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Ohio Lottery

Singh wins
ra·ln·dalayed
Memorial

Plck .3:

350
Plck4:
1234
BuckeyeS:
1·15·28-29-34

Sports on Page 4

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01117,

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Verdict brings

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.bOmbing ViCtimS

By STEVEN K. PAULSON
AIIOC~ P~

By KELLY KURT
AIIOCiated Pre. . Wrltllr
OKLAHOMA CITY - One by ·
one,lhe families lined up at lhe slippery elm lhat had outlived lhe Oklahorna City bombing. They came to
n()urish it with water representing
"tears lhey had shed for lhe dead.
. Some poured all they had, sym- .
bolizi~g the grief they had resolved.
Others sprinkled only a few drops;
some tears will never be forgotten.
Slowly, the ground beneath the tree
became muddy.
"I really feel like I can go on with
my life now," said Dan McKinney.
whose wife, Linda, and niece, Shelly.
were killed 'in the blast on April 19,

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A o.nn.tt Co. NIUU8fllll* •

Next: Jurors will decide
if McVeigh lives or dies

Reaction:
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2~1ZI'II{Ief.35-

PomerQy·Middleport, Ohio, iUeaday, June 3, 1987

Publlahlng Compenv

Writer

DENVER - Before he became
the worst terrorist in the United
States, Timolhy McVeigh was a son
.of divorced parents, an Army
. sergeant who served honorably in the
Gulf War, and a misguided patriot:
jUry con\'lcts
Jurors will have to decide in a
Tun Veigh hearing slated to begin Wednesday
..i. n&gt;Okla. City'
.
whelfler lhe life McVeigh led before
,..,
,"he.d¢1onated a truck b.IJmb in Oklabombing
' hcima City- killing 168 people is a reason to spare his life now.
In makins that decision, jurors
... .. ,,. .
. may get to hear from 29-year-old
McVeigh himself, who never took the
stand at the .trial that ended in hiscon·
viction Monday.
They will certainly hear from
199~.
friends and relatives of those killed in
McKinney emptied about threethe April 19, 1995, blast, many of
quarters of his bottle of water at the
..
1""~:.,.
whom arc expected to demand retri'base of the tall, leafy " survivors'
,· · ''bution for the loss of loved ones.
tree" that stands across the street
Yerrevenge is not the same as jusfrom where the Alfred P. Murrah
tice, say lawyers involved in dealh
building was reduced to rubble. He
penalty cases.
thought he might drink the rest.
ExTRA EDITION.• Thla front page photo of an extra edHion of
"The government will make an
"Thai way it'll always be with
the -Rocky Mou"taln Newl waa bel''::lt::'ld In front (If the fedlr·
argument that justice requires the.
·me," he said.
al CclurlhOUM In Denver M ·holir
thl guilty verdiCt Wll
death of Tim McVeigh," Denver
THUMBS UP • Lnd prosecutor Jo1eph Hartzler, foreground,
announced In the bombing trial of nmothy McVeigh In the Okla-.
defense lawyer David Lane said . .
· · Relatives of the 168 people who
glvel
the thumba up aa he leads hla defense team from the U.
lost their lives gathered here Monday
h~ City Monday. (AP)
"You're going to see lhunder, brimS.
Courthou
.. after hni'lng the verdict in the trial of Oklithoma
·night, hours after the nation teamed
stone, blOod and hellfire." .
bombing
auapect Timothy McVeigh In Denver Monday.
City
·thatTimolhy McVeigh, a 29:year-old blast, offered her thanks to the jury.
Inside his small, ranch~style house
The challenge for McVeigh's
McYalgh waa found guilty on all counts. (AP)
.
"I don't think they're going to 'in Pendleton. N.Y., McVeigh's father, lawyers is to convince just one per· 'GulfWar veteran, had been convict·
ed-of murder and conspiracy.
regretlhis. They made the right c,leci- William, quietly watched lhe verdict son that a prison term, not execution,
Now the nation will wait again as . sian. He WIIS.Il!lilty4 hope he 'II get on television. Nearby was his~)}: . ·r.Wllyt4 be just punishment.
lions over four days, elicited both tears.
,j~;d.ecide .whethQ!.".McVeigh,wiiJ ':t~~"llelRnpeniiltY,"'sfW,.,..aid, · :,
' 1tt.':Jaul!fct~who'describedjJerbJOih- · ··· --"eat~·ll.l.er1fit'l6fiie blftt&lt;lifOifone -cheers ~nd, ~e~(s from bombing vic- l McVeigh )¥as escorted out by
be senteilced to die for the deadliel!
Kpicture of Bay II!!' as- slic was ~r's anti-llOliCI'IImelll· ferVOP'to jurors. of these j'liron;.IQ cause a .lifo ·sen- ·lims ancl.(amily members in Denver four U.S. ma..Shals. He shook the
hands of two of His lawyers and
act·of.terrorism in lhe Uniled,Stat!'s· carried lifeless from tbebuilding by
)il ·ai statemerii, iliey .lsked for tence?" ~,said, . . .., . .. ,,.
and.Oklalu'iitul'City. ·
-The verdict brought cheers hen! a firefighter in one of i~e most heart· ptayer$ on nnlothy's 'behalf: "Even
Lawycn were sc~uled to return
McVeigh sat impassively at the excltangcd whispered words with
and atlhe federal courthou~ in Den- breaking images of the catastrophe. though the jury has found Tim guilty, to !~C fed~tal courthouse today to defense table, his hands in a white- one on his way out.
Inside the courtroom, more than .
ver, where McVeigh had been on tri- - She \V.as one or' 19 children who per- we still love him very much and detenilinc what evidence will be knuckle clasp, as U.S. District Judge
two
dozen people fough1 back tears
at since,April 24. After U.S. District ish~~
,
.
intend to stand by him no matter what admitted during lhe pe'nalty phase, Richard Matsch n:ad "guilty" to
and
many broke into sobs and
Judge Richard Matsch leftlhe bench,
. Xears from no~ l!lY k1ds arc happens."
. ·
which is expected io take about 1 1/2 each of the II counl&lt; or murder and
embraced each other: One man thrust
one man in the courtroom raised bolh gomg, to open up the1r h1story books
James Nichols, the brother of co- weeks.
conspiracy he faced.
·
fists over his head. People embraced and they,'re ~oin~ to see tha! picture, defendant Terry Nichols, said the triThe verdict, reached shortly after · Two rcd·eyed jurors held tissues his ·fists into the air.
Continued on page 3
. ·and burst into tears.
so I don t thtnk I m ever gomg to be at proved nothing. He accused the noon after 23 112 hours of delibera· in their hands and appeared close to
,
· RUdy Guzman, whose brother, alile to escape it ... I'm always goirg government of a conspiracy.
Marine Capt. Randy Guzman, died in to mis~ Bay lee," Ms.· Almon-Kok
lhe bombing, stood sobbi~g outside said lhi~ morning on NBC's "Today"
"They've made accusations·, Ter.the courthouse: "There's no relief at show.
.
ry and Tim done lhi~, and Terry and
all."
The l"lention now is on lhe penal- Tim done that, but lhey've backed it By.BRIAN J. REED
level and at20 years or more Qf ser- Grove Cemetery Clerk, $600; Zoning ,
· In Washington, President Clinton ty for ¥c:Vei~h. Like Ms. Almon- up with no evidence," he told Sentinel NeW1 Staff
vice, would be : POLICE DEPART· . Officer, $1 ,200.
.
.
· ·said it was "a very important and Kok, many sa1d he should· be shown · .reporters outside his farm in Decker,
Mayor Frank Vaughan commend. 'f!te first reading of an ordinance MENT: Captain, $8.57, $9.15; Lieulong overdue day for the survivors no mere~.
.
Mich. "Thosejurorshadalotofpres- providing pay raises in excess. of a tenant, $8.36, $8.90; Sergeant, $8.1 0, ed Hysell for her "hard work" in com-··
. :and families of those who died in
"I do~'t thmk the conventional . sure on them: 'What do we do?' And dollar an hour for village employees $8.66; Patrolman , $7.81. $8 .39; Dis- piling the data relating to employee
Oklahoma City.;, But he, too, methods should be used. I think they public pressure changes peoples' was held when Pomeroy Village patchcr. $6.20.$6.71; Meter person, · salaries and for presenting them to
. .acknowledged that no verdict can end should lll'lpulate his legs ~:;yithout minds."
·
Council met in regular session Mon- $6.20, $6.71 . STREET DEPART- council.
.the anguish.
anesthestl\ and shove bamboo i'ods up
Evidence of the bomb's destruc- day evening. .
MENT: Assistant Supervisor, $7.46,
Council alsp discussed the inter&lt;
"This brjngs some peace," said his leg," said a tearful William ~aay, tion still stood around those who
A second ordinance was intra- $8.04; · laborer, $6.20. $6.71; view . schedule for applicants for.;
Deloris Watson, whose grandson was a rescue worker who had Sifted came to the flower-bedecked fencl' duced setting' satlries for supervise- WATER DEPARTMENT: Assistant Chief of Police, and noted that there ·
severely injured in tbe building's day . through tlie shattered concrete and sur'rounding the bomb site.
'&gt;f
ry personnel for village departments. Supervisor, $7.65, $8.19; Laborer, will be an opening for a pan-time ~ .
care center. "But my P.J.'s lungs arc glass and twisted metal .
The steel skeletons of nearby
The ordinances, which were $6.47, $7.04; Clerk, $6.20, $6.71; police dispatcher.
no better than when the explosion
"He killed my son and he 's not buildings ripped apart by tile blast are approved una,nimously, will be read GENERAL: Tax Administrator,
Council approved the hiring of
occurred. This will remain wilh us for human now," said Charles Tomlin, rusting with exposure. In other build- again atlhe June 16 and J\IIY 7 meet- · $6.20. $6.71.
Tim Wolf of Long Bottom as a part- ··
as long as we live.'I
who lost his sari, Ricky. "He's an ani- ings. gaping holes remain where in" before goin1 into effect. They
Part-ti~ employees' salaries aa;c time police officer.
.
Arcn Almon-Kok, whose 1-ycar- mal. Only an animal can do what he shattered windows have not been ptovide for an across-the-board . sc,l at m1mmum wa~c.
In other business Councilman ·
: :old daughter, Baylee, died in the did.''
. ,, ·
replaced.
increase of one 'diJllar anbour, plus
.S.laric.~ for non:clccted supcrvi- ' John Musser reported ;hat nine of the
three perpent, for all hoUrly employpersonnel would be increased at new period lamp posts in the downiles.
.·
. varaous levels, avemgmg three per- town business district have been ·
In the exhibit attaChed to the ordi- cent, to the following levels: Police vandalized . Musser said that the half-·:
nance, wages for hourly employees Chief, $20,000; Village Administra- inch s1ccl brackets w~ich hold decoare broken down by years of service. tor, $28,000; .Street Supervisor, rativc llags and banners have been·
Those increased wages, at starting $20,000; Fire Chief, $1,200; Beech
Continued on page 3

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Cour1C'i.l .proposes pay rai·ses

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:BOO evacuated from their hQmes ..

~Governor declares state of .

1eme·rgency in·. ,·Putnam County

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· ; :By The AIIOCiated Prell
· : About 500 people were forced to
:·evacuate their homes as the Blan: :chard River spilled over fts banks and
·:flooded sections of Ottawa in north: :west Ohio.
·
·
·. . Rail\ pe~sis\~ and showers 1111d
-lhlinderstorms were expec;ted to con·
.tinue througli Wednesday. The river
: was ex\:&gt;ected to crest at 28,7 feet at
·J a.m. today, according to the Nation. at Weather Service.
·
Gov. George Voinovich declared a
state of emergency iri Putnam Coun. _ty after several streets, businesses and
. -homes in Ottawa and other commu.nities were flooded. Damage had not .
·.been determined.
As the murky, brown water moved
·north t'rom the river, homeowners and
rtlerchants were busy moving belongings and stacking sandbags. ·
· "What a mess," said PattY Peterson, manager of an Ottawa fut-food
rataurant. "I don't know if it's
(water) going to gel in, Hopefully
, not.h .
,

CHEVRDLEI• DLDBMDBilE•

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pte who live al0111 Bi1 Dlrby Cree~
in IOUibwellem
Pnntlin
County
left .
. their
lncentnl
more than
20peohomesOhio.
volunwily
MOIIday
nip.. Some _., r.:ued b)' boat.
Pleasant Thwnlhip fire Lt. Mlrk

Hollar said those people were placed
wilh relatives '•and neighbors who
have homes on ~igher ground. Some
oflhe homes' foundations and fumit~re wexe damagll(). . . .
. .
Several roads leadmg 1~10 Plam
City in neighborlna Madison Coun·

ty were closed Monday, and residents .
· were urged .to boil water for drinking,
said Annabelle Tuller, village clerk- .
treasurer. ·
.
The sewer plant ancl at least four
homes in t!te village of 2,100 people
un~er water.
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·a~~~;5i~~52~~~e~~~
W111n 1w

lllny...
relnl. (AP)

dll: :

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County OKs public defender contract

lw lldl CJf 1 laM In
-t lah UDiJIIICI
II
-tr lla n d r
due tit pii'IIU Ill

-as in years past, the office will agree
By BRIAN J. REED
to provide those services "outside or,
Sentinel Newl Staff
The Mci11s County Commissiol)- the i:ontmct," at regular rates . Attarers ·approved lhe continuation of the neys who represent defendants in
county's public defender program capital murder cases arc subject to
during their replar meeling on Mon- special certification . Prescillly,
Charles Knight is the only attorney in
day afternoon.
The commissioners met wilh Ohio lhe county so certified.
In other business, the commis·Public Defender David Bodiker,
sioncrs.approvcd
continuing partici· O.P.D. Deputy Director John Alge,
pation
iil
a
multi·county
workers
and Michael Westfall, who oversees
compensation
risk
pool
.
Participation
the local O.P.D, operations.
· Public defender services, which in the program allows the corrimisprovides criminal defense represeri- sioncrs to pay a lower worker's com.tatiOII for indi&amp;ent defendantS, arc pensation premium, resulting in co~provided through me multi-county siderable ~avings, I!Ccording to Com.
bnnch of lhe Ohjo Publ~ Defender's missioner Frll() Hoffman.
Hoffman
said
that
the
county
Office, loeated in Athens. The !=QUn·
. ty will pay S34.S80 for lhe ~ivices, saved Sll :289 last year by partici·
which are provided tliroup a con· paling in the pro@ram, and received
tract with local attonieys Patrick a refund of $22,430. The estimated
savinss for next year arc $12,893.
Story and Steven Story.
The board renewed contracts with
AA;conling to . AIJe, the county's
cost this yar is up eilh!.percent from the Community Action Progratn
l•t _ye.. That increue is due in part Committee of MeiJ~ and GaUia
to the fll:l that the c:ounty did not County, Inc., to administer At-Risk
receive a refund of unuted funds last Preanancy Transportation and
u it haa in yoan put The cost Enlwlced Medicaid Thmsportstion at
is down 6.6 percent from two yoan · maximum costs of $3,500 and
..,, Alp llid.
$17,000, respectively. The contracts
~fall said thll the c:ofttriCl .,. effocti ve from July t, 1997
doet tiCII include repiUttlllli.011 In ' dtroup June 30, 1~8.
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dellb-piiMliY IIIUidlr wials,lidliJU&amp;h,

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The commissioners moved to
request no hearing in a liquor licens"?o"
renewal for Proffitt Plus Us, Inc.,
doing husincss as Twin Oaks Company in Chester Township.
· The cummissi.oners also:
- Approv&lt;X! a resolution submitted .
by Economic Development Director
Ron McDade for a building loan for
the Tuppers Plains industrial site, stating that the project did not conflict
with other sites in the county;
.
-Approved advertising for bids for
six Issue Two paving projects, at the
request of David . Spencer of the
highway department;
- Reviewed a proposal from O.V.
Weber Construction of Reedsville for
the construction of a retaining wall
behind the courlhouse;
- Authorized payment of$62.50 115
' membership dues in lheMeigsCounty Chamber of Commerce for the
Department of Human ~rvices ;
• ·Approved payment of bills in the
:amount of $268,313.45, w.ith 181
'entries.
Also present ·were county commissioners Jeff Thornton and Janet ·•
Howard, Clerk Gloria Kloes, Proseculins Anorney John Lentes, and
County Highway Superintendent
~unin1 Rciulh.

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Comment~ry
The Daily Sentinel
'£stalifislid in.l948

111 Court Strwl, Pon!eroy, Ohio
614-992-2158 • FIX 182-2157

~.2,

A Gannett Co. Newsl)(lper
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Men11ger

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlrvller

J7HI Senllntl 100/comoo- to 1M odltor from- on • - ..... flf ..,.._

Stoon ,.,..,. (300 _,.or-},..,.. 1M boot • - ot llllnf ,..,.,....,_ 'J)oJIRI,.,.

o/1-r,:.
numbret.

,,. -~Mid

1·· ,.,
datlftfthefw'•••••ac.toap•u'Q

tltllr.d. E..h lhould Inc- •.,. ~ ·-.,

•nddayrltMphotM
tty•
or loiter. 111111 to:
to 1M Editor,
45769; or, FAX to 81"'~57.

u,.

•at'flf8
J7HI S«rt/MI, 111 ·Court St. Alwaur, CWo

Excerpts from other
Ohio Newspapers

Page a
Tu11dsy, June 3, 1117

presidential race.

~

Khata1m waged a spin ted campaign thai promiSed greater freedoms. He
sa1d lramans should be able to express themselves Without worrymg aboul
rclig10us police, and urged a grealer role for women and a liberalizing of
economy.
Mosl 1mponant for the United States, Kha1ami· has rejeclcd the lypical
Iraman government. rhetonc that describes America as The Greal Satan.
If Khatami means what he says, there might be some chance to reduce
tensions between America and Iran and prod Iran away from ils policy of
supponing international terrorism. Thai would be a welcome development
given Iran's pivotal role in the Islamic world.
The (Toledo) Blade, May 28
l11c easy way oul ot Ihe public educatiOn fundmg ' mess left in the wake
of 1he Oh1o Supreme Court's March decision is to s1mply enact a whopping
tax increase and throw gian1 gobs of money al the problem.
Easy maybe, but stupid.
What will improve the makeup and type of schools we have is a determined program of reform, genuine rcfonn of what-we leach and how we
teach u, a willingness to try new thmgs.
What sort of oplions! Charter schools. magnet sc.hools, and educalion
vouchers which enable parental choke.
That means, finally, a long look :u the concept of user fees. Parents who
arc able to do so simply musl be prcrared 10 pay more of the cos! of their
children's puhhc educatmn. They should he required 10 pay some form of
per-student .chool-user fcc. wh1ch would not only put them in a position to
llemand more for their money hut also would help sell school taxes In olh·
crs.
You can hcl thai more school lcv1cs would pass if !he taxpayers could
sec that true rcfunn was already under way.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today IS Tuesday, June 3. the I 54th day of 1997. There are 211 days left
1n 1hc year
Today 's H1~hhght 1n History :
On June J . 1963, Pope John XXIII died a1 the age of 81 , ending a papacy marked by mnova11ve reforms in the Roman Catholic Church. He was
succeeded hy Pope Paul VI.
On this date:
In 1621. the Dutch West India Company received a charter Tor New
Netherlands, now known as New York.
In I K08 , Jefferson Davis - 1he first and only. presidenl of !he Con fed·
eracy - was born m Chnstian Counly, Ky.
·
In 1888. the poem "Caocy at the Bat," by Ernest Lawrence Thayer, was
tirsl published, in the San Fram:isco Da1ly Exammer:
In J9:n , the Duke ofWmdsor, who had abdicated the British lhrone. married Walhs Warfield Simpson in Mon1s, France. .
·
In 1948, Ihe 2(J().inch reliccting telescope at the Palomar Mountain Observatory .in California "'as ded1cated.
·
In 1965. astronaut Edward White became the first American to .. walk"
in space. during the flight of Gemini 4.
In 1981 , Pope John Paul II left a Rome hospital and returned to 1he Vat·
ican 1hrcc weeks after the attempt 011 his life.
In 1983. Gordon Kahl. a m1lilant lax protester wanted in the slayings.of
two U.S. marshals in North Dakoca. was killed in a sun battle with law
cnforcemenl officials near Smithville, Ark.
In 1989, Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, died.
Ten years ago: President Reagan arrived in Italy lo prepare for a summit
of major industrialized dcmocrac1es. the 13th such gathering of world leaden.
Fi-. years ago: Undeclared prcsidenlial ca~idate R955 Pc~ 111nou~
he'd hired Hamilton Jordan and Edward Rolhns to help steer hts campaiJn.
.
Democrat B1ll Clinton appeared on "The Arsenio Hall Show."
One year ago: The FBI pulled the plug on electricity at the Fm:men ranch
in Montana in an anempt to persuade the occupanls 10 negociale an end to
the 71-day-old s1andoff.
j

t

--Local briefs-.....

O HI O Wc&lt;tll1cr

James L. Spen·cer

California be.g ins to backtrack on AA
By O.WAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett Newa Service
WASHING10N - It's not that
the stale of California is begirining to
backlraek on its anti-affirmative
action campaign that surprises me,
but rather how it contemplates doing
so.
A task force, created by the same
Universily of California board of
regents !hat two yean ago banned the
use of race, gender and ethnicity as
admission factors in the slale university system, is recommending a new
kind of affirmalive action .
If it is approved, the university
would spend millions to help public
schools with"large numbers of underachieving students beuer prepare
these youngslers for college. This socalled "oull"each"' program is affir·
malive action by another name. Having outlawed affirmative action in its
admission policy, the Umvers1ty of
Califol)lia now is considenng using

il to go in1o publie schools to help
minority students meet its new raceneutral standards.
Here's how it is supposed to
work:
Each oflhe univ!=rsity"s nine cam·
puses will establish pannerships with
some of lhe state's low performing
public schools - elemenlary and
secondal)' - to help improve students' grades and !heir chances of
gaini'ng admission to.the higher education institutions.
The cos! of this effort, estimated
to be millions a year, wtll be shouldered by the universily.
The task force's report followed
release of some depressing news
about the fall off in minority enrollment at the state's law schools. Black'
admissions al the UCLA and Berkeley law schools dropped 80 percent.
Hispanic enrollment a1 the two
schools is down - 32 and 50 per·
cent, respectively. This precipitous

decline even Qusecl Wlll'll Connerly,
the black university regent who has
spearheaded California's anti-affirmative action . movement. to agree
that some kind of outreach effort is
need.ed.
But as well-intended as the task
force's proposal is, it's unlikely to
undo the damage done by the university's new admissions policy.
In the short term, the numbers of
minorities entering lhe state's university system will conlinue 10 drop.
In the long term, as some of the stu·
dents who benefit from !he outreach
program graduaiC. minority admis·
sions will increase some - bul nol
much.
The combined effects of Proposition 13. a ballot initiative !hat capped
1ax increases. and~ the segregated
housing patterns which concentrate
many minorities in poor neighbo(hoods and underfinanced schools
have created a two-tiered public edu-

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Recent Ohio editorials of statewide and national interest:
, The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, June l
Watching how the Federal Trade CommissiOn is going af!er Joe Camel
- R.I. Reynolds' lald·back, cigarette-loving cartoon character- and Mayor Michael R. White"s efforts to ban tobacco and alcohol billboards in Cleveland neighborhoods, one would think that if we JUSt do it (erase the ads),
youngsters and adults won't.
But something important overshadows these questions of trademark bans
or prohibition of certam adwert1smg in certain neighborhoods: the principle
ol free speech.
Plenty of legal products can cause bodily harm. But to save people form
life-threatening cardiac ~onditions, should the government ban billboards
ohowmg butter and cream-laden fettuccine alfredo?
• Trampling on the nght to advertise a legal product 1s even more od1ous
, than Joe Camel's smug mug.

The l..ima News, May 28
Even Iran, that closed and tyranmcal society where bearded mullahs
enforce 1hc1r strict mtcrpretalion oflslamic law, has been touched by the nat·
ural human longmg for freedom. Ayatollah Mohammed Khatami, a reformmmded clenc, wnter and leacher, won a resounding victory in that nation's

The o.lly S1nUnel• P II

Three injured in accident

By The Associated Press

The (Youngstown) Vindicator, May l9
The Supreme Court left no doubt. No one is above the law, not even the
president of 1hc Unilcd Stales. And so the court ruled thai the case of Paula
Corb~n Jones v. William Jefferson Clinton shall proceed.
Clmms that the president is too terribly busy 10 address 1he lawsuil have
alwaxs had a opec1ous ring to them. One suspects !hal Prcs1dent Clinton could
have given Jones' lawyers a deposition or even two in a fraction of the lime
spenl wilh his lawyers trymg to win delays in this case.
·
Tn those who say it 1s unacceptable to have the president of the United
Slate&gt; held up-to public nd1culc by having testimony about his mwdcy behavIor dragged lhrough the courts, we would say there can be no such dragging
1f there was no such behavior. And if there was such behavior, Paula Jones
deserves her day m coun and !he American people deserve 'to hear about it.

Pomeroy • lllddlepor"., Ohio

I ReaLLY

SHoULP
QcJiT.

cation system in Califom(a.
One tier is districts populated
largeiy with well-1o-do white !!lu·
dents. The 01her is comprised of
financially troubled scbool districts
whose scudents are disproportionately minorities.
Such disparilies in public education creates sySiemic disadvantages
for minority students thai cannot he
overcome by the University of California's limited outreach program.
For the university, affirrnalive
action was a means of overcoming
these gaps of educational opportuniIY -and the resuhing differences in
academic performance. Withoul it,
1he slate's higher education ,system
will be hard pressed to maintain the
level of minority enrollment it
enjoyed when race, ethnicity and gender were factors that could be considered in admissions ..
. Next fall, when the ban on affirmative action extends from law
school admissions to undergraduate
progrlliJIS, the university system is
expected to experience another sharp
drop in minority student enrollment.
The university cannol overcome·
1he effecls nf these reductions with a
small - though well-meaning outreach program. Whal's needed is
a commitment from the legislature
for a far more expansive effort to
improve the quality or education in
schools dominaled by minori11es.
That will take years and hundreds of
millions of dollars to accomplish.
Since Californians don't want to
, fix the problem of disparate educational opportunity via the hack door
w1th affirmative aclion, then they
may he forced to Iackie it head-on by
payinglhe cos! of impmving the educational envimnmcnl for minority
studcnls in kindergarten thmugh 121h
grade.
- Failure to do that will inslitulion·
alizc a separate and unequal system
of public education !hal will doom
large numbers of minorily sludenls to·
lower academ1c achievement- alid
little possibility of gaining admis.~ion
In California's univcnily system.

A Polish artist named ·Libera_,...._____
I

Zbigniew Libera recently unveiled
a new, urn, well, sculpture, I suppose.
Firs! he created a reproduclion of
a Nazi dca1h camp out of Legos.
Then he look a photograph of the
assembly, disa'l'embled it, and pul it
in a LEGO box. It looked like somethmg you could actually grab off the
shelf at your local toy slore.
The LEGO Group had given h1m
the original pieces for free, not knowing what he was gmng lo do w1th
thein.
Harper's magazine reports that.
according to a LEGO Group press
release,
··u the artist had dcocribed hiS
ultimate project to us m advance. he
naturafly would not have received a
single LEGO clement from us 1"
I like the exclamatum mark. It
makes LEGO sound, cwn in translation. more overexcited than appalled
by Libera's work. Personally. I like
thai in a moral "ancc. Though what
that moral stance is. I'm nlll sure.
L1hcra had hccn mv1ted to Italy's
Biennallc cxposilmn. which is.
according In !he Los Angeles Times.
"one of the world's premier arts
cvenls." Bul, alas, !he organi7crs said
he couldn'l bring lhc Lcgos. So he
refused to auend.
And what wa' the Biennallc's

But where do artists get off, telling
moral stance?
other
artists whal they shnuld or
A curator of Vemce's Polish pavilion explained that the works were should not create'? I don 'I wan! any
"explosive matcri.al" !hat "treat too kmd of committee. artiSt or otherwise, dccidin1! what is or is nm an
appropriale artistic approach regard.lan Shoales
ing the more unplcas~nt aspects ol
human h1s1ory. And the Holocaust is
fnvolously one of the darkest way beyond unpleasant.
moments in European civilization."
Like it or nm, !he Holocaust has
Well, ynu know, ll's one lhing for entered popular culture. h has hccn
LEGO to dcc1dc !hat a reproduction the suhjcct of a grcal comic hmak
of a concentration camp in Jmlc plas- sencs: "Maus." The death camps :n;c
tic bricks might n01 cause i1s line tourist attrdctioO:,, for God's sake.
producls to jump off the shelf.
There's a Holocaust
I don'! applaud th1s dccts1on. hut
Museum in Washingllln, DC.
I understand it. LEGO is in !he cute
I'm sure the whole approoch 1&lt;1
little toy busmcss; il lmngs fam11ies these altractinns IS tasteful as hell,
together through obscss1vc building and many hundreds of thousands of
ac11vity. I've LEGOed away some dollars were spent on con~ultants to
wmlcr evenings myself. I love ensure laste control, hul if the aim is
In acquaint lifth-graders with the horLEGO. What's 1o ~ate'?
And I can understand government rors of Nazi1sm, we shouldn "1 he surprised if !hey eventually usc the lools
figures
thundering against the NEA. and of their childhmM.I to express their
the public funding of the arts in gcn· new understanding of reality. And we
erul. Scrcammg about ba.,ket-wcav- shouldn'l he surpnsed tf-- eventualing or gaudy performance art allows ly •• S&lt;&gt;nie toymaker gives !hem
an elected representative to appear as lhnsc tools. Libera was just predicta staunch moralist, anti-elist. anti-big ing !he future, that'~ all.
government acl1v1st. and master of
I used to re-enacl great battles
public rela11nns all m one gesture. ftom Amencan history With httlc
And It saves the govcrnmcnl pennies plastic ligurincs. I moved from the
a year.

Alamo, Custer's Last Stand and Geityshurg to impossible haules that
could never have occurred at all:
p1rates NS. WWII mafincs, cowboys
and Indians vs. a'tronauts, aliens vs.
cavemen.
Pirates may have hcen drunken
sociopaths, hut 1ha1 wa.' over 300
years ago. Now lhey're quaint Nnw
lhcy'rc a LEGO playscl.
Libera spent a year in prison in !he
early 'l!Os, sent there jly Pulish communists J'nr his political cartoons.
That doesn't give him !he right In
make conlroversial sculptures, ol'
course.
But that's only because ,we all
have thai right.
,
Ironically, i!'s only artisL' like Lil&gt;r
era who suffer for !hal nght The res!
of us lake !hat right lhr grunted, and
spend our free time standing in line
for "Speed
II." The lea•( we can dn. in my
opinion, is let !he p&lt;K)r guy play with
hiS LEGOs.
(1\, receive a complimentary Jan ·
Shoales ncwsleucr, call I-H!J0.9K9DUCK or write Duck's Brealh, 408
Bnmd St. Nevada City, CA 95959.) ·
Jan Sh,.les Is a syndicated ·
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
A..ociatlon.

When time is.the enemy_ _ _______
One of the mosl loaded words in
American cullurc is "family." And
ho!h 1hc left and right claim that inslilution as their own. It makes good
political copy lo say you arc pro-fam·
ily, just as being accu&gt;Cd of being
anli· family is one of !he worst pos.~i­
1
ble slams.
So it is curious !hat in a cuhure
where the idea of the family is so
cxalled. the aclual lives of families
arc so dillicult. Parenls arc overworked and stressed 10 1he limit
Children feel angry and neglected.
And communily support is quickly
eroding.
__
In her new book, "'The Time
Bind,•• Arlie Russell Hochschild provides rt provocative lhesis on whal
exactly is happening to the American
family. Hochschild, a professor of
sociology ac' the University of California, Berkeley, spenl 1hree years
studying a Fortune 500 company
with a stated policy of being.family
friendly. Her aim was lo figure out
how such policies translated into the
real world.
Parent$ a1 the company, to wbich
she gives the pseUdonym Amerco,
had very positive feelings about their
employer and were proud that it had
proaressi vc proarams such as
telecommurins. llcxtime, )lllehlity
leave and put-time work with benefits. However, lhe Yilt ~ty we~
ullerly reluctant to take ldvii!IIJC of
programs, despite the feet thll survey
after survey revealed that Amerco

parcnls said thai !hey had difficulty
halancmg the demands of work and
family.
Although !hey arc vaned and

Sara Eckel
complicated, Hochsch1ld idcntilies
two main explanations for !his cnntradictmn. First, she found that
despite the colorful brochures
encouraging parents 10 consider family-frienilly policies, the truth wa.~
!hat Amen:o executives gauged its
employees' dedication to the company by the number of hours !hey spenl
at work. And many Amereo employees believed that their careers would
suffer if they opted for shorter hours
or a more flexible pace.
Even more, compelling was the
fact that many working parents
admitted that they enjoyed biins at
work more !han they did being at
home. After all, at work there were
promotions, n:Cognilion ceremonies;
friendly co-workers, binhday pllrlics.
At home, there were thlnkless taSks,
needy children. lllld freq~nlly 111
ongoing wer with the spouse abolit
the division of household chores.
Many Amerco inen, fllr eumple,
were reluclant to like on the "recond
lhifl" ~1p0111ibililies of home and
children 11 the end of the dey. Their
wives ~talilled by puttins iq for
overtime or workin1 later hours,
thus 1fon:inc their husbends to deal
with dOmestic millers.

The result was a viciuus circle in
which hmh husband and wife lclt
more satisl1ed and more appreciated
at work than at home. Because they
spent murc t1me at 1hc office,
employees could often work at a
relaxed puce. taking time to jok~ with
co-workers or attend \1 haoy shower
or lwo. Home. on the other hand, was
gelling less time and becnmmg·more
stressful -- with rigidly scheduled
dinner hours, hath times and story
times. In essence, lhe very nature of
the two places became revcr&gt;Cd,
with work feeling more like "'home••
and home more like "work."'
Of course, Hcx:hschild's thesis
.docs not apply tn eve!)' workin~ paren!. Ccnainly 1hcre arc many employees across the country whose workplaces an: far from homey, and who
would love nothing more than to stay
at home with their kids. But by I."L~ti~g a sharp eye on the workers !If
Amcrco, Hochst:hild has provided us
with valuable insiahl into how we can
Indy become a nation that values
children and families.
That won't be easy. For it first
requites taking a look at our own
lives, and realizing what the culture
of ' worbho)iam is doina to ourselves, our fllllilics and our communitics. And it mo111uot boilina the
Jlloblemaofwarhndflllllil,hltopll
politicel philosophies. Radw than
criticizlns workins Jllilllll rcw llpllllllins 10 much tilne away from their
,\

I

kids, we need In hK,k at why the
nlfice is so much mnrc appealing
than the home and what we can do tn
' In. create
rcven;c that. Are there ways
seriuus jobs with reduced hours'! Is II
p&lt;,ssihlc tu crculc a vital cummunity
life !hot will enable parents tn stay
hnmc wilh children without 1\:cling
cut niT frum the world ul' udulls'!
Hcx:hschild pmposes a lime move·
ment. where we would end the cycle
!hal determines a person's value hy
the number of hours she works and
the amount nf money she makes.
Wh!!rc,evel)'one worked fewer hours
and had more lime for their family
and community life.
Thai might sound like a fAraway
dream, btll who knows'/ One day ·
Sl)()n the old suard at the lop of the· •
corporate hierarchy •• thC men who ·
don't know how to tum on an oven •
• will have, vanished. AI the same
time the children of parents &lt;:~~~~ght in .
the time bind will be in the work- ·
force. They an: the ones who suffer :
the most under the time bind. Perttaps ·
·
they will he the ones to find the way :
. out.
.
·. Sara lcbl Ia a •rDtllalld ·
: w1 It fer Nn ; .. u Bwl .,.Ill '
,0
I II
...
.. . . I ¢1 18&lt;
can .,........... u ...........
·•
' • ••1
II 11•

James Lawrence Spencer.' 97, Pomeroy, died Sunday, June 1, 1997, at
Overbrook Nursing Center in Middleport.
Born Feb. 3, 1900, in Racine, son of the late James J. and Belle Carnahan Spencer, he was a dliry and poultry fermer and worked 11 Botkiu Feed
and Grain Store in Minersville. He was a member of tile Racine First Baplisl Church 111d a 57-yeer member of Racine Masonic Lodse F&amp;:AM.
He is survived by three daughlcts, Marpret Amberacr of Chester, Pauline
Kennedy of Pomeroy and Mary Thompson ofToledo; six grandchildren and
six greal-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Irene Spencer, three sons-in-law,
and by a great-grandson.
Services will be Wednesday, I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home ill' Pomeroy
with Pastor Larry Haley officiating. Burial will follow in Greenwood Cemetery, Racine.
Friends may call toni1ht from 6 to 9 at the funeral home. Masonic services will be at 7:30 tonight at tho funeral home.

'•

••
•••

H

IMan~~ttkll ~ I·

•

·~

(f

tNO.

I

I

•,.

..,.
..
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76°

Three were li'Cited for minor injuries followinJ 1 0110-C*' ..,..
on state Route 325 in Salem Township Monday eround 6:15 p.m.
Amanda and Ross Savage. ages and address uruepoilod,llld Todd
Marcum, age and lllldnoss unreponed, were transported 10 Hober Medical Center in Gallipolis by units of the Meigs County Emela~ Medical Center where they were trelled for contusions and lac«1110111 and
released, according 10 • hospital spokeswoman.
.
The accident remains under investigation by the Me•as County
Sheriffs Department. '

• ICollimliut l1so I.

(f

••'.

•

W.VA.

(f

Two receive·minor injuries in wreck.

· Two people received minor Injuries in a one-car accident on Curtis Hollow Road ncar Long Bottom Sunday around I0:30 p.m.
Misty D. Lyons, 17, Reedsville, was driving eaSibound when· she
swerved to miss a deer, according to a Meigs County Sherifrs Depart·
.ment report. The car went off the right side of !he road, slid over Ill
embankment and rolled over onto its top, the report stated.
Lyons and a passenger. Herbert Boyles, 19, Parkersburg, W.VL,
received minor visible injuries in !he accident, 1hc report stated. Dam·
age lo Lyons' 1988 Chevrolet Beretta was listed as moderate.

Meigs announcements

'
One car ticcident probed

Bible School scheduled
The Chesler Garden Club family
Vacation Bible School will be picnic will be held Wednesday at
held at the Hemlock Grove Christian 6:30 p.m. at the home of Judy
Church June 16-20 from 6:30 to 8:45 Bunger. Beverages. meat and table
p.m. Theme will be "Promise service will he provided, Other items
Pt.
Builders for Jesus." There will be are to be brought by those auending.
classes for ages two years through
seventh grade. Bible stories, puppet -Hymn slnc set
The Grubbs will be a1 the Asbury
skits, crafts, sinaing, recreation, and
United
Methodist Church. Syracuse,
refreshments will be held nightly.
from the mid 60s along lake erie 1o The closing program will be June 22, Sunday, II a.m.
9:30am. All children are invited to
the lower 70s south.
Youth to. hive yard sale
auend.
Extended forecast
The Faith Harvest Church youth
Thursday...Fair. Lows around 50
group of Chesler will have a yard
Open House planned
with high&amp; 70 to 75.
An open house and card shower sale. car wash, and bake sale, SaturFriday and saturday... C~c~ of
showers. Lows around 50 wnh h1ghs has been planned to celebmte the day, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on State Route
801h b1rthday of Ruth Taylor. The 7 Tuppers Plains.
65 to 75.
event will be held Saturday, 6:30p.m.
at the Gary Smith res1dencc on Sum- Grade card pickup set
Students of Southern High School
ner Road. Friends and family are
cast across South today. Forecasters invtted to attend.
can pick up their grade cards any
pred1c1cd up to 3 inches of ram over
weekday between 8:30 a.m. and 3
the Carolinas, eastern Tennessee and Chester Club to meet
p.m. at the high school office.
Kentucky. Afternoon thunderstorms
were possible in Florida.
Flooding c9n1inued to be a problcm in the Ohio Valley, w11h high
7:25 p.m., state Route 554,
Unils of the Meigs Coumy Emerwater ~losing roads and causing gency Medical Service recorded sev- Cheshire, John VanReeth, 1rea1ed at
cvacuau_ons.
en calls for assistance Monday. Units the scene.
Dry .Wea1her was expected over responding included:
RACINE
!he G~ Lakes and northern Rock- CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:54 a.m., Elm Streel, Janet
ics, butl ain was possible over South
Manuel,
HMC.
4:50 a.m., Riverside Apanmenl~.
Dakol:j Nebraska, and parts of Min- Mid&lt;lleport, Dorothy Bl)'ant, treated RUTLAND
nesotan;
10:52 a.m., Meigs Mi1.1e 31, Salem
at the scene;
Th~f nalion's high temperature
8:33a.m., Riverview Drive, Mid- Portal, Barry McCiine, HMC;
Mon~ was 107 in Carlsbad •. N.M. dleport, Robert Freed, Holzer Med6:20 p.m., volunteer fire departLows of 31 were recorded 10 !he ical Center, Racine squad assisted;
ment and squad 10 slate Roule 325,
Maine towns of Presque Isle, Clayton
10:33 a.m .• Calaway Ridge Road, motor-vellicle accident. Amanda and
Lake ~d Houlton.
Tuppers Plains, Lester Hawk, St Ross Savage. 1bdd Marcum, HMC.
Hijls loday were expected 10 Joseph's Hospital.
Cen1ral Dispatch Squail and Salem
reach the 70s in the Northwest, MIDDLEPORT
Township VFD assisted.
Northeast and Midwest, the 80s in the
Plains,·WeSI, Southeast jjnd Florida
and the I 00s in !he Southwest
• ~' ,
·1·

No injuries we're reported in a one-car accident on Bald J&lt;nol&gt;r
Stivcrsville Road near !he junction of Bashan Road in Suuon Town·
sh1p Monday around 7: I~ p.m. ·
limothy D. Kerns, 38, Portland, swerved 10 miss a deer in the road
and drove into a dilch, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Dcpanment report. Lighl damage was reported to Kerns' 1989 Buic~ Ccn·
tury.

~Today's Ohio weather forecast
.; .Ohio
·
• Sy the Associated Prell
~
Tonight... Mostly clear north. A
- chance of showers early central and
~ south .. .Then clearing. Patchy fog
; .deve!oping late lonight. Lows from
, 45 to 50 north to the mid 50s south.
··~
Wednesd~y... Mostly sunny. Highs

I

Council proposes...
Continued from page 1
bent down.
"I imagine by the next meeting.
1hcy'll get all of them." Musser said.
"As far as I know, !here have been no
arrests and no repon of damages hy
the pollee," Musser said.
Police Chief Gerald Rought, who
was attending 1hc mecling, said 1hat
an uflicer on foot patrol is generally
on !he job downtown no later !han
10:30 p.m .• and said that similar
problems with iron gales on mini·
park entrances were coun1cn:d hy
extending the metal work to a level
that is more difficult to reach.
Council approved the bid of G&amp;M
Fuel Company (Ashland Oil) as the
provider of fuel for the village, al 82
cents for unleaded fuel and 79 cents
for d1esel fuel. The local firm was the
only bidder.
Councilmen Bill Young. Larry
Wehrung and George Wright noted
localions where street patching wa.•
needed. Mayor Vaughan ~aid tha11hc
patching would get underway as
soon as the weather improved.
Wright also reported on three san1tary sewer problems.
Young reported thai the VIllage
clean-up collected 19.3 cubic yards of
trash at a cos! of $654 10 the village.
When asked by Wright, Vaughan
said that work on the village's new
water well is "ahout e1ghty percent
completed."
Council also:
- Approved the Mayor's Report of
fines collecled in the amount of
$4,960. with a village of share of

iShowers expected to end tonight
: ,B y The Asaoclated Prell
Some showers will linger tonighl,
; but welcome dry weather is forecasl
; for Ohio on Wednesday and Thurs: day.
; Highs will be in the 70s on
' 'wednesday under mostly sunny
: sk1es, the Nalional Weather Serv1ce
• said.
: Forecasters said more ram is pos~siblc on the weekend.
~ .- The rccord-h1gh teinpemture for
· ~ Jhis dale at the Columbus weather
: stat1on was 99 degrees in 1895 while
• the record low was 41 in 1924. Sun: set tonight will be at 8:55p.m. and
, sunrise Wednesday at 6:04 a.m.
: Across the nation
: More rain fell on the sa!Urated
: M1dwest loday, while scattered show' ers were reported across the Plains
; and Northwest II was cool and
; j;joud)l in •the East and hot again in
: the Southwest
: . . ..... Modcratollo'hca-vy roin was 1 fore~

!

•

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

~~dge ~ets

~ :Next: Jurors must~ ..

•

: ·
Continued from page I
: '' "We were holding hands and
; praying and crying," said Kalherine
!.Alaniz, whose father, Claude
,Medearis, was killed. "My mom
:reached inlo her purse and handed me
· ~is wedding ring mid, of course, 1just
1,;sl it."
,. Bud Welch stood in down1own
.Oklahoma City ncar the site of the
!bombing, where cheers erupted from
:more than 500 people who gol news
!6flhe verdict on televisions set up on
: tfle sidewalk.
·
"I thought it'd all be joy, but it
:,sn't." Welch sai!l. "A vcrv dull vic•·
:tory. The bottom line is my little gir1
•isn"t coming back and I have the rest
'c\r my life to deal with that." .
Senlimenls . from people hke
Welch will he presented to jurors dur-iag the penalty phase to demonslrate
!he enormity of a crime that Cl!St a
~pijtlight on America's mililia moveJ11Cnt and like-mmded right-wing

'e~lremists.

.. Prosecutors may show a home
''lideo of 1-year-old Bay lee Almon's
;m~t and only birthday party. The
, ilj(ant became a symbol of the boml&gt;r
' iri'g after a picture of her hody, era•died in 1hc arms of a firefighter, wa'
, .. ·
•-

The Daily Sentinel
(USP!Ill,_)
-Publi11hed every afternoon, Monday throuah
Friday. 111 c ..rt S1 .. Pomeroy. Ohio. by aile
Ohio \IIIIey Pub6ohl"l Co-yKlMn&lt;H Co .
Po""'"'Y, Ollio 4~769. Pb. ~·ll~ . Sec:ood
cla1111 po!lllle pnld at Pomeroy, Ohio
Mtmbtr: llJc J\~M»Chlled Preu. and lhe Ohio

New!!paper AIIJOC:ialion.
'ios'fMASTER' Send oddrtA• correc:don.' to
:nte Da1ly Senttnel. Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy.
Ohlo45769.

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trial d·ate
for Sheppard lawsuit

published m newspapers around the
CLEVELAND (AP) - Long
af1er
his death, Dr. Sam Sheppard is
world.
to
be
tried for th'e third lime in the
Defense lawyers plan io call peo·
pie who can talk about McVeigh's 1954 murder of his pregnanl wife. ,
Judge Ron Susler on Monday set
difficult ch1ldhood in !he small town
of Peh'dleton, N.Y., h1s parents' a Jan. 26trial date for a lawsuit askdivorce, his loyally as a friend and ing a judge to declare Sheppard
decorations earned a.~ an armored- innocent in 1he case thai helped
inspire !he "The Fugitive."
vehicle gunner in !he Persian Gulf.
"Thanks to the judge. If this is the
His father, Bill McVeigh, is
roulc
we have lo go, I'm glad we've
expecled lo take the stand. as 1s h1s
got
a
trial
date," said Sheppard's son,
sisler, Jenmfer, who provided evidence agpinst him when she talked of Sam Reese Sheppard, lhc driving
force behind the lawsuit. '"What I'd
his anli-~ovemment views.
Jnmes ;Nichols, who lived with like to know is when they'rc·going to
McVeigh and whose brother is to he solve the crime. We know my dad's
tned in the bombing as well. will tes- mnocenl."
tify.
· '
Sustcr also denied lhc coun1y
And both sides will look to Waco. prosecutor's request to dismiss the
Texas. lo advance !heir cases.
lawsUit.
Proseculors accuse McVeigh of
Sheppard convicted of murder in
bombing the Alfred P. Murrah Fcd- December 1954 and imprisoned for a
eral Building in retaliation for the decade un1il the U.S. Supreme Court
FBI's fatal raid on the Branch David- ovenumed the convicuon in a landians ncar Waco two years beforehand. m"k decision thai cited the unfair
McVeigh. they said. was a hateful cffecl of prctnal publicity.
man whose 1wistcd beliefs on POV·
In a retrial. Sheppard was acquit·
emment led him' lo murder 168 inno- ted in 1966. The groundbreaking
· defense helped make Sheppard's
cent people. !'
The defcn$1: concedes McVeigh lawyer, F. Lee Bailey, J'ainous. . ·
wa.• upset by Waco, and may call sevSheppard died in 1970, msisting
eraI Waco expc, ns to teslify abou11hc throughout his life that a bushygovernment's ~ft-criticized conduct haired intruder killed his wife Marilyn and knocked him unconscious. ,
during the raid.
The younger Sheppard, who lives
The jurors - seven men and five
in
Oakland,
Calif., wants Suster to
women -can sentence McVeigh-to
death by injection, life in prison or a
lesser sen1ence , determined by the
judge. Some expressed reservalions
about the death penalty durmg the
jury scleclion pn;&gt;cess, but all said
Am Ele Power .......................40~
they could impose il if justified.
Akzo ......................................15\
Ami'Tec:h ..................',............66'1.1
If the jury cannot
unanimously
I
Ashland 011 .............~ .............47\
agree. Mauch can 1mpose a sen1ence
AT&amp;T ••••••~.................:..............36
of up 10 life in pris9n wilhout parole.
Bank One ..............................43~
If !he jury decides McVeigh should
Bob Evana ...............~ ........14"M
be executed, the judge cannot overBorg-Wai'MI' ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 49\
,
ChamlliO'ft ................................17
rule it.
Ctlarm 811pe .............................5'/..
Prosecutor Joseph Hartzler. who
~~~ .......... :..................31
has mulliple sclerosis, stopped his
I Mogul .......................28\
electric wheelchair lo speak briefly 10
G111rtett
..................................82\
the crush of reporters following the
Gooclyeer ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••ser
verdict.
'
Kmarf.....................................13i

declare his father innocent
Under Ohio's wrongful imprisonment law, thai declaralion would
allow Sheppard to ask !he Ohio
Court of Claims 10 pay $250,000 for
his falher's incarceration.

Fourteen area greenhouses donat·
ed flowers which were used as door
prizes for the 1997 Senior Citizens
day held recently at the Center.
In the listing of greenhouses contributing on the Senior Citizens Pqe
in Mondly'a edition of The Daily
Sentinel uninlentionally omit1ed were
Rice's &lt;Jreenhouaea, IW'en Oreenhtlulel, Art Hill~. Thorn·
tiJII Grccnhouaea1 and Hubb.rds
Orccnhollses.

Fourth Annual
Customer Appreciation Days
We,re ce1ebrating 92+ years of business
And we owe it all to you - "Our Customers"

Come join Us for Hot Dogs,
Popcorn, Lemonade, Give-aways,
and Old-Fashioned Service
Pomeroy Office

Gallipolis Office

Friday, June 6
11 am to 3 pm

Friday,June 13
llam to 3 pm

•

•

Tuppers Plains
Office
Friday, June 20
11 am to 3 pm

·,

Fs

Farmers
Bank
a saYings COfTlXIlY

_
-·

............
Ill _ _ _

Sho~'a ............................ ,... 5\

Stir 88nk ................................42

Wend¥'1 ..........................., ....~,.

1111 tt F.O.I.C.

Worthl"'l:on.........................1a'!.

. Stock reports
-·-·-. . ~ 10:30

1.m. QUOtll prond•d by Aclvllt
of Gllllpolla.

•

•

•

•

(tnJi(e...

bJr

Landa End •••••.••••.••••••••••••.••••• 28\·
Ltd................:........................18'4
ova .....................:.................37'1.
OM Yllley.............................4o\
PeopiM •••••••• ,...............,........33~
.Pretn 'Flnl ...............................1TA.
Roc~ll ..................... ~...........83
RD-Stwii ..........., .................,1H)t

.'

Prescnl wore council members
Musser, Young, Wchrung, Wright,
Scutt Dillon and Gcri Wahoo. Mayor Vaughan. Clerk Hysell, Chief
Rought. and polic-e officers Mark
Norman and Jonalhan Sanders.

eJ~ 0 eJ~~ D eJ~~ D. ~~· D eJ
~;
Farmers Bank Presents Its
~

Stocks

Correction

$3,637;
- Approved the paym~nt of biUs.;
• Aulhori•.cd contmumg p1rt1c1·
palion with workers' compensati~n
adminislrator through !he Oh10
Municipal League at a cost of$1,966.
Tho progrum will provide an anlicipaled savings of $16,392.

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�!

.

~ Sports
.;Singh wins
:ay RUSTY MILLER

The Daily·Sentinel

•

rain-shortene~
'a

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Tu11_N,, June 3, 1187

. p gt4
June 1881

· By The AaaociiDd Preas
It might take an entire league to
stop Andres Oalarraga.
Galarraga hit his fifth homer in
seven JlllleS Monday night a5 the
Colorado Rockies beat the St. Louis
Cardinals 11-7. But he might he suspended by the National League later this week for charging lhe mound
in a game againSI Florida on Saturday.
·
"I'm expec,ting to hear something from the league, and it won't be good
news," Rockies manager Don Baylor said. "It'll he a shame if he gets

suspeaded beC•tJMI he is in such a
aroove ript now."
GaJ~~m~a's opposite-fJCid, threerun homer in the fifth was measiii'Cd
at 426 feet, I03 feet shoner than his
blast two days 110 in Miami. Four
innings after hittina that tape-measure homer apinst the Mll'lins,
Oal~~m~a charged lhe mound after ·
being hit by a pilch from Dennis
Cooi'Suc:h incidents usually lead to
suspensions.
"I can't think about that," Galarraga said after Monday's game. "I
had 1o protect myself. He (Cook)
tried to hun me and I can't let pitchers do that." ·
.
·
Bayl91' said 1he team migh1 not
appeal a short suspension.
"It depends how many games it
is," Baylor said. "I know they are
going to do something, just based on
other incidents this year."

John_
s on's

two~hitter

Meinorlal

·
swing, pushing an iron .right of the . four-foot birdie putt seconds later - Nollilo, 16J-"': 71-67-206
Jock Nidoloooo. $57.000: 69-7G41oo:IDI
. DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Vijay green from where he had to ~e a to re~n his one-shot lead.
11•-.
$57,000: 66-'72-'lOollll
, Singh's first swing of the day set up drop. He pan:ed the hole, but ~need
Smgh all but locked up the victo- Drrit LAMIIII. $45.600: 70-71-61o209
Baii'I'M~y, lt!l,de». 74-el ., 109
111 eagle tap-in for a two-stroke I~
on every sw1~g and ~very bme he ry when Hoc~ found a greenside Olea
Illy. $45.600: 66-74-fio209
· and an eventual two-stroke victory m hent over to p1ck up his ball the rest . bunker w1th_his tee shot on the pat- Bin, Alldoodo, $45,600: 66-72-71-709
.the rain-shortened Memorial Tour- of the way.
3 16th and failed to get out .with his Mn c · ( · ·, sM.m 7&gt;10-'7•210
- - $34,21». 7l-71-67.ZIO
nament Joday.
· Norinan stretched hi~ birdie s!fi~g _next shot. He settled for a double- O.y - $34,200: 6t-68-74o210
Billy Mayfoir. Sl7.ll0: 6&lt;).70-61olll .
' Singh fired a 5-under,par 67 in to five m a row w1th a twD'putt birdie bogey.
Dovid Frool.ll7.ll0: 72-70-69-211
&gt;the third and final round and he fin- on the par-51 5th to start his day. He
Hoch faded to a 73 that left him lloYicl
lluYII. Sl7,ll0: 73-69-211
-ished with a 202 total.
narrowly missed aiong birdie putt at at 11-under 205 along with Tommy Peter-·S27.ll0: 71 -7 1-69!olll
Hus. $1~.760: 7&lt;1-68-70o21l
, Afterthreedaysofheavyiainand 1he 16th, then lipped out a 10-foot TollesandLceJanzen. FrankNobi- · illy
Phil
$19,760: 68-74-70o21l
·-several suspensions of play, Singh ' birdie try at 171!efore'scraping the lo's 68 lefthim at 10-under.
Robcn Domron. 519.760: 71-70-71•212
Doo ._,_ $19,760: 69-71-72-212
•was able to chiim his first tottr vic- cup on a long birdie putt on the clos-·
Jack N.•clclaus. the 57-year-old - JeJper
-ik. $19.760: 66-7J-7J•lll
tory in two years and marked his first ing hole.
·designer of _the Mu_irfield Village Tom Leton.. SIJ,77l: 7J-70-70o2LI
Holloat. SIJ.77l: 7l-71-21J
"I saw he lwl eagled il, but 1 c~rse, co~b~ued his strong play Mlt.e
toP:IOfinishin IOstartsthisseason.
Poll Goj&lt;doo. $13,77lo71-69-72-11)
•'J'hC win as wonh $342,0()().
thought he had holed his third shot," w1th two birdies down the stretch to l'lul -lid.Sll.77l: 7J.71-21J
Greg Nomian and Jim Furyk tied Norman said of Singh. "I didn't real- complete a 69 .. He· fini.shed ;at 8- Grta Knoll. Sll,775: 71-70-72•21J
s- Loway. Sl3;77l: 74-73-M-213
. for second at 204.
ize he had hit it that far dow~ there u~der-par 208, bed for e1ghth along loy
DooBIIIce. $10.513: 72-71-71•11~
Norman's closing effort, an 8- with his driver."
·
wrth T1m Herron.
Kid&lt; 'l'riplen. SIO.lll: 'I0-72·7lali4 '
Mi .. Brisky, SIOJJJ: 71 -70-73a214
under-par 64 -matched the toumaNorman said a soggy course was
_Masters champion liger W~
Scoot O.mp. $10.:513: 71-69-7...21~
ment's third-round record.
the perfect place·for a player such as fimshed at 5-o_ver 221 after :a thirdMlft
SIO.:!IJ: 'I0-70-74oll4
Furyk finished with a 6-7.
Singh.
round 74that mcluded a oumtuoleRoc.o · SIOJU: 74-7l-611a214
MiclloeUinodley, $7.600: 72-70-73•m
The tournamenl waS cut to 54
"He's extremely long off the tee. bogey 9 on his 12th hole.
£noie Ell, 17.600: 68-74-7,1a2U
holes after more than four inches of Under these conditions, he's hitting
John Daly, making his first Curtis Sulnae 57,600; 7~7l•l1S
Nqee. $7,600: 69-7S.71•2U
rain hit Muirfield Village Golf Club 7-iron or 8-iron while some guys are appearance m a tour even since his ilnd.ew
Let Rinh\-, S7.600:7.1-68-74o21l
"on Saturday and Sunday. Play was hitting 4- or 5-iron," Nonnan said. second stint in alcohol rehab, fin- s.... Stricter. $7,600: 7l-72-b21l
Dudley Han. $1.600: 73-72-70a21l
suspended Sunday afternoon after . "His length is a big advantage under · ished last among those players mak- Hoi
~-- 11.600 73-72-1Qz21S
co-leaders Singh and Scott Hoch had these 'conditions."
mg the cut. He shot an 80 in the close . lolwl Coot, $l,007: 7l-68-73a216
Leolllld, Sl.007: 72·71-73a216
Singh nearly lost his lead at the ing round for a 227, last in the field. lullin
hit their tee shots at the 539-yard,
Mi.. Slandly, $l,007: 69-74-73•216
-par-.5 lith hole.
14th, which could have been a dislloui Martin, $5.007o71·72-7.1•216
Singh's first shot today, a long aster if debris from a flooded creek
Hen; are the final scores and mon- Tom Warson. 15.007: Jl-69-75•216
Black, $!1,007: 73-12-71.,.216
iron from ·the middle of the fairway, had nol prevented his drive from ey winnings Monday of the rain-- . Ronnie
Paul Azinpr, $5.007: 7.~-72-71=216
came to rest a foot away from lhe going into the hazard. He was able shortened $1.9 million Memorial Clareoce Rose~· ss,007: 69-10-71•216
hole on the rain-healen green.
to punch ou1 shon of the green, then Tournament on the 7,163-yard, par- Don Fonmon, S4,l70: 7s-68-74•217
Funk, $4,370: 70-7:1-74c217
· He_turned 10 a sparse gallery and chipped up to five feet and hil the par 72 Muirfield Village Golf Club Fred
Kelly Oibsao, S4,l70: 69-78-'Hic217
' pumped his anns, smiled and waved putt while Hoch was birdieing to cut course:
Cwio Perry, $4,ll6o70-7l-7l•218
. Brad Fu.on. $4,256: 74-69·7~=218
· Vojay Singh, S:l42,000o70-65-67=!02 ·
·before tapping in the eagle pull to get the gap to a shot.
a-Ueuko..S4.ll6: 7l-71·72•218
G~g Nonnan. 5167,200: 71·69-64=204
·to 14-under for a two-stroke lead
Hoch rolled in a 10-foot .birdie . Jim
Cnis Pon-y. S4,104: n-?0-76a219 ·
Fu.-,k, $167,200: 71 -66-67•204
DulfyWIIdoof. $4,104: 73-71 ·75a219
· putt at the 15th to temporarily tie for L.cc Janun. S78,S33: 70.67-68=205
; over Hoc h.
BiH GIQSIM, $4.104: 74-71-74=219 · .
Scott Hoch, S7s.s:n: 67-65-13=205
HOI'h hun his back on his first the lead. Singh came right back with Tommy Tolles, 578,533: 70.64-71=205
Keilb Fcmoo.-$4.104: 74-71-74-219

B-.

o·-.

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I

UP -

UNING IT
VIJay Singh llnee up his putt on the 18th-'i~Qte In
the tlmil round of the·l'llln-ehortened Memorial ToUI'III~ ~y
In Dublin, Ohio. Singh shot -a s-under-par 87 In the final round to
win the tournament with a 14-under:-PBr 202. (AP)
S!e.. J• .;., ·54.11&gt;1: 14-72-7J=2i 9
Bri111n Henninatr. $.1971 : 72-71-71=220
Fuuy Zoeller, SJ.971 : 78-69-73=220
Kenny Perry. Sl800: JS-70-76=221
Onw Urr11i. Sl800: 7!'1 -70-76:o221
Jell Mown. IJ.ROO: 71-76-74=221
1lgcr Woods . SJ.800: 72-75-74•221

Hideki Kase. $3,800: 12- 7~·74=221
Oa11id Edw~Ws. SJ,IKJO: n- 74-74:221
Pekr LOJ'Wd. $3,ROJ: 71-74-74=221

John Daly. $3,648: 76-71:80=227
Shifi!ki·MIWUyanta 74-67-WD

Craig Stadler 16-68-WD
Rick F~hr JS-69-WO

:.-Nier, Withem and Strickland stand among Skyline winners
Late Models Ed Venham held off last
By SCOTT WOLFE
week's winner Todd Smith ·in a
Sentinel Correspondent
' Again some of the greatest names tremendous pedal-to-the-metal bat·in open wheel racing assembled al . tie, while Ralph Wi1hem claimed the
Ohio's fastesl, smoothest red clay street stocks and Alan Strickland the
oval on May 30 at Skyline Speed- Foul Cylinders.
The Super Sprints were fine tunway.
However, when the final rooster ing for Friday Coca-Cola Sprint
tail plummeted to eanh a familiar National Friday, a race lhat pays the
face entered victory lane; the profile winner $3,000 of a $1 &amp;,000-plus
· of three-time winner Jimmy Nier in purse. Many outlaw sprint drivers
the "Flying 00" from Piketon. In the have already inquired about entering
&lt;

..

the race, including several AJ,.Star
Circuit regulars. ·
'
Actually, Nier is 3-for-3 in his
Skyline outings, having missed a
race that was won by Ronnie Myers.
Since Myers' win, however, '_'Lady
Luck" has turned on the Cildwell
driver and · two-time K-C sprint
champion, a5 last week he suffered
magneto problems and 1his week .was
i_nvolved in a nasty flip.
On the second lap of the sprint

\

"A" main, early leader Billy Jarrell
looped it in tum four, triggering .a
melee that left Myers with no place
to go. Myers became airborne and
flipped, then while upside down, was.
struck hard by veteran Dave Dickson. The traumatic scene silence&lt;;~ the
once-cheering crowd, bul a sigh of
relief, turned 10 applause, erupted.
Then Myers . emerged from the
wreckage .only shaken. All three
cars were eliminated.
·
Nier. who staned fourth, overcame Jarrell at the conclusion of the
first lap, then lead green to checkered
in a record breaking performance.
Nier was turning laps near the I 0second mark as his powerful
melhanol, fuel injected JNC,IJenkins/Chevy rocketed around the fast
racing surface.
·
Mr. Consistency Mike Bowling
put on a thrilling rim-riding rendition
to finish second, while Tracy
Hoover. the hustling West
Portsmouth, Ohio attorney laid dQwn
the law for a strong third. Back in the
pack, 14-year old Jonalhan Stevens
worked his way from the tail of the
field to a strong fourth place finish.
He was followed by Eric l:lysong,
Keith Crabtree, Brian Benson, Lon'

nie Darst, Ron Marks and Doug
McAtee.
Heats we.nt to Hysong and Nicr. .
The Laic Model feature was again
another greai thriller. featuring the
'top three stars of last week's race. Ed
-Venham. who tried juSI ~ litlle too
hard last week 10 overcome eli~ntu'
al winner Todd Smith of Pomeroy,
took 1hc early lead, bui drove just as
hard as he did the week prior. Venham, driving Jerry Tolson's #I'? led
a trio of himself, Smith and Scou
Wolfe in the McDonald's/Ebcr'~Cit:
go #14. One could have throy,;n a
·. blankcl over the top t~ree runn~Jl- a.'
they .e_xchangcd position
..1.
after position.
Ycnha!']led the first 14 laps, but
Smith took the lead on the · 15th circuit. Venham regained the lead and
went on for the popular win. Following Smi\h and Wolfe were Danny Talbott, Ryan Cline and Darrin
Smith.
The lone heat went to Danny Tal-

a flag-to-flag win over a very tough
Super Street S1ock field. Withem had
to withstand charges by Mitch
-Gillian, Donnie Kinnison and Roy
Roush, who all were out to get the
lop spot.
.
Kinnison was slowed by a spin,
·however, Withem widened the gap
over second place as the race pro. gresscd. Gillian edged Roush for second in a great battle. Rounding ou1
1hc top 10 were Kinnison, Kun Sta. cy, Darrin · Roush, Dave orrell,
Roben Cornell, Marcus Powell and
John Vandale. HeatS went to Wiihem
and Kinnison.
·
Perhaps the' most'"titirant''l)f-'1h'c
great' races held l;'riday was the last
lap· ·pass •of "'Aian rStri61111nd;" wlfl
blasted by Ryan Cox with Mil(e Bakerin low-to win Ihe Four Cylinder Pl.Main. Cox had led for 14 laps, but
did not lead the most imponant one;
lhe la.'t lap. Cox became entangled
in traffic after having built up a nice
lead.
·
·
bOtt.
'
Going into turn three StiCkland
Ralph Withem broke racing tra- scrubbed otT Cox hehind a lapped
dition when he dominated his paint Gar. Strickland went high and Mike
scheme with a brilliant grec~\Qiow- . Baker dove low as both flew by at
ever, he disproved the old lllcing. the checkered flag, dropping Cox to
superstition of bnd luck by claiming third. Rounding out the top I0 were
Steve Cruse, Dana Nicholas, Scott
Stickland. Tim Gray, Greg Farran,
Best Flora and Millie Tomblin.
This Friday is the Coca,Cola _
Sprint Invitational, paying $3,000 to
win for the outlaws, lonl( with the
stocks and Four-Cylinders.
(See SKYLINE on Page S)
Ac1ion continues each Friday at
the super fast Skyline Speedway. For
an action-packed night df clean,
family fun and excitement, or a night
in the cool spring air.and relaxation, ·
come to the new Skyline Spee!lway,
located on County Road $3 between
Athens and Coolville, off U.S. 50.
Wann-ups areal 6:30 an.!l racing at
8 p.m. Gates open at 5:30. A 14-inch
cooler limil is in effect.
Super Sprinls, Late Models, Pure
Stocks and Four-Cylindel'li will he on
Our statistiC~~ show that mature
the menu. Skyline is located on
drivers and horne owners have
County Road 53 between Coolville
fewer and less costly losses
and Athens, approximately an hour's
than other age groups. So Irs
drive from Chillicoth~. Gallipolis
only .fair to charge you less for
and Columbus.
Insurance. Insure your
u.,,.,,.. and car with us and save
more with our special
mLiiU·ocllicv discounts.
·

SNOWDEN STAGES- Jett,Snowden of Rut- · brake, ladder bar and coli over auspenalon. MoM ·
.lancl; a coal miner by trade, is one of the many popular racing atops for the team are Kanawha
)ocals competing in the drag clrciH of the Ohio Valley Dragway and K-D Dragway near South
Valley. Snowden and the Snowden Racing teem Wabater. Pit Crew membera are carolyn, Amber
run In the Pro ET class In their 1966 Chevy II and Adam Snowden and Carl Hall. Jeff's favorite
C._.... The car flaunts a 427 Big Block engine thoughts about racing are the apeeda and
and clocks In at a 6.70 or 101 miiH per hour. "meeting people." The wol'llt thing Is "when you
Snowden, a alx·year veteran operates a chassis red light or break."
·
with a powergllde transmission, tranamlaslon
'

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners a•d
Mobile Home
Ow•ers Special
· Savl•gs.

Are you 55 or
older -and
Looking for _a
job?

c

you.
_., r rea~~ladude r a rduu ror
IJIIIIflll'lll,...... I

Scoreboard
Wednesday.'s-games

Baseball

Chic;Jgu Cub1 (Cilstillo 2· 7) Ill

PhiluddPfliu (Nye 0·0). ? : 3~ IWl.

Arlnnta (GiaYinc 5·J) 111 Monlrcnl Uu 7:.1Sp.m.

AL standings

Jcn~ - 1).

S1. Luuili !Andy

»:

lsJJm

L I!EL

!ill

I~

.70fl

27

4lJI

~I

0t:1ruh .................. 26 21t

.-»&lt; I

11 '.·

H:.llinli.M\! ...............lC1
New York ... ....... :\I
Tun.,nlo
.. 21'1
ltu~luu .'................. 22

2~

. ~54'
. 41~

Jl

1'·
. 15

Cfftlnd DM!dun
CLEVEb\NU .......27 24
Milwaukw ............. 26 211

Kamm11City ...........l-l 21'1
('hit:il~ll .................. 24 29
Mimwsutlt.............. 24 :n

.2ol

.52\1
.:.C.MI
.462
.4!1~

..a~

.:'i!lh

.......

tAl SBURY BLUE 8TREAIC8- The . .lilbury
111Ue . . . . iJCIIIIIy the fourlh.gilde
balrl' ball 1111 n IOUI'n•nent'lponlllrecl by the
llglaMI YOiflh FOOIIMI JMgua. The 111m alto
tool! IIC 1111111 In the Ponwoy 'Iouth Lwgue Tour· '

'

J

•

, _ t . In front- (L-R) llll!lt Wa lllng, oludn
w.qm., ~ Well 8nd 'lranr llllllltii,
Behind them .,. caach Bob llaclalan, Jolh
Aa~Mr, Dully LM. Grlnt Amolcl, D.J. AI till and
COICh Jerecl Wilmer.

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·wednesday's a-mes

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Chicar,ll White s,,,_ tD:dtlwin 2-71 at
CI.EVEI.AND tNitJtY ~)), 7:0:'i Jl.m.
N.Y. Yimkt'~~ · n•l·llilll' 7- ~l m lt.tlti·
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Rnlllon (Hmnmund .l -.\) m Milw;!UkL"t.'
(Hkln.'tl !'i-~).IC:O~ p.m.
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(WaiM'n .l·.l), IO ~ .l~ p.m.
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Transactions

'

5-3 lead.
Belle went 0-for-3 with two
walks, ending his career-high hitting
streak at 27 games. II was the longcs1
streak in the majors this season.
Rangers 8, TWins 0
At Arlinglon, Darren Oliver (3-6)
pitched eight strong innings and
Ivan Rodriguez wcm 3-for-5 with a
homer for Texas.
Oliver, who lost five of his previous six dec'isions, gave up live hilS
as the Rangers beat the Twins for the
follnh straighl time.
Warren Newson hit a two-run

san DitJo 5. Arl~~r~~a 4
Cbh:apCultt 3. Pinlbca'Jh.l
"""""" 2. Lot Anpln 0
M""""IIIIO. N.Y. MellO
Cokndo II , St. Louil7

BOSTON RI:P SUX

Pl:~ccLI

.

lx3 Greetln@ • $10.00

l.t.'llj!UI:'.

Ix4 Greetms &amp;
Picture, $13.00

Nadalllll.t•aut

Nl.: SUSJit.'IILk:III.ALS hll}"-'"-'s ll111.l~1·rs
.:211 Wilwn · Ciu~·rn·ru l'i~hl t!iU!lt.'li :md
litll'LI hint :m undiSI.'fiiSCd UnlUII/11 f11f ~~~ ­
'inj! :~ ~urk~.&lt;tl h:~l itL a Jut~~.• I Jf.'lllll.\

NI ~W YORK ~mrs : lhK:~·d SS N:~·y ·
Onlutk:l tltt"ll~~o• 1:1·ilay di~Jhll'll list. K~·­
~all~·~t IN I: Sh :l\~ill Gilh..·rt Ht~tu NL&gt;rl'oll).: ut
tilt.' l~t~crmuillltall .~-:'11"~·.

PHII..\DH .I'HIA I'HII .I.II:S: R,·.

~:'ililc1l OF Kid y OICI\&gt; l'rnm S~romlun·
Wil~~·s - Uum.•

S..•m KHI 1

111' 1111.' lntcnmliunotll ...·a~IIL' .

l';~hin

Mmluro

Wilk~·,· llotrn.· .

ll••kelb•ll

HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY

111 S ~fiUlhl ll·

'

N•lhtnal ..._d.._. 1\PU('illtinn
I1 HIJ.I\I)Ill.rHIA 7bllRS: N:uuctl
G.ar Hl'ltrtl. Juhn Kur:sll't anll. M:trk Turjlt'nn mosi~innl ..:u11dk'~ . fotr:\·iu O'('netnnr
tlirt:cltlr ur'11lay~·r 11\."rsnnnd ami It illy
Kinj: .l'it.-C ttn:sidL:nlnf I'I."L~kt:lball UtlllliAi ~lmtinn. .
··
VANCUUVI\ K CiRIZZI .IES : At:·
qUirt.·,ltht' Humltlll N.nt.:kcu· IIJ'I7 Sl~C­
!lllll·niU!Id dmfl t.:htlii:L' lu ~:umplcl~· ;m
t.•arlil'f tmtl!:.
"

(YOUR FATHER'S
NAME)
· LOVE, JOHN, JOE AND
SUSAN

Fnolb•ll

HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY
(YOUR FATHER'S
NAME)
.
LOVE, JOHN, JOE AND
SUSAN

N111ional t'ao~bllll.rtei&amp;IK"
AKIZUNA l'AN:IJINAI .S: Sl~ncd
01.11 Tuuy M~i..'umllri tv ;1 '""' ")'-''~~' cun·
lr:k:l.
Mark M:Mf&amp;k~J. ,
llAI.I,,\S C'OWIIOYS: Si!!lll.'ll WR
Anlhuny Millr:r. Rt.··~ittn'·"' Kll Hcr.;l·hd
W:tlk.:r antJ S Killllmt.•K 111111.,.•)'\"ar ..:un·
,,...._.Ill. M.dt.·:twal(.' Rttt _l&gt;.makiS4tft. ·
Ol: n~OIT UU,NS: Nt.• · ii}!.n,·d IJI.
Mik.: Wt.•lb•.
MIAMIDOI.PHINS: 1\j!.l\.'\'tltn tt•nns
wilh RH U..-wayn..• Un1111.111 .1111 a tllk"-Yl'llt
NI ~W ()RI.IiANS SAINTS; Si~n,•tl
1.11 [rllt.'!OI llilttlll M ;t tiU~' · YL':Ir &lt;.:ttlllr:tl'l.
AnRtlUIII.."L'LithRt ('8 Uri;m lltl"'mim '"',;
lo.:n lht.•t.:am.
·PHILAI&gt;I:LI'HIA Ei\Cil.t:s : Sia:lk"tl
WN. t.tiL'hu.:l Timr.,uri, WK ftum•ll
(.'urt~:l;nKI and '11~ Jimn1k• f!!olntllllllltlill\:·
yi.':U ~·nntr;lt.'IJI , R~·lcast:d WR J 11~1'Cf

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SAN OIEGU CHI\RGI~ RS : Sirnt:d
CO Paul Rradfurd k1 n twn•)'C:V CtliiiOtcl
and WM tuadrt: CniL•mnta IU a nt~t · )'t:ar

··t1ftlrl._'l, Did I'MII n.'rk~ lc~., oiTt..'f In TE
Shannon Mil!:hcll. Witbtln.•w tl.'rllil:f uiT~.,.,.
toRR Kcwin 811Uie nnd ·I.R lt'k' Cum·
tniRJI.
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Ool&gt;o .,.._ 3-4), 2:l0 ,...
. CINCINNATI tMII&lt;kor 2·$1 II
M II I I I ' tSdiliJol7-4~ 7;l5 p.IO.
Mooi...l t~- Moftlooal-1) II N.Y.
. S. D1t1D (V9-lt 7:40p.m.
2-7) • A

•

1

Deadline For Thil Special Father's Day '11-ibute ls Tuesday, June 10, 12 noon.
· Fill Out The Form Below And Drop Off With Payment To

The Daily Sentinel MFather's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CIRCL~ oNE: --A.1n'"GR"EmNo.:S1o:oo--a~1X4-G'FieE'TiN'ciAN'oPicruR"E:.s13:oo--, ·
(PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE)
~THER'S

NAME...___ _;.,.,__ ___,_ _ _;.,.,__ _ _ _ _ _ _

---"-~

'un NAME(S) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

'

,ASHINOTON REDSKINS: SiJncd
LB J.mcl Willia• to lthlw·)'Cill !:lmlntt:l ..... OT Joe ~ IU Q 9W-)ftl; ~...,...
tract. RttaiiK'd ut:lutivc RC(Uiialin[l
ri...o 10 QB Goo Fmone nod Ql T,..o

a.-.

H.....,.

. Nolloool-.. , _
ST. LOUIS BLUI!S: Acquhd G
Bre11 Jo...son frOM t•c Colorado
Avalalk'M few • 1997 tiHnl-rotl'lld drafl
pkk .... • «llllli,_:IOOD thlnk,oool
Jlk-t. Si.... IW Rftol W 1011 0 li&lt;IMI

-----------~------DP--~-----,--------~
_____ ..;. ___,__ .;. _________ .J

.....

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SEATil.E SEAHAWKS: Si'n&lt;d DT
M:ft Spin.lcr. S Titn Hu:k atld LB Oltn

'Cokndo (8.M.. JoMt 1-0, M St.
(,Molria2·l). I :3!1 p.m.
Loa A - (1\oedo :4) II Hou..,~
!Kilo 6-2),H5 ~-··
'
Phllbuah (Cookt·4·6) II Chlc110

~- 6-oll. 7:40 ..

Matt Boyles, the son of Joe and
Lori Boyles· of Tuppers Plain ~.
recently rc1urned to Mcig~ County
after competing in the Division IJI'
regional track and field meet in Dayton .
The Eastern freshman earned the
trip -to Dayton by winning a berth in
the 3.200-mctcr run in the di~trict
linal~ at Portsmouth the week before.
Boyles joined 15 mher long dislance runnel'l! from li&gt;ur mhcr dislricts in lhc region as 16 qualify l'nr
the event The top four qualifiers
from 1hc regional advanced In the
stale.
Boyles, despite a cold, placed
siKth in his heat. wilh·a lime below
his regional qualifying ti.mc.
Boyles w\m his ~egionul hcnh hy
placing second in his heal a1thc district mce1 with a time nf'I0:5S, ,
Boyles is coa~hed hy Arch Rose . ·
at Eastern.·
·

Let Everyone Know Your Dad Is
Someone Very Speejal With A
Father's Day Thank You Tribute To
Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
Oli Fr~day, June 13!

Rid• Garee~ ;md RHI1 lint ('uui 1111 lht:
1:1-J;ty .diN:tbk:U till. A~li"atl.."t.l RHI' Mark
llr:UIIIL'IIbUri! l'rnm lhL' l .~ · di!)' lfi ~ ahf~·J
liN! . Mct:llllcd LHP V o !U~hn bhdm;m
from P:1wlud~1 nf llu: lnh:nt:uiunal

S'r. LOVIS •RAMS : R•k•"'~ 01.8

:S.n PranctKO (£del 7-2) at Flcvlda

-··J.-

Boyles runs
in Division Ill
regional meet.

'

·Cillinl ,k'nkinJ.

·Today'spmes
tA- -~·",1:~lp.m

Fea1urc: Ralph Withem. Mitch
· Gillian, Roy Roush, Donnie Kinnison, Kun Stacy. Darrin Roush. Dave
Gorrell, _Ro~ert Cornell, Marcus
Powell, John Vandale.
Four-cylinders
Heat: Steve "Fireball" Rnhcrts.
Ryan Cox, Steve Cruse. Greg Foreign
Heat: Alan Slrickland. Mike Baker, Anhur. Payne. Scott Strickland.
Feature: Alan S1rickland. Mike
Baker, Ryan Cox, Steve Cruse. Dana
Nicholas, Scutt Stickland. lim Gray.
dreg Foreign. Best Flora. Millie
Tumblin.

homer, Domingo Cedeno went 3-for4 and Will Clark went 3-for-5 as '
Texas had a season-high 18 hils.

Buebllll

t:lltHrlM.'I.

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SOUl FmtM:illt'n ........ JI 2.1 .57ol
Cllk\flll.kl ........ ........ .\1 2-l ,:'i()-1
Los Aattlt=J ........... 27 27 . :~no
~J.U .............. 2o1 :\0 .44-l

POMEROY
1182 1817

.

UUFFAI.U IJII.l.S: ltdr:as,·tl 1.14

Mllntr.:"ni ,............... :!IJ 1:'i .~ .\1
Phihu.ldphin ........... IY .1 .~ ..1~2

214 EAST MAIN

S~m Fram:ilicu (l'uulkc ()..OJ nl l.ull
1\ni,&gt;elc.o; (MnrtiDI!t-1-JJ. IO:.l~ p.m.

Awtcrk.n ~..nKue

Monday's scores

I

Pin~·

(Miicki 1- IJ. 7:-IOr.m.
·
Soo DiCJ!.U tCu•Mnc .l-1 nu ('uhii'LklLI
(Rnit.:y :1·4). 9:1l"i r .rn.

1',
.l ':
..
.'i' ,

N.Y. Ynnk\.'CS :'i. Bn~tun 2
CI.EVELI\ND nl 1\itkimoi'L', pj1ll .. ruitt
Chi~o::attu While Sox K. Milwauk..•t.• .'i

'

at

(St.."hmk.ll 1-J), 1J5 11·"'·
Huu1h11t CHull :1·4) 111 CINCINNATI
(Jlurha4-ol). 7 : )~ j\Rt
- l:lnrid&amp;L (Rupr ~·2) al N. Y. . Ml'l.•

Wntnn OIYWon

T.:xlts ..................... :~«)
An&amp;:lhclm ................u
Scallki ...............:.... ltl
Oakland .................2;1

Dc~s ~ - 21

hur~:h

H•~•m• Dl~l11ion

=,.·. . . . :. . W I~ ~

ROGAN ~ ~
ER -- .
raaae &amp;.rvf01111

pnlC losing streak . Wall (2-l).., •
c:8eer-high ·with nine llribollll in
his 14th save. Milt Gardner (6-2) -inningstowinforlheflnuilae
allowed seven hits and four runs in since April 23. Lima held lhe
4 213 innings, his shonest outing this Dod!ers lo O!JC hit in tbc final '-&gt;
seiSOII.
innings for his flnl u~~e. HidiP
Nomo (5-5) dropped to 1-S in his
Cubs J. Plntes l
At Chicago. Brant Brown went 3- - . Cll'eer against Houston, allowing
for-3 with a solo home run to lead the · 1wo runs and six hits before Ieavins
Cubs to a season-best ihird straighl in the sixth.
victory. BrQwn. recalled from TripleExpos 10, Mets 0
A iowa on May 23, is 8-for-13 (.615)
Carlos Perez pitched a six-hitter
over his last five game~ . Terry Mul- · for his second career shulout as
holland (5-4) gave up four hits _in Montreal ended New York's fourseven inninrs. and Terrv Adams game winning streak. Pilching most
pitched the final two innings for his of the game in a steady rain at Shea
eighth save. Jon Lieher (2-7), who Stadium. Perez (5-4) recorded his
has lost five of his last six starts, gave first -shulout since June 24. 1995,
up fo~r hits in six innings.
when he. blanked Pittsburgh. Joe
Alitrus l , Doc11en 0
Orsulak and Henry Rodriguez hit
At Houston, Donne Wall and lhree-run home runs, Darrin RetchJose Lima combined oil a six-hiller er went 3-for-5 wilh a 1wo-run shot ,
and Brad Ausmus hit a iwo-run dou- and rookie Vladimir Guerrero had a'
_ble as the Astros snapped a_three- solo homer for Monlreal.

But Robb Nen got Barry Bonds to

poWid out with two-runners on _for

Skyline...

Monday's...,..

Fnu
lllllf,_-lldlllto
belp you decide wbll job II npt for

.

~~::-:i===····-

f.aM~It-rn

JTP.~ senice~ladude:

Rookie Heath Mumy got his tim
lllljor Jeaaue victory as San DieBO
bell Grea Maddux and the Braves •
Adlllla. The Plldres, who broke a 22 tic with three runs in the fifth
iming, stretched their winni1111 streak
10 four. Mumy, makina his first
lllljor le-.uc start after two relief
appearances, pve up se~~en hits and
four runs in 6 1/3 innin1s. Trevor
Hoffman pilched the ninth for his
ninth save. Maddux (6-2) allowed
nine hits and all five runs in seven
innings, the most earned runs against
him in 12 starts this season. ·
Marlins 4, Glaats 2
At Miami, AI Leiter pitched seven strong innings and Gary Sheffield ·.
homered to lead Florida over San
Francisco. Leiter (5-3) allowed four
hits, walked four and struck out five.
Blanked for 8 '}}3 innings, the Giants
got two-out RBI si_ngles _in rhe ninth
from Sian Javier and Jose Vizcaino,

.helps Marioers down Blue Jays 3-0

American
League
roundu

NL standings

The GaUia...Meigs .l'fPA
gro,=am can hel11 you!

'

Galarraga's 15th ~r "r ,fle
season 11ve the Rockie• ~ IHl lead .
The Cardinals rallied with five
runs in the bottom of the fifth,
includinJ a three-run homer by Ray
Lankford. But the Rockies pulled
away with four runs in the sixth on
RBI sinales by Larry Walker, Galll'rl&amp;&amp; and Kirt Manwaring, plus a runscoring groundout by Dante
Bichette.
Rockies Slarter John Burke II- I)
went five innings, giving up five runs
on nine hits. Loser Dumy Jackson
(1-1) allowed six runs on five hits in
f'ivc innings, raising his ERA to 7 .36.
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
Florida 4, San Francisco 2; San
Diego 5, Atlanta 4; Chi~ago Cubs 3,
'Pittsburgh 2; Houston 2, Los Angeles 0; and Montreal 10, New York 0.
. The
Cincinnati-Philadelphia
game was postponed by rain.
Padres 5, Braves 4

2; Chicago 8, Milwaukee 5; Texas 8, Sele (6-4). O' Neill followed with a
Oct. 2, 1995.
. "He was as good as he could pos- Minnesota 0; and Detroit8, Oakland line drive to right
Wells won for lhe fifth time in his
sibly be." Toronto manager Cito 7. Cleveland at Baltimore was poStlasl seven stans. Jeff Nelson pi1ched
Gaston said. "He just about pilched poned by rain.,
Yankees S, Red Sox l
the eighth and Mariano Rivera got
himself a no:hiuer. I can't tell if he
Paul O'Neill went 3-for-4 and lhree outs for his 16th save.
was injured or not He looks great."
White Sox 8, Brewen 5
Johnson has won Jhree straight, drove in the go-ahead run in the seventh
inning,
and
David
Welis
(6-3)
Chicago scored three in the eightll
"
including a four-hit, 15-strikc~&gt;ut
and three in the ninth, but Alhert
pitched seven solid innings.
u
performance in eight innings against
After losing the opener of the Belle didn'_t get a hil at Milwaukee.
n -By TOM
TexM in his previous start, since havfour-game
series at Fenway Park,
R,ookie Mike Cameron's two-run
AP Sports WrHer
ing a 16-game winning streak broken
New
York
won
the
final
three
games.
double
highlighted the ninth as
Seven years to lhe day since he in Baltimore on May 2.
With
the
score
tied
2-2
in
the
sevChicago avoided being swept in the
pitched a nochitter, Randy Johnson
Ken Griffey hil his major-league
flined .with _another one. The way leading 25th homer for theMariners. enth, Bernie Williams and Tino Mar- four-game series .
Dave Martinez's three-run homer
Johnson is throwing, he might Joy
When Johnson warmed up in the . tinez hil one-out singles· before
Vaughn
Eshelman
relieved
Aaron
in
the eighth gave the White SoK a
with history every time he takes the first inning, home plate umpire AI
mound.
Clark flashed seven fingers at the
Johnson pitched a two-hiller left-hander. At the lime, Johnson had
(Continued from Page4)
Monday night to lead the Seallle no idea what Clark's gesture meant.
Mariners to a 3-0 win- over the
As it turns out, Clark had a better other three classes. This is one you Tracy Hoover, Jonathan Stevens,
Torooto Blue Jays.
memory than Johnson. -don't want to miss. On Friday, June Eric Hysong, Keith Crabt~. Brian
On the seventh anniversary of his
" ... 1 didn't think anything about 13, the full-blown oullaw Late Mod- Benson, Lonnie Darst. Ron Marks,
no-hiller against Detroit, Johnson (8- •it until tbe inning was over and then els return to Skyline Speedway with Dqug McAtee.
1) didn't allow Toronto a hit until the 1wcnl uptoAI and I asked him what a !mlslercd purse of $600 to win,
·
. Late Models
sixlh, when Alex Gonzalez blooped he meant." Johnson said. "He told $100 for lOth and $75 to slart; a
Heat: Dllllny Talbott, Ed Venham,
a one-pul single to center. lilson me it was seven years ago today that nearly $3,SOO total purse in addition Todd Smith, Scott Wolfe
Brito's blooper in the same inning !threw my no-hitter."
to· the sprints,. Streel stocks aild
Feature: Ed Venham, Todd Smith,
was ihe Blue Jays' only other hit.
Griffey hit a 421-foot shot over Four-Cylinders.
Scou Wolfe, Danny Talbou, Ryan
Johnson slruck out nine and the center-field fence on the first
SUMMARY
Cline; .Darrin Smilh, Ace Layne
walked three in his 12th start since . pitch from Luis Andujar (0-1) with ·
Super Spriats
Street Stocks ·
undergoing back surgery last Sept. · two outs in the first. With 25 homers
Heat: lim N_ier, Ron Myers,
Heal: Ralph Withem, Roy Roush,
12. The 133-pitch performance was in 56 games, Griffey is on a pace to Jonathan Stevens, Traty Hoover _
Darrin Roush, Mitch Gillian
his firsl complclc game since going hit 72 this season.
Heat: Eri_c Hysong, Keith CrabHeal: Donnie Kinnison, Delhen
the distance in · the ooc-game diviElsewhere in the American tree, Dave Dickson. Lonnie Darst
RmL•h, Dave Gorrell, Roben Cornell
• . sional playoff against the Angels on League, it was New York 5, Boston
Feature: Jim Nier, Mike Bowling,

Skyline Speedway posts
prizes for this week's races
In last week's racing action at
Skyline Speedway near Stewart, the
Super Sprints were fine tuning for
the Coca-Cola Sp.rint National coming Friday for a rate that pays the
winner $3,000 of an over-$16,000
purse.
Many outlaw sprint drivers have
already inquired about entering lhe
race, including several-Ail-Siar Circuit regulars. Along with the CocaCola Sprint Invitational will he lhe
other three Skyline suppon divisions.
In two weeks, the full-blown outlaw Late Models return to Skyline
Speedway with a bolstered purse of
$600 to win, $100 for lOth and $75
to stan; a nearly $3,500 total pu..Se
in addition _to the sprints, Slreet

Thl o.Jiy Sentinel• P8ge 1

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port. Ohio

�•

•

Plge I • 'I'M .DIIIIy SIILIILtll

Tueeday, June 3,1997

Pomeroy • Mlclclleport, Ohio

TUIIIIIJ, June 3, 1117

Pom.eroy High 1947 class celebrates _Golden Anniversary

Cookbook review: Get out-of
the kitchen and onto the patio

Beat
of the
Bend ·
By BOB
HOEFUCH
There were three members.of the
Pomeroy High School class of 1932
on hand for the recent Pomeroy
Alumni Association reunion.
The three included Harlan and
Aileen Wehrung and Virginia Smith
Heilman. There are about 13 others
who. .was unable to be .present for the

reumon.

Cookbook rniew
"Hoc Barbecae," by Huab
C.rpentef aad Teri Saadbon
(Ten Speed Pre., $17.95) ·
By DAVE MATHER
Gannett Newa Sei'v~
For many families, Memorial
Day weekend is the time to ·search
the garage or storage shed for the
grill that has been buried by winter's clutter.
Standard fare for the weekend ·
probably will be hamburgers and
hot dogs, bratwurst and beer or
steaks the size of Rhode Island. The
more adventurous might grill a slab
of ribs slathered with thick barbe-

!!1"'1'---

.•

Jessica Sayre. daughter ·of 114r.
and Mrs. Aaron Sayre of Racirle.
was recenily named winner of !Jlc
1997
DEKALB· ' Agricultq\'11
Accomplish!flent Award. The awatd,
sponsored nationwide by DEKAI&gt;B
Genetics Corpomtion, is preseitt~d
to the outstanding sen.ior, agri~ultdr­
al student demonstrating supcrij1r.
scholarship, leadership and agric~l­
tural experience. Presenting t~c
award was Southern High School
agriculture education teacher Aarf.it
Sayre.
:
Sayre is a recent Southern High
School graduate where she wlls
vice-president and secretary of tltc
local FFA chapter. Her agricuhutui
program consists of tomatoes.

COOKING UP SOMETHING GOOD • To ensure that your grill gets Its optimum uae this summer,
keep the fare simple. II the menu doesn't strey from the bailcs, lhe grill gradually will ,.II into dis· .
uae es summer progresses.
RUM MARINADE
grilling. ·
about 4 minutes total cooking time
2 pounds large raw shrimp
If grilling, in a sm.all bowl, com· (cut into a shrimp to check). As the
(about 40)
bine all the marinade ingredients shrimp cook, brush on the remainFlavorless cooking oil to brush and mix well. If not using right ing marinade. ·
·
on the cooking·rack
away, cover and refrigerate. Ail To smoke:
Caribbean Rum Marinade:
advance preparation can be comBring the shrimp to room tem1 cup rum
pleted up to eight hours before you perature. Prepare the smoker for
one-fourth cup butter, melted
begin the final steps.
barbecuing, bringing the temperaone-fourth cup honey
Final steps:
ture to 200-to-220 degrees. Smoke
I tablespoon pure vanilla extract Place the shrimp in a bowl. Atleasi the shrimp for ahout 15 to 20 minI teaspoon ground allspice
10 minutes but not more than 30 utes, or until they are evenly pink
1 teaspoon ground 'cinnamon
minutes in advance of the cooking, on the outside and white throughone-half cup chopped cilantro pour the marinade over the shrimp. out. During smoking. brush on
~~ .
~~
. Toss the shrimp · to coat evenly. more of the marinade.
Here is a sample recipe from the
3 tablespoons very. finely Keep refrigerated.
To broil:
cookbook. If you are not a fan of m'inced ginger
.
Preheat · the broiler. Placc'"thc
To grill:
rum, · substitute Grand Marniet or
4 cloves garlic, finely minced
If using a gas or electric· grill, · shrimp 4 ind1es from the heat
one-half cup freshly squeezed lime.
I Scotch bonnet chile, or 4 scr· preheat to medium (350 degrees). If source and broil li&gt;r about 2 minjuice. Strips of fresh pineapple, rano chiles, finely minced, inclu&lt;l· · using charcoal or. wood, prepare a utes on each side or until they arc
rubbed with a lillie · brown sugar ing the seeds ·
fire. When \he gas or electric grill is evenly pink on the outside and
and grilled alongside ~the shrimp _
Finely minced zest from I preheated or the coals or wnod arc white throughout.
would make a. great addition. As a lemon
ash covered, brush the cooking rack To serve :
possible menu, accompany this Advance preparation:
with the oil. then lay the shrimp on .
Transfer the shrimp to a heated
dish with mashed yams, mango Shell and devein the shrimp (cut the grill or on a grill screen .
serving platter i&gt;r 4 heated dinner
salad with baby greens and Key shrimp deeply lengthwise and rinse
Grill the shrimp on both sides or plates and serve at once. Makes 4
lime pic.
out vein). Pat dry~ cover and rcfrig- until they are evenly pink .on the servings as a entree.
SHRIMP WITH CARIBBEAN
crate. Set aside the cooking oil, if outside and white throughout,

.ll1e popular Ohio River Bears
linn in Middleport has created a
special hear to mark th'c 150th
anniversary of the Pomeroy Fire
Department.
The special hear costs. $65 and .
orders will only he taken until July
1. If you're interested in placing an
order just contact Scott or Gcri Wal·
The following Southern Jqnior
ton at992-3314.
High School students were rccognit.cd at the school's annual awards
I'm sure many nf . you · will asscmhly held May 22.
remember ]can Hamm. a teacher in
Lee Reynolds was named rcc.ipithc Southern Local School District ent of the Hili's Miss School Miss
ftlr I8 years.
Out Award.
]can says she .ha.s such pleasant
Recognized for all-year honor
mcmori.cs of Meigs County having roll were : Joe Cornell. Rachel Marcome here in 1934 with her father. shall. Nathan Manin, T.J. Moore,
the lute L. R. Cannichael who ·was Aarun Ohlinger, Lori Sayre. Mau
sent to pastor of the U.B. Churches Ash, Amanda Huddleston , Joey
at Syracuse and Enterprise. Jean Manuel. Clay Enslen. Chad Hub. took pi~no lessons from Earl Brpwn . bard. Josh Larsen, Sarah Ball, Orenwho didn't actually play the piano na Sisson. Emily· Stivers, Jeremy
· but did play the violin aod the two Fisher and Macyn Ervin.
ofte n played to~ether as Jean proMakin~ A's ail year were: Tvier
grcs scd on the ivories.
Little. Jonathan Evans and Shauna
Jean's inspiration to learn to play· Manuel.
was from Sis Bowen, Tom's sister.
Recognized for perfect allenand she admits that she never really dance were: Elizabeth Bird, Joe Corgot to that level but she did learn. nell. Tyler Johnson. Russ Krider,
Jean's father served several other Terry S111ith, Shauna. Manuel.
churches in Meigs County before Maeyn Ervin and Lee Reynolds.
leaving. Meantime. Jean married
Spelling bee winners were Josh
Delmar Hamm who lived at Mom- Larsen and Shauna Manuel. Shauna
ing Star. She moved to South Web- Manuel was school's representative
stcr almost 31 years ago to he with in the county spelling bee,
her aging father and likctl it so .
Also recpgnized were the followmuch. she and Delmar stayed on.
· ing programs' participants:
·
Quiz bowl _; Carolyn Bent7., Joe
If we ever have a real bad Cornell. Tyler Little. Rachel Mardrought in Ohio, we can always beat shall. Lindsey Smith, Brice Hili.
the rap apparently by si:hcduling a Dally · Hill, Nath.an Martin. T. J.
golf tournament at Muirfieid. Do Moore, Aaron.Oblinl!er. Lori Sayre.
Amy M. Wilson. Clay Enslen. Chad
keep smiling.

their son, Phil, who lives in Tennessee. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bennett
from Hillsboro, were also suests.
Following the luncheon,the
invited guests, Coach Wilks and
Bennett gave retnarks. Wilks talked
about his experiences with the footbail and basketball team members
who were present. Bennett spoke
about the years when he taught and
served as principal at Pomeroy High
School.
·
During the course of the afternoon the ciassma~ recapped their
lives during the pasi fifty years since
graduating from 'Pomeroy High

School.
Johnson Murphy, Frank Vaughan,
A letter from Betty Ratliff Dean, Kenneth and Faye Wiggins, Frank
who lives in New Mexico, was read, Ryther, Wilma Neutziing Mees, Paul
and class members enjoyed "remem- · and Gloria Kioes, lind Joe Struble.
ber when" stories. Members of the Those persons coming from out of
Class of 1949 joined with the Class town included: Richard and Lois
of 1947, renewing old friendships Rosenbaum, Danville, Calif.; Horwith team and class pictures being ton and Gerry Thomas, Raleigh,
taken to record the event.
N.C.; Charles and Nancy Baird,
Etowah, N. · C.; Barbara Roush
Attending from the area were Goodrich, Gahanna; Betty Tedr()W
Evelyn Cook Clark, Mildred Dobbins, Hamden ; Betty Heilman
'· Kapteina Phillips and her guest, Gilkey and Howard Gilkey, ColumMarilyn Wilt, Lancast,er; Joan Scholl \ bus; John and Gonzelle Howard,
Childs, Bill and Margaret Lehew, Rancho ·Dominquez. Calif.; John
Horace Abb9tt, Kenn~ Mease, Ida and Joann Sapp, Reynoldsburg;.

FOR CONSERVATION .- Pictured with a thermometer which
recorded contributiona for the preaervation of the rain foreets ·are
from the left from, Adam Humphreya, Brlltsny Varian, and Ryan Varian; and back, James Haning, Hollie Dugan, Branden Black, and
_Gary_Ka___;_uff_.

SW(..'Cl

corn. cabbage and peppers. She
plans to attend the University of Rio
Grande where she will major l n
early childh(tnd.
:
As this year's winner. site
receives a lapel pin and ccrtificqlc
and her name will be inscribed on a
special plaque in the scho~l's agriculture education room. The
DEKALB award is presented .at
nearly 3,000 schools annually. : ·

..
-

News policy

.~

In an effort to provide ouFrcadcr- :
ship with current news, the Sunday :
Times-Sentinel will nut accept wed-:.
dings after 60 days from the date of·
the event.
Weddings submitted after the 60- .
day dC\ld[inc will appear du,fiog !he'
week in The baily 'Sentinel and the;
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.
All club meetings and other news:
articles in the sticiety sccti(tn must·
he suhmittc.d within till days . of:

.

PAdEVII:,E -- Scipio Tllwnship
Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30
. · p.m. at
Pageville. , .
..
.
l

POMEROY - Pomeroy Eagles
Auxiliary 2171 will meet Tuesday,
June 3 at Star Mill Park, Racine,
7:30p.m. PiCnic and meeting. Covered dish.
'

POMEROY -- Revival through
June 8, 7 p.m. nightly and 9:30a.m.
and 6 p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene .
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Lodge #363 F&amp;AM regular meeting

The winning district essay was
wriitcn by T.' J. Moore, who wrote
about Mrs. Donna Norris.

Tyler Little and Jcl'f Circle were
essay winners of the DAR contest.
The assembly ended by rccugnit.ing
those students wfl!)l had pa.&lt;sed part
or ail of the ninth grade proliciency
IC'\il

MEIGS.COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS
THE TAX BOOK'$ ARE NOW OPEN FOR
SECOND HALF 1996 COLLECTION OF THE
REAL ~STATE TAXES, ALSO FO;.
. ..
· . · · DELI"QUENT TAXE$.
CLOSING DATE IS .JUNE 24, 1997
TRAILER TAX DEADLINE IS JULY'31, 1897.

ewe discusses annual convention
The 52nd annual convention of Catholic Women to be held on June I I
. adt St. John's Arena in Steubenville was announced at a recent meeting of
·the Catholic Women's Club of Sacred Heart Chun:h .held al the chun:h.
A feature of the meeting wa5 a "candlelight tea" held in honor of the
. Blessed Virgin Mary by the hostesses, Anna Blackwood, Alice freeman,
Phyllis Hackett, Ann Layne, and Blllbara Mullen. Readings were given and
ail present joined in group singing. Centering t~ tea table was a y~ilow double begonia and candies. the Rev. Fr. Walter Hemz save the biessmg for the
dessert served 10 members seated at tables decorated wilh yellow pansies
and white tapers.
.
Plans were announced for a potluck picnic will be held on June 10 at the'
Hackett Cottage in Long 8011010. Mass will be at 6:30p.m., with dinner M
7 p.m. Women are invited to bring their huabuc!s or special friends.
President Kris Harris conducted the business session when officers'
reports were gi~en.

Wiliinms. Shauna Manuel. Lee
Reynolds. Jonathan Evans, Jess
Janey, Falhm Rqush. Brenna Sisson,
Macyn Ervin • .Clay Enslen, Chad
Huhhurd, Jilsh La!'Son, Emily Sliver.
Also noted were participants and
leaders in the following mini-class·
es: hunter education. musical .
babysitting. conking. aru.l art .
The following students were rei:·
ngni1.ed for outstanding essays in
the "Teachers Make a Dill'crence"
i.:ontest spunsorcd hy the Meigs Historical S&lt;lciety: T. J. Moore, who.
wrme about Mrs. Donna Norris:
M'an Ncigier, who Wrote ahout Mr.
Jim Wickline: Rachel Marshall. who
wrote about Mrs. Suzanne Wolfe; .
Jamie Smith, who wrote ahout Mr.
Tim Curfman; Lee Williams, who
wrote about Mr. Bill Baer. ·

•

POMEROY -- Pomeroy Eagles
Auxiliary 2171., Tuesday, Star Mill
Park, Racine, 7:30 p.m. Picnic and
meeting. Take covered dish .

RACINE -- CHOICE !:lome
School Educators meeting Tuesday.
I0 a.m. at Star Mill Park. Bring sack
lunch. For more informaiion, contact Tammy Jones at 992-6743 .

THURSDAY
POMEROY -- PERS/PERI meeting, Thursday, noon luncheon. Bob
Byer to speak on EMS and
Medicare. Reservations to Senior
· Center, 992·2161 by 9 a.m.

MIDDLEPORT - ' Middleport
Lodge #363 F&amp;AM regular meeting FRIDAY
POMEROY -· The Meigs County
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Work in F.C.
Heritage Dinner at the Meigs Coun·
degree. Refreshments.
ty Museum will be held Friday, 7

p.m . For additional information or to'
make reservations; call Museum
992-3810 by Wednesday. Cost is
$10 a person.
SATURDAY
DANVILLE
Services,
Danville Church of Christ, Saturday,
7 p.m.; Sunday, 10:30 a.m. 6 p.m.,
Denver Hill , Foster, W. Va., speaker.
SUNDAY
CHESTER -- Evangelist H. D.
Cook Columbus, speaker. Harvest
Outreach Church, Chester, Sunday.
6p.m.

The annual·gathering of the Pomeroy High School class of 1949 was held
at \he Trinity Congregational Church, May 24, with a buffet luncheon served
by the Trinity Special Projects committee.
·
George Dallas served as spokesman for !he class festivities of the day as
letters from Walter Green and Joan Riggs Johnson were made available to
everyone present. The afternoon was spent visiting with classmates attending the event, with video and photographs beiri~ taken. · .
·
·

. Classmates attending from the area were Guy and Donna Morris, Irene
Bailey, John Werry, Non~ Michael Shook, Vernal and Betty Blackwood,
John and Mary Lou Ihle, Lawrence and Blllbara Eblin, Eddie Ball, Wyllis
and Eleanore Davis, Manning Kloes, and Martha Struble, John Blackwood,
John and Eddie Bali, Wyllis Struble.
Coming from out of town were John and Joan Gilmore Pmons,
Granville; · Bill ·and Barbara 'Phillips Nease, Bellefontaine;._ Paul . Rei~?el ; ·

Reynoldsburg; Eugene Thomas and daughter Julie Ann, Union, Mo.; Bill
and Sue Tubbs, Phoenix, Arizona; Lee Wince and guest Alice Miller,
Zanesville; George and Kitty Dallas, Agoura, Calif.; Rollin Daniels, Palm
Springs, Calif.; Bernarq and Patricia Meier Suchoza, McMurray, Pa.: Jim
and Anna Lee Warner Mciver, Johnson City, Tenn.; Jack and Shirley Seelig,
Sla{ke, Florida.
·
·

\

(AT THE RIGHT PRICE)

eLight
To
By

I 72 Hedge Trimmer

21S Line Trimmer

Dave

21.2cc single cylinder engine

Grate
of
Rutland
Furnlt.re
Diet: girth control

* *the*golfer who.
Heard about

314 Walk-Behind Tillers
3- to 8-hp engines, tilling width
from 14 to 20 inches

\

STX38 LaWn Tractor

LX173 Lawn Tractor

GT242 Lawn &amp; Garden Tractor

13-hp, 38-inch mowing deck

15-hp, 38·, 44· or
48·inch cutting width

14-hp, 38- or
48-inch mower deck

•

always wears two pairs of
socks, in case he gets
hole in one? •

-·-

a

***
Castles in the air are line,

_,

until you try to move into
them.

•

*** art.

.

Walking .isn't a lost
.You
have to getto the garage
somehow.

~.

***
Never try to put a cat back
in a bag.

Gardens and lawns are complex things. For one, they never sto~ growing. Which is why we have everything. you could want
.·· to help keep things in order. It's all john Deere and it's all in one store. .
· Nothing Runs Like A Deere®

CARMICHAEL'S FARM AND LAWN
•

Rlflaad Funitwe
\

I

J

POMEROY -- Pomeroy Eagles
Auxiliary 2171, Tuesday, Star Mill
Park, Racine. 7:30 p.m picnic .and
meeting~ Take covered dish.

WEDNESDAY
RACINE -- Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM , work in the
E.A. degree, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
at the hall.

.

All hirthdays m'ust he suhmitted :
within tiO days of the occurrence.
All material suhmitted li&gt;r puhlication is subject 111 editing.

.

•

ALFRED .-- Ora~ge 'fownship
trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of clerk, Osie Follrod.

.
POMEROY -- Salisbury Township Trustees, 6 p.m. Tuesday, at the
township garage on Rock Springs
Road.
·

occurr~ncc.

·FAILUIII TO RECEIVE TAX STATEMENTS DOES NOT
AVOID ANY PINALTY, INTIREIT, OR CHARGE INCURRED .
FOR IUCH .,ELAY. OHIO RIVIIID CODI313. t3.

HOWARD I. FRANK
MEIGS
COUNn TREASURER
.
.

will be held on Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
Work will be in F.C. degree.
Refreshments will be served.

calendar-:-------------:-

·Pomeroy .High, School .class of 1949 gathers for alumni ·reunion

SJHS students honored in awards program
Hubbard. Shauna Manuel. Matt Kim McDaniel. T. J. Moore. Aa~on
Warner, Lee Wil.iiams. Macyn Ervin, Ohlinger, Macy Rces, Lori Sayre.
Mall Ash. Ryan Hill, Brenna Sisson, Jan Wise, Rachel Allen. Matt Ash.
Emily Stivers, Sarah Ball. Erin Stru- Shcrri Cummins, Amber Duffy. Joey
ble and Lindsay Smith;
Manuel and Amy M. Wilson. Also
CCTV -·Joe Cornell, Tyler John- recognized for citit.enship were:
son, Tyler Lillie. Nathan Martin, T. Clay Enslen, Chad Hubbard, Josh
J. Moore, Sherri Cummins, Joey Larson, Shauna Manuel, Jessica
Manuel, Amy M. Wilson. Nicole Nance, Joey Sands, Mag~ic Smith.
Benson, Nick Bolin, Brandi Codner, Lee Reynolds, Mall Shain, !lrenna
Clay Enslen, Cbad Hubbard, Shauna . S'isson, Emily Stivers·, Angel Bird,
Manuel, ·Jessica Nance, Tom Jonathan Evans and Jesse Janey. ·
Student councii members reco~­
Roberts, Joey Sands, Lee Williams.
nizcd
were: Joe Cornell, Tyler Little,
Kacy Ervin, Macyn Ervin, Tammi
Fryar. Ryan Hill, Tony Hupp. Fallon Nathan Martin. Kim McDaniel,
Roush. Mall Shain. Emily Stivers, Rachel Allen. Stacy Mills, Nicole
Benson. · Matt Warner. Brenna SisJennv Stollsteincr; '
Newspaper -- Joe Cornell, Tyler son, Emily . Stivers. Kayia Pullins
.
Johnson. Tyler Little. Timber Wil- and D. J. Smith. .
Student council officers were:
son, Nathan Martin, T. J. Moore,
Lori Sayre. Joey Manuel, Rachael Fallon Roush.. president; T. J.
Neville, Nicole Benson, Brandi Moore, · vice-president; M:icyn
Codner, Kacy Ervin, Chad Hubbard, Ervin, secretary; Sbauna Manuel.
Shauna .Manuel, Jessica Nance, Erin treasurer; Lori Sayre, reporter.
The school's Envirothon Teams
Roach, Joe Sands, Maggie Smith,
Mai:yn Ervin. ·Tammy Fryar. Ryan we.re recognit.cd for their second, .
Hill. Tony Hupp. Fallon ·Roush. founh ·and si~th place postings in the
Matt Shain, Brenna Sisson, f'mily 1997 'uninr High Multi-County
Envirothon Compc:tition. · Team
Stivers and Jenny Stollsteiner.
Citi7.cnship honorees were: · Joe members wetc: Lori Sayre. T. J.
Cornell. Tylcdohnson, Tyler Little, Moore, Joe Cornell. Tyler L.ittle,
Rachel Marshall. Nathan Martin. Jercmv Fisher. Kala Pullins. Lee

Other guests .for the afternoon
included Phi! Ohlinger, Pomeroy;
Elmer Houdashelt, Grove City; and
Paul Ginn and his niece, Michelle,
Columbus. The deceased members
of the Class of 1947 were remembered: Bill Mayer, Jean Lee, Victor
Young, Bob Pickett, Charlene
Smith, Stanley Nease, Helen Brown ,
Earl Thoma, and Jim Hawley.

Brittany Nicole Durst, daughter
of Shawn and Jenni ·Durst, celebratRutland Elementary School students' raised $210 in It i$ estimaied that 17,000 plant and animal species are
ed her first binhday on May 15.
22 days to send to The Nature Conservancy;• Adopt An wiped out--each year. ·
She was presented cards and gifts
Acre Program.
Sixth graders at the school decorated an upstairs
from
· her parents, great-grandm&lt;;Jlh·
The program is being held to help in the preservation stairwell -to represent a rain forest. The rest of the stuer,
Millie
Weed, grandparents Wtlhs
efland for animals and plants in the rain forest .in Costa dents in the school were reminded for several months of
and
Sharon
Durst; Fred and Ann
Rica, Paraguay. and Belize.
the plants and animals living in a rain forest. They also
Birds, marsh deer, giant anteaters, tapir, and the ·: read over the intercom each morning facts concerning Werry; R9se. Werry and Jack Foilrod; and aunts, uncles and cousins:
endangered jaguar, and just a few of the animals that the rain forest.
Amy Durst, Chip and Michelle .
reside there. For example in the rain forests of Costa ' ·
Werry;
Jay, I;&gt;ebbie, J.T. and Jbrden
Carol Evans's class created a large thermometer that
Rica live 845 ·species of birds, 205 finds qf mammals
Evans;
Pam and· Dennis Wolfe;
hung in the hallway displaying how the fund raiser was
and more than 10,000 varieties of plants.
Christy and Amber Blackston; Tim,
It is reported tbat at the current rate of deforestation progressing with the fourth graders organizing the fund
200 tons of rain forest trees are cui down in two hours. raiser. Each morning the money was counted by the stu- Natalie and Aaron Faulk; Rita, Joe.
Wes and Laura Fields; and a friend,
Every second an area of two football fields is desrroyed. dents.
Angie Pullins.

--~---'-.----. Community

The .Community Calendar is
published as a f~e service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
Clllendar is not designed to pro·
· mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number or days.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE -- Revival
services will be held at Harrisonville
Community Church through Saturday at 7 p.m. each evening. Evange. · list Norman Taylor will be the
speaker. Pastor Theron Durham
invites the public.

Evelyn Feiger, Toledo; Paul Jacobs,
South Shore , Ky.; Mary Curtis
Stark, Glendale. Arizona; Patty Karr
Carsey, Lexington, Ky.

Durst m·arks
Rutland Elementary School project
benefits nature·conservancy program · birthday

Sayre·named
outstanding l
·ag student . ..•

Among them is Dorothy Ebersbach, formerly of Pomeroy, who
now lives in the Tampa area in Florida. Dorothy is one of several women
who were showcased in a recent
Tampa newspaper article. You see
cue sauce.
Dorothy and the other women from
Simple fare raised to noble levthe Tampa Bay ,area were WASPs
els because it is usually is prepared
during World War II. WASPs stands
on the deck or patio with great flare
for Worrian Air Foree Service Pilots
- and flare ups. Jlut if the menu
and women pilots during the war
doesn '1 stmy from the basics, the
new nearly every type of plane fer·grill gradually will fall into disuse
rying fighters and transports across
as summer progresses.
the country.
"Hot Barbecue" has some ideas
Dorothy was one of 1,830
to spice up those outdoor panics
women accepted for the program in
with new flavors using old standard
1943 out of 25,000 applicants . She
grilling potions and ingredients you
was trained at Sweetwater. Texas
might not have considered grilland later then went to a training field
worthy.
.
in Tucson, Ariz., where she tested
Recipes include Southwest
planes after repairs were made.
Burgers and Asian Burgers, Rib
At the story goes, she was Oying
Eye Steaks with Amazing Glaze,
an AT"6 one afternoon when sudden·
Honey and Lime Thai Pork Chops..
ly oil shot out ·an over the · windChicken Grand Marnier, Tiger
shield and the engine began to
Prawns with Green Curry Rub,
smoke. She· managed to get the · Swordfish with Asian Sweet and
plane safely down, happy. of course,
Sour Citrus Glaze and Planked
that it hadn't burst into names.
Salmon with Ginger Spice Rub.
Since the experience with the
Scattered throughout the cookWASPs was over 50 years ago, . book are sections packed with
Dorothy is now very much a senior
information on grilling terms, techcitizen.
niques, equipment and fuels that
will benefit both novice and
The Rutland Emergency Service
advanced cooks. There are also
Unit is sponsoring the annual Rut•
recipes for saisas, chutneys and
land com munity yard sale this Saturcondiments and advice for grilling
day beginning at 9 a.m ..
vegetables such as squash, asparaIt's the third ·annual event and on
gus, broccoli, onions, mushrooms,
that day all Rutlan~esidents are . and even okra.
asked to hold yard sal.es which
Although none of the recipes
makes for one king size event. They
include a nutritional analysis, the
do this at their homes although
recipes clearly tell advance prepa·
rental space is available at the Rutration times whim needed and sepland Civic Center so if you want to
arate cooking instructions for
take part you can call Marcia Elliott
grilling, smoking, roasting or broilat 742-2233. During the d~y mem·
ing.
hers of the EMS unit will be barbe- .
The bottom line: This would be
cuing and will serve sandwiches
a good choice for familie~ who like
throughout the day.
to grill out but want more than stanMary Little of Athens has sent
along some stuffed animals to help
out the Women's Au&lt;iiiary at Veterans Memorial Hospital in providing
stuffed toys f&lt;lr children going:_
through the emergency room. Libhy
Fisher. head of the toy collection for
the auxiliary, extends thanks to Little ror the donation.

The 1947 Pomeroy HiJh School
Class observed its golden anniversary Saturday, May 24, at the Trinity
Congreaational Church social rooms
for a noon luncheon with their classmates, former faculty members, and
guests.
A bountiful buffet was prepared
and served by the special projects
committee of Trinity Church. The
invocation was offered .by Kenneth
Wiggins,class president. Joe Struble
gave the welcome and the committee recognized invited faculty
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Herndon Wilks
of Cbesapelllce who were joined by
'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Qhlo

1

..
•

•I

t

. 668 PINECREST DRIVE

614 446·2412

GALLIPOLIS

�Tliaaday, June 3, 1987

Tun~. Ju• 3, 1117

Pomeroy • Mldclaport, Ohio

P• I • The Dilly Sa dine!

Fun, Food and Fitness: Summer meals can be
(Thla article Ia broualllta you cooked, trimmed 3-ounce serving of
by the Meigs c-ty HMith meat, fish. or poultry is about the
o.p.tnlent Prwwtd... HMith size of a deck of cards.
Servlcfl Grant, Jackie Statelier,
Rub it on. Try experimenting
Coordinator and Linda King, with rubs and marinades. Rubs are
Aaalatanl Coordinator.)
blends of dried herhs and spices that
As summer begins to arrive flavor the exterior of meat as it
Americans rely more and more on cooks. Marinades, made with herhs.
backyard barbecue for meal prepara- spices and an acidic liquid like wine .
tion and for a very good reason. vinegar oi lemon juice, enhance the
Gri lling adds sizzle to healttful eat- flavor of meats.
ing and is a fun way to enjoy a variSummer pr&lt;'~uce offers bold fla·
ety of foods.
vors and colors.to meals and is perPreparing foods on the grill . fect for grilli11g. Season chopped
enhances the flavors of garden-fresh vegetables such as zucchini •.colorful
produce a.• well as the savory taste bell peppers, and eggplant ·with
of lean meats. poultry and fish. ba.&lt;il, parsley, onion, and garlic.
Preparing lean meat is a breeze on Wrap ~eggies . win foil coated with
the barbecue. A low fat cooking cooking spray and frill for 10 to 15
method like grilling( or broiling minutes. Balance your grilled meal
when you nee&lt;! to take a rain check) by serving refreshing low-fat frozen
is fan easy way 10 trim fat. Lean yogurt with grilled apple, peach or
meats stay lean since, unlike frying, pear halves.
grilling allows fat to drip away as
Barbecuing is simple if you
meat cooks.
know your way around the grill.
To help keep your outdoor . Here are some basic tips for grilling
· options lean: Stan off lean. Pork loin perfect meals. Patience pays. Stan
chops ;and tenderloin , skinless grilling when coals are ash-colored
chicken breast , lean cuts of beef and and glowing.
fish are good choices lor the grill.
For gas and electric grills, ignite
When buying any leans cuts of meat, and cover for 5to 10 minutes before
look for the words "loin or "round" grilling. Cook it right. Small cuts
in the names, such as pork tender- such as thin pork chops( I inch
loin or beef eye of round. Trim the thick) and tenderloin, cubed meat
fat . Trimming or removing visible for kabobs, should be cooked directfat prior to cooking reduces total fat ly over the heal source and turned as
per serving by nearly 50 percent.
needed for even.cooking.
Develop an eye for size. Portion
A one-pound pork tenderloin is
control is just as important as buying done in about 20 ·minutes (when the
and preparing lean. The Food Guide temperature reaches ISS degrees F).
Pyramid recommends 5 to 7 ounces Let stand 5 minutes before carving;
from the meat group each day, temperature will rise to 160 degrees
which can be eaten as two 3-ouncc F.
sc.-ings or as one larger portion. A
Thick chops and larger cuts, like

loin roasts. should be cooked over
Backyard grilling is more than a
indirect heat. By baking coals meal, it is an occ-sion everyone can
around the edge of a the fire grate . enjoy. Here area few tips to help
and centering a drip pan in the mid- ensure a fun and safe time is had by
dle, you can create an indirect all. Never use ~asoline or other
source of heat. Simply place the highly volatile Huids as staner...they
meat on the grill over the pan, cover, may explode. Wear a heavy apron 10
and roast. Lean meats in minutes.
protect clothing from arease and
Most foods cook fast on the grill. sparks. Wear name resistant barbebut don't overcook or foods will be cue mitts when adjusting hot vents.
dry and tough. Burgers made with
Never use a charcoal grill
lean meat or turkey are done in indoors- toxic fumes are hazardous.
about 10 minutes, or when their Do not move a. hot charcoal grill.
juices run dear. Pork chops, chicken Give coals several .hours to cool
breasts, and fish steaks are ready in before storing the grill. To check the
Jess than 15 minutes. Just remember temperature of the coals, cautiously
when meat, and poultry juices run hold the palm of your hand about
cleans or when fish flakes easily, it is four inches above the coals. Count
done. For a moist juicy chop, the number of seconds you can hold
look for a hint of pink in the center. your hand in t~at position before the
A .meat thermometer will register heat forces you to pull it away. 1Wo
160 degrees F and the meat will give seconds, hot; three .econd, mediumslightly when touched witH' tongs. · hot; four seconds, medium, and five
For more information contact the second, low.
American
Dietetic · Before and after that backyard
Association/National Center for barbecue be sure and exercise. ·.
Nutrition and Dietetics.
You ~now that children love to be
Some basic equipment is essen- outside and so do most adults. Doing
tial. Beginning grillers need only a an activity with ·your family in the
few basic tools to get started. The great outdoors makes the experience
best 'place to stan is by choosing even more special. Here are some
your grill. There are three basic fitness-fun ideas you may want to
types: Charcoal, gas and electric. Icy together no matter what your age
Gas and electric models are very may play tree tag. You will need
convenient and heat up quickly, but ·streamers of different colors, such as
charcoal grills continues to be popu· yellow, blue ·and red.- tie a streamer
Jar with traditional' grilling enthusi- around each of several trees .that are
.asts. With the grill as centerpiece, fairly close together.
add a bag of charcoal briquettes, .Choose a .color, such as red, and
lighter fluid, matches, longs. an stand next to a tree with a red
apron, cold drink and your choice of streamer. Say another color. such as
meal (chefs hat is optional). Before "Blue!" You and yo4r child run·to
you know it you'll be grilling in siz- the tree with a blue streamer around
zling style.
"
. it. Ask your child or ~nother family

member to shout .IIIOiher color-"Yellow!" Run 10 a IRe with a yellow Slrcllmer. Continue takina lllmS
namin1 a color and lllllnina to the
. appropriate tree each time until you
both are ready to stop. . .
Do jumpingjKks outside. Jumping jacks arc a great exercise for
improving your child' coonlination;
You don't have .to worry about low
ceilings or disturbing your neighbor
who may live down stairs--because
you're doing your jumping jaeks
outside.
·
Bring along a cassette recorder
with lively music to listen to as you
exercise. Or invite your child 10 help
you count one/three-four/five-six,
and so on. Befon: you start. ask your
child to predict,how high the number
will go before you decide to stop. Be
sure to quit before either of you·gets
overtired:
Here are some more fitness tips.
Wear comfortable clothing and
foocwear when you exercise. Do
simple stretches to loosen up the
muscles before exercising. Don't
overdo it. Stop when you or ytiur
child gets tired. Take deep breaths
and cool down after exercise.
Drink plenty of liquids after you
exercise, to replace water that your
body loses when you sweat.
The following recipes arc taken
from the National Pork Council and
the Beef Industry. For a free copy of
recipes for making Lean Meals in
Minutes, send a self nddresscd
stamped envelope to.: National Pork
Producers Council. Lean Meal in
Minutes, P. 0 . Box 10383, Des,
Moines. lA 50306.
Cajun POrk Tenderloin

218blespoous plflrib
·.
2 ICUpoORI CIICh of onion po..-der, girlie powder. cayenne peM,
I 112 teespoon &amp;fOUnd bllc:k ..,per
I teaspoon each dry thyme
leaves, dried oresano leaves
.
I 1-pound polk tenderloin . . Blend spices in small bowl. Rub
. onto pork (some spices may tiOI
stick to polk); let stand 30 minu~s.
Prepare coals for pillinl!. Place pork
· on grill 45 inches from medium liot
.coals. Grill IS-20 minutes or ut11il
· inserted meat thermometer re'ads
155160 F. , turning occasionally.
Serves 4. Nutrition facts per serviq:
ISS calories, S grams fat, 2 amps
saturated fat, 67 milligrams cholesterol. 63 milligrams ofsodiwn, !:!4
grams protein.
··

Poet's
corner
'

do
I felt the urgent need to
Tell all those Who read these
words
What a wonderful person you 'arc

If there was nnly one wish
·1 could have come true
It would he that every child
· Could have a grandma like you
You're a mother, u grandmother
And great-grandmother t&lt;K&gt;
A poet, pianist and teacher
To name just a few

was in the school honors program
for four years. She · has accepted
employment with an Elon Collage
. family who now reside in Ivory
Coast in Africa.
She will be in Ivory ·Coast for at
least one year, tutoring the family's
children.
CCL MEETING
The Middleport .Child Consc.-ation League met recently at the Rock .
Springs United Methodist Church. A
"healthy" walk was planned, bui due
to inclement weather, it was canw
eel ad.
The Pledge of Allegiance and the
"Mother's Prayer" opened the meeting ,;,ith President Kitty Darst officiating .
· Darst .gave a report on th~ South
CenJral District Conference, held
recently in Gallipolis. She reponed
that an instructional video is avail·
able to members. narrated by Rosie
O'Donnell .
The. group discussed next year's
programs:

.

•

The annual family picnic will be
held on June . 22 at the home of
Helen Blackston.
. Devotions were given by Nancy
Morris, titled "1 Know Something
Aboct You."
Hostess gift was won by Helen
Blackston, and a dessert was ·se.-ed
by Nancy Morris.

Reunion policy
'

To ensure prompt publication. of
· family reunions, the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune requests that arttcles be
neatly. typed and double spaced for
easy ediCing. Reunion items should
1101 exceed 300 words and. must be
submiued within 60 days of occurn:nce.
No e~ceptions will be made.

New Radlltora .• R..Coret
AJC CondenMra/HOH Aanmblle•
.,

SERVICE
Un~tstone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
ges-4422
Chester, Ohio

.

MiddlepQrt Is Observing
· Its Bicentennial .This Summer.
The Dally
- Sentinel will publish a
eommemorative edition for its
July 2nd
You can be a part of this
historic edition.
For More
Contact The Dally Sentinel
at 992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104
Don Riffle Ext. 105

l

•

i

949-2168

1111

.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Oeb.tors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for their person(!! use.
This may include a car, a ho,use, clothes, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

· Garages • Replacement Windows ·

Attorney William Safranek

FREE ESTIMATES

1

'

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

"

(No Sunday

.

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

'

985-4473

·

· Lost: Sibtrlan Husky PupP)', Ap.
p.rox, 35 Pounda Around Me.reerville Area , Reward I Pla11a Call

,,......., '

Fill Dirt
614-992·3470 .

.....

New Homes, Acld~lons,

·JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST. ·

614-992·5479

I

Babysi&lt;tor Wonted

I

3545.

Babyoittor, 2 Kida tn

Pittum, Clotting.
Garage Slle: 100 Third Avenue.

6141h, sm, 6th, g.s, Dootlty Wam·
ens Clothing (Larga) Girls Sizes
8--12 Miac.llems.

Ga- Sail: JUNE 2.M. tOam 10
Spm. I 112111111 N. On Roule 160
Past Hos~talt
Gigantic Sale Rain or Shine 2nd
thtu 4th. 1154 Socond Me., 9-5

Of

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard SaiH Mull 81 Paid In
Advance. Dudllna: 1:00pm tha
dar belore the ad 11 to run.
Sunday 6 Monday tdlllon·
1:OOpm Frldoy.
Flv. lamlty- June 4·5, corner ol

41h and RoHlnt, NIIW Haveri. C.Ci
Duncan 1"8ilklence.

CONCRETE
SERVICES

Garage sale, June 4, 112 mile
above Fiw Points, rain or shine.

Foundations,
Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios,
.. ,
Garage and
Basement Floora.
- Free Estimates.
Insured
:SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES
742-0304

WILL RAUL·

.. ..,.c......

Sensational Results

LIVE!!!

Fmm amnn,g its ranks

1-900-(414).1 020
Exl. 1412

Your aranddaughter,
Deedrah Simmons

$3.99 per min.
Mual be 11 yro.

Serv-U (&amp;19) 645-8434

Gravel, Umeatone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mlnlnum.

Free E11ima1es

·- . - . ...
BAULIIII
IICIV......
'•

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Lll!leatone &amp; Gravel
. Septic Syatenla
Trailer &amp;
HouaeSitee,

"FACTORY
DIRECT
PRICES'' .
.Q uality Window Systems

Reoonsbte R.,..
Joe N. Say..,
. Sayre Trudd1g _
Co.
614-742-2138.

110 Court St.
912-4111

'1/ZlWtlln

For lnfoi'IIMitlon
leadllll to the
amtatand
conviction of
enyone Involved In
' ateallnt a property
line fence at1 1127
lc,oaa St.,
I.D. Callerl

IContacat· Ron.Mlllt.rl
882-4021

Pomeroy, Ohio

YfV 1023477

., '"-

INSULATION

Consider:

MIDDLEPORT ·

537 SAYAN PLACI!'
m-2112

8:00 a.m.'3:30 p.m.

•Replac.-.1 WW.ws ·.

Easy Bonk.Finandng
Air CondHioners Installed 528" omonth
Heqt Pumps Installed 138" omonth

•lulhl Gorages
•51-Doors&amp;

'~!:"

D. Gea17's
Bod~

$8Ning Southelltem OH &amp; WV · . 814 448 8418
1-8CJO.I7Z-61171391 Safford School Rd..
OH

I ,-A.INTING
' A pod pnillljob o"
• ~ nny do11dy dr~y,
mn~ ilaeem
~ler.
. Jrltarlor
Biforl;~ p.m.
1•vem11aage.
Atterep.m.

114-115-4180

...........

EVENI~G

MEAL

.AT

Donatloa $4.00 for meal

742·2925

. Don Glary,

Multi· family yard sale, r8in or
shine, nice clothing, all sizes,
many larger women's ond men's,
children's, household and m•sc
lteml. Counry Road 10oM 4-lanel
SR 33, second dri~eway on right.
Sale Wednesda~. Thursdsy and

oftoom Addition•

-New Garages .
•Eiaclrlcal • Plumbing
•Rooting
ofnlltrlor • Exterior
flalntlng
'
Alto Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
912-6215

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Pallo tale· June 5·7, firsr house
pasr church In Chester. Exerc;is·
81, patio table; something lor eve·
ryone, new and used.
·

Tuesda~ an'd Wednesday - June
3·4, 288 Main Slleel, Middlepor ~

Brannan.
Yatd sale, Syracuse Park , Wed.
June .trh. g.,s.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

compltl8 an IIPJ)IIc.lian al any af
our .oHices and aubmit to Human
Resourc:es Oeparlment, Ohio
Valley Bank, Boa 2.t0 Gatllpollt,
Ohio.t5631.
•

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Ell·
PLOVER
Bread And Pastry Baker. Part
Timei Position. pteue Respond
To: ClA '413, Cia Gallipolis Oailr
Tribune, 825 Third A~enue, Galli•
poti~ OH 45831 .

CABLETVORDERTAKERB · ,
Earn $15 ·S18 Pot Hour +Com-.
missions. fExtremel~ High Qustomet Demand, No Overnight

Travel. ·Immediate Openlng_t. ·
CarididaiOI Must It Avallabll To
Sm&lt;t Paid Tmlnlng P.,.,.m Now.

CALl PMJL TOLL FREE.
1-88&amp;-432-7378

Computer Users Needed. WOrk
own hours. $20k to $50k/~r 1·

000·348-7186 xt508.

. 'I)RNERS
Gaset Transporlltion ol Marlena

is expandi"',,. Need Ouair18d
OfiYtfl 2 v...sExperttnce. Must
Pass the DOT Physical and Drug
Tes~ Class A COL UcenseWilh
Haz: Mat. Mileage Pay, Taom

....,..

lti...,A.........
111111!. lllln, ~

Fiberglass Technician· dulles In· .
elude wer lay-up. mold prockjcdor\

pariS lay-up. f'loaoe Oall 814-9411- .
2311 9:ooam-5:oopm i!ttkdayo
(tFc. Racine, Ohio).
FulfTime l!ACHINO
POSITIONS OPEN:
ACADEMIC: Enalioh lnsltUCIOr.
SPECIAL ED: Multi-Handicapped Instructor; Behavior Oil·
ordet lnsb'ucror.

VOCATIONAL: Practical Nursing
lnstruc;tor (E•perienced B.S.N.);
Patient Cart Technician Instruc-

tor tExperier&lt;ed RN.)

.

CONTACT: Gallia -Jackson •

General Construclion Halper
Must Have ·E•perlence\ Transponat ion , &amp; Own HanG Tools,
614·388-11385, Altar 7 P.M.

80

Hair Stylist Wanted Rent Yo~r

Public sale
and Auction ·

OWn S•tlan, Or Make $10 To 115
An Hour, Calf Carol 'King, 61C·

441HI922.

005

HOME BUSINESS Choop S•r~
Send SASE • $5 To C. Roueni
P.O . ·aox 7429, Canton. OH

44705.
HOM.E TYPISTS,
PC usan needed. C.tS,OOO inc;ome porenlial. Call1·800·613·

--

4343 EXL B-9368.

Owner

Legal Secretary, ·computer skills
rtquired. Send ·reaume Ia : Box

CW·3 c/o Point Pleasant Rea·
iller 200 Main St Pt Pleasant
W/25550
.
Now hiring truck .drivers to pull
\lans &amp; flatbeds. $.28 mile load·

ed, 1.14 empty, empto~oa paid
health insurance, paid vacation

aner 1 year, COI.-2 yoors

••~»ri·

ance, clean MVR;Jra-amploy .
men1 screening a at least 24
years old. Call800·228-eesB.
·

FreeEatlmates

Now Taking
lno's Pizza in
Pomeroy ArMs

Ill'S
POiftiLI

•lMgeJob8
•

Experienced Hair St~llst fUidld
For Joann's Kut &amp; Kurl 814·44tl·
9496, 614-446-0214.
.

Yard Salt. Smiles out Jerry's Run
Rd, .Apple GrO\It. New &amp; used.
LOIS o.l Bargains . Juna 4 lhru
June 7th. 8anr?

304 882·3541

-

-282·210

Vinton JVSD At 814·245·5334,
E11L 201 For Application lntorma·
lion. E. E.0.
.
•
DEADLINE: 11'11197.

McCumber Rd.
Rptllnd, OH
•S~NII JobS

•

oe,.. '

&amp;roua benefits "package lncludlftt .
401(K) retirem.,v, opportunity IDi' ·
career advanca'men!. and merU
bonus opportunilltt. ,Experienced
and qualified per~on(a) ehould

Sar June 7. 2205 Lincoln Ave., 9·
1 Mens~ wqmtf'S, Jr size clc:ilh·
1"',1, coilna lin, 32' enlry doot.

GOODNin's
QUAUTY ROOFING

. .,,_.r_
,_,..
1111

,,

ot small clol,.. &lt;XJU(t 1 ptult

Oh io Valley Bank otforl I

ORA NT TRUCKING, INC.
5488SRt3
OAK HILL; OHIO 45158

614-992"3120

HARTWELL
HOUSE

.• .

edge

•

Home Ph.

•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•WHCI Eaters
2 mi. off Rt. 7
Ltadlng (:reek Rd.

rrublit is invited

BY•nings when requettld by Ccll-lection Manager. Working Knowl-

or (800)333-

550 PaQe·St.
.Mlddlliport; Oh. 45760

.BRIBILI

MEIGS COUNTY §ENIOR CENTER
Mulbeny He·ti, ·Pomeroy
1\aesdays anc!Thundays .
Serving f'rom 5:00- 5:45

Shop

Quality Work at
a Fair Prlcel

\'

\ .LINDA'S

··

.YOUNG'S
(ARPENTER SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

BENNETT'S
HOME
HEATING &amp; (:OOLING ..

.c;:r.
1·614·992·70!,!,_ -=

614-742-3411

•R... Acltltlons

•Free 5 Year PartsWarrar;tty
•Free Digital Thermostat

ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID

' 1:i:t

Free EsUmstes ·

Wlndtws

(Payments based on approved crodll)

Must be 62'years of age or handicapped.
, _ Must.meet HUD eligibility requirements
For further details call today

week, and be aYillabll tar -

lnsurance,401K

Ftidar. 9arn-7pm.

Will Your .U tilities Put You .
In The Poor House?

in Pomeroy, Oh[o
Rents are computed according to your
·.,. income. Lovely apartments featuring
,.
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
,,
appliances.

New Construc;tion &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen Cabinets
VInyl Siding • Roofs
Decks • Garagea

1111117 1 mo. pel.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

THE MAPLES

•'
The qualified appllcanl ·~ll ~
to have a lle~elble s-e daw worll

Sunset Home
Construction

1..acJ0.2e1-5eOO

0

•'

Mlnl...,.-(2) ,_, pflor
collectlon•••~·

c-..............).

20 Yrs. Elcp. • Ina. Owner: Rick Joh/110fl

'

GIFTED
PSYCHICS!!

Garage
sale·
Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday, rail1 or
shine, Five Points area, Wipple
Rd;

992·7074 .

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

y.,., ~

-lfild

Porter on 554 NIIW StuW

mo

a- tiChOOI

Olatricr, Mllture Adult 1 114......

June .trh, &amp; 5th , 2 Miles N. 01 'On Weekends, Aelerenc•a
Holzer .Hospital On .Route 160. l::l.t::u•:::,ti::,B1::4_:·25::58-;.1;.:0::;l0;:.~--Clothes, Old Toola, Chair Co\ler,
lANK..,
Shoots; Houlehold ltoma. Chtiot· 0 ~ 0 Valley Bar* It ~on
ma1 Dec ora tiona, Exercise expe'lenced and
lndlv\fd. 1
Equlpmon~ Caftae &amp; End Tables, ual to f&amp; Ono Ill lui*"' poalilan
Aquarium. &amp; Wicker Furniture. 9· as 1 CoHecdona~ In fw F'ts..
nancial Bar* Gtaup. To qlll1ilfy for
ttis exempl poailion. yo\! will
AIJ.·'Iord SIIH Mull
need:
It Ptld In AdYII101.
DEAN M; 2:00p.m.
EHoctlvo -~~~ .,d 01'11lho doy-.. lhollll
muoiCIIIon 1111111lo to tvn. SUnday
odltlon - 2:00p.m.
Abllltrtoco....o .......
frldoy. Moncloy odHion
- 10:00 o.m. Sa1urdoy.
Ptoplo ortontod PtrMflllltr.

Cell VI For A Free fllimllh&gt;

614-742-3090
614·742-3324
614-742-3076

,__.
.no. t.-o-

Rep.

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

June 2-.t, 9 -7 2 Ullea East

Roofing, Siding, Pole
earns, Decks, Painting,
Garages, Porche8.

POMEROY, OH.

Yard sate

room Fhaurea.. 2 Air Conditioners,

335i Happy Honow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760

360° Communications

70

a..~ Cllr,.L

needed: Earn rnon.,- mat billa at,_,

tl82-6358 or 304 ..82·2846, Ind.

WodnHdoy, Thurldar. Dolls, Doll
Furniture, Home lnterio,, Bath·

Top Soli,

Calls)

·

~.~~~,.~.~.~.:::R!!t~pr~.-..-.-:-:,.:::d::..::,

Garage Sale: 1/2 Mile Out 211

CELLULAR PHONES " ,........

250 Condor Stre~
Pomeroy, .Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
·
Fax: 304-n3-5861
Phone: 614: gg~L2406

ESTIMATEES

Er,lf't&lt;' ·

Big Garage Sole: 1.2 Milta aut ""
Ule 218, Juno 2nd lll'u 61h.

KINGS'

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales; Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday· Friday - 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday - 8:00a.m.· 12 noon

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine &amp; Welding Shop

Nlle=to~tow~=-~ ••

512.- . . . . ,..

lteina.

Umestone,

'

•Garages
•Complete ·
·· · Remodeling

W011ld . . . . ....
101-

Baae Bill Cards, Marbles, Tools,
Sll\l&amp;r Certificates Lots Misc.

Gravel, Sand,

. 614·992·7643

Athens, ·Ohio

(UmeStone. Low Rates)

.WICKS
HAULING

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

11/211171mo.Ddl

. ~New Homes

0484

11!12-737hr S1....a·OI83.

-

.

......

Slll7.

Lolt· pait of prescriplion QlatHI,

Installation
American Standard
Freedom
Heat Pump
(814) 992-7434

"Build Tour.DNa•"

UlodtlotiOII' ......

in~Coooll

11• 8 - k old 112
Bauat &amp; 112 llllale. To a good
Home. Very ganlfe. (114) · 441 ·

Gotlipolls Cioy Park Yiclnloy, 614-

Sales Service .

Attorney At Law

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

-

8eoudl~t

60 Loatll1d Found

319 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport

.

(614) 592·5025

corlna

Sf H.

MOlliSON'S HEATING
. &amp; COOLING

Remodeling

&amp;J

'

Sat., June 7, 1997
'
6 P.M.
Meigs Co.
Fairgrounda
Sponeored by .
Meigs Co. 4-H Horse
Commltl"
For more Info call Pam
985-4489 or U11 949-2052
,,
AuctlonHr:
Rhett Milhoan

to tood and

ii'.,_

... 311 Jill .

fluffy KIMN Root Cu• 5 WHks
Old, 81&gt;H48-41121.

3117/WT'fN

1998 Martin StMt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Audtcriw...,.,.,

2ND ANNUAL
TACK AUCTION

Toy piano player is serious about her miniature art .form

Attention·Advertisers

· Custom Homea

CELLULARONEe
'

'

So to y&lt;lU Grandma Brannon
I just want to say "thW1ks" .
Heaven sent us an angel

By CATHY HAINER
childhood, happy or otherwise," Tan hybrid between die xylophone and locating one in a Lower East Side musical instrument, Tan says. "You
USA TODAY
says. "So people can rc.latc to the piano.
store for $45.
can drum on a tahlc ur a curdhoardl'
When Margaret Lcng Tan takes toy piano, even if they didn't have
Tan didn' t set out to be a toy
Today, she laments. toy. pianos box . II all comes from Cage; he used
the stage at the Spoleto Festival next one. II has such a ~ostalgic sound." · pianist. She won a scholarship to arc gelling increasingly hard to lind. · llnwcr pots and coffee cans. He had
month, she' If he playing . the toy
Although an adult tinkling away Juilliard when she was 16. but she "Children today don't like to press a whole orchestra or found objects. I
piano. But her ~rformanccs arc far at a toy piano may seem frivolous, was greatly moved by meeting keys. they want to press buuons. But can go into the kitchen and lind a
fro111 child's play.
Tan says playing the instrument isn't avant-garde composer John Cage. !·keep my eyes open at Ilea markets, new instrument. To me it's the ulti·
Tan Is one of a handful of serious so different from playing the stan- "My association with Cage was a thrifi stores, garage sales."
mate chaUcnge. "
musiciims who afe bringing the dard· version - except that she sits powerful in.nuence on my life_ l had
miniatur~ instrument to a wider on a little stool about 8 inches from
a working relationship with him for
She now has a total of nine in her
Bcsidc,s the toy piano, Tan peraudience. In fact, the release of her . the ground .
II years. That's why I became collection, including a hlack mini forms on the loy accordion·, toy
new recording, "The An of the Toy
"The toy is really a very primi- involved in new music."
grand made especially for her hy the hunmhox. toy siren. polk'C whistle,
Piano" (Point MusiC, $16.98). coin- tivc version of lh~ adult piano. It has
In 1993'Tan made her toy piano Schoenhut Piano Co. of Rochester, pup gun. drinking glasses, even SI'Y
cides with the I 25th anniversary of keys like a regular piano, and little debut at New York's Lincoln Center, N.Y., considered the Stcinway of toy sauce dishes and cat liKHl cans. ·
the toy keyboard.
phistic hammers, hut instead of hit- performing Cage's 1948 "Suite for pianos.
"I had to eat my way through
"I'm fascinated by the Challenge ting strings they hit metal rods.'.' The . Toy Piano." She scoured thrift shops
·nine cans of tuna fish to find cans
of turning a playt~ing into an an sound is very bell ' like, sort of a ·lo find the perfect piano, finally
Anything can be turned into a with the right sound."
instrument," ·says the 44-year-old
·
Singapore native wbom Piano Quarterly magazine has called "the high
priestess of the avant-garde." "It
challenges me to defy the boundaries .and capabilities of a conventional instrument."
· lf this brings to mind the
"Peanuts" character Schroeder
hunched over hi.s toy piano and
pounding away at a Beethoven opus,
:,:ou 'rc not flir from wrong. In fact,
.. .
.
Tan consid~red calling her album
"Ode to Schroeder.." Instead, she
' dedicates her version of Beethoven's
"Moon] ig.ht sonata" lo Charles
Schulz's cartOon pianist.
issue~ .
On "The An of the Toy Piano,"
Tan literally covers ev~ryone from
Beethoven to the Beatles. "Any:thing you can play on the big piano
you can play on a toy," she says.
"It's just a mauer of compressing
the song and .fiuing it to the toy 's
Inform~tion
range."
'
Tan is not a composer herself, but
several composers now arrange
specifically for the toy piano. She
hopes the repertoire will expand as
more ·composers become aware of
the magic' of the mini's sound.
What draws audiences to toy
piano concerts? Call it remembrance
of sounds past. "Everybody had a
•

WonUdTeluJ: . . . . . . . .

O r - Pug

814-250-1585.

992-2825

Middleport, OH

10125196/HI'I

'

z~

llatl18 lllaeM Dealer

"

•

I

992..0583 .

DUMP TRUCK

'

Rt 1, Box 44-C
Maeon,WV

NEW·REPAIR
Guttws
DownspoutS ,
Gutter Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

Nolweet Flnlnclal

_:,.a. L. HOLlON INGELS ELECTRONICS
:·TRUCKING

for children. family and friends
Was hrcd in your spirit
And will never end

.

U... L ........ CDPMA

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

.. .. '

ROOFING

FAMILY DENTISTRY .
.304-773-5822

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
Mon-Sun

ltow.rd L Wtlt nl

8•1'17 8. BOIIdn, D.D.I.

New Locltlon: 2 miiH off Rt. 7 on Rt. 124

Your compassion and care

Jim Lochery, president of the Ewlnga Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution, lett, prelleflted awards at Thursday nlghra din·
ner meeting. Recognized and given certltlcetea or medals were from the lett, Judge Frederick w. Crow, Syracuse, the law enforcement award tor hla participation In the Lucaavllla priaon riot trhila; Donald Shatter of Racine, the heroia"' medal tor bravery In a rescue attampt during a trailer tlra; Barbara Shahon of Gallipolis tor her leadership In Toys tor Tots campaign and food collection tor the
needy; John Kautf, peat prealdent'a award; Betty Kauff, the Martha Waahlngton award; Tom McNearlln of Oak Hill, the patriotic award .·
for Memorial Day flag festival, and Margaret Parker, praaldent of the Meigs County Historical Society, tor program assistilnce.

~ -~ DEITIL CARE

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
lndultrlll • Automotlvt

For eighty-seven years now
This world has been blessed
With your endless kindness
And gentle. tenderness

ness meeting.

She received a B.A. degree ami

_...,,

e p.m. frM

7/221tln

RETIRED TEACHERS
The Meigs County ~ctired
Teachers held their monthly meeting
recently at Trinity Church.
After lunch, served by the Trinity
·Church ·women's . group, Maxine
Whitehead conducted a short busi-

BLACKSTONS RETURN ·
Helen . Harold. Bob, Brenda and
Joey Blackston have returned from a
trip tn Elon College in Nonh Carolina. where they attended the graduation of Helen and Harold's granddaughter, Heather Kane. Heather is
the daughter of Jack and Sherrie
'Kane of Charleston. W.Va.

\dotM:JIIo lftlclionlll mile kJllln.
1 2 - old, loll of room
.. ,.. Cell (814) 1 1 2 - littr

Barbecue Marinade
Preparation time:· I 0 minute5 '
Cooking time: 6 to 7 minutes :
112 cup chopped onion
. ·.
I tablespoons packed brown
sugar
.
· I tablespoo11 vegetable oil
1/3 Cup' each cider vinegar and
ketchup
. I tablespoon each prepared
horseradish and water
1/4 teaspoon coarse grind black
pepper
Cook onion and brown sugar in
oil in small saucepan over medium
heat until onion is tender, about 3
minutes. Add remaining ingredients
and continue .cookihg over medium
heat 3 to 4 minutc.s, stirring occasionally. Remove from hCat; cool
thoroughly hefore adding to beef.
Makes about 3/4 cup.

For Grandma Brannon
Because of the good deeds you

WINNERS ANNOUNCED
The following were winners of
prizes at the recent open house at the
Pomeroy Chapel Of Fisher Funeral
Home: Ralph Ballard, Long Bottom;
JoAnn Hays. Rutland; Sharon Hausman, Pomeroy; Betty Wilson, Middleport; Laura Harrison, Cheshire;
Bcuy Kern, Shade; John Bailey,
Flatwoods; Gary Bates. Pomeroy;
· and Pat Layne, New Haven, W.Va.

so ·.v.nuftl

'grilling~ .

Society . .---......___ ____;,__SAR awards-----....,
scrapbook

The group also attended a presentation by the .Trinity Church Bell
Choir in the church sanctuary. Dixie
Sayre , choir director, asked the
teachers to try their hand with the
bells:
. The next meeting will he held on
September 20.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Rilacnlillle Rella
. Expeftencld

....,...

(614) 7424100
'.

�TUIIday, June~. 1887

~ ~::~~~~,~~~------~~~~-.-~----~-.-~~~~~~~~Oh~~~==~====~~~==~n-~~~~~91~
=~boP
DIDCIK
NBA Cro••word Pu~...
.

~...

--.-.

540 lllllceiiM1eoua

•.

IED.IDEHTA\- ULD
1

Additiol'llllncotne
: :'l.re You Calling On Medical IJ
• pen tal Businesses? Would You
• J,.lke To Conti"ue What You Are
• :.CoinSa And Have Addilional SSOQ
~2,000 Per Month? Profit From
~ur E11perienclt.
I '

i·· -----6~,t~4·~~~~~~~--~
I :'

•

1 Aock!Prings Ret.blllratian Conte&lt;
neking an RN whh expa~ienca

•I'
·: • n longterm and rehabilitation
nursing. Thia posllion will involve
resident assessment systems
MDS and c11e management for
our aubacut&amp;lrehabiliuulon unit
..Candidates lhould e.11hibit ability

to c:ommunicat,, organize. and
work with th- lrtterdlsciplinary
iherl~

team. We _.recognize your

career goals W1th highly compelS·
tlve salary and benefit package • .
To respond to this exciting op,portunity apply at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Canter, PoiT\eroy,
Ol1io. 814-992-eBOO.

,..,.. -ldVtnlslng In
tltll fiOWIPIPII I&amp; llt&gt;jlet to
ttw Fodera~ Fair Housing AI:!
of191111whlcll-·llegll

t o - - •ony prelerenc:e, .
lmkatlan or

....,.li•*•tion
bleed on rece, colOr, rtiQIOn,

... ••- , ...... 01 " " -

origin, or ony , _ to
tnllkO t&gt;~ IUdt prof1f811Ce,

-llun 01 ~lion."
This- wll not
1&lt;1-tgly~

-lion

adveftiHrnenta tor realestata
- I &amp; In
of tha law.
Out' rtadM are herobi
lnlotmed 1111111 d"lliugs
--lnlhlonlnt aval-on an equal

Semi 0riV8fl For Flatbeds, 814-

opporlunlly ~~~~··

310 Homes for Sale

··· village. Appllcanta must be a

resident of Uiddlaporl Village.
Mu&amp;l have experienc;a in book·
keeping or ac:counting and' com-

.,

puttr 'skllll.
~~~.

ApDIIcarlona can be obtained at

VIllage Hall, 237 Race Street,

,.Middleport, Ohio between the
tiouro of B:OO f&lt;ll and 4:DD PM.
.,AppllclliOna mua1 be returned by
.1Uria1B,t1107.
WANTED: Exporlanced Painters!
Send reeume to Box CW· 29 Clo
Point Pleae•nt Register 200

._,.own

• Nain SL Pt. Pleasanr WV 25550.
t.IUit
transpartalion.

Work Ffllltt Home Earn Large IncOme catalog Buo. 614-441-11187.

180

wanted To

Do

Beautiful 2 SIOry On Corner l:oL
8'\6 Main Streel. Pt. Plea.sam,
WV 3 Bed""""' 2 Fun Batlls, LiV·
ing, Dining, Family Rooms. Mod·
em Kitchen, large Laundry Area.
S68.DOO 614·446·2205, Or 614·
446-9585.

Brick 3 Bed•ooms, z Full Baths, 2
Car Gara~, Parque1 Floor In Entry &amp; Dintng Room, Partially Remodeled, Nice Neighborhood Of ·
George• Creek .$69,90D, 6t~­
~8-8252, Ot6t4-441-Q399.
Corner lot.C02 Fou nh Ave.
(Great For Bed &amp; Braakfut) e
Bedrooms, 4 Batlll, Formal living
Room IFamily Room With Pocket
Doors, U!ili1y Room, Garage. Ae·
modeled. - 1115,000- Shown By
Appomlment Only. 614-4.C6-2858

FACTORY DIRECT.
NO llllDLE Mf&lt;N.
SAVESS$1.
Oakwood . Home• Ia th• only
dealer in the tri-atatt area that
builds and sella their awn
homes. For factory direc.t prlcea,
shop OAKWOOD. HOMES, NITTIO, WV. 304-755-5885.

Chlkl care In my home, ref8fanc.. -~-.. 614-992-8&amp;12.
Child can. In My Home, Smte Ro·
ute 7 Soulh. Crown City, 6t•-256-

0no bodt oom, lltout two rniel CMit
Now Limo Rd.. 814-742-2803 or

N•w Sanll: Aepo'•l Only 3 left}
owner financing available. 30475S.7191 .

1 &amp; 2 BA aparlmania, 2 &amp; 3 BR
hoysing, aome currently being
rtmodaltd, low rent, Wllomt uti~
Idee paid. Small peu welcome
wldepolit 30-4-87&amp;-2Q63.

Sale ·Big Mark ·Oawns On AU Sin-gles In Stock ·Financing Available -French City Homes. Inc.
Gallipolis, OH . 614-446·9340.

1 end 2 bedroom apars'tttnt&amp;. fur·
nlahed and unfumiahed, security
deposit required, no pell, 6, .c992·2218.

Schult- Came See The Industry's
Oldest Budder 01 Homes At The
Areu Only Authorized Schull
Dealer -French City Homes, rnc. •
Gallipolis, Ohio 614-446·9340.

1 Bedroom unfurnished Apart-

mont Range, Relrigeratot, Dispo.
aal, Garage. provided. Water,
Sewage, Garbage Paid, Oeposll
and references Required, 138
Firat A.ve. Rear, Gallipolis, 114+
448-2581
1 Beautitul Apt. Across From·
Downtov~n Park, 2 Bed, 1 Bath,

Elec. $13,500 • Financing Available- Fren'ch Cit~ Homes. Inc.
Gallipolis, OH. 614-446-9340,

814-441-1618

2bdrm. apls., lotal electric, ap-'
plianctl furnished, laundry room
facllirlea, dose to school In town.
f&lt;ppllcotlon&amp; avallabta at: VIllage
Gratn ApiO. •49 or call 6t4·992·
3711 . EOH.

Cole-' 3 units· t1ve in one, rent
othE!f 2 out or total rent $910. N&amp;W
windows &amp; carpet. $63,500

3br a~rtment in Gallipolis Ferry.

Pomeroy:

Experienced carpentry and remodeling. Inside and outside,
docks, vinyl aiding, add-on addl-

llona, cabinet retacmg or newi.V
rabuill. Ralarencea-Free Esu""""'· Jim Sltui 30H75-t272.

Will POill~ly land contrac.l or
help finance on an, 814·828 .... 950.

Experienced Carpentry And Re·

Newly remodeled three bedroom,

modeling Adc:l-pns, Decks, Walks
From Framing To Finish Work,
814·441-l\124.

one and 112 bath home in Middl&amp;-

George• Pottabte Sawmill, don't
haul your 10(,11 to the mill just call
304-875-t957.

Painting · Interior /E1tenor Wind·
ow Glazing No Job Too Small I
References Upon Request, Free
Estimates, Call Ann 614-379·
2&amp;05.
.

14x60 Clayton Cherokee, i ncludes big kitchen, 2bedroorns,
Insider heat pump, $17,995. Call
Mountam State Homes 304-6751400. "

Mobile Homes
for Sale .

Seamatu1ss. 25 yrs. e1perience. 14x70 Two Bedroom, Two Bath
Alterations lor men &amp; women. Trailer Only $7500 Or Sale With
Land And Will Sale Land SepaCall Tere10 81304-675-8728.
rata.t6141367- 7555
SPILLMAN'S
H~71 12xS5 Mobile Home, $2,400,
Home Paindng: Inside and Out
614·446·6956.
Lawn Care Services: Mowing and
Trimming
1974 Fleerwood 14170, total elec;·
Cal: (6.t4)256-9t60
trlc, 1t1ree bedroom, 1 &amp; 112 bath,
Will do Baf&gt;l'slning in m1 home In verY good ccndnion, newly pain!·
Mercerville. 8 Miles out Rr. ·218. ed, includes stove, refrigerator,
heat pump, gara"e disposal, two
caM: (614~256.S965
ceiling fans willghts, bllnda,
Will Do Babysitting, in my home valances, block underpinning,
starti!!P in July, Bidwell Area, CPR 10x12 porch with roof, must be
and F1rst AIO Training (614)366- movad, $8000 080, 614-992·
6096, leave message.
0301 ask lor Paula
W1ll haul junk or trash away. $35.' t988 Oakwood t4x70 2br, 2 batll,
8x12 deck, on renled lol, e1c.
pidwp load. 30&lt;-675-5035.
cond., asking $13,900 OBO.
Will take care of elderly and do 3D4·675·8051 Leave message.
hciJIOkeoping, 6t4-94!1-1302.
Must Sell I

1992 14x76 Clay1on Mobile
Home, Three Bedroom, 2 Bath,
$17,000 . Has

Opportunity

!NOTICE! •
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you. do buslne'll with people you know, and
NOT 10 aend money through the
ma11 until you have investigated
the ollo&lt;ing.

Business and
Buildings

SectiOnal :JSR... 2 full baths, large
kitchen, large front"parch, heat
pump, on -4 acres of ground In
Fla•ocic. 304-8 7S.589Q.

320

Business

340

BEAUTIFUL APf&lt;RTMENTS f&lt;T
BUDGET PRICES f&lt;T JACKSON
ESTf&lt;TES. 52 Wt&amp;twood Drive
from $260 10 $3~. Walk to shop
&amp; movie&amp;. Call 614·4-CS-2568 .
Equal Houling Opporomity.

pon, 61H92-3465 aner 5prrL

House painting : Exterior and in·
tarlor painting, e•perlenced, fret
ntimatea. reasonable rares. 304·
713-5878.

FINAN CI AL

References &amp; deposit required.
304-87&amp;-5421 .

Fisher- 3 BR, 1 BA, new carpet,
some remodelinQ, $18,500 fi·
nanced or $1.C,SOO cash firm.

Been

Moiled .

(614)367-72Bt
New-1997 t4 Wida-t batll, S6991
down, $139/mo, with approved
aedit Caii1·800-6SII1·6777.
Now-t997 14 Wldt-t both, $6991
down, $13g/mo, wilh approved
credit Callt-BOO.fi9t.fi777.

1997 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$995 down, $195/mo. Only &amp;I
8&amp; YOUR OWN BOSS Local Oakwood Homes, Nitro, WV. 304Vend Rre Far Sale Big Cash 755-5885.
Wkly. Call Today IIOQ-350-8363.
HUH 14)180 3 or -4 Bedroom,
230 Professional
$1 ,359 down, $229/mo, Free air,
skifting, &amp; delivery. Only·at O'akServices
wood Homes Nitro, WV. 304· 755HARTS IIASONARY :- Block, 5885. .
brick &amp; atone work, 3D years ex ·
perlence, reasonable rarea. 304· 1987 doublewlda $1445-down,
885-35Qt ahet 6:00pm, no lob·IO $22Dimo, Free delivery &amp; aetup.
t·800.S9HI777.
-Iori&gt; BlG. WV-021206
2 Bedrooms. Central Air, In Gill·
llvlngaron'a baaement water - poU1
, On Ranted lot ; Ready To
proofing ,' all bas•ment repair• L41ove Into! 01-4-44e-1-409, After
done · free estlma1e1, lifelima
4P.M.
guanintee. tOyra on job experi·
onca.304-e75-?145.
FOR SALE
3 Bedroom and 2 both 1995 KenREAL ESTI\TE
tuckian all alec:lric mobile homo,
1•a70 completely furnished with
~:::::-:-:---::-::-::::;:--- , refrig, stove. dilhwasher, washer
&amp; d&lt;yet, raltle &amp; • ch&amp;lra, end 11310 Homes lor &lt;&gt;-Je
ble&amp;, coffoo taltlo, 2 lompL Mae:
2 112 JUr Dfd, 2br, 2 bath, liVing . , bedroom has queen lize bed,
roam, dining room. kitchen, lull 2 night elllnda, vanity, 5 draw11
- l f l 1 wJIIroplace, 112 lllmlli cltoll Sotond bedroom hu dou·
room other 112 could be made bit bod ond 5 thaii.. Titircl
tn&amp;O bedt'aom or bathroom, 2 car bedroom t\11- been ua•d for
anached garage, hHI pump, vi- crafct. large 8'122' coveretl
n~l tiding, nil on 7.5 acrn. .,.rch, corpoted, SUnbtam JllltiO
_ , boau11ful hotiMI, ehown 1&gt;1' lurnnlltl which Include&amp; 4 chaife
and cuthions, glaas top r.ble
11 ·a' ...., 304-882-3827·
and gl!Hr willt culhlon. La&amp;t IIUI
no1. IMit II a 10'X14' metal IIOfr
•
building wi1h - k ond
lhoivo&amp; and hooked up 10 oiK·
tric. Hom• 11 on rented lol In
Fiehtr&amp; Mobile Home Court In
Cottlg0¥1110, WV. Stlllng price
I25,00D 1\lmllhtd 01 $20,000 unl\lmllhad. Cll 304-372-11574.

iiobif.; I'

~~~~~~~~::

~

Country Site Apt, .Large 2 Bedroom,. 2 Large Baths, Washer
Dryer Hook-up, Central Air $450
Ucnth
Oepotll
Required
5
7
( t3J5 4-253II
Downtown Galli polls: !!lodarn t
Badroom, All Eloclrlc, Carpeted,
Complete Kitchen, Electric Heat 1
Air Conditioning, 6t......_4383.
For Rent Twa Bedroom House on
Graham School Rood, $300
uonlh $150 Depoal1. (814)4~.10050
Furnished 3 Rooms 1 Bath, No
Pars, Reference And Deposit Required,G 1-4-44S- 1s19.

3 Acres for S:ale &amp; used trailer
sold separately. 304-875-5958 or

furnished Elficloncy Apariman~
Central Heat And Air, ,All Ulihtin
Furnished Except EhN:tric:, Privata
Parki~'~~~, Pha.ne 61 , _448- 2602

304-675-2445.
5 acre .tracts Surrounded by Za·
lelki State Fores~ $9,900.

n,;j;;,·~
~;;;;;;-;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;::;
5 acr8 1rac1s available In south - l
Manor Aparlments. Now

Goods

2 Pi~ Uvlng Room Sullt, Good
Condltloti, SOrlou&amp; lnqurkl&amp; Only,
$250 Firm, 114·448-tOOO, L-•

...._.

f&lt;ppllanct&amp;:
Roi:ondltlonod
Woohofo, Dryora, Ranga&amp;, Rolri·
grarora, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cl!y llaytag, 8 t4·441·
7NS.
French provincial sola lSD .
Brown rocll111r $50. Lg end •bl•
ltD. Lg OVIfllulled cltalr (floral)
150. 2 new twin bed fr1m11. 2
IWin box frtmtt. 2 twin mattr..l·
H. 304-1175-3038. .
G.E Slda by Side Rafrlgerotor
1t75, Now l!cCulloch Gu Wtt·
dealer $50, Minkota Trolling Boll
M61&gt;r$t00, Cttll (1114)-24
GOOD USED f&lt;PPLIANCES
Washer•. dryert, relrlgerators,
range&amp;. Skagge Appllanct~, 70
Vlnt SlreOI, Coli 6t4·44fi.738B.
1.a0D-499-3499.
Kitchen Corr&gt;ot fe.SO Sole On All
Carpet In Stock A Room Size
Mollohan Caroto. 614-441-7444.
Matching 'twin bed&amp;. Complett
lax mathlne. 304·882·292D or
304-882-3274.

Sears Frosi·FrH UprighL Freaz·
er, StDO. 8t4·446'-4141 Aller I
~M. &amp; Weekend&amp;.
Used Alt Conditioner &amp; Heat
Units $1
S1orm Doors
St4-

so

446-330t, 6t4-446-35B3.

•so

Ultd Furniture 130-Bulavlle Pike,
Baby Bad, Book Shtlvu, good
Hospital Bed, Couches/Chairs,
Quain Bed, Mirrors, Computer
D•sk. Chett of Drawers. Tablell
Chalro, Much Morel (614)·446·
4782 Hrs. t0-4.
Washer, Dryer, Refrigerator,
SlaVe, Freezer, Microwave, Color
T.V. 6t4·256-t238.

530

Antiques

Bur" or Mil. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Ualn Str..t, on RL 124,
Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:0D
a.m. ta 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:DO to
6:Do p.m. 614·992·2526, Russ

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Brown Carpet, Good
Huti:lt illosk.
4 ploct b'droom oulle, excellenl
oondition. jubilee oak, $350 OBO,
6t4-742-2011 .'
.c• hea.vr corrugaled pipe, 1DOfL
roll, S2t.99. PAINT PLUS Hf&lt;RD·
WARE. 304-G75-4084.
5 118" Jointer, 10" Floor Model
Saw, Rldl.ng' Lawn Mowar, Lawn
Sw...,.,, Shop ~c. , Miscellanooua Tools Ect 43 Christy Drive.
61.C·446-2476
5 hp. a1r c~mpressor, air tire
changer, air car lilt. Bear spin belancer, hydraulic transmission
jack, 60,000 Ill ~~~. other ml&amp;e.
lhop tools, &amp;1•·q&amp;2-SKJ.S.

5'•6' Utility trailer with loading

111"'1'8- $500. 30H75-216t.
6 Cedor Htrcule&amp;, Jacuzrl Teal
Gr•en, Oienator Skirl, Cover,
$3,iloo, 614-367~7735.
AKC Collie pupploo, aable and
white,
livo lemalea,
one male,
eyes checked,
aholll dewormed,
, ·61-4-696-1 085.
Anllque Car Tire, firestone 4 Ply
Size: .C75 ·500 ·19 Spoked
Wheels, Exctllenl ConclltiOn, 814·

..
~6~
· 7-12:;;7_.::-7--:::-=::-:--:;:
1
I

Antique dining room table, 1 x
chairs, bullet, might be cherry.
te75 ceo. 304-875-3882. ·

17:;.:.~-;;--':'-::;:;-;:::::;::-;:::;:

Acuptlng Applications For 1 AutomUc Dryert ' Each; Sofa
Bedroom HUD Subsidilld Apart· SSO: Rtfrlgoratot $75; Sofa Bed
$60; Full Size Bedlinor Fill 8 Ft.
mem FOJ Elde&lt;ly &amp; Handicapped, Bed, Llko Nawl •75, BU-379Furnlshed Appliances, Equal
"
Houalng Opportunity, 8t4·446· I:2::7.:20~~Arn~";R;-I-:P.-.Il.7"'"-;::::;:=:-::46311·
Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bldtoom Rocky, Tony Lima. Guarantud
5 Loto·t5Dx325 and 1DOI250 aportments at Village Manor and Lo~ot Prices "' Shoe Care, Ga"
$8,500. Phone 304-675·5106 alRlveroide f&lt;portmeniO In Middle· I:::=;_-:-:--:-~-:---,-:-.--;-:Ief 5pm b" rmr8 intlrma~
port From $236·S30• ·. Call 814· Bu•cher block table w/-4· chairs,
992-506,. Equal Housing.Oppor- bulchtr bloc-k lable 1w/2 chaira,
Several 5-acre p.-cor.
t7,500 HCfl
Nnides.
1ovv seal, brand new. 3()4-875·
remote, beautirul land: Meigs
41 D6.
Modern
t
Bedroom
Apoumen!,
County, Scipio Township. SR 892
Cemetery Lot a. Granite Bronze
Ou&amp;t off SR 143).,Owner financing. 614·448-0390.
Memorials. Apple Grove MtmorlCall for good map,.- 1""· 81-4·593· One bedraom •partmvnt in P' at
Gardens. 30-4·576-2779.
8545.
Pleasant Furnished. Very clean
&amp; nlct. No pets. 30~-87&amp;-1388.
Closing sale- 'Rose's GroenRE NTA LS
house, CR 28, one mile ~rlh of
One bedrOom aparrmenlln Mid· 8ashan. Open 8:00am to e:OOpm
dklpor~ al utilitlaa paid, 1270 mo., or caDahaad. 8 t4-849·2822.
StOD daposit, lt4-992-7806,
41 Houses for Rent
8am-5pm.
commerlcat Rldgld Sewer f&lt;nd
2 Bedrooms, Basemenr, Gallipolis
Cleaner With Anachmenll,
6 1.c-'"6 -4 782 Galllpolla,
City Llml!a, S3951Mo., Plu&amp; De - Twin Rivers Tower, now accepting
poail, Reterance,· No l?ets, 614- applications for 1br. HUD tUblid·
lz•d apt. lor elderly and handi·
446--4196, Leave Mt110go.
capped. EOH 304-875-867V. .
Concreto &amp; Plntic Soptic Tank&amp;,
3 Bedroom, full basement, kilch·
30D Thru 2,000 Gollon&amp; Ron
en furnished $3001mc. 28G Fair- Two bedroom apartment In Uld· Evan• ·EntetpriHI, Jackson, OH
'
view Rd. Camp Conley. 304-S75- dltP&lt;Ht. we pay nter, sewer and 1..800·537-~.
trash, you pay gae and eleetrlc,
38t2.
$200 mo. plua $100 deposit, CS14· E1ec1ric · Scoo1er and Wheel992-7808, 8afn.Spm.
ci\ol;o, New/ Uatd, Scooter lll\1.
Partable Rlmpe, Sloirwar EIO¥I'
Two bedroom aparbnent in Uld- tor&amp;, Bqwma!'l'l Homecare 114·
dlepor1, no poll. lt&lt;-992·5858.
446-7283
One bedtoam house In Pom11roy,
f
I
o....o
nico and clean. rlapo&amp;lt, 304-773- 450
U!ll
Full Size 3 Ploco Antique Btd·
5707efter 5pm, 614·11112-2Q()g,
ROOIIII '
room SullO, Excillt~t Condition,
ern Vinton County fronting on
Slate Route with rural water avail•9 900
able, • . .
Owner financing available with
$500 down paymenl, 814 ·596 5707,(agent owned).

o

a•...,..

Small 2br, large yard, $200Jmo,
271 Fairview Rd. Camp Conley.
304-675-3812.
-:-------'-------Smell hou&amp;t in Clifton, clean,
quiet, no pots, $275/mo. $2DD
depottit ' 304-773-DtQZ

!

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

Sloopln~ room&amp; with cooking .

Two bedroom houae,t nice and
elton: no inaldt pot&amp;. dtpo~t Ond
reftroncts required, 8U-D92·

Alao trailer apace on rlwer. All
hook-up•, Call oftor 2:00 p.m..
304-713-8B5t,- wv:

30QQ.

4...
-

420 Mobile HalMa
lor Rent
t4xlV- Homo, 3 - 1 112 Bath&amp;. 2 Milt&amp; From Rio
Orondo, $325/Mo .. Wotor Pold,
Dopo,al! Required, All Electric,
Central Air, No Pe11, Call 81-4·
4*011t ·Ahor 7:00P.M. Or lt4245·8442 Daytime f&lt;ak For

MinGy.

•

2 Bodioom In lloeon, NO poll.
301-713-1751.
2 Ba-.rt llobllt Home, t2851
Mo., 1215 Dopoal~ low Utllltltl,
Nice Neighborhood, 114·387·

041!S, ca-l.

Space

for

Trailer Iota. Cawmy laiJjt i.lolliro
Home Park. "" liz" accoprad.
304-fi75-54Z.1.
Two rlvor compallo&amp; irllh full
hookup, parlo &amp; dqclto, 114-112·

470

wan..ctto "-1t

'

Wantod·3br ltouM or trailtt Pt
Ploteant
...,1 ., , _ oprlort. 304-t75-5111 Ilk lor lltondt.

-

tH2 lnttrnollonal crew cab, ell•
101. dump truck. s &amp; z. oJr brtkoo,

_ , 11 Roj&amp;l Qalt

1.
RoiGI~

Inc.· $500 down and tab aver

poymonll, lt&lt;-742-20711.

Turning l'low &amp; Middle Buller,
1;1.3DO.It+Z45«178.

1883 lnlernatlonal, 1 112 ton
llatbad, hyd. lilt gote, 345 gao,
4sp., low miltl, excellent condltior\ $5.000. 614-8!12-411t .

Now Stpllc Tank f&lt;ertttlon M.,. · For Sale: Naw Idea 4~3 Roil nd
lOr&amp;; 13tD pfUI IIJI, (1141....... Baler, llalwt&amp; 414 Belt 700 Pd&amp;.,
4782
Elocric: Tit Ho• Baltd 400 Bales.
.,..,_ Tlvllt Shop- ..,. luring ·sa .. A&amp; Now, $7,DOO: Massty·
fumlture, malomlty clolhll. ltitll1 F.trguoon Modal 450 Round aalItems and largo toys. Call 11+ .er, Bale&amp; Good, Good Conditloo,
'ta,800 OBO: lla11oy Forguaon .
8112-3725.
•t2 Squoro Baler, GoOd Condl·
Saga Gon111i&amp; &amp; Sage CD Vllth lion. S1,200 OBO: W~ Do Cu&amp;tom
Gamo&amp; 1200; Day&amp;: 114·441· fiay Work, Round , Or Square
. . . . AIIO W~l Buill Hog 8r Tho
3278: EwW&gt;Qe 8t4 441130110.
H,.r Or By Tho Job, 814·387Snapper 14 HP Riding Lo'"n . 7. ..
'
Mower, $t,OOO, 8U-3111-D4D6
f&lt;hor 8 P.M. Or Any- On Wao- 11a11oy Ftrgu&amp;on 255 diesel
tra.Ctar, Ma11ey Ferguson 560
llondL
round bale&lt;, Ma110y Forgu10n T
SPRING SPECif&lt;l: Centrll Air Dyna-Batance mower, Lfas~y
Conditlonaro: 2 Ton St,tg5; 2 112 Ferguson pull-type rake, Vermeer
Ton lt:205; 3 Ton S1,3D5: 3 112 drum mower, Bison 15' stock
Ton 11,515:4 Ton St,085: Prlctl Wlltr. Phone304-456-t917.
Above Include Normal lnltalla·
lion. FuH 5 Yttr Warran!l'. "II You Naif Holland 55 Hay RakO, ElcelDon't Call Us We Both Lo .. t• lenr,.Condition, Wilh Fre1h Painl,
Froo Eetlmato&amp;l Add·On Heat I Flold Ready! $t,350, 6t4·~46Pumps Only Sllghty Higher. Call 0t030
Ua Todaj. 1D97 Is The T,.tnty
Sevenlh Year In The Heating &amp; We make hydraulic hose assam·
Cooling Bu&amp;lneul Ot4-448-6306, bliai. ·Sider's Equipment 304175-742t.
1-81JD.28t.(I(JIIfJ.

Used Wuner 1 Orv.er General
Elecuic, $300, Bolh 61•·•46-

4m.

Warren 10x12 dual jet knock·
down cooler wlunit SSOO. 8x12
International cold storage freezer
wlllnlt $650. Babre 5pm 304-7135341 5pm 304-773-5842.
WolffTannlng Beda
TAN AT HOME
IXJi DIRECT and SAVEl
Commerc:ial!Horne units from
$199.
Low monlh!y payments

FREE color catalog.
Call TODAY I·B00-7t1.0158.

550

Building

Supplies
Black, brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, ate. Claude Winters,

Rio Grande, OH Coli 614·245·
5t2t .

620

tg88 Ranger

Pets

A GrOom Shop -Pel Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don
Shooll. 313 Geofl!'l• ·cr.,k Rd.
014-446.Q2:Ji : ;·&gt;,-· .. _,
'
AKC Beagle pups, born In Fabru·
81'/. &amp;hots ond wormed. $40 o&amp;ch,
8t4·742·t805.
AKC malo Trl Shtlllo, 11r old,
oxc. quality. $175 OBO. 614-367·
0028.

AKC mlqliture Schn1uzer

pup·

730

Small horse, ttvee year old sorrel
mare, new bridle and saddle,
$500, 8t4·992-4221.

740

2063.

.

Bobtail kitten•- long hair, White,
black, rabby, porents port bobcat
and pan Siamese, $25, S14-992·
27-41 .
Boston Terrl•r &amp; Chinese Pug
P.upplos, Both AKC Registered,

Show Dual~ Vet Checked, Shots
&amp; Wormed Now Takirlg Deposit
Or Payments. lt4-381-8325.

Christy's Pea
N·- Second
271 111u•

Mlddltport. Ohio.
·
.
.Supplloa- grooming· pota. Mondoy througl1 Friday, 10om-6pm.
Saturclar. noon-apm. 6H·gQ2.
4514.

Full Blooded · Dalmalllfl 11
monthl old. $75.00. Railed Rabbit
Hul!:fl:$50.00 ,(8t4)-4-18-71126

1/tiTfL.L.I,tNGf.

I

'•

-

&amp;

E~tlnrude,

t990 Buft:k LaS:abre. one owner.

96

SE~

Can be seen
at 38 Hudson Street, Middleport..
Ohio.

790

34 aa~~oo~

ore,

2~--1

7 Guldo'a high
note
&amp;Plot
• Llmll'l ""'

3 Wlilbuffato
4 Hoaltry

s=.r

nama

35 Sean:ltw (for) '
I Co.llt311 lnaect IIIII

10 DoNa
marathon

Pas&amp;
Pass

2•
4•

Pus
Allpua

..

J

--

"

41 AmM poriOn
Phillip Alder
1 2 - ,.
fl!irlier this year I was asked by .
........
l~
two students how they could do bet·
ter in the w~kly duplicate at thei~
411WO~~
club. That was an easy one. I replied
under·
that if they defended all opposing
contracts perfeclly, they would win
47 -Pop
;1
every week.
·
(punknllllili'l
Adam Smith, an 18th-century
48 Duck
''·
49MIMK.altl#
Scottish economist and philosopher,
1he caml~
almost had it right when he wrote,
:51 JFKalghl·"Defense ... is of much more impor·
' ·r
CELEBRITY CIPHER
tance than opulence." Well, good
··
by LUll Campo•
'",,
defense at the bridge table leads to
c.tdyCiphtr ~artCNMICIIrom ~lOt rile 11 DytlmOUI people. Pill and PNIIf'll ~J
one fonn of opulence; many plus
E.ctt
inN~-*torlnOther. TodlfSCIUe' W~MD
scores.
· I A
'KXEN
ANKWDC
XA
Take today's deal as an example:
You hold the .West cards, defending
AD · BVWYN
SL
VJNJWVUISKN
lA;
against four spades after South
opened one no-trump. You stan with
.a
"
KDYXGIKK· L
A P N
ElORA,
XR
·-two top clubs, South df'&lt;)pping the
'l
jack and queen. What ne~t'?
SN •'
S U D D T A
You should check the point-count. aD V Y P R , R D
1') "
Let's a.~sumc declarer has shown 1'6- l
IRTXJADJ
.
.
·•
18. There arc I 2 in the dummy. and
PREVIOUS
'SOLUTION
:
"Trying
to
hit
a
Phil
Nitkro
kf\UCI&lt;Ieball
Is
like
lrylng
tj9,
you have I I. That leaves panncr with
eat Jell-0 with chopsliclls.• -Bobby Murner.
.,.
,....-.
.
.
10
at most a jock., Su, you· re on your
oWn. Thi~ incans that the only chance
fpr a fourth trick lies in the trump suit.
_....;.;;___....;.;__ _1.11o. loy CLAY I. I'OI&amp;AN
;~
Undcnninc declarer's spade holdinll
by leading a third club.
..,
Roorraf19o lollwn of tho
....
Let's assume declarer ruffs in
four acratnblod wc•d• bo-·
hand and starts on the trumps ..You
loW 10 form 10111 -''!'Pio worda.
must duck the first two rouods. Now
declarer is dead. If he switches to the
F I TT RH
red suits, you will get a ruff with your
remaining low trump for one down.
But if South continues in kamikaze
fashion, leading a further round of
T R I MH
trumps, you win and play a founh
club, forcing out dummy's final
.I
trump. You will score your last trump
and a long club for two down. .
Whenever you've taken all your
BOYBH
:n is ·a fact,· the jolly woman
side-suit lricks, giving a ruff-and-dis·
•o
told her kids, •you can't dam1~
~~
age your eyesight by looking at
card is typically the best defense.

••
'

.•

'!

:::

·~

...

I I .~~'_

?

•

by filling

"'

....
(t~

In the missing words

.

ME LeA'/IN6, DO
'(OU? '(OU DON'T
SEE OUR SHORTSTOP
LEAVIN6, DO VOU? .

COME

SAC~!

1'11~~~:-;i~~slfTTfRS IN

I'

r 'I*

I"

SCilAM-L!TS ANSWERS
Legion • Dregs • Conch • Pollen· HOLDING

DOO XP jot ski, witll Cus-

My Grandpa believed that. you shouldn't be so inter·
ested in where a p6Jilician stands as you are about wh'!
is HOLDING him up:
· -... .

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

AC.,;~~~r~~~~~
, 35', fully con-

Clean,
sene 'Stereo,
86,000 Auto
Miles. sunroof,
,$6.200, 614·
~46·6013 .

.

$9500,

1992 Ponuac Grand Prl1, Full)!
Loaded, $6,000, 614-4146-8652.

1987 ~ 7 112 Ft. Sunljne Trailer,

1994 Dodge Shadow 4 Cylinder 5

AC, Awning, Sleeps 6, Excellent
Conditicr. 614-446-43517, Abet 5.

Speed, With Ait, 19,900 Miles.
$4,900 oeo. 614·256-e34o, e1•·

t994 P•owl~r 3011 camper, like
new, queen-size bed, microwave,

256·6467.
~-· ·

air, awning. 304-576·2547. ,

199S. Honda Accord lXA, AUla,
AIC, Loaded, Bal. Fot. W11r.
23,000 M1ies. E1collont St3,450,
014·446·0491 .

No money down! Euy lo"n
tran&amp;I&amp;L 1996 Dutchman 18ft.,
loaded. 304·675,55~ .
Small camper $1,500 . 304-6 ,75·
1304.
'•

SERV ICES

L.;a;~'-'E:oli~.....L&amp;S........&amp;-~,$~2:-:and~~

to Astro-GiUph; ~/othis
newspaper, P.O. Box 17SK, Murray ·
· Hill Station, New York. NY 10156.
Be sure to Slate your zOdiiiC sign ..
CANCER (June · 2·1-July 22)
Today you might profit from a com·
mercia! arrangement that won '1 be
conducted conventionally. Although
daring and diff~renl, it will be ~lhi-

Home ·

810

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROqFNG
Unconditio~al 111~1ime QUf(&amp;ntee.
local relerencet turnflht:c:t.•Establlshed 1975. Call ''1614) 446·
087D Or 1· 800-287-0578. R9gers

Instrumenta
Slat GUitar, Chalhlre. Oillo- leu&gt;
ona and lnatrumanlli· piino, gul·
11rand'dtuma,lt4-387.()3()2. •

Watmproofing.

C&amp;C

'

General

Home

Main·

••nence· Painting, vlnVI aiding,

carpantoy, doors, wlndoWI, l&gt;ltllo,
mabil• horn. ntp~lr and mcw.e. For
''" estimate call Cher, 11-4-112-

J

.,

lletil

1·C prbfe of

I' r I
~~~·~~~flmm I I I I 1·1 I

7102.

1990 Celice Automalit:. Red, Cas-

-

30Numlro31 Hug
33 f'laYwrlght

•

~ou ooN'r see

WllfRE15
EVeR1(80D'r'
601N6?

tom Haul trailer, $5,700, f31-4-992-.

614 0 ~92· 4103.

:~~r:=:...

alflnnatloft
DOWN

•

985-4293.
1994 Marada 18 Fool Open Bow,
wtSun Deck, .c.3 Lilet V6, Mer·
cruiser; Am Fm Cassene, and Ski
Accessory. 614-256-6393

.....
.u-,-·,

1...-1-..1..-.1......1-...t.--' you develop from slop No. 3 below.

614 -

1988 Trans ·Am, 305 engipe,
tuned port fuelmjection , 5 speed,
Hop. CO. lull power options, new
tires, wetl mainlained inside and
out, $4695 OBO, 61 •·1192· 7211&amp;

aulllit -

:t2 ._. dog,

........

• . . . , .... _
17 Work flanl
II Cry af I

...
, .~W-:-:I-:T::-:-:H-:E=-:G-,1 the • • • • ·• • side of things." .
1-.,-1:.;_,.1~,~7i5-iilr;.,lr:6-; 8 Complete tho chuckle quottd

t991 21' pontoon boat w1th cover, .
Bass Tracker Par1y Barge. 60 hp.

good condition.

21~

......

MAllia

•

I

t988 Ranger 373V 18' t2 -24V
Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinruda

1987 Rellanl P!ymoudl K Car Air,
AM/FM Radio Good Condition,
$1,500, 614 ..46·8699.
.

.

I! I I

'-""""'

s•.soo.

Outboa•d. $9,800, 614·992·2770.

lllailiitlle

2011Dp

I

MOWEI&gt;?

t987 Camaro; V-8 305, automatic, air, super sharp, $2900, 614·
992·5034.

IIUICIIDura
II Plelnllll

'::~::~~, s&lt;e:~~~-J&amp;~~s·
0

1987 1811. Bass·BuQgy Pontoon,
35hp. fool·control trolley motor.
many .new pans, asking
30H7S.67t0.

Musical

Qa_.,.

8323.
.

.

DRYWALL .

\'

840
AHidtndll

or caswu•clal wlrinl.

_.IJ.
Ridenour

""" MrVic:o or rapaln. ...

Upton Uood.Cora At. 12·3 IIIIo&amp; cented electrlcllln.
South of leon, WY. Fln•ncing Eltottlc,l, WVOOOIOI, Oooe-875·
304-4M-ICI88.
1788.
'

lwtt-.

.

.'

Something of maierial
be
associated
wilh
this
development.
. .TRO·OilAPB
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Qec.
21 ) The judgt;nent you possess is
quite
· keen · today and-your initial
BERNICE
assessments of situations will be on
BEDEOSOL
target. Slii:k with your gut feelinas.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Une~pected changes might be made
cid. ·
·
today that could have a positive
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The stars , effecl on your earning powers. Let
indicate that you· should get along · your imagination run rampa t.
0
well with all ussocial\ls loday, espe·
AQUARIUS (Ju. 20-Feb. 19)
Alqyol
who
hashad ciallyifyou'reableto4ealwiththem Situations thai contain elements of
your best interest at hean may be on -a one-lo-one basis.
•.
chance could work out favorably for
hCipful to you again in the .year
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpt. 22) Subahelld\Study his or her adv1ce tn an stantial strides can be made today you today. Take care not to risk a lot
.arrangement that could make or save where your work is conceriled, pro- . merely to cain alinle.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
you money. .
. ·
vided that you repl~~:e old. methods
Today
marts the beainning of a
GEMINI (May 21-June_
You with unique appioaches.
f•vorable,shift
in 1D BniDgemeDI you
are rarely at a loss for cre411ve ideas,
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Try not ,
felt
powerless
ID control. Closures .
eve11 thouah they often end up col- to schedule your day too fu in
leetiq dUJI somewhere. Howe"!, idviJICe. Spur of the moment devel· should work out to your benefit.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You
today your infcnuity will han func:· opmenll milht 1lllleiJO and you' II
miabt
hear l'ronlu old friend toilay
tiOMI cllunels ·for pDiitln eqns· WID! to be he to Jllllic:iplle.
sion Oemini, trell younelf ·to • •. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) An w~ wutsto aet you involved in h~
or her IIICII idea. If it sounds a bit fll'
birthda~ lift. Send for ~our Alrro- unexpecllld benefit lillY be Channeled ·&gt;011!,
research it in clepth. ·
CJi.aph prildiclionstcx,la)' by maillna ., lhrou~h a family conlllet today.

201

Hang. finilh,
- ·· ~~,..,
•• repair.
Ceiling&amp;
textured,
Call TOf11304.S75-418B. 2D YH"
experience:

f t,H'.I :,l!f'f'. I! ·

Sidor't Equipment. 304 .. 757421.

AAD 1'\Y c..om:£ 'iET!

WANT YOUR

Motors

18.5 foot Slratos ski boat, 150 hp.
SuzUki, 65+ mph, garage kept. ex·
cellenl condition. $5500, 614-9493403.

25811.

tiO f'.-m ~CIUPNRI
10% OFF all rwm ltaCIOI potll.

.

HI,I'IR .
EU!.TIS!

lor Sale

I hevt a targo 111101011 •of. Dfl'1'*to
oarda, 'llogi.r lite
ft\.
eluded, lltoueatldt of ODmlc
book&amp; and a hug• colloellon of
&amp;port&amp; carda. l'tl'l doall No rH·
olltr reltratd. Cll .tvtn·
lng&amp;, I14-DG-30N.

C,.Rtltc_t._._,._

DltiiJINb Will\ '!'COlt

~[MV€111'\"

1995 Honda 350 414 L1ke New,

1986 Z24, ' rebuilt motor a,nd
transmission, needs power steerIng fixed; 1982 Toyota Tercel,
runs excelle~n; 61-4·742-3513.

\li'fl1f(J(~,

WilY ...ue. 'iOO

DtD [DO
SOMf.Tf\IW..

ON, lA.~'~ ?'

Plus Extras I $4,500 Call After 5,
61 4·446-2956.

1!!0, Fr.,.h """''"'

JET
.
f&lt;ERATION IIOTORS
llepoltod",. • ~'"-~·

I"

~U6Hl~

:-:--:-:-=::-i-:::-:;:::::;:--:::::::;:-

10-

,.

Motorcycles

Boats

11 u.M.......
11Aiiilallaa
17 ~

-~
-~·
11 loGnill

:•

,994 Suzuki GS 500, 400 miles,
$2650 OBO, 614·992·5576 evenings.
·

750

·---

-

1991 Yamaha Mato 4, 2WO, 200,
$1200. 614·992-5034.

.

570

wAves ANt&gt;

446·3099.

t996 lincoln Town Car,• Under
~~t2,000 Miles, E~ecelleni C~ndibon,
I'!!~~~~--B~rl~dg~t:-P-Ia-za_. •full Fac1ory Warranty, 614 -361·
7444 · Or f&lt;ltor 5 P.M. 614-446·
'
..
Two ma.e miniature CoMie pupa, ~~· .
•125 -h: one it. .lt Jock Rus••II torrlar pup, S250; lt4-742· aij ·Cougir. .V' 8. SBOO, 61'4·742·
2050.

,fStAft(~ ON I~AIN

614 · 446 -3278; Evenings 614 · .

1982 Chevy Station Wagon. Malibu Classic, Runs Good, "Body
Good $90D OB0. (614)448-7759

call

I

viANTfl&gt;• 6UB3e(TS FOrt

.,.

t991 ,Honda 300 4&gt;4 $2,300, 614·
446·6958.

.5320.

10gal tank,.aet up s_peciall. Fish
Tank · &amp; Paf1ihop, 24t3 Jackson
Ave. Point Pleasant, 30•·675-

"'

1982 Yamaha Vergo $SOD: Days :

Honda motor-

11~11

~==-""'

Chevy Pick-Up, Excellent Condition, 614 -256·6574.

Cycle, needs work, best offer.
Call Doug at 304-882·3636.

=

11=

.=...:,

1980 CJ7 Jeep New Tires, El ·

197i Cadilla' _Coup Oe111lle,
Qao~ coridifl; !:--$995 . 3~4 ·6 75·
3t90.
.:l(

.,..._
,.....

The intrigue
of victory ·

.0

haust , Good Condition; 1972

Autd!llor Salli

.

By

1989 Ford F-150 4wd, 82,000
mites. 304-675-6538.

1991 Ranger )(lT 4x4, 4.0 liter,
Tool 601, Tonneau Cover,
105,000 Milos, $7,000 614-245·
9544 leave a Message.

titer's Dayl ( Maka great gift~!
AKC Reg Englilh Bull Clog mala.
AKC Reg Maltese, . 8wka Old.
614-11112-4005 or 304-9112-411111.

AKC White German Shaphard
puppioB S200ea. Phone 304·675·
777t.

GOIN'
HOM • . IN
THAT RAIN·
STORM ·

1988 Ford Aero star van, $4500,
1·304-773·5:..&gt;5 alter 6pm.

Registered black Tennessee
Walker, 7 years old, will vade lor
farm tractor. 304·562·5840 or 304·
562-1676, ...

.,...,
.....
,.=::
..
.......

:~

Qpening lead: • A

II

1986 Chevy Full Size Convers!on
Van, White and Navy Excellent
Condition, law Mileage, pnce Be·
llwoi!j, 614-448· 7928.

1U90 F250 Lariat, cold ale, no
rust, great shape, 614·992-3394
days or 614·742-Xl20 evenings.

1988 Ford Taurus, exc. running
cond .. St,500 080. 304 ·675-

AKC
Registered
Miniarure
Schnauzer Females 6 Manths
Old, 614-446-3523.

2•

1985 Plymouth Uinl Van, power
steering and power brakes, 5
apeed, looks and runs g,aod,
$900, 6t4-Z47-Z961 .
.

Reg. bl ack Angus bull Ankeny

AKC Rog Boi~rs $250 males.

AKC

,_,
"1=:=---------------'.
• .I NT

I SHoRE AIN'T

&amp; 4-WDs

. 3w3, St.2dO. 8mos. 2AR Gmos. &amp;
hailats. ao.f·,675-l;Z46.

1986 Cadillac Fleetwood, 4.1hter,
auto, oo .•g3miles, good cond .
30&lt;-675-5424 alter Spm.

Reg Weimaraner puppies
S300ea. 304-675-7740.

Vans

Dodge Pick Up Four Wheel
Four Speed. New Paint Job,
Pilrlect True~ SS.OOO Firm.
(6t4)44H737 Alle/5 p.m.

AOHA Mona1 Maker $t,250 For
Sound, GOOd Temperament. Easy
Moving, COnclusive -Dare 96 Filly
lnceni~~e, 614-379-2932.

Camarct.. ~1 80

··" ~
~S-:
·'"

ACROII

I ....._ 11111111 40 CIIMIIIII . . .

Vulnerable: Eaat-West
Dealer: South
Seulll West North EM!

_,
"'

t985 ChO'ii Custom .Van, S2t95
080 or "ado. 614·992·5529.

Livestock

plto, three black, one 1011 &amp; pepper, lholll dtWormed. roadj - ·
I -Gt4-IJII6-1085.
$300 females. Ready ta go Fa ~

MlleL Good

t99t Chevrolel S· JO, rigged lor
&amp;owing with IOwbar, call614·992·
4103. Can be seen al 38 Hudson
S•eer. Mlddk&gt;port, OH.

2yr old "black Tennessee Walklf,
very GOOd disposition. Will trade
for farm 1ractcr. 304·562-5840 or
304-562·1878.

1879

Soulla
• K J 52
• Q. 2
• A K J 10
• Q J

..

1989 Dodge D50 Ram, 5spd,
oleyl, good cand., $2,80Q. 304·
675-5771.

2 5 Month Old GO&amp; II Both De.horned, 1 Castrated Buck; 1 Nanny, Both Good Health, $60 .Both
614·446-:(l988.

710

••eas

••

Good Westlng~au1e Washing
Machine: $60.;' 0BO. 614·4468627.

TRAN SPORTATION

f9r Sale

• 10.
Wet&amp;
.
. Bat
• A 7 IS
• 4
• 10 7.
• 7
.• I 8 3 I
• A K' l 7 2

Condition, Runs Great; $2,300.

Steel Buildings New, Engineered 640
Hay &amp; Grain
40•60112 was S15,5DO now
$8,940, SOXIOOitB was 126,200· Tobacco water bed plants. 30-4Now $17,931, 6Dx20Dxte was 895-3954.
$82,500 now $39,V72 1·8DQ.~06·
5t28.

560

ro.ooa

-

•••as

1985 Ford Ranger, riee"ds work,
$200. 304-!75-5752.

l wanted to Buy
i

• Q. $.

.•.

1984 S·tO Blazer Noed. Engine
Rapelr $600, 614·386-Q2!;5.

Warne"d to buy 3 BR Trailer.
(814)-ol\le-t 052
.

630

• Q 10' •

"AKJ

198~ Ford Bronco II V-6, 5apd,
83,000 .miles. Coli 304-6,i'S,1Z7B
oft8r 6:30pm.
.'

.

·sTORAGE TANKS 3,DOO Gallon
Uprlghl, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jack10n, Oillo, t·800·537-D521.

...

$5,500, 6t~-99H111 .

Farm Sat• Tractor, Equipment
Caule • Wh•eler H11 W1gon,
Snwll WOgon&amp;. lll&amp;e. Coil For In·
brtNtlon, 014-26&amp;-8843.

ALDER

.
...

Htndmadolof19 .Fol1ar lmporttd
Clgare 'Ftom Doittiiticltn RIPublc,
-422 Second Avenue, G'aiiiPQIIt.
814·444-t815.

area.

. ..

llot~oea

Bolt Si&gt;rirtgl. Clllt4-o144Ht46.
Twin Size Bad With
And
Grubb'a Plino- lUning &amp; rol"'lr&amp;.
Probloma? Notd Tuned? Call tho
piorto Dr.6t4-44B-4525

:---:-~~---:-:---•:-:· :-:.-'! IN
ford Troc10r Good Condlllon,
With Kina Cuuer Dlak lltulh Hog

,.
Lindon Toawlno Mantel Clo~
1100, Ladle&amp; Jowolry. (t14)44f&lt;

cia! Couch ttso. - m Roc:tttr
lt2S (8t4,...e.o775 •.

dey tlu ttdl¥

58!51.

I

H•lth Rider

Rent

Downtown first Boor olflct &amp;poco.
air ODnditloned. oa•pot C..
•- 1
.a.
(. l
14 • " - a.m.-.,.m."""'"

,~

•

HouNIIokl

Moore owner. .

2 Bedroom Apar1ment1 ~cral8.
Unlverlalty ·Rio Grande, Also, EHI330 Farms lor Sale
clancy Apartment, All Utilltle&amp;
~----------------' 1 Pold. 614-38fl.9946.

en, 148•900 ·

1.o25.

210

Nice 1.CI70 2 Bedrooms. Mercer~
ville Location, 614-2511-tOSD.

3238.

Spiril - 1997- 1-4x50- 2 BR -Total

Runand -Stroot- 3 BR, 2 BA, river
view, new siding, carpet &amp; kil~h-

AMI,8t4-2111'0007.

440

House For Sale: In Mercerville
Area, WiH Move On Your Lo~ Call

Middleport:
N. Third- 3 BR. 2 BA, 5 yearo old,
tax abatement. $47,000.

3 B•droom Tralter, Thurman

s•so

For sate, 1 bedroom home in Po·
meroy, wilt" sell on land contract,
614·992-5858.

Ba1Jyaitting AI My' Home Quality
f&lt;llordtble After School Available
Flexable Houra: Call 61 •-3670157 Aek Far Carol Or Leave
Me1aage, Will Care For ·Children
Or Adutll Wit! Disabilities.

AFTER I P.M.

Large selection of used home. 2
or 3 bedrooms. Starring at $3•95. . 51. f&lt;lban&amp;, Willowbtnd Park,
Quick delivery. Call 1·800-837· 3DB Ell'j)iro Dr.. 2 BR. 2bllh. v•y
· nlct mobile ho,.,
plus de3238.
po&amp;lt No polL 304-562·5B40 or
l 1mited Olferl 1997 doublewide, 304-512-t8711.
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $2791
month . Free deli~ery &amp; setup. lWo 8tdroom Trallet In Clll'. Car·
Only at Oakwood Homes, Niuo poltd, Ha&amp; WOihe&lt; or\d Doytr, No
Poll. Ph&gt;ne (614)446 0893
wv.304-755-5885.'
l'MI
_ _,, Roura 7 South ApNew 1997 1.Cx70 three bedroom,
prollmottly
1D MIIH Rom Galli·
includes 6 monrhs FREE tot rent
Oilly St81 .66 per month with poll&amp;. (814)256-t5B8
$1050 down, Call 1-800-837-

02111.

=7~11~2·~~~~~~~~=1 ~61~4~-2~~~t~~7~·~~------

3 Bedroom Hauee Trtller Fot
Ron~ In Rio Grondo, Dapoal~ No
Pel&amp;, Nlco Yard, 814·378-2720

114-742-2421.

See Manufactured Homes, al
Ucuntain State Home1. Rl62 N •
across hom VOcational school.
Mobile &amp; eectional homea • parts
&amp; service. 304-675-1400.

landscaping, sidewalks edged,

PlusDepoM. eu 311 8371.

IT'S BIG . tD97 4BR, 2Bf&lt;TH
DOUBLEWIDE . $1,g49 DOWN,
$31giMO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES. NITRO, WV. 304-755·
5885. Umiltd OIIBr.

Aher 5:00P.M.

lawn care, etc. Call Bill 304· 675-

·

replacement home. Call 1-800468· 787t to Mt appointment lor
derails.

24 Hour In Home ca .. For HandIcapped Or Elderly, 614-44tANY ODD JOBs:· Elteriar palnt·
ing, shrubs &amp; weedl lrlmmed,

2 Badroom Trailer For Ron~ LD·
cated oo 568, No Pall, llebro 5
P.M. 6t4·245-5582, f&lt;ftor 5,1t4·
24s.!iBIID.
::::..::=------~-1
2 Badroomo. 2 Bilths Very Nlco
S10Ve, Rolrla&lt;uator, Central r.~.
Wotor &amp; T,.&amp;h Paid, t350-lllo.,
PIUI Dopollt, AIIO, 3 Badroomo.
2 Both&amp;, Conlrll f&lt;lr, t300/llo.,

hom• ln disaster rell•f funds
available ta help ~au purchase a

';'8158 8843
Tho Village ol Middltpotl II rak·
ing applications for 1 part time
Clerk Treasurer tor Middleport

510

-•llollol,_.m
Wo hovo St DOD to $20DD per

'

'81 S·t D, moc~anlcally &amp;ound,
bodr ..... 6t4-74M513.

PHILLIP

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1q R

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•'

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anc

fled•
paat·Phis,

'

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Ohio Lottery

.

•

Pick 3:
222
Plck4:

return home

..

6819
Buckeye 5:
3-9-18-28-31

8pe~~taonP8ge4

'

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.

..

2 Seclloo18. 12 PegH, 3 5 AGannMICo. Ucwap!DJI .,..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednnclly, June 4, 1897

Laurel Cliff seeks flood hazard mitigation funds~

,,

· By BRIAN J. RI!!D
lentlllll Newl 8181'1

gency Mana1ement Asency on
behalf of the Salisbury Township
lbe Laurel Cliff area near Trustees, askins that the township be
Pomeroy may become the HCond permitted to apply for hazard miticommuniiY in Meiss County to gation moni~ throulh the Federal
receive federal funds for flood hazard Emergency Management Agency.
mitigation.
The La~ Ciff and Rock Springs
The Village of Rutland is awailinB communities, have been especially
~y ~or flopd mitilalion, and the hard-hit with, hiBh water and flood
applicallOD ..process for the Laurel . dama1e in tiJC past several years.
Cliff area is now underway, ac;cord·
Rood mitisllion funds are ultiins to Bob Byer, director of Meiss mately dispe~ to residents in a tarEmergency Services, who hail filed geted area, fc¥- the purpose of making
an application with the Ohio E'!Jer- homes less s~eptible to flood-related damage. ,;.

' '
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..

..
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'Date rape'
bill moves

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on to Ohio

,,

Senate

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···'4WD;-air;~4"'door,

5spd; v6, powa s.mtng; 4 wtweladdkk lnkes, As Low As."

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. CMSette'artd much more! As Low As...

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-·

have suffered significant nood damage in each of the past three years. ,. .
"This would be money Wclf'
spent," Howell said. "There's a lot of'
work to be done, and we )!!ant to ger·
it done as soon as possible:"
The commiuee's goal, Howell:
said, is to complete the application
· for fundi!lg by ·september.
·:
Last year, the village of Rutland
was one of 19 applicants approved
for FEMA hazard mitigation funding,
A total of 40 a(lplications were
received state-wide, according tfii:
Howell.

,.

Rain hurting
Ohio ·farmers .~
Up to25 counties may
qualify for federal help ·

•

. FINDI,.AY (AP) -· ~mingly ment. ·
.
endless spring storms have turned
"I just wish it would quit rnioing."
some farmers' fields into a muddy Maurer said Tuesday. '
mess, and that could spell serious ·
Storms that .began Thursday 'ontrouble for their crops.
·
tinued in some parts of Ohio through·
Just ask farmer Neil Clark.
Tuesday. The National Weather SerMore than 7 inches of rain have vice said the skies would be clear and
fallen in eight days on Clark's 1,800- dry today and Thursdav. But foreacre farm out•idc of Findlay, about40 casters predicted more rain this week..
miles south of Toledo. The rain end- end.
'
ed late Tuesday.
. ·
The impact of the storms ca...ed ·
~-'!'ht " !!lorrils have left l,lbour ·ol&amp;=-'1\re'St!ay ns• rniiFswollcn· rivers '1lild
acres of the I,H()().acro farm where he streams in northwestern and central
grows corn :and soybCans under ·Ohio began to recede.
,..
water.
But some areas arc not out of the
"In three weeks will be the woods.
.
longest day of the year, and then win'The weather service' said' today·
ter will be coming. It still feels like water was still rising in the nonhwinter now." Clark said.
western Ohio cities of Dclianee,
The story was much the same on Grand Rapids, Napoleon and Water- .
many Ohio (arms, said Steve Maur- ville.
,
maintaining residential property tax- er, director of the state Farm Service . In Oak Harhor. about 30 miles cast
es as a local option and asking busi- Agency, which · administers federal ·of Toledo, the risK!g Portage River
nesses 10 chip in mon: money.
farm programs.
was threatening the wastewater treatBusinesses could he forced to pay
He said it was too early to deter- mcnt plant.
·
up to half the new taxes for Ohio's ft1inc the damage caused by the
The excess rain has probahly cost'
schools. Currently, they pay ahout27 heavy rain. But he believes up to 25 the state's fanners millions or dollars,
cents of every dollar raised in taxes counties cnuld eventually qualify f&lt;)r said Luther Tweeten, an-agricultural:
for the state's General Revenue Fund. .emergency help from the govern- . economist ul Ohio State Uni vcrsity.:
·The business increase would come
~
only if the state decides to raise tax:
es for schools, Browning said.
Donald Bema, president of the
Ohio Public Expenditure Council,
said businesses looking to move. to
WASHINGTON (AP)- Orders new orders, it's a sign that innatio..::
Ohio could be scared off if business to U.S. factories rebounded 1.2 per- ary bottlenecks could he developing
taXes are too high.
cent in April, the third rise in four in. the proiluction pipeline.
"lbey need to be real careful that months, \Jolstered by strength in
Shipments nf manufa,turcd goods
the state mnains competitive," Bema transjx&gt;nation equipment, industrial illso jumped 1.2 percent in April, the
warned.
machinery and m~tal producls.
largest surge in a year. That helpe~ ,
The increase to a seasonally produce the second consecutive
adjusted $323.9 billion was slightly decline in the hacking nf unlilleil
su:onger than economists expected. It orders - 0.3 percent in April, the
followed a 1.3 percent drop in March same .a.• in Man: h.
~
and gains or 0.4 percent in February
Within durable goods, new orders
·
. and 2.S percent in January.
for transportation cquipl!lent rose
rah Federal Building on April 19,
Advances were broad-based and 3.4 percent. It was the first increase
199S, as retaliation for the deadly included a 1.3 percent increase li1r since January and included all cnn1:.
1993 FBI raid near Waco.
durable goods and a I percent rise in poncnt industries except railroad
non-durable goods, the first increase equipment. Orders for industrial
Prosecutors were expected to con- in three months.
machinery rose 2.7 percent, the lifth
tend that the enormity of the hombFactory orders arc closely fol- consecutive increase. Primary metals
ins.on victims and families warrants .. lowed by cconomis~' as a barometer such a..stecl rnse2.'1 percent and fabthe death penalty. Defense lawyers of future production. And if produc- . ncntcd mclal ·products were up 3.g
were expected to arsue that McVeigh lion fails to keep up with the pace of percent.
was clouded by misguided patriD'
tism, and should be spared. .
·lbe penilty hearing is a relatively new phenomenon in federal courts.
The federal death penalty statute
that . applies to McVeigh has only ·
been in effect since 1994, and nobody
·has been executed under it. ·

h..
b
.
.
ess
·
'
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ma
·
y' . be
·
·
a
s
fie'
d
~fi:;~~r=::~~?t':_;:
'~ USin
·
~~ · .
~=~:ei~.~~~~~:~ to pay more taxes for schools
_

:

m Marth 1996, but tt ts still available.
·
in about 80 other countries, where it
coLm.iaus (AP)- Allowing
is used to treat sleep d!sorde~.
voters to have asay in the state's new
Rohypnolls an·an11-msomma~Ng school-fund!ns system appears to he
.10 tm1es more powe~ul ~an Vahum. likely.
,
lbe drus c~s an mtoxtcated,then
lbe idellj 1was included in a 10sleepy feehng that ~s after two . point list di~ussed '1\Jesday by law. hours and lasts about etght. It leaves makers and education leaders who
some people semiconscious and are studyina.1ways to get more mobdefenseless to sexual assault and ey for schi)Qis. The list save some
unable to remember much later.
clues as lo how officials will
Reid's ~ill would increase penal- approach sc~Jliol reform.
ties for u'ms a ~Ng for ~· sexual
Amons tl)Cm is the recommcndabattery, corruptiOn of a mtnor, gross tion to have a statewide vote on the
sexual imposition and sexual impo' funding soluaion.
sition. A rape conviction coupled ~ith
"If the s6J,ution creates a signifithe 11se of ·B dNS would result tn a earn tali inc~. then It should go to
minimum 5entence of five yean in the voters," slid OffiCe of Budget and
prison.
Managemen Director R. Gresory
· lbe bill, which passed the House Browning. · •
unanimously, now soesto the Senate
.
the Senate:' a bill ·.

Currently, the ha1r care profes~ions are ~vented by separate licensIRS asencteS that bar them from
working under the same roof. The
state Barber Board requires that barbcrs work only ·in barber shops; .the
state Board of CosmctoloiY requ1res
th• cosrnetolosists work only in
beauty shops.
lbe ' leaislation sponsored by
~sdake ~epublican Ed ~~tis
would retam the sei'B!"Ie ,ltce.nsl~ll
standards, But ~uus satd h1s b1ll
woold a~lo~ bustnesse~ to hett~r
se~e thetr cltents b&gt;: endtng t.he or11fic1al and cOSily requtremcnll for scparate facilities.
.
The Senate, meanwhtle, voted 301 for a bill that would require new

,..

to discuss the ten-step application
process.
According to Mick Howell, chairman ·of the committee, the entire
township might be considered for the
ft1itigation project, if funding is
approved and if a n6od hazard can be
deemed present township-wide.
The commiuee will now visit
. indi'vidual properties to assess Hood
hazard and past damage, a require· ment in order to complete the ten-step
application process.
Howell said that properties in the
Laurel Cliff and surrounding areas

--·~
: ~-Upitgoes----~

na;!:,&gt;t~~~iaandiltherstates a·

~!'~:~~s~~.:t;,~:..cosmelologisls

...

According to Byer, the mitigation has now been completed. Resident
assistance beiris sought for the Lau- surveys, project estimates and other
rei Cliff community is very similar-t(l documentation will he performed by
the mitigation program in Rutland. In a committee of residents in the comRutland, residents affected by flood munities involved: Laurel Cliff, Rock
problems will have several options: Springs, Willow Creek and Thomas
the outright sale of their property to Fork. This eommittee has been meetthe village, acquisition with reloca- ing weekly on Monday evenings at 6
lion, physical relocation of the home, p.m. Next week's meeting will be
elevation of an existing structure, and held at the Rock Springs United
retrofitting, which involves making ·Methodist Churi:h. The meetinss are
homes "flood-proor· by sealing base- open to the public.
ments and elevating hot water heaters
A representative of the Ohio
and electrical boxes.
Emer1ency Management Agency
Byer said his role in the process was on hand at this week's meeting

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
would join !be- growing number of
states seeking to stop the use of a
powerful tranquilizer in sexual ·
assaults under legislation approved ·
by the House.
The bill, approved unanimously.·
Tuesday, would bump up the penal- .
ties when victims are dNised.
Rep. Marilyn Reid, R-Beavercreek, said she introduced the bill
after ·hearins· from college students
·concerned about reports of women
who had been dNged and sexually
&amp;ssaulted.
. ..
·1'-·il
Tht•tarpt of. .the ·bill .ja,;;,R•i- .J
trazepam - a tasteless, odorlesS; col- . · . . , .
orless · dru&amp; sold under the trade

forxf=~~~ot~

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'ISP;ickaJ; 5spd, power sttuq, alnmlmuD
· · ·wl~ aif, AMIFM (3SI!Jit, As LOw As...

&gt;

Cle• tonight, low In the
. Thuraday, aunny,
In the 70..

·
The Ohio School Funding Task
Force and the Legislature have about
10 months to come up with and
approve ·a new education-funding
plan in' response to the Ohio Supreme
Coun's Nlinl.that found the current
system unconstitutional.
Browning, chainllan of the task
force •. and .Goy. George Voinovich
have said in the past that they don't
want to leave out the voters.
Senate Minority Leeder Ben ESpy,
0-Columbus, questioned what Wc;&gt;Uid
happen if voters reject the plan and
the Slate has three months to find an
alternative 5Qiution.
"That is the dilemma." Browning
responded.
The list of ideas also included

Factory or,ders post third
increase in four mo~ths

.

J ud. ge· M
t h 1•
·
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·
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~·

'penalty phase' of McVeigh's trial

.
.,:,:•
DENVE"- (AP) - Jurors dec:id. ins whether '{imothy McVeiah lives
or dies willMar wrenching testimony about thmQkllhoma City bombins. includi .. that of a 10-year-old
hoy who lost l!is mother and a rescuer
wl!o held a hand buried in the Nbble,
. only to feel the pulse stop.
u.S.. District .Judie Ric!iard
Matsch Nled 1\Jesday that testimony
rrom those wlio survived the bombins and lostlcried ones is relevant to
. the jury's decision on McVeip's senrenee.
.
But MiliCh did nilt allow every- .
lhinl .the JI'OICC'Ition wanted to present during the penalty phase thai

.

hesins ioday, saying he hoped to
avoid ipOamingjuror sensibilities.
He also refused to let the defense
Jl!llsenl evidence on the handling or
the (alai 1ovemment raid against
Branch Davidians ncar Waco, Texas,
wltich the defense could claim drov~ .
McVeigh to commit tile worst act of
terrorism on U.S. soil. ·
·
"We have to~~ this hearing to
enSIIIe that the uluinate result and the
jury's decision arc truly a '.moral
response to app;op~atc iri(ormatio~
rather than an emouonal response, '
Marsch said.
_ .I'!osecutors have contended that
-McVeigh blew up the: Alfred P. Mur·

:ss~:::Cc::!eOO:'!x":n:n~:· Education funding tops legislative agenda

a ~lateillield.

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. • COLUMBUS (AP) .__ Educlllion
. Sponsorin1 Sen, lkn Espy, ~?" fundinl will top the ~nda ~
Columbus, said current law allows
. House and Senate neplltaton bepn
~ who haven't pdu~ .from
meetias aext week to smooth over
hish school to hold such polirttons.
"'Ibis bill will make sure the tllldi- thedilferencesbclweai their~
of the lllle's'iiellltwo-yell' 'buqet.
tor's 'offiCe has profenioul Iliff ror .
lesialalivo leliden uy.
~ to~." Blpy said.
The Houle set up lhe nesoUIIions
Sen. James · Carnes. R·St. Tuesday
by ~ 5cn1ee amenda.inville, ·who Clll the only nep,
mellll
to
ill propoted $36.1 billion
live yolc, said it would disqualify
spelldills
plaa The Senate Iller
lholl Who doa't hive a desr• but
ittsh'ndlll ila...;....,IMII-arouI.e I 6 . . . . . - I . , lkills liaa pn~cedulll....,.. -llld ..-t
dllouab explrilncc Hi alao Uicl the tO
-illlillle.
1111 0111
~- 1111 IIIIIJ.eiisl• l
11p. Tum J¢ •. R-New 0111an'sl Ins
l COld.
Slid dii:Ssnllt ,...._.. a bud''I belle&lt;~e dll •.d!eiw eh-eM blw \
set
thit
- 300 ...,..~o~rpr dlln
the!WIF a tfbi'ily lhlllll haw_. the- lhlllll
dtl Hou1f Ia MlrdL
.,... people," C...llld.
"Nannlaal;y, til wouldn't .... far
Thillilf- p110 1111 Ha IIi

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a blll We haven't seen," JohnJOO said. Ray of Akron and Gary Suhadolnik
Rep. Vernon Sykes; D-Akron • . of Stronssville and Democrat Judy
qreed. ·
Sheerer of Shaker Heipts.
"There is only one hook I would
Amons the issues suarantced to
accept on (aith. and this ain't it," he come up:
said
·
-· Chanses made to a· GOP
· ,;It's lOins .0 be primarily prim• iichool-fundins ror:nulalhat shielded
ry ~secondary edt~ellioo and hilh· suburban districts from the effects of
er ~ucation •." H0111e Speaker Jo·Aan rising property values .
Davidson said whe~ ukell to outline
- The Senate's watered-down
the main areas of dtaqreement.
version of a. House plan to keep
. "TIIcre aredi«-. ~ I~'t iportKJP:IIplly oft public librw'y com· dlillk tile di":~- are IIII,IOf, n...- p!ltel' netw«U.
.
dlllere-. the Reynoldsbuq
.- .A Senate -.dment limitinj
~- IIIWid.
•
CleNeland's school voucher eqleli·
ltapt 111 ntl• the Houle 1n the ment to studentl cunently enrolled.·
IIIIIs wiD be S,._, JoliDioa IIIII Joan
- A Senate decision 10 Clip the
Lawnaea, R-OIIIIL The Seal!le size of the income lilt cut 8Qin110
IM8Iben will be a.publa. Roy lndlvicltials.

. "-'

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ICHOl:ARSHIP • ._,., Abbla Sbalton, prelldent ol the
WDnllll'l Auxiliary It '•'Ill,_. IIIITIOilal Holpil8l, pn11 1111 a
•1.000 ICholarlhlp to St.ale Raad, right, of RutllncL A menlbw •
of the gndudng clliu It
Sc'-1 thlallli'lna. Aeecl
Wlllllucly phylltllll......., .. ~ Colllga. Ttla .UIIIIWy hll f
pntllntld I Ioiii olta,DOO In IChDfll'ltllpe' thll eprlng.
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