
. University of Uppsala in Sweden.
canc~r. .·'
. ··
.
hosts :
'
.r
The study, based solely on sl'itisThe human papilloma·yirus is the ·
tics, is considered exceptional · nati&lt;;m 's most comfilon sexually
· POMEROY - Peoples Bank
'•
because of the detail provided by ·transmi.tted disease , infecting up to in Pome{oy will hold a bake· sale
.
_
c
cct
1c
(" S 1 t ast 111g,
•
re
s
te
s
t
ror
uct·
n
uv.~u
Swedish records, and the highly sta- half th~ women in the United States in the bank lobby on Friday,
At H.c a ~ ouahl• · P r i c- t ·s .. Sa t i s l ac t 1on &lt; i- u ara ntc. ~c.· cl.
ble and hemog_eneous population in . with between 100 and 200 different beginning at 8:30 a.m. Proceeds
the Scandinavian country.
strains, said Denise Galloway of the · will benefit the American Cancer
" This certainly gives· us more of • Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Soc'l ety.
·-.
a reason to believe· it's related : to ·Center in Seattle.
..
genetics," said Dr. Wenc;!y Brewster,
But only a tiny percentage of SATURDAY
an epidemiology exp~n at the Uni - women get one of the few dangerous
REEDSVILLE
Eastern
versity of'Califomia at Irvine. '' For strains that cause cervical cancer. High · Scbool Class of 1984 15
so long with cerviciil can~er · it's The disease affects about ·16,000 year reunion picnic Saturday, 2
been argued that it's environmental , American women a year, and about p.m. at Forked Run Staie Park .
or a sexually ttansmitted cancer." .
5.000 die.
Bring covered dish and beverage .
Gyllensten
f:Ompared
lh'('- 1
. TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup,pers Plains Veterans of the ForWi~djammer
eign Wm Post 9053 will hold a
South Canlala
.
round a..nd square dance Saturday,
8- 11 p.m. with True Country .
. The dan ce band Windj ammer, based in Ch arleston. W.Va .. will perCaller will be Ronn ie Wood .
form during th e.Gallipolis River Recreation Festival on Saturday, July
3 al 9:30 p.m. on the main stage .
.
SUNDAY .
Th e g r o~p . formed in 1983 , c urrently consists of LeaAnn Jones and
MliJDLEPORT - Boelk Fam Ty ro ne Street on voc al s; Jay Edward s o n drum s; . Mi chael "Nemo" . il y Singers from Hill sville , Va ..
Pleasa nt , bass; Jac k Griffith , guitar: and Mark Sc arpelli and Elli oll
. wi)l s ing at the. First Bapti st
Namay, kcy hoard s.
Churc h of Middleport on Sunday
Th e b~n d a nd it s va ried repert oire has played dance . or co ncert at 10 : 15 a.m. and 7 p.m . All welengagments and convc:: nti o ns .fo r Union C arbide , Nautilus , Charles lon
come.
1
Area Medical Center. HBO. Bank One , E. F. Hullo n and o ther org ani -

-Page 4

•

Testing • on blood spattered cape could uncover Lincoln clues

' '.

The Cincinnati Reds
extend their winning
sbeak to 10 games

Ann Landers: Tax advice, Page 6
Gay rights·flag controversy, Page 3

-

$25 per cowse.
Courses include : Computer
Capers I, July ' 12-16. 12-2 . p.m.;
Medie•al Days
Knights. July 1216, l~noon ; Computer •Capers D,
July 19-23. 12-2 p. m,~ Civil War
Battles &amp; Generals, July 19-23, 2-4
p.m.: Drawing. July 19-23, ((}-noon;
Paper Art, July 26-30, l~noon; Creativ~ Wriling, July 26-30, 12-2 p.m.
To register, &lt;;all the Meigs.Center
at 992-3lB3 or 99~- 6450, Monday
lhrough Thursday. 12-6 p.m.

Sports

. . , 2,

·'

•

•

zau o.ns.

1lndians humble Twins 7-5, _Page 4
Friday

·

ThurSdAy.
Helsinki agreement " by Moscow, (]ark said. adding that
In his first appearance on discussions with the Russians would resume next ,week
Capitol Hill since the NATO air and he eJtpected a final agreement 10 be re~ then.
campaign against Yugoslavia, Oark , The argument is mainly over ·a Russian demand to stasaid he sees link evidence thai tion troops in the Italian -patrolled sector of Kosovo as weiJ.
Milo!;ev'ic's authority ;;. ebbing or · as in the thTee other areas spelled out in the Helsinki agree·
thai he might be ovenhrown or men~ plus a Russian demand for closer military and polit- ·
forced to Step aside.
.
ical control over their troops than NATO says was a~
1
"He still has his tiands on lhe in Helsinki.
·
sinews of power in Serbia," Oark
NATO officials in Belgiuro, speaking'on condiliQ11 of
testified. His political Clp!ICJ$Itioo is .anonymity, said the Russians are sc:eking to expand thc_ir
"fragmented ·atod weak. "
. opeiations inio the British area around the airport in Pristi·
In his remarb 3t the Penta- na as well as the Iialian-patrolled sector.
goo; Oark said the NATO-led
Moscow ·atso ' is arguing with NATO over whether .
peacekeeping eff&lt;irt · i\' Kosoyo . is .Russian soldiers must take orders from NATO cornrnanJIIOCI"'iding well eve!) though he ders - a contentious issue that the Helsinkl agreement
encountered obstacles this w~k was supposed to have senled. ·
.
from Russian offia:rs who visited
. Clark said the Russians wanted 10 make changes· in the
his headquarters in Belgium to work Hd sinki agreement aftl:r analyzing the situ~lion in Kosoout ·details for deploying 3,600 Russian peacekeeping vo and seeing 'potential problems,ISuch as dealing with the
troops in Kosovo.
·
rebel Kosovo Liberation Atmy.
·The Russian role in Kosovo peacekeeping was mapped
" For example, some con;:em was t-xpressed by some of
out in a detailed agJCemCnt readted after lengthy negotia- · the Russians on the ground,,h~ving seen the KLA up a lit·
lions in Helsinki, Finland, on June 18. II is now clear, how- Ue close and personal, ,.that rnaytle the seaors they picked
ever, that disagreements remain.
weren't the most convenient sectors fo r the Russian forces
"There has been some mative reinterpretatiim of the to be in," Oark said.
.'
·•

Area July 4th
MIDDLEPOJn'
Parade line up on

woman
accused of star1ting her-child

"

COLUMBUS (AP) - A grand jury has indicted a mother accused of
starving her 4-year-old disabled daughter so severely lhat the
weighed just lS..pounds when her mother took the_girlto the hospital two
,, . .
.
weeks ago.
· Renee Bunthoff, 26,· of Lancaster, was charg~d T)lursday with .child
endangering and failing to care for a functionally impaired person, acc1ord··l
ing to the Fairfield County prosecutor's office.
· · ,.
Police say Buntht&gt;ff either didn 'I feed her daughter Btitney for sc:veral
weelcs or fed her just enough to allow her to survi'\:e· Bunthoff said shefollowed her doctor's orders in feeding lhe , !=-~ild.
.
Britney requires lOla! em beca11se she has a:rebral palsy and cannot
alk. ._, ,... . -· .~~
lliPeaJ;OI' ·~
-·_ -;..-·
..•..
·" .
had lost a tl1ird of her llojfy weight between the t!mc of her last
checkup
8 and June 20 when 'i'e was taken io Fairfield Medical Center ·in Lancaster, about 30 miles southwest of Columbus.
Her doctor said the girl had a "complete breakdown of the body, ~ue to
malnutrition." She also had sores on her, back, a sign that she hadn't been
moved in months.
Britncy was releO,.ed from .the hospitall!fSI weekend into the care df Fair·
tiel~ County Children SerVices.
.
',
·
·
Bunthoff faces qp to si&gt;&lt;' and-a-half years in prisotl ' if convicted of 9oth·
charges and fines tOtaling $15,000.

Patrol fires froofHJr accusfld of falsifying records I

'

L\MA (AP)- A State Highway Patroltrooper'accused of lying about
writing several traffic ticketS has been fired.
·
· .
Toney Wall; 37, a trooper since 1985, was.notified this week that he had
been fired, said U. John Born, a patrol spokesman'.
Wall was charged with falsification last month, a rni..Umeano&lt; oarrying . a maximum six monl~s in jail
and a $1,000 fine. ·He has pleaded
innocent.
Born said Wall, a trooper at the
Lihla post, can appeal his dismissal.
He 'has been disciplined before for
..being late to work and abusing sick
2 Sectlorut - 12 Pages
time.

U:IS Lm.
Parade line up at
Southern High School
12:45 Lm.
Flag raising . cereParade begins
mony by Racine American Lc;gion
7 P·ID·
Ceremonies
on Post602
Dave Diles Park
.. 1 p.m.
Parade
Flag Raising (American Legion)
2 p.m.
Every Thursday
,;Star Spangled Banner'' (Otad Dod- Band
son)
2:30p.m.
Antique tractor
Invocation (Rev. Vcmagayi: Sullivan) pull
Comments from Mayor Sandy'
S p.m.
RACO
Frog
Iannarelli
,
Jumping Contest
Comments from Commissioner Mick
6 p.m.
Kiddie
Tra~tor
Davenport
"'
Pull
'o·
Parade and Flower Contest Awards
6 p.m.
Harvest
Time
8 p.m.
MusiCal Program Band
.... ,.. ..
(rom Dooley and Paulette Harrison)
7 p.m.
.Country Remedies
. 9-.30 .,..__ ' . Fireworlcs ·
. 8 p.m.
~est Tune · ··
Events are ·s(ionsored by lhe Mid- ·
9 p.m.
Country R!"JJ~ies
dleport Community Ass!JCiation, .
All events with the exception of
with fiteworks .sponsored by the Vii- lh'e pMade and chicken barl!ecue will
!ag~"of Middleport and sul!"rvised by
be held at Star Mill -Park with enterthe Middleport Volunteef Fire tainment ott the Star Mill Park stage.
Department Concessions and other ·'
·
·
·
·
RU11AND
· :
vendors will be set up in Dave Diles
Park throughout the evening.
. ~tland's Fourth or July cdebralitformation is available from lion wUI be held on Saturday, J.uly
Myron Duffield at992-4197.
3.)
·
.
· RACINE
9 LtD. .
P~e line up on
11 a.m.
Oticken barbecue ' Depotlllld Brick Streets
at the fire department
· 9:30 Lm.
Par&amp;!le
5 p.m..
Ash Street ·
6 p.m: ·,

Eve~ts
11 Lm;
Parade awards and
announcements .
11:30 a.m.
Vocalists Tammy
Taylor and Bev Adkins
12:15 p.m.
Big Bend C log-·
gers
I p.m. ·
Entertainment
2 p.m. .
Karaoke
. 5:15p.m.
Dwight Icenhower
- Elvis impersonator
• 7 p.m.
Blind Side
11 p.m.
Fireworb
All events are sponsored by the
Rutland \blunteer Fire Department
and Ladies'Auiiliary.
The de)iarlni€l\t 's annual ox roas
,will be tield throughout the day in the
• 'park.
, . _ · ..
_ .· .. .
· Questions . ibmit. parade entries
·arid other events should contad 742;
.8311.
MASON; W.VA.
Mason, W.Va. w'ill sponsor.
parade on Saturday. The parade line·
up will be at 9 :30 a.m. -at the Faith
Baptist Oturch.
Those wishing to put fire department, EMS, floats. bands o·r other
entries should contact the Mason City
Building at (304) 773-5574. ·

..

*

l

6
9&amp;10

11

will bl}

3

Sports
Wytber

4&amp;5

3

Lotter ies
OHIO
~
Pick 3: 5·3·1; Pick 4: 3-7-6-9 •
BuckeyeS: 3·7-14-18:21. · •W.VA. .

.

Dllily 3: 5-2-8i DaUy 4: 8-4-3-3
C 1999 Ohio Valle:t hblishing Co.

RECEIVE DONATION · - M•mbers of the
Cheater VoluntMr Rr• Department are ptetured rscelvlng 1!1· chac::k from th• Burlingham
.. Modern Woodm.n Camp 7230. The contrlbu·
lion totaling $3,520, rapraaent8 funds raised
through • M•morlal Day dlnn•r organized by
the Woodmen camp, and through the compa·
ny'a matching fund program. Pictured making

the presentation are Modern Woodmen mem·
bera Carrie Lambert, Kay Wllllama, Rosalie
Johnson, Alfiha Randolph, 0111 St. Clair, Chuck
Williams and Mlldrsd Zlagler, along with fireflghtera Larry Cleland, Charles Radford and
Elmer N-ell. The contribution will be used to
rapl•ce a ·tank on the department's tanker
truck.

Clinton boosts Palestinian aspirations
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clin·
ton is giving a boost to Palestinian aspirations as he prepares for a n.ew round of U.S.
peacemaking efforts in the Middle East.
With Israeli Prime Minister-elect Ehud
Barak due here in a few weeks, Ointon is
beginning to lay out his views· on some of
the thorniest issues, even while saying it
was up to lsr~el and the Arabs to make the
tough decisions.
His statement Thursday that Palestinian
refugees should feel free to live wherever
they liked was followed only a few hours
later by U.S. assurances to the Israeli
Embassy here that U.S. policy had not
changed.
Meanwhile, Clinton, at a joint news con ference with vi siting Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak, reiterated the support he
offered lut year in Gaza to Palestinians'
having their own .land - without directly
calling for a Palestinian stale.
•.

Continued In "Eastern L:ol!ai "
•·
on page 3

In J~rusalem, Barak said in a statement
that Clinton's remark about the Palestinian
.refugees was " not acceptable."
"This is apparently a misunderstanding,
and the (Clinton) administration should clar·
ify its position and correct it," Barak's state ..
rnent said.
If Israel and the Palestinian Authority
manage to reopen nego~iations, the refugee
issue could be one of the toughest, possibly
rivaling Palestinian demands for a state with
its capital in Jerusalem.
The Arabs contend Israel forced local
Palestinians to flee when the Jewish state
was established more than a half-century
ago .
Thousands living in refugee camps lin
Arab lands are demanding a right to return.
If they did, it could have a major impajl on
the character of ihe Jewish slate.
After Ointon's remarks. the U.S. admin istration went into explanation mode.
"The American side has made very clear
to Israel that the posi tio n of the United

States has not changed alld that the question
should be decided by the parties themselves,
in the framework of final :status negotia,
tibns," said Israeli embassy spokesman
Mark Regev.
In addition, he ·s aid, the embassy was
assured "that America will support an
agreement reached between the parties on

the issue."
"We now have a real chance to move the
peace process forward in the Middle East,"
Clinton told reporters after he and Mubarak
met for more than two hours in the Oval
Office and over lu"ch in the While House
residence.
.
Mubarak, for his part, offered to hold
separate talks with Barak, Syrian President
Hafez Assad and Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat.
" We remain most willing and determined
to do all.we can," he said in asserting the
role of moderating force thal 'Egypt assumed
20 years ago 'when it became the first Arab
·
state to make peace wi th IsraeL

the same ones that prQiluce jet skis.
Dealer!i have been sell ing personal
watercraft since the early J980s.
" It is only natural that motorcycle
dealers offer lxlih pieces of equipment
fur sale," Carey said. '_'C urrc~\ law
mahdates th at al l dealers have separate ·
buildings/facilities in orde r to sell dif·
ferent products. If taken literally. most
motorcycle and boat dealers would be
. v1o
. Iatton,
. "
m
L
.
..
The Senate made several changes
to the ,bill, incl uding:
.
• O ari fyi ng the use of placards or
ta'gs, sim ilar to a ,dealer tag for car5
when they ·are al an auto body shop,
when deal ing with the amount and
type of business perfom1ed in an auto
body shop.
• Requiring clerks of courts to
relaJl. waten....,af1 or outboard motor
title
t seven years.
•
fining ·a '"'atercraft d(laler ~t.;;

At the same time, Mubarak called fo r a
suspension of Israeli selllements o n the
West Bank and in Gaza; where the Palestinians envision having a state, and he sharpl y
critici zed Israel for retaliating to a Hezbo lan y rson who ts regular!) e~gaged
l&lt;~h rocket allack by bombing south ern
in the busi nes.• of manufacturing, sellLebanon.
"Such actions only polson the atm os- ing. displaying, offering for sale· or
phere in the region, " ~e said at a joint ne ws dealing in vessels al an est&amp;blishcd
pl ace of busi ness. .
conference with Clinton .
• Excluding franchises or dealers of
- "They create an erosion of the peo pl e's
new
farm equipment or lawn and garconfidence in the process at a time when we
den
equipment.
such as an all -purpose
are working hard to encourage the parties to
vehicle, from the provisions of this
take confidence-building measures ."
legis
Iat ion.
Clinton said he would prefer waiting to
The bi ll now goes to the governor
talk •to Barak before making hi s own views
public. But responding to questions, the .for his approval.
Additionall y. Carey's House Conpresident provided some insight into thi s
curre'nl Resolution 21 was recently
thin ing.
passed by the Se nate and it became
F r the first time , Clinto n spoke in s uplaw immediately. HCR 21 urges the
pur of Palestinian re fugees,
. federal government to reject th e use of
' I wo uld lik e il if the Palestinian peopl e
t free and were free to 1!'\Je wherever they Tem porary Assistance for Needy
Families (fANF) block grants to offli ke, wherever they 1wan t to live," he said .
set new spending.
.,

I

.,

\.

The Eas te rn Loca l -S&lt;;haol ·
Bo ard . appr oved se ve (al' per,
sonnel ma tte rs w he n they me t
in s pe ci al se ssio n on· Wednesda y. •·
.,
· The boa rd a pproved ·Joyce
H i II as E lement ary S tu qe nt
C o uncil Adv isor and Fres hman
Class Advi so r atid Te resa
Lemons . a s S pecifi c Lea rn ing
Disabilities T ea c her o n. a oneyear contract. Katr ina Spurlock
was approved ·as a s ub stitu .t e
c o ok and c us tod ian. '
'
T he bo ard 'accepted the resignatio ns of Da rl ene · Reed, bus
driver, G lend a Be11e du m, cook,
and Margie Bene du rn, Custodi an , a ll. due to le tire ment. The .
resignallon ·o f Kin,. H!lwe ll as
instrumental mu sic instructor
w as also aq:e pted .
Professional g ro.w th s ti pend s

ufacturers who make motorcycles are

~

E!!llm•lm
Local

'

Ohio Sj; nate changes tQ legisfatio n
codifying a common practice conduct·.
ed at motor dealerships around the
state have been approved by the
House ofRepresentat ives.
'HouSe BiU 3Q6. sponsored by State
Rep. John A. Carey, would ,benefit
motorcyde"dealcrs by clartfying that
they may continue to sell personal
watercraft at their dealerships.
Carey, R-Wellston, said most man-

Today's Sentinel
.

'

.Watercraft ·dealership
bill goes to governor

Good Afternoo n

ealendn
!;;lasslneds
Comics

Eastern Local
School Board
makes' P.ersonnel
.
.
moves

'

'

"

'

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