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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
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Readers should be ~lerted of old phone scam that is being revivecf
to . hang u~. I became suspicious,
satd I was tn a b1g hurry and hung
Ann
up. .
.
Landers
I
Lmmedtately
~ailed the phone
, 1W7, Ln. AIIJdi:J Twnc1 '
company
and
was
tnfonncd that by
Synd11:a1e and Crt:lll'"'
Syndteall:
pushtng 90 #, 1 would be giving that
·:technicia~" access t~ my pho~e
ltne,
allowtng htm to pla;:e long-dtsDear Ann Landen: I just found
tance
calls while 1he charge
out about a tel~phone scam, and I
hope you will warn your readers ap~eared .on my . bill. Please alert
your readers to thiS scam. --Dayton,
about it.
Ohto
I I received a phone call from
Dea.r Dayton: ·I very much
someone who identified himself as
apprcctatc
your letter. You have
an AT&amp;T service technician.
This so-called technician claimed helped me alert millions of people to
to be running a test on the 11hone a racket lhat could he very coMiy to
.
lines and asked me to help him by unsuspecting vocttms:
We
contacled
Onano
Pagnucct
,
touching the number 9, then 0, then
the pound &gt;ign# I was lhcn supposed lhc dtrec1or ol pubhc re lauons at
AT&amp;T, and he tnlonncd us lhat your

information is accurate.
Pagnucci said this is an old scam
but it was recently revived whi:n ·the
information was posted on the In1ernel. 'The scheme is mostly directed
at businesses and government agencies.
Pagnucci said that real' AT&amp;T
technicians do NOT ca ll and ask
customers to help check the phone
lines or run tests. Nor will they ever
ask to verify your calling card number.
· Managers of office buildings
should notify their staffs no11o com·
ply with such requests.
If anyone should call you and say
he (or she) is an AT&amp;T service per·
son, ask for his or her namo. phone
number and the name of a supcrvi-

sor. Then, hang up. The caller's
iden1ity can then be verified through
AT&amp;T.
These crooks should not be permitted to get away wi'th such
shenanigans. Victims who do nothing are aiding and abetting them in
their dirty work.
Dear Ann Landers: What could
you possibly· have been thinking
when you replied 10 " Midwest
Senior"?
·
He's the reader who -was critical
of the sensitive personal information
contained in newspaper obituories
and asked how you fe ll about il.
You said 1hat you didn't mind
reading about someone 's multiple
marriages because that was "part of
1he person 's personal history " but ·

that y~u would prefer to see an
AIDS-related death referred to as an
"extended illness" to spare the family members any embarrassment
I can't understand how you railed
to sec the hypocrisy in your statemenl. An AIDS-related death is
indeed a profound part of som"one's
personal history.
. To have it whitewashed implies
that AIDS is a source of shame. It
most emphatically is not. That is the
kind of thiqking that prevents so
many people from being tested for
this devastating disease and contributes to its spread.
The public needs to know how
many lives are being lost to this tcrrible illness so thai the ·search for a
cure will not wane

. Publishing such information in~
obituaries confronts us all woth t~
reality of thjs plague. Please, AnliJ.
rethink your response. --West Coafl.
Reader
&lt;C·
Dear West Coast: Several re~
ers complained about my answer bdi
for a different reason. They point.out 1hat a death from AIDS shou~
not be a condemnation of oneit
lifesty le. There are ways other th~
by reckless sexual conduct that :J
person can get AIDS. Contaminate!!
blood and needles are the most com.
mon.
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Send questions to Ann Landers, CrC;
atc&gt;rs Syndicate, 5777 W. CentUI;!'
Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angeles. Calit
90045

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eommunity Calerlda!
New videos
library patrons

available · t~

Over '4o new videos have been
added to the Meigs County Dislrict
Public Lihrary in Pomeroy and its
branches a1 Middlcpon and
Rac,ine:
Library patrons arc permitted to
check out lwo videos for 1wo days
on eac h library
Additions to the Pomeroy facilily include: The Fi fth Element;
Anaconda, Fern Gully II, The
Magical Rescue; That Old Feeling;
Buddy ; As Good as it Gets; Anastasia, The Brave Lillie Toaster
Goes to Mars; Disney's Flubber ;
Elmopalooca!; Mouse Hunt; Conspiracy Theory and Breakdown.
Added to the Middleport facili·
ty are: Hcathers; .Danielle Steel's
Jewels; Malte se Falcon; Gigi ;
Conspiracy Theory; Breakdown ;
Rookie of 1he Year; An American
in Pari s; Toothle ss; Brigadoo n;
Buddy ; As Good as it Gets; Mouse
Hunt; Disnlo.(s Flubber and Anastasia.
At the Racine branch, th e additions are : Toothless; Buddy ;
Mouse Hunt; Conspiracy Theory ;
Blank ; Moby Dick, Anastasia;
Dan ielle Steel's Secrets; Danielle
Steel's Kaleidoscope; The Sandlot;

As Good as it Gets; Breakdown;
High Society; The Apartment and
Disney's Flubber.

Ceremony planned
The national .bell ringing ceremony, "Let Freedom Ring", will
be held on July 4 at 2 p.m. in the
afternoon.
.
Ewings Chapler, Sons of the
American Revolution, is asking for
. volu.ntecrs who can gain access to
bells in churches. co urthouses.
town hills, Universily buildings
and the volunteers would ring each
bell 13 times stating at 2 p.m.
Last year over 20.000 ringers
partici pated in this celebration of
Independence Day in honor of
those patriots of the Second Continental Congress wloo singled the
Dec laration of Indepe ndence in
July of 1776. To volunteer for the
new patriotic ceremony residents
!Day call 1-800-330- 1776.
Attends 1"0rkshQp
Fou.- Meigs County students
part ici pated .i n Buckeye Boys
State . a workshop in government
spon,ored by the American
Legion, at Bowling Green State

University last week.
Taking pan under sponsqrship
of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, were Matthew King , son
of Curtis and Linda Kin g of
Chester, and' a stude nt al Eas1crn
High School; Jason Harris, son of
Tom· and Penny Evans, Middlepon , seni or at Meigs High Sc hool;
Jason Youn¥, son of James and
Barbara Young, Rutland, se nior a1
Me igs High School.
Attending under sponsorship of
Middleport Feeney-Bennett Post
128 was William Aaron Will . son
of Mike an d Marcella Wilt of
Pomeroy,_a senior at Eastern High
School.
About 1400 high school stu dents from across the state panicipated in the program, the larges t: of
50 such· programs in the Uniled
States. It was a week-long activity
where two former boy state rs were
inducted into the Buckeye Boys
State Hall of Frames. They were
Brigadier General Darrel Porr and
Astronaut Michael Gernhardt.
Speakers included Randy Gardner, member of the Ohio Hou se of
Representatives, and Peter Lemon,
medal of honor rec ipi ~ nt and
author of the book, "Bey ond the
Medal."
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TUESDAY
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POMEROY - Free immuni''
tion clinic. Meigs County Heali~
Depanmcnt. Tuesday. 9 tn II a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. Every child to ~
accompanied by parcnt/guanlia(
·with immuni1.ation record .
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RACINE - RACO mcctin i
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. cookout an'.{!
potluck dinner at Star Mill Park. !"0
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· POMEROY - Meigs Coun ~
Township Association ~cetinJ;:• .
Tuqsday, 7 p.m. at the Sentor C111,
zcns Center, Pomeroy.
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POMEROY - Winding Trails
Garden Club meeting Tuesday, ·&amp;·
p.m. at the home of Debbie Mohlcit: .
Members arc to bring perennials for
exchange.
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THURSDAY
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POMEROY
AAIAI-Ancin
meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacr(d
Heart Ca!holic Church, MulberQI·
...:~

Avenue.
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GIVEN SCHOLARSHIP- Jam fa Drfke, daughter of Tom and Debbie Drake, was the recipient of the $500 Ken Amsbary Memorial
Scholarship presented by the Melga County I.K.E.S., a loeal conservation club. Making the presentation on behalf of the club was
Henry ·Bahr.

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TUPPERS PLAINS - VF'1/ '
Post 9053, Tuppers Plains, Thin'S;:
day, 7:30 p.m.
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REEDSVILLE
Rivervic~
Garden Club potluck supper Thur -•
day, 6:30 p.m. at the home or Nola~
Young.
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MEQitAL tOVERAGE
FOR YOIJR FAMILY

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MEDICAL
ELIGIB
PROG

YOU MAYBE
IF YOIJR FAMILY
INtOME IS AT OR·
BELOW 185 PERt.ENT
.OF FEDERAL
GUIDEtiNES
Family Size

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CALL TODAY FOR

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Meigs County's

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Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

·S•outhern seeks
ir:l put for design
o.1f ·new building
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Single Copy- 35 Cents

Racine
preparing
'booming'
celebration

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By •.

liM FREEMAN
cuse. Letan Falls and Portland, in
Sen Unel News Staff
addition to Southern Junior High
The Southern Local Board of School and Southern Kinderganen in
Education
is seeking community and Racine.
•
staff input on two possible designs for
The building is scheduled to open
the •district's new K-8 elementary by the beginning of the 2000-200 I
scho,ol.
.
. school year.
Jm:k Poumeyer, representing the
Building plans need to be submitarchi·lect firm of Marr-Knapp-Craw- ted in Septetnbe~ to the.state School
tis A:ssociates Inc., New Phillldelpltia, Facilities Commll;iiion so biddhig I f••:·;~hc&gt;ifi
presc ~nted the board ,Monday night paperwork can be completed in
with a couple of possible building · Dcc~mber. said Lawrence.
designs - a one-story design and a
"The decision probably needs to
two-·.story design.
be made within the next few weeks
Po lllmeyer met with the board dur- to determine what kind of building
ing it'.s regular meeting held at South- we want," Lawrence said.
.em High School in Racine.
Lawrence stressed that the avaiiSt.lperintcndent James Lawrence able drawings ate just building drawsaid he wadts to get the qcsigns out ings which do not show how the
to . dlistrict employees and to the building will look on the site. More
SOul bern Local community. Copies detailed drawings will be available
will be sent out this week with pay- following the completion of survey
chec ·ks and the · pl1111s will be dis- work which·haulready started.
BUILDING DESIGNS- The Southern Locel
· play•ed atthe 'high school for public
Each type of design has its advanBollrd of Education- prilnnled two poMI·
• bill building ·deelgns, on.story and two-story,
revio =w.
tages ·and disadvantages, Lawrence ·
during MOnday'a ~ · IIIMtlng. Southern
1•, public meeting will be held explained. For. instance, while the
Superintendent J1mea Lnnnc:e ·examined
Tue:·tday. June 30 at I p.m. at the high one-story design is easier to-construct
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school, during which the architect and more accessible to handicapped
will receive comments on the build- people, a two-story design may fit del Group cOmpany. Tokarski was
Lawrence said there was vecy Iii· de ·
beuer ·,n the available space and h:lve assi_._. to the district by the state lie difference in the companies' fees.
mg stgns.
e·~y
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Plans call for the new school less roof area and lower heating costs · School facilities Commission.
but added that it was oelt Key ap•btlil·ding to be constructed next to the - but require a costly elevator to
The board also approved Key · tal Market&lt;; would · give the "best
highschool on land already owned by malce it accessible to hiUidicapped Capital Markel~ o( Columbus to pre- effon at the best price."
the :;chool district. The building will people.
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pare the bond.' for the building proIn addition, the board approved
hou.Hc: students from kindci'Jianen
In ~elated malle..,. the board met ject. The board also considered fiflh for $10.000 the firm of Peck. Shaft~t:Ugh ~ip.th gnJ4e IUid will. replao:e with_ co~s!(111;tion manager Roland Third Bank and Huntingtoti 'Capital _ f~r &amp; ~illi~s lo serve n.• bond cou~-

prepared .for the buildi~g proj~ct:
. The board scheduled a speci.al
. M -'- J
?9 t 7
meetmg on....y. u·ne - a p.m.
at the high school with Peck, Shalli:r
&amp; Williams reprelienlalive Ed Cavezza and -Key Capital Markets to discuss investment strategies to maxi!flizc the return on, bond•.

investments.
Utilities already recover those
costs, but they are in the rates th;tt are
regulated by the ~tale .
Rep. Ron Amstutz, R-Wooster
and a s.upporter of the bill, said he
understands the coalition's concerns,
but that it'S time to move forward.
"There hn.~ to be a level, evenhanded approach to this," Amstutz
said. "One would qu~stion whether
we can go back and review decisions
that •lreooy.huve been mude."

PAUL SOUHRADA
AtUQCiated Preu Writer
COLUMBUS -'The state's 8-month·old welfare reform law- designed
to push people off public as.•istance and into jobs- is too toug~ on the state's
p(lor, Democrutic lawmakers said Tuesday.
·
··we need to remember that the goal of welfare reform is not simply to
driive down the number of people on the welfare rolls," Rep. C.J . Prentiss
of Cleveland said at a news conference.
·
"The goal of welfare reform is to lifl families out of poverty and into self·
su fticiency."
'The numberofOhiodns reL-eiving welfare benefits hus litllen by more thllll,
5!'•.000 since the new law took eiTect Oct. I. according to the statt: human •
service~ dq)anment. The 353.764 who remain arc the fewe.t since 1971. but
a ,good bit of the decline can be attributed to the strong CL-onomy.
Under the current system. recipient• lose some food stamps. welfare checks
aud other benefits ifthey do not '"eel work or educaliQn requirements. Prentil;s and the other Democrats proposed legislation to make the penalty a llat
S~iO and allow welfare recipients to keep their state-subsidized day care. job
!mining and other benefits.
The legislation also would require the .state do tl beller job of determil)in,g whether welfare recipients are finding jobs, allaw'single adults to get food
stamps in parts of the state with high unemployment, incren.o;e the number
, of state·funded jobs and provide rriore money for training welfare workers
. 'a~od for dnog and alcohol treatment of recipients.
·
,
The bill has virtually no chance of clearing the Legislature, however. One

l Sections - 12 Pages
Vol. 4!1, No. 4S

(800) 992·2600 ~

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-- Spory
Los••

4::6
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Lotteries
.(lt.JIIll
Pick 3: 4-7-7; Pick 4: 0-1-9-0
Buelteye 5: 2-5·12-16-25

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8-10
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Ca!eqdar
C!us!Oeds •
CPmiq
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Dilly 3: 1-8-'1; Dilly 4: 3-S..Q..O ·

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The coalition objects to having
consumers pay for the multibilliondollar investments utilities made in
nucle-Jr power plants in the 1960s 1111d
' 70s.
Particularly hard-hit may be the 2
million customers of Akron-bn.o;ed
FirstEnergy Corp.. which operates
the Perry and Davis-Besse plants in
northern Ohio. Those customers
already pay some of the highest utility rutes in Ohio.

A parade. chic ken barbecue.
antique lr.tetor pull. frog jumping
contest ... and, of course. fireworks
will be the highligh-ts of Racine's
annual July 4 celebration.
The parade line up will be at 9: IS
a.m. at Southern High School with a
flag raising at 9:45 a.m. by the
Racine American Legion Post 602.
'The parade will start at 10 a.m., going
down Elm Street!o Third Street. from.
Third to Vine. from Vine to Fifth then
back to Elm Street before returning
to the high school.
In the float awards. there will be
. two categories: religious and nonreligious. In the religious category,
there will be awards of$1 00,$75 and
$50 for the first three places. .
Awards will be $75, $50 and $25
for the first three places in the nonreligious category. In the walking
units, monetary .awards will be $25.
$15 and $10 for the lirst three place
' entries. Trophies will be aw:)l"ded to
the. first place individual rider and
first place unit in horse entries.
Trophies will also ~ awarded to
the first three places in the antique
tmctor division. Monetary award'
will be awarded to the first three
places in the decorated bicycle divi·
sion.
Anyone wanting information on
.the pamde may contact Marilyn Powell at 949-2676.
Abaobecue will be held at the fire
depat'lment anne ~. Homeffillde _ice
cream will alstfbe aliailiibte.- ·
The tractor pu.ll will be at 2 p.m.
on the· pullihg track at the park. Any'one with questions may call ?.422750 or 949-218!. A kiddie tractor
pull will be held at a time to be
announced later.
The Racine Area Community
Organizalion will sponsor the fifth
annual frog jumping L'Ontest at5 p.m.:
Rent-a-frogs will he available for$) ·
. or _contestants may supply their own
frog.
Awards will be presented to the
contestant with the farthest jumping
frog in lwo divisions: senior and
(Continued

[)emocrats want change in welfare· reform law

Today's Sentinel

MORE INFORMATION
(740) 992·2117 or

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
H
SERVICES
I

Reds extend
losing streak
to 10 games
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Good Afternoon

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Withstanding jeers and threats, Page 2
Meigs Legion ties with Glouster, Page 5
Aspirins: cheaper usually better, Page 8

B·:~

Annual Income

1
$12,948
2·····~!.···~·········~···$17, 796
a... ~~··~ .. . . .·....... ~···· $s21.:,75,6
......... ~ ... ~.-.. ~. 26,856

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 90s; Low: 60s

Sports

lcoLUMBUS (AP) - An envi· for $10.5 billion, the amount the ing the Legislature before the next
ron mental coalition warns that eon- .{"!UP says is what utility companies session begins in January because
surtners could wind up bailing out the stalld te lose on bad investments lawmakm are in recess, possibly
until after the Nov. 3 election,
under deregulation. '
,
el~ ~tric utilities if competition is
At is.'ue is a . bill sponsored by although hearings have been held on
inl'roduced to the power industry. But
OO tl of the main proponents of dereg- . Rep. PriseiUa Mead and Sen. Bruce · the Mead-Johnson bill and other proulatli_on suggests it may be a little late Johnson, both Columbus.:arca Repub- posals.
The bill, in its current form, would
licans, that would allow customers to
in the game.
About 20 people auended a rally choose their electric power supplier mani!ate a temporary user IIIX on
Tu csday sponsored by the Ohio Envi- within five years of enactment. electric cuSiomen;n.~ a way to pay for
ronmental Council, Ohio Citizen Transmission and distribution sys- some of the utilitie~· ••stranded
costs." Those are the utilities' cost•
Ac:tion ond the Sierra Club. The par- tems would remain in place.
The bill has little chance of pass- froni construction projects and other
tic ipanl' then shredd~d a mock check

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MAY ASSIST YOU WIT11
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Todaiy: Sunny
Hlgl1u: 80.; Low: 60s

June 24, 1998

ACIW;;t~"hi;hii9hi'";OnS~;;;;;; cosi ;;;d;;d~re;,Jiitio~

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Page 1Q

Tuelday, June 23, 19911
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· 0 iHtl 01111&gt; Wley Puloliohlna Co.

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reason is that Republicans are apposed to any tinkering. particularly with t,he
welfare-to-work rules. 'The other rea.son is purely logistical: lawmakers do
not plan to return to Columbus until this fall- and then only for a few weeks
to clear up left over legislation before the end!lf their current two-yeartenn.
Still, the proposal wn.~ welcomed by'advocates for the poor, ~ho say the
state sanctions have incren.'led demand at food banks ond soup kotchens.
. "Provisions contained in both the Ohio Works First and federal welfare
reform bills have incren.o;ed the severity of food insecurity and hunger for
thou.,ands of Ohioans," said Lisa Hamler-Pndolski. director of the Ohio Food
Policy &amp; Anti· Poverty Action Center.
.
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But buckers of the current system s~ incentives and penulttes are but II
into the welfare•'plan because recipients arc eligible for welfare payments for
only three years and have to get with the proj!nun right away.
•• tthink they're wrong about their iss.res," said Rep. Jo~n Lawrence. a
Republican from Galena and one of the architects of the welt are reform law.
Lawrence said the changes in the welfare law would be meanmgle:.- wothoutthe penalties.
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That said, Lawrence ackoowledged that there may be problems wnh the
way some county welfare departments are interpreting the law.
She said some county offieiuls are looking mainly at the number of~
pie cut from the prosram. and not enough at whether people need more Job
lrllining, education or .other benefits.
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The leJiiislative welfare oversiJIIhl commtttee plans meetmgs around the
stutc later this summer to investigate some of ~hose local problems. Lawrence
added.

Clinton pledges patient protection as
managed care firms enter Medicare
By LARRY WHEELER
Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton sought to n.'sure the nlllion 's
38 million Medicare recipienm lUesday that when new manaaed-care
providers begin entering the jlroJram
next year. all plans will be required
to offer strong patient protections. ·
Included in those protections:
• Women having direct ac:ceu to
women's health specialists. .
• Quick re•olution of patient
appeals of a decision to deny, reduce
or tenninatc care.
·
• Streamlined bealment ·plans for
penons with complex needs.
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• Patients ' lliiY not be excluded
from eii!'OIImcnt bued tin their health

status.

receiveJedcral health cart...benefits,"
Clinton said at an unrelated bill signing event. "Beginning this week, we
are putting thole protections into
effect."
The protections Clinton referred to
are part of a thick ricw reaulation to
be publi.shed in the ·fcdcnll register
this week that sets ground rules for
IIUIIIIIed-QR! healtfl pllns to participate in the Medicare program.
S-.nina in January, a broider
amy ol' health plans will be eliaible
to market services to Medicare
enrollees. 1'hciSe pl1111 include traditional hcaltll-maintcllllll:e OIJanizations, pn!femd-provider oipnizations and provider-lpOIIIOI'ed OIJanizatiOns

Al~ah familiar .0 n-y Clln'ent

"I instructed our adminillralion to ·worbn who paniciptlle in em'ployimplement 1 palienll bill of rights for er-aponiiOied health care, loday's
the one-third of Americans who senion are luply uninformed about

how. managed care differs from the
traditional fee-for·service structure
they are IICCUSIOmcd tO.
Nine out of 10 Medicare recipients
do not unden;tand managed ciU'fi,
according to a survey . relea.oied last
week by the American Association of
Retired Persons.
. "If people don't undentand the
system they are signing up for, they
are going to have trouble ... getting
the care they need." said Judith Hibbatd of the Univenity Qf Oregon.
who directed the study.
Medicare advocates welcomed
Ointon's IIIIIOUnccment but withheld
judgment.
·
"The consumer protections th~t
an: enumerated in that neaulation are
aoocl on ptpct but what concerns me
is il!ere is no new mone)'{l)r the gov. eiriment for enforcement," lllid Joe
·Baker, associate director

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SEEKING CHANGE - State Rep. C.J. P,rentiM, D-Cieveland, .
leaned back -In hlir chair Tuesday as she l.l stened to ,:omments
during a conference snnounclng propoaed legislation tb!ltt
-l!l,d make changee to Ohio's current walfare laws. The bill
-uld be sponaored by Prentlsa ·a nd Rep. Tom Roberts, D-Dayton, left. (AP)
,,

Plott Hound Days starting
at fairgrounds on .Thursday
The National Plott Hound Association will hold its 45th annual Ploti
Days beginning Thursday at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
·
The event, to continue through Saturday, is hosted for the second consecutive year by the Shade River Coon Hunters Association, Pomeroy. and
includes UKC licensed nite hunts and bench shows for devotees of Plott
hounds, a breect of hound generally used for raccoon. bear and boar hunting.
.
.
:
La.•t year approximately 5,000 to 7;000 people visited the event, accord-: .
ing to organizer Bill Spuun. ·
"We expect more this .year," Spaun Sjjid.
,
AII·Piott f11n events begin Thursday at I p.m. and include a youlh bencli
·show. The evening will conclilde with an All -Pion hunt
·
··
One of the more popular events, the bear treeina col)lest. will be held
Friday, with oontest entries closing ,at8 a.m.
The bet11 is in a caae suspended in the air out of reach of the hounds;
said Spaun. There .is no contact with the bear, he added.
"Anyone expecting a bear fight, they're coming to the wrong place, •.
he said. "They might aet to see dog b¥k tit .him.. .
.
A UKC licensed bench show and licensed nitc hunt will also be held
Friday. .
.
· .
Sltunday will consist of the NPHA annual btl~ineu meettna and awardspresentation at 9 a.m., a UKC licensed llench show 111d 1 licensed nite.
hunt.
A wide veriety of vendon will be available durin&amp; the three-day event
lleHilll doJ-related ite.ms.

a

,,

�Wednesday, June 24, 1998

Commentar

Pti1Qe2
Wedneedly, June 24, 1 •

\.•

1bunday, June 25

- ~~Acc~u~IM~e~a~th~e~r•~~~o~re:~~~fu~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

T.stufisfrttf in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • FIX 992-2157

A Gannett Co~ Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publl8her

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

DIANE HILL.

Gtnefll Mllltgtr

Controller

t
o
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,.- ID: IAitiiO fD IINI Etllttw, 7110 SMttitJol, 111 CcNn1 St, Pomotoy, 0/lkJ

,,.1'-.'•.

_ , "'· I'AJl' to , .....~167.

Once shipped,
dual-use technology
is·open to misuse

Nighthorse in noncom liance with his own la'N
By Jack Andei.on
ll1d .... Molter
Candidates who run for high-profile political offiCe usually devour all
the free publicity they can get their
hands on. But all pubhc1ty may nOI be
good pubhc1ty, especially for a R«&gt;ubhcan U.S. Senator trymg hard to con·
vmce voters that he's a bue couserva·
liVe
Yes, ihat was Sen. Ben N1gt.thon;c
Campbell, R-Colo .. the pany-switch·
ing, Harley-riding conservative wuosc
face was peeking out at subscribers
who rece.-e(j this month's Playboy
magazme.
lns1de the magazme's plastic wrapper, before readers can peruse the Pet
of the Month pictorial and read a protile of baseball's Ken Gntfey Jr., 1s an
advertismg supplement from the
Franklin M1nt, touting the "Spmt of
the Thur1!1er" collector's knife.
On the left s1de of the od is n picture of Sen. Campbell, resplendent m
face pamt and a Cheyenne war bonnet.
Of course, the ad gives no hml that the
"famed Nat1ve American An1st Ben
N1ghthorse" is in fact a U.S. Senator
locked 1n a tight race for re·election.
Th1s 1sn't the. first time Campbell

has
faced
embarrassment
over his associ·
ation with the
Franklin Mint.
As we reponed·
last summer,
Campbell's
Jewelry venture
has bumped up
against a law
Moller &amp;
that he himself
Anderton
autbored
in
1990. while servmg in the Hou~. The
law says that all arts and crafts items
advenised as being lnd1an or Native
Amencan must actually be made by
Amencan Ind~ans Campbell's collector's kmfc IS manulactured in China
Buyers of the "Spmt of the Thun·
der" kmfc have to read the fine pnnt to
' learn that the kmfe 1sn't manufactured
in Amcn~a •• much less by American
lnd1ans Campbell's office d1d not
return our calls !Jut they prev1ously
told us that the kmtc docs comply wuh
the law smcc 11 was designed by the
senator. who " a member of the
Northern Cheyenne tnbc
NEUTERING THE JUNK YARD
DOG .. W1thout fanfare , the Clmton

Juanita Ballard

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGlON- Challenged. about the Chmesc military's use of U.S
technology exported there for civilian purposes, the ambassador drank a
glass of water.
Civilian use. li Zhaozing said, when a diplomat drinks it. let a sold1er
drink the water, and it would be a m1litary use.
.
The lesson, essenually a blunt brush-off, made a simple point amid the
complexities of the debate about satellite launches and other sensitive deal·
ings with China, mvolving technology exppned for c1vihan purposes but of
obvious use to the mihtary.
As Li said, almost anything can be put to more than one use.
Li wasn 'I asked about water, of course The question was supercomput·
ers, and he insisted Chma honors 1ts contracts covenng their uses.
But the reality 1s, sell1t, send it, and tjley've got It U.S. stnctures that are
supposed to keep it from military uses don't guarantee that outcome.
Balancmg American busmess, diplomatic and defense mterests in sensi·
live dealings w1th Chma would be a Juggling actm the best of circumstances
- not the poht1cal settmg for President Chnton as he goes there Thursday.
Congress is mvestigating h1s approval of. satelhte launches sa1d by critics
to have leaked technological data enabling China to 1mprove 1ts m1litary
missiles at the expense or U.S. security.
That has st1rred a success1on or congressional hearings and of Republ•·
- - -·--·· --- aL-a l""'t: - •- . - 1----..1 ..!-1 .. .J t r
'
.,..,
can accusations that Clinton cleared .risky deals for a major Democratic
donor. Both deny it.
"!think they were decisions that were made very much m the nat1onal
interest," said Samuel R. Berger, Chnton ~ natiOnal secunty adviSer. Berger
said he does not beheve Chnton's deahngs with China at the summ11 w1ll be By .lOIII pti Plltdns
President Clinlon embarks for China
inhibited by the pressures in Congress.
next
week. the ftrst u.s. head of stale to
But the investigations and political stir almost cenamly will keep off the
visit
Beijing
in nine years, since Chinese
table any agreements on technology exports and future satellite launches.
anny
troops
slaughtered hundreds of
Indeed, the admm1strauon Itself is investigating the possible secumy impact
of a 1996 export deal for a $750 milhon 1elecommunications satellite pro· peaceful, unan'ned, pro-democracy
demonstrators in 11ananmcn Square
ject. It still needs ftnal clearance from the government.
As II happens. the president IS to be
One China scholar said the capstone of Clinton's summu might have
offiCially
welcomed a1 the sue of the
been an agreement to ease export restrictions on U.S. satellites and related
massacre,
wh1ch wdl present a bloody
technology in exchange for Beijing's a~ement to jom an mtcrnauonal
wonderful "phot&lt;HlJl" for Chmesc presaccord to control transfers of m1ssile technology elsewhere.
ident
J1ang Zcmni. whose government
· But m this setting. Harry Hard1ng of George Washmgton Untvers~ty sa1d,
views
Chnton's wilhng appearance m
that's probably a dead 1ssuc
11ananmcn
Square as absolution t&lt;&gt;r its
The House mvestigat10n centers on a wa1vcr granted by Chnton to launch
atrociucs
of
June 4. 19&amp;9:
aU S. satclhtc from Chma hy a company under investigation for allegedly
Chnton argues that he " Simply
lcakmg forbidden miSSile technology to the Chinese as they tned to dctcrobserving
protocol. He doesn't want to
mmc why an earlier rocket exploded. The 1996 explosion destroyed an
msult
h1s
Communist
hosts hy express·
Amcncan satellite
ing reservations about being ~'1\.'cted m
the square where hundreds·of •nnn&lt;.'Cnts
died at the hands of Chma's governmen!.
To Clinton's mind this ri:prescnts
constructive "engagement" With Bel·
Jing. And those who don't sec itthat way
l)car Editor·
.. hke Chinese dis.•ident Ding Zilin,
· Th•s is 1n response to Ms. Wa1tt's J unc 16. letter. rebutting my state·
whose son was one of those murdered in
mcnts on the cat problem. Ms. Waitt states that she doesn't like "my solu·
Tumanmen, and who says that the red
lions." These solutmns aren't my idea. I did stale that I hoped Ms. lcm·
carpet to be rolled out tor Clmton 1s
Icy's invcsugatwn turned cold. Whoever !s admi~istering the _solution is "dyed with the blood ol our relatives
performing a scrv1ce for me by gcttmg nd of ammals who, 1n the past. who htive fallen" -- an: diSpamgmgly
liave been dcsfru~uvc pests (I speak of cats in general.) It is regrettable diSmissed as "1solatwmsts "
that cat owners sulfcr pam. but if they would be more responsible, these
Indeed, that's how Clmton chooses
incidents would be less likely to occur Ms.lcmlcy's suggestion is ns proto delinc the.Chma debate m thiS wunpostcrous as 1t1s futile. shoo them away and contact the owner. I've been
try -as a poh11cal and philosophical batShomng them away for years. And how in the name of Cat Heaven am I
tle between the unenlightened and xenosupposed to know who the owners arc?
~
phobiC, who would attempt to Isolate the
· Many of the cats arc of highly questionable ancestry. havmg been
world's most populous nation, and the
whelped in the nearest convenient crevice ._ .
"pnnc•pled and pragrna11c," who would
. When cats go on the prowl. they operate by the same rule that governs
engage the Communist republiC
Ole jungle: the law of claw and fang. The idea that cats are entitled to
But Minnesota Senator Paul Well·
roam where they choose and do whatever 1hc1r nature compels them to do
cedes authority 10 the cat and imposes the law of the jungle upon the
property of others. The jungle law also dictates that any wildlife on thai
property is fair game. Some animal-rights kooks have mvested nl\imals
with "rights."
ByTONYSNOW
. This is sheer lunacy. A number of rarmers across the country are light· Ct 111111 Syrdc ••
iftg to save their land hecausc their equipment killed some sweet little
WASHINGTON - Justice Cbrcncc
fjeld mice who had a "natural right" to be there. Animal-rights kooks can Thomas Sllnllld America seven~ ago
be very vindiftive when they come 1n1o positions of power. Ther fre· by aa.'IISing Edwml Kennedy, Howald
quently attack familir&gt; by threatemng the breadwmner of the fam1ly or Metzcnlnm 1IICI aher tiberollknn'11lls
other "important members."
of Ulpling hun to a "hi!l~Hoch lyn;:h: If they have a cadre of black-robed alhes, the unthinkable can become ing."
die thinkable with lightning speed.
The White ~i&gt;tm.1tt w.n.d to
: The second part of Ms. Waitt's letter 1s so Illogical that it must have keep him oiJ the 5J¥crne Out of the
lic:en wrinen at three o'clock in the mom mg. She puts the onus on me_ United St...-s bcc:usc hedllcd to ~on
i)tstelld of the cal owners and county. It's not my civic duty to pay spay· their political lcgitiiriicy and moral
ins fees for cat owners. Ms. Waiu admonishes me for implying that cat gnndc\1: In the end. he foiled them by
ewners won't alter their altitudes if they receive "education " Why do cat defending his lmor, even as lflll1)' of h1s
owners need education orilds placed in.the "Sentinel" at my expense, Ms. "'JRl'"«'dS14'1Xibscowcltxlintheroncr.
Waau? Unless t~ir IQ's are·befow 60, the}' already know what cats do.
Unfa11.111icly. the lyndling cmbnues.
It is not my r'sponsibllily to propose plans for the county for ~,!11 con- Mldlofthe!U:kprcs.&lt;treatshimasaptritrol. You liJ'C the head of the Humane Society. Ms. Waitt. If you lack the til. Emerge magaTJne smc:ml him la\1
intellectual firepower to come up with ideas, then ask whoe~er oversees yar with a CXM:r db!JWon potlr.lying
you to provide you with someone wbo can.
hnil as a la\WI jockey. The lii;IXll11plll)ng
While you are waiting. I will provide a few susgestions: ask for a llticle called the)USiice an "lltincial nig·
tough new cham and leash law ror cats. A second law for cat owners: all .ga-" and "l!nclc Thomas," and dcpic:tcd
' roms and feline femme fatales will be neutered and spayed. If cat owners him wellingmAunl Jemima 'do-rag.
are poor, set up some kind of easy payment plan to help them. All c4ts
la!tyar,theMrylllndiiiAACPwcnt
will be affixed some form of permanent!D.
"
bonkasOV«anxpaes~thiThomasaddn:ss
, Any cot seized while runni~ll loose w:m be taken ''? a shelter and .the the B?Ys and Gils C'Ul of Essex County,
11 wner will pay a fine to secure Its release. Any cat not 1den11r1ed w11hm a Dei.JU!18Clllll the Mllyland b!xder. The
specified period of time will be painlessly eothanized.
c!OO,Ied by the nat!on's tql pediatric neuMulling over these suagestions should give you some ideas of your fOitlll!lOII, Dr. Ben OlSon, had to tlrowin
own.
the rowel -but it did so regmfully tnl
Start th1ngs rolling, Madame President.
lllljpily.
•
Jeffrey Fields
Now c:anes the Naional 8al' AssociaMiddleport lion. the nllion's pre-eminent Nack legal

•

IToledo! 91•1

administrabon has hit on ~ sure-ftre
way to cure the epidemic of scandal
that seems to have ovenalcen offic1al
Washington.
They're taking the cops oft' the
beat.
Two decade' ago. Congress. proposed .. and President Jimmy Caner
signed .. a law creating the Office of
Inspector Geu~ral. The IGs were to
serve as an independent, in·house
police force rooting out fraud and

But the Clinton adminlstrution 1s
apparently not impressed. n.~e folks
who promised us the "most ethical
admintstration m history" and )pushed
a crime bill that promised 100.000
new cops on the stneet wants to cut the
staff or the inspectoo general by half.
Of course, that's not how tlx! White
House is spinmng things. The~l see it
as a cost-cutting move. a way to:o makt
the government more efficient. Vice
President AI Gore complain•; that
wast~.
inspectors "oftel\ develop ndvclrsarinl
The plan worked better than any- relations with agency manage•·• who
one could have hoped. In the1r first break rules." He wants the burcmucmts
decade of existence, inspectors gener- and the :nspectors to "work together:·
al identified an eshmated $1 (KJ btllion in a more '"constructtvc" way.
an government waste. In the DepanBut this system 1s supposed IQ be
ment of Defense. the mspector gener· adve(larial.lnspectors shouldn' lt work
al managed to prosecute 20 of the 100 hand-in-hand wuh management . Their
largest defense · contractors for pro- job is to keep management's hmJ ds out
curement fraud an its first seven years of the taxpayers· cookie jar.
ol exiStence. Not a' smglc defense conUNDER rnE DOME .. Could
tractor had been prosecuted m the pre· Sonny Bono's wife be prcsHJcntial
v1ous lour decades.
timbre'/ At least one memlx:r ol' Conlast year .alone. by thCif own csti· gress seems to thmk so.
'
mate. IGs saved t~xpaycrs more than
Rep. Jennifer Dunn. R· w,~,h .. 1s
$15 billion wh1lc costing JUSt over $1 one of the nsing stars amnng lflousc
btlhon. ·Even Wall Street cun't beat Republicans. House Speaker Newt
such returns Ken Starr can only Gingrich even tapp..-d her tn Icad a
dream ot' such cllic1ency.
ta.sk force in · charge ot clnsun1g the
widening gender gnp In curl t&lt;1il the
.mcrca~mg num he r of women
'
.
vntcrs.
who favor Dcmncmt1c cand•dan•cs
Dunn says her gnal is fur R•cflllhhCalls to gain at least half the .
vote hy the 2000 preSidential
One way to promote that goal
be to have a woman on the
Though some analysts .
Dunn would make a good
she didn 'ttout herself at a
ing with reponcrs. lnstcod she
up Eli1.abeth Dole, who has
out seeking the presidency.
But she also mcntioncil a
expenenccd GOP
Mary Bono, R-Calif., os son~eo•~~~:
watch. Bono, widow of the rt&gt; ~:c!dlji
deceased crooner, was "~ huge
a recent gathering of GOP WotJ nC~ •·
even though her congressional 1enure
IS still less than six months old
Jack Anderson and Jan MoDer
are writers for United Fe~~tun~ Syndicate, IM. -- -.

~~-

America bends but China remains r.igic:J

Letters to the editor

Denies responsibility is his

stone, one of 01e make"' about the ~'Ovcmmcn\'s policy
preSident's fel- of forced abortions and fon:cd stcnli7.alow Democrat•. tlon.
.
puts the Chma
Gao srud that the govcm.knt pays
debate in proper mfonnanL• to n:port on unoothom.cd
perspective. "It pregnancies of neighbors, l\.'lat1ves and
IS not a quesuon liicnds She related how the govcmment
of whether to actually turc down the homes of wtMncn.
ISolate
or who violated the "one child per couple"
engage Chma." mandate. And if a pregnant womun w&lt;Ls
he smd "It " n "'~ apprehended. one nl her (UCnls
Perkins
qucst1on of how (usually the mntl;lcr) W&lt;Nlkl be tlvuwn in
we engage that Jail unul her expectant daughter cmnc
na11on."
forward.
Wcllstonc's remarks were cdu.:d
TIIC Clint(m admmistrallon's
this week by Harry Wu,the Chinese d1s- ll.'sponsc to th1s testimony! "Evidcnc'C .
sident, dunng a visit to San Diego. Wu. that C&lt;Mncs lbrw:rd sug~ocsts thel\.' i.'
who did 19 years of hurd umc m ,, Chi· Jl&lt;•&gt;r supc!Visi&lt;m•~· l&lt;.:al ollicials," smd
ncse pnson camp, smd that wh1lc n cer· Whnc House spokesman M1kc Mc'Curtamly IS a good thmg for Wa.shn1gtnn tn ry. &lt;IJI&lt;&gt;IogiiiDg lnr Chmns hahy hutchseck better rclallons w1th Be•Jmg Chn- crs
ton's engagement amounts to an
It's diC same thmg with tr:ldc. In
"appeasement pohcy"
1997. China arnao;.scd a staggering $50
And Wu IS not alone m h1s a'sess· h1lhon trade surplu.' with. the United
ment. It IS shared not only by Sen. Well· States hy talung advantage of this counstone. but by many other lawmakers a.' try's lh:c·tmdc policy. while pursuing a
well - Democrats and Republicans pnllccticmist tr:ldc policy on its own soil.
alike.
Indeed, Qlina continues to impose a
They see a president who 1s so hent whowing 30 pen:cnt tariO' on U.S.
on malung friend.• With the Commu· impon., (while titcing a ncgligihlc tariff
msls, so preocoup1ed With securing his on iL•expons to this country), wh~ehdri·
"plucc m h1story,"that 1-C is all too will· vcs up the cost of American goods far
mg to overlook the Chmcsc govern- beyond the means of the avcmgc Chi·
mcnt's conbnumg human rights nhu.&lt;es, nesc consumer.
Its unfrur trade pra&lt;.11ccs, and It' threats
So what IS the Clinton admmi~'lmto U.S. nat1onal sccunty
t~&lt;m's response to China's potcct•on•st
Indeed. JUsllwo wt:cks ago, a H101.o;c pmctices'l To unconditionally renew
international relations suheommHtcc Ch1na's "rnostfavorodnallon"tr:ldcslaheard chllhng tcsbmony from a tonncr Ius year by year.
Chincsc "population control" adm1msFinally, there is the most cntical area
trator, Gao Xmo Duan, who told law. ofUS relatlonswithOuna .. thegrow·

mg ducal P'NXl by Chioo's wozupons
arsenal and Bc1jing's dcstahili7.al!i&lt;WJ ol
the A"M subcontinent by Its export of
sophisticated-weapons tcchnolom' to
countries like 1'-Mistun. Iran and Nonh
Korea
.
lmk:cd. Pn:sidcnt Clinton knows,
li'nm U.S. intclhgcncc. that China lha.s at
lcastu dmen lnng-mngc missiles. cupahlc of delivcnng nuclcur payl&lt;uh:. tar~ctt..-d h•Amcncanc•lics Hcalst•krMlws,
lnHnlhc same lntcllib'CJI(.'C sc111n.'C s. that
Bcljmg sc•ld ncurly ducc dlv.Cn nudCW'·
cupahlc nus.,iles to PakJstun. wh1ch
undt:r U.S. l.tw, 1\.'\jUII\.'11 dud 011.' ,pn.'SI·
lk.'lll cut .~r all high-tech tnd: with
China.
So wlutt ha.s ht:cn the admin Jslmtion 's II.'SJIIIIISC'1 Well. the administratitWI
went out of •t• way n&lt;M to iiR)lOSI.'' C..•~
nomic Silncliulls agamsl. Chma It ,.. ll"'i
bra1.en violati&lt;HI ol an mtcmational non·
nn~ifcr.di&lt;m agreement. •
And hc.:ausc the president imp&lt;Nld
no sanctions agamsl Bc1jmg, a U.S.
satellite company wa.• allowed to e).por1
technology to China whic-h, accord1·ng to
the Pcnta~~m. allowed the Chinese mill·
tary to va'&gt;tly improve its missilc-guid·
ancesyJ;tCm.
One ncodn't he un Isolationist tn take
IS.'UC with Clinton administration r•~k.-y
townrd Chinn in the area-; of human
right•. t!Jldc and oouonal sc..-urity 1)lc
president silmehow believes that Bdjing
has tnken (lOSitlvc steps in coch of these
area•. But the cvidc111.'C suggc."s that
Chioo has, at best, rcmamcd stubbemly
in pla.-c.
Joaeph Pti kila is a ........nist
TheS.. Diego Union-Trlhane. '

ror

Th omas Withstands
.
enemies' J. eers and threats·

'I

~

t

v

&lt;rganization. The
judge on the &amp;h U.S. Cuwil Court of Thomas is a Wgct of um:nnlling IDe
chair of the group's
~
cnmcs. The Jll.'lfti m !hi.~ C3'iC - '· rodjudiCial council.
Keith cb:!;n ., ttmand liD his pal.~ lXISS lllll.'k Kllltsmcn. they're hhcntl•ntclkx:tual~
louisiana
ideological lionus tests: He has ~ who behave as if the FillilAmcnillllllll didSupreme Coun
Thomas as a tiicnd f&lt;Y 15 ytm. The two n't ~ 10 bla.:k Cllfl.'ii.'IVMivcs.
Judge Bcmctlc J.
men made (llhlic their at!ix:bon last yar a1
Thmr&lt; Slink a.:aL'Icd of "lx:tmying
Johnson, roccnOy
· the. invcstitlll.' of Keith's rcpb:cmcnt as a his pcqllc."Yctoolikc many ofhisfocs, to:
asked Thomas to
full-umc jWgc ,.. the CCIUII. Jlllj,oc fric a.:wally help; the (XXI' tnl ~.
Q!IIVCI' m adm:s,,
Clay Th mr; llcw kl ~'11'111 f&lt;r the fCIC.
As Roo Suskind
in an ~tmng
July 29 at the
Th" year, Thm.. hcilllcd a llmc-jud!,'l.' piece FlY E..quirc, he belongs to bei&lt;Yt!~ to
NBA's national
rmcl th:• ,.;:Jct:rcd K..~th 111 rn:ci"'! the the Hmttio Algtt Society, m elite. :zoo.
con"'lntion, and he
AnolcriclUl JutliCllllll.' So.:ICiy 's Edwanl J. mcmher gnq~ allllp&lt;Rld entirely of •men
Snow
au:qMed
D:vitt AWII'Ii. The pin:. whil.il c'lllics a and WJmcn who wen: Inn (XXI' llldallllllc
This cnrogcd A.
.
$15.&lt;XXJ h&lt;IOOI'.rium. c'Cicllruk:s judges b~Xd.
lcon,Higgcnhn4hlm,aretircdjudgconthe IMv&gt; make &lt;1UI.'illli11Jing m1111hutions 111 the
The &lt;Ufn gr'II:S
wch ')'Cii'
US AJ1lcals Cowt. He d•Sflllehcd an legal )m4C!&lt;..J&lt;WJ- md k&gt; sc&gt;eicly 10 bocncrol. tn rcxr kids- such'"' the WIMingt&lt;WJ·ori:a
ln&lt;llnchary lc11c:r tu &lt;K&lt;n:lltKHI ollicials. Keith IS the fr..t hlock kll\liX.'IVC the h&lt;tnor. younbostcrs wh&lt;• tncklc rcb'ularly •ntn
complaimng 1M "your •nv1lll!K111 (has He says he Wllllkln't ha"'! roccivcd the trih- · Thmr;' chm•'las b kindncs.s IRI cnung:tvcn)hlmanimpimall!fthathcha;ncvcr utc wflhl111t Thmr;' &lt;L1ivc "-"J''IIl.
,.;:1. He tells them wfllll he often mil!~ tell
had from any """JX111Siblc cx-gani1•111on
'l1lomlt; J1I'I.'SCNild the awanl cmlicr this
hiiiN.'It: DIWJ't,J!I"'l in to lwc.
'
withintheAliicanAmcril:ancommunity&lt;Jr month - over the (XlliCSI ~~· the &lt;WCr-vn~al
litxr.JI elitist~ hclicvc liD CClll'ptision
any IIOII-COil'il.'vc groop; of wh1~ 1n HigcnbOiham. Keith will n:tiiTI the kinl- cm'ii&gt;ls of g~vmg IJiicll;- demlnlinr, thl ,
America" This is !I1Mdml stuiT: Higgcn- ncss by i111lab.1ng 1bomas .- this year's ntt.:r
!Jcia"'l well. Thonui, on the ·
bOOlamhasCll'lcdoutasccm.lc'ai'OI.'rasa NBAconvcntlon.
ntherhmd, km1 by ellm'fllc. Heqx:n1 hi,l ·
Thomas·phobc and often encourages
Unintentionally, Thomas hos bcoc&gt;IT1C a diu to the llllldy lllkf poor witllOia M.llllg ,
vuerdisc:iple ofMillin Whcr King Jr. than JlR!S.' releases cr dcmtnl1ng federal gniliiS. ·
~ to slap a muzzle on the froe.think·
ingjurispnlde.
his critics. He has wihtood C11C111ics' jeers
When doods say they don't Wllnt to ·
Despiie the flap. the invilalion stands and tlma. ij: has absabcd Sbwb1i will- hear foool such a mm, it says fll' more :
8111 the justice will say hiS piece. Funher- &lt;* qJCI1 ~ He has 5IUCk by his abwt their ch!n:tcr tim his. •
• -:
~he wiD enjoy·aleau polite recepp inciples. despite JliC5S1R fimt ..tlitc
lion. tlw1ks 10 a man who d~ with wwkl-be tx.s men.
•
Wlile'lbny Smw, G I•&gt; Sy.... :
lim on vituallyevery ~points of
In an 9 OOKW l with viclini7Mion. - . m1 w.a ()atury IJhd, 5Wie
civil-righs law, Damon Keith - a senior few pcqlle adcnowledi!C tNt ~ 700, Lol All I I c. !IWI5.

"'*"

,.,idar.Q""

(lll'*'

I

Durable goods orders
in .decline during May

OHIO Weather

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Juanita Ballard, 83, Gallipolis, died Tuesday. June 23. 1998 in Arbors of
Gallipolis.
Born March 15, 1915 in Cheshire, daughter or the late Bert .and Cora
Yeauger Scott, she was a 1932 grnduate of Cheshire High School. and attended the Old Kyger Church and the Morabian Church m Dover.
She was also preceded m death by her husband. Brady Ballard, on April
20. 1985; a daughter, Betty Macmtosh, and a brother.
Survivtng are a son, Gary Ballard of Columbus: a daughter, Barbara Brew·
er of Beachwood; four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, a broth· ·
er,lewis (Geneva) Scott of Gallipolis; three si~ters. Jeanette Scott and Marjorie Bradbury. both of Gallipolis, and Charolette (frank) Gunter of
Charleston, W.Va.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Wetherholt Chapel. Gallipolis. Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Friday.

IMansfield I 89' I•
5

IND.

•leo1umbus!91•1

W.VA.

Rain

Flurries

VIs AsaDc:latod Prou Groph/c$N«

Warm, muggy conditions
maintain grip over region
By The Associated Press
Warm and muggy weather will continue to grip Ohio heading into the
weekend.
Tonight it will be panly cloudy and once again muggy. A stray thunder·
storm may linger m the nonh. Overnight lows will fall into the mid-60s to
lower 70s.
·
On Thursday, another hot and sunny can be expected. Afternoon highs
will soar into the upper 80s to lower 90s
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostly clear. lows m the m1d and upper 60s. l1ghl and vari·
able wmd.
Thursday.. Mostly sunny. H1ghs from the upper 80s to near 90.
Thursday mght...Mostly clear. Lows m the upper 60s.
Extended forecast:
Fnday... Moslly clear. H1ghs in the lower 90s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms during
the afternoon and night. lows near 70 and highs in the lower 90s.
Sunday...Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
in the upper 60s and highs in the upper 80s.

Meigs recorder attendsstate summer conference
Meigs 'county Recorder Emmogene Hamilton attended the recent Ohio
Recorders' Summer Conference in Sandusky. wh1ch was attended by 69 of
Ohio's 88 county recorders.
The total population of Ohio as of the 1990 census was estimated at
10,847,115, Mrs. Hamilton smd The county recorders of Ohio proces.~ numer·
ous cfucumenL~ penaining to land tran~act1ons every year. she Hamilton said.
Recorders' offices throughout the state recor\kd approximately 529,723
ileeds and I,046.758 mortgages. Mrs. Ham1lton added. Fees collected for
.reco"!ings totaled $5,4.5 16.252. wh1ch were pa1d into general fund' of the
cpunt~es last year.
""'
. locally, Meigs County's 1997 total recordings were 4.065; deeds. 995;
mongagcs. I,063; land contracts, 48; and mongage assignment•. 107. Finane·
ing statements total filed were 1,247. Total receipts for 1997 were
$102,885.10.

~scription issued of suspect ·
Earl Wayne "Bimbo" Smith, 43, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday, June
In Athens Cot.~ nty rape report

Earl W. 'Bimbo' Smith

21, 1998 in St Mary's Hospital. Huntington, W.Va.• following injuries from
an acc1dent.
Born Aug. 12. 1954 m Mason County. W.Va., son of Susie J. Keefer Smith
of Naples, A a.. and the late Gene Wayne Smith, he wo.• the owner and oper·
ator of Smith Paving Co. m Point Pleasant. and a 1972 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.
He wa~ also prec~ded in death by his grandpanencs, Will,iam E. Smith, and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Keefer.
Surviving are his wife. Nancy Ca\10 Smith; two daughters. Melissa Dawn
Smuh and Mandl Joe Smith. both of Point Pleasant; a sister. Beverly Kay
Carder of Pomt Pleo.\ant; his paternal grandmother. Genrude (Selby) Sm1th
of Point Pleasant; and many aunts, uncles. cousins. nieces and nephews.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
Pomt Pleasant, with the Rev. Johnny Hayman, the Rev. Pete Cobb and the
Rev Louis A. Hussell officiating. Burial will be in the Suncrest Cemetery.
Friend&amp; may call at the funeral home from 7-9tonight.

Meigs announcements
Shirts ror pickup
Boys basketball camp T-sh1ns are
ready for pickup at the Southern High
School between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS liJ.'NO)
A C1att1 Co. Ntwiplptr
Published ~ery afternoon, Monday through
Fnday, Ill Court St • Pomeroy, Oh10, by ltk:
Otuo Valle)' Pubhshina Company/Oann~.:u Cu
' Sc:cond cllh postage pild at Pomeroy, Oh10

. Mt•btr: The Assoc:latcd Pres&amp; and !hr.: Ohm
Ncwspipcr Associlllnn

Polt. . .er. Send addrr..s rom:~:t1on~ kl Tbi:
· Da1ly Sentinel, Ill Court St, Parnc.my, Ohto
&lt;4.57611,
I
stlBSCRIPTION RATES
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or the subscnplton

li!AIL SUBSCRIPTION

1-MelpC:O.aly

13 WL~kl...................... .... $27l0
26Wl.-eb .....................$5182 '
52 Wookl ........................ JIOS 56
~Ia O•bldt M"- C•aty
13 Weeks ...........................529.25
26 Week.,,..... ................... S56.68 •

secutive days regardless of whether
the mcals,lunche&gt;. or ponwns. are to
be consumed on or off the prem1ses."
Under authonty of Sect1on
3732.03 of the Ohio Rev1sed Cnde.
prior to conducting a food serv1ce
operation. or temporary food semce
operation in the State of Ohio, every
person or government agency shall
procure a license for the food serv1ce
operation.
The requ1remen1 does not penain

No winner in
Buckeye 5
ClEVElAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all ftve
numbers selei:ted m Tuesday night's
Buckeye 5 draw mg. the Ohio Lottery
said.
There were 184 Buckeye 5 tickets
With lour of the numbers. and each is
worth $250. The 4.568 tiCkets showing three of the numbers are each
worth $10, and the 42.228 tickets
showing two of the numbers are each
wonh $1.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................46,.
Akzo .................................... 105\
AmrTec:h ................................3~.
Ashland 011 .............................51
AT&amp;T .....................................80'1.
Bank One ...........................~... &amp;&amp;\
Bob Evana .......................... ..21 17~

Borg-Warner ......................... 43'1.
Broughton............................. 18'1.

Champion .............................11 ~.
Charm Shpa ........................... 5~

City Holdlng .......................... 44Y.
Federal Mogul .......................l1 \

Sl W..kl .......,............ .SI0912

Gannett '"~''''"'''''"'''"''''""'"'""
Goodyear .............................63?.

Reader Services

Kroger ...................................441'4

Kmart .. ~................................·•.•.•11

CorreCtion Polley
O.r mala . - I ' l l Ill all olorieo k to be
-nle. II yoa luiow ol • error In 1

(7..0) ":Z.
1155. We will dledl your taronnllloo

_.ory, call the

IH molle •

IIIWII'OINII II

corroct1oe II w1rnated.

---•re:

News Departments

Tilt .....

•••ber .. m.%155.

Drpllrt·

~

Moupr.............. ..........Ext. 1101
N................................................ En 1102
orExL 1106

Other Services
MYtrtW..."''"'''"''''''''''"''''''"'.Ext. ....
CI"'Clotlooo .................,............... .Ext. 1113
a..tflod Ad!. ..,................. .........Ext.

u•

•

· Lenda End ............................ 32Y.
Umlted ..................................32\
Oak Hill Flnl ..........................21'1o
OVB .......................................G~

One VllltV ............................35"Peopln .................................31~
Prem F.lnl............................... 20'ta
Rockwell ...........................•?\
RDISheii ...............................54'-

Selrl .....~ ..............................61,..

Shonev·• ...............................3"-

Star Blnk .............................81't.
Wendy'a ................................24\

ATHENS- The Athens County
Shen·Ifs Depanment ·ts seek'mg: mformation on a suspected r~pist that an
mveshgator'feels should be easy to
identify.
The sheriffs office is investigating
a rape on June 12 that was reported
on June 22.
Investigators are seeking a white
male. 30 to 40 years old, five feet 10
inches to six. feet tall. 180 to 220
pound• with a muscular build. He has
blond hair. crew cut style, and blue
eyes.
He was described as a body
bUilder-type person with shaved legs
and manicured hands and was wear·
ing new N1ke clothing. the repon stat·
ed.

The atta~ker has a scar from left:
no~tnl to his upper lip and another;
scar on h•s chest.
Accordmg to the report. a 36-year-:
old Athens area woman was ndmg;
her bicycle on the Hock-Hock•ng·
Adena Bikeway near Ri.ver RoaO
when she stopped to pick berries. M '
that time the male came up behind
her and forced her into a wooded are~
off the b•keway, where he raped hef
at kmtepomt
Anyone wuh mformauon aboui
this mcident or anyone who recog.~
n1zes the person descnbed was asked
to contactlnvest1gator Dave Warrei.·
at the Athens County Shenfrs Officeat (740) 593-6633.

Southern seeks input

Southern High School. Plans are
available for review at Southern
High School.

(Continued from Page 1)

Meigs County Veterans Service
Commission will meet Monday. 7:30
p.m. at the Veterans Service Office.
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

Middleport blood drive
A blood drive will be held July 2,
noon to 6 p.m. at the Middlepon

trict's Title and Spec1al Education
programs.
• Recognized the following stal'f
transfers: Janice Curry. kmdergarten;
Tncia McNickle. letart Falls second
grade; Kathryn H•II-White. letan
admtmstrdtive nssistanl for 1he ths- Falls third grade . Jenny Manuel:
The board met with Junior high Portland tourth grade. Jane Ann H1ll,
~
school Princ1pal Mickey Kucsma. kmder-c_!:arten md~
In other bus mess. the board
who shared th~ n:sults of the district's
• Approved a policy reqUirmg stu&gt;
eighth graders on Ohio Ninth Grade
dents to maintain a 1.0 g~ade pomt
Prolic1ency Test.
The students did well. she average to be elig1ble for part•c•pa·
explamed With 92 percent passing the tion in Southern local's mter··
writing port1on of the test, 88 percent scholo.stic progmms.
• Approved membership with
po.~smg the reading ponwn. 50 per· ·
cent passing the math ponion. 85 per· Educational Technology Services for.
cent po.\Sing the citizenship sect1on the 1998-99 school year at a cost of
'
and 54 percent passmg lhe science 55 cents per student
• Approved a temporary budget
ponion The science section IS a
for the 1998-99 school year.
recent addition to the test.
• Approved renewmg the district:,
E1ghth graders who attended

Ch11n:h ofChrill m431 Main St. To

""h&lt;&gt;ol in the: Southern Local Di•trlct

s.e\f-i.ns.uran.ce medtca\

SOulhti'Jl meeting
A meeting to offer input on South·
em local K-8 Building plans will be
held Tuesday. June 30 at I p.m. at

be a·blood donor. individuals must be
17 years old. in good gener~l health.
weigh 110 pounds or more and not
have donated blood within the ~"~-"56
days.
•

exclusively since their kmdergarten
year did even better. she explained.
Of those students. 98 percent (or all
hut one student) passed the writing
port1on of the test, 97 percent passed
the readmg port1on. 89 percent passed
the math portiOn, 93 percent passed
citizenship and 59 percent passed the
science port1on of the test.
In personnel matters. the board: ·
• Approved Kathy M11ler as a bus
driver for the 1998-99 s~hool year.
• Approved the position of ARSI

program With Med1cal Cla1ms Ser,
vice of Ravenswood. W.Va . a~'
administrator.
• Approved a textbook replacement plan so all elementary schools
will use the same textbooks by the
time the new district-wide elementacy
school opens. The same books are not
m use throughout the elementary
schools, lawrence said.
• Approved the bidding fur a new
school bus.

Southern LSD
The Southern local Board of
Sponsors student
Peoples Bank co-spo'nsored Kristi· Education will meet in spec1al ses·
na Kennedy at Buckeye Girls State sion Monday. 7 p.m. at the high
held Ia\! week at AshJand College. school in Racine. The board will meet
The American legion Auxiliary pro- w1th bond counsel and Key Capital
Markets to discuss investment str~te·
gr~m is a workshop m government.
Kennedy will be a senior at Meigs gies to maxim1ze the return on bonds
for the new K-8 elemsntacy school
High School Qlis,_.f"'"
al.,_,l._ _ __
and to discuss contract negotiations.
'
To sing
Mani Short will sing at the Poplar Meigs LSD
The MeiRS local Board of EduR1dge Free W1ll Baptist Church off
State Route 554, Sunday at 6 p.m. cation will meet in regular session
John Elswick IS filling [n as pastor of Thursday, 7 p.m. at the distnct's cen·
tr~l oflice on the second floor of the
the church.
Pomeroy Municipal Building.

-

VSC~tlng

Health Department lists requiremf!nts for food handling
· . The Me1gs County Health Depan·
ment has issued a reminder to all
individuals and organizaiions wishing
to sell food at July 4 events of the
licensing requirement\ to engage in
such activities.
As defined in Section 3732.01(m
of the Ohio Revised Code, a "Temporary Food Service Operation"
means "any place, mcludmg any
government operation, where meals
m lunches. or port1ons thereof, are
prepared or seJVed for a considemtion
of a single event, in one locat•on, for
a penod of not longer than five con·

WASHINGTON (AP) -Orders to U.S. factories for big-ucket goodso
expected to last three years or longer dropped 2.6 percent in May. the larges(
dechne in live months.
•
The decreo.~ in durable-goods orders to a seasonally adjusted $184.3 bil-;
loon followed gains of 1.6 percent in April and 0.3 percent in March. the Com·•
merce Depanment said today. h Wll~ the sharpest fall since a 5.3 percent d(llp:
•n December.
•
Orders m May fell in two volahle categories, which had increased sharply•
the month before : c1vilian aircraft and military goods. But declines were:
broad-based, if smaller. in other ·sectors and hkely reflected dimini~'hect:
demand from economtcally troubled Asm.
.
•
Orders for mihtary goods plunged 20 6 percent in May after JUmpmg 38.3percenl in April. For civ1han aircraft, orders fell 13.3 percent after nsmg 39.7;
percent.
Even excludmg those two categories, orders were down 1.3 percent. They:
fell 4.1 percent for primary metals such as steel. 1.2 percent for industnal·
machinery and equipment and 6.8 percent for electroniC eqUipment.
:

to the selling of prepackaged items
such as candy, potato ch1ps an4 soft
drinks, or for baked goods.
Before a license to conduct a tern·
porary food semce operation can be
issued. certain standards must be mel

prior to the issuance or a license.
The licenses are issued through
the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment. according to Keith little, the
depanment's environmental health
director.

Squads answer five calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service recorded five
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:25 p m.. Meigs Mine 2, Jessie
Nap1er, treated Ulthe scene.
MIDDLEPORT
I :45 p.m .• Pearl Street, Ronald
Bosler. refused treatment. Central
Dispatch squad o..sisted.
RACINE
8:42 p.m .. Elmwood Terrace,
Raci~e. lucille Diehl, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Hospital news
'\'eterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Albert
Roush. Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges JDne 2l - Reba
Jenkms. Raymond Murphy. Ethel
Fulks, Jessica Perdue. BenJamm Hal·
Icy, Mrs. lewiS Harper and daughter.
Wayne Kemp. Bobby McCoy, Carrie
VanBibber, Kayla Smith, Johnny
Klein.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Erhart. son. Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Tucker. son. Middleport.
'{Published with permission)

Math.Sc•enceffnle I person to be
posted.
• Hired Ryan Lemley as ja high
school social studies teacher on a
one-year contract. and Dave Barr as

.Theft reported
linda Hubbard, Syracuse. report·
ed four fans have been taken froln the
greenhouse on Second Street with the
la.'t theft occurring Monday night.
She reported purchasmg two new
fans Monday and discovered one of
them miSsing Tuesday morning along
with an old fan.

RUTLAND
7:25 ,a.m .• Depot' Street. Dakota
Marshall, Holzer Medical Center:
8·36 p.m., Hampton Hollow Road,
Charlene Goodman. HMC, Central
Dispatch squad a~sisted.

tn~urance

• M~t m execuuve session wirh

guidance counselor

Sh~rley

Sayre to
~

d1scuss personnel malters

Present were lawrence, H1ll.
board PreSident Boh Collins, boarit
members Marty Moranty. Dave Ku&lt;!sma. Doug little and Ron Cammarata.

Racine preparing
(Continued from Page 1)
' jumor. Reg1str~1ion for the senior
diVIsiOn ( 15 and younger) is $3 with
regiStration for the sen1or division ( 16
and older) being $5.
Prizes for the top three limshers m
the senior division will be $100, $75
and $50 with the lop three fimshers
in the junior diviSion rece1ving $40.
$25 and $10.
For more information on the frog
jumping contest. call 949-2485.
Entenamment will on the stage
throughout the day with times 10 be
announced later. Scheduled to per·
form are the Racine Baptist Church
children's choir. Swingin' Seniors,
Last Chance Band and Family Tra·
dillon Band.
Food booths w1ll be available
during the day. Craft and game
booths w1ll also be set up during the .
day. To reserve a space, contact Dale
Han at 949· 2656.
Fireworks by the fire depanment
will conclude the day at 10 p.m._ .

ALL AGU, ALL TIMES $4.00

***************

D

BIG
'"''"·'""'m"
•
1·740·753·3400

1'"1ovtes

M

'''~H~ f;.fiHD~l

• •••••••••••
COUPON

FREE HEARING TESTS
will •• glvt• I• Mtlgs/Gallla Couatlts

•y

HEARING AID CENTER •
•• &amp;6.e·
Friday, ~6, 1998
••
••
In Dr. A. Jackson Balles' Office
••
224
East
Main,
Pomeroy
••
t:OO.Noon
•
•
•
8 Call Toll Frea 1-IOG-634-5265 for • IIIIIMtllafe appointment: •
The tests will lie given •y a lkmed Hearilg Aid Spedafisf •
•
• Anyone who has trouble hearing or uAderstandlng conversat•on 1s •nv1ted to •

Worthlngton ................. -'~ .......14\

• have a FREE hearing lest to seell this problem can be helped Bnng this •
• coupon w1th you lor your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75 00 value
..

Stock r~pona 1r1 the 10:30
1.m. quotN provldtd by Adveat
of Gllllpollt.

•
•

-·-·-

AR~N~~~::::t~.:ER
WALK·INS WELCOME

•
•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

I

�•

•

Sports

The ·Daily ·Sentinel

•

Wednesday, June 24,1998

R~ds

selves. Everyone goes through
stretches where everything seems to
rum against you. It seems 10 always
happen at least once a year."
The Reds haven' t been through
anything like this in live years. The
la't time they ivent so long without a
win wa' 1993, when they 1oM 12 in
a row after Tony Perez wollired.
They pulled out everything on
Tuesday - owner Marge Schott
sent down a stuffed gorilla for good
luck, hitting coach Ken Griffey was
back in the dugout after walking out
in a huff the previous night.
When Damon misplayed a fly ball
to set up a ·two-run first forthe Reds,
it looked like things might change.
"I said. 'h looks like we might be
getting some breaks for a change,' "
manager Jack McKeon said. "I
thought we were going to win that
game. Deep down, 1. had a feeling. If
we could have contained them for
awhile. it might have worked."
Scott Klingenbeck ( 1·2) couldn't
hold the rare lead. Jeff Conine hit a
solo homer in the second and Damon
lied it with 3POther in the · third.
Damon foiiO\,;ed it an inning later

goodluck.ofcou~.

The hilling coach was back on the
bench, having patched up the club's
latest rift. And Lenny Harris. the
team's best pinch hiller, was pl;~ying
right field and leading off . in a
revamped lineup. ·
The·Reds"tried ev~rything to break
out of their month-long slump Tues·
day, .but couldn't come up with any·
thing to match Johnny Damon's
homers and 'Hal Morris' defense.
Damon drove in four runs with a
pair of homers and Morris, a former
Red, went4-for-5 and made a game·
saving play at first base, leading the
Kansa~ City Royals to a 64 victory.
While Kansa~ City completed an
invigorating 7-2 road trip, the Reds
lost for the lOth straight time and the
18th time in 21 games in June.
"I can appreciate what t)ley' re
going through," said Morris, who
played for the Reds from 1990-97
and still has close friends on the team.
"We had some tough times earlier
this year and long losing streaks our·

HARRIS UPSET • Clnclnn1t1'1 Lenny Harris complains 1bout
being celled out lifter hl1strlke out we1 dropped by Royals' Clleher 511 FIAno Tueldly 1t Clnergy field • .The.- were Nnnert on
ll,.t end eecond who ldv1nced when HI"'' finned. Clncy IOit
Ill 10th ~Wight, 6-4. {AP)

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gene
Slaughter. who became the win·
ningest coach at Capital University
and led the Crusaders to a victory in
the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl, has
died. He was 72.
Slaughter, or Columbus, died
Monday al Doctors Hospital North
after a brief illness.

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Houston 9, MinMsota 0
C~vcland ~-

He coached future NFL Hall of
Farner Paul Warfield at Warren Harding High School and was an assistanl
to Woody Hayes at Ohio State in
1960.
A year later, Slaughter became
head coach at Capital and posted a
120-94-3 record before retiring afler

CLEVELAND (AP.) - A group
hoping to own the replacement
Cleveland Browns expansion fran·
chise has been expanded to include
corporate chief executives.
Former Browns Calvin Hill .and
Paul Warfield and New York devel·
oper Howard Milstein, whose partie·
ipation in the effort had been dis·
closed earlier, called a news confer·

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a 25-year career. The Crusaders won
the Stagg Bowl in 1970. He was the
Ohio Conference coach of the year in
1964 and 1970.
He also was Capital's athletics
director from 1981-87.
Slaughter took over a slumping
Jackson High S€hool football pro·

Chicaro Cubs 4

Seattle 5. Sao Die9o J
Toronto J. Montl'l!nl 2

ence today to introduce additional
backers. Organizers of the new.s con·
ference declined to identify 1he new
backers in advance.
. The NFL is reviewing applications
to replace the teain thai Art Modell
moved to Baltimore following the
199S season. The new team is to
begin play in 1999 in a stadium now
under construction.

Atlantoa 7.. N.Y Y;mk~o.-c!
Dctmil 8. St. Luui ~ I

gram in 1953 .and guided the 'ronmen .
to three Southeastern Ohio League
titles in ~ix years.
Slaughter is survived by two
daught~rs. Lisa Davis of Reno, Nev.;
and Gwen Jones of Gahanna; and a
son, Scott, of Denver. Funeral
arrangements were pending at Woodyard East Chapel.

R

Commissioner Paul Tagliabue NBA Detroit Pistons. played for the
wants an owner in place by Septem· Browns from 1978-81 after nine
years with the Dallas Cowboys.
ber.
Milstein, 47, recently became 50
Warfield . .S5. a native of Warren,
was taken by the Brow.ns as their No. · percent owner of the NHL New York
I drafl choice in 1964. the year of Islanders. He is chairman of Douglas
their last NFL championship. He was Elliman. an insurance. commercial
traded to Miaini in 1970. but returned and residential real estate ' broker
for the 1976-77 sea.o;ons.
with 19 offices.
Hill. father of Grant Hill of the

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Pittsbur~h (l.id-.cr .li-th al Ka11~~~~ City (llckt.:r .'i-7). lt:O.'\ p.m.
Cindnnmi !Tomko :'i -61 a1 Chkato Whi11.! So!lCPnrquc 2-01. lt05 p.n•
T.:x;L, (Van POflPC'I 0.1) 011 Ari.tona !Tckmoco 2· 11. 10:05 p.m.
Anaheim ISJiark ~ 1·01 111 Lm Anlt:k~ IRt)"-'S O..l). IO:O!i Jl.m.
Oakl:rnd {H:ryncs 5-.ll:.t S:1n Fmnd~·o lf..sks 6-~). 10:0~ r .m.

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Offer ends june 30!

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Milw:rutL-c 7. Coi\\IOidn ~
Ck•w land 5. l'h•~·;'l'" Cut-~ _.

S.m l&gt;icgu .\

Ton1nto .l . Ml'llllrc:~11
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N.Y. t.lciJ b. lbltinMlfc .l
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IXtnlir 1'. Sl. l.nui~ I
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1\MIII!'illl b. U1~ ,\n)!t-·1~-s --l
\\'tdtw1141a,·'s Game-"
Chk.-01$\' C11"J ICI;vl +71 :IIIA·rmit IGn-i.tinJ!_~'f ~.11. 7:0~ p.m.
St . l .uu i~ ll'ct~t•\· k'k ~ - .1 1 a1 (.'kwl:md jWJiJ!hl fHl. 7 :0~ p.m.

a month

for one year.

TtWllllhl,iCknk:M 7·1'11 ;It Mtllll r~·:.J ifL~kic I.()). 7:0!1 r .m.

Tmnra 8:~ )' IS:.unlk·r' 1-n ar f:'lnritl:r c~1c:lf.k,wJ ~-61. 7 : 0~ p.m.
llm hm 11\\'i.'f)' +-I~ m l,•il:~..lo:lflhia il.~wc r 1·01. 7 : ~~ p.m.
Oahimtlre (Smilh 0.1) :11 N.Y. .. lc11 ~~~· lt-41. 7:-10p.m.
NY. Yank1.'CI i&lt;'uno: IJ·1\.al ,\tlanlil tMiiJ-,.•Ot"--9-.\J. 7:-MJ p.m.
Pin~buq:h tP,·I~'fl 2- ~t at Kan~a.' Cit)' tRIHI.'h '·IH. I':~ r.m
.
Milw:.ukcc (Wood:anl +~l 111 Minl~ll(lta CHIIWkin• -1-6). ~ : 0~ p.m.
Cincinn.1ti IWim:ht,t...or ·' ·•H ut Chh•UJ.t\ Whilc So1 (Nav~ !i-9}. 1\:05 p.fn.
HCMtlton (OtrJm.1n fl.:\) at Culomo.k1 CAJI:telo +8J. 9:0!i p.m.
Oakland IS~ein .t-tl at S3A Fmt14:i"o-t03rwln 6-!il.IO:(K p.m.
Tt'xat (tkllinJ l().,,)tM Ariznn."' tDiair l- 10~. IO:OS p.m.
AMhtim (Finlty 7~) llllA)I A~I~'S (Drtifon +.6). IO:U p.m.
Scanlre (lohn10116-6) at S;m Oit'JO tAifrhy 10.-l}. IO:.l!i p.m.
TIMinda)'"l CaMH

MilwM.« !Eldred 2-'1 nl Mini)('I(Jta CRadb 8-.5). 1:15 p.m.
Housron (Ebrton 0-0) a1 Cnlomdo (8.M.J011es l-2) ..tm p.m.
SeaRle (Ciotde ~-61 m S:rn VieJo {L'liiJiton 1·11. S:05 p.m.
Cbka10 CuN (Wood 7-J) 1M Detroit CMoehler 7·!i). 7:&lt;6 p.m.
St. l.oolstAybGr J.J) a&lt; Cleveland 1Burt&gt;o S.S). 7:0l P·"'·
Toronto (Williaml: 7-J) • Montreal Chn-16-6l. 7:05p.m.
T - Bay (S-M 2.0) 01 Rorido CH"""'*t S-4), 7:0S p.m.
Bos1oo CSol&gt;eri)oJen S.Sl" Philadelphia Clleedl J-4), 7:JJ p.m.
Ballimore (Ericluon 8-6) at N.Y. Mttl (Nomo 2·8), 7:40p.m.
N.Y. YanUh (W4ells 9-2) at Allaftla (Ntlllf: 8-.5). NO p.m.
Ph11buqh CLitbor J.l) 11 Kansu Ci1y (llekhtr J. 7).1j)S p.m.
Cincinnati (Tomlo S.6) at Oiicqo Whilt Soil (Patque 2.0), I ;CH p.m
Tall ('W "-1 0.1) • A~ ..... (Tt,._o 2-1). 10:0! p.m.
•
Anollti01 (Sporb z.ll) 11 Lot An,.t.. (Re,.. ().)~ tO:OS p.m.
Oll&lt;land (Haynes S.J) MS.. Ftan&lt;lo:o tEitot 6-J), IO:Ol p.IIL

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COLUMBUS (AP)- Here is the ucellent fishing opportunities for wben seeking largemouth bas.~. Sun·
weekly fishing report provided by the channel catfish anglers. Fishing al fish and bluegills can be taken at
Division of Wildlife of the Ohio night with night cruwlers, chicken depll\s of3 feet or more in areas with
Department of N111urul Resources:
livers and prepared baits is very pro- shoreline cover. Use red wonns.
CENTRAL 0100
ductive. Some anglers choose to use mealwonns and larval baits susALUM CR~K LAKE-This is flyfishing gear to catch bluegills. pended beneath a bobber.
a fast improving mulikie fislli ng lake. There is also a good population of SOV'tHEAST OHIO
VESUVIUS LAKE - Located in
Growth rates of mliskies stocked here crappies present in this lake.
Lawrence
County. anglers here will
are above averlige with some five· , VAN ·wERT RESERVOIRS find
e}ltellent
fishing opportunities
year.:Oid fish mea&lt;uring up to &lt;l7 Both upground reservoi111 are 6S
etdst for ~hannel catfi~h. Many fish
inches. Trolling at depths of 5 to 10 acres in siu. Sm~llmouth bass num- ·
measure II to 24 inches' with some
feet in the area near the dam with bers are excellent with most fish mea·
larger fiHh present. The sunfish popoversized hires and cro111k baits seems suring 10 to IS inches. Look for areas ulation is aburidant. but quality is fair.
to be the 111051 popular muskie fish.· with rocky bonom or riprap and fish
inc technique. This is also one of the with soft craws, small spinnel'll, and Use larval bail'S and small wonns
fished along the shorellfle for best
area's lop bass toUmainent lakes. The imitation bails. Try. drifti111 a W0f111
deep · points throughout the main barnes.&lt; near the boltom on overca.&lt;t m~ults. Saugeyes up to 18 inches may
clwinel are the best places to fish. this . days to catch saugeyes. These fish be caught on jigs or.wonn harneS!IC!I
along the bottom.
time of year for largemouth bass.
mea,ure 13 to · 18 inches. Channel fished
VETO LAKE - Flathead catfish
BUCKEYE LAKE - This lijke catfish. abUIIdarioe is good and IIIOlit up to··40 pounds have been causht
supporlll a developing hybrid striped of the best fiShing success OCCUI'li at here. .Use small bait fish such as
bas. fl6be?'. Fish meaSUring IS to 20 night.
bluegills or sunfish fished along the
inches . seem to be more common, NORTHEAST OHIO
bottom at niJIII for best results.
WEST BRANCH RESERVOIR Channel catfish may weish 8 to 12
though 110111e larger fish are present.
· Slowly drift or troll emerald shiners -Hybrid striped bass measuring up pounds and also provide excellent
and shad or cui jigs and surface to 25 inches can be foond here. Use nighllishing opportunities. Blucsills
plugs if these bu.• are chasing bail· · live shad or shiners fished a1 depths . and sunfish measuring 5 10 9 inches
fish aionJthe surface for best results. of 10 feet or more over deeper open can be taken along the shoreline
The eastern llalf of the lake in areas waler for best results. Channel catfish when using small worms and larval
witlt aquatic VCJl:llllion n the best . can be taken from shoreline areas at baits.
pieces 10 fish for blucgilll. Fishina foi: nisht when lishilll along the bottom SOUfBWEST OHIO
channel and fllllteld catfish is rated · with tnlditioMI blits .. Check with
STONELICl&lt; ~AKE - Large·
BOOd 10 excellent during tbe summer. area bait shops to cet the latest infor· · mouth
bass generally IIICIISure 10 to
malion on ~J~Uskic and bass fishing.
NORTHWEST OHIO
1·3 inl:hes, but a few IIIIJIII' fish have
RESTHAVEN POND NO. 8 LONG LI6.KE- Use small crank weiJhed in at7 pounds. Elrly 11101'1\·
This 1:ZO..Cre lake on the Resthaven · blita and bllde spinnm in areu with ing and eveniiiJ are good times 10
Wildlife Area in Erie County offers • ve,eewion or aubme!Jed slluclures

Cirv 1'1 . Cinchm:ni 4

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GOAL KEEPER Jim f..elghton, Scotland,
tries to 110p Moroc:co'l ucond goellrom going
In the beck of the net during the Group A, World

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Cup soccer match II the Geoffory-Gulchard
ltldlum In Sl. Eitel h'll, Frence TUIIdly. Maroc·
·co won, 3-0. (AP) ·

,
:

--------------------------------~--------~------------------------------------~~~~~----~~~~
·
· "We can't really acceptthis unfair celebr~te in the streets or Santiago. · .thinl eliminated ieam 10 dismiss its !
decision," midtielder Salomon Olem·
be said. "The referee will not be welcome In Cameroon if he wanted to,
spend a holiday there."
Le Roy launched into repeated
verbal attacks on FIFA . president
Sepp Blatter, who last week told ref·
erees to call more fouls.
·
" If this is wh:it football is all
about, I hope Mr. Blatter was watch·
ing," Le Roy said. "'there wa&lt;n't a
.shove or a fouL
"I hope FIFA will discuss the
issue of what happened today."
Chile moved into the second
round for the first time on foreign soil
-· il finished third ·when it played
host in I%2- and sen\ thousands to

Weekend fishing report across Ohio

Hnu~ton ~-· Minn..•sota 0
Sc~mk ~ .

..

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Wt'dnt!day"s Gamf'.• .
Chkapo Cubs ~Clark +-71 :niJ,_:rnul iGn.'t~iup~·r 0-.\). 7:1J.Ii p.nr.
St. Louis fPa:llmnd :'i-.lJ :11 Ck-n:lnnd !Wrifhl f""""l. 7:05p.m.·
Tnrorrw ICk:n11:tts 7-61 111 MPnln:al IUu~ ki.:' 1-01. 7 : 0~ J•.rn.
T.1111ftrl Bay ISauiWk'l's 1-71 :II Flnrid:r tMa:aLI&lt;I\\s .~-Ill. 7.11.'1 JUl.
IJO!&gt;Iml (A\·ay 4-1 I 111 Philadclphi;r cl.-~ ..:wa:r 1 ~ 01 . 7 : ~.'1 p.m.
Unllimoh: !Smith 0-11&lt;~1 N.Y. Mcts CRl't.'tl K-41. 7:-W Jl .m.
N.Y. Yank~o-cs !Cone 9-.ZJ ;rl Atl;wt;a fMillw(ltt\1 9-JI. 7:-10 r .m.
Piu,hllrph IPa:las 1·!il r~t Kansas CTry &lt;R11M:h :'i·Ml. K:O!i p.m
Milwaukee (Wnodard -t-.~1 m Min111.~:1 (Hawkins 4-6), lt:O~ Jl.m.
Ci nl'inn:rli JWint::hdt~·r .\.-l) at Chitaj1-ll While Snx INrl\·nrm .'i -91. M:O.'i'fl,m
O:lk.l:md (Stein .\ --l) m San Fr:mdk(l IO:irwin 6-.'il. 10:0.'1 p.m.
1\n:d~~:im IFin~y 7 -411\li.A.'~

PARIS (AP) - The power of a .
referee's whistle could hardly be
more profound.
1Wo controversial fouls - two
. cases of apparent iqcidental contaet
. - in two games Tuesday at the
World Cup led io street celebrations
. ·:.
on the other side of the world. They
-''
;&gt;ent teams to unprecedented levels of
success and left losing cooches angry,
· bitter or pe~plexed.
Norway - not Morocco - is in
I he second round because of a penalty in the 89th minute that gave the
Norwegians a stunning 2-1 victory
•
over defending champion Brazil. It's
the first time Norway has made it past
the first round.
"We made history' in Norway
.....
.
..
\~,.,~~~.•••- ~ft;~ . .,_,, .·•
· today," Norwegian striker Tore. Andre
,,•
,.. ''"'*· '\ .. ' '1. ""'~ --~ '&lt;to. '~•'' ~ . , Aosaid.
DILL STEALS THIRD • Meigs' Matt Dill llldel Into third biH
The game didn't matter to Brazil.
.with 1 steel TUeldly evening. Meigs end Glou..., battled to 1 6which
owned first place in Group A.
8 lie before the geme w11 hilled by dlrknlll. (Sentinel photo
Still. even coach Mario Zagallo
by Dive Hlrrll).
.
couldn't help but raise the proverbial
eyebrow to American referee Esse
Baharmast's decision that Junior
Baiano's bump with Flo as the two
battled for position on a high ball was
worthy of the most decisive of fouls.
"I don't really know what happened there." said Zngallo, shrugging
his shoulders. "The referee is FIFA's
~in relit1 of Matt Dill. Bentley struck problem; notBrazil's·problem."
.By DAVE HARRIS,
It was a problem for the Moroc·
OUII~ilumber
nine-hitter for.what
Colnljlot*"l·
i:ana:
who thousht they had qualified
shoula'lia¥e
been
the
final
0111.
But
Meijs and Glouster battled to _a 6with
a 3-0 ·victory over Scotland.
illr tie in .eiahth district Amencan the balhiOI past the catcher allowing ·
Legion baseball . aCtion Monday the runner 10 reach ba•1e. Another Then they learned of Norway's stunevening at Meip Hiah School. The . Meigs error put runner.~ on fir.~t and nitlJ comeboek.
Moiocco's phiyers wept on the
game wL&lt; called after nine innings second. Back-to-back sinales olf the
field.
Coach Henri Michel kicked the
bats
of
Drake
and
~ilckson
made
it
a
due to dllrkness, il will be finished on
· bench; then hugged each of his stars.
July 14th before the.scheduled game 3-4 Glouster lead.
And he.hadn't even heard about the
Meigw
retook
the
le:id
in.
the
sev·
apinst Glouster. That gil_me is a non
dubious
penalty that did his teall! in.
enlh
inning
when
Bentley
led
off
the
confemJCC gamie and it \'ldl be played
inning wiih a grpund rule double to
"All of us, we and the players are
a1 Meip. The suspe~ aame will
.
right
Jeremiah
stole
second
and
extremely
disappointed." Michel
begin at S:JO with the regularly
scored
on
a·
perfect
suicide
squeeze
said.
"I
want
to pay tribute to an
scheduled game to follow.
scori
ns
Bentley
with
the
tying
run.
excellent
and
an
outstanding team,
GIOU!Iter jumped on to a 3·0 lead
Meigs took .the~ead in the bottom and I want to thank them from the ·
in the top of the first inning. Sutt11n
led off by reaching on an error. a walk of the eighth iMing when Adam bottom of my bean ...
For truly bitter words. tum 10
and an 0111 later Snyder doubled, .A Cumings lined a double down the left
field
line.
two
outs
later
after
back·
Cameroon's
Claude Le Roy. whose
sacrifice and a error later Glouster
to-back walk.s, Bentley blooped a sin· tirade went straight to the top over a
wa.&lt; on lOp 3·0.
· That is the way it stood until the gle into short right field to score call that cost his team a probable
winning goal and a second-round
fifth inning. Daniel Whittekind sin· Cumings.
But
Glouster
rallied
in
the
top
of
berth in a 1·1 draw with Chile.
gled ·to lead off the inning~ Kyle Nor·
"I can accept a lot of things, but
ris followed with a perfect bunt and the ninth to tie the game. Jackson sin~
gled and Vogl doubled off the left I can't accept that one." LeRoy said.
reached on a bad throw to first.
"I'm sorry we were eliminated: espeJeremiah Bentley followed with a field fence to tie the game ai six.
Meigs
threatened
in
the
bottom
of
cially on ·a decision that wa.' an ·
base hit to make it a 3·1 game. Corey
Williams followed with a sacrifice ·the ninth with Dill reaching second incompetent one."
The foul came in the 58th minule,
fly. and a single off the bat of Matt with one out. But Carroll wa.&lt; able to
retire
the
side.
At
that
points
the
game
when
Hungarian referee Laszlo
"Pork" Dill made it a 4~3 Meigs lead.
was
called
due
to
darkness.
Vagner
claimed Patrick Mboma
Glouster took advanlllge age of
Meigs will host Wellston on pushed Ronaldo Fuentes just before
Meigs errors 10 regain the lead in the
Francois Omam Bi)'ick put the ball in
top of the si~lh inning. With two outs Wednesday.
the net.
and Jeremiah Bentley on the mound

..

-"

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SAFE AT SECOND· Cleveland's Pet Borderl llkllll llfely beck
to ucond lilA before Chlcego's Mlckly Monncllnl (12) cen tag
him out during Tuelclly's geme In Wrlglty Fllld. The
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29

"The ball found my glove some·
how," Morris said.
While the Red' wondered how
Ions their bad luck would hold out,
Muser mused about ways to keep the
Royals' road luck going when they
return home.
"It was a good trip. It will be nice
to be back home after eight days," he
said. "We're going to wear our road
grays tomorrow. I don't know if
there's a league rule."
.
Notes: ·Morris has three four-hit
games this season and 12 in his
career. He had a IO.gpme hitting
streak snapped Monday nighl when
he came into the game late and fouled
out in his .only at-bat. ... The Royals
have won their last four series ....
Rapp went 0-for-2 at the plate. Roy·
als pitchers are 2-for-28 in inter·
league games the pa.'t two seasons....
Rapp is 5·0 with a 2.47 earned run
average in six road starts this season.
He's 2-6 at home .... Slumping Reg·
gie Sande~ ( l·for-24) was out of the
Reds' lineup. Harris started in right
field, batted leadoff and went O.for-

Ex-Capital, Jackson grid c,oach Gene Slaughter dies

Scoreboard
Eas1 DI\'Won

with a three-run homer, his eighth.
and the tone was set.
Damon. who set a career high with
eight homers la&lt;t season. ha.• been
working on keeping his weight back
so he can drive the ball farther. His
·swing is becoming more powerful.
"It's not McGwire-esque, because
I'm not as strong." Damon said.
· "When I was growing up, I was pret·
ty strong for a kid. For some reason,
I've not been able to hit more home
runs."
Pat Rapp (7-6) gave up eight hits
and lhree runs in six innings to break
out of a rut and win conseculive starts
for the first time si nce May 7-13.
Rapp had alternated wins and losses
in his last seven decisions.
Scott Service gol his first save
sine~ 1993 and the third o.f his career
. by ~llchmg the final three 1~nmgs and
l!!v!ng up one run. Mon;1~ made a "
d1vmg stop on Sean Ca.o;ey s grollllder
down· the line at firs~ base to save a
run and end a threat m the seventh . .
"I think Morris' play turned the
game." manager Tony Muser said .
"If Hal doesn 't make that play, we
probably don't win."

grounded out, and is now IO.for-7¥-;
in his career with the bases loaded-: '
with no grand slams.
·:1 don 't think he's going up the13&gt; ;
trying to hit home runs," the Cubs': ~
Jeff Blauser said. "I don't think he!&lt;•·
been trying during the whole streak.~' •
Reliever Mike Jackson. broilg~t
on to face Sosa with two outs in ~e ,
ninth, got him on pop fly for the finar :
out, notching his 16th save of the sea- .
son.
"Jackson got one of the most dangerous hitters in the league to -pop
up," Hargrove said. " Having the
power hitter up there versus the clos·
er in the ninth. that's what the game ;
is all about."
•
• : .•
"We're in the American League; :
.where you have teams ·with good hit·
ters up and down the lineup." Jack·
son said. "Going after someone like
Sosa isn '!.anything we haven't dot!e- :
before.''
•• ·

CHICAOO (AP) - When Jim man said. "Everyone told me. You could say, 'Heck, Sammy will
'Oiome wa• growing up in downstate 'You've got to come to Wrigley.' take care of us.' Well, Sammy's
Peoria, he used to go to Chicago They're right.''
allowed to go O.for-5."
"This is a great place to play a
Cubs games.
Which he did.
game,"
Cleveland
manager
Mike
For two days, Thome got to piny
Henry Rodriguez hit his second
out his childhood fantasy Clll the big Hargrove said. "I can see why Ernie homer in a.' many games for the
Banks loved to play baseball here." Cubs. but Sammy Sosa. one shy of
league field.
After Fryman connected against the major league mark for most
Thome and the Cleveland Indians
loser
Terry Adams (6-4), pinch-hiller home runs in a monlh, went ().for-5
rallied Tuesday for a 5-4 victory over
Mark
Whiten doubled and scored on and is homerless in two straight
the Cubs, sparked by Travis Fryman's
game-tying home run in the eighth a single by Pat Borders, putting games.
Cleveland in front II was the 12th
inning.
"Somebody has to step up, and
"I've he;lrd that when'you think of homer of the year for Fryman, who nqt just me, but everybody."
Rodriguez said "We need Grace, we
'fan friendly,' you should .think .&gt;f also doubled home a ru~ earlier.
Eric Plunk 13·1) pitched I 1-3 need everybody. There's no way he
Wrigley," said Thome, who had three
hits. "It was real friendly with all of innings of hitless relief for the win, ·can hit a home run every day."
Olir fans here. We had a lot of fun." Cleveland's third sttaight. The Cubs ·
"I can't do it every day," Sosa
their
third
in
a
row
and
findropped
"These were the two most fun
said. "I can't do it all."
games l've'played all year," said Fry· ished a nine-game homestand 3-6.
Sosa, who bas 30 homers, 17 of
''I know we can play with that . them in June, Hied out to the wall in
man, wbose homer landed over the
left-field ·bleachers onto Waveland team," Chicago's Mark Grace said. left, grounded out twice and popped
"I know we can beat. them. We up twice. He came up with the bases
Avenue.
haven't
stepped up 10 the challenge. loaded and IWo out&lt; in the sixth; but
" I played in Tiger Stadium and I
. thought that was a nice park," Fry·

try everything, but lose 1Oth straight

CiNCINNATI (AP)- There was
a slUffed gorilla sellled by the railing
of the Cincinnati Reds' dugout- for

w

Indians outlast Chicago Cubs 5-4

Page4

fish. Use surface plugs, small spinners or crank boils, live·baits, and 6·
inch pla.stic worms for best result,.
There are sorrie shoreline fishing
opport11nities available to catch rainbow trout. Fish ·at shallow depths
with small worms, kernel corn,
cheese and miniature marshmallows
to caleb these fish.
PAINT CREEK . LAKE ._ The
tailwater provides a good opponuni'
ty to catch flathead and channel cat·
fish when using traditional .baits
fished at night. Most channel clllfish•
measure l2to 16 inches. whil~ some
flathead.s may weigh over 20 pounds.
The rocky areas of the lake
good
places 10. fish. for lmrgemouth and
spotted ba.-. Anglers need to vary
their presentation of baits and lures to .
determine what works best at a giv·
en time when bass fishing. ·
LAKEERIE
.
In the westem bo.•in, walleye fishing remains e~cellent. One large hot
spot continUC$ to be the area south of
Middle Sister.lsland and,west to West
Si!llel' Island and the Toledo Shippinc
o.nnel. Anglers 1-"= using bottom
bouncers. .with ~s,
weight-for·
\ '
\
ward spinners a · worms. 1111d are
trolling deep-diving lures as well as
using downriggers and planer boards.
Most walleyes are •t depth.~ of 28 10.
JS feet and metiSIIre 13 to 22 ipches.
SOI.tllmoulh bass fishini remains
good in the area from Ruggles Reef
. .tg Vermilion.

''Chile has qualified after many coach. sending Pole Henry Kasper- '
years of sacritice." striker Marceto c7.ak on his way after two losses. Sau· I
Salas said. "You have to go through di Arabia's Carlos Alberto P-.ureira !
hardships. It really is a dream for us." and Soulh Korea's Cha Bum-kun j
Chile will play Brazil in the sec· have also been !ired.
•
On
the
hooligan
front.
a
court
in
;
d
ond roun .
.
·
1
More celebr~tions and heartbreak Bethune convicted and sentenced t
were due today. when South Africa three more Gennan~ to prison. Each 1
plays Saudi AJ:abia (alr~ady ouO and received a ·one-year sentence for ;
Denmark plays France (already attacking French police following :
advanL-ed) in Group C.
Sunday's Germa~y· Yugoslavia game !
In Group D. unless Par~guay can in neaiby Lens.
I
upset Nigeria. then the winn~r of the
Also. two 27-year-old Gcrm3f!s l
Spain-Bulgaria game would leapfrog were placed under formal investiga- ~
into second place and join the Nige· lion - a step short of being charged I
rians in .the round of 16.- for the allempted murder of ;
Meanwhile. Tu.nisia became the policeman David Nivel. who remains :
in a coma after Sunday's violenGe.

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel.

Venus gets lost, but shows .up just in time ,
. WIMBLEDON, England (AP) La.'ll year, Venus Williams flopped in
her Wimbledon debut. This time, she
nearly didn' t show up.
The 18-yeat-old AmericaA came
within five minutes of being default·
ed when she got lost on the All England Club grounds and turned up late
for her first-round match Tuesday.
"I could never figure out where
Court 13 was," she said. "I thought
1 was playing on Court 18, but I
thought that was Court 13, bUt no."
Williams said she made it on time.
but WTA Tour officials confinned
she was 10 minutes late. A no-show
after IS minutes results in an auto'matic default.
Winning the match proved easier
than finding the coun as the seventh·
seeded Williams cruised to a 6-3, 63 victory over Canada's Jana Nejed· ~
ly - one of only 14 matches com· :
pleted on a day disrupted by inter·!
mitten! showers.
. I
Other women's seeds advancing:
Tuesday were No. I Martina Hingis,:
No. 3 Jana Novotna, No. '14 Sandrine
Testud and No. 16 Nathalie Tauziat. :
The forec,ast was better for today, '

Griffey
satisfied
by talk
for now

with No. 2 Lindsay Davenport, No.
4 Steffi Graf and No. 6 Monica Seles
among those scheduled to play sec·
ond-round matches.
The only JRen's seed to complete
a match Tuesday was No. 6 PatriCk
Rafter. who downed Swiss qualifier
Iva Heuberger, 6-1, 6-2, 4-6, 6-J .
Fourth-seeded Greg Rusei:lski,
limping with a sprained left ankle,
split the first two sets against Mark
Draper and trailed 5-4 in the third.
Richard Krajicek. the 1996 champi·
on and No. 9 seed. led Brett Steven
two setsto love.
In second-round matches scheduled today, defending champion Pete

have been wrong with me, then."
There was lillie wrong with
Hingis, who opened de_fense of her
title with a 7-S. 6-3 wm over Losa
Raymond.
.
The 19th-ranked Amencan was
one of only five players to beat
Hingis last year. In their last meeting.
Raymond won in three sets in Zurich.
"When you play Wimbledon, you
don't want to play the No. 19 who
you lost to lasttime," Hingis said. "I
had to give everything to just get
through the first round."
Raymond sensed that Hingis can
be beaten.
:•1 think she's vulnerable here,"

she said. " I think she feels like she's'
got 50f!1ething to prove again, and the·

first couple of matches are gomg to
he tough for her."
Hingis, who beca~ the yo~ngest
Wimbledon women s champoon IR
110 years when she won the title last
year at 16 years. 9 mon,ths, said she
has a different attitude this time.
"Last year I was still kind of the
underdog," she said. "On grass.
nobody expected me to win it or g~ve
me the credit. Now I am the favorite
and it is quite a different feeling to
come bock here as a defending cham·
pion t"i'!' the opening round on Cen·
tre C~. It feels gond."
·

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Page7

¥Wednesday, June 24, 1998

Greedy daughter should be·grateful she's not saving for mom's retirement
ply because they happen to· be relat.
ed.
Ann
It is ve,Y imponant for my peace
of mind to know that my mother has
Landers
a secure retirement and that she will
be well cared for in her old age. At
preserit, while I am working . on
plans for my own retitement, I am
Dear
This letter is also trying to figure out how I am
in respons" to "Hun and Poor in San going to provide for my mother. She
pie@O." She is t!Je woman who felt will be facing her retirement years in
that her mlother should have given the not-too-distant future.
.
her pan of the proceeds from the
"San Diego" should con$ider
sale of th : family home after her herself fortunate that she does not
father died . (Her mother had remar- need to worry abo~t her mother's
ried.) "Sau.1 Diego" asked for your · financial situation . That daughter
opinion tcr. help put things in t~e should stop , being so concerned
proper pclrspective. Well, Ann, I about money that is not hers to begin
h_ave q~ite ~nother perspective. I am . with. lnh~rited money should be
sock arK! ~Ired of people v;ho feel viewed as a pleasant surprise or an they are e/"titlcd to so'!lething sim~

unexpected gift · .. not an entitle·
ment. Sigri me .. A Mind of My
Own in Austin, Texas
Dear Austin: I like your style.
Thanks for voicing my sentiments
so precisely. Would it sutprise you to
know that you and I are definitely in
the minority? Most people think dif·
ferentlJC and start with that "blood is
thicker than Wllter" adage. .
. Delli" Ann Landen: We brought
home a beautiful, healthy,baby from
the hospital and were surprised several weeks later to find a red spot on ·
his forehead. Our doctor told · us it
was a birthmark called strawberry
hemangioma. Our older daughter
also had one but in a much less
noticeable place. The doctor said the
spot would.get bigger for a while hut
.

would eventually fade and disap- have broken away from the circula·
pear. ·
tory system . These " birthmarks" are
I have been floored by some of quite common. One out of every 10
the comments people have made babies has one somewhere on his or
about that birthmark. For example : her OO.:y.
"Oh, did he bump his head?" And
These biOhmarks will grow for a
less polite remarks, such as, "That while, but then, they will begin to
thing on his head is getting bigger," fade . Generally, they disappear com"I hope that's just lipstick ," and my pletely by the time the child is 5
personal favorite, "It's not the kind years of age. Treatment is usuall Y.
that turns cancerous, is it?"
not recommended, exce pt in
Here is some information on extreme cases.
strawberry hemangiomas. ObviousI hope this infonnation will help
ly, a great many people need to be educate your readers so they will not
educated. Hemangiomas usually feel the need to ask tactless ques·
awear shortly after birth and have a tions. -- Nameless, Of Course. on
red, raised. bumpy. teuure. They · the East Coast
may be smaller than a dime or as
Dear East Coast: Your letter is
large as a coaster. They consist of extremely informative, and I'm sure
immature vascular materials that it will prevent countless people from

as king questions that could be hurtfu l. My office contacted Dr. Jerome
Garden, a dermatologist at Chil·
dren 's Memorial Hospital in Chicago.
,
He said about 50 percent of these
birthmarks disappear by age 5 and
90 percent by age 9. Those around
the eyes. mouth or diaper area, how ever, may need treatment "'it h
steroids or laser, His advi ce was Je
chec k all such birthmarks carefull Y,
and follow your pediatrician's
advice. Thank you for all the folks
you educ at~d today.
Send ques tions to Ann Land ers. Creators Syndicate, 5777 W Century
Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

Gary Jl'ones and Sam Hawley
Third gradei Sarah Clark.
DeQuasie (mathematics).
from the American Electric Power
Fourth 1rade: Kevin Hill,
Third grade .. Eric Fruth ·
Philip Sporn Plant joined with Chelsea Smith.
(mathematics); LD/DH -· Paul .
Syracuse Elementary School to
Powell (mathema!ics).
Sixth grade : Kaielyn Hood:
honor se'1cral students on· May 22
· Fourth arade .. Nikki Arnott
Special awards were presented
for their 1997-98 school year to the following sixth gr~ders : (mathematics).
.
achievem•ents.
Fifth 1rade .. Shawn Chapell
Bethany Amberge, for 'A' honor
Studen Is who were recognized roll for all six. years, and Codi (science).
for b.:ing on the: honor roll for the Davis, Sarah Hawley and Katie
Sixth srade .. Jeffrey Wallot
J:ntire ye~or were:
Sayre, 'A and B' honor roll for all (science).
·Second c!rade: Bonnie Lou Allen •. . six years.
··
Third nine weeks:
Morgan ;Brown, Teddy Brown, · . The plant also honored several
First 1rade •• O,ntna Quillen
Christopl·oer Burkhammer, Lind- students 'for academic effort. Each (reading).
·
sey Buz;·,ard, Joshua Caruthers, ni.ne weeks a student was recog- .
Second grade .. Tyler Circle
Ryan Chapman, Heather Cundiff, nized from each class for being (math).
Jessica the hardest worker in a particular
Stephanie:
Cundiff,
Third grade
Amber
Sarah
El-Dabaja, subject.
Durham.
Williams (reading); LDIOH -Chelsea Freeman, Eric Pierce.
Recognized for the first nine . Ricky Plumley (spelling).
TblrJI grade: Nicholas Buck, weeks were :
Fourth 1rade .. Myca Michael
Chance Collins, Samantha Gray,
First grade .. Craig Jones (social studies).
Olivia D udding, Tyler Harkness, (reading).
Fifth 1rade .. Heather Duffy
Amber Hlill, Mallory liill, Adam
Second grade ·- Trenton Rose- (mathematics).
·
Phillips, Adelle Rice, Michael berry (reading).
· .
Sixth grade •• Joey Riffle
Yost, Ashley Teaford.
•
Third 1rade-- Brittany Morar- (mathematics).
Fourtl• .srade: kyan Amberger, ity (reading); LD/DH . .. Chris
Fourth nine weeks:
John Berttz, Shyla 'Jarrell, Myca Cogar (reading)..
TREE PLANTING - Studenta at SyracuM Elementary School along whli lvaunn• Nelgler and Sam
First grade .. Bradley Brown
Hawley
from the Philip Sporn Plant celebrated Earth Day and Arbor Day by planting a crab apple tree
Michael, Jason Pierce, Chelsea
Fourth 1rade .. Caitlin Nease (mathematics);
Smith. ··
,
(science).
. . Second grade .. Stephanie In front of the •chool bulldlpg. The first graders helped plant the tree and each class took part In an
official ribbon cutting ceremony. Firat grade teacher Jan Norris and Alex Hawley are shown here cutFifth gr•de: .Ashton Brown, ·
Filth 1rade .. Keshia Tillis . Clark (reading).
,
tlng
the ribbon to dedicate the.tree with Nalgler and the remainder of the first grade class looking on.
Tyier Roberts, Stacy Snyder.
(reading).
Third arade • Michelle Eblin
Sixth Lt~rade: Bethany AmbergSixth grade .. Nick Notting- (social studies); LD/DH .. Timosixth grade - Sarah Hawley
Second .grade: Heather Cuner, Codi Davis, S·uah Hawley, ham (reading).
Sixth grade: Nicole Goble ..
·
thy !'sail (English). · ,
(social
studies).
diff.
Third grade: Samantha
Katie Sa) lfe.
The AEP-Philip . Sporn Plant
Second nine weeks:
Fourth grade •• Joseph NotYear-end awards fo• the stu· Gray; LD/DH, Angeline Apper- also has three other Partnership
Studer Its recogniz~d for having
Fint grade .. J.D. Whitting- tingham (reading).
dents
who worked the·hardest over son.
perfect a ttendance for the school ton (mathematics).
schools : Mason Elementary,
Fifth grade .. Holly Duffy
the.entire
year ·were:
Fourth grede: Jessica Lyons.
year wer11~:
· ·
Ravenswood Grade School and
Second grade .. Samanth11 (social studies).
Fint grade; Craig Jones.
• •
Fifth ar•de: Stacy Snyder.
Green Elementary, Gall ipo)is.

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The J)aily Sentinel

Syracuse ·students honored for achievements

MAIUFAC'rURER'S

We Stll Monty Ordei't
We Wire Monty

sta·:

.,

and-volley tactics thai are more effective on grass.
"I wasn't really trying too many
things," she said. "My plan was more
or less, make my shoes and get off the
court before it rains."
Williams indicated, without too
much conviction, that she will mix
her game up more in coming match·
es.
..
"You know, more serve and val·
!eying would be at least one serve and
volley because I didn't attempt it at
all today," she said.
When it was pointed out that she
did come in and hit a forehand vol·
ley, Williams said. "Something must

LtMrr &amp;.UP TO &amp;8C

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ken Grif· i
fey has been neassured by the Cincin- •
nati Reds' front office that no one will '
undercut him as the hilling coach. For
now. that's enough. .
Griffey returned to the Reds 011
Tuesday, a day after he left the sta·
dium complaining that he was be ins .1
made a scapegoat for the NL Cen- ·
tral's last-place team.
After talking with general man·
ager Jim Bowden and manager Jack
McKeon, Griffey was back in uni·
fonn for a 6-41oss to the Kansas City
Royals. He said his concerns had
been satisfied for now.
"At this point, yes," Griffey said.
"Jim Bowden has told me that. So
has Jack. That's the only way I can
loot at it. ..
Griffey's . abrupt depanure on
Monday night a few hours before a
l-0 koq to lb.lt.oyala showed
strain of a club ftoundeflng in Its lint
season of rebuilding. The loss Tue5- ·
day was Cincinnati's lOth in a row,
leaving the Reds 3-18 in the month
of June.
After hearing Griffey's complaints
and meeting with the coaches. Bo\Y," ·
den said the air had been cleared. ,
Griffey wa~ not fined for walking 0111, '
"Ken's issues were all put out on i
the table and we •re taking steps to 'I
resolve those issues," Bowden said.
.·'He's still the hitting coach. His
tus ha.~n 't changed. That's all I'm ·
going to say."
Griffey's complaint• were wide·
ranging and illuminated a deep
resentment of how he's been treated
by the organization over the
· He
said a number of.Jhings
him for some time, building up until
he finally erupted.
He empha.•ized two area.: His
perception that he wa.• being blamed
for the team's weak offense. and a
lack of communication by other
members of the staff.
"It's been festering." he said.
"All people had to do was communicate with me." '
McKeon wa.• diplomatic, saying
he wished that Griffey would have .
talked to him about the concerns
instead of waliing out.
"Sometimes you just ny off.
something snaps -"d you don't think
'bf tbose things," McKeon said. "I
wish if there wa.~ any kind of problem, at least I'm aware of il"
Griffey. who played on the Big
Red Machine in the 1970s and wa.~
waived in 1990 so he could play with
Ken Jr. in Seattle, said he also had
kept quiet when he felt slighted by
the Reds in the past. '
"I get tired of it." he said. "I did
it in '7'. when I got pinch-hit for in
the bottom of the eighth inning with
the ba."'s loaded and nobody out and
. 1hit .300 thai year. Same thing in '90.
Nobody knows the true story of
what happened in '90. So I said;
'Hey. I'm julit tired of being the pat·
sy.
In 1990. the Red.• leaned on Grif·
fey to retire to open a IU!IIer spot and
then delayed putti!IB him 011 waivel'll
so he could go to Seattle iliil form the
111111 fathei;·IIOR combinalion in major
leaaue hi!llllr)'.
.
.
His lalest complaint has more to
do with how he was treated and per·
ceived on the coaching staff.. The
Reds expected to have a decent
offense this !1C811011, but veterans and
young players alike have failed to hit
in the clulcll. v

&gt;

Sampras was to face Sweden's
Mik~l T!llstrom, and Andre Agassi
wa.~ up against Gennany's Tommy
Haas.
Gelling past the opening round
was a relief for Williams, who was
upset in her first Wimbledon match
last year by Magdalena Grzybowska.
Williams lost her only grass-court
match this year at the Wimbledon
warmup event at Eastboume.
"It feels real nice," she said. "It's
comforting to know that I'm doing
better."
But Williams isn't doing much
different. She remained glued to the
baseline and refused to try the .serve-

By The Bend

VVednesday,June24,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

88

IUY ON' Ll. DEll

HILLSHIRE F.AIII$'
SUGAR 111M
,,
·
It's really that simple. On J.une. 15th, Peopr,J National Banlr took on the name of Ciry National Brnlr.
Other than a new napte, you cari still expect that good
old fashioned service. and your favorite bank
products.
.
.

EASTMAN'S

CLOSE TO HOME AND ·
COMMUNITY MINDED.

-OODL

Same Faces. Same Places. New Maille.
PeoJJ~e:s N,ational is n~ Cio/ National Bank.
.

I

.

NATIONAL
All the bank you need

'

.

'
•

.

'

' .
·. J~l

....c.,..._.f.JIIIIk.CGIII
·1
Point Pleasant. (304)874-1000 • Melon, (304) 173-5514.
, New Haven, (304) 882·2135-

Member FDIC

'

�Wednesday, June 24, 1998

..
Pllge 8 • The DaUy Sentinel

Wldneaday, June 24, 1998

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

.For over - the - counter pain
:medicine, cheaper usually better
choice for millions of ~ople ..
Even if you don·'t have a sensitive
stomach or bleeding disorders, it is a
good second choice when aspirin
fails to give relief of symptoms,
..
Excedrin is a mixture of aspirin,
acetaminophen, and caffeine. ll
works quite effectively, panicularly
for migraine pain. It is a poor choice
John C. Wolf, D.O.
to take before bed, tiowever,.because
of
the stimulant effect of the cafAssociate Professor
feine. Taking two Excedrin is like
or Family MCdiclne
, washing down aspirin and Tylenol.
Question: I see many advertise- because it has been on the market with a cup of coffee. The caffeine
mcnls for aspirin, Advil, Tylenol, si nce the last century. the patent has that is mixed with the aspirin can be
Excedrin and other pain relievers. expired. This means that aspirin . an additional irritant to the stomach.
Motrin is one braM name for the
. Can you offer advice on when one also known as acetylsalicylic acid ·
, product would be beuer for me than is now in the "public domain" and drug ibuprofen. It is effectove for
: another?
any drug company can manufacture , aches. pam and feve_r. JUSt Joke the
: : Answer: Pain seems to be part of and sell it. Thai is why it is very other medocones you ve menlooned.
·· the human condition. It is a signal inexpensiVe and sold under so many It can cause some stoma.ch upset, but
· from a body part which isn't work· . different brand names. ·
II docs thos less than asptnn but more
ing as it should be and serves to
Aspirin's major drawback is that frequently than acetammophen. The
focuses our allention on 11.
it often causes stomach irritation. genenc obuprofen works as well _as
Because aches and pains arc which can range from amild stom- brand name product~, so once agaon,
: prevalent, it is fortunate that reme- ach upset to a bleeding ulcer. You choose the one that os the best va:luc .
·· dies for them arc, too. The products .. can reduce this problem by taking an
Th~ best add~oo~al guoda~ce :
· you mentioned - aspirin. Ad vii. · enteric-coated aspirin product or by can ° cr 15 to 13 e at ~am sogna
· Tylenol and E•cedrin · are qn the using an aspirin tablet that contains senously. All of us exper~enee occa: shelves of essentially everY grocery an antacid in addition to the acetyl- soonal problems for Q/hoch any of
store. pharmacy and gas -sta\ion. salicylic acid. Also, taking aspirin thes~ products.. should ~ork well .
·. l;ach works quite well to relieve with food ' helps reduce stomach irr!- Persostent or repeated pam, on the
· most of life's annoying aches and tation. However, these measures will other hand, may be the consequence
pains and also fever. One isn't "bet· not climin~te the problem. That's of a problem tha~ you ~hould bnng
ter" in all circumstances than the why I usually recommend that my . to your physocoan s attentton.
other, but there. are times when you patients with stomach troubles usc a
may wish to try one over the other.
"non-aspirin" pain reliever. .
Aspirin is the oldest Qf the comTylenol is a brand name under
·. mon pain relievers and sets the stan- which several products are market·
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
· dard of effectiveness and safety cd. "Regular" Tylenol contains the
column.
To .submit questions,
against which the others are judged. generic drug acetaminophen, while
to
John
C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
write
: fl's power to bring pain relief is other Tylenol-btand products
Unlvenity
College
of Osteopathic
1111surpassed by newer drugs. For a include additional ingredients.
Grosvenor
Hall,
given problem, however, you may . Tylenol works no beller than goner- Medicine,
Athens,
Ohio
45701.
find that a different product works ic acetaminophen, so purchase !he
better for you. For most situations, most economical one when you
though, aspirin is still the best. ·
have aches and pains. AcetaOriginally, the Bayer Co. of Ger· minophen 'won't cause stomach irrjmnny had a patent for aspirin. but tation, so it is the pain reliever of

STORE ·HOURS
Monday thru
Sunday .

291 SECOND ST.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTinES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JUliE 27, 1991

•

FAMILY PACK ASSORTED

Pork Ch·o

LB.

TV

Sylvania
color fern'wtremote,
flat
. Public Notice
Public Notice
top w/remote,
desk, 3 tier
mah. table,
stand, pairrnah.
chairs,
:=~~~~~=T=]~~~~=~~TV

any or all blda aubmllfed,
Furtlllr, the abqve colla!•
., erel· will be aold In tht
jonciHI.on It Ia In, with no
. ,.,,... or lmpllad war·
.

,.,....lwn.

For further Information,
etlnlact nm at •
• 11.
(I) 24, 21. 21, :Jtc

Child's oak pr- blck rocker, oak lamp table, oak
PUIUC NOTICE
telephone, aJier Chalnl from old West Shade MethodiSt
Notice It hereby glvtn Church. Singer &amp;eWing machine, G.E. microwave,
that on July I, ,_from lllt:!~~slde::r~by side 21 .7 C.P. refrigerator w/Waler &amp;
1:00 P.M. to 1:3D P.M. a Ice
-like new &amp; more.
public meeting on th•
• GLASSWARE
Budget and Atvtnut 48 pc. Nortaki china, a p1 Toecaily china, Old salts,
Sharing tor tht year 1919 · FllllllaWare teapot, pitcher, a cupe, 1o plates, cobalt
tor the VIllage ot PonMroy, pitcher. Flelll bud Vl88t, ,Lustreware teapot, huge set
gr,~.:C:::Ic~~ htld at the or Pfallzgraff dlshee, 'llch wllllf set, Child's cup w/dog,
KatltyHyltll stemware, salt &amp; pepper lhakers, American FostoriaVlllag• Cieri! Rd. cake plate,lherberts-v-·butler dish &amp; more,
Pomeroy, Ohio Fenton basket&amp; &amp; odd pea, cutglass sugar J creamer.
Tom &amp; Jerry punch bowl &amp; cups, Jg. set Aunt Jamlma
(I) 24 tiC
salt &amp; pepper ahlkera, blaeuH jar, Venltian glass
rooeter bowl, oriental china, good fruit jars blue &amp;
110 HelpWIIIIId
clear. llowar poll, stone jars &amp; jugs, H.L. VanMatre
~ WV stone jar, Jas. Benjamin stoneware
depot Clnn. Ohio
crocka green &amp; whne· _Blue &amp;
whHe &amp; others plus more.
·
COLLECTIIIW
Lg. collection or COIIume jawelry, Elgin pocket watch,
Sflllon kitchen clock. waterbury k~chen clock, Jg.
church bell, German army patchel, WOrld Wll II
memorabilia's, Iota or Old newwpapera; 1915 calendar
~lblt tx1ract poster, old hall &amp; boxn, ejed, 6 11.
pouch therrnomeler, L.ong8berger balkltl; al)eel
Send reaume
nuic, Gene Strlllon Porter Books dlled 1913, old
or
Garman hllmtll; old adv. wood bolCft, old post cards,
Kranldln adv. box; '*I fancy gold gull1ed mirror, McCoy
apply In person:
army plctur8, pldure or old Cheltar coverad bridge,

w.

Needed

Heating

Sentinel
Claalfneda

992-2156
-110

Help w....

pful more.

&amp;eoo.g

:... ·..
I!OUBIHOLD

•••••••

\

TOOL8

lnctlvfdulll. STNA'I preferred.
Apply In peraon at: ·
Vetl111f11 Memorial Hospital,
Humen

Reaourcee Offtce,

V.V 111rgt au clay IUCtlon.

and n1c1 gJaaeware &amp;
~tel

l:varythlng II

reMJy 10 pulln yolK houle. Come lind spend the day

15

Auction Coliducted by
Rick PHI'IOn Auction Co. J88
""- 77W7II AuotJon Canter 17M44r
T.wte: Cllll cheak W/ID•.

11' Eeat Mtmorlll Drive,
or
t_--~--~l~!MM~~~~~-~~~or~~~ol~p:~~~~~~

992·5513

Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
. 5 pm-11:30 pm ·
weekdays
·
Sunday• 3 pm·10 pm

LIIIDSCAP
DESIGNS

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages. • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

ROOF TRUSSES
Southern Yellow Pine Con1trucllon
Custom ·Engineering

614-992-7643

•

St. Rt. 248

f ,. .e:::~~~~·

Tltr Trro1u1t You Std. Is lhr

So""f' You'/""'" In thr

·sk·1111 M.lk
s1••
I . •••••••••
GIL.

.

STOKELY'S (Asst. V.-r.)

·. Vegetables .. ·
.

'

14.25• 15.25
Umlt ,2 ·Pieriae
Add. Purcha1e 3~

bz.

29c

.
.
·CriSCO 011
..

$ 89

480Z.

ladies who did all the work:
Sandy. Rife, Genie Lipcomb, Ann
Hatfield, Crystal Richmond, Cathy

Plumbing

Buster Hanning for our

special T·shirts. All . who sef"!t

1998 Martin Street
, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

flowers, cards and all the food,
: Than~ You.
·

at Mizway Tavern.
1

Call740·843·5426

''

I/4/M1 mo.

•

COIIPU'fiR
PIRFORIIANCI
~~ · UPIRADII

$

_..Your One S&amp;ep
C::o•puter Sbop9 '
· Give us s call for system repairs,

Value

sgoo
Free Cas,h!

SUNSET HOME

CONSTRUCTION
New Construction

&amp;Ram•••ling

Minor Repairs • Cablneti • Siding
Roofs e Decks • Garages
lnaured

Free Estimates

740·742·3411

Tf:le

.'·•• .

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Antique auction- June 2e , noon.
Second and Main, Pt. Pleasant
Local stun, bottles, and advertis·
lng . 740 - 992- 5088~ Consignments
welcome.
Antlque bottle show and sale Second and Main St., Pt. Pleasant, June 26, 6·9pm . June 27. 9·
3pm. 740·992·5088. Free apprai·

..

~.

Rick Pearson Auction Cornpany,
full time auctioneer, complete
aucllon
service.
Licensed

15 -20 Acres A long State Route
35 , With .Acces To H1ghway; 740·

596-2128.

RN Or LPN Li·

tense . E~eperience In Long Term
Care Is Prelerred . Benefits· Are
A'o'ailable . If You Ha...e Any
lions. Please Contact Lisa Short
AI 740-446·71 I 2.

O#es·

Arbors At Gallipo li s Is Curr.nlly
Accept ing Applications For $tate
Tested Nurs fil g Ass i stants ~ We

plicants . Benefits Are A'o'ailab1• . II
\'a u Have Any Questions . Plitase
Contact Lisa Short At 740-446·

7112.

AREA SUPERVISOR ' •

POSITION OPEN

Multi· Unil Pizza Deli..,ery Fran .chise With Locations In 50 Mifes
Surrounding CMill1cothe Has Ar.ea
Super'o'isor Positon Open. &amp;olid
SuperliiSOry Experience A Must
As Well As E~cellent Communicalion, Organizalionat , And Leadership Skills . Result ·Orieoted
Person , Self Starter, And Positive ·
Leaders Need Only Apply. Pos i·
lion Curre!'ltly Report\ Direct.To
CFO Owner. Salary $30k Range ,
Plu s Bonus, Camp. Car, Medical
And Other Benefits. Qualilled?
Send One Ftage Resume To PbB

211, Chillicolhe, OH 45601. .
ATTENTION Certllled N•rolng
Attlttantt: Ravenswood Village

is now accepting applications tor
fu ll aM part time positions. Paid
..,acafion and holidays. If inlerestea . please appl~ In person Mbn·
day through Fr iday. 9am-4pm .
Wtite attn : Georgie Boso. R.N ..

D.O.N. 200 South Ritchie Avenue.
Raven swoo~ . wv 26t64, 30•·
273·9365. EOE Glenmark/ Ganl·

sitJ Eld~rcare Facility.

Carleton School/Meigs Industries
seeks a substitute Health Servic·
es Coordinator (RN 01 LPN) to
work wllh students and adults 'With
developmen ta l disabilities. ~ust
be a registered nurse or licensed
practical nurse currently I1Cel'lsed
In the State of Ohio. Send resume
lo:
.Steve Beha , Executive Director
Carleton SChooVMeigs lnclustries

P.O. BD&gt;&lt; 307

.

1310'Carleton Sl.
Syracuse. Ohio 45779

CHILD COMMUNITY SUP·
PORT PROGRAM WORKER I
CASE MANAGER 20 Hours Per .·
Week . Seeking Person To Pro· ·
vide lnte nsi~e Case Manage·
ment Services To The Most Profoundly Seriously Emotionally Disturbed (SED) Children. This Is A
Highly Visible Po sit ion In 'l'h'e
Community.
:
Minirnum Acce ptable OUalific·a tlons : Bachelor Or Associate Oegree In Social Work . Mental
Hea llh Technology, Nursing· Or
Closel~ Related Field Preferred:
Ability To Work Responsibly And
Independently As Well As tn
Concer t With A Multi·Disciplinary
Clinical Team And Support Stall.
Ability To Utilize Gu idance And
Supervisi on . Valid Drivers ll·
cense, Good Dri'o'lng Record And
A Su itable Vehicle Fo1 Transportation .
Benellts Inc lu de Paid \(acaUon,
Paid Holidays, 401K Retirement
Pian And More . Send Res ume
And Letter Of Interest To Judith
Smith. Director, Tri·County Mental .
Health And Counseling Services.
313 1/2 West Main Street, Mc·
Arthur, Ol'ljo 45651 .
Companion to liv~ with elderly
woman lor room &amp; bOard . N'o n·
drinkers. 304-675-1704.
CoupOns for cash . Earn up to
$200 per week clipping coupons
at home. Free lnrormalion 1-800-

466·9222 ••1 8865 .

Orlver needed for local haul, 27%
ol gross. start immediately, must
have current COL, medical card ,
drug scrHn, call 740·742·341 0

'

POMEROY, OH.

MOBILE -HOME
PARTS
•H•i• litentery"

ANNOUNCEMENTS

' 2 Week Vacat ion
"Aetiremenl Plan &amp; 401k
'Home Most Weekends

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

Anliques &amp; clean usecl furniture .
will buy one p ie ce or co mplete
household, Osby Marlin, 740·

·992-6576.

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks , t 990 Models Or Newer,
Sm ith BuiCk Pontiac, 1900 Eastern ~venue, Gallipolis.

·o

Auto

Parts. BUy ing

304-773-5033.

Condition. 74().446.9853.
005
Personals
Wanted': Auto's In Any Condition,
SOAP OPERA UPDATES NOWIII Call'740·366·9062.
Or 740·446·
1-!100·n3-" 55
7278.
Ewl. 1293
$2.99 per n;nuoe
· Mus I Be t Oyrs.
EMPLOYMENT
Strv·U (619)645·8434
SERVICES
World Wide Web Helpl Amazing

· World Wide Web Navigational
Secret• Revealed! You Never
WouiC Have Thouglll....

1·900·329·1293. E•l. 9796. S2.99

Per Min. Must Be 18 Yrs. Serv·U

Discount Prices

619-645-8434.

Bennett Supply

30 Announcements
DIABETIC I'A'I'~TS: You May
Be Entitled To Receive Your Dia·
belle Supplloo At No Cool To
You. For Mo ~t lntormauon ·1·888·
677-6561.
Now To You Thrift Sttoppe
9 Wtel SUmoon. Alhons

. 740.448 9418

1311 Safford
School Rd.
Q1IIIJIC)II1, OH

740·592·1842

(Cut Out lor Futu,. Otocount)

Quality clothing and household

1

110 . Help Wanted
All ldtchen help needed, (lnclud·
lng cooking) . Pick up appllcallon
•• Tlte Cool Spot, .(:oolllilt.
Appelacn6an Community Visiting
Nurse Associa tion, Hospice and
Healt~ervices, Inc. Ia seeking
expert ~Ired Nurses to provide care to clients In tl'letr t'tomes
·a fter hours (evenings and waell;ends). Qualified AN 's must have

a minknum of one veer of recant
clinical experlanc!ft In 1 home
care or acute care ee111ng, eJICII·
lent communication anCI problem

U•ma. $1.00 ' bag aale every

solving sklllo and flexibility. Con-

Thurlday. Mondey thru Saturday

tact Barbare Allan, Human Re aources Director at 740·594 8226 with lnqulrtes or send yOu r
resume to P.O . Bo• 7h, Athens .

e·

The Apphance Man
"NHCI .-pair on any
make?"
• Waahera ·
• Rang11
SinH

&amp;

wre ~ked or salvaged vehicles .

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any

•Roof Coatlnga
"VInyl Skirting
"Water Heatera
*Doors/Windows
*Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
*Fiberglas• &amp; Wood
Stepa

9:1J0.5:30.

.

· ALSOTEAM
POCITIONS AVAILABLE
For llflll&lt;outtd Runs

, Can Us To Learn More
About Our Tradition

,..

, -800.929-5003

Call Us ArtYIImel
Milch or Pennie

Come Grow With US......

SI.CIOO Weekly
•
Details. Ru sh (Long Seil·;(d·

Stuffing Envelopes At Home. For
dressed Stamped Envelope) To:
Ace, DePt: 1351 , P.O. Box 57e9

Diamond Bar. CA 91765.

.

Easy Work! Excellent Pay I ~s ­
semble Products At Home . Call
Toll Free 1 -800· 467 - 5566 ~I.

12170.

•

Exp. Dependable Diesel Meehan·
lc With Own Tools: Benefi ts P,o.
vldetf . Send Resume To : MEg::~:;c,.P· O, Bo~ 1o9, Jacks~n .
Experienced Auto Body ma n.
Send Applications to CL A437 G!o
GaiUPQ'Is Daily Tribune 825 Third

Ave. GaMipol$, onoo 4563t

Experienced H. V.A.C. Installer,
Call Yates Heal ing &amp; Cooling ,
740· 2~5-5858.

Experienced In Res idential Con·
struction Siding. Framing, Roofing.
Etc ., Own Hand Tool;, Phone &amp;
Transportalion. Call 740-388·
9385 For Into References Re·

qui rod.
Fast paced salon. hiring in all lo·
calions, Athens,store hiring now,
cosmetologist &amp; receptionist, calt

740-592·9707.

tmiMcUite opportunities In

•

roWr

area for STNA 'f:' For tiiCtllettt
Giveaway
01110 .5701. EOE
pay and details call nowl 814. ;;-:;:::::-;::-:-:=:0:::~-:-:::, Al....._at0 ,.
1111S3 .
2 Kllleno lb A Good Homo. Lltltr ~rbOra 1t Gllllpollt Is currently 22B·IIM2.
.. _
'lll_lntd.__;_7__;_...:..;
";;;380;.;.._ __
accepting eppllc•uans lor RN 't
Needed: Energetic, Kind ANI
•Dryer
.
· c
1nd LPN't . We are looking tor llodlcatod AN's And LPN'o lntlf•
, Hot Water Htallr
3 killona. I black/mole, 1 cream/ dependable
apptlcants.
Must
malo, I black/White female, liner ha"" a YOIId Ohio AN or LPN II· esttd In Caring For People rn
• F~
tralntd. 8·8wkl old. 30•·675· c.nu.
Our Pr.ogresslve long • Tere,
E1~rtence In long Term
• Dlahwa.....
3332.
Cer• Facility. Mu11 Be Sentill•
Care 11 prererrtd. 8eMflta are
To Tho N10d0 Of Tho ElderiJ.
Cell Ken Young
8 Teddy btor like puppleo. good •••liable. II you haw ony quoo· Pilose Apply IN Peroon ~I
Uono,
piHM
contecl
LIM
Short
wllh Children. 7•0·379·92~ Coli
(740) 9115-3551
Soenlc Hilla N&lt;nlng Center. 3t)
at7-7112.
.
t11er 8:301)m.
8uclufdge Rd .. l!ldwol, OH •sao•,

f.

•j

Cltange YOUR Dlreclkln ...
Join OUR Family Tradition
HARRIS rAUCKING CO. .
Lyr-.:hburg. VA.
We Otter Our Dri\lers:
'Up lo $.35/MIIe
'Co. Pay l'or Heahh

J

I
''

Rain or shine· SR 124, Portland,
Ohio across from Portland p·ark.
June 25 -? New treadmill , $225:
gootl color TV, $125 ; 3x12 pool,
solar co'o'er and all . · 740·9492065.

Gallipolis. Ohio 74().379-2720.
90 Wantad to Buy

. 0 .614·992-5479

INTERNET SIGN.UP POINT
POIIIIER()Y, OH

Powell'soSupe~ :

•

113 W. 2ND ST.

ssles, upgrades or consulting.

The advertisement that ran
in The Dally Sentinel
• should have had this
disclaimer at the bottom
of the ad:
P.aid for by Goldsberry for
th~ Court of Appeals,
Javon Kittle Cooper,
Treasurer, 17 W.
~ashington St. ,. Suite A,
l ,.
Athens, Ohio 45701

Sund•y &amp; Monday edition·

1:OOpm Frldoy.

Wedemeyer's Auction Servi ce,

"
JEff. WARNER INSURANCE

Free Estimates

&amp; Bonnie Ingles

•

Advanee. Deedllne: I:OIJpm the
dey before the ed It to run,

360° Communications·

· • Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.

Thank You for 12 wonderful years
George

SOmolhlng Fa&lt; Everyone!
·
Pomeroy,
Middleport "
&amp; Vicinity
All Yord Soltl M•ol Be Ptitd In

CELLULAR PHONES

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings

All our customers and friends,

;

Joe Wll1on
1614) 992-42n

Lotta·s
COttSTRCJOIOtt

Crystal Richmond, Thank You ·

. ALPO
Dog Foc,d

Wed , Jun.e 24th Thr.u Frl June
26th, 8 112 Miles North On 160,

166.0hlo &amp; West Virginia. 304·
773-5785 Or 30&lt;1·773-5447.

'·

it.

Stop In
Stoll't
ForDetalla

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

"Build Your Dream"

Lori Patterson for our beautiful
cake;

Have A Valid Ohio

Drivers:

for the photo album. We treasure

$ ., ,

c

M &amp;J

Gravel, Sand,

•
•
•

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Umeitone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985·4422
Chester, Ohio

Limestone,

Musser, Lence Basham, Loretta
: ·Barley, Kristle Barley, ~renda

Win A Bankl'ioll :
This Week:

SINGLE
ROLL

.

American Misc.

-~

Re Le HOLLON
' TRUCKING

WICKS
HAULING

Remodeling

Garage Sate : June 25th, 26th,
143 Second Aven ue, Bab~
Clothes, Fostoria Coin, Glass 1

~

12/11/11n

614-992-3470

• Moore,. Virginia Underwood.

j$

MASTER B.LEND COFFEE

BOUNTY .
.PAPER TOWELS

Roofing

Friday &amp; Saturday, June 26th ,
27th , 10·5, Addison Township ,
Swisher Hill Road, Girls Clothing,
Household Items, Etc.

Ucensed &amp; Insured
~Phone 740-992-3987 ·

· llime StoneLow Rates)

..

Custom Homes

· 10JIO o.m. Soturdoy.

• tft2J1 mo. pd

n

•

'""

VANCID

lie Plld In Advonce.
DEAQUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tlte day boforellto od
• It to run. Sunday
edition ., 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mandlly odhfo~

Brian M01rlson

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
· III!'J Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding
;...
• Commercial 6 Residential

Full line of_water storage !&amp;nka·
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanka
Water line· 100' thru 1000' Rolli
Sewer Pipe· 3" thru 8", Gas Plpe &amp; Regulltora
Open:
I
. ~ .....
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00.12:00 Saturday

so great and a special night. The

Morning Cer·
13 oz.

·MAXWELL HOUSE...
.

81111811 1 pd.

• hard to m~ke our retirement party

(Aslb,le Yarllt~es) .
'13•13.2 oz• .

34.5 oz.

Free Estimates

following people who worked so

Blueberr~r

AU Yard Solei Mull

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Aller 6 P-~ ~
(740) 985-4180

••

•

.

Take the pain oirt of
painting, and Ill me
do it lor you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leavemesaajjl.

~. r-----=~~=-~
We would like to thank the

Post' Cocoa1 or
Fruity Pebbl,•ts un

Road, To End, Turn lei! To Bulavllla Pike , Turn Rig ht To Greentree Road, First House On Right.
Curtains, Clothes , Kids, Adults ,
Boat, Weedeaters , Tools, PontiaC
Motor, EIACtrlc Cook StoVe &amp; Dryer, 4 Wheektr Braided Rugs.

· HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

PAINT~G

4 Family : Friday 261h, Saturday

27th , 9-5, Our Bulavllle Porter

ft~~~~~~~~~~~
I!) JD CONS7RUCTION .

fit . ·

Card of Tbanka

oz.

Gallipolis
.
cn
2 Family: Friday Only, Rodney II
8-4. Chlldrans, Womens , Clothes
&amp; llems. Orjel, Lights, Yoret

. (7 40) 985·3948
·

Yard Sale
&amp; VI 1 11y

First Three days
ROBERT BISSEll
FREE POI'(ORH ANO IIAUOONS
Opening July 1st.
Free Estlmatesf ·
CONSTRUCTION ;... '•
'li!!)
THE ALMOST
Owner:
John Dean
•New Homes
EVERYTHING STORE
•Garages
New -and used
•Complete
We Buy-Sell and Ttrade
Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons • Remodeling
MEIGS
while they last.
Stop &amp; Compare
Come In and see us at
REFRIGERATION
FREE
'..
202 Eaat Main St.
·Residential
air
ESTIMATEES
. Umeltone Hauling
Pomeroy,Ohlo
conditioning
985-4473
House &amp; Trailer Situ
992·1074
•Auto atr condlttontng
7/22/lln
·Heat pump
Land Clearing &amp;
•lnstai!Jtion &amp; sorvicc
Grading
$25 serv1cc call.
Septlll System &amp;
Don Sm&lt;th
Utllltlea
37814 Peach Fork Rd .
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plaln1, Ohio 45783
Estlmatn
Pomeroy. OH 45769
740-985-3813
(614)
992-3838
992 -2735
4" thru 48" pla1tic culvert In llock

LINDA'S

Clomflfll S.n1ao

70

No Job Too Small

ii!!! 27 yrs. exp.

985-3301

·

LOST: Norweg ian- Elk Hound.
btack/su,;,r. whioe-spoo on chest,
neutere~. medium-brown eyes.
shy. Missing since June . 15.
Black/brown/wh ile beagl~. t ear.
~~;;;~29~sing since June 15

·Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Rnldentlal
Free Eslimates

11:-t

. (No
Sunday
Calls) _ _~211;.::-:.::.::::.~
..__ _ _....;.:
__
_.....,::,__...;..

,

Bladen Road. 74(}-256·1399.

P/B Contractors, Inc.

Computer Graptm:s
Designs
All Landsc!lplng &amp;
Lawn Service's
•Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

914fTF"N

9" Rib Pattern
$1.25 per runnln9 foot ($39.40 per aq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14',&amp; 16' Lengths
For uses on Pole Barris, Garages,
Storage Buildings &amp; Por.c hes

Call for Quote Today

Arbors At Gallipolis Is Currently
Accepting Applicallons For RN 's
And LPN's . We Are Lookin~ For
Dependab le Appl ic ants. ~us t

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching •
Umeitone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

6:00.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING.

BlUM LUMBER :
'

;s

BORDEN

wtth 1111

or

Agricultural • Industrial ·Automotive.'
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy.· Acc_e t Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

. ;:=::==~::;;;;;;:;;;::::

Beanu;

.

Yard toola, old 1001 box, old 10011, Hometne weecleater,
Arlene&amp; HP
wheel horN 10 HP 31D-B lawn

Somathlng

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES
740-698-9114
or
740-698·7231

•Room Additions
•New Garages
·Electrical _&amp; Plumbln"
•Roofing
•Interior &amp;Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Worli
(FREE ESTIMATES) )
V.C. YOUNG Ill .
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Chester ·

'32 oz.

"""'*·

Veterans Memorial Hospital SNF Unit
1- looking for Caring, dedicated

RADIATOR REPAIR

.

Pill ChiiiiS

poll l Plfll, ftltWIIt. linens, books,
"*ten, plclurW, lllck telephOite &amp; box, fanl, seera
Hoov«
bird balhJ, plant lite products, bee
kllplng supplltt, Cllt'lltmll decorations &amp;
bldaprNdl.

P.O. Box8
Chtlttr, OH
45720

l:ARPET

Aunt Jan•e's

Hambur!1•r

Ae~~•ewar.

.

•

.

0.. food Ctlnllr, Hamlkon 'BHch Roilier,

Gun Shoot every
Saturday Night at

(7YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEYICE

SJ59

Pork 4!l

FURNITURE
Beautiful 8 pc. maple DR suite, early dropleaf table
w/rope twist legs, 4 pc. .Cherry poster BR suite.
(Quaen or full size), 9 pc Basset French DR suite, Lg.
Baaeet HI-Boy chest, 2 matching corner cabinets,
Rock City JJ~e chest, cedar chest, wardrobe, BR
suite, FJexsteel 2 pc pillow back LA suite, recliner,
maple end tabln &amp; coffee table, Zenith color console

HVAC
Installers

"

Long hair lluffy asSOfted color kit·
tens. male and temale , 740·992·

:,TRUCKING

RECREAJON ClUB

1·740·949·20 15

. 740-446-9416'•1·800-872-5967

Arbors at Gallipolis is currtrftl~
accepting applications tbr state
tested nunlng nslstants ... We
are looking lor dependable ap·
pllcants. Benefits are available.
If you have any questions ,
please contact Usa Short at 740·

Are Looking For Dapendable Ap·

CALL

"Where Qrmlity Doesu 't Cost More"

AVON 1 All Areal I Snlr'-Y
Spellll, 304-675-1~29.

446-7112.

5597.
60 Lost al)d Found
Found: Female Beagle. No Collar.

""

Help Wanted ,

Tiger Sulped Kittens, 740-256-

6419.

starling of $5995
949•2168
FOUND: Whlle/lan male Beagle,
740 992 2 2
· ~5/t:&amp;:/tf:n~--~Bea le· Meadows area Gallipolis ,
t._ _ _•__•_" _ __,r I.==~;;;
r
Ferry.304-675-2644.

ROOnll AND SIDING ,

L.oc:altid It the AuctlonCenttr on At.- 33 In
Muon, wv. Will bt 11111ng the contem ol the

. , ..., . . .... right to .......

R.C. Co a.
Pr.oducls

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

Male Akita Ml•. 1 Yeor Male Baa·

gle (No Papers) : 2 Year Tan Mate
Cocker Spaniel (No Papers) ; 5

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESTJMA':TES

• Blawn lnsula~on
• Gorages • Decks
24 X 24 Pole Building

· linri·nrn:;;D.pulii•M;niHDiiis•ta;;L;-""·-, r-B-1-SS__E_LL__B_.U.....
IL-DE-R--S,--1--N--C._,

10:00 leMe

·· The Farmer• Bank and
..,.ngt company, P-y,
· Ohio, r...rvta the right to
' ttld at thla aale, and to
withdraw tht . above
oolleterat prior to 11la.
. Fur11Mr. the Fa,_. llenk
and lavina• comp•ny

$5.41

SHOWBOJILT

prellnt.

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating ·

*Free 5 Parts Warranty
""Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

f/11198tfn

SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1991

1G1LT5402LE133M3

'28 a month
Heat Pumps As Low AI *38 a month

Air Conditioners Aa Low As

Free To Good Home : 9 Month

ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR

• Fascia • Seamless
Gvller • Roofing
• Replacement Winclaws
• Sta~onory Dock$

BACKBOEua
DOZER SERVICE

'"Easy Over the Phone Bank Finallcillg"

12 Pk. Cana $2.39
Llmll4 Pluaa ·

AUCTION

10:00 o.m., a public
.... will liM held at 211 W.at
s-nil Strael, Pomeroy,
Ohio, The Farmer• lank
and Savino• company
parlllng lot,. to Hit tor caah
tile following collateral:
1. . CHEVROLET •
CORSICA

Add.

. ~~~:t,!'?~

~

PLUS

Achieving a perfect 4.0 grade Candace l. Tuttle, Racine , were
Three local students have been
point
average and being, named to . among · I 16 students named to the
named as honors students at
Washington State Communify the college's Presid-ent's List was dean's list, earning a grade point
average of between 3.5 and 3.99.
College in Marietta for the spring Sheri L. Roush, Portland.
•
Debra
J.
Teaford,
Portland,
4nd
term ..

,..., at

.....

Ca"7-I0-448-6982.

Howard L WrlteHI

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

.f . --

TRPPRn
,_ ......,

I

2 LITERS I

'

NOTICE It hereby given a

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Air Condition~.:;at Pumps

.I AM·10 PM

· Three named to honor students list at Washington State

t11at on Salurd.y, June 27,

Black &amp; White Shtltlt, Friendly,

$ 919
Umlt1

110

8mo.old part beagle/part spaniel,
haa shOts, nxed , dog house. to
good homo. 300-675-7528.

24 PK.12 OZ. C::ANS

.

Glveaw1y

40

Pepsi
&amp; MI. D•w
Products

edicine

home oiJelln Summerllelcl Frederick a lifelong
,..dent o1 Cheller, Ohio. Home contelned
artlciH from Mre. Frederlcke llmlly, Including
1tem1 from J.S. Fi'lnk (Squire Frenk) John W.
Frenk, Nol'l Frenk, Brown and Guy
SUminerlleld. llema date from late 1800'1 to

___'!fl~ Dally S.entinele Page 9

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohl_o

40

•

'

�.. Plot 10 •llle Dally Sentinel

VVednesday,June24,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

PHILLIP

ALDJ!:R
oak HIM, OhiO Ttucl&lt;lng Company
lOOklng For Experienced Semi
Tractor iraller Orivtra, excellent
Pay &amp; Insurance Paekagt, 740·

-13.Be_,8-5.

340 Business and
Buildings

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'79 Liberty 14x70, throe bod·
rooms. fire~. 18500. call 740992-4020.

Commerciai·Offlce or Aotall, 87
Mill St. Middleport. 1,450 Sq Ft.
$400 mo. Corner Building. 740·

Brend Newl Groal Glftt CO/Video

14 X70 3BR. $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 plr mo. FtM air l fiM tllr1·
tng. l.-926-3428.

door).

6pm.

350 Lots I Acreage

APT AV.lii..AIIU NDW
'TWin Rivers Tower now ae&lt;»pting

Exporlenood carpenter will do rt-

~~:~:~:~~ ~ :

11

I

dacka-, vinyl siding,
Frtl estimates. Call

. 3CM· 67~1272. Rtfer-

,.__.request.

overbrook Center. 333 Page

Furnilura rtpalr, reftrUsh and res-

Street, Mlddltport, Ohio hiS full

toiiHon, also custom orders. Ohio

time and part ume STNA posl-

lions ovalloble for all ahlfll, an·

Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry
!'hlllps, 74()-992-6576.

yone Interested please Slop by
and 1111 out an application. 740·

Georges Portable Sawmlll, don't
haul your logs"to the mill Just call

am.

992-6472. EOE .
POSTAL .JOBS TO t11.31 fHR.
tnc. Benllill. No Evrwrtence. For
~
AI&gt;!&gt;- And Exam Info., Call 1·81l0113-3585. Ext 8474 . 8 A.M. ·9
P.M .. 7 Days fds.lnc.

304-675-1957.
:.:_:...:__:__:__1-R::--..,.-:-:11::-

18•80 31&gt;&lt;. 2 bath. $1 ,325. down.

RoQters and Siding Installers

Noodod For Immediate Employ·
ment, Apply In Person AJ. CMs·
lien's Construction, 1403 Eastern
Avt .• Gallipolis , OH 740-448·

-- 4514.

Painting, Plumb ng, em

ng,

Any And All Odd Jobsl Free Ea·
lima~ 7.M1•-•151
·-· ~• ~ .
Prolessional Tree Se"'lce, Stump

Removal, Free Estimates! In·
sural)ce. Bidwell, Ohio. 614·388·
96411 • &amp;1 4·36HOtO.

Will Do Commercial &amp; Ro.-tlal
Cleaning No Job Is Too Small.

Call Beth, 74o-367·796e.

SceniC Hills Nursing Center, 311
Bucl&lt;rtdge Ad., Bidwell, OH 45614

11 Now Accepting Appllcallons
For Friendly Outgoing And De·
ptndable STNA's Please Apply

In l'lr1oli At Tho Front Desk Bet·
- 8:30A.M. ~: 30 ~M .
Scenic Hills Nursing Center 31
Buckrldge Road, Bidwell , OH

454114 Is Now Accepting 1\p!llica·
Hons For Part· Time Laundry And

Houaokuplng Aides. Pleese Ap·
pty tn Person At The Front Ceslt

Between 8:30 A.M. ·4:30 P.M. No
Pilant ca1s Please.
Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
. Now Aecepllng Applications For
A Part·Time Rastoralive Therapy

wm haul Junk 01 trash away. $351
plck14&gt; lOad. 31J4-675-5035.

Never ~epay.
Call Toll Froe
.1·800·218·!1000 Ext G- 2814.

1995 14x50 2 Bedrooms. 1 Bath.
All Electric, Wltt'l Stove &amp; Refrigerator, Underpinning Included,

Mull Bo Moved, $11,000, 740·
256-6040. Or 740-~123.

Professional
Services

230

B &amp; W Garaee. St. Rt. 338, Letart.
Ohio, 740 - 247-~22. propane

tanks filed for grills &amp; RV's.
livingston's basement watlf·
proofing, all basement repairs
dona , tree estimates, litelime
guarantee. t2yrs on job experl·

enee. 304-675:2145.

hiVe or t&gt;e oUglble to Obtain Ohio

cenlflcatton.

-iOn

Send rosume '&lt;1f .lJne :lO to:
Molgl County Board ol Mental

make arrv such preference.
limitation or discriminatiOn:
This newspaper will nol
' knowingly aa:ept
adverllsements tor real nlale
whiCh lo In violation of tl1o
law. Our .-is are hereby
lnfonned that alf dl elings
atlver1ised in ths - p e r
are available Cll an IQUill
oppor~unlty basi!.

· Drug SCreening. Apply In Person,
10 A.M. To 3· P.M. Mon. Through
Fri. At The Knights Inn Rm . 15.
404 Chillicothe Street, Jackson,

WANTED ~PUENT
MEC
IC:

WILOUFE JOil TO $21.110 fltR.
Inc . Benelllt. Game Wardens,

12x60 3 Bedroom House Trailer

$2,800. 740-4411-3709.
3br home in New Haven, 1230
sq.fl. E11ce11ent starter homl,
ready lo move ln. All appliance•.

135.000. 31J.1.882·3197.
4 Bedroom Brick, Vinyl. Fenced
Yard, Walk-Oul Basement. AI·
tached Garage. 1/2 Acre Lol,

Security. Malntenaco. Park Rangora. No Exp . Nooded . For App.
And Exam Info Call1·800·813·
38111. Ext 8475. 8 A.M. • 9 ~M .. 7

740-245--9820.

Days Ids, Inc

balhs. $25."000. 112 mile on
paved road Plea&amp;ant Ridge Rd.

uo

Busln111
Trllnlng

112-acro land with 4br. 2

Gallipolis Ferry, wv. very nice
location. School bus goet right

lryhouM. 304-773-5040.

"'9' At Bucqye Hills Caroer Center. Let U1 Know Your Interested.

A-

FaN Roglat-n II Open In July.

Stop In Or Call For A Brochure.

740·245·5334 . Financial Aid
To Tholl Who Qualify.

150

Schools
Instruction

LOOIIfNCI FOR A ~01... But
Short On Skllla? Gain Skllll fn

wide 3br, 2 bath , only
$1 ,325. down, $205. per month.

HI0()-691-6777.
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homu

-1111caro Tochnlclen (Formerly
lllllfll Aldl). MR/00. Pro·Emp1oy011nt Training, And More ...
COli 740·245·5334 For Catalog
And hlbn•tlon.

110 W.nt.dTo Do
NffDGOJOR

tt-.

ll/lnAII I mult:lllng, • - • bodl, tandoclll&gt;lng,
li41WIIk ldgtng, mowlnt,
ote ... FrH Eatlmo~ - Coli Bnl
:1f14.175-7112.

Houle lor aele at 379 Salem
Slreet In Rutland, 5 moms I bath
with garage and han baument.
Out of lite· flood IIH. cal II 74()-

742·2065.
tn MlddiOJIOrt· new kitchen. ook

, _ , 8abytlftlng $t.50
...,
· Coli
Jonna Or Looa,
_,_
, 7-1-1127.
I

I 111 CeNI $17.15 Por
1,100 Print /lflglt Clulllly
CtiiC&amp;B - l n g 74o-1f73.
Circle ·N· Convaloectnt Home,
· . ... 2 ()paning~ Eidlrly Or ......,.d Porson In M' Homo,
7-1-111311.

· -'"~
Merit
CnM*, Owrw HICH71·

w-s

end-

1371
·&amp;klint ·Dooro •
IIDolng. Llonod

1/2, ... 74()-1192·3485.
with all options, only $2.•11.
down, $382, par rmntll. FtM II &amp;
ll&lt;lrt. 1·88H91-em.
Lovely Country Home On SR 1
SoU1h With A Breathtaking River

Vlow. IItty Private Se!ttng On 2 1/
2 Acru But Only 10 Mlnut~t
From ClaHipoflo. 3 ~ Bod.....,., 2
112 Balha, Hardwood Floors, 2

Flraplocoo, Now Holt Pump, Now
K-n. I!Jtny Eldru Won't Laot
Longll $110,000.

Middleporf, betutMul two story, 3_
br, 2 b'th, lorga t.r. I lr., Olk
doorl ' trim. Smllll'l custom ook

-·-hod-·

cablntts, Jenn-alr range, dllh:·

-cor---.•-·--·
5243.

bytp-

--.-27,1-

111:00-1:1:410

540 Steond ~. Mktftp!N't·
&amp;.ldfuf tint ~ ld:UOJII Vlctorfln
llome, grtalloceiiOn; • • • -

Prtoo rwducld.

s.aa.ooo.

.,

IIIILITAYLOII MALTY

1'11111_...., - I n IIIJ I ; ·~
hugo ..., n1c1 cornel lot, 740·
812-7411G enylfrnl.
'

.

'

•
'

Fot Rent Excetiont Ollice Or Reta1
Space Approx. 718 sf With Plenty
01 Parking Located: 26 Cedar,
Clalllpofis, 74o-258-6881 -c '

caoh Paid For Lfd In Ga11ia
Counly, Blackbur
448 0008. .

Aiaify,

1•0~

Mobile home site l\l'alleble bet-.
wean Athena end Pomeroy, call

.

74()-385-4387.

Smtlll H.,_ Or Traitor In City Of
Galllpollo, Clooe To Stores. For

pn.,.._

Prtce, 304--675-77.3,

MERCHANDISE

Wo Pay Ca1h. 1·800·213·8365,
Anthony land CO.

510

RENTALS

383-CI8II2. .

(RIPOI

Sot 141 on 101. Best Ollar. I00-313886l!.

____ .._ ___
12180 · remodeled

Monarch

throughout lining on ronlad lot.

l40.mo. As-Ing $4,800 . 080
Muot 1011· 199e Rodmen. 14x70,
two bedrooms, two blthl, ucet-

paymenll 10 move In, no pay·

.

Household
. Goods

7795.

Include• aktrdng, dtluta • •

and Mtup. Only 1117.01 per
month wltll 1107&amp; clown. Coli 1·
100-137-32311.
N!W lANK RII'O'I Only 3 IIIII
Sllll under warrenty, owner II·
nanclng available. 304·755-

7191 .
Now Doubi.Wido 38R, J bath.
$1.325 llown &amp; $205 per mo. 1·

IIIIQII-3428.

Sf.... ............ Spoclll
linonclng on 2, 3 1 4 bedroom
homes. Pey . .nla 11 tow ••
1110. Ctl- 31).1.7~ •..
Bpoctot 1lxlo · 31R, 2 bttll.
tl.32fl Down, hUll Mo. Froo otr
&amp; frlllknng. t.eoo-et1-1m.

--

.......
..,_..
,.. _, .......
-SIICIA~

1-8()(H99-3499. •

Polly'o -

.

a Uood furnflunr

we now hiVe Army &amp;Jrpt..m
2101 Jefltrworl Avo.
Open 9:30 • 5:00 Mon-Set.
304-675-SOFA (78321 .

3 Bedrooms, 2 Beth Houle In Alo
Granda Aroa, 1·7118-1184-3493.
:J-.4 br hOUn located In Pomeroy.
Newly remodeled wltll new carpet

Uood Furniture Slore Below Hall·
day tnn, Kaneuga . BodS. Couch·
es, Oreuers. Tablet, Desks,
Lamps And Morel Summer. Hrs .

and kitchen cablne~• - S•50. per
month and.aecurlty dapoait. 740992-691HIIor 5pm.

Monday Thrtt Friday, Hrs .- 10·8,

740-448-4782.

1 ·I BEDROOM HDIIEI FRDII
SO,OOO Local Gov't . -&amp; Ban~
Aopo's Caii1·800·522·2730. X
1709.

Utt~~d

Window Air Conditioning

Units. Qlfloront Sizes, Guaronltod,
740-1186-0047.
.

steel shaft and regular

12xBS Trailer w/1 acre ol land,
14x70 trailer w/2 acres ot land.

Wlllsel or rent. 31J.1.578-2880.

530

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260·$300, ltwer, Wiler and

-·no

Ga~

Plalnl, 1275 month plu1 deposit

lize 7. 'peld S700 wilt lake; $300:
74o-387-o286 or 740-8411-2481.

440

125-CFM gas comprestor. call

740-992·7548- !IJ!m.

18,000 BTU Air ConditiOner. '74o4411-7123.

1 and 2 bodroom - -· lur·

nllhld and unfurnished, securlly
de_pollt required, no Pals, 740·

•930's Old Singer Piddle &amp; Ellc·
trlc Sewing Machine, $150, 080.
74()-2541 8345.

9111!·2218.

740 ... 21!QQ.

·-

.

2 Bedooom A!&gt;al1ment fn Gallipottl. Dopo11t, No Pota. 740-381·
11828.
· 2 Bedroom Apt. s- and rllrlg
Included. 74 Court St. GolfipoNa.

7~

----------~------ ,

2bdrm. lptl., lOIII eleCtriC, ap· .
pllancoe furnished, loundry room 1
Cloelto ldloolln town.)

lacf-.

:tir:'' 3
NI-

&amp; diiCI.

Modl1on

PLPieMtni,WV. Ap!N.

~174()-379-2211 .

BEAUTIFUL APAATME"!TB AT 1
BUDGET PRICES /lif JACKSON . Fntivol ond fair Food Bootll lor
ESTATES, 52 W11twood Drlvt Soli. Will Conalder Trade. 740·
from $27V to U51. w.. to lllop 1 245 01103
·

-

•

Stw•.t::

OQII trwlerl, 10180 I
IbiS, • - and relr~t~rolorp· Now Toklnt Applteotlona- 35
gu.-LimeAd....... - . Wtll 2 Badroom Townhouao
7·7-.
=:.tment' '12111/Mo., 740·-..

330 firma for 1111
t 12 Acrea, HouN1 Worll:shop,

Outlluildlntl. Welltrn Galllo
County, 115,000, Equlpfltlnl
Avolllltl'-, Sepaptltl,, 114·238·

.

...... l'foci nolriCCI!IIing
liPif!ICIIIOIII lor HU0 _,llod
aptl. lor oldlrfy/ltlndlc-.1 or
-people. EOH. 304-112·
31210&lt; 30WI2-3274.

Wltlt Gold CI.E. till. Wor·
rorrflr48Dirlf 740 44111111.

~ -~a.~,.~~~~~·,~~ridlr~'!m~-~~
· ~t2~1rp_.•_w_
· -·7M3.
·

&gt; Orubb'l Plano- tuning I

Nlct 1 Badroom Aportmtnt, I
Country Stdl ..l bUIIIII. Roule l
au, 12eii/Mo., il(jter,
CllrbJtOIIrlcltrdld,'Otpoatt

iruhd.•••-l,

1Wo 2 t j

\

11111112~.~~~~~~~~~

1\p!ll~tlono IYIIIoble at: Villtgo
Clrllr\ Apll. 149 Of call 74()-992· 1 Etoctrlc HOipllal Bod Wilker,
3711. EDH.
·
Comode Choir, I Tobll, Clood

port. From. $ZIII-S373. Clll 74o- '
992·5014. Equot Houafng Dppor--

TAlllnCIAL
Now 31H SHI/clown $111/mo.

811541.

BMnle'a: Amerteon Trio $1.300,
Mapto S300: Radar S300, 740·
I ~379-2W,;,_;.;__4.;.·_-_4::-P.:-.M:-.-:-.:-::--:::::-:
ATTeNTION: Wt'll PAY YOU
TO LOIE UP TO 29 Poundt, 47
PoopJo lmmeclilllty Ollar
Explroa, 7181V8, CALL 740·441-

=;;;;i;;;~-;;ia'~;;;;;; l UO; Whirlpool Dfyer $15: All

-.wv.---

Froo .... up I Dell..
Lolli a..~
tro wv: 104-75HII&amp;.

Floor, All UDIItltl Furnlehod Ex·
cepl Elec:lrlc. Cen1ral Location,

-living. t rtiltl a ''J oom .
0,1-ntl. YfiltOt _ . . . , 1
lllvtrlfdll Aporl"*'ll In Middle- I

117........

.,..,MO I

1193 Cub Codot Riding lawn
- . r - 1841 .... Dock. 18
HP. Wf1h Cu. Ft. Trallor, E'""'lent
car-.. t3.200. t40-441-oo&amp;3.

1 BedfOOI'I) Uhturnlahad, 1at

packing. 304-743-5of00.

TRANSPORTATION
- -

710 Autos for Sale
'91 Tempo, white, 4 door; amlfm
cassette, air, power window&amp;,

child sefaty locko, 13500 OBO.
74()-849·2483.
1110 ·11t0 HONDA CARS FOR
t!OO Seized &amp; Sold Locally This
Month. Call1·800·522·2730 Ext .
4420.

Trudia. 4x••s, Etc.
1981 Bonneville Pontiac $300;

740-256-6345.

BlOCk, brick, sewer'.pipea, wind·
ows, lintels. etc. Claude Winters,

Rto Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121.
Pole Building Specials: 24'x42'x9'

with two tO'x8' overhead doors,
one 3' entry, insulated root &amp;
stamleu gutter, erected price

-·Post--

t8848. 30'x48'x9' willl one 14'19'
sliding ·door. one 3' ·enuy, seamtau
prloo t7385.

uu-.-

Inc. 1·1100-3118-3021J, 740-992·
8418.

Pets for Sale

560

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming.

tires, bat·

tery, paint and front brakes. 740·
1987 Buick Riviera, ·make excel·

1987 Chivy Cavalier, 4dr, with

AC . Fair cond. $500. 740·9928914-Spm.

Problemt? -

-lrl.

T - Clll tho

P'lno0r..740 1.. 152!1

Ho!palnt woehlr $SO. 1~· Color
TV w - 180. Stetmer I1Urtk
$40. CO!ftpound Bow $10.
Tlrll(21 235110AI5 t:IO. Tifll(2l
2351701115 $30. Homo Slorao
Spo-F-180. Miracle-Oro
~lahf food 10· 1 1141' p1k1 wl
r-r S15. Frao a-1 pene wind-

- . 304-t75-11244.

Ja- tqUipmenl. 20• Electllc
aulo acrublltr. Ueod ..,Y 111111 .
$2,000. 740-. . .14.

black &amp; whtle, $125 eaCh, 740-

378-6406.
Schnauzer. miniature, AKC ,
champion bloodline, 740·467-

3404.

610 Farm Equipment

~ GAN TeLl.- YOU Tt4E

TIMt 0~ Ttlf
P~~Gf, IUT
tlOT

mlnum Jon Boat. 1987 CaroNna
with

8HP Mariner engine '"1811 -oiling ..
motor. llsh finder . $2,000. 304·
675-5756.
.

•

1993 21ft. Mirada Cabin CruiMr.

••

''

•.

, ·

20ft. Citation wn:railel', inloutboard

~rw~.~r~a~s.~
C, amlfm ca11ette. $2600, 304~

422t .

1989 Corsica V·6, "utomatic, AJ

22 Ft. Sea Ray Cuddy Cabin

motor. 170HP. $4.995. 304-875·

BOT~-

'·

1988 Ponliac Bonneville SSE.

"'

~1&amp;1-1 ... I W~ RE.TIIt-IC:&gt; TK.'.T
[ 11"-D eK..C..OfJ£ f..·~ &amp;:EN~ .

,...00\m£ ~ l TI10U&lt;?I-\T ""'
t-W.&gt;T IT, I

~lZf.D

.

'T~f...T I. 1'\~V(f:. ~y ·11~...,.
&amp;.Et.( I~ Tf\E. FI~T ~K£!

'273-3307.

C, $2.395; 1989 Joop Comonche
Pick-Up Bucket s..to. $2,295.
COOk Motors, 740-448-0103.
'1989 Ford Tempo, run1 good,
needs windshield , loti of new
por11. $1100. OBO. 304-875-7398.

1991 Dodge Daytona Sholby Tur·
bo Fully Loaded, High Miles, Ex-

cellent Condition, $4.000. 740·
319-2847, L - Messege.
1994 Cavalier RS. 4dr, auto.

Perfect Condition, AI• Accesso·
rles, sn,5oo, Blue Book Value

Hardtop Includes Dining Area

With Sink. Alcohol, s._, Buin-tn
ICI Choat, Slerao, Port ·A ·Potty,
New Lower Unit, Glmbie Rings,

Exhaust

Manno~. Steering

Ca·

bill, Bauery. Staintesa Steel

Prop. Cuatomilod Storage Cover,
18.500. 74().448.7106.

35 Horse Power johnsons Good

Condition, $800, ca• Between 1 -5
~M. :ll4-675-5131.
warranty, three seaiar, 83 I'IOrH·
power. bought new July or '97,
three matching Kawasaki Ski
vests and trailer all go wllh 11,

$5000. 740-9411-2203

Of

740-949-·

204S , will consider trade for a
good pontoOn bOll.

SACRIFICE

1987 Oceanic Soo Imp t8011p.
Mercruiser lntboard engine. tift.
deep· V w/lraHer, tlfe jacketa &amp;

1999 Pontiac Grand Am, Hall
Damage, Huge Discount. 304·

bumpers. 740·446·3814 . Makt
ollar.

578-2241 .

760

67 Flreblrd, 3.8 Iller, overhead

- · very good condilion. $2,300.
74()-992-2191 .
Credit, Problems? We Can Help.
Easy Bank Flnahcing For Used
VehiCles, No Turn Downs, Cafl

Vlcklt, 740-416-2897.
Sllzod Clro From 1175. Poroch·
es', Cadlllaca, Chevya, BMW'S,

Avo-.304-451·1088.

720 Trucks for Sale
1981 International Cargo Slar
1700, PS, 31.000 actual miles.

Auto Parts &amp;·
Acceaaorle•

1111 tanka' &amp; body poria. 0 &amp;
A Aufo, Ripley. WY. 304·372·
3933 0&lt;1·100-27:1-9329.

790

1972 Starcrall, call lor iii&gt;POinl-

· ment.7~.

J 95

Pass

46

aummer

I Lacquer
lngrwdlent
7 Round

By Phillip Alder
Henry Brooks Adams, an American hislorian, wrote. '"The difference
is_ slight, to the influence of an
aulhor. whether he is read by five
hundred readers. or by five hund~
lhousand; if he can select the five
hundred, he reaches the five hundred
thousand:" Of course, his royalty
check might be somewhat larger
·from SOO,OOO, butlhey didn't worry
so much about that sort of thing in
those days ( 1907).
A reader from Fort Pien:e, Pia.,
who requested anonymity, sent me
this deal. He had been Wesl, on lead
against four spades, and asked what.
he should have selected as his lead.
Well, what would have been your
choice?
North probably felt 1hat ~is sec·
ond-round raise to four spades was a
slighl underbid, but what else could
he do?
.
Wesl led the club queen. Declarer won in the dummy and played a
diamond. which Wesl won. Wesl
switched to a trump, but it wa,~ loo
late. South won in the dummy and
.lost another diamond trick to Wesl.
Back came a second trump, bu1
declarer got 1wo diamond ruffs in lhe
dummy. His 10 winners were four
spades. two bearts.lwo clubs and 1wo
· diamond ruffs.
"Was the club queen such a_bad
' lead'?" my correspondent asked. True,
• it was superficially atlractive and, I
suppose, might not have been-falal on ·
o different layout. However, with his
slrong diamond• over Soulh's firsl·
bid suit, Wesl should have led a
trump. And he should have kept leading 1rumps every tiine he won a dia·
mond Irick. Then South would hove
oblained only one diamond ruff and
finished one down. He would have
losl one heart and lhree diamond
lricks.

'

.' .

~

'

''

. ·'

I Gulda'o high
noll

'
•
••

8G,..,tener

o1J1ec1

1~Fiommlble

mat8rll
a
11 Wholl

.•.·• .1-'~
••

Jewllll
-lc

.. .

12 Germen ciiY
:. ;;
19 Flbulous bird ... •
22 Ancient
· • •
~

' ' ~

24 Dogholel

2t'""-

All pass

28 Gorden toota
30 Metchleu

34

HolllndaiM
lt1111111er

. •"

35 FMIOUI

rtetbeclt

.

- ..

nny-

.....

.. • J

40 Eucolyptua

.. •

.. ".

42 Untidy
44 lrlore likely
411-Gou
Seem
50 Doc lor

.. '
...
.

.
)

"l
1·Ac-.
Sebaltlln --: " ..

52 Run53 Sick

... · ..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

'

'

'

.

peop.;

c.brity CipMf C:'YPIOQI'II'r'll Ire CteMtCIIJOITI quotltiOM by IM'IOUI
pul-.d pr-..nt
EliCh leltef in the cipher Nndllof another. Todly't CIW: S equtls L

'z c

KM

K

FC

K

KilL

FKWDJM

OJMACW.'

AWCKD

KO

KFCWJXKM

JDKSJKM

AWCKD

DR

JLRS

·oX R W XC 0 C ,
R Y
0 J M K D WK.
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Knowl~ f;rank Slhatra was an honor. To me ha was
lha greatest artist of !he cenl~ry . - Julio lgles1as .
.

'.
'

'::~:~'

S@\\.oUlA- "f..~S

----------

l~ltod loy

Rtclf'ranga ltttlrs of
0 four
.....,mblod word•

'

.

... '

8 WOII
eAMI

CLAY I. POUAN

the

bo·
low to IO&lt;m lour simple wqr:ds.

:1

A W R E .E V

I 1 I I I'

..

1

' '

'

I
It---rl---.ll:'i""l.].,.-;I· ·

'

w0 L R G

E G A V U I=
..:'
1--TI....,I;.__rl
.,..
_
.TI
~...-f..
I

'"

'

I '

.'

The jilled coed concluded
'that if all the big fish that got

~=-~~-::;:~·~-:::;~,·away
were. in the sea, there
wouldn't be any room for the

r

I

II (

.•

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQYAIES

I-.....,~z-ri_T_,H_,c,Nr-11 ~ ~~plete
•

•

•

IS

•

I
•

V

the chuckle quored

•

by filling in the missing words

r 1, 1~ r 1

vou devefoo from step No. 3 betow.

~~·~~~~~E lETTERS

1_•

_

•

_

• ·

II I I I I

SCUM lETS ANSWERS .
Grouch · Motif- Quota • Symbol- FOR YOU
"Middle age,' e woman said to her friend, 'is when
the phone rings on a Saturday night and you hope n·s
not FOR "''OU .'

''

...
•

••

IWEDNESDAY

1995 Jayco Destgner Series 34' • '
camper, like new, ~ltchenlllving •
room lllcte-out, queen bed, center

bath, llde·t&gt;;·lilli, priced to sen,

J.UNE 241

740-e61-3222.

24 Foot Travel Trailer, Sleeps 6

'

'

$3,400. 304-11112·3237 altar 6pm. ·

t982 Ford shortbed, motor and

.

'.'

a

.

Rool Ak CondHioner, Very Good
Shape, Asking SUoo. ·74o-256·
1382.

Oldie But Goodie: Winnebago

Nice Conctitlonl $2.500. 740-388·
8820.

bed, automatic, loaded, positive
traction rear-end, two tone,

Pop-up camper. Sleeps 1. Great
$4000, 3114·773·5139, 3114·773· . condition. AC/h..t. Oven .......

5038.

and .link. Electric, gas. or bBI·

1&amp;n,Ford Explorer 81•000 miles.
18,000. 080. 304-87H438.

!IJ!m.

tory. $3,000. 740·992·8914 afler

SER VICES

&gt;

(

:38 =-:fgtoncl.:.
~
lfypnollc
.. " ~

•

door retrlgerator, 18tt. carefree
awning, king 1ize bed, new ttres,
•.o Ona generator, runa great.

-304-&amp;75-3823.

..

, •..
'

i I

1973 2311. Dodge CDncoldo, gall

body good, runs good, S775, 740-

In-. no lUll. 304-&amp;75-3823.

Q 10 8

electric hut, microwave. - .

-

1989 Chevrolet Suburban 2500.

... .."-.,.-

,......

Campers &amp;
MotorHomn

740-742·2455.

314 ton. 2·wheel drive, ex. cond.

•

3 lf8iute .,.....
32=1hoeiiD 4-thl-.on
5 Pll'lllln
33 Llon'a home

PEANtJn
..f1Jf...

1998 3011 . Sprlntlf traVel trailer,
lull awntng~ ,CIA heat. Used 4

992·3875.

BIG NATE

KaWasaki STS Jet ski, still under

$23.275, 74Q.448.35n.

11110 Chevy Silverado 350 tong

FARL1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

12 Ft. Coleman Fiberglass Ca·
noe, Paddle, &amp; ure·vest, Like

I"

Upton Used Cart Rt. 62· 3 Mites
South ot Leon, WV. Financing

Purebred Slborian huslty puppies.
s!M old, IWO rod &amp; white, five

lion, $1000. 740'992-7487.

18.000.080. 304-675-,1218. .

NOTICE
fNOCh Clly "-! Clnlomlng
-()pial
Proftllionel (!rooming by Appointments. OWir 15 yrs~ experl·
ence, evening appointments
available, 650 Second Ave. Gelllpolia, DH. 740-446-1528.

'92 X2 Jet Ski 1 excellent condi·

THE BORN LOSER

Large goldfish br outdoor pondl.
t15. oach. »1-675-1845.

.

$7500, 740-742·7101 .

in/outboard motor, 4.3 engine,
plus all acce11orles . 304 ·87563511 after 5j&gt;m.
'
,

1llltnlna2 Optic
IIIIPIIC8tor

Opening lead: ??

'90 Cheetah. open bow. 18', 4 r:v·
IInder 1/0, with accessories ,

boat lraller, galvanized,

DOWN

Which lead
to make

shape. 304·&amp;75-2714 or 304-6751577.

Corveriea. Also Jeeps, • WD's.
Your Area. Toll Fr" 1·100·218·
9000 Ext A-28U For Current
Llsllngl:

291t .

ACARD 'AMEll

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

2· 1995 Kawasaki 750SS Wave·
Runner1 wldouble trailer, great
shape, garage kept, low houra,

1987 Toyota Cellca. 5sp. air,
North Carolina car. no rust, Ex.

1994 Toyota 4 Runner, 8 c~.

1200, ShOts /Wormed. 740·379-

16

NOW TO FIND ME

4111.

1986 Dodgo Colt. -

Jerome-

25 A-longottlng IOUnd
27 Stick IOgltlter
28UMIIIfiW

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Soulb West North East
It
Pass I 9
Pass

2 Honda 300 Four Wheelers ,
Four Wheel Drive, Needs Re·
pairs, $t,850 Each, 740 -446;: .•

1987 Fishor llot bonorn 15ft. alu·

K

118 t11ron0 polnta
17 8houfei

.. 7 2

Rides. $17.300. 7~.

1995 Chryaler Cirrus. lff,500,
740-245-5393.

NI.C Rog Golde!&gt; Aotr-r pupo,

Golden Retriever Puppies, AKC

t

=·=

31 Chltf::

9 K 63

Custom , Black 600 Miles , No

trelter, 740-742·2580.

DBO, 740-258·1252, 740·2581818.

white Cockatiel $50. 740-992·
8814-6pm.

1998 Yamaha WaHior, good con·

1985 Mercury Marquis $500:

1994 Ponllac Sunblrd, V-6, 5
Spood, 2t,OOO Miles. Rod. $5,300

Bird. Jtnday conure. Hand
raised. Tame. $350 . Grey and

• A

dillon. $2.800 . OBD. 304·578·
2553.

1964 Evinrude Sweat18 Tn haul,

• 7 4 3
.. 9 6 4 3

South

Of New Stuffl74o-441-14t9.

675-3560 ...... message.

AKC English Springer Sp8J11ol
P.upa, 6 Weeks Old, 1sl Shots,
Wormed, $150. 740·258-6935.
~~Affer=·~5._ _ _ _ _ _ __

~- '740-~788.

1991 Honda 250x 4 Wheller LOIS

90 hp. Evinrude motor, Evinrude

• QJ 98

A Q 10 8
8

~lent

24 Compow

• 7 5

Q J · to

1983 Mus lang 4 ·Cylinder, Au·

4C'/I. toadod, good cond. 89,ooo
mileL $4.850. 304-578-2118.

Riedy To Oo 81281118. 2 Males, 3

• 8 32
• 10 7

2011. NolrisCratt bass bolt, 20011p , ,
Mercury motor. lrailer, tackle/ . , •
lures, other extr.as . $6,500. 304· · ~

Shiels. 373 Georges CrHk Ad.
740--.o231.

AKC Registered Rolt Wellers,

• AK~
Eaal

1984 Honda V65 Sabra, 1100Cc . .
14,500 Miles. Water~. Shaft
Drive. utoe Now. 740-441-{1443.

="~.

23~..
.-nt• .

• 8 2

Many Extras To Llstl ·show Con·
dltton' $4.950, 740·388·9780 Af·
ter 5:30 P.M.

411 v... ,....
411

lllncllgnlllon
47 Sliort ....,
2D vega cube
48 Buoy
21 Weltem IIIII'Sh 11 rc-lng (olltr.)

• K J 9 4
9 A 54 2

$4200 080. 740-949-23t7.

1982 Cutlus Supreme, 2 D. 280
V8 . Good Condition, 11,800 Or
lle$1 Oflor. 740-992-.

tent work car. Asking $700. 080.
304-675-7937.

Building
Suppllas

17

1984 Harley Davidson Sportoter

New. $125. 74()-245--9322.

finish wfth tho Cotol DEK Of Rub·
bol DEK sjstems.
PAINT PLUS (304)175-4084.
Wolf Sun Oues1 Tanning Bed
Longenburger Basket. Home In-

ex. oond. 11 ,200. 304-675-1278.

lornlitic, le95. 74o-448.Q390.

~~-cy

•

11 Acta like.

1997 Harlsy Davidson Soil Pale

992-6914 after 6pm.

740-448-1032.

$1250; wadding gown with veil

for Rent

Milton, WV. We do vacuum

19 NisHn Pulsar'. s 1peed. new

1'11111 bodroom biller In MldlliiPOf1,

Apartments

tom, 2573 Vatel Crooslng Road.

Austl'llllan Shepherd PupJHea, 1
Male Merle. 1 Male Tricolored,

alze 7, pold $1400. witt taka

$300 monlh plu1 depooll. HO·
11112•3194.

Nelson 's Custom Proc(aalng
now open. Formerly Jones Cus-

elm, 740-9411-3306.

Marqula wedding set 112 carat ,

· 740-117-3487.

Fruhan With 2nd Calf 7112 .
$850, 740'256-8230.

Your deck Is the center or
entertaining and rec::raallon
i
ltlea. So don't just give it a
ish" . Cilva II a qua111y ~lkkens

Male Blue Merle. f Male Tricot·

1/3 cerst. round diamond-...
size 8, peld S800, wilteke S550:

Tupper~

Full-BlOOded Jersey COw Due To

orod, 74()-448-10:11.

Tralltra for rent2br &amp; 3bf, quail·

-ndo.

992-m9.

540 Miscellaneous
-Merchandise
Central Ak Conditioning. Free Es·
timatoot If You Don't ca11 Ua, WO
Both Loeol 740-4411-8306. 1-800·
2i1-o098.

11H for HUD. 304-773-5944.

French Alpine Goat. BUck, · 6
Weeks Old, Weaned, $!50, 740·

Australian Shepherd Puppies. 1

•cooL DQWNI•

polis. 74().448.3907.

1984 Honda Aspencade Too

Moore owner.

Schoola, l.oclled CloH To Clllll·

and -

Waterline Special: 314 200
$21.95 Par 1 OO: 1• 200
S37.00 Por 100; All B.rass
prouiOn Flltfngo In Sloo:k
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
· Ohio. 1-800-537-9528

ready on 7-6-98 , M-$175 FM·

1124 E. Meln StrHI, on Rt. 124.
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 740,992·2528. Russ

2 Bedrooms, No Pets, Clt'f

1'closed
11111 bodRIOin
- In
In porch,

H&gt;158.

S200. cat NOWt 304-895-33811.

Buy or sell. Rl¥erine Anllques,

- · 740-992·2187.

2 Bodroom Trlltor. C~ To
iipolil, 74()-258-8574.

Antiques

Horse: 8 Week Old Gurole Clated
Stud Colt, 140·387 -7875 . HO·
387-0183, 740-44 I-o425.

1·91l0-!122·27:l0. X 3901 .

Featuring Hyllro . Bath . .Pon

Sporting
Goods

1000, runs great, looka great ,

• Tan At Homa
Buy OirOct and SAVEl .

Washers, dryers, refrigerators.

ranges. Skagga Appllancoa, 76
Vine Street. Call 740·448·7398.

I Year Old Gentle Quarter Mor·
gan Riding Mara, Good Trail

34 C11or1o

lwatwn
· I Huntlna dog
_.., 7 Kind &lt;#...
loulevlll'd
13 Fooi'IIIOkl
37 Ninth mo.
14=~·· 40C--11a.._WI)

1961 Honda CA -400 low miles,

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Commercial/Home Untts
From $199.00
Low Montllty Payments
FREE Color catalog ·

Motorcycles

2 Small Pont11 Child Sale 1500
Each. Both For 1800. 740·448·
8981 .

1980 ·1990 Trucks For $100111
Seized And Sold
Locally This Month.

terior. 740-258-1068.

&amp; movies. Call 740·441·2511 .1
Equal Houaing~.
G. E. Woallor $125: Maytag Dryer

U-IIoloo

Scooters. Electric Wheelchairs,
Sales : Rental , Trade , New &amp;
UHd. Bowman's Homecare, 740·
446-728a

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

monlllllor 4yro. 304-755-7111 .
Nw 111118 14x70 tiVII -oom.
lncfudol 6 '""""" FAEE tot roni.

740·992·3725.

MORt THAN SKIN DEEP.

Appliance•:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Rangel, Aefrlgrator&amp;, 90 Day Guarantee! ·
French City Maytag, 740 -U8·

410 Houaea tor.Rent

One

WITH SIKKENSTHE BEAUTY IS

We Buy L•nd: 30 ·500 Acres,

2 bedroom mobile home In
pals, 74CHI82·58511.

.

polilli. ., 740 -

Real Estate
Wanted

360

Frl~ay.

tree TV (small) Beanie BBby with
every S2S or mora purchase,

port, 74()-992-3184.

no lond needed. Only at Oak·
- - 111110, WY 31M-7118IIIIL

Make 2 Payments Move In No
Paymtnta Af1tr 4 Ytlfl, 1·100·

etc. Tuesday through

50x123' trailer space In Middle·

-

(111.9851
OAKWOOD HOMES Barbouro•
vilo00H38-340jl

AEMTION MOTORS
Aopalrod, New &amp; RsbuiH In Stock.
can Ron Evans, 1·91l0-537·9528.

460 Space for Rent

gto-wldel: 304-n:l-5944.

·month. Free delivery &amp; stt·up,

NEW 3 1£0110011

304-675-4548.

304-773-5651. Mason WV.

loti for aale·publlc water a lew·
er, double-wide&amp; ONLY! no sin-

for Rent

Coli Virginia L.. Smith AMity At
740·4•8·1106 Or Call Coro At
74()-245·8430 For Moro lnlonna·
lon.

046-4722.

Ping driver and thrH wood wltll
rtex. The
driver has a wooden hoad with
10" loft. $100. for both clubs. 304875-5856.
.

14 or 16x80. Only meko 2

Loaded 2h80, 3br. 2 112 bath

Auto TechnoiOQW", Air Co-.dillontng &amp; Healing. Farm Bualnau
Planning, Analysll , Computer
'Spectaltll, Customer Centered.

Sleeping rooms with coOking .
Also trail•! 1pace on river. All
hook · ups. Call alter 2 :00 p.m.,

420 Mobile Ho-

Toll Free 111 800·218·11000 E•t.
H-2814 Fot Curreml.fsltngl.

Of OplratiOn. Train In: Aduh
B.. lc Education. ClEO Tutlng
Site. Ofllce Tocllnotogy. Welding,
fnduatrlai .Malntenanee. Peaee

Lot for sale· Gallipolis, 901172,

nice neighborhood, quiet. 740·

ba .-.1. A muot· - · priced to
sou at 116,400, can 740·992·

lent condition. 11rlou1 lnquirill
or"ly, 74()-9411-1:117.

Ytar Of Training In The
Evenings. Buckeye Hilla CerHr
Canter Conlinuel In 111 22nd

Ofltetr /Ciifroctlons, SUCCESS,

740-441·5898, 740-441-5187.

520

From Pennies On S1 Delinquent
TalC, Repo's, REO's. Your Area.

cablneta. dlahwaaher, dilpoaal,
heat pump, thllNt bedrooms, bath

one

Rd .. 19000.740-992-45411 .

Two bedroom In Pomeroy, $300
per month, $300 doJIOIII, pay own
- . n o poll, 740-982·2381 .

Can 11ay or be moved. Lot rent

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK GOT Double
rou STARTED... But Your Em·

ployer May Demand A Ll~fle
More. Lot Ua I&lt;Hp You Learmng.
Train At Night. Take Adull Traln-

Weefdy Rates. Or Montllty Rates.

real rock underpinning. gardel)
IUb, etc. Ell rllnt condition. Mutt

I.MTEII OfFER
1991 lloublowldo 0 Down $295

Dressing table , stroller, swing:
playpen, baby- bed , &amp; car seat.

Pomeroy Tnrlri Shop now buying
large outside toys and baby
• Items. walkers, toddler car seats,

Conslructlon Workers Welcome

3 Bedroom, Very Clean, Stove &amp;
Aehlgerator, Central A/C, large
Yard, 2 Cor Garage, Rt Ts $400/
Mo.• + llepoait. No Pets. 740-2566056. .

Largo setoctlon of used homes. 2
or 3 bodrooms. Ster!lng at $2995.
Oulck delivery. Call 740·385·
8621.

310 Homes for Sa"

Furnished
Rooms

Lot tor aale, 1.5 acres located In
Syraeuae Village on Roy Jones

7690.

REAL ESTATE

~ppro• .

cuse, 112.000.740-992-4561 .

numeroua upgrades Including

Ohio 710-288-3129.

450

Circle Motel LOWIII lllatll In
Town, tjewly Remodei8d, HBO,
Clnamax, Showllmt &amp; Disney.

Lot for sate, 1.2 aeres In svra-

nanclng .....-. 304-755-7191.

CA, catllodrll ce•ngo. att drywll;

----

182 Midway Drive. Cha(lotto
wren , 304-882-2038 sifter 5pm or

74()-448-7488.

875-7948.

menta, assume loan, owner fl·

Hurry I 1993 1Bx70 mobile home.
rwo bedrooms, two balt,ooma,

Drapes, lined plus aheera, like
newl Wetldry vac- used one time.

Ludwig Drum Set With cases Call

Run Start Park. price redueed ,

1100.

Hugo 28x80 3BR, 1 112 bath.
Starting at ONLY 139,999. Many
opt1on1 avallablo. t ·888·928·
:Je.

Of9n, .. eny ........ .,

Trace V.ntures Ekplorat~ns. Inc.
Will Begin Taking Applications
For Sei!lmic Workers On Man·
day. June 22. This Is All Out 01
Doors Work, Very Physical And
Long Hours. We Work 7 Days A
Week And You Mutt Be Willing
To Travel, Have A Valid Drivers
L1cen11 And Be Able To Pass

1t58.

Reference &amp; Deposit 740·446·

Boat J\lmp on 124 next to Forkod

Water. Tr.aah Paid, 740·388·

ollllllv. WY.

not--

JET

home. One mile 1rom Ohk) River

ABANDON HOME Make 2 'pay·

111 o.tc ood 304-7-.-.

sex familial status 01 nat60nal

no

ter and trash paid, total electriC,

Upstairs Apartment, Close To
Grocery &amp; Downtown GaiUpotls,

2 Bedroom Cottage On Bulovillo.
112 Mile From Porter. NO PETS,

a

Hmltatlon or discriminatiOn

room, 1235 depollt, $235 montll,
pets, references required. wa·

• 112 acres, water, electric end
.....r. choice opot. Ready for eln·
gle wide, double wide or build

1807.

tro, WV.
reGister to win free
doublewlde, no glmmk:kt . Ontr

based on race, color. religiOn,

Upstairs apartment tor rent.
downtown GalllpoU1 , one bed·

COt &amp; tapes

740-742·2937.

·building, Price Reduced 128.000.
710-388-9636. 740-3611-8323.
94 Clayton, 3 bedroom. 2 full
bathS. etorago building, In ground
pool, 740·949·3306 or 74()-594·

storage unit. Black and eherry.
Never out of box. St25. Holds up
to g•o dlses, a11o holds tapes.

Call 740·992·6636 aflor 8 pm.

With Additions Fruit Trees, Out·

FREE 001• E·WIDE
Slop by Dakwood Homos ol Nl·

to advertise ·any preference,

and Deloolop-181
Dlaobii1es
P.O.Box307
Syracull. Ohio 45779.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EIIPLD'IER

9.5 Aorea With 2 Mobile Homaa

evel-. 304-755-55418.

All real 8Siate advertising in
thiS newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of t li68 which makes Hillegal

Department or Education multi·

1:00·5:00 At 1·800·339-8518 For
An Appolntmont.

dor1on 740-992·3348.

Divorce Forces Sales-Take over
paymenta, 2br, 2 bath. financing

ployment, appllc•nts must also

y Truck&amp;.

1995 Clayton, 141170, ell electric,
excellent condition. call Tom An·

_par month. 304· 675·6512 after

copped. EOH 304-675-8879.

8 acres or 2 acre Iota on Bethel ·
Ad.· WV. No slnglewldes. 304·

1993 Redman Mirage, 14x70,

deposit; all ulllltloo paid, $150

lzed apt lor elderly and handl·

1981 Governor II, 3br, CIA, new

carpet. »1-675-3840.

pooj,te, $100

application• for 1br. HUD subsld· ·

(AmNTION DEVELOPEIII,
. CAIIPOIIOUNO
COUNTII\' EITATESj
.38.28 Acr11. Apprbx. 8
Lake. Mobile Home With Large
Add On Galllo City Water And
Electric $125,000 Mora Acraage
Available. 74()-388-8878,

31&gt;&lt;,-&lt;:fA. $12,000. 304·875-5661 .

Business. Medtcal BMis.

(nexl

740-687·3222.

back for pool, new outbuilding,
120.000 firm, call 74()-992·5053,
leiYe message K...,·answer.

FREE
CASH
CIAANTSI
c.."fj8'scholarships.

Aequltltlona

rnshod. 17000. 74o-985-3543.

a

of Education Teaching Certificate.
To bo consldrirod lor full time em-

Equipment. And Hydraulics. Sal·
ary Commensurate Wllh Experl·
ence. Call Monday ·Friday From

1974 Hlllcreat , t2x56, e~~:cellent _
condillon, two bedrobm, central
air, all electric. used as summer
home, must be moved, full fur-

Snape. Asking Price $8.500, 740-

Teaching positions available· a1
Carleton School. Full time ,and
aubstllute opportunities tor teachera wilh currant Ohio' Department

Experienced In He

baths; 74()-843-5327..

1992 Commodore. 14.:80, on
rented lot In Middleport, close to
shopping, scho&lt;)ll, pool park.
Three bedrooms, two full baths,
!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. total electric, 2x8 wala, cathedral
recommends that you do busl · . ceilings, 3 ton central air con«U·
IIoner, two skylights, lront porch
·nea&amp; with peopl8 you know , and
NOT to send money through the .and back deck, carport, • • above
ground pool with new pump, liner
mail until you have Investigated
and
solar eover, prt'llaq fence In
the offer"'9.

Please Apply In Person At
Scenk: Hills Nulling Center, Bel·

~

1963 Champion, 50~~:12 , two bed·
rooms; 199• Spruce Ridge Skyline. 72114, two bedrooms. two

Buslnell
Opportunity

qulrod. Dependability A Musil

• Medical Insurance
Call 800·878·0680 Mon ·Frl 9:00
A.M. To 5:00PM.

$205. per mo. Fru air &amp; skirt. 1·

88H9t-em.

~2456.

Must Be STNA· Restorative EJC·
perlence H'lpful But Not Fie~

SUMMITTRAHSI'OIITATlON
OponloiQS Fot OTR Drillers.
• .29e Per Mile
• $12.50 Per Hour
• Unloading &amp; Drop Pay
• Personalized Dispatch
•HomeWeeicly
o 401K -Vacation. Holiday Pay

mo. koe air &amp; skirting. 1-800-891·

1917 14~~:60 2 Bedrooms, Good

FINANCIAL

Asllstont 10:00 A.M. -8:00 P.M.

· -8:30A.M. ~:30 PM .

1••70 3br $999 down, $198 per

992·8250

Smoft 1br lpl·1 .. 2

740

ACROSS

•

'

~~!!~==~~~~~===-~~LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The~ are

your mind to it TOIROITow you might ..
UTilO·ORAPB
. slrong chances 1hat, lhinJs . c.ould not feel quite as induslrious.
~----- Work out beller than you aQtiCtpate
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 19) II
·today. WhaJever you do, don't let isn't likelyyou'll be upslaged by othBERNICE
your faith wave"'
er.~ tnday •• your popillarily is comBEDEOSOL .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A inS: to .a . high point. _!!_nd your
condilion affecting your earning _ demeanor will attract admirer.~. ·
•cupobility will begin to make changes
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) If
ror the beller today in ways you may you have the ti!l~C and inclinwion,
111nday, June 25. t998
be unaware of.
this is a gOQd day to so bargain hunl·
productive year(
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Har- ins- especially if you're looking for
could
oftinR for you. There mony can be ~sloml in a ~lation- · on unusual household item.
'may be.in~ng developments thai ship that"s been unsteady ·lately. ll's
ARIES (Man:h 21-April 19) The
will improve conditions in areas up 10 you to offer the olive branch.
ability 10 think on your feel is your
Where disappoinlment onc;e pre·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) arearest a.~set · 1oday. You'll malte
vailed.
Somell'linl! secret is &amp;linin&amp; where smart moves while others are still
CANCER (June 21-July 22&gt; Don't work is concerned today. When il's ponderinJ! lbe fact.,,
.
wa.\le your lime and tal_$n(A on mun- revealed. it may not plca!!e yDUr N10TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
dane objeclives loday; you're likely ciares. but il could pu1 a smile on your F'mancial condilions look favorable
to be far more fortunate if you strive •race.·
IOday, but don't sweat it: your 111051
.
Iror laiJICU of 1111e significance. Know
SAGITIARIUS (Nov.' 23-Dec. profitable opportunilies ~II be.-msl10 look'for romance and yoo'll _ 21) WeiJ!h your decisions compas- , neem~iby someone else.
it. The Aatro-Graph Mt11Chmak·; siOnalely ioday. Base'your judgment . GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20) Hapl e~;::~~reveals which signs fiR on how others will I* alt'mcd, not by · peiiii8IICC 8nd chance could play
1~
perfect for you. Mail what you slliJd tD gain.
·
llqer roles than usual in 11111ters of
10 Mllldlllllker. do this _ . ·
CAPRICORN (()elc. 22-JUI, 19) penonal imponance today. When
P.O. Do~ 17~1. Muny HiD ' YDU
jet work yDU've been brush- you
the sianals. lite positive
51aliclll, New York. NY 10156.
in~ finished IOday if you put action 8nd aim for the best.
·

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(

. :·

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.,,
•

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"

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•

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~,

�Thu

Wednesday, June 24, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 1~ • The Dally Sentinel

Weather

Olivia de Havill·and and thS\ 'French Patient'
year in an interview with The Asso- the corner.
By DOUGLAS J. ROWE
ciated Press in Paris, where she's
"When I made the lunch, it was
Allocia!M Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Olivia de lived since the '50s, she recounted not always on time. I would be lookHavilland's recent real-life perfor- his long, painful years of treatment. ing at a recipe, studying a recipe and
And now de Havilland - ·who's trying to make a dish he would like
mance could almost make Miss
Mela~ie look like a meanie. And we also endured a longtime feud with very much," she says,,self·effa~ing­
all know how gentle, sweet and giv- sister Joan Fontaine - has another ly.
Why all this for an EX-husband'
ing her "Gone With The Wind" "family situation," as she puts it.
She says Galante was diagnosed ·
" Because he is the father of my
character is.
She's taken in her seriou,:y ill ex- in February- with what, specifical- daughter and I'm grateful to him for
husband, 'Pierre Galante, and she ly, she won't say - and his (loctor having giv~n her to me," de Haviland their daughter, Oisele, have though! that it would be best for him land says.
not to return to his bachelor apart- ·
been helping to care for him.
Spoken like the Melanie Wilkes
who unwincingly cared for the C0nDe Havilland imparted. this per- ment _
So de Havilland and her daughter federate Army 's wounded and never
sonal detail during a recent interview to explain the unfinished state decided that he should live with her. fretted about Scarlett O'Hara's
She rearranged hef household, designs on her husband.
of her long-in-the-works autobiograAnd as if to let you know she's
giving the master bedroom to him
phy.
"A lot of real-life events, illness- and putting herself in an adjoining not angling for any medals, de Haves in my ·family, have impeded its bedroom - "just 12 paces from illand points out that no~ she's "sort
progress, but it will be finished one Him, so that at night he would -know of a bystander, a presence, the landlady" for the man she calls " my
day," said the two-time Academy someone was there."
Award-winning actress, who turns
At first, she and her daughter did patient, The French Patient. "
In her first visit stateside in a
virtually everything, including all
82 July I.
De Havilland los( her son, Ben- the cooking. After a few weeks. they decade, de Havilland isn't here to
jamin, to cancer six years ago wh~n d~cidcd they could usc some help. talk about" family matters. She's realhe was 42 - he had fought So now, for example. someone ly here to tout another theatrical rcHodgkin's disease since age 19. Last fetches a hot lunch at a cafe around release of "Gone With The Wind, "

which remains arguably the most
popular J110vie of all time. (Among
those arguments: its innation-adjusted domestic box-office gross totals
some $907 million, putting it StOO:
million abead of "Star Wars.")
The 1939 film, which won eigl•t
Academy Awards, had major rereleases in 1947, 1954, 1961, 1'.167
and 1989. This time New Line Clllema - which is sending more than
200 prints nationwide- is ,touting
technological . i!11Jlrovements:
revivtd color and remastered sound.
In addition, 12 minutes of the film's
negati ve have been digitally restored
to eliminate scratches, smudges and
other imperfections.
Audiovisual improvements aside, ·
de Havilland says the enduring
appeal of "Gone With The Wind"
stems from "the human element set against a compelling canvas.
'.'This 'huge panoramic· background," she explains, "that is The
War Between the States, and the terrihle devastation that meant."
And since all countries have

I

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7 p.m. with
work in master mason degree.
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Annual meeting. Carleton College Board of Trustees,
7 p.m. Thursday, home of Robert Wingett, president. All members urged
to attend.
POMEROY- Town and Country EXPO meting, Thursday. 7:30p.m.
Meigs County Fairgrounds grange building. COmmiuee members and others interested encouraged to aucnd:
· POMEROY - Sharing and Caring Suppon Group, Senior Citizens
Center. Thursday, I to 2:30p.m. Bonnie McFarland to talk on Holzer Wellness Program.
·
POMEROY- AA/AI-Anon meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
Catholir Church, Mulberry Avenue.
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW Post9053, Tuppers Plains, Thursday, 7:30
p.m.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Garden Club potluck supper ThurSday,
6:30 p.m. at the home of Nola Young.
·
RACINE - Racine Chapter 602, Auxiliary, Thursday. 6 p.m. at the
post home. Covered dish dinner: Meats and bevcr6ges furnished .
POMEROY - Board of Trustees of the Meigs County District Public
Library, regular session, I p.m. Thursday, Pomeroy Library.
SA~URDAY

.
CHESTER - Benelit for Shaun Long, Tuppers Plains. a"identally
sh!Jl this spring. Live music, food, an auction. Account established at
Fanners Bank with proceeds to go toward paying medical cxpen~cs.
POMEROY- Eastern OAPSE picnic. Royal Oak Park. Saturday. 4 to
6 p.m.

•

SUNDAY
REEDSVILLE - Whaley reunion, noon Sunday, Forked Run State
Park. Take lawn chairs and two covered dishes.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Open gym, Meigs ..Middle School, Middleport,
Monday. 9 to II a.m. for girls entering 7tli or 8th grades. Meigs Local
School District. Info on shoot-a-thon to be distributed.

Today: Sunny
Tomorrow: Sunny

High: 90s; Low: 70s

•

•

1616 EutemAve.
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer
'

•

I

Single Copy· 35

C~~~~

...

&lt;

,&amp;,"

'

First pe-r missive auto
tax hearing set tonigh~·
Ol.ivia de Havilland

Tile first of two public hearings on
a proposed p.ermissive auto registra- .
lion tax will be held at the Meigs
County Courthouse tonight.
The hearings are a requirement
before the $5 tax is placed on the cost

:

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Notleef·PohUc Nodee!···

.

appl1!111US.

YOUNG DOG DEVOTEEA8ron Fife of Mldct...
port, a yooth member of lhe·Shllde Rlvw Coonhun..... ABBOCI•
tlon, was accompanying his grandfather, Bill Wootan of NeW
Haven, VI., who was busy Wednesday pr~p~rtng the Ploa Days
event at the Rock Spring• Fairgrounds. A8ron Is shown above
with 1 Plott hound puppy owned by Steve Fllkl«a' Beer Pen
Plotts of .K1111111ZOO, Mich.
.
-

w.

Meigs again plays
host to Plott Hound
Days observation ·
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Members of the National Plott
Hound Association. represeming
many states. have moved · into the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds for the
. 45th annual Plott Days.
The annual NPHA event will continue through Saturday, hosted again
by the Shade RiverCoonhunter Association. The public is welcome to
attend the events.
·
Wednesday, organizers were busy
a.'isisting people moving into the
fairgrounds' camping area Qr directing NPHA to hotels iri .the area (local
hotels were .already filled). ·
· Today's activities are limited to
Plott hounds and their human alicionados, incl~ding an all-Pion United Kennel Club bench show and a
nile raccoon hunt. (No raccoons are
killed during the events:)
Plott hounds are one of six UKC
recognized coonhound• and the only
breed that does not trace its ancestry
to the foxhound. The ancestors dr

l Sections - 12 Pages
Vol. 4!1, No. 411

.
.'

The Meigs County Commission·
ers voted earlier this month to hold
the public hearings on ~he laX, but
have not indicated, as a body, ifthey .
will approve the fee. The deadline for
(Continued on Pege 3)

·Meigs County fire departments
have been awarded a total of $20,476
in volunteer ·fire deplirtment gt'anL~.
Local fire departments awarded
grant,. include: Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department, $6,880; Rutland
VFD, SIQ,OOO; and Scipio Township
VFD, $3,596. .
The money from the grants will go
towards the pun:ha5e of communication equipment and protective gear.
A computerized ranking system i'
used to dctennine which departments will receive grants, according
to State Seri. Michael C. Shoemaker,
D-Boumeville, who announced the
grants this morning.
Many factors are _considered
including the department's budget,
total resident population, geographic
size, the number of fire runs, and
compliance with state mandates.
Special consideration is given to
departments requesting funding in .
order to meet state requilements (or
protei:tive clothing and brealliing

Today's Sentinel

•.

of registering a motor vehicle. ·
The countywide tax is being proposed by the Meigs County Highway
Department to provide local matching funds for Issue II, FEMA and other pubI ic grant programs.

Local VFDs
win funding
from state ··

Good Afternoon

GallipoiU

(614) 446-3672 .
CaU ToU Free l-800-521-0084

PuhUc Nodee! Nlic Nodce! NDe Nod~!

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

••

•

Meigs County's

Public Notice! Public Notice! Public Notice! Puhlie Notice! hlt6e Notice! Puhlie Notice!
n ues ay, une ,
, a evere Ha1 torm· itGa i~ is,
Ohio- Over 100 New &amp; Used Cars &amp; Trucks ·were affected!
These vehicles will be sold without repairs- We will pass the ,
cost of damage plus any F~ctory Incentives to you!
New &amp; Used Vehicle Damage Liquidation SQie· Now At•••
Gene Johnson Chevrolet-Oids
I
..
''Your Hometown Dealer"
•

PageS

a1

~--------------------------------------------------------------------~ .

.

Reds
lose
again,
this
time to Chisox

•

By NICK FIERRO
treat,
Bridgewater (N.J.) C!)urlerIt 's like wa.tching an expert do
News
martial ans. What those women do
Shoney 's claims to offer one. with a spatula is incredible.
Years ago, Roy Rogers Family
My hrnthcr's favorite sandwich is
Restaurants tried to sell something the Pagano's Triple Checsestcak .
. similar to it. Chef America Inc.'s Hoagie with fried onions and rnushHot Pockets have a knockoff of it as rooms. In English. this is a rolla navor! Lots of sandwich shops bursting amount of chopped steak
througho~t the nation try to pass
with American cheese, provolone
something off as one.
cheese. C~ccz Whi1., fri_cd onions.
It's often. imitated but never lettuce , tomato and fned · mushduplicated. It's the real Philly rooms. He likes his with hot ~aucc,
checsesteak. And · unless .you arc a pizza sauce and red pepper seeds.
SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED - The Racine Area Communi· transplanted Philadelphian and can You can get this monster for about ·
ty Organization prasentad four $500 scholarships to Southern High make one yourself, you have to go to live bucks, but you may regret it if
School seniors at its May meeting. Kithryn Hart, RACO president, Philadelphia to get a real one.
you cal the .whole thing.
is shown presenting scholarships to Matt Dill, Nicole Hill and CrysIf you can't bear-the thought of
,Not so fast, though: You can't go
tal Coleman. Also rec.elvlng s scholarship was Nikki Robinson who to just any steak shop in Philly, you: not being able to sit down and cat on
was uQsble to attend the meeting.
have to go to a good one.
the premises, you can get a really
Oprah Winfrey did a show lhat, good steak at Tony Luke's.
•
featured a war between Pat's Origi- Tony Luke's has a wide selection of
nal Steaks and Geno's Stea.ks (two ;andwiches and like P&lt;~gano's, peoof-(he most well-known steak shops pie line up to buy the sandwiches.
Wedding ceremony planned
.
in South Philadelphia).
My personal favorite at Tony Luke's
Bob Wood am;l Sue Laudennilt exchanged wedding v:.ws in a ceremony on
Zagat's apologetically calls is its Pizza Steak with sharp proJune II at Daytona Beach. Fla.
.
.
Dalcssandro's of the . Roxborough vnl.one cheese and fried onions. · A
They will -repeat their vows at an open church wedding for family and section of Philadelphia the best.
killer. I just wish they were a bit "bigfriends on Saturday at the Chester Baptist Church. MusiC will begin at4 p.m.
Every daily, weekly or ·every-so- ger. Bull came up with a snl~tion --.,.
and the ceremony will take place at 4:30 porn .
often newspaper in the City uf I huy two! And you can sit down (or
A reception will follow at the bri.Je's h_ome in Racine.
Brotherly Love has had a best stand up) right there and cal.
chccsesteak contest.
To suin it up, as long as you stay
Williams named to HC dean's list
.
The ·very best of the best is Bill away from imitations you can't gu
Pagano's Steaks and Hoagies in the wrong. Remember a few hasic facts:
Teresa Wi;liams, Pomeroy, was named to the Hoc\rng College dean's list West Oak Lane section of Philly.
- It's a cheesestcak, nut a stcnk
for the spring quarter. Her name was pmitted hy the college on a list' recent- The steaks there have had people and .cheese. I mean, du you call' it a
ly submitted to area newspapers .
lining up oul~ide of the store on Fri- burger and cheese"!
day and Saturday nights for more
A steak sandwich is not a T-hune
Seinfeld mobbed by fans at Mercedes dealership . tnan 25 years. This is truly the taste un a kaiser roiL It's nut even
· worth traveling 71) miles to gel.
chopped steak on a kaiser rnll.
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry Scin- bulfet lunch.
In fact . the story is that the
If you go into any sandwich shop
lcld's trip to a Mercedes dealership
The midtown ~anhattan finn employees get -a bonus if the place outside of Philadelphia tlmt ha.' ·u
took a ium for tbc surreal when people Shearman &amp; Sterling was h&lt;~ding a sells out uf meat hy closing time. I ~hinglc saying something like " Rc•tl
who had gathered across the street to mock merger and acquisitions program can tell you that this happens mnrc ·Philly-style Cheese Steaks."' cuveal
gawk at a roomful of food-poisoned lor its summer a.'isociates at tbc hotel. than mos.l people would believe.
emptor. I went to a place like that in _
lawyers mobbed the car-collecting Alter the private lunch, some people
Just what makes Pagano's Steaks Antioch, Tenn., and I got what I paid · .
comedian.
complained of naus.:a, tightness in their so good'/ Sty"le. pure and simple. for -· ouch!
Scinfcld went to the Park Avenue throats and flushed •kin, said Fire
·There is nothing like watching a
- Beware of large franchise :
dealership "Tuesday to pick up a new Department spokeswoman Amanda
couple of ladies pour a mountain, places that will' give you something :
Mercedes E-60.
Schmidt.
yes a mountain, of prime steak on a on a hot dog roll. &lt;:::hecse steaks arc .
He soon found himself the object of
Extm police officers were sent to long hot grill, pouring in lots of oil ··special-order items, not las! food . ·;
unwanted attention from tbc crowd keep order as a crowd watched Scin(these things arc not lowfat. folks)
Anyway, go to Philly and shop ;
milling across the street in front of the fcld from outside tbc showroom.
and if you choose, mixing in fried · around: Find the place you like best:·
Drake-Swissotcl. where 25 lawyers The comedian. who reportedly owns
and.interns had been sickened after eat- more than 50 classic cars, acknowl- onions, peppers, mushrooms, etc. You'll never want to huy an imita':
and making it into a sinfully tasteful lion chcescstcak again.
•
ing apparently tainted tuna steak at the edged his fans with a wave.

.

Sports

· Politicians practicing politics, Page 2
McGwire belts 34th home run, Page 4
Call for blood donations, Page 8

.

High: 90s; Low: 70s

ln. searach- of the best
cheesesteaks in Philly

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

experienced war, everyone around
the world can "understand that film
right way" and how the characters
- played by Vivien Leigh, Clark
Gable and Leslie Howard ~ struggle with their need to survive and
their own personal conflicts.
"So there is an univer.al quality
about it, and that makes it eternal,"
she says. .
Even tho.ugh she won her Oscars
for 1946's "T9 Each His Own" and
for 1949's "The Heiress" and
sllirred in such other notable films as
"The Snake Pit," she will be forever remembered as Melanie. (She was ·
nominated for the supporting~tress
Oscar but lost to co-star attie
· McDaniel, who played Mam .)
· "Well! don't mind that, S e was
pretty admirable," she says, laughing. "It is, after all, the best-loved
film of the century.... Around the
world. And I'm not going to object
to being remembered for the character that I played in the best-loved
film of the century."

June 25, 1998

Calendar

8

C!a...ilieds

9-10

Comics
Editorials

Local

II
2
.3

Soorts
Wnthcr

4.5. 7
3

Lotteries
OHIO
Super Lotto: 3-6-18-33·42-45
Kkker: 9-4-8-S-7-7
Pick 3: 3-4-2; Pick 4: 4·9·7-5
W.VA.
,
Dlllly 3: ().2-8; DilDy 4: 7-2-7-4
0 111911 Ohio Valley Publl•llln&amp; Co.

~

Scllnc:e laborltory c:Uineta 111'8 going Into pi-In the duef.llborlltoly .,.. of the Mw East·
em Elemlntary School. Ben Myers end James Cline, working for Femham Equipment Co. of
WlltlrVllle, llbove, -lnatalllng the Cllb~ on Wldnlldly. At the MW school floor tile
gylllii!!IIUm floor'M1§, cfi!Uroom flxtliiM ·~"Diller finish wor1t era being complltM. 'Next~
at &amp;stiim High School, what Wlra once cleBtrooma have been reduced to shells .. both office
•~ end clsurooms ere raconflgured. Cl-rooms that once faced State Route 7 have
gutted lind will be rebuilt with mOdifications to house a media center end expanded ldmlnlstratlve lrBII. The lw!J buildings era expiCted to be open by the beginning of the new school
yeer.
·

•

totaling more tha~
$185,950 were awarded to voluntee ·
lire departments across Ohio. which
is in addition to the $72S,OOO previously allocated this year. This bring5
the total grant amount for 1998 to
$1,510,950 for 259 fire departments.
Shoemaker said. The grants are
· awanled by the Ohio Depanment of
Commen:e.
Grants

Mrs. Clinton
will lend hand
to Strickland

bien

Despite criticism back home,
Clinton arrives for China visit

XI' AN, China (AP) - Greeted
Clinton said he wa.' delighted to come at the South Gate of the Old
with a colorful ceremony evoking · begin his journey in Xi'an, and com- City began a presidential mission disChina's ancient culture, President pared it to .the American heartland puted at home, a sendotf marred by
formal diplomatic protest after ChiOinton said today he was determined where he grew up.
"We
.Americans
admire
your
ria
barred three radio reporters for
to pur5ue closer ties with Beijing
today's Plott hounds were used for
CINCINNATI (AP) - First lody despite crilicism back home. "As two accomplishments, your economy. Radio Free Asia, a U.S. government
boar hunting in Germany many yean; Hillary . Rodham Clinton will visit great nations, we have a special your hard work and . vision, your bro~a.~ter nettling to Beijing.
ago. Jonathon Plott left his native Ohio next month to help raise mon-. responsibility to lhe future of the efforts against hunger and poverty,
During the long journey to China.
Germany. came to this country iri · ey for lhe campaigns of two southern world." he said.
your work with us on peace and sta- Clinton said he will be striving lor the
1750 ·and brought a few wild boar Ohio congressional" candidates. a
Opening his nine~y trip, Clinton bility in Korea and South Asia," Clin- advancement of political and human
hounds with him,
spokeswoman for one of the candi· took his fi11t opportunity here to ton said. Yet he urged China to allow rights, an issue rankling a Congress
They are either brindle or black in dates said.
answer critics who u111ed him not to more freedom for its people, saying divided over his poli•'Y of cordial
color. with a brindle trim. Males can
Beth E&gt;avidson. a spokeswoman visit China.
"a commitment to providing all engagement and investigating his
weigh up to 75 pounds, with females fon:ongressional candidate Roxanne
'"There may be those here and human beings the opportunity to prior deals with Beijing.
being slightly smaller. They are Qualls. said Wednesday that Mrs. back in America who wonder develop their full potential is vital to
Of the growing controversy over
known f'!r their great courage and Clinton will be the featun:d guest whether closer ties and deeper friend- the strength and success of the new technology exports, Beijing's foreign ·
. stamina. and are also used for boar July 27 at a joint fund-raiser for Ms. ship between America and China are China."
ministry spokesman. T;m)l Guoqiang.
and bear·hunting.
Qualls and Ted Strickland in Cincin- good," he said. '"Clearly the answer
Clinton delighted the crowd by said today that cooper~uon on satelThe yearly event also consisL~ of nati.
is ycs. We have a powerful ability.lo opening his speech with a few words lite launches "benetits both · sides.
the NPHA annual l)usiness meeting
Ms. Qualls, 1he city's mayor is help each OCher grow. We can learn of Chinese: "Ni. hao rna?" - which Those who are in the mainstream of
and awards ceremony. set for·Satur- running ·against GOP incumbent much from each other. And as two means ·-Hello, how are you?" He bilateral rela.tions should have a cor: ..
.• ..
day at 9 a.m.
Steve Chabot in the ~ st Congres- great . nation.•. we have a special closed by saying "Thank you·· in rect VJew.
Clinton views his nine-day mis• :Some of the more pOpular events, sional District. Strickland is the responsibility to the future of the Chinese.
sion
to China, first by an American ::
hear field trials and da.~h races. will Democratic incumbent in lhe 6th Dis· world."
Air Force One touched down in
•
be held Friday ritoming. The field tri· trict.
•
Clinton and his wife. Hillary, sweltering Xi 'an; where quiet crowd' ·president since Geo'lle Bush in Feb; : :
als will be Held at a site in the coun·
"All the details have not been strolled through this ancient capital of evening onlookers lined the street~ ruary 1989, as the right way t&lt;l
try on Bunl(er Hill Road near Bar- worked out, but we do have a t:on; city escorted !Jy the mayor and his along his route to the old walled city increase America·s i mpacl on human
risonville. The da.~h races will be held firmtUion that Mrs. Clinton is com- wife, and a long line of women in yel- amid the modern one. Security was rights, nuclear weapons spread and
at the fairgf'OIInds beginning around ing." Ms. Davidson said.
low-gold ceremonial garb. Dancers stringent: Chinese authorities sta· for cooperation with Beijing to sta, ·
·
II a.m. Organizel'll stress that the
A messaae 8eeking details of the dressed as warriors perfonned an tioned water cannons in· side streets bilize shaken Asian economies.
bear. which is kept in a cage. is not visit was left at the White House elaborate welcoming ceremony that nearby.
Clinton's first stop today was
touched or injured by the hounds.
press office this momin~ . .
The extravagant ceremonial wei- China's anciellt walled capital.
dates back to the Tang Dynasty.

..

Once ·again, Congress wrestles,with elimina~ing HEAP
By CARL WEISER
Gennett News Service
· WASHINGTON - It's ~ummer.
but Congress is once qain fighting
over the pros ram that helps low- .
income Americans fight winter cold.
In a move that bas become as predictable a,, the
a House
Appropriations subcornmiuee, t:on·
trolled by Republican, this week VOl·
ed to wipe out lhe Low Income Home
Ener11y
Assistance
Program
(LIHEAP), which President Clinton
wanted to spend $1.1 billion on.
If experience is any indicatioil, the
H&lt;iuse will approve the cut -lariely •long party lines - allowing
election-boon~ Republic1ns to tout
their willingness 10 slow federal
spendina IIIICI DernQcrall 10 lhow
their t:ommitment 10 protet:tina the

sea.-

poor.

Right on cue Wednesday, Democ-

·oo called a news conference where
t

'I
Rep. Joseph Kennedy. 0-Mus., lutes of-Health.
u~ his t:olleagues visit 1n Inner"This is a question of prioritizing
city ne1jhborhood or poorrural town very limiled·funds." said Livingston
to "tell an elderly widow who. spends spokeswoman Elizabeth Morra,
her days, indoors. shiverina in an "That's the bottom line here."
overcoat ... that our government will
A proble.m for Livingston is GOP
do nothing 10 relieve tile chill."
Sen. Arlen Specter, Who c:hai"' the
But after such tfletoric the proaram Senate subeomminee that fund.~ the
likely will survive: The Senate will prognun and who hails from Pennrestore mosJ if not all of lhe $1.1 bil· sylvania. Pennsylv~nia would get
lion and the HOUIC. lackina the v~ • $73 million under Clinton'.s propos·
to override Clinton, will rettell.
al, second only 10 New York's $136
With the btJdaet squeeze tiJbten- million.
ing each year on most federal pro"lA his view, it's 'heat or eat' for
grams, .the debate renects mon: than lhe elclerly." Spectrer spokesman John
whethe~ 10 subsidize heating and, in Ullyot SlitL "This year, es in pnovi•
wann climates, air condltioninJ COlis · 0111 yan. Senllor Spec:ter is deterof ~.6 million "bouftehold&amp;. It also is mi!ICII to fullcl .lhe UHEAP proaram
a debate over priorities.
in hilsubcommiaee."
House Apptopt illiool Chaii!IWI
· Specter hll 1n lily in Sen. James
Bob Livinpton, R-U., uidlhe mon- Jeft'ords, R-Vt., ~ of the
ey- nulled 10 PlY forflealt6 gro. Labor and 81101111 Retoun:el Comint:ludina 1.2 billion boost . mittee thll countered· tbti House
in the btJdtet for the Nllional Insti· IICtion by votiiiJ 18-4 to •lhoriie

anms.

as

~-

.

$10 billion over five years for home
energy aid. Jeffords called the l'rogram "vital."
.It provides grants to states, which
then distribute the aid through utility companies or heatin~ oil (om~­
nies or directly to low-1ncome rest·
dents. .
When such help was first provid·
ed in 1973. oil )vas $55 a barrel. Now
it's $15 a barrel. fueling the Republican argument that a.'5istance is no
longer needed.
It amounts to "corporate welfare"
because the ta~ money ultimately
goes to the oil and power c001panies,
~~aid Morra. Livingston's aide. adding
that Republicans want the private
sector to voluntarily provide ene111y
assi~ance.

Program advocates warn endina
the prognun could drive poor rami·
lies into homelessf!CsS or result in
people freezing to /Ieath: Most (amit - -- .

ilies·using the progr~m earn less than

Sli,OOO. according to the Department '
of, Health and Human Services.
l.o!iina. the subsidy, said HHS
spokesman Michael Kharfen, "could
be a hazard to their health, ccl1ainly
during jleriods of extreme weather."
Cameron Taylor, who is on Jeffords' staff and is legislative director .
of the Northeast-Midwest Senate
Coalition, noted that la.•t year·S7 senators signed a le.tter supponing the
program .
"i have no reason to believe that
it won't come out with a strong fund:
ing level in the Senate," Taylor said.
Calling i~ "outrageous" that
House Republicans zeroed out the
prognun, she said that a quarter of
assisted homes have a person who is
disabled and. a third have children
under6_
I "Whll would happen to theae
pcopleT' she asked. "Would they filii
through the c~~~Cks?"
·

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_.....

_

.._ .....

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