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.Ohio Lottery

·wimbledon
first round
results

Plck3:

3-5-5

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Plck4:
4-4-3-3
Buckeye 5:
14-19-23-31-34

8porta on Page 4
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t .

Muggy tonight, Iowa
around' 'tO. Wedneadlly,
sunny 11 flrat, then 1
chance of thunderstorms.
Highs In the lo-11011.

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Vai. . . N0.41
01817, Olllo ll'allly Pilllhhlng Colnpiln~

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2 SICilona, 12 , . . . , 31 centa
A Gennett Co. New1p1p1r

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, Tuesday, June 2_,, 1997

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Commissioners explore options on insurance
By BRIAN J. REED

program ·and administered by Mcd- well as cowuy depanments outside of
According to Miller, the commis•
ical Claims Service of Ravenswood,' the courthouse, such as the county · sioners need to consider four options
Sentinel N-• Staff
Possible remedies for the Meigs W.Va. .
.
highway de~ment, helllth depart- in order to address increasing costs•to
• · Under the .self-insurance prograrn, .. ment and department of human ser- the county's general fund:
County Commissioners' mounting
• An increase in cost to the
health insurance probleJIIS were dis- premium$, paid at 60 percent by the vices.
Representatives of those partici- employee. The commissioners,
cussed at the bo.OO's regular meeting cQ!lllty and 40 percent by the employees\. go into a fund to pay claims. paling 'l!encies haye paid into the through the general fund, have
on Monday afternoon.
T1m Smith and Robert T. Miller, However, the claims.fund has dwin- ·fund a total of $100;000 in 1997 to absorbed premium increases in the
representing the insurance consulting died 1n recent months, and seneral replenish the fund from 'whieh claims amounts of 18, 28 and 20 percent for
· finn of Ohio Benefit Group of Bowl- fl!nd doUars have been paid into the are paid. Each agency's share was the past three years without any
determined by the number of eligible increase in employee premiums;
ing Green, met with the board to dis- · fund to keep it afloat.
•At its lowest •.the fund from which employees. Those asencies were rep- .. . • A m;Juction in benefits;
cuss possible remedies to the.financial diff~eulties facing the county's clainis are paiq was ~~ $3,01io. : . resented at· ).fonday's mce'ilngs by ··&gt;.iU·~qnsideratioll of managed care,
.- Covered'under the plan are soiile , depiutment heads and administrative · through a network oflpcal, affiliated
employee ·health insurance plan,
·
· hospitals, which would afford .some
which is operated as a self-in!iurarK:e I SO employees of county offices as personnel.

Miet·dlep·ort

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Hollister will run
for cong.ress~onal
seat, ·sources say

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to fill two
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vacanc1es .
in village

By AARON M.ARSHALL
· Sentinel Columbus Bureau
COLUMBUS - Lt. Gov. Nancy
Hollister will run for the Sixth District congressional seat in .1998
instead of running for secretary of
state as she had po:eviously indicated,
according to an anonymous source.
The Marietta native will announce
her run for the sprawling Sixth District seat held by Rep. Ted Strickland,
D-Lucusvilie, in the next 10 days,
said the Columbus source.
Asked t? CO):Ifil'!fl the repqrt, Hollis~ ·~f!P:~f , i'li'~raff,...6"'l!.. ~-

By JIM FREEMAN
.
Sentinel Newt Staff
Middleport shoQld have a new
councllman and clerk-treasurer effective July 14 when new officeholders ·
may be sworn in.
.
On the recommendation of Mayor Dewey "Mac" Horton, village
council Mof!day night appointed ·
Steve Houchins as a new council
member to fill the unexpired term of
George Hoffman, who left the village
for out-of-state employment.

__.,ljgJ!f,bi'.!.S.J~~!f~~lhe .
lfe1111f'~il 1 ,

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· Urclr
Board of Trusties. '
·
. ·,; l}cy,ap. 'ScW.an.n . was ·appohiled to
compleiC ilie te~ of Clerk-Treasurer Dennis Hockman, who is resigning at the end of the month due tomedical re~~Sons.
.
Horton recommended Swann be
'appointed for a three-month trial
basis, but questions were raised over
the legality of a temporary appoint·
ment for an elected official.
Council then elected Swann to fill
the entire remainder of Hockman's
term, which expires April I, 2001l.
Neither Houchins nor Swann were
present at Monday night's meeting.
Afterwards, council ·and Horton·
presented II plaque to Hockman in
appreciation to him and his wife, Teri,
for their work towards the village.
Bob Gilmore and Mary Wise,
rep~;esen1ing the village's Bicenten~
nial Committee, presented plans for
the upco!f1irig Independence Day celebration.
''We need to go all out for· this
. one," Oilmen Slid, noting ~~ the

degree of choice to employees, but cs from Blue. Cross/Blue Shield,
woiold allow the insurance program to which provided health insurance up
until that time. ·
.
buy "wholesale." .
Michael
Swisher,
director
of the
• Shopping the marketplace for
more competitive rates from the county Department of Human Ser·
third~ party administrators and rein- . vices, said that he is a propOnent ~f
surers. The third-party administrator self-insurance, especially because of
for a self-insurance plan is responsi- the high cost of traditional "fulr'
ble for processing claims, while the insurance.
"I remember the days of 50 per, . ·
re-insurer pays any claims which
exceed an employee's limit of cent premium increases, so I'm a big
fan of self-insurance. But I'm con·
$30,000 per year.
cemcd
about what we can do to make
. The county's self-insurance program was begun in the late 1980s as the pia~ more financially sound."
a result of skyrocketing cost increas(Continued on Page 3)
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.,~~tOJfiiJienl.

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~!) ':&gt; Hollister

was unavailable
filr comri\ent, when a.•ked on June 2
about w!)cther she told Ohio's GOP
congressional delegation that she .
was running for Strickland 's scat dur- ____N:.:•::n::EY:z...:H:.::o:.:l:::ll•:.:le:r::...._ _
ing a recent Washington visit, she did Frank Cremeans, who was defeated
Mayor o.w.y "Mac" Horton and Council Prea- ·
- . CLERK-TREASURER HONORED- Middle'0ot deny the report.
narrowly by Strickland in 1996, after
ldent Beth Stiver~, above, preaen'-«1 a plaque
;. pilrl Clerk·li'MIInl' o.nnll Hoclonan,llft, wu
"I had an official' agenda that I was winning the seat from Strickland in
to Hocltmln recognizing him and hla wife, Terl,
.racognlzad Monday by the vlllagl ~nell.
fell' their -rk for the village.
·
·
there to discuss and there were some t 994.
·"·Hockman 11 realgnlng hll pOsition at the ilnd
political discussions - the details of
Cremeans, who didn't return calls
, oUhla'IIJOIIIhdueto hwlth reiaonl. Mlcldllport
1
&lt;
which I won't share with you," she request ing comment, has made no
. said: She added cryptically then, fonnal' declaration of his 1998 plans
~illage is celebrating its bicentennial . al I(Ntinger Parkway to 35 miles an safety issue. ·
"There really isn't ilnytlting to tell but ha.&lt;attended ·sevcrallocaiRepubsaid
raising
the
speed
limit
Swift
lliis year.
.
. ;.hOur from , State Route 7 to Ash
you,
but there will be."
lican events suggesting he's gearing
to
35
mph
to
Ash
Street
would
. .Wise Slid the Middlepo~ Post S_lf\\Ct.
.. ,
Ohio
Republican
Party
Chief
Bob
up for another congressional run.
Office will offer a special cancella- . ·.• 'f11e problem has already been encourage speed past the Stonewood
One thing that is clear: Republican
marking in honor of the villag~·s ..
~.with new speed limit signs Apartments and General ·Harti!lgcr Bennett, who said publicly in
November
that
he
liked
the
sound
of
leaders
want to av.oid ·a costly CrePat.
k
.
20Qth birtliday. .
.
· : . ., ·'Xill' . ~(ffl»n ~~ H~b~o~ Bridge to
"Congresswoman
Hollister,"
also
means-Hollister
Republican primary.
Councilman
John
N~ville
pre.
Cmoncil memberS, )VhO wtll sef'!e tl)!l•.. II' torp0ra~10~ ~omot, ot was not•
1
did
not
conlinn
Hollister's
impend.
"I
would
hope
that Frank would
a~ judges in the Fourth of July eil; The s~ hm1t on the area of the sented an.other viewpoint, saying the
reconsider running again (for Conparade, thanked the two for their Hobson llridge will remain 25 mph speed limit should be 35 mph fonhe ing candidacy.
" lf she is running for Congress, I · gress) and I would say to him that he
efforts.
due.to recent size and weight restric- whole length of General Hartinger
think she'll be an outstanding candi- ought to look at his other options,"
Hockman observed the village tions placed· on the bridge.
Parkvvay.
'
date,"
he said."She fits the district, · said GOP chief Bennett.
·
"It
is
a
major
headache
to
drive
2S
c.:O afford to pay for the fireworks if ·
~oweve~. Police C~ief Bru~e
she
understands
the district ... and I
E~pccting a Hollister challenge to
th ,11eed arises.
·.
Swoft and Vollagc Admt~t~trator Btll miles-per-hour," he said. "... 1 think
· . can't think of anyone more qunli- Iris seat since Kasputi1 declared for ·
, ¢ouncil then discussed a petition Browning dcfe~ded relalmng the 25 ~we need reasonaj&gt;le laws."
secretary of state, Strickland iook the
Council members encouraged lied ."
signed by almost 100 area residents m~h s~ hmtt from the oldcorpoA
Hollister
for
Congress
candidanews in stride.
ontt.isins the speed' limit on ,Go~ner' rauo,n ltne t~ Ash Street, calhng 11 a
(Continued on Page 3)
. cy represents.a much different direc- "It's not surprising to me, from what
tion for the former Marietta mayor I hlld read. It looked as if the Repubthen her long-held public stance that lican power brokers were lining tip ·
shei was "focused" on running for . behind him (Kasputis) and I felt ·it
and ;fire last July that killelt nine peo- .. would have legalized fireworks such Fourth.of July and two days after.
secretary
of state.
would bedifficuli for Nancy to over• Put in smoke evacuation . syspie AI a fireworks store in Scottown. as boUIC! rockets a~ Roman ~andle.s.
Apparently,
rather
than
risk
a
come
that kind of support.:'
·
The new measures would create . Adults can buy foreworks m Ohoo terns. ·
statewide
primary
run
against
Asked
if
pro-choice
Hollister
rep.
• Keep fire suppression systems
stricter safety rules relating to t!Je . now but must agree to take them out
declared
Secretary
of
State
candidate,
resented
a
more
moderate
and
thereon at all tiines, ex~ept during .repair.
sale, storage and exhibition of fire- · of the sta.te.
•Increase safety packaging of fire- State Rep. Ed Kasputi s, R' Mayfield fore formidabie challenge than ereworJ&gt;.s. 'It would require ·improveUnder the safety provisions, lireHeights, Hollister will stick closer to means, Stric~land disagreed.
works.
menls in fireworks 'stores, such as works stores would have to:
"I think she would be a very strong
• Limit store size to 5.000 square her soutlicasteni Ohio roots.
wider aisles, and make sprinkler sys• Put in more exits and widen their·
But those roots may draw her intn candidate ... but much of my.
feet.
terns mandatory. .
.
aisles.
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The Senate and House are expect- another potentially tough primary strongest opposition in the district has:
. Ulwmn~rs removed a co~tro.ver• ~ve security on s1te dunng pen .
tussle with Galliapolis businessman
(Continued on Page 3)
stal .proVISIOn from the boll th11t sales. tomes - 14 days before the ed to vote on the bill this &gt;yeek.

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Fi.r eworks ·s afety regulations .added to budge~ bill

. COLUMBUS (AP) -A HQuseSenate committee on Mohday
approved a bill thai would require
. touaher safely measures for fire"
works stores.
The fireworks safety regulations
wereaddcdtothestate's$36.1 billion
budget bill.
.
The nogillations were s~-g~sted 1n
a separ8ie bill by Rep. John Carey, RWellston, in response to the explosion

CSX, Norfolk .So~thern seek economic ·

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gain of $1 .billion: via b~eakup of Co~ rail

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. :WASHING10N (AP)-Gainsof
nearly $1 billion a year and cuts of
2,000 raiii'OIId jobs are projected
undcr two rail carriers' proposal to·
break up Conrail and challenge ·the
· ttucking industry.
CSX Corp. and Norfolk Southern
Cqrp. expect to lure more thin I million trucklOIIds of frci&amp;ht oft' the lli&amp;hways and Dlito rail can by offering
better connections and fewer bottle·
ncc:ks on Colll'lil's lines.
apel'llionll ·iiJIProvements are to
save $S44 million a year, while
growth in ll'lllfK: would ylel!l $44.5
million in lllditional income after
three years, the CXllll~ies said Mooday in •kina for feilcniiJIIII'ilvll.
. The SIO billion poposal would
breakConrail'spipoathe Nonheut
and introduce my,r competition
there fclr the lint tiJM Iince 1976.
wbineoa.-a 1 H:oarailout!lf
six ......,. nilliolda, CSX anc1
. Northern Sollbern would be 11111011
evenly divided in dle,Eut.

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· I"Stheir 23-volume filing with the
fcde~ ~urface 1\'ansportation Board,
CSX and Norfolk SoulherJ! arsued
their plan could help reduce h.ighway
congestion and maintenance costs
and provide a cheaper alternative for
.moving prt!ducts like automobiles
apd cbil.
·
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"The efficiepcy aains will directly benefit rail freight customers and
will eloable the applicants to provide
muclt.!jmi'JVv~ rail service to customer• thrqu&amp;hout the Unit~
States/'.said David R. Poode. chairm1111, pre~ideni and chief ellec!ltive
officer of Norfolk Southern.
·.
The rillnlads said the 2,000 jobs
thai would be eliminaled over tluee
yeill represent 3 percent of die,_._
ly 13,000 politiou at the three railroa Ailotbcr 2 300 politions would

Southern spokeSman Frank Brown.
Major cuts in management ll!ld clericai 1JOSitions are sl~n Philadelphia, Conrail's headquarters.
The Surface Transportation Board ·
is e~pected to take .,.ty a year to
decide. It could impose conditions or
reject the pl1111 outriaht.
The proposal would leave CSX
and Norfolk Soutllcm in control of
nearly 4$,000 miles or lnlcks.stretehJOB ·EFFECT ing from Montreal to Miami and kele, 11, 1 42-par
from Boston to' Kansu City. It fol- ~~~~· ·~on•
lows a pair of~ consolidalions in ·Iretta ~y whllltpllklrtt
the West over the p'ast two years and ~· outside Conrail
. could lead to a lt'IIIISCOntinental rail- hlldquartera In · Philadelphia.
Hankele, who handlea lnterroad.
CSX IIIII Norfolk Southern, which modlal blUing, pllina to retire In
llave already borrowed $10 billion to 1-112 ve-s and the announced
buyConnil'utock,plcdgcdtolpCIId . lob cuts OIUII d by Conralll'a
$1.~ . billion to improve
con- .breBupwlll not affect him. (AP)
-IOCiti~.
RCCiion• IIIII other f8Ciliticf. .
PenniY~OiiolllllMil:tqan
~ CCIIIIpQies hope to ~~ CQllnting'on ruehina more mllrkets
a -Illata 11ate1f to lolle jobl thlior mvesmtcnl,l by ~apturing on their own roatel, avoidin&amp; cosily
.
whiiC! flOrida. Cleoqia ancl some of the f!'eilht' trlfr'll' Jolt ·to · ud tlnle•coniUmina interchii!JCS
'Vi!Jlnia t.cejQb pins, ..ld Norfolk trucks since World W•ll. rrbey are 1 . between rnllroadi•

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·Schools-conscious budget
·scheduled for vote today ·
COLUMBUS (AP)- Lawmakers !lope to get a passing grade from the
courts after putting more education money into the state's new spending plan .
House and Senate negotiators on Monday approved the $36.1 billion bud. get, which outlines the state's spending for the next two years beginning July
I. The Senate will vote on the package today. .
More than a quarter of the money- $10 billion - will hc .dcvoted to
schools for building repairs. textbooks and basic student aid.
Conference committee members took into account the Ohio Supreme
Court's ruling that fou.nd the state must come up with more money for schools.
The Legislature faces a March deadline to have a new funding plan. ·
"We have met all of the clements of the court's decision," said Sen. Roy
Ray, R-Akron . "We llave a very s)rong case to take to the court." .
Lawmakers llope that the increases in education spending, coupled with
a probabJe tax increase, will be enough to satisfy the court. .
"The next 'step is to take a (tax) package to the voters," Ray said.
Schools statewide will share $250 million to· repair or replace rundown
buildings. A separate bill set aside another $300 million for school buildings.
Districts also will get S50 inillion for new textbooks and materials.
"We did the best we could with the finances we had available," said Rep.
Tom Johnson, R-New Concord.
"I would've liked to have funded education to meet the court's require- ·
ments without going to the tupayers," Johnson said. "But I don'tthink that's
possible."
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,
The three Hoilse and three Senate members on the committee unanimously •
approved the budget and sent it to the Senate..The House likely ':"ill vote
Wednesday. Neither chamber can change it - tt can only vote on ot.
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Tueedey, June 24, 1987

v

1Commentar
.The D.Wy Sentinel
'Estabfisfrd in 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Birth

•

co~trol:

It should be a no-brainer. Birth
control reduces the rate of unwanted
pregnancy and abortion. Therefore,
birth control should be widely available and easy to obtain. It should be
as inexpensive as possible and drug
companies should be encouraged ro
develop safer and more reltable method~

•IIIII,.,.,., - -

;Americans debate free
:Speech from flags to food

Commh:~sioners explore

0 HI 0 W c t1 !11 t: t

Tullay,June24, 1817

Bur•• alas, this 1s Amenca. And
when it comes ro mauers of sex m
ROBERT L. WINGETT
th1s coWIIry, nothmg Is ever that simple. For alllhe obsessing we do about
Publisher
sex, we actually get very nervous
when it comes to'helping people take
control
of their sexualtry. The UnitCHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
ed
.
S
tates
reports the h1ghest rate of
General Manager
Controller
unwanted pre1nancy in the Western
mdustrialized world; 11 also hJIS the
Tile SonoiMI welcomn , . , . to 11&gt;e - - - - 0 ronge g1 ......
highest abortion rare
~/otters 13110 or lo..l ,...
ehMtt:O ot - g pub//- zyt»d lerWhat do countrits such as Cana,.,..,. ptel'orrotl ond 1111 moy"" edt- EICh should /netd F
and S d k
ha
and doytlmo plio,. n~J~nl»&lt; ~iff • H - ·. . ,..,.,.,,.. to • preriouu,_
a, ranee
we en now t 1we
· or t.~»r. lllollto: Loft.,. to tiNl Edllal. Tile liMIIIMI, 111 CDUt1 St, -oy. 0111o
don 't? Well, tt's preuy simple really.
~..;4;,;;576;.;.;;1;.;:o;;:r,.;,F.;.;''-";.;..;;'o•'•'••·.-11112,_-2.;,;157-.;...~---------------' They know that btnh control works
But for some reason, th1s IS a fact that

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

CODditioal and hip temperarures

What's so complicated?

we just don't want to accept here.
the emolional cost.
Consider lhe way our health insurSterilization, for example, is curance companies deal with this issue. rently the most popular form of birth
Most traditional insurance plans control in the United Stares, and certainly for many women it's a desirable
choice. But according to Dr.
Sa(s Eckel
Felicia Stewan, d~rector of reprodon 't cover reversible methods of ductive services for the Henry J.
binh control Health Maintenance Kaiser Family Foundation, it freOrgamzations have done a bener ) ob- quently leads 10 devastating ~suits
m this score, but when it comes to for people who divorce and subsemdcmnity insurance plans, only 33 quently wish to stan new famihes.
percent cover oral contraceptives and "One ofthe saddest things Js that we
only 15 percent cover all five avail- have a fairly substantial amount of
able form s of prescnpt10n reversible regret," says Srewan. " But as a clinbinh control -- the pill, the ieJan we do not want to be m lhe posl·
diaphragm, Depo-Provera, Norplant non to say we will nor do this
and IUDs. Contrast rhar with 86 per- because you haven't had enough
cenr that cover stenhzatoon and 66 children. ''
percent that cover abortion,
The short-sightedness of private
I feel s1lly explaining why this is health insurers can also be found in
a bad idea. F1rst, there JS the eco- the federal government, which has
nomic costs of surgical sterilization, reduced funding for the National
abortton or bringing an unwanted Family Plannmg Program (Title X)
pregnancy to tenn . Second, there is by 72 percent since 1980. Couple that

Of CovR&lt;;e
XGeT THe
eJecTiON seaT!

:By NANCY BENAC
I'M THe
;Associated Press Writer
GeNeRaL!
WASHINGTON - You can bum a tlag, but you had better think tWJCe
:before msultmg an onton. You can wnte a novel that msp1res voolence like
the Oklahoma Ctty bombmg, but you can nor run ads hawkmg cigarettes JUS!
anyplace.
Free speech in the land of the free 1s not as free as you m1ght think.
In a debate as old as the rcpubltc, Americans are weighing once again
when tt 1s proper to place lim1ts on the First Amendment's protections of
unbndl ed speech.
- In Washmgton, yet another effort os under way to have Congress pass
a conslituttona) amendment outla"-tng desecration oflhe American tlag. ThiS
marks the thtrd such attempt smce the Supreme Court ruled tn 1989 that bummg a u s nag is protected expressiOn
- The tobacco mdustry and ant1-sniokmg forces negotiated a deal that
would set sharp ltmtts on cigarette ads, doommg Joe Camel and the Marlboro Man along w1th marketmg of ctgarettes on the Internet and btllboards.
The deal would have to be approved by Congress and could result tn strict
feder al regulatoon of tobacco adverttsmg. The Supreme Court already has
let stand Balumore's ban on billboard ads for Cigarettes and alcoholic beverages, and other coues arc trymg out the concept.
- In a new trend, more than a dozen states have enacted "vcggie libel "
laws that forb•d spreadmg d1sparagtng false mformauon aboul food products. Texas cattlemen arc ustng their state's "agncuhural dtsparagcment"
law to sue Oprah Wtnfrcy for atnng a show on mad cow dtsease in which
she cxclatmcd · It has JUSt stopped me from eatmg another burger!"
- Human nghts advocates last year protested republication of a racist
underground novel. "The Turner Dtanes." that prosecutors cla1med was Timothy McVc1gh 's blucprtnt for the Oklahoma City bombtng The publisher
countered that dtstnbutoon of the novel would help shed hght on the "s1ck
mmds" of supremacist groups
Free-speech lawyer Floyd Abrams finds tt "dtshearlentng that so many
Sometimes a fund family not only ate faamly wtthm an 11-ycar penod,
attacks on Ftrst Amendment values arc procccdtng at once."
delivers products. but takes on special she learned the hard way that there
Dtsheartcnmg, hut nor neccssanly surpnsing
causes common to many of us. The was ltttle matcnal wnttcn ahout the
" Ftrst Amendment tssucs arc always unpopular, " Abrams satd "That 's Oppenhetmer famtly of funds sees fmancJal rcsponsibJitttcs left 10 heirs
why we need a Ftrst Amendment "
the value tn targcung women
H~ called the pcrennuil nag-burntng debate a glanng example of some
investors. Stem Roc hopes that teachDian 'Vujovich
P,COplc's wtllingness to infnnge on tree speech and smd " veggic ltl&gt;cl"laws ing ktds about mvcsung w1ll one day
are npe to be found unconstltuttOnal
pay ofl for all concerned Now. one after a death
"What I realtzcd os that there arc
'A voluntary agrccmentlo curp toba~o ads would be appropriate.Abrams fund family helps us face the
smd. but not tcderal rcgulatoons thai mtcrfcrc wtth free-speech roghts. As for inevitable the cross-gcnerauonal somr rules olthumh I hat arcn ·: rules
to anyhody." says Moore , whose
whether a no vel tncttcd McYetgh to vtolcnce. he satd "There's no reason transfer of assets
to th1nk 'The Turner Dtancs' had no impact, but we don't ban ,books"
The Wonthrop Mutual Fund Fam- funds arc managed hy Wood.
Su how free ts free speech'' ·
oly has' created a brochure lttlcd The Struthers &amp; Winthrop, experts tn the
Ol1ver Wendell Holmes anoculatcd the practtcallimils in 1919 with his Famtly Doscusston . h's designed 10 cross-gcnemttonal transfer ol wealth
dtctum that "the must strongcnt'proteclton of tree speech Would not protect help famtly members start talkmg and asset managcmc'nt. "After my
about-- and then mvcntory1ng-- tl\ctr father dtcd. my mother needed a road
a man m fal se ly shouttng lire tn a theater and causmg a panac. ''
It is up tn the courts to dctenntnc when speech crosses that fuzzy ltnc fam1ly's assets and hnanc1al docu- · map for logtsttcally undcrsrandtng
ments. To get the brochure free nl what In do next."
where the harm tl would mn1ct ts too great to be !Olcratcd.
If you ' re one of the mllhons of
charge. call I-K88-222-2514
Amcncan s arc qutck 10 thmk the line has been crossed
baby
boomers likely In rece1vc some
The
reason
hehmd
the
brochure
is
On tssuc s from nags to food , "It ts occurrtng to people that speech can
to
cncoura~e
famolies
to
talk
about
of the $8 lnllton that's expected lo
cause tnJury. and tn their zeal to curtatl tnJury they arc anxmus to curtml
thctr
ftnan~cs'
"'·
when
a
famtly
transfer to them through inheritance
speech," sa1d Barry Fnedman. a law professor at Vandcrbtlt Umvcrs1ty.
member
dtes.
those
left
behmd
won
'
t
the next 20 years, and have not
over
' That ., why lrcc-s pcech advocates arc happy these dccistons usually end
have
to
add
to
the
gncvmg
proce"
sat down and talked about the Jmpnr·
up bctng madr tn coun.
.
.
" We chcnsh free speech. we hkc the 1dea ol tl, hut when ccnain kmds w1th confus1on over where tamtly tance ol what happens when you dtc,
you're not alone
of vocwpo mts or attttudcs arc expressed and arc then protected by the Forst documents nrc stored.
Moore.
national
sales
Beverly
A&lt;rordtng to a poll conducted by
Amendme nt , we suddenly become cnttcal." satd Emory Umvcrsity law promanager
nl
the
Wmthrop
lunds.
ts
the
Louis
Harris &amp; AS&lt;octatcs. only half
lessor Dav1d Bcdcrman
hramch1ld of the proJeCt After cxpe- ol the 952 familtes surveyed had dts·
EDITOR'S NOTE -Nancy Benac covers national affairs for The ncncmg mnc deaths m her immcd1 ~ cussed last wtshcs. hnanccs and the
Associated Press.

..

with the fact that 30 pe'"nt of poor
Amencans have ne11her health insurance nor Medicaid coverage, and it
should come as no surprise that half
of the unintended pregnancies in this
country occur because no form of
birth control was used.
Then there IS our national queasiness about sex education. Once apin,
rhc United States has the hillbest rare
of teen pregnancy and abortion in the
Western industrialized world, but it's
not because our kids are more tiexually active. Indeed the rate of teen
sexual actJYJty here IS about the
same as comparable nations. The difference is that Amencan teens have
lower rates of birth control use.
Finally, there are the anti-abonion
activists, who have succeeded · in
making not just abortion bur all
forms of family planninll a hot-butron issue. "The confusion with the
abortion debate has had a very siJnilicanr impact on contraception
development in the United States,"
says Rod Mackenzie, who has held
executtve posit1ons at Johnson &amp;
Johnson and the Ortho Phannaceurical Corp. "The pharmaceutical companies that develop new methods of
birth control have received nothing
but cnticism."
The result is lhal there has been
almost no atrempt on the pan of
American drug manufacturers to ·
develop safer or more effective methods of, birth control. "You can spend
the same amount of money and
invent Prozac,'' says Mackenzie,
refernng to the extremely profitable
ant•-deprcssanr.
This cannot go on. The strange
form of Puritanism practiced in this
country " leading to devastating
results. The fact is that the rate of
unwanted pregnancy can be dramattcally tmproved. All 11 takes is a rcaluy check -- that is. an admission that
sex happens, and often for reasons
othcr'than procreation. As Dr. Stewan says, "If other countries can get
these results, why can't we?''
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assodalion.

• • IColumbusls2• (

Area weather to remain
hot, hazy u·n til Thursday
By The A..oclated Preu

It will remain hot and humid in Ohio through Wednesday.
'Lows tomght will be in .the lower 70s.
.
.
.
. Thunderstorms are poss1ble Wednesday afternoon, and h1ghs w1ll rem&amp;Jn
m the uppe~ ~ and low 90s.
Cooler rur ts expected Thursday. . .
.
. The reco~d h1gh temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather sralion was 97 m,f91_4. The record low was,46 set m 1982. .
Sunset today w1ll be at 9:04p.m. Sunnse Wednesday wtll be at6:04 a.m.
.
Weather fo.m:ast:
.
Tonrghr...Muggy. Patchy fog after m1dmght. Lows around 70. L1ght and
vanable wmd.
.
.
,
.
Wednesday...Mostly sunny m the mommg, then panly c~oudy WI~ a
~hance of thunderstorms m the afternoon. Hazy, hot and hum1d wtth h1ghs
m the lower 90s._ Chance of ram 30 percent.
. . .
.
Wednesday mght ... A chance of thunders!onns unt1l m1dmght, otherwise
panly cloudy. Lows around 70.
Extended forecast: .
'
BOsThursday ... Showers and thunderstorms hkely. H1ghs m the lower and m1d
. .
Fnday... Partly cloudy. Lows from the upper 50s lo lhe lower 60s and h1ghs
in the lower 80s
·
•
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows from the upper 50s to the lower 60s and
highs in the mid 80s
·

Brochure facilitates family discussion ·
,,

Today's Birthdays Actor AI Mt•hnam os 78 Comedian Jack Caner ts 74.
Mov1c dn ector Claude Chahrnl os 67 Actress Mochelc Lee Js 55. MuSJcoan
M1ck FlccJwood os 55 Act or-d~rcctor Georg Stanford Brown is 54 Ruck
musoc tan Jell Beck ts s; Smgcr Anhur Brown is 5~ New York Gov. George
Pa1ak1os 52 Rock smger Cohn Blunstonc (The Zomb1cst IS 52. Actor Peter
Weller " SO Rock mustctan John II Isley (Dire Straus) ts 48. Actress Nancy All en ts 47 Reggae stnger Dernck Sunpson (Black Uhuru) IS 47 Rcg~ac st n•c r Astru (U B40 ) ts 40 Smger-musJcum Andy McCluskey (Orchestral M a~10cvrcs tn tbc Dark ) IS 38 Rock singcr-musJcian Curl Smtih (formerl y Tears for Fears) ts 311 Actress Sherry Stnnglield is 30. Smger Glenn
Medeoros ts 27

Berry's World

..
a ....

......
*

~

..._.~

0 ttt7r,NEA

BATMAN CATCHING SOME Zs
II

locatmn of imponant personal and was of little help. It took weeks of
fmancial documents "ttth their adult plowtng through drawers and boxes
child. l'amilics, the study revealed, hefore he was able to put the family
were more ltkely to d1scuss the loca- t mance puzzle together.
uon of thctr importam documents (55
"lust trying ro change owneh;hip
percent) than talk about linanctal on my dad's mutual funds was a hig
assets und ltahihucs (51 percent). deal because I didn't know where he
And. when ot comes to talking , kept his rcc!lfds," said Robbtns, ol
women were more ltkcly to dtscuss West Palm Beach. "Something like
those mailers than men (5K percent thts (checklist) would have hccn a bog
vs. 4!1 perccno.
help"
In The Famtly Discussion
While there is no doubt this chcckbrochure is a two\ pagc. 4':1-Jtcm hst woll be helpful, startmg a concheckhst. SubJects covered mcludL· versatton about money isn't easy. It
cvcrythong I rum emergency papers to can lead to some prclly heated fami personal lmancJal papers and insur- ly dJScusstons. And new rcsponsihilance documents. Also on the check- ltlcs
list reurcmcnt plans. organ donor
But m the end, M&lt;Knc thmks the
statements. adopuon papers. passport diScussions wtll he worth it "If you
numbers and mihtary papers Then have a famtly discussion in place,
there's,, space for checkmg oft suh· you'll go through gncfhut you'lllccl
jects that have been tended to onc'C as though you nrc more in control "
mlormahon 1s logged
Dian Vujovich is tile author of
When Bob Rohhins' father died "Straight Talk Ahoul Mutual
suddenly. he ttmnd himself m an Funds" and "Straight Talk About
cmot1onal and fmanL·tal fog, not Investing for Your Retirement,"
knowing what assets h1s dad had. nr both of which are published by
where the family records were k~pt. McGraw HiD. Send questions td
Because hts father had handled all the her in care of this newsalaperi or Via
Iamtly money. hts grte\mg mother e-mail at MisMutualaol.com. ·

Bernard C. Neutzling
Bernard C. Neutzling, 83, Mason, W.Va., died Monday, June 23, 1997 in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
Born Apitl 24. 1914 m Pomeroy, son of the late Victor and Ehzabeth Neutzling, e was a retired auto mechanic from Tom Rue Motors.
He was a World War II U.S. Anny veteran, a member of FOE Chapter
2171 in Pomeroy, Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy, a member and
past commander of VFW Stewart-Johnson Post 9926, Mason, and American Legion Posl 140, New Haven.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Madalena Young Neutzling.
Surviving are daughters and sons-in-law, Mary M. and Harold Hood of
Letart Falls, Connie J. and Barry Hollis of Mason; and Vicki L. and Jim Ashton of Middleport; sons and daughters-m-law, Charles L. and Carolyn Neutzling of Leading Creek, Edwin F. and Nancy Neurzling of Minersville,
Bernard L. Neutzling of Mason, Ohio, and David K. Neurzhng of Mason;
brothers, Norbert P. Neutzling of Middleport, and Clarence F. Neurzling of
Columbus; t 4 grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren; and two great- greatgrandchildren.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday m the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
with Father Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will be in St. Joseph Catholtc
Cemetery, Mason. Military graveside rites will be performed.
Fnends may call at the funeral home Wednesday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.,
with a vigil service at 8:30 p.m.

()ne ticket nets Buckeye 5 prize

'

Nothing gets peol?le angrier than flag burning

Last Sunday's New York Times
had an art1clc by Richard L. Berke
about pohttcs and morality. Now that
communism is dead. it seems. today 's
poltt1ctans JUst don 't know what to
rail agatnst.
That's one ol the reasons politicians rely on polls. II they can jU•l
ftnd out what locks us off. they can
scJzc on tl. a~d look
like they're uckcd off too It 's as
1mportant for a polt1Jc1an to appear
outraged as it os 10 avoid the appearance ot tmpropncty
(lmprcpncty itself is perm1ssihlc,
only Its appearance ts frowned upon.)
That's why tlag-huming keeps
cropptng up as an issue, I guess
Nothtng gets people angrier than a
flag humer. The fact that nobody 's
ac'lllaHy bumcd a nag sin&lt;.-e. oh, 1':170
docsn 't seem to affect our rage one
whit. Our elected representatives arc
howling for a cons1itut10nal amendment on this issue. just in case somebody mtght hum a nag again, sometime.
A politic tan's time might be better spent fundtng 5chools and highways. But that wouldn't get h1m a
panel spot on
"Nightline," would 11?
Anyway, helpful pie chans at the
top of the art1cle showed us the
results of polls conducted by the
National Opimon Resean:h Center.
Questions like "Do yoO think it
should be legal or illegal for a doc·
tor to help a terminally ill pMienl
commit suicide?" were illllcd opin·
ion p1es, one e~~:h for Republieans,
Democrats and Independents.
I can see the value of a poll to

pohttcmns and journahsts .. 11 gives
them something to hlather about. But
I'm othcrwosc puzzled hy this untquely American phenomenon D&lt;l we

tan Shoales
really
need to know what people like us
arc thtnktng bet ore we make a decJsmn ourrsclvcs'' Lei me rephrase that
Do we need to know what specot tc
numbers of people ltkc us arc thinktng bel ore wc make a dccos10n to
thtnk oursc 1ves'!
Maybe we have an opinton in our
heads, but don't feel c(mfidcnt tn the
expression of that opinton unless we
have a p1c chart cocxostmg wtth 11 tn
our brain, letting us know that
the "Always Wrong" conttngcnl constitutes 75 percent of the people JUSt
like us.
Maybe ·unless we arc e1thcr
insanely self-IISsured, or genuinely
nght about everything pretty mu,·h all
the It me . .we must always weigh uur
mixed emotions 'agamsl the fixed
numbers presented by or!!anizatiun
like the NatiOnal Opinion Research
Center.
Take cloning. One of the !"Ills
asked this question. "Fnnn what
you know, do yo11think cloning is a
good thin'g or a bad thing'!" The
Republican pie broke down as ft)l· ·
lows: 23 percent good, 64 percent
bad arid 7 percent depends . . The
Democi'IIS: 21 percent pxl, 65 percent bad and 9 percent depends. lnde·
pendeiJIIS: 22 percent gOOd, ~ percent
bad and 12 percent depends.
Apart from the uucr stupidity of

the qucstton itself ("From what you
know, ..
How could we have an opmoon
hased on what we don't know!). we
can clearly 'ce thai dtsapproval nf
clomng cuts acnJSs party hncs.
But what this means is anyhody's
guess. Arc people wary ol sHeep
clones''
Humafl clones! IBM clones'! I
know a lnt of computer users whn
wtsh there were more Mac clones.
Are they represented in this survey'!
And you'll noti•'C that 6pcrccnt of
the Republicans, 5 percent nf DcmO&lt;:rats and 7 percent of
Independents are m1ssing. Who'
took them! Clones'! Aliens'!
Speakmg of whtch. a recent
Timc/CNN poll revealed that 22 percent of "adult Amcrtcans" helievc
that "intelligent beings froll) ' other
planets have been in cont~ct" with us,
I 7 percent believe that these beings,
nr others like them, "have abducted

human betngs to observe or expertmcnt on them," and 13 percent
beltevc that " members ot the U.S.
government'' have hccn m contact
w1th hramy aliens
f':lcvcr mtnd that a heltcf in aliens
(on a dJSapprnvul ol clones) docs not
affect lhe1r cxostcncc one way or
another. Just hxlk atibe numhers. hut
ot' s st1ll a prelly hetty minnrtty. When ·
arc pnlitict_ans going to go for the
UFOiog1st vnlc'! They cnuld get
locked nft about ahcn autnpsics (or at
lea.'t ahen autopsy vidc&lt;t,). They
could call for an amendment lhat ,
WJruld end UFO abductions forever.
Tn do that, ot coun;c, they'd have
In admtt the truth about Roswell.
Trust me. That wtll never happen.
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoalcs newslcucr, call 1-KIJ0-9M9DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 40ll
Broad ~t .. Nevada Clly, CA 95959.)
Ian · ShoaltJ is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Today in history
By The Allocllted Pr111

•
•

~oday is Tuesday. June ~4, the I 75th day of 1997. There are 190 days
left m the year.
Today's Highlishtm History: ,
F1ve-hundrcd years ago, qn June 24, 1497,the first recorded sighting of
North Amcnc;a by a European took place as explorer John Cabot, on a voy·
age for England, spotted land, probably m present-day Canada.
On th11 date:
.
In 1314, the fon:es of Scotland's King Robert I defeated the Engli•h in
l!:lc Battle of Bannockburn .
In I S09. Henry VIII wu crownod king of En1land.
In 1647, Mqam B~ a niece of Lord Baltimore, wu ejected from •
the Maryland Adembly .tier domandin1a place and
in !he body. •
In 1793, the fin1 republican constiiUiion ill France wu ldopicd.
•

"*

,,

I

•

CLEV£LAND (AP)- One ticket matched all live numbers in Monday
night's Buckeye 5 drawing and it's worth $100,000, the Ohto Lottery said.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled $329.225.
•
Thert'wete 112 Buckeye 5 tickets ;with four of the numbers, and each IS
worth $250. The 3,375 tickets showing three of the numbers are each worth
$10, and the 34,757 rickets showmg two of the numbers are each worth $1.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled $1,200,186, and winners Will receive
$324,087.
Pick 4 Numbers players wagered $359.092 and will share $163,600.
The jackpot for Wednesday's Super Louo drawing is $12 millton.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-9M)
Pubtlolled every aflemoon. MondQy IIIIVIIJh

Aidlf, t It c ... n 51 , l'omeroy, lllllo. by lhe
Ohio \Olley Pubtiduna ComponyKlanoelt 0&gt;..
l'omavy, O.io 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Socoo4

Catcher Yogi Berra of the Yankees handled 950 chances without an
error, 1957-1959.

•oc s

_ p!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!s~!l!!!!:e!!l!!!!k.!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!~

II

ciao -pood !lll'omeroy. Ohio.

Ani Ele Power .......................41\

M•lltr: The ,\JIM)CIIllfd Pie!'~'. and the Otdo
Nlwr.paper Assoc:uttion.

AmrTech ..........-..............,••.•• 69:4
Aahland 011 ...........................46'1.
AT&amp;T.....................................3&amp;'1.
Blink One ..............................47'\;

POSTMASTER: Send addrna correcrio1s to
The Daily Sent1nel. Ill Co•n St. ~oy.
Ohlo45769,

Akzo ......................................88}.

Bob lvana...........................11'-

lorg-Warn.r ........................52'1.

SUII8CRtPI10N RATES

Chlmpto.n ..............................1~~

One- - ... .. .. . ... . .. - $2.00

Chwm Stlpl ...•- .....................lt).
City ttotdlng ••••••••••.•.••..••••.•.•••• 32
Federal Mogui ......................

llyc.m.rw--

Ooe Moodl ................................. ...... $8.1Q
Ooe y-............. ... ................... $104.00

SINGLI COPY I'IIICI

Doily ...................... ........ .

3lC-

Su'*rlben not des1rint to plY tt1c c.ner may
mnit In adYance dheel to The Dlily Sentinel
0111 -~~·or lliiiCHIIh ball• Oodio will be

~~----­
No lllllscripdoo by mall permitted to .,...

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52 ~................: .............................. 105.36

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1 3 -.............................. .......... .....129.25
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caooctr-r ..............................81\

Kmlrt ....................................12'Land8 Encl.............................
Ltd.,_.._ ...............................11'0M HIH Flnl ............................11

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Prern Fln1.................................17
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RD-IItlll .........................-..201\

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Wll1dv'l ·········-···················.25\
·-·····················-11'.4
I·Worthlnglon_._._
Stock l'lportl . , . thl10:30

··~·
of
...provlclld by~·

52 WW.......................................IIOU2

(Continued fnlm Plig. 1)
incr IIIC in fuel is beiiiJ used bec8111e
Commissioner Jeffrey ThorniOII the proseculing lliOI'IICy's off'ICC is
said that he feels the c:ounty is 100 abo fuelin1 county vehicles from the
small roc a sclf-insiii'IIICe pilJidli" . same ~:
bur Smith and Miller both said lhll
CommissiOIIef Freel Holfmaa said
smaller sclf-illllllUK:C lfOIIPI can be lhM the fund would he replenillied
successful ill conlinuilll Choir pro- when n mled.
. .
pams ll millimum Cost iiiCIIUet.
Souflby and the COIIUDISSI~
They also uid that Meip County aareed that ~~~ilit~ for fuel ·
should be able to continue operstin1 usc, such • nwnlll:inanll ~deaae and
irs insUIIIIICe plan with minimum cost fuel use _logs, was tmportant for cost
increases.
morutonng, and~ be performed
Also to the county's cn:dit, accon1- by all offic:es ustng county vehicles.
ing to Smith. is a "reasonable" claims
Howard also expre~ concern
history.
that fuel and county vch1cles only be
The question concerning the com- used for county-related trav~l. Soulsmissioners and most department by no~ thai ~cpuu.es of h1s depanheads, then, is why the system is such men! drive the1r cnusers only to ~
a drain on'county finances.
f~ work: as ~ell as on patrol dunes
"If our group is not to small, and dunng their sh1fts.
our claims are reasonable, why are
Soulsby also no!cd that plaster
we not holding our own," asked Jon ~ork and fl~r repaus were needed
Jacobs, deputy health comnussioncr. m the shentrs department. Roof
"Our employees are receiving the rep&amp;lr IS _al~ need~ to control moissame services, but the premiums are !Ure, _wh1ch 1s ca~st~g damage to the
still going up."
mrenor of the buddmg.
~et business
Soulsby also uked the board to
The comm1sstoners held a second consider the purchase this year of rwo
pubhc heanng on Commumty Devel- new cruisers for the department. In
opment Block Grant projects for years past, Soulsby has purchased
I ~~7, funded through the Small used Stale Highway Patrol cruisers at
Cmes Program.
.
an approKimate cost of $6,500, and
. Approval for the followmg ~ an additional cosl of $2,500 for conJects has been granted, based ?" en: version. These cars usually have at
.•zen '":Put. and the commJssJoners least 80,000 miles on them at purderermmatton of local11eed: fire pro- chase, he said, and maintenance and
rect1on fac1hty. and equipment, repair bills are considerable.
Chester Town~~tp, $130.~; fire
Soulsby said if the board could
pmtc:ctmn facohty and equ1pment, buy two new vehicles this year, and
SCIPJO Townshop, $15,000; fire pro- wollld be unable to buy further vehirecrion facihty and equipment, cles in coming years he might be
Racine, $30,000; street •mprove- able to buy new cars through h1s Fur· ments, Lebanon Township, $25,000; therance of Justice account, a discrehtstoric preservatton, Chester/Shade tionary fund used for law enforceHisroncal AssoCiation, $12,000; mentexpenses.
adm1msrratton and faor housing,
The board also approved the fol$20,000.
lowing transfers of funds: $143 SO for
The Rae one project will be community corrections; $10,000, folreplaced by a. water line extension lowing appropriation. for a juvenile
project on Zmn Church Road in the court grant; and $75,000 in the
Leading Creek Conservancy Distrtcl depanmenr of human services .
at the same cost, due to administra- Appropnation
requests
were
tive delays. The Racine project will approved for the Meigs County
be funded in 1998, according to Board of Mental Retardatton and
Commissioner Janet Howard.
Developmental Disabtlitles of
A bid from the Shelly Co. was $7,065, and the Meogs County Hoghopened for Stale Capital Improve- way Depanment of$154,767.
t Pr
(I
II)
·
fo
The board also·
men ogram ssue prOJCC15 r
.
this year. The bid WIIS the only bid
• Approved a serv1ce contract
· ed ~ th
It'
·ob pa · ng renewal w1th Office World Inc for
recelV
or e mu 1p1e-J
VI
,
.
project, and was su_bmined in the sof~warc support and equipmenl
amount of $383,171.52. S110,000 in mamtenance for the DHS m the
county funds will also be spent on the amount of $9,204, which 1s retmprojects, which involve Mmersvillc bursable by the state. ·
Road, Old Portland Road, Laurel
• Passed a resolution, mtroduccd
Cliff Road, Titus Road, Pauhns H1ll by Hoffman, to be forwarded to Gov.
Road, and Leading Creek Road.
OeQrge Voinovich, endor.;ing English
The bid was tabled for review by as the official language of the state of
County Engineer Robert Eason, who Ohio;
was present for rhe bid opening.
• Approved payment ofb1lls m the
Sheriff James Soulsby attended amount of $535,049.59, with 339
the meeting ro discuss an 1\lllicipated entries.
Also present was Commisstoners'
shortfall m his depanment's fuel
budget for the year. He noted tl at an Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Middleport to fill two
Horton also reported on Thurs(Continued from Page 11
day's
meeting in Mason on the
members of the community ro add
replacement
of the Pomeroy-Mason
their mput to the issue by attending
council meeungs or wriling letters to Bndgc
He encouraged co!Jncll members
village hall.
and
otllers in the community to send
Horton said workers are in the
public
input forms to the Ohio
process of repairing the pool in the
hopes of getting il open before July Depanment of Transportation supportmg keeping the bridge near its
4.
currentlocatoon.
The fonns are avail"We didn't gel it open last year
able
at
village
hall
and Middleport
because it didn't hold water," he said.
"We're trymg to make it hold water." Trophies and Tees, he sa1d.
Moving the bridge would retard
Council approved spending
economic
development m all lh~
$5,000 to get operations staned at the
communities
served by the span and
pool includinll,paying life guards.
On the boat launch, Honon said hamper cooperari ve ·fire and emerthe dock has been repaired afler. being gency efforts, be explained.
Income taX administrator Carol
damaged m the March flood and 'that
Cantrell
proposed the village purmoney has been received from Fedchase
an
Aelna
health insurance poleral Emergency ManagementAJCIIC)t ·
icy
for
its
employees
lhrough the
and the state to make the repairs.
Horton said the Middleport facil- Wiseman Agency of Gallipolis.
ity is one of the best places to launch Council took no action on the matter
a .boat since it faces downstream, pendmg receipt of an update cost figmaking 1t easier to launch and recov- ure.
In other business, council :
er boats.
,
• Met with a representative of
Browning pointed out a problem
Alliance Insurance on options for volwith k1ds playing on the dock.
Horton said lhe dock is for boaters lage property and habitity insurance.
• Approved the mmutes of the
and sa1d police will be watching the
June
9 meeting and paid monthly
dock.
bills.
These are little children who have
• Held a brief executive session to
no business being out on the dock,
discuss
personnel matters.
Counci~woman Sandy lannarelli
Present
were Horton. Hockman,
explained.
In adllilion, she complained about council President Beth Stiver.,
lannarelli, Councilwoman Rae
lmle children playmg on village
Owiaidowsky
and Neville. Absent
streets and urged parents to keep their
was
Councilman
Mtck Ch1lds.
k1ds off the street.

The Dally Sentinel• Page J

DEP director warns he
may revoke pulp permit
CHARLESTON. W.Va (AP)- The state is spendtng too much time
and money defend1n1 permits ot iuued w the developer of a proposed
Mason County pulp mill, and the time for a commitmept to the project
1s near,lhe stare's lop envoronmental offiCial sa1d.
If PPrsons &amp; Whiuemore of Rye Brook, N.Y., does not demonstrate
a Wtlhngness to build the Apple Grove moll, it w•lllose 1ts atr-pollution
~111111 1n December, Division of Environmental Protection D1rcctor John
Caffrey said.
"My concern IS lhe D1vosion of Environmen!al Protecuon has been and
is expendmg significant resources to process the permtl applt cauons and
to resiJO!ICI to appeals," Caffrey wrote in a lerrerto !he company last week.
. "W'!de we remam committed to working with you 11 is becoming
mcreasmgly difficult to do so 1n the absence of a clear, good-fatth effort
by !'arsons &amp; Whittemore to move forward." he sa1d.
. Caffrey said~ com~y can save its pennn by re-establtshmg a lellal
mteresl m the sne and ask1ng the Army1 Corps of Engmccrs for a development perm1t.
·
Parsons~ Whittemore has said 11 remains mlcrcsted in the perminin1
process, bur It has not renewed an option to buy land for the $1.1 billion
plant along the Ohio Raver. The option exp1red March I .
~hile the company has postponed work on the project indefinitely,
envtronmenllil regulators ~ave contmued to defend its aar pennit against
appeals by env~ronmenral groups. The DovisJon of En•ironmental Protection also has oontinucd to process the companyUs apphcatJon for waterpollution permits.
C. Kenneth Goddard, a vice prestdent lor Parsons &amp; Whittemore. saod
Slllurday he had not seen Caffrey's letter and had no comment.
Environmentalists oppose the project. They belte•e high levels of cancer-causing dioxin will result from the plant's bleaching operations.
They also contend the state ts wasting taxpayers' money by defending the permils even though the company's interest in the project appears
10 have waned.
But state regulators said the law requires them to continue work on
the permits unlll they arc notified the company has abandoned the project.
·

Meigs announcements
Social pltusned
An ice cream social will be held
at the Bashan Firehouse. County
Road 28, Friday, with servong to
begm at 5 p m. Several kinds of sandwiches on add1110n to homemade 1cc
cream.
Reunion set
The Hollon reumon at Forked Run
Park Saturday, I p.m. Business meetmg. 3 p.m. potluc~ at 5 p.m
1

Boll order Issued
The Tuppers Platns-Chcstcr Water
District has issue~ a boil advtsory for

its Sulton Townshtp customers al9ng
Pine Grove Road from the intersection of Mornmg Star Road to Saltier
Road, and 3,000 feet on Salser Rood
from Pmc Grove Road. The action is
the result of a water Iinc break. Residents arc asked to boilthetrdrinkmg
water for three minutes before consummg.
Girls basketball
An Eastern girls basketball meeting woll be held Wednesday, 4:305.30 p.m. at the htgh school for girls
playmg basketball next year or gomg
to R1o Grande camp

Squads respond to 8 calls
Units of the Mei&amp;s County Emergency Medical Scrv1ce recorded e1ght
calls for assistance Monday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4: n a.m., State Route 124, Middleport, Effie Black, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
7·53 a.m., Lmcoln Hetghts,
Pomeroy, Lucille Topping. Veterans
Memonal Hospital;
9:30 a.m., Rocksprings Road.
Pomeroy, Pearl Carsey, Holzer Mcdtcal Center, Pomeroy squad assisted;
3·41 p.m., Manuel Road. Lctan

Falls, Eva Lawson, VMH, Racine
squad assisted;
~
5 p.m .. Powell Street. Middleport,
Luella Driggs, VMH.
MIDDLEPORT
4·35 p m. , Overbrook Nursmg
Center, Datsy Brown. PVH;
. 7·21 I'm , volunteer fire department to R1vcrsJde Apanmcnts, smoke
odor ar Kcnda Reynolds rcstdcncc.
POMEROY
I0·12 a m., Overl&gt;ronk Nursing
Center, Mtddlcport, Everett Delancy,
PVH ,

Run for congressional
(Continued from Page 1)
come from the most conservalive
wing of the Republican Party -and
I'm talkmg here about the Christian
Coalition - and I don't think that
same mtcns1ty of oppos1110n would
be present in a race against her."
But a former nallonal Republican
political consultant, Mark Weaver,
said tiie GOP math is simple: take the
conservative Republicans who
backed Cremeans and add in moderate "Hollister" Republicans to defeat
Strickland.
"She can.reach independents, and
working women - whO arc two
grou~ Republicans need to target
more," he said. "Even though she's
from the eastern part of the district,
she'll fare very well in the Cmcmnati
suburbs (at the wcstcm edge of the
do strict)."
A polittcal Achtlle~ Heel for Hoi-

HOSpital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions- Dora Wining, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges June 13 - Edwar~
Swisher, Frances Grady, Jerry Mont•
gomery, Jamie Coon.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Williams, son. Jackson .

lister could be fund-ratsmg a' she h:.;
bankrolled only about $35,000 for a
1998 run by t~e end ollast year
But Weaver S81d her .tn~c m s!J!tcwJdc
oflicc and her affiltatoon wt.th Gov
George Voinovoch will attract tbe
necessary Washongton b1g-moncy
donors. "Nancy Hollister wtll have to
raise nearly a m1llion dollars (to run
for Congress), but she can do ot."

We Give Mat•re

Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Ho•e
Owners Special
Savings.

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses
than other age groups. So tt's
only lair to charge you less lor
your Insurance Insure your
home and car w~h us and save
even more with our special

Today's . uves~ock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Thesday as provided by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: 1.00 to 1.50
higher; demand moderate to good mr
light to moderate movement.
•
U.S . 1-2, 23().260 lbs. country
points S8.S0.60.00, few S8.00; plants
59.25-61.00, few 61.SO.
u.s. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. . 53.0058.00; 21().230 lbs. 48.50-53.00.
Sows: fmn to 1.00 hillber.
U.S. 1-3 300-SOO
lbs. 43.()()..:45.50
.
500-600 lbs. 46.00-48.00, few over
600 lbs. 49 .00-SO.OO•
Boars: 38,00-42.00.
Estimated receipt~: 27,000.

.

l'lkw from P\odacen Llve•IOCk A..odatlall:

Hog marker trend for Tuesday:
1.00 higher.
Summary of Monday's auctions
at Hllbboro and Creiton:
Hogs: 1.00 higher.
Butcher hogs: 55.00-61.50.
Cattle: lower to 1.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 62.0067 .00; sell:(;! 58.00-34.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 62.0065.7S; select 57.00-62.00.
Cows: lower to 5.00 higher; all
cows 46.25 and down.
Bulls: sleady; all bulls 63.25 and
down .
Veal calves; lower; choice 90.00
and down.
Sheep and lambs: lower; clio1ce
wools 80.00 and down; feeder lambs
90.00 and down; aged sheep 32.00
and down.

i

'R.R£G}rfER~

~ranee Servlcee

,..
L---

--~

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-8687
Auto-0-nen ],....,.,..,.
Life Home car Business
n.~~·

'
I

�The ·Daily

Sports.

Sentin~! ·
Junt

Expos notch 5-0
/victory over Reds

Twins record 7-2
win over Indians

MONTREAL (AP) - Add Jim ing a reliable fifth starter.
Bullinger (5-6) retired the first II
Bullinger to the list of solid staners
Reds before Lenny Harris hit a twofor the Montreal Expos.
Bullinger pitched a four-hitter out double in the fourth. The rightfor his fourth career shutout as the hat;tder went on to record his sixth
Expos beat the Cincinnati Reds 5.0 career complete game and second
this season. ,
Monday night.
..
"I try to think about being really
"It's contagious to pitcq well ,"
aggressive,"
he said. "Challenge
Bullinger said. "Everybody's been
and
get
quick outs, Late in
the
hitter
throwing the ball well. I'm trying to
the game. I was still fresh. I didn't
continue with that."
The Expos left ·spring training have to reach back for anything
with a starting rotation that consist- extra."
F.P. Santangelo gave Bullinger all
-ed of Pedro Martinez and a series of
the
offense he would need.
question marks after the trade of Jeff
Santangelo
homered, scored three
Fassero and injuries to Matt Wagntimes a_nd extended his hilling streak
er and Rheal Cormier.
Lately, the rotation has hiKI all the to 18 games.
Santangelo was dropped from
right answers.
· Montreal starters lead the majors the -leadoff spot and batted seventh.
'.'I don't care where I hit. The hotwith i 3 complete games, o0e more
than their ·season total of last year. tom line is you have to hit the ball
With eight shutouts, Montreal trails where it"s thrown ov.er the plate,"
Atlanta by one for the major league said Santangelo, who went 2-for-3
with a walk.
lead.
Santangelo, who homered for a 3In their last II games, Expos ·
0
lead
in the fourth, hit an infield sinstaners are 8-2, allowing 19 earned
gle
in
the
second and scored on Chris
runs in 87 '113 innings, a 1.95 ERA.
Widger's
double. He made it4:0 in
It's no coincidence that thirdthe
seventh,
scoring on Mark
place Montreal has won 13 of 16
games to move 4 1/2 behind Atlanta Grudzielanek's bloop single.
David Segui's RBI single in the
in the NL East.
eighth
scored the Expos' final run .
At 9-3; Martinez is having his
John
Smiley (5-9) allowed four .
best season of his six-year career,
leading the majors with a 1.64 ERA. runs -three earned-: and six hits
Carlos Perez, who missed all of in .6 213 innings. He lost his third
1996 with rotator cuff surgery, is 8- consecutive start. his second straight
since coming off the disabled · list
4 with three shutouts. ·
Jeff Juden. who hiKin't started Ju ne 16.
"Smiley thrt\w the ball good,"·
since 1995, is 8-2.
·
Reds
manager Ray Knight said.
Hard-throwing Dustin Hermanson, who hadn't started since junior "He really only made one mistake to
year in college in 1993, is 3-4, but Santangelo. There was a bouncing
has recently shown signs of.becom- ball in fron_t_o_f_Aa_
_ r_on Boone aod a

· :.;,fi_··
' ... ;;·•

,

SANTANGELO SCORES- The Montreal Expoa' F.P. Santangelo
(7) troll across the_plate In front ofCinclnn11tl backstop Joe Oliver
· In the second Inning of Monday night's National Leagt.te eonte!lt In
Mootrnl, where the Expoa won 5-0. Santangelo scored on Chris
Widger's double. (AP)
blooper. 1 was satisfied with his outing."
Cincinnati has lost three straight,
scoring just four runs.
.
The Reds' l•'ne"up 1·s m1·ss 1·ng Barry .Larkin and Reggie Sanders, both
sidelined with injuries. Knight said
heplannedtoshakeupthelineupfor

Thesd.ay's game against Perez, a Jellhander. .
"There's no telling what kind of
lineup you'llsce out there," Knight
Barry · and Regg1e
. out,
sa1·d . "W"th
t
we're short when we face a left-hander. It's going to be tough to pui
·
toget hera rmeup th at 1ooks vtable."

Lawton was 4-for-5 with singles
· By KEN BERGER
in
the first, second, seventh and
CLEVELAJ'ID (AP) - For two
years, the AL Cellll'al title was exclu- ninth.
"I tried to sljly fQCused and not
sive property of the Cleveland lndiseule for just two or tllnee," Lawton
ans.
Oil Monday night, the last-plnce said.
Aside from Jim Thome's two solo
Minnesoia Twins dominated the
first-place Indians and showed just hOiners, the only bright side for
how wide-open this division race is. Cleveland was that Sandy ·Alomar
Matt Lawton had four hits. Pat extended his hitting streak to 22
Meares had a two-run homer and games with a single in 1M second.
"I got it ~arly, but they shut me
· three RBis and Brad Radke won his
fol!rth straight start as tbe Twins ~at down after that." said Alpmar, who
was 1-for-4. "They shut.the whole
the Indians 7-2.
.
Cleveland won the division by 30 team dowh."
games in 1995 and 14 112 last year. ·
After losing the first of a three-game
Radke (8-5) allowed two runs.IIJid
set wilh Minnesota, the Indians are six hits in eight innings, pitching at
only 37-33 and in first . by two least into the eighth for the third time
·in four starts. Radke, who struck out
games.
·
"I continue to ·feel this club is five and walked one, is 4-0 with a
~iKiy to take off at any iime," Cleve- 1.71 ERA in his past four starts.
land manager Mike Hargrove said .
"I'm pitching the same ,now as I
They·~ better hurry. The Twins
may be in last, but.they're only 4 1/2 have been all of this year," Radke
. said. "I haven't changed anything."
games behind Cleveland.
After Thome's second homer. a
The usually light-hitting Twins.
last in the AL with 53 homers, got 16 solo shot leading off the sixth, Radhits against four Cleveland pitchers ke retired nine straight batters. Mike
-and snapped ~ five·game losing Trombley pitched the ninth ..
streak against the Indians.
"We"ve got a lot of guys who can
Cleveland starter Chad Ogea (5swing the bat. one through nine.'' 8) as in trouble early in losing his
said L~wton , who had his fourth- fifth straight start. With one out in
career four·hit game. "Pat Meares the first, he gave up three straight
has some pop, and he's the No.9 hit- singles, including a rul!·scoring hit
ter."
by Steinbach. Coomer. ;;~dded a sac'
Meares turned a one-run game rifice lly to make it 2-0.
into
Rich Becker led off the second
h a 5-2
ff contest
lb" L with a two-run
.,omerso . Ab 1eh opeh z indtheh cighhth. with a double and scored on an RBI
,erry
ac ·• hw do ha t ree · 11s · single by Meares. making it 3-0.
d temRBI
an two
s, a a run-s~onng
"It seems like every mistake I
-double!' indthehninth. an_dhRonRCBoo~cr made early, they hit.'" said Ogea, 0compete
t eroulwll an
Ism- 5
with a 7.52 ERA in his last live
gle.
outings.

Mets get past Braves 3-2_to tally fifth consecutive triumph
By The Associated Presa ·
The New York Mets know it's too ·
early in the season for a really big
series. Then again, a swee~ of the
defending NL champions wouldn~t
hurt.
.
Rick Reed beat 1996 Cy Young
Award winner John Smoltz, and
Carl Everett hit a two-run homer as
the Mets defeated Atlanta 3-2 Monday night for their lifth consecutive
victory.
.
"I'm. sure they beheve they can
play with us," Smoltz said. ··•They
probably think they're a few steps
away. but that doesn't deter t~em.
They believe they can win.".
1ltc Mets played well agamst the
New York Yankees last week despite
losing two of three, t~en swept a
four-game senes from Pittsburgh. To

make the playoffs, they know they
have to leapfrog past florida and
Montreal- and close on the Braves.
"This team has always played
Atlanta well," Everett said. "We
showed Atlan.ta we can play well
against them, and I think they know
it."' .
,
Reed (5-4) pitched a six-hitter at
Shea Stad1um, helpmg the Mets to
their 26th win in 40 games.
Smoltz (6-7) had a complete
game, but allowed 10hits.Heiswinless in six straight starts.
"I've yet to have Jl bad game, but
by my record, it wouldn't indicace
that,·: .Smoltz said. "People who
haven 't followed it might say, 'Well,
gecz, 6-7.' But the people who follow it, they know it could be a great -

season."
with 109. surpassing Rollie Fingers.
In other NL games, San Diego
Mark Gardner (8·3).allowed sevoutscored San Francisco 11-6, Los en runs aod 12 hits in five innings.
Angeles beat Colora\lo 5-3, PittsDodgers S, Roddes 3
burgh blanked Houston 6-0,
Eric Karros and Raul Mondesi .
Philadelphia beat Florida 9· 3 and . homered on consecutive pitches at
Chicago defeated St. Louis 3-0.
Dodger Stadium. and Hideo Nomo
Padres 11, Giants 6
(7-6) allowed five hits in eight .
Steve Finley homered three times innings in his first game against Col- matching his feat of May 19 at orado since he no-hit them at Coors
Cincinnati - and Wally Joyner Field last Sept. 17.
·
added two homers.for San Diego at
Karros and Mondesi connected ill
San Francisco.
.
the first inning wheillhe' Dodgers
Jim Bruske ( 1-0) got his ,first scored all their' runs off Kevin Ritz
major league win a few hours after (5-7). Two of the runs were unearned
being promoted from the minors, becauseofanerrorby ·firstbaseman
allowing three hits in five scoreless Andres Galarraga.
·
innings of relief. Trevor Hoffman got
Darren Hall finished with one-hit
. the final out for his 13th save and relief for his first NL save and his
became the Padres' career leader first in the majors since 199S, when
he was with Toronto.

Pirates 6, Astros 0
Philadelphia slopped an eight-game
Francisco Cordova (6-5) pitched losing streak.
a two-hitter at the Astrodome for his
Ric.k Helling (2·5) was tagged for
second career shutout. and Jcrmaine ' seven runs and six hils in four
Allensworth hit a bases-loaded triple innings at Veterans Stadium.
Cubs 3, Cardinals 0
in the eighth as Piltsburgh erided a
Rookie
Jeremi Gonzale1. (3-2)
six-ga_me losing streak.
Ramon Garcia (3-5) allowed pitched a four-hitter for his lirst comthree hits over the first four innings plete game in the major leagues as
and allowed only one runner to reach visiting Chicago stopped a livegame losing streak.
second until ihe fifth.
· Mark Grace drove in two runs
PhUIIes 9, Marlins 3
Rookie Scott Rolen homered and with a single in the lirst and a homer
drove in five runs, and Curt Schilling off Fcrnanao Valenzuela (2•10) lead(9-6) struck out a career-high 13 as ing off the sixth.

TUIINy, June 24, 11117

Pot;neroy • Mldd.t.port. Ohio

Venoys
make
racing
.a family
traditio·n

The O.lly S1ntlnel • Pege 5

Wimbledon first-round play continues

Majoli, .Krajicek and ·Henman
win on new court's first day
By ROBERT MILLWARD

Kevin V,enoy of Long Bouom ha.'
. ben one of the steadiest drivers on
the local drag racing circ~il for several years. having v.con the 1995
MOdified Class Championship, posting two Pro·ET wins jh 1997 and
earning World. Bracket qualifier in
1995 and 1996.
.
VcnpY and Venoy Racing. under
directorship of Kevin and wife Bren- .
da. get help from brother Craig
Vcnoy aad mother-in-law Beverly
Cunningham.
Venoy, a truck dri"ver and sales
personnel has been rncing four yean
Brenda Venoy'a Nova
under sponsorship from Rutland
· Bottle Oas, J's Service Center.
Snouffers Fire and Safety, D&amp;M Pizza. Baum True Value ·and Nich&lt;Jis
Sheet Metal. The heautiful. 1972
Nova, named Wishfui,Thinkin' runs
in the Pro ET clai;s and will run 1/8
mile in a 6.50 at 103 miles per hour.
The car has a 406 Chevrolet
engine with a Crane Roller. Dan
heads, TCJ5,000 conv.ener ~nd TCI
transbrakc. · Venoy competes at
· Kanawha Valley · Dragway and
National Trail Raceway.
Venoy says one of his favorite
things about racing is all of the good
people you meet and all of the fun fastest men drivers. She w"as also in . member of the racing Venoy family
you have lilcing. . His worst thing the quarter finals in the World Brack· is a local deli 'manager when he's not
cl finals at Darlington, S.C. in 1996. racing. Craig. Kevin 's older brother,
about racing is "losing".
The Venoy Racing. "Twee Wish- also drives in the Pro E.T. Class in
His most valuable lesson learned
in racing is "race to have fun nnd not ·es", car will turn the eighth mile at his 1975 Chevy Vega powered by a
7.27 or .94 miles per hour.
· 355 Chevy engine ..The car clocked
to get too emotionally involved."
Everyone in the Vcnoy family in with a 6.8 or 9K.9 miles per hour.
Brenda Venoy, the wife of Kevin serves on the crew along with Bren. Special car features include Dan
Vcnoy, keeps it "all in the family" as da's mother. Bev Cunningham. Heads. Lunati Cam, Power Glide
the lady racer · from Long Bottom Veney competes at Kanawha-Valley with Brake and the family 's personknows how to live life in the fa•t Dragway ,and National Trai f Race- al touch. Venoy has meed three years
"seriously" as he says, Vcnoy comlane.
way.
.
Her favorite value "in racing is petes at Kanawha Valley Dragway
The computer operator at Racine
Home National Bank by day and meeting new friends and all the oth- and National Trail Raceway.
race driver by night drives a 355 er valuable less6ns learned about
· Crew members arc Kevin. Brengood
sportsmanship.
Her
worst
da,
Megan and mom and dad Vcnoy
powered, 1972 Chevrolet Nova
painted Corvette Yellow like her hus- moments in racing are when her bus- :ind Brian Bailey. Craig's favorite
bands Pro ET.
.
hand K~vin "wins mo1c races in my mome.nts in racing include making
friends, helping others and winning
·
Brenda competes in the.Modified car than I do!"
rounds.
Th~ worst is rcdlighting and
Her
most
valuabiC
lesson
learned
class and the car with 60,000 actual
·
brc~king
out.
original miles is still stn:etabic. is "Never second guess your lirst
Craig's most valuable lesson is
Brenda is in her third year and was instinct.''
"Go with what,you know ts right and
second in points in !loth 1'195 and
1-996 -ugainst some of the region's
· Craig E. Venoy. ihe third rucing don't second guess your. gut feeling ."

-

over Romania's Dinu Pescariu.
said after Monday's victory. "This
Wll!IBLEDON. En1land (AP)
Britain"s Tim Henman won the match. just to win it, it's like a dream
- :Iva Majoli"s first-round Wimble- firSt match to be played on ~he new come true. People have alway• been
don victory felt almost like winning IJ,()()().seat No. I Coun. downing telling me that·! could play well on
· .
·
Canada's Daniel Ncs\Of 7-6 ( 13-11 ). gra.&lt;s, and I guess I never had confi.the French Open.
She didn't have a trophy to etJI· 6-1, 6-4.
dence, especially here at Wimblelect this time. But the 19-year-old
Today, No. I Pete Sampras began don."
Croat grinned excitedly, raised her his quest for his fourth title in live
Majoli also has n lot of people vn.
arm in triumph and soaked up the years by taking on Sweden's Mikacl her side.
applause of the fans .
·
Till strom. Another three-time chamCoached hy her hrother Drago
It was her first win on the famous pion, cighth·secded Boris Becker. and father Stanko. she has lllso
grass courts of Wimbledon.
faced Marcos Aurelio Gorriz of worked with Nick Bollctt~ri. former
"It's my first victory, so I was Spain.
touring ,pru Goran Prpic and, mo!il
really excited," Mujoli said after
Martina Hingis.the women's top recently. four-time Wimbledon douMonday's 2-6.6-0. 6-3triumph over seed who hasn't yet made it to the hles.champion Peter Flcmina.
Argentina's Mariana Diu Oliva. quarterfinals at Wimbledon in two
She even got some help from
"When I won this match. 1 was attempts. was first on No. I Court nine-time Wimhledon champion ·
almost as happy as when I won the against qualifier Anne Kremer of Martina Navratilo,·a about how to
French Open_. It vias like relief."
Luxembourg.
play nn grass.
· · Besides Diaz Oliva, Majoli also
Hingis was beaten by Majoli at
" I saw her and Billie Jpan King
had to beat the rain that interrupted · the French Open, her only loss of the . when I was walking fmm pr~cticc,''
play on Day One of the tournament. · year. and is sec4cd to meet the Croat . M~jnli said. "She just told me. 'OK.
In the Centre Court duel of the in the scmilinals at Wimbledon.
come on. win that lirst match. Just
two fastest servers in the game, Greg .
A naturill clay-court player, bend your knees, be down lnw ~nd'
Rusedski had the upper hand. The Majoli had suffered two lirsi-round move well, and you have a gnnd
British left-bander led seventh-seed- losses on the gr.1ss at Wimbledon. chance.'
'
ed Mark Philippoussis ofAustruliu 7- But she didn't go along with critics
"II' I ~rvc we fl. if I'm nl,!grcssivc.
6 (8·6), 7-6 (8-6). 3-.1 when play was who said grass was only good llJr I could win ~~ few tnnrc munds,"
halted by darkness.
grazing.
Majoli·said. "Everything is possible
"I don't cattoo niuch grass:" she nn grass.''
Rusedski, who had not even
allowed Philippoussis a break point
in 14 service games, wus serving for ·
a 4-1 .lead when they resumed play
today.
Another match to linish today
was the battle between 1991 Wim. bledon champion Michael Stich and
1993 runner-up Jim Courier.· B()th
nrc unsccdcd this year. Stich led 7-6
(7 -0), 1-2 when they resumed play
on No. I Coun .
Defending men 's champion
Richard Krajicek looked impf!!ssivc
in a 7-6 (7-5), 6-2, 6-4 victory Monday over Germany's Marcello Cra·
ca, serving 19 aces.
And No."2 seed Goran Ivaniscvic
fired 24 aces in his 6-1, 6-3, 6-3 win

-Sports briefs-. Media .
NEW YORK (APl - Rupen
Murdoch and cable's Tele-Communications Inc. nrc launching a national spons network to go aller ESPN.
The two media sluggers have
tcamctl with Cahlcvision Systems
Cnrp .. owner of the New York
'.
Knicks and Rangers. to assemble a
STRETCHING to r~turn the volley of G..-mlllly'a Marcello .Craea
coa•Ho-coast sports cahle network 11 defending Wimbledon champion Richard Krejlcek In first-round
I hal will reach 55 million households
· action Monday at Wimbledon's Centre Court. Krajicek won lt;tfour
· with a mix ._of games and sports seta. (AP)
·
nc.ws.

'

Hunt files countersuit in fig/Jt
over ownership of NHL
expansion club in Columbus
COLUM}\US, Ohio (AP) -

the original group, Columbus Hockey Limitlll!, allowed any of its memfiled a countersuit in the legal battle . · bers to' break off to gel a team on
over ownership of a National Hock- their own.
ey League expansion team due to:.
The original group splintered
start play in Columbus in 2000.
after a proposed ·o.5 percent. threethe suit filed Monday in Franklin year sales tax to help p~y for a downCounty Common Pleas Court con- town arena and soccer ·stadium was
tends that Jolin McConnell did not defeated by voters on May 6.
have t))e right to set up a second
Hunt owns the Columbus Crew
ownership group to obtain an NHL of the Major Soccer League. ·
franchise.
McConnell and Wolfe EnterprisMcConnell and Wolfe Enterpris- es said 1-lunt did not participate in an
es last week asked the same court to cffon to find private funding which ·
ileclare their group's right to acquire resulted.in Nationwide Mutual Insura team without Hunt. On Monday, ance Cos. agreeing to pay 90 percent
they amended their suit to ask the and .The Dispatch Printing Company
court to dissolve ihe original owner- I0 percent of the $125 milliori cost
ship group.
of building a 20,()()().seaj downtown
Hunt alleges in his suit that each arena.
·
member of the original group, which Titcir suit seeks no monetary
·included McConnell, committed ' damages.
·
about $4.5 million to the $80 million
Hunt's nction asks for the presentNHL expansion fcc and$10 millipn day value of the projected profits of
in capital needed to start the team.
the hockey team and the arena for the
-M~-connell and Wolfe Entcrprisnext 25 years.
. es said the operating agreement of

r--..; .Sports entrepreneur Lamar Hunt ha5

HOCKING DIVISION CHAMPION - The Southern baseball team onble mention. Maynard end Llll&amp; _,. aJHiouthe81t Dlltrlct 1IJ.
poated a 12-4 Tri.Yalley Conference racord to eem the Hocking Dlvl· sters. In front are (L·RI Michael Aah, Pea. Slaaon, Billy Young, Dill,
elon league champlonahlp In _May. Overall, the Tomadoea -re 14· Nate Slsaon, Corey Williams and Chrla Ball. Behind them ere heed .
13 and were Division IV sectlonel runnera-up. Jeue Maynerd wee .coach Mlck'Wineb..enl)er, Maynard, J"on La-c•, Danny·Sayre,
aiJ. TVC end leeg..._ "Player of the Year• (MVP), while Joe Kirby Jr. Chad BloUnt, Kirby, 1\'IOn Buckley, Uele end e11latant eoech Ryen
· ,
- · 1110 named AII-TVC. Travla Usle 1nd Matt Dill were eiJ.TVC hon- Lemley.

Scoreboard
Baseba ll
BM&amp;tmDhllien

lroOOio ............ ~ b
~
J2 .562

New YO&lt;k .............. 41

TOIOOIIO .................. J) 37 .471
"lloJton.................... Jl 40 .m
Dctroii. ................... Jl 39 .451

Ill!

s

14~

16
16

Cllllni-

-066

a
3
)

4~

.

.

O.kt...S (Kanay 1-7) oo S..11le Uo!lnoon ll·l), t0:05p.m.

w-..-

C'Jioompoon HI. I:05 p.m.

Bahlmore (MYUIAI 8-2) 11 MilwDUW

CEicllod7-n 2:0Sp.m. '

.·

Kanw Oty (lkk:her &amp;-7) Ill Chica1o .
Whilo So• (Dtrwlo 2-5), 2:05p.m.
Anlhcim (Perilho 0.2) • Texu (Win
8-ol), 2:35 p.m.
Minncso11 (Tewbburr _ 114· 6) at
CLEVELAND (Nfoy B-olt 7,05 p.m.
8011on (Wakefield l-7) 11 Toronto

s.tlo ................. ... 43 Jt .511
ADIIholm ................J9 34 .5:!4

36 .!GO

Ooldoiod ................30 46

4-51. s,35 p.m.

N,\'. Y - Cl'eni1tt 8-5) 11 Detrok

Chi-............... :.. 35 . 37 .416
.416

Wllilc Sox (AlYiftl ~), K:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Springer 4-1) • Te.u (Hill

Wed.,...y'apma

CLEVELAND ....... J7 33 .529
Mllw................. :.Js 35 ,!GQ
KMiu Cil) ........... 34 36
..... . .............. :!4 39

(Karl 2·8). 8:05 p.m.
·
Kanau City (Pit1aley 2· 4) a~ O.icaJO

·39f .

Cllenlp 11-3). 7:35p.m.
Oakland (WnJert 3-5) 11 Seaule
(Woico&lt;t 4t 10:35 p.m.

Meaciii]''IN.Y. Y-5,1loorvit.l

M-o7.CLEVBLAND2

lloJtcNI7.TOIOOII06
M i - BoJ",_o
Cbiuoo- So&amp; 7. ( ( . a City 6
Aalbiia 1, TttutO
_ .. 6, OoUood 5

s.

T.............. .

N.Y.

y - ~ 3-21 11 De-

'""'COllY- !-5). 7:11' p.m.

.

NLstandlnp

I:. . . . . ~. . . . . .J i~ "

........ .:.................~ 30 .519
......... ,......42 31 ,,

New YCJ&lt;t ..............-12 Jl

.soa

.319

Centntlll•lololl
Ho•ston ................ .37 38' .493
Pi111b1r1h .............. 34 40 .459

Boston (Suppa!'! 2..0) a1 T01on1.o (A.n·
dujlll' 0-3), 7:3S p.m.
8aJ1irnore (Boakie 3-3) al Milwaukee

AL standings

r ......................... 36

Ploiladclphi.o.,......... 23 -49

Minne1ota (Scevcos b-0) til CLEVE-

LAND &lt;Wrialll 0.0~ 7:05p.m.

,_

Stl...ouis ................ :\:\

40

(AIIaCio 3-6). 'IO:M p.m.

2~~

Florida rFcrnandez 7-6) Dl Philadelphi&amp; (M.lAitcf 4-8), I : 0~ p;m.

W~ay's games

.4S2

4} -;11 ,
OoiCII&amp;o ..._. .............. 29· 45 .J92
CINCINN~TI. ....... iO

2,1

Lot""""'

Moad.,'ucores

Mon ...l5, CINCINNATI 0 '
, N.¥. Mela J. All- 2
. Philodolpllia , , florida 3

Tr ;ms&lt;JCtiOilS

Chi~o Cubt

3, St. Louis 0
.. 6.Hou.... o
Loo Anplet 5, Col"""" 3 .
Son DieJo II, Solo .,_;,.. 6

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CLEVELIIND INDIII}IS: Citlte4 11!1

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Atl.a11 (Brock 0·.0 ) 11 N.Y. Meu
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,
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Lctotio(AMJ-5-3~1:0$p.a
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6

. ll'tal (P. M.-ti.e&amp; 9-:1). I:J5 p.m.

Wllltmlll•llloa
San Francitt:o ........ 41 32 .568
Colorado ................ 39 36 .520
Loo Anplet ........... 37 37 .500
s111 Diico .. 1........... 3~ •2 .02 .

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Tuurtey, June 24, 1117

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

'Too e~b~rrassed' urged to see professional counsel.or
De.- Au Landers: I've been
going with my boyfriend, "Phillip,"
for four yeus, and I've lost all interest in ~ex. In the beginning, I W.S
alwa,a ready for action. Now, I
couklll't care less. I'm not even
interested in kissing him. It's definitely nothing he has done that has
turned me off. He's always very caring and considerate. We get along
great, except for this crazy problem.
Needless to say, he is losing interest
in me, and I'm afraid he will drop me
completely.
1
•The slime thing happened with my
last long-term boyfriend. Things were
hot alJd heavy in the beginning, but
after a year or so, -I cooled off. After
·we broke up, I began to date other

Ann
Landers

--

IW5. 1.M AliCia
111na Sr-Jic* Mil Cre-

men, and my sex drive returned
almost immediately. Is this normal, or
am I some kind of nut?
When I met Phillip, !thought my
sex problems were gone forever, but
I was wrong. Apparently, I need a
variety of .men in order to be sexually fulfilled. I'm afraid I'll never find
real happiness if I keep on this way.
What can I do about it? I'm too
embarrassed to share this with any-

.

'

one but yoo, Ann. Can you help me?
··Lost That Loving Feeling in Chicago
Dear Lost: Many adolescents
enjoy the chase more than the catch.
However, you are apparently past
adolescence, but your emotional
growth; at least where sex is con-·
cemed, is stunted. You need to work
through this problem with a professional counselor. Please don't delay.
. Dear Ann Landers: I am writing in
response to the letter from "Been
There and Done That," who advised
against helping addicts. I disagree.
· My brother-in-law's dr,ug of choice is
alcohol. He has been in and oot of
treatnient centers for years. However, he never borrowed money from us

and has asked for help only once or
twice. The majority of addicts are not
liars and cheats, as "Been There"
stated in your column. They are honorable and decent but flawed in this
one area.
Over the holidays, my brother-inlaw and his girlfriend came to stay ai
our house for two weeks. We asked
only that he stay sober. which he did
for a while, but it didn 'I last. We stuck
by him when he got drunk and we
.had to go looking for him in bars.
· After several 11ightmarish episodes,
he had a drug reaction and ended up
in intensive care. We offered our love
and trust unconditionally.
A week ago, he checked himself
into a detox center and is now io a

Food, fun, and fitness

With Factory Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
.Less Than Fict~ry
. Invoice on Most

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.

halfway house. No one gave up on
him, and he is com'rilled to bei11g
sober one day at a time. We hope his
sobriety will last for a lifetime, but
whatever .happens, my husband and
I and his family will be here for him.
-- An East Coaster
Dear E. C.: Maybe your brother-inlaw will prove the exception to the
rule, now that he is seeking help voluntarily. According to the expens in
this field (I am not one), the best
favor you can do for an alcoholic or
a drug abuser is hang tough -- and
this means NOT bailing him out of
tough situations, which you and your
family have done repeatedly from the
goodness of your hearts. ·
Loving concern of family and
.

friends doesn 'I work with alcoholic'
and drug addicts. They need Alcoholics Anonymous and professionaJ
help.
Gem of the Day: One of life'•
greatest mysteries: Why is it yoo can ·
throw a burnt match out of the window of your car and stan a forest fire
that will bum for thiee days, but Wtlfl
two boxes of matches and the Sunday
edition of a newspaper. yoo can't stai1
a fire it\ your fireplace? ,
Send questions to Ann Laod,n;
Creatcin Syndicate, 5777 W, Century Blvd., Suite 700, Loll Aqeles~
Calif. 90045

.

June is designated .as National Dairy Month
This article is provided to you as a We never outgrow our need for cal- pressed fi&gt;r time," a publication of the . high speed until thick and smooth. ;
service of the Meigs County Health cium.
American Heart Association, physi- YiC&lt;ld: I 'serving (approximately 150 :
Department Preventive Health SerWhen you choose milk at meal- cal activity can improve your mental calories)
•
vices Grant, Jackie Stancher; Coordi- time, you are providing your body health and outlook on life . .
•
Regular physical e~ercise can give Double Strawberry Health Shake :
nator and Linda King, Assistant with not only calcium, but with Vit·
Coordinator. For funber information amin A, B vitamins, protein and you the energy 'that you need to do
I cup sliced strawberries
":
I container (8 ounces) low-fat .:
call614-992-6626.
ril!oflavin: What a better choice. "the things you want to do such a5
'
•
How many of you serve milk with These are all things your body needs spending quality time with friends strawberry yogurt
your meals? Be truthful, even though especially if you are a woman who is and family. II can also reduce feelings
I cup ice cubes
~
you know that milk is the best choice, pregnant or breast feeding. Teenagers· of stress, anxiety and depression
I cup milk up nonfat dry milk
:
how many of you make milk your are another group of people who need along with improving your sleep, giv2 tablespoons of sugar
:
choice? Too many of us now a days more servings of milk.
ing you,rest to enjoy daily activities
Blend in the container of an elec- •
'have tea or pop with our meals. Not
Just how much milk do we need? on the job and at home.
tric blender, strawberries, yogurt, ice : ·
only do tea and pop have empty calo- Well, tbC average· person needs two
Regular physical acti~ity can clear cubes, milk, dry milk and sugar. :
ries, they also contain caffeine. Caf- to three servings from the milk group your head so that you can approach Blend until smooth, I to 2 minutes.
feine is a diuretic and caffeine blocks every day. This amounts to 800 mg. ·work ·refreshed and able to concen- · Serve immediately. Yield: 3 portions .
your body's absorption of iron. It may of calcium. If you are a pregnant or trate. It can boost your self-confi- (31/3 cups), '194 calories, 389 rng. ~
be entirely possible that the nutritious a breast-feeding woman or a teenag: dence by improving your stre.ngth, calcium.
'
.,.
:~
meal you prepared for your family er, the recommendation is 3 to 4 serv- stamina, flexibility, appearance an~
•
was literally flushed down the drain. ings from the milk group. This sense of control. When you exercise Veggie Pizza
,
Mille- is the bod)"s hest source of amounts to 1200 mg. of calcium. · regularly, it o:;an help shed extra
•
1-14 inch frozen pizza crust
calcium. What does calcium do for
What counts as a serving? One pounds and .abdominal fat the fat
1/2 envelope ranch dressing
:
our bodies? Calcium builds strong coup of milk, 1 1/2 ounces of cheese, most closely linked to heart !lisease
2 tablespoons "light" or regular .
.
bones and teeth. Calcium helps to and one c11 p of yogun. For children and help you to maintain· a healthy mayonnatse
. •
keep bones strong and prevents under the age of two the recommen- weight.
8 ounces (I cup) low-fat cottage :
osteoporosis in adults. Most people dation is for wi]ole milk. If you are
Regular physical exercise can pro- cheese
·•
kriow that calcium is a mineral that older, you may want to think low fat vide some health benefits, too. It can
2 tablespoons instant nonfat dry ~
helps build strong bones and teeth, in niilk cheeses and yogurt. Calcium help increlll!e your HDL (good) cho: milk (optional)
. :
but did you know !hat calcium also is sometimes added to orange juice, lesterol and lower triglycerides. Oth·
1 In cups chopped vegetables ·•
helps your muscles contract and bread, soft drinks, cereal, . milk, er benefits include lowering your (broccoli, cauliflower, mushrooms, :
rela~. helps your heart beat, helps yogurt and other foods. The amount blood pressure, controlling your . carrots, celery, radishes, green pep- :
your blood clot and helps your nerves of calcium in these fpods is listed on blood sugar (glucose) levels, and help per, green onion, cherry tomatoes. ;
send messages?
the label.
improve bone density, reducing the etc.)
·
.
" '
So wliat happens if you don't supThere ar~ many calcium supple- risk of fractures a,'l you gel older.
I Cup grated mozzarella cheese; ~
ply your body with en&lt;~ugh calcium ments on the market. There are no
or low-fat cheddar
.. ~
to perform these important func- benefits for taking more than the rec- Lo-cal Banana Milk Shake
Bake pizza crust according to• .
tions? Your body takes the calcium it om mended daily allowance for calpackage directions. Cool. Mix ranch~
needs from your bones. If your diet cium. In fact high doses of calcium
1/2 cup nonfat dry milk
dressing, mayonnaise. cottage cheese~
supplies enough calcium, your body may interfere with the absorption of
3/4 cup water·
and dry, ·milk in blender or food~
d~posits some in your bones. If your other nutrients like iron.
I banana .ice cubes
processor until . smooth. Sp~ad on~
diet is low in calcium, your body
According to the publication "FitCoinb~e all. ingredients · in an c~led .~~,.T~e .~i~~~!lgtes, i!'d
makes a withdrawal from your bones. · ·ting Fitne~s In, even when you're elect:iitb~iiilet:1i:::,qyet.~d-blend on grated Crn:c&gt;e.
·

..

.•

.

.,

.USED

,,

ROTARY SPEAKERS • Deborah Cramer;Iefl, and Scott Coppenbarger of the WSAZ·TV morning news team were guest
speakers at the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Monday
evening.

WSAZ-TV morning news
team addresses .Rotary Club
SAlE ENDS MONDAY, JUNE 30

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PW. POL, AM/FM cass,
i cassette, all power,
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lUII=U

A news team from WSAZ Channe13 Huntington gave a history of the
station at Monday night's meeting of
the Middlepilrt-Pom~roy Rotaty Club
\ held ·at Heath United . Methodist
. Church.
·
Presenting the program were Scoll
Coppenbarger and Deborah Cramer,
who told about the station, an affiliate of the Na.tional Broadcasting Co.,
which began broadcasting with the
program "Stop The Music" in October 1949 from the 14th Floor of the
West Virginia Building.
The team noted that the WSAZ
now broadcasts from 645 5th Ave.
Huntington. They said that the station
has been a leader in television technology since its beginnings. During
the fifties it became the first color station in the loc.al viewing 'area and
continues~ m'ntain its cutting 'edge
technolog9~ as shown in the fact that
it is the first NBC affiliate station in
the nation to have a remote digital
· satellite truck for "on the scene"
transmissions, according to Coppen·
barger and Cramer.
The two noted that their day at the
office begins at 4 a.m. when ihey
review pre-written news releases of

-----Names :in the ne.ws----~

news highlights of the past24 hours.
They described a format which is
based on ·segments of both news
highlights and l.ocal weather in every
15.minute segment. This allows the
audience to gear up for the day with
the knowledge of what to wear and
what news has happened since going
to bC,d. they said.
.
.
Arter the morning program, they
said they prepare for the noon show
with Coppenbarger reviewing scripted news and writing some of his own
stories, while Cramer spends most of
her time workirig with the Dopier
Radar equipment which gives a visual display of wind motion and rainfall.
Public relations is a vital part of
their jobs as they visit local school
systems to educate young people of
the importance of writing skills, public speaking and meteorology, they
said.
AI the meeti.Jig special rec~gnition
· was given · to guests including
Bernard Fultz's grandson, Bernie; Joe
Young's grandson, Jacob, and·Point
Pleasant Rotarian Frank Capehart.
The dinner was served by the
Heath United Methodist Women.

Community calendar
.

'

Tbe Community Caleada.: is
published u a free service to non·
profit IIVUpS wisblDI to anaOUilee
meetlq and 1peclal events. The
calendar Is not deslped to promote
sal.es IN' f'!tnli ralsen of any type.
Items an printed a space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
s'peciRc number of dayt.

.

POMEROY-- Meigs Local Board
of Ed~tion, Thursday, 1 p.m. in thll ·
district's central office, Pomeroy
Muni~ipal Building.
POMEROY-· Town and Country
Expo 97, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the ·
old grange building on the fair
grounds.

SYRACUSE -- Carleton College
REEDSVILLE-· Riverview Gar- Board of Trustees, annual meetinll.
den Club, Tueso;lay, 6:30p.m. potluck Thursdayi 7 p.m. at the residc;oce of
picnic at home of Nola Young.
Bob Wiltgen, president. All board
memberS ltrged to attend.
RACINE -· RACO to meet Tues·day, 6:30p.m. at Star Mill Park.
, FRIDAY
SALEM CENTER •• Meigs .
WEDNESDAY
County Pomona Grange, Friday, Star · ·
-MIDDLEPORT -- Feeney-Ben- Grange h.ll. 7:30p.m. Degree work ·
nell Post 128, American.Legion and will be exemplified in full form for ·
the Auxiliary will meet for dinner at inspection.
• .
&lt;
6:30p.m. to he followed by the meetings.
'S\.INDAY
NELSONVILLE -- Descendants
DIURSDAY
of Issac and Lydia Mei'cer Midkiff,
MIDDLEPORT -- Meigs County reunion,.Sunday, home of Ross and
Family and Olildren First Council, Pam Flowers, 1911 Shafer Road,'
Thunday, 8:30 a.m. at the Meigs . Nelsonville. Ca11664-3807 for infor·
County Department of Human Ser· mation.

Tl.IESDAY .

'

vices.

RUTLAND .•• Loading C{eek
Conservancy Board, Thursday, S
p.m. at the off'a.

'~

.'

.,

· the job description!''
·money for the athletic department. walked out.
· The D~ily Iowan said it could not ·
They don't plan to do it again.
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)
Fred
MacDonald, who plays the anchor reach MacDonald for comment.
Goldman
says
don
't
use
,
the
circus
on the "Weekend Update" segment
on NBC's "Saturday Night Live,"
SEATTLE (AP) - Mona Lee atmosphere surrounding O.J. Simpdelivered a 50-minute routine laced · Locke is all for trumpeting the wor- son's criminal trial as an excuse t"!
with profanity and sexual references, thy cause, attending the galas, play- ban cameras' in New York courts. •
"Camera opponents love to argue
including jokes about women having ing host to various dignitaries. But
sex with pigs.
she dmws the line at cozying up to a that the camera's presence in the
criminal trial of Ron's killer was
"Norm MacQonah:('s perfor- few bats.
·
mance (Sunday) was anything but
Still, the first lady of Washington .· somehow to blame for the acquillal,"
· comedy," athletic director Bob state recognized as tongue-in-cheek Fred Goldman wrote in a letter last
Bowlsby said. "It was profane, vul- Hillary Rodham Clinton's offer to week urging New York legislators to
gar and off-color."
·
bunk at the White House until the extend· the state's experiment allow:
Bowlsb~. who issued 11.n apology governor's Olympia mansion is ~er- ing cameras in court. .
.
."What the camera revealed should
. on behalf of the department, said tifiably bat-free.
·
about 80 percent of the audience of
Mrs. Clinton sugge sted the be.used to fix the·system's flaws," lie
. 1,300, which included children.. bicoastal commute Monday for Gov. said. "To be frank, we ·wished the
walked out during the performance. Gary Locke, his wife, and their 3: camera had been in the civil trial as
As they were leaving, MacDonald month-old daughter, Emily, while well."
.
said "What do you want me to talk crews are plugging holes and vents in
Goldman, a spokesman for the
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)- Norm abo~t -losing my 'luggage at the air- , the governor's mansion. Nine bats Safe Street Coalition, an advocacy
MacDonald was not quite ready for port?" He also said, "What do they were spotted insiqe the house since group for crime victims' rights, said
expect- (or me to hold up a picture February, forcing the family to move his family suffering was the result of
prime time in Iowa.
Sports officials at the University of Yasser Arafat and make a joke?" to a private home in Olympia last Fri- the way the media behaved outside
. His invitation to play in Monday's day. ·
the courtroom and problems within
of Iowa say they wish they hadn't
event
was
rescinded
•.
said
Bowls"We
get
to
escape
the
.bats,"
Mrs.
golf
the criminal justice system.
invited MacDonald to help entertain
by,
who
was
among
those
who
Locke
said
..
"That
was
never
pan
of
the crowd at a golf event that raises

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A former flight allendant has won Robert
DeNiro's bean.
·
The 53-year-old actor exchanged
wedding vows June .17 with yrace
Hightower, 42, at a private ceremony in New York, his publicist, Stan
Rosenfield, said Monday.
It was DeNim's second marriage,
Hightower's first. ·
DeNiro, who stars with Sylvester
Stallone in the upcoming movie
''Cop Land," won a best actor Acad·
emyAward for ''Raging Bull" (1980)
and a ~ut&gt;pprting actor Oscar for
"The Godl\llher, Pan II" (1974). .
He was nominated for Academy
Awards for "Taxi Driver" (1976),
"The Deer Hunter" (1978) and
"Cape Fear" (1991).

. HEMLOCK GROVE
Fifty
Suftday hymn. sing, Sunday, 7:30p.m. .
Hemloc~ Grove Christian Church. ·

"Lane" Encore Sectional
11' x 91/2; 2 Recliners, Full Sleeper, Pull Down Tray

Sofa &amp; Loveseat

�:P~a~ge~S~·~T~ha~Da~I~~:Se~n~H~ne~I:----:::-------.----;:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::~::::~::::::::::~::::::::~T~u:•:•~d~IJ~;=•~~=-=~24~,~1~88;;7~

It's

a first: Gene

flaws found. for

z.

~

oos have come a· long·

GPIIIIDII

J&amp;L .. . . I
IISIUTIOI

•

-

organizati on, and allowing it to puL Its
name on an. adopt-a-highway sign
inight gi ve it some semhlancc of
- rcs pcc'iability that it docs not
dese rve ," said Ron Quse k: a
spokesman for Attmney General Dan
·Morales.
·

11,1011t pagca nl wi ll soo n be done. As
in finished .
Pageant director Margie Gilhert
said she wi ll no longer try to attract
co nlcsr.:mts ·"im:c qlCrc was only·onc
cn rra nr
32- year-old Hc1di
AI. RUQUERQUE. N.M. (API Hach ncl
.
" There's no one in Vermont that Earth to UFO trac·kers: Ignore the
wants to do il and no one in Vcnnont giam white Xs across southern New
1hat ·wanls to cooperate and no one in Mex ico!
Vermont that wants to do anything.··
The 15-foot-widc Xs arc heing
:-~aid Gil bert. who Uocsn ' t even li ve in
pl aced throughout the · Rio Grande
Vermont. She lives in Newton vrlle. Va·lley . 1&lt;1 help aerial photographers
map nc ~ rl y 4,000 square miles of
Mn ~s.
Gi lhe rl pl:ms to give up th e Mrs. New Mex ico as part of a water rights
Vennunt franch ise she purchased in survey. state engineer Tom Turney
l lJtJ4 from national pagcanl ownC'r said Monday.
David Marmcl o( J..os Angeles. She
1r is pure coincidence that the Xs
lost nearly $4 ,000 in the past year arc startin gI ll appcar.just before the
allc mpting tn promote the ctun pc: tl - 50th anni vc!'sary of one of the higgcst
tion. whose winner would go on to dates in UFO lore. A nmcher ncar
the Mrs. America pageant.
Ros well said he found de oris on July
"Every yc:rr I kee p sayi ng il's K. 1947. t.hat many UFO bulls helicvc
go ing to get better:· Gi lbcrl s:1id. · was from a flying saucer.
" Oh. there arc some ve ry beautiful
An Air Force in vestigation said
women m Vermont that would makL· the dchri s probabl y cam e lrom a hal!he.United Sllitcs proud - hurl 10an' r loon designed to monitor lhc atm m;.
push Lhcm to make them do it .... .
phcrc for eviden ce of Soviet nucl ear
.

.

Gates said.
The foundation ·s ~oal is tn provide community access to the Internet through puhlic li braries in lowincome ·c.:ommunilics in 1hc United
States and Canada. plus support and
training fo r library personnel.
Microsoft said ahi1ut 45 perc·ent of
U.S. public libraries have some Interday.
. ncl access. hut il is usuall y rcsl rirtcd
"Since I was a kid, libraries have . to staff members.
played an important role in my life...

" lr means that potentiall y every
child and adult will have a&lt;ees.s to
glohal information online lit pulllic
lil1rarics across America.·· said Eli zabeth Martine z. exe.:utivc directnr.nf
1he Amcrk;m Library ·AsS&lt;~eiatiun .
"A new form nf literacy is being
required or our young people." said
United Negrn Cullcgc Fund President
and CEO William Gray IJI.' a lilundalinn hoard member. ''The (cchnnlogy and trainin g hemg provided by

War begins against citrus pests, disease

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - The
hattie against the Mediterranean lfuit
ny and citrus di sease is being waged
in the air and on the ground. hy day
and hy night. ·
Pilots were tn hcgin spraying the
pesticide malathion in the Tampa Bay
area on,Monday night after residents
complained about · harbcc ucs and
graduation l!artics ruined by daytime
spraying. But by late Mnnd ~ y. rain
had kept the aircraft grounded.
Also Monday. state agricultural
officials began burning trees infecttests.
·
ed
with citrus canker. There is no cure ·
FORT WORTH.. Texas &lt;APl New Mexico didn 't consider the
for
the disease. .
.
Texas ofli cials don't mind a littk help Roswell anni versary in milking its
The
war
has
hecn
on
since last
in picking up tr•as h along state hi gh- survey plans. said Br4!n James. an
month.
when
Qnicials
found
hnth
ways - just not from the Ku Klu K attorney for the engineer's office.
Klan.
" I can' t imagine what some of medflies and canke r in the reg.inn.
Joe Earl All cock. an imperi al wiz- the se UFO folks will tbink when they _posing a threat to ~ $7 hill inn fruit
ard of the Uni ted Knights of the sec these ·x s..'· James said. "They,' re
KKK. has applied on hehalf of the going to he convinced it 's a landing
group Il l partic ipat e in 'the . state's zone.
"'adopt a highway ·· anti-litter pro1!r::un.
DUBUQUE. Iowa (AP) - A lit~
- Under the program. cllch group tle brown teddy bear is being credit'
that volunteers gets a blue-and-white ed with saving the life of a 2-year-old
spmlsorsh1p sign·on its pieCe of land ~ hoy who fell from a second-story
All coc k wants ro adopt two strctch.- window, _
·Logan Newcom was holding the
cs of road ncar Fort Worth to ~ lean
the area - and show the public ·a bear as he played hide-and-seek with
another .:hild. As Logan hid behind
ki nder: ge ntler side of the Kl an,
" I was born and raised here in the hlinds covering an open window,
Fort Worth. and every day I sec what the pins holding the sereen came
it looks like on the side of the road loose and he fell through, police said.
He landed on the bear on the lawn
and it's trastry." he said. "And we
outside
but was not seriously' injured.
want to clean it up."
Assistant Fire Chief Dave Schus· ·But Texa~ offic ials filed papers in
federal court M1mday seeking to ter said Logan was ly ing on a couch
keep 1he Klan off the roadsides. The and screamin g when rescue workers
state said the program .is open only to arrived Thursday.
Once they gave him a new teddy
civic and noqprofit; organizations, private busineS&amp;,.go,oemment and fam- hear to hold, the crying stopped. He
was treated and released from a hosil ies.
The KK ~ " is not a respectable pital.

:1nd vcgctahlc industry - second
only to lo·uri srn in Fl&lt;irid:l . .
The mcdlly is the rMst widespread fr it ny pest in the wnrld and
one of th mosl

Whik'
fmrmlc s: o umans. il is hamlful w
clC\' llSHHin g:.

.......

250 varieties •1.· frlii!S and ve~c tabl cs.
More than 200 medllies were
found Monday in an ahandoncd
gro ve in Brando'n, a suburh ol'lcun pa. nearly doubling the total nurnher
of fruit llics found so far. at.:tordin g
to Ned Davis nf the Florida Department nf A ~ricuhurc.
Agri cultural oflici als said the lat·
cs l di scovery wasn' t alannin!!
because they had destroyed the fruit
in the gro ve hlst week aflcr find ing
larvae.
The sprayings could end as early

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umeatone • Gravel

Dirt • Sand
9115-4422
Chester, Ohio
10/2-

FReE ESTIMATES

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

D.C.aJ7's

•

. ~'FACI'ORY

·~

110 Caurt.et.
MIIH118 ·•

·

CORPORAL ELECTRIC
BANKRUPTCY can relleva a debtor of
Dailey Ad- Racine
financial obligations and arrange · . a fair
814-8411-3010
distribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
Jolin WIUiam11- 0-nt:r
keep .'exempt" property for their personal
Ucansed Electrician
Work Guaranteed , . .This .may include a car, a house, clothes, and
Free Elllmales Providing
household goods.
Quality Residel!tlal .
For. Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:
sGMcsNew ·
conistructlon- Total and
pllllal rewires on older
Attorney At Law
homes
(61 4) 592-5025
Athens, Ohio

uae.,

Attorney William Safranek

2411r

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

•N1wHomes
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•Complete

Big Bend Fabrication, ·
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Stop &amp;

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FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
7122/tfn

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·
A.Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
PMne: 614: 992-2406 ·
Fax: 304-773-5861

$200 REWARD

Mlldla Bamallr C•dlllonar

For Information
leldlllf to the •nest
IIIII £anvlctlon of tht
persons who breke
"'iia t'-Twfl'liiliiff
681 In Reedsvlle.
. Call Meip Sheriff
992·3371

MdB•tPamJII

$hop the
·~:.t. Want Ads
1~
'
f•"·-·"·
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550Pt~geSt.

Middleport, Oh. 457tO .
• Home Ptl.

Ext. 8789

a-

~Geary,

•

Must be 18' yra. .
Sarv-U (619) 645-8434
. ,

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Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
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319 S . 2nd Ave•

Middleport

s.raa Service
lnatellatlon

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CELLULAR PHONES
36G- Communications

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

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Guttere
Downspouts
Gutter C"'"lng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

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(614) 992·7434
----~

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Uc. WV 011030

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l'ornefoy, Ohio

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992·9057or

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTIC)N

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Lemley's Aocl loli Service. Lnlle

--·

Lomtow. Auctlo...,. Hounllotd.

Ee1811. Farm Sales. Phone 81"'

Rick Pureon Audon co.,_,

full lime auctioneer, campi•..
IUCIIan
HfVice.
Ll ~enHCI
lle8.0hlo I Wilt Virginia, 304·
77$-5785 Or 904-77S-S...7.

Wlnted to Buy .
Abaolute Tot Dotter: All U.S. Sll·
vor And Gold Colno, PraoiHtl,

90

-ry.

Diemandl, Andqut
Gold
Rings, Prt· 1830 U.S- Currtnq,
Slorling, EIC. Acqull i - - ,
· II.T.S. Cofn. Sllop, 111 Second
-.... Qllllpollo. lloW411-2842Anllqueo, lu•rtiNoe, poo, china,

cain1, 1oy1, lampe. g..n1, toot1,

eotettl; ol1o opprlloolo.

01b~

llll'lin. 814-1112-74-41.

Anliquol, rop pri- peld, River·
in• Antiques, Pomtra,, Ohio,
Ru11 Moort owner, 114·1t2·
2528.
.

Porto. Bu~lng Ill·
vohicltl. Selling pot11. SO.·

J &amp; D'o Au lo

• Vinyl Siding • Garages ·
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• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates '

· In Good Condtion, Call. 114·2455887.

Call 614-843-5426

EMPLOn1EtJT

fl *- K-9 Designs

614-992-5479

Pon'teftl¥,

MiddlepOrt
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,J

June 21111, • ·1 .

Howard L WrHeael

t:reeclom

$2.99 per min.

-·
.BISSELL BUILDERS,
614-992-3120

MOIRISOI'S

w-.~

Professional Pet Grc,orii
Boarding • Training. Supplies ·

vago

773-5003.

Wanled To Buy : Borbl• Dollo,
Clothes, And Accenorles. 115D
- 1979 CaU Days 614-318 .u n

Wanted: Uoed

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•FrAe 5 Year Parts Warranty
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•

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BENNE'IT'S MOBILE HOME
1

HEATING ·&amp; COOLING

Serving SouthBastem OH &amp; WV
614 4411 9411
1-110().812-58117 1391 Sliflord SchOol At!., Gallipolis, OH

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'1111111 Mllrtln Street
Pom•roy, Ohio 45768

/

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16111,

I/IM11-

Cuetom Homee
Remodeling

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·"Five bucks If You .wt ~your violin."

PUIUC NOTICE
Orange Townehlp will
hold a Public Hearing on
the propoeed Budg•• lor
. , . . on July 3, 1117 et 7:30
p.m. at the hor;.e of the
, clerk. O.le Follrod.

"'24

. *have
* *to be put off
Some tasks

tiC

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WANT ADS
FY\CK

dozens of limes before thQy'll
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is the . ability

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Foundations,
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$3.99 per min.
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Call 992·9045 ·
for all your
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Matu;a PerJ;on Having Experi-

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Billing. Must Be Computer liter·
ale, Proleniona! And Reliable, M·
F 011)' Shih. Re!l!me To: ~0. Box

33, Gallipolis, OH ~5631 .

Caretaker/Handyman to live rent
free in mobile ~me wtlot In til·
char)ge for wor k/errands.' Transportahon a must. Send re1ume
· and references to Point Pleasant
Register Bow G-24 Point Pleas:

Talk Live To A
Real Gifte'd ·
Psychic

992•9200

Babysitter n8eded nights. Wed~ ,
Sat, the 111 thru 20th of each
month. Apply in person U6 N .

BILLING DEPT.

742

HAULING

·iH-67$-SIJI

Heard about the fortune teller
whose office was Closed due to
unforeseen circumstances?

1·90()..656..27~

Easy Balik Financing
Air Co'ndiJiciiiiS lnSialled '28" a month
Heat Ptlnps IQStalled 138" a month

SAVE STEPS!

~.

a Fill!' t:rtcat

,_,1_

Smkt

CONSTRUCTION

(614) 742·3100

......~llod.
, !Co!llra.ro

anl WV 25550.
Carpenter/ Working FOreman 'tor
an steel and post frame building
company. ·Must have rayouland
aupervisory abitilitl. Salary "and
bDrw• c:ommensurate wi&amp;h uperl- ,
ence 1nd pro~uctivlty, Pte1H rt·

AWJ O UNCEM E NTS

oporid C/o The Dati)' Sanrinol, ~0.
Box 728· 43, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

.:...--~---:---1 Computer Users Needed. Work
Fenonala
own houro. S20k ro S50k/yr I · ·

005

::.:._Aiflij~;;r:---l aoo-348-7186 '' soa
Hll Your Marriage Or RelaUon·
llliP·Gol Up I Wont. Slop In Prlncell VIdeo And Rom ,Ono 01 Our

!)QN'I BfAQ JHI$1
Unleta you want to

Loo ae

We""'r &amp;Fetl GreaLCALL NOWI

"''
Mill Vldooo. 100 Now Roloaooal (304) 562·0373.
1380 Eaororn Avenue, Gallipolis,
DRIVERS WANTED

OrColteu 446 6922

30 Announcements
•100 - r d lor tergeot chomical-

tw ~.. Mullotn Pitch. EC(IIinoJ 'llo•
llricoll, 814-742·2548.

Crawford'&amp; Flea M.lrkat Plus in

HondtriOn, WV. Free opaco In
Juno. Call for delllll. 304 ·8755-10&lt;1• .

..,,_

Mil

***

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Then there was the duck who
decided to try flying upside
down. He quacked up.

· fiNAl IJAJI
50'To 75%,.0ff;

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YOUR MESSAGE ·
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOtAL OF ·
$7.00 PER DAY.

'

.

.2513 Jackson Ave. •~Pl. Pleasant, WV 25550 . .
CALL TODAY:

304-675·2627

Door. ..... ..
c..~ll• ·•oo•l .

1 $11011100115

II WQiliDtiiiS

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ina. Owner: Ronnie JoMe

Rutland Fumiturt

... 124

.,

Pomeroy, Ohio
· '14111-211-1111111

·

WV 1111:13477
'.. . .

io
arrive. at co.ncluslons without
expressing them.

MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
MID-OIDO VALLEY CENTER

.

Qullllty Work at

DIRECT
. .I
. PRICES"
.
Quality Window Systems

Grate
of
R1tlantl
Funiture

~ l&lt;el}l~· 7~1

.

-I

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Bod~.......

16 \'MRS IN BUSINESS

·

Fl18801111ble Ratea
Experl-.cl

UP·T&lt;&gt;-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE .
STOCKS
AND MOREll

UmelltoM a 0n1ve1
8eptlc8yat8nla
Trailer a
HouaeSHea
R..80Mble Rltfea ·

•SmaHJoba
•Large Jobs

Narwlll FlnMclll

SOLID VINYL

The Ligl)t.

,Fall Semester begins August ·25th

Rutland, OH

u.•a L ......... CDPJL\

f'l'u.blic is invited

I. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING"'

'·
as next month as offrcials shift from
pest kide to hreedinz the wild mcdlli cs with sterile !lies from
Guatemala.
Agri cultural nfticial s plan to
release 125.&lt;XXl sterile medllies per
square mile lwke a week for irp Ul a
year hcpinn ing next month.
By
" You may sec them. hut it's not
~oi ng Hl he like Biblical locusts or
Dave
anything." said Terry McGnvcrn, a
' pukesman for lhe U.S. Department
of Agriculture.
Oflicials confirmed two weeks
ago that canker was found in grapefruit and nnvcl orange trees nnnhca'il
of Pal rnctto. Workers hcgnn hurning ·
To gei into college these days,
rrccs frnm a 32-ucrc lot and plan to
hurn XO acres of trees fri1m unothcr ' it's not as· necessary for
· students to hava good grades
lot Tuesday.
··
as it Is lor the parents to have
good credit.

]t's Timeto Check Us Out!

FAMILY DEN liS IHY

..t.Uillacts

the Gates Lihrary Foundation will ·
ensure that.all our yuun g people will :
have equal opportunity tl&gt; succeed." ·
The foundation will expand on the
work nf Microsoft 's community
affairs initiativc,-Lihrarics Online, an
IM-month pilot program that sent $17 ·
million in cash and snliware to more
than 200 iihraries . in ihc United
States and Canada.
Patty Stonesifer, a , former
Microsoli executive. will serve as the
foundation's president and chairwnman.

rn

McCumber Rd•

304-773-5822

Doutlon $4.00 for meal

-sJnDMrs&amp;

Bill Gates, Microsoft giving $400 million to new library foundation
REDMOND, Wash . (AP) Microsoft Corp. chairmim Bill Gates
and hi s wi fe arc contributing $200
million to launch the Gates Library
Foundatinn, which is aimed at
improving lihrary computer servi ces.
And Microsoft is givin g ·an equal
amount in software to the nonprofit
group. the company announced Mon-

.......,&amp;B......,D.D.I.

1Qrr1a)'l ud 1bunda11
Servlag l'rom 5:00 • 5:45

=::::~WI

Mrs. Vermont pageant
director g.iving up post
HARTFORD. Vt. (AP) - From

j

Mulberry Beiabta,
Pomeroy
•

1:00 Ull.-3:30 p,IIL

NEW YORK (AP)- Three over·
In the tase of the 8-year-old girl
Associated Press WrHer
weight people- includi ng two chiI- and her cousin, the mutations in the
PITISI! URGH (AP) - Kelly
dren so .fat they have trouble walking leptin gene greatly reduce the ir lepCavendi sh knows her meerkats
~ have provided a scientific prize : tin supply. S\)lepti n·injcctions might
from watching animated Timon in
the first genetic defects known to be useful in treating the kids, said one
"The Lion King" mov ie and from .. ,
make people obese.
scient i.st fami liar with the work,
TV specials on the African mamOne child is an ,8-year-old girl . Arlen Price· of the University of
mals. She's now ,seen one up close.
who weighs 190 po~nds. Her 2-ycar- Pennsy lvania.
·
·
In fact. the 8-year-old girl burold cousi n weighs 64 pound s, more
Leptin was discovered in mice.
rowed right into the meerkat exhibthan twice as muc h as most boys that Experiments showed it let t!le mouse
it at the Pittsburgh Zoo without
age.
brain keep tabs on how fat an animal
·raising an adult eyebrow Tuesday.
Thcii problem is something sci- was. Mice with defective leptin genes . " There were, li ke. three right
cntists· h.ad been hunting intensive ly became very .fat but lost weight
there," Kelly told her 2-ycar-old
around 1he world, a defect in the gene when they 'got lcptin injections.
sister as she pointed toward the nnithat tol ls the body how to make a hor·
Those results set !)IT an intensive
mal s.just inches from· their faces.
nwnc called leplin .
.
searc h for lcptin gene naws in fat
With its new Kids Kingdom secThe third person is onl'y modcr· people, None was found until now.
tion, Pittsburgh joins a growing li st .
arely overweight in middle age. but which indicates such defect~ are·very
of zoos that have scrapped Mother
she weighed 80 pounds at age 3. rare. experts said. But the ni:w work
Goose or farm themes fo r hands-·on
That \ more 1han twice what most 3- does show that lcptin is important in
ex hibits that let children mimic aniyear-o ld girls weigh.
reg ul ating body weight in people, as
mal s as they learn.
Her problem turned out to he well as mice.
Kelly 's · inom.
Barbara
defects ·in a different ge ne. one that
Everybody inherits two copies of
Cave ndi sh. remembe rs a different
tells the body to make an enzyme. the lepti n gene, one from eac h·parent.
children's zoo in her youth. when
That frnding gives a new hint fnr Both copies were defective in the
"hand s-on:· meant petting puppies
. undcrstonding 1he complex process of children. Each of
·r parents was
and kittens. But .zoo direc tors say
weight cimrrol in peop le.
found to av on bad copy of the
domesti c animals simply aren't satThe defects arc described in k ptin gen , ut t cy al so had a norisfying today's children. who often
Thursday 's issue of the journal mal copy. They are overweight but
see c.ot ic species on TV and the
Nature and 1he July issue of the jour- not extremely fat.
Internet.
nal Nature Genetics. The work is
The Nature Genetics report deals
Kids Kin gdom delivers more
,reported by scienlists from Adden- . wi th the middle:aged woman.
.
than a video image. Children can .
Researchers found defects in both
brooke 's Hospital at Cambridge Unislip down an otter slide. hop along
vcrsity in England ;vith collaborators · copies of her gene for an enzyme·
with real kangaroos , scamper
elsew here.
called prohormonc convertasc I or
through a mole rat tunnel and enter
E• pcrts said the gene !laws cause PC 1. This substance helps the body
a dark cave where piano wire sepaobesity only very rarely and don't make insulin, among other things.
rates them from the bats.
apply to the vast majority of fat pcoIt's not clear how the defects
"You hear them squeak or hear
pic.
would make a person· fat. said Dr.
thc. ll ap of win gs. and you can 't do
"They' re real landm ark papers.'' Robert S. Jackson of Addenbrooke 's
that wi th glass," said Henry
NEW ZOOS- Visitors ot th" Kid's Kingdom In the Pittsburg Zoo watch in amazement a seal. When
said Dr. Al be rr Stun kard of the Uni - Hospital , one of the researchers
Kacprzyk. Kids Kingdom 's curator. · th~ 7-acre outdoor area opened in 1995, attendance g~ 26 percent
vcrs iry of Pen nsylvani a School of reporting the findi ng.
· Children al so can use computers
Medicine . Bu1 there's " no big public
PC I helps make substances that
tOlearn about conservation issue s areas and he c•pects all zoos will decided a nur.&lt;cry rhyme theme · it. "the kid will immediately look
hca ll h or therape utic message.... The work in a part of the brain that's · and write to lawmakers or explore include such involving ex hibits 20 didn 't say much about wildlife.
on the ground and watch the chipaverage midd le-aged, overweight important in weight control. so the
years from now.
"Think of the rap the wolf gets. munk." he said.
animal-related careers.
woman is nor like ly to sec much ben· explanation might lie there. Jackson
Kids Kingdom alre ady is the He cats up Little Red Riding Hood
Allen Nyhuis, author of "The
Laltis' latest challenge is helping
cfit from 1his."
·said. Solving the mystery might teach
Zoci Book: A Guide to Americas most popular section in Pittsburg h. and kicks over the pi gs' house. design an area in the Central Park
Genes &lt;lo play an important role m re searche rs more ahou.t · hum an
Best." published in 1994, . ranks . · When the 7-acrc outdoor area. . What we want to say is wildlilc is Zoo that will let young children
llrdinary human obesi ty, but thai weight control , he said:
· Pittsbu rgh as one of the three best opened ·in 1995. attendance grew worth savin g. " said Lattis. now hatch from a turtle egg. hear sounds
probably comes from subtle variaThe woman 's case is " like ·~ little
· children's zoos in the country. The 26 pcn;cnt. It went up anoihcr 18 director of Conservati on Centers. through· rahbil cars and step across
lions in their fu nctioning rather than · . hole in a fe nce to.look through to sec
Fort Wayne (Ind.) Children's Zno.is · .percent last summer. and the sec- which operates f1ve New York zoos squishy lily pads.
maJor defect' li ke the nc-..:found areas worth loo kin g at in more
, .
No. I, he said. The Baltimore Zoo's ond phase of Kids Kingdom. the and aquariums.
mutorions. said Rudo lph Le ibel of detail .'' he said.
children's 'section ranks with Pitts- indoor Discovery Pavilion, opened
He also not iced that proximity is
" If they can imitate the animals
The Rockefeller Un ivers ity.
burgh. ·
·
last month.
a nigger draw for youngsters than they can identify with them," said
The .Bronx ·zoo was the tirst to exotica. . .Nyhuis, who has visited 130
author Nyhuis. "If they can identiIf a chipmunk cr.osscs a side- fy with them. they will care ahout
North American zoos, said 20 per: revamp its children 's area in 1981
cent have updated their children' s after a gmup led by Ri chard Lattis walk 'in front of an elephant e•hib- them murc."·
\ .

IEITIL CAll

AT
.
'
MUGt C001'ITY SENJOa CENTEil
'

.. 137lll't!UII'LACI!
II'IM'I •IIOfl't
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1\vn co ntcs lan ts ln one. the Mrs. Vcr-

EVENING MEAL

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... 742-2211

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�Pllgt10.,.. EMily Sentinel

r....-y. June 14, 1~

;

lf&amp;A Crouword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

•

.5i['

1'1\' PI Ill

"'• . . I'

•

19g7 14170 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$;85 down, 1185/mo. Only 11

Oakw&lt;M&gt;d Homao, Nlba, Yfll. 30-4·

756-58115.
10g7 14180 3 or 4 Bedroom,
11.358 clown, $22111mo. Froo air,
al&lt;ir1ing, &amp; dellve&lt;y. Only at Otk·
wood Honwo Nlw,Yf!l. 304· 755-

5885.
19g7 doublowlde $1445 down:
1229/mo. Froo delivery &amp; oetup.
t-80().6111-e7n.

HELP WANTED
La Contino
lluloan Rootau,.,t

1g97 Fleetwood· 14x52, 2 Bed·
raoma, 1 Bath , Washer /Or~er,
CA, $18,100, 8t4·387·0518 Or
814-1192·5428.

Gallpolll Flf'Y WV
304-t?l-7115.
Nutae Aide Training ProgramRocklllrlngs Rehobilitatk&gt;n Con111r
wil bt olforlng lrOining c~IHI In
the month of Jut~. Application•
are now being acceplld at
38759 Roc:kll&gt;rinr·Rd .. Pomeroy.
OH. Cla11 s(ze 11 limiled. Three
(3) refetenee papers are required
wilh application. Applw 1n person
'between 10em &amp; 3pm U-F. Students that succealfull~ complete
the TCE class will be eligible for
employment Absalu tefy no phone
caiL EOE
,

All realostalo - n g In
this MWOpaperls ~to
tho Federal Fait' HOuolng Act
ol 1968 whiCh makes ~ Illegal
to lldvtrlls8 ·any preference,
. limitation or discrimination
baood on race, colOr, rel~lon.
sex Jamll•al status or national
origin, or an~ IntentiOn to
make anv such preference,
llmllatlon or discriminatiOn.•

OPERATORS Dowalorlng Com·
pany Hiring JTtain l~g Field OperaiOra For Filter Press, Dredge,
Pumps. Immediate Openings.
$9.00 /Hour Minimum Starr. Higher Rail With Experience. Banafits
Package, Travel Required. Food I
lodging Paid By Company. Valid
DrivBIS License Requ ired. Mult
Be 21 Years 01 Ago. C.U Botwoen
8 A.M. -5 I'M. To Schedule 1ntor·
view. Metropo litan Environmental
services, Inc. 5055 Nike Drive,
Hilliard, OH 43028 1·800-800·
7378 Or Lo&lt;ally Call 614· 771·
1881. E.O E

knowingly accept
advertisements for reel estate
Which is In violation of the
law. Our rea~rs are hentby
lnlonned that all - l llngs
aclveftised in liM newspaper
are available 'on equ8l
opportunity basis.

Postal Jabs 3 Positions Avail·
able. No Experience Necessary,
For Information , Call 818-757·
31o4t,E•t9116.

11 16 Sunser Drive, 3 Bedroama.
2 112 Bolh Homo, Ful Baiomont
Price: $98,500, 814·448·8238 For
M01e iniDrmlltion.

RN or LPN Wllh m (Ohio N~rse
Aide Trainer) 10 teach clan at
long term facility. Hourt and
sch&amp;clule for classes tleJIIlbte to
YOUR needs. Part lime position.
Contact Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Roci&lt;oprlngs Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio 4~789, 814-992·
11808. Corol Greening. OON.

12 Rooms Ranch Style Home3Bodroom, 2 112 baths, large
kitchen· &amp; dinlnrf room &amp; family
rooms, 2 porchealacraened, 2 ~r
garage, 8/10 mile oul Sandhill
Rd. and lol! more. 304-671M571 .

RN, LPN Or RT, Responsible For
Sening Up Infant Apnea Monilor
In Homes And Doing. Monthly
Home Visits." This Ia A Part· Time·
Contract Position. Send Resume
Or Pick·Up Application At Bowman's Homecare. 70 Pine Street.
GallipoliS, OH 456.31, AttentiOn:
LewiQ.

I·RAV TECH To WOrk Pari· Time:
4:00 I'M. -8:00 P.M. Mondajo -Friday And Saturday 8:00 A.M . •
Noon. Responsibilities Include
Performing Radiologic Technolo·
gy Procedural, Development Ot .
Films, And Croa1-Train To Per·
form Other Duties As Asa1gned
By Manager. Requirements: Mu11
Have Completed A 2 Year Ra diologic Technology Training Pro..
gram At An AMA ·Approved
School And Be Corblied /Eligible
ByThoARRT.

. This

newspeper wil ,.,. .

an

REAL ESTATE

0 Horileslor Sale

11t TIITIO Buyora E-Z Analncing, 2
Or 3 Bedrooms Around S200
lolonltt Free Del1very &amp; Set Up, t ·
800-251 -5070.
D-rRolloiProaram
Wo havo 11000 to $2000 per
hame in disaster relief 'funds
available to help you purchase a
replacament home. Call 1-800,
481-7671 ta set appointment for .
dotalll.
.

APPLIAN.CES

Solo &amp; Choir, Now Amari con

Apartments

lor Rent
1 and 2 badroom aperlm8nll, lur·
nllhad and unlurniohad, HCurity
deposit requ ired, no pers, 8U11112·22t8.
1 Bedroom Near Holler Extra
Nice, Central Air, S2GQ/Mo., +
Utililill, Deposit Req. 014 ·44821157. .
.
1 Bedroom unturrilshed Apart-

ment Range. Rtfrlgerator, Olapo-.
tal , Garage · provided. Water,

sewage, Garbage Paid. Deposit
and relerences Required, 138
Firat Ave. Rear, GaUipolia, 114«8·2561
2 Bedroom Apar tment. Central
Air,' Gas Heat, WID Hook-Up
Close To Gallipolis, 814·4402072.

rangeo. Skoggo Appllonceo, 78 114-245-5688.
Vlnt S1roo~ CaQ 814·448· 73ge,
IUIIIIER IALE : Control Air
1-8)0-&lt;109-341111.
Concltlonoro: Full 5 Yoor WlrranKlichon Carpet ·11.50 Sa'- On AI ty. ·n You Don't Coli Uo We Bolh
Carpet In Stock &amp; Room Size looet• Froo Eodmatooi 'Add-On
Mollohon c...r.. 114--4*7444. . H•l Pumpe Only SllillttY Higher.
Call \Jo To4oy. ttll7'1o T~e
Twenty SOY0nth Y.oor In Tho
RolrlgoroiOr Now Modal' Whlto H•tlng &amp; Cooling Bulllnolll 014.
Woo 1250 811!111 Dentin Door 448-e308, t-1100-291-11091.
1175; Rolri91f11Dr lido By Sldo
Groon $185; Rafrlgwator Froll STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Froo 1125; Whirlpool Wuher, Uprigh~ Ron Evano Entarprlool!
fgs; Whirlpool Waohor, N.., Jackeon, Ohio, 1-1100-537-9528.
Modo!, 1 Year Gaurantoo ·U05;
EloclrfC RonQe 30 Inch US; Eloo- Throe whoel blko, 24" 3 opood;
1rlc Drylf $95; WI,_ Nr COndi- also 20· girl'a bike ; eu-a92·
1126; Sliaggo Appllailcoo, 2968.
78 VIne Street, Galllpollo, 014· Topooll 120 A load, 814 ·048·
441-7381, 1-.&amp;111-0128.
1052.
Tradltlonal .oota ·choir: almool
now, oxcollont ·condition, $200,
814-~ -llpm.
550
Building

tio-.

a

ltOO oec11, 814-247-1100. I •

Modal 800 Ford tntcll&gt;r, ~lly rostorod, 5 speod, Wllh 8' blade,
$5700, 814-11112·5072
/

1-'--..;,_-----,' - 10% OfF Ill larrn IIICIQI pans.
Sidor'• EqulpmenL 3,04•875·
7421 .
I

N..;. t:!~t;'ridw
mlotr, erc
....... •
1&amp;.)
.

•

720 li'Uckllor Sale

-13. '

.

Q ,7 ~ 2 ,·. ,

'.

10 ' 7

1913 Frtlghdlner Ca-r, .-00·
cumrnino 13 opted, 114·892·
8!10t .

Q

1948 Chevrolet Flollllne, 8t4·
3811-8383.
AKC Reg Champion Stock Sea·
g53 Buick Special $S,500 Firm,
gle, lemalo, lBO 080. Dog kan· •11•••••
217 _
nei10X10 $100.304-675-2105.
. -·-~-~-------AKC Reg Weimaraner puppies 1970 C'-Ue, 305, Rtlluih Origl·
nal Transmission, AC::, Rally
$300oo. 304-675-7740.
Whoolo, Remodeled Interior,
Needs Ex.erior Work $1,800,
OBO, 814-44 1~138, Alter 5 P.M.

Soulb

Rabblls For Sala $7 Each, 814·
258-t125.

Furni•hed Elflcloncy $ tG51Mo.,
Udlltloo Pold, Shore Bath , 007
Second Avonut, Gtlllpollo, 814·
448-3844 Altar 7 ~M.

2 Window Air Condldoners Priced Full-Blooded Dilmatlon Puppieo,
ToSolll814-37'11-2218.
Wormed, $76 Each, 814·388·
8922.
4" heavy conugatod pipa,
.
roll, $21.98. F¥.1NT PLUS HARD· Golden Rotrlovor puppies, full
WARE. 304-875-4084.
blooded, flrat shots &amp; wormed,
I tOO, 014-11112·7851.

t984 BMW, good condition,
$1250 080 ; 1983 Mazda RX7,
good conditktn, $1250 OBO; 8t4·
992·7Utt.

KEEP AN EYE ON
TATER AN' I'LL GIVE

'

IUIO W/OYerdtiYI. 35,000 milll,

~OU

$12,500. 304·875-30l3 . Altar

MAKE IT

t984 F,lorO Rod. 4 Speed. Runs I
LOOkl Good, Short Block, Chromo
Whools, $1 ,100 614·3117-o333

A QUARTER H

'

ON HIM!!

vans &amp; 4-WDs
u.poo,1

1::

11187 4114 Fonl ~. Pairt,
Shoc:ko, Elhoull, Etc. .LOll 01 Ex·

· ~.~

n,*

11'011
Mieo, $3,800r OBO
Coi81.4·258-1147. .
10g5 Dodgo Caravan V·8, Auto,
Overdrive, 25,500 Ml'-•· Asking
110,050 Or 080 114-258-A340,
814-l!!il+lll7.

·~~ ­

,vi:.i·.

1995 Ford F•150 4x4 E•tended'
Cab, Wllh Towing Package;
13,000 Mileo 1 Year Or 23,000
Milos Lth Ori WorfWIIy, $18,000,
014-448«175 Col 4 ~M.

8.8 Ac"res,...2 ~ear old sec1ionaf.
Midloport· All ~avo now windows
3br, 2 baths, control air, NI:EI Repo'al Only .2 left. Never lived &amp; carpet. 3 units ovalablo. One 3
Somervll'- Realty. 304·875·3030 m. Free delivery &amp; set up. 1~800- ··BR, one 1·2 BR and one 1 BR.
Mad Your Confidential Information or 304-875-3431' Joan Casto.
Depoalt and references required.
251-5070:
To : Holzer Clinic, Human Rela 614·828-4950.
.
tions; 90 JacMson Pike; Gallipolis,
Trallar &amp; lotlol~e Hill, Racine, Dh,
OH 45831-1562 Or Far To 8t4·
Small.lurnlahed effitnc;y, all utUi6t4·247·~2t~.
11es paid. P1. Plei.sant area, d•
440·5532. Equal Opportunlly Em-~~~~~~::~:~: Wanted To Buy: 3 Bedroom pook required. 30«75ployor.
House Trailer, 61~·~48 · 1052.
FurniShed 1br apartment on Mt
180 wanted To Do
For·Uie, 1 bedroom home '" PoVernon Ave. Ideal for 1 person,
mlrO)', will seh on land contract, 340
Business and
$200/mo. + electric . .no pets, no
·ANY ODD JOBS: Exterior point· 814·992·6856.
Buildings
smokerS, references &amp; deposit
lng, ahru.bs &amp; weeds trimmed,
landscaping, sidewalks edged , Home for sale on Rt. 2 North Store &amp; Restaur8nt w1Game 30-4·875-2851.
lawn c:are. etc. Call Bill 304-675· about 10 miles from Pt. 5 bed · Room, new roof, building In good
Three bedroom apartment, Third
room• on acre lot, shown by ap71 12.
pointment cinly._ Call 304-372- shape, bath open doing busi- Street, Racine, S300 per month
ness. owner retiring,, aell building, plus utilities, deposit and relarEIP""-nced carpemry end rlfnO· _;42;.;1.:.6.:.fru;.;m.:.S.;.;5pm.:::,..;__ _ __
equip~ent, . groceries, alack.
encoo. 814-247-42112.
dtling. Inside 1nd outside, House and property, app(OK. 4a- $70.000, more mlormation 304dKkJ, vinyl aiding, add-on addl· &lt;;res. Ideal starter home. Beech 882·3403.
Twin Rivers Tower, now acc:-ng
tiona, cabinet ,.facing Of newly St, Pomeroy OH. 304·882-2077.
appliutlons lor 1br. HUO aubsid·
rebuilt. Ralerancaa-Ftee Estl·
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
ized apt. for etderly and handi·
-JimShul304-e75-1272.
House For Sale By Owner, Raat.
capped. EOH 30«75-8879.
tors Welcome At 4% Located On 20 Acres &amp; 2br uailer, city water,
ElpMienced AN Will Do Private LeGrande Boulevard, 3 Bedroom 12 acre&amp; cleaned. $42,000. 304· Two bedroam apartmanr In MtdDuty Home Heallh, Hospital Or House, With New Roof, New Car· 675-t4tl2.
dlaport, we
water, sewer and
Nursing Home. 8t4-44e-895t .
2 Car An ached Garage,
trash, you pay aas and electric,
Far
Sale
Or
Trade:
32
acres
5
Georges Porta~e Sawmill, don'tl'"''ove Ground Pool With Patio M•tes From Gatiipolit, on Slat&amp; $200 per month, $100 deposit,
haul your logs to the mil juot call With 2 Level Dock On Back, Route 218. Wil l Sell All or Parts. 814·992·7806, Oom·5pm. Avail·
:J04.87S.1g57..
Fenced In Bock Yard, Appliances
able July Ill
Slay, Nlco No i g~borhood For $25,000, 814-256-6574
Profellional Tree Service, Stump Kids, 614·448- 7307 After ... :30 Seven 5 Acre lots On Teens Two bedroom apartment in Mid·
dltpor~ no pelS, 8t4·992·6858.
Removal, Free Einlmatesl In- P.M. ForAppaintment
Road, One With House: One
aurence, Bidwell, Ohio. 814-368· 1---=.:..:.:=~--- Run
9848, 814-387-7010.
Sale ·or Lease With W11h Trailer Hook-Up, Will Land Unlunlshed Apartment, 322 Third
Ground Pool, 1 112 Contract, One lot On t80 North,· Avenue, 614·258- 1903. From 9
614-669·3462. .
A.M. ·9 P.M.
Signa Mado/Rolurblahad. Metai~~~~~R~t~
. 7~F•=c=in=g~R~Iv~e~r,
roofs painted, lawna mowed,
SovoroiJ.oc:rw pan:olo
450
Furnlslled
ulmrned. Handyman work, woad$7,500 ooc:lt
en signa_ 304-875-8925 Rick.
House plus 12t68 trailer, house
Rooms
just painted , golfd ahape, both remota, beautiful land ; Uelgs
County,
Scipio
TownShip,
SR
892
Wan tad painting trailers, alngle occupied with good renters, 304·
Oust oH SR t43). OWner finoncng
story houses, inside a out"Ref· 882-3403.
Call
lor good map, t·8t4 · 593·
ttancas &amp; eatlrnatet. 30 .. -Sg5»71
Mt. Vernon Ave 2br, $68,000 . 8545.
.
·
Conlrll ail &amp; heat, luH basement.
Will babyolt, throe moalo with 304-117s.eo.e ohtr 4:30.
RENTALS
care, excelent care, In my home
oryouro, cal8t4-992·78-47. ·
Newly remodeled lhroe bedroom,
one and t/2 batll homo In Middloport 114·11112·3465 altar Spm.

naa

,.DO '1 LQOK. TKe..l

8g S-10 Blazer 5 SP, 2 door,
82,000 rnileo, 17,800 ., take ""'
Paymon11L (8t4)-3711-2134

D\FF€~1 7

·'

Motorcycles

1187 Honda Shadow 700, V
liMn, 5000 miles; ·1rnmuu1ate c:on·
dition, l3500, 8t4·092-4081l.

.

i

' I

1ge8 FLTC- Ultra Harley David· ·:
aon wilh all the -.xtras. eterea, •
clock. caasettt radio, intercom •
svstem, cruise control, CB radio. , 114,000, ... 8t4-742-3t81 .
..
Are you buying n.ew furniture?
Sell your used rvrntture to the Po·
meroy Thrih Shdp. Theta is a reol
need for couc:hea, breakfast and
dining room se11. We also buy
baby bed.a, stroll era• .playpena,
toddler car aea11 and walkers.
Call 814·992·3725 Tuesday thru
Saturday, 10om-4prn ot 220 East
Main Stroot Parneroy.

1987 Chevy Cavalier Runs Groat,
Selll814-245-t300.

Mu~t

Schnauzers, miniature, aalt &amp;
popper, AKC, champion bloodlina,
shots, wormed &amp; lirsl grooming;
814-667·3404.

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

."Hot Spots. " Kill Fleao,
Mosquitos &amp; Flies On
Contact. Without Internal Polsons. Ask J D NORTH PRO·
DUCE 61 4·448-1933 About
HAPPY JACK KENNEL DIP.

....."···-·..............-..
Musical
Instruments

pa'

t987 01~1 Cutlass, asking $2200
OBO, 81 4·915-391 7.
t987 Ponlloc 8000, good condi·
don, runs and looka good, $1295,
81HI92-e824.
1988 Toyoui Cal!¥)', ·blue, PS, PB.
excellent condition inside and ouL
$1995, 614-11112-8824.
.1 989 Dodge Convtrtion

Van.

Good Condition, Original Miles,
8t4·256-eaoe.
.
1919 l,lorcury Marque lS Erctl·
tent Condition. Mic:hellan 'Tirea,
Asking l5,500,oCall At Night 814448-1501, Deyo;014-448-!lll07.
tiiiiO Buick LoSabro; $5500, one
owner, can be, Htn at, 38 Hudson SL, Middlopor~ Oh., 814·11112·
4103.

Boots By Redwing, Ch1ppewa,
Roc.ky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed Star Guitar, Cheshire, Ohio· tenlowest Pricat At Shoe Cafe, Gal· ons and lnsrrumenta- piano, guitar and druma, 814-387-11302. '
lipollo.
.

Fruits &amp;
Conctete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks, 580
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Vegetables
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
Strawberritt, Pick Your OWn, Cal
t-&amp;l0-537·9528. .
Claude Winters. 814-245·5121.

11190 Oldsmobile Collis, -door,
air, aulomatic, looka an&lt;! '""'
good,$2800 .080, 814-742-0002.
t991 Dodge Spirit t04K Runs
Good, Well-t.taintained , 12,500,
814·381H1293.
1993 Chryslw· Concord, Loaded,
59,700 Mioo, EJCollont Condition,
18,500, 8t4-250-1401.

014E L.OU!&gt;Y

1g93 Kawasaki 550 EX, ; :
3,300miloo, helmet nice, 12.300. ·
30«7&amp;-5010 Of 304-ll75-4811.

LITTLE . WORt&gt;.

1g93 Suzuki RM 125 CC, 13,000,
Pra Rae• Bike, Have All Top
Brand ,Parlt For Mora Information Coll '814·448'-9441 Between
1Opm "' l1 prn.

750 Boats &amp; Motors

lor Sale

111114 Morado ,t8 Foot 0"'"" Bow.
wiSun Dock, 4.3 Llltr VS, Mot ·
"'"'""'· 11m Fm Cusone. ahd Ski
At:couory. 614·258«,U3

Buslneu '

Opportunhy

WE~E 51T&gt;TIN6 81{ TI-lE
,
CAMPFIRE,I5UT WE WEREN T
THINKING OF 1{00..

TI-IINKIN6 OF
I-IlM, SIR ..

OF HIM ..

~•

l
:

I

4 Good .Yoor Wranglor RTS. 245 1 . :
75R /18 t3,000 M"'' $150, 614· ,.•
245-Q851 .
•

320 Mobile Homes

A~TRO·ORAP~ ·.

--·
;.

Improvements
BAiiloiENT
WATERPf!OOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantH.
local rtforoncu lurnllhod. Eolo~llhod 1975, Call (610) .,...
0870 Or 1·800·287-o570, llogoro •• ~

Watorproollng.

Appliance Porto And Service; All
Namo Bratlcfo Ovor 25 V.rs E•·
pflltnce AH Walk GuaraniHd
~;;ch City Moytog, Ot4·441: .

Steol building daolwO:~WtH·
- l n ,Optn ..rkal.
...,
llctOry - L. High profit potlft·
tial, ooles or cono•uctlon. (3q3)

.,..3200 Ext. 7HI.

q&amp;c

230

-home

Generol Homo Molntenonca - Paindng, vinyl siding,
ClfPif\"Y. dooro, wlndo 1, botho,
ropelr ond ...... For
,,.. •• - , . ... Chol, 814·11112·

8323.

'I

10 Wlda- 1 btdl, ....
down, I 1S9/mo, ooilh appro...d
credit. Ctll 1-1-tm.

...

1-

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-

110811~)

Weal

Nartb

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.•t

.....

10=nlanll .

12 1'tPa cit . .

11 Ullel I

11 Actor .....
17loidlll'a

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f

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•

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•

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your t.ll(iitlli ~ign. ·;
.
LEQ (J.iily: 23-Aug 1 ;m Friends,
know if you·n: told soriil!\bing in confidence ·you· U not .betray their 'rust.
Today you may be 'cam· some infor•
BERNICE
motion that could be profitable, , '
.BEDEOSOL
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Jf
you' re 'invillvpd in a gmup acti\'ily
today. don't sin1.1lc out ,one l'ricnd for
spo:cial' attention . ·Con.verse cquplly
Wednesday. June . 1997
and llll!icably wi1h one and all. ·
From 'time 10 time in the year
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ,W~cn
ahead you misht get some sirong 1he' occasion calls for i1. Librans can
hunches regardins business matlers. be extremely·, ~ingle-mindcd . This
Do not Inial them indifferently: they . could be a day to do e~actly. that, ~
could be worthy of further explo- decide on a aoal and So for 11!
ralion.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Seck .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Com- • ende~~ors toda~ that. wil.l enable you
panion8 will sense your pmcn« and I? uuh~ your tmaatn~uon . II l_ooks
ehllliamatOday, as wellu your obvi· hke y~u II come up wuh some ideas
ous ,ICiidcnhip qualities. When you of wh1ch you'll be very pro11d.
issue direclivcs they'll not he chal· 1 SAGITtARIUS (Nov. '23-Dec.
lcn.ed. Cance;, treat yourself to 21) Because you:re not likely to talt:~
binhllay •ift. Send for your Astro- lhi~1s at face value today. you won t
Graph preaic:ti0111 for thc year aheld he easily deceived by others. Keep
by IMIIIIIJ $1 uc1 SASE 111 Astro- your"cyes ope11 for slick salelpeQple.
Onph, do this newspiip8f, P.O~ Boa
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Ju. 19)
1758, Mwray Hill Slation, New lbdayyou'llhavelheCOtll'llptoren·
York, NY 101 S6. Be sure to state der a decision on an imJ*llnt issue
l#

II

you·ve becn' ducking lately because ,
you'~e fek it was too difficult.
.
AQUARIU&amp; (Jan. 20-Feb.. 19)
Puy ~tlention to detwls·today, as theY.
.will be equally as important as major
factors. Each small part !s.sssentialto
complete the big picture. .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) Seek
companions today who are young in
spirit mtbcr than serious individuals.
The young in mind will help you feel
young at.heart. · ·
ARIES (March 21 ~Aprill9) Your
protective feelings for people you
love could be stronger than usual
today. This is well,and goOd; bl!!" take
care to leave them some breathing
space . •
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20)
Today your abllny to read character
in others is very pronoiQICC(I. A woril
of. caution. howc&gt;vel) keep your observation» to yourself.
'.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20) 'fuJay
you could have some.I'DIII aems of
information to impart to liicnds or
cowO!kers t1i1t could mike or save
you tiOth money. Share lhe weallh!

..

20 Yow .,
21 Dlfi11411100V.

,,•
' .

23 Ob11r,.•

21 .KIIIen
IOUncla

Eul
It

~a=~--

26
Pass

lumu
.
32 Troplcalllull

Pua

'.

••

33 Robln'ahaM .

Opening lead: • 6

34 1M4 lnv•IOn
. dill

38 Hanly- ·

The first 9f two

3t Mr.Cfaua

41 Uncle .
42 Pound unit

William Hazlitt. an English essayist who died in 1830, pointed out that
"1,\'e may 'be willin~ 10 tell a story
twice, never to hear It more th!\11 .
once." Well, I hope you'are not so in
agreement with this that.you ivon'l
read tomorrow's column! .This deal
from the final of ' the Australian
National Open ·Tealfls last January
fealured instructive play at both
tables. Rather than try to squeeze it
all into one column, lei's spread · it
over two days.
.
' To test Y'\urself, cover the West
and South hands. You arc Easl,.
defending ·against two hearts. West
leads the diamond six : jack, .ace,
eight. What would you do now? ,
West's thin one-spade respqnsc
picked off North-South"s best suit Ir
you and your panner were North·
~'luth . would you get into . spades
' after West's bid'1 True, North's second-roUnd double strongly suggested•
s pades. hut Soulh understandably
went with his other four-card major.
West, Michael Counncy, led the
diamonr.l six. This was seconlhighcsl from a weak suil, which enjoys
considerable popularity in certain
circles.
·
Peter Gill won wit~ lhe ace: then
he foond the perfect play. switching
to the club four: After winning with
the I0. Courtney realized what wa.~
required. He returned the spade two.
which Gill ruflcd. Now came the dub
jack. overtaken by West's queen. and
a second sp3de run·. Finally. Gill
cashed the dub a£e to defeat the contract Beautiful!
· That must hC a candidate for ihc
. Defense of the Year Award. given ~y
the lnternalional Bridge Press Association .

•

·I

43 Codlltoh dlah

·•

411 ,_.In
411

·HIWall
Whei .

50 CrOll• ~bl!r- ·

52 Blimtlleln, for

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

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by Lula Campos

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'LTWVRPYISGE: ,
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S G E • '. V G G
0 G F L T Y P.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'd rather listen to a bad minister than to a coach lalk
about loolball." - (BroadCaster) Alex Hawt&lt;ins.

·=~:::~· S@~~lA-~t.~s·

....

Will
lAM I

,·'.

Ullo4 ~J CLAY I . POllAN

Aoorrt~ngo letters of rile
four scrambled
below to lortn lour simple wordJ.

i•

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MU P. R E J

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O:.r da4ghter slept with het
new .puppy. My husband says
that man has made animals
other than his own species a
memberofhis- ·· · · -

I0

.!' ·

Complete the chuckle. quoled
by f1ll ing i" 1he miSSing words
you develop ·from llop No. 3 below.

..

PRINT NUMBERED LETTfRS IN
THESE SQUARES

•

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-

..

CNbnly Cipher a~••••.,.tntMed fromquotMionS by ramous ~ - pull~ pMMn~
EICt'l rtnf.r .., N c.pner Slandi fllf' another, Too.y·s Clue D equalS M

UNSCIAMILE AIIQYf LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

.

Canine. Proud· Salon - Picnic • OPINION
Man overheard at 'his fiftieth birthday" party, 'I've
reached lhe age~ere what I lhink is only an OPIN·
ION . ~
111
·

'

1gs9 2.8l Front Wheel Drive En·
gino,l250, 81U46·3407.

~--810
Ho!Qi.........
o ).

• -

SCIWMITS ANSWERS

"

760 Auto. Pans ·&amp; ·
Accessories

SERV ICES

t

41DIIillngU~III

HEY, CIIUCK .. MARCIE AND I

I WAslol'i

WE SHOULD CALL CI-IUCK,AND
TELL HIM WE WERE SITTING
81{ THE
AND WE

Pomoroy, Flohor Stroo~ 3 BR, t
BA. new ctrpet, oome rwmodoling,
$13,000, Clll814-828-4950.

for Sale.
!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you ~o busl- t2x80 1965 two bad&lt;oom mobile
ntss with people you know, and home, one bath, good condition,
NOT ro send money through tht 13000 0110. 814·092-et34.
mail yntil you have investigated
12180 Good Condition, 18,000
the ofloring
AhlfO P.M. 014-448-732t .

!llh plrl

;;_..;~,....:;.,1..::;......;1;-::..,...1-i

FINANC JAL

210

'

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~
I ttoo.,.OIIIOOV.
7 Rnpand
.

L-.L.-..IL-..1.-...J.L-...L.--'·

1888 Ranger 373V t8' 12 ·:t4V.
' Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinrude :
Outboard. $9,800, 0~~-2770. t ,'
\

1 AIDe. ....
(llllbr.j

-=-!Ht

31flaloll
11 La Ill d
31 ct.n

'40

DOWN
2 Canliliuoy
.43
.

I1--TI

1884 Bandit Ball Boat 50 HP ·
Mercury Garage Kepi, E•cellenl'
Condition, $3,000, Between 2 P.M. : ·
To 5 P.M. 304-e75-513t . .
•

"I

Zl Yea, -1
27 1INullla
Zl
AINall;llt
:11 Natllreiii
nMIOn

E

1g7g Baja 19 Ft. 454 ChOYy, . :
Berkley Jet Drivo, Engine Needs : ,
Aaoombled, $2,000, Consider . • '
Trade, 814 ue 4880.
'

'

IOLIII

tl"-11
11 Long~ ·
22...,..11Me
:M N8ullclitl rope

By Phillip Alder · '

1988 Kawasaki KXSOO looko, ·
Runs, Rldea Great, Excellent
Shape, 1975 Finn, 814·379·2812
L-llnoego.

Graclouo living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apertmenll at Village· Manor and
Rlvoroldo Aparunonta In Mldd1•
porL From 1238·1304 . Call 814·.
192·5084. Equol Housing Qppor.
JJni.et. .

• AKJ 4

Pass

Jtee Jotp c'hwokoo 4 Door,, y.
8, Auiomatic, 4 WD f,C , AMIFM •
CD; PS, PB, 731&lt; illlu, 14,500
OBO:-Rotalla For 11,300, 814· •
U1· 1318.
.

740

.A1075. 2

Dbl.

FlFTY CENT

AN' I'LL KEEP
BOTH EYES

8;00prn.

.

i

Pass

tllll8 Grand Careven 8 Paallf!g·
er, 22.000 Milts, v-e; Auto. Load·
ad, Under Manulacturod Warran-•
ty 117,000, 814-258·1252, 8t4- ,.
250-1818.
1983 Hondo Civic 4 Dooro, Auto,
Runo Clood $525, 8t4-37'11-2845.

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

Vulnerable: Nortli-Soulh
Dealer: Eut

620

71 0 Autos for Sale

But

Soa&amp;lo
6J883
• K·J 8 3
-. Q8 '
• t s '2
•
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'

AKC Reg Boxers. ONLY 4 It·
mates left. $250ea. Wormed &amp;
tat ohotl. 814-992·4005.

....

• • 54 2

10 $

wa

TRANSPORTATION

•

911 '( 3

1g_. Ford .Bronco Full Size,
•2.1100. 30211oklr;8t4-3881C211. '.
AKC Gorman Shepherd Pups,
Whitt Champ Line, 814·388·
gr94.

6 A K 10 I 4
• AQ6
. t K ol
• • 7..e

a•pw'l-

llllllll
........ . . . .

, . . ._

;

1995 F-t&amp;!l SWB, XI.T, alllaetory
·opilono, rtd w/Whllt inlerlor, 351

~a IIIia

12wda.)

.. '

:
te7g Chtvy 1/2 .Ton Plell· Up •
Auto, PS, PB, AC, Runa Good,• :
Good Body, $1,1100 Or 080, 814-

~t4-2511-1514,"Ahtr8~11.

New 1807 14x70 three bedroom.
Includes 8 months FREE lot rent
Only S181.68 per month with
$1050 down. Call 1-800· 837·
3238.

Repo's Only 2 Lolt, Never lived
In, Free Dol~ery &amp; Set Up, 1·800·
251; 5070.

t!t.304 4111-

t984 Joop Chtirokoe,

prox. 12'1060' 2 Bedrooms, 1 Both,
Mobile Home Must Be Moved
From Present Site, 13,500, Call
814-448·3638.

living Room, Family Roam, Built
In Fireplace Yalved St0,600, Sell
For $9,000, 614·448-41134.

n

a17 Ill

llllrlloura

18&amp;4 C....,rolet311&gt;d, ZWd, now
pain~ ollckor &amp; lla~ery. · Mint
12,415. 304-87&amp;-72511.
.
19110
Ford Super Call. e :114 bed,
nwkl hydraUliC hooo .......
tilioo. Sldtr' l EquiPII!tnt 304· F-150 Xlt Lorio!, auto; air, ·,
cruloo, omllm ... _ , two-tono
87&amp;-7421.
pain~ Raooa hitch, vlldr, bug
ohleld, bedllnor, tOOk mlloa
wantld to~
•5500, 814·048 ·2311 dayo or
looking lor Hook.o\1 dn P~onlc . 814-9411-21144 _ . . .
011 014
.1004 Toyota EJtt. Cob OWd. Sopd.
''
1f!!j!i1187
114.500. 304-57S-4031
.
830 •. Livestock

wv.

New Listing 14x70 2 Bedrooms,

'

730

3238.

New Bank Rtpo"st Onlw 3 left.
owner financing available. 304755-7191 .

llhr ;

It

sal• •

14

Up.,. Ueecl C... Rt.l2·3
Soonh of Loon, Yfll. Flnanclrif( •

golon " ' - - -..
I~-:-~~~---:--:--

Supplies
Uood Air Condlllonor &amp; Hoot
Unill $t50 S1omt Doort $50 11 4· ;:B::Ioc~k::",":b::7ric:::k;;,-::.,:::...
~r;,:po;·poo--.-.,':"ln~d- . 14 Crollllrtd.BaM CIIWI, 0.. 10
441-3301. 114 4413583
ows, lintels, etc. Claude WlntAirs, ' Calvo In ~ WHko." C~II Andy
Rio Grande, OH Call 8 14·245· Adamo Dairy ltol-3.,..2744
5121 .
640 Hay &amp; Grsln

Large telecllon of used home. 2
01 3 bedrooms. Starting at $3495.
Quick delivery. Call 1·800-837·

Mobile Home: 1964 Travelo, Ap-

3br, 1acre vard in Gallipolis Ferry. MuS! See. 304-ll75-48!1.

USED

Wathefl, dryers, refrlgtrltors, Huntor 1750; Satoflita Dllh 1100,

IT'S BIG. t997 4BR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE . $1 ,949 DOWN,
l3tViM.O. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES , NITRO, WV. 304· 755·
5885. Limited Olio&lt;.

ed: Addison Township, 814-4484792. .

'3 BedrOOfTII, 2 barhs, living &amp;
dining room combined, family
room, utllitV room, central air, 2
porches. replacement windows,
vfnyl aiding, double car garage,
collar, 2 out buildings, 3 acres,
Rt. 2 North, 112 milo on E·ckord
Chapel Rood. 304-675-5524.

440

GOOD

Firat Time Buyeral ~-l Financing.
2 or 3 bedroom, $200/mo. Free
"delivery &amp; set up. 1·800-251·
5070.

Barn, Maintenance Free, local·

3 Bedroom, 2 bathroom, '!,.w
lamlly room, new roof/siding.'c•r·
pet &amp; linoleum, deckl'l.n ground
pool, t car garage, storage buildIng, Green School District, 502
LeGrande Blvd. Call 814·448·
3302 for appointment. Pnced in
lew 80's

rna.

FACTOI!V DRECT.
NO MDDI.E MAN.
SAVESISI.
Oakwood Home• Is the onlv
dealer In the tri-arare area that
buildl and aella their own
homes: For factory direc1 prices,
shop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl·
TRO, WV. 304-755-5885.

Limitflt Offert ,997 daublewide.
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $279/
month. Free delivery &amp; .setup.
Only ar Oakwood Homes, Nitro
304-755-5885.

3 Bedroom Homo With Garage &amp;

3 Bedroom Trolllf + 2 Badroomo
For Rent In Patriot, 814·••t ·

407 N.H. ltlrblne. $211111; ..., 150

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