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                  <text>'Ohio-Lottery

Reds sweep
series With
Milwaukee

Super Lotto:
15·21·23-30-45-47
Kicker:
54 860-3
Pick 3:
2-9-3
Pick 4:
1·7-8-3

Sportt on Page 4

Moally clear tonight,
Iowa In the lower 60a.
lndependanc;e
Day,
cloudy,_ chance of show·
era. Hlglla 11t11r 80.
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ent1ne
2 Section•, 18 PlfiH, 35 eonta

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 3, 1997

01117, ONo lllllt.y Pullllllllng c:omp.ny

A~Co.NiiWIFipH

Pool to
reopen
Friday

~

Middleport facility
now holds water
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Nevis Staff

While attempting to open Middleport Pool last summer, village offi·
cials noticed one remaining problem.
It didn~ hold water.
But now the pool is filled with
water and is expected to be open Friday for the first time since 1993.
The pool was scheduled to be
open for, the 1996 summer season .
after major renovations were com. pleted to the 43-year old stNcture,
. but inadequately sealed cracks along
the edges of the bottom surface of the
pool failed to hold water.

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PlleefihiJ•fOIII' • Mldclleport BkuftMiol Edltloa, JIIIJ 1, 19f7

...

overhaul of lhe electrical system and
steel reinforcement around the pool.
tors found that metal INsses sup- Anew steel and concrete deck extenporting the outside of the pool had · sion for sunbathers was added to the
· deteriorated, accord_ing to Mayor south side of \he pool, behind the
existing kiddie pool.
Dewey "Mac" Honon.
.
. SAFE SHOPPING - Chool8 your favorltn for your Fourth of
The new deck extension will Sc:rve
Preliminary
eslilnates
to
repair
the
July cookout picnic, but retiiiRiber 10 keep perllhable foocla ..t. ·
ly. Roy and JennHer Brtnldey ahoppld for fresh 1111111ts at ·Powpool were set at $80,000 ancleventu- two purposes, with the top to be.used
ell'• Super-Yalu In Pomeroy, above. Freah meats should be takally rose to about $100,000, but vil- for sunb•thers and the area under the
en home Immediately and relrlgerltiMl.
lage residents and businesses raised deck to be used as a new shelterhouse
more than $50,000 _and a grant .was for the_park, according to Honon.
seemed from the Ohio Department of · · A new sand filtration system was
The pool was closed when inspec-

CfJ.Je 9lre Cf&gt;roud Cfo 93e Oeroing
Widdlepo~f cpuring Cfhi.s
9/i.sloric 20Qlh ?fear
Oj9t.s Cfounding

..

&lt;·

In
the pOol wt,ll
better than when It WIS first butlt 10

1953,.

By BRIAN J. REED

__

Sentinel News s~

. If you are planning to pack the picnic basket or fire up the backyard grill
over the upcoming holiday weekend, you should he mindful of.food safety
guidelines, especially since the weinher is expected to he typically hot.
Hot !Veather increases risk of food spoi Iage, so picnic baskets should be
· kept as cool as possible. Insulated coolers help decrease the risk of spoilage,
· as do baskets which contain something cold.
.
·

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• soning, according 10 material provided by the Ohio Slate Universily Ex ten·
· sion Service.
·
Mosl commercially prepared mayos and 'salad dressings con1ain salt and
· an acid navoring which actual slow bacterial growth. Actually, mayonnaise
added to food slightly prevents food poisoning. Mayonnaise should never
be frozen. however.
·

Mayor Dewey Horton, Rae Gwlazdowskl, Belb Sllven, Saadllaaurelll, Dennla Bockw•a, derk, ud Jolla .
NeviUe. Nol plc:lured Is rouadlman Mlck Chtldl.

'

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9fnd CWe 9/re E ooking Cforward
Cfo Oeroing the Cfiesidenfs
9ls.CWe 9iead9nfo Cfhe
,

Slrex/ .2 00

etJrs.
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Keep hoi foods and cold foods cold. When purchasing meats and other
perishable ilems, make the market your last. stop, especially in the summer.
Make cenain that the perishables are the last item you buy, and get them right
into the refrigerator or into the ice chest or insulated bag you're taking to the
picnic. Perishables should never be left in a ,l!,ot car while you run other
errands.
.
.
.
· When preparing food, cleanliness is a mus1. Clean hands well befoo: working with food , lf'you're cooking outdoors, and hot water is not available, use
wet handy wipes instead. To avoid salmonella and other food-borne bacteria, wash hands carefully after working with.raw meal or poultry and bef~ue
!landling other food.
.
. When serving, never reuse utensils, plates or bowls used with raw food.
If you plan to grill out, remember to take what you know about kitchen cleanliness to the grill. A grilling surface should be very clean before food ts placed
on it.
.· Becky Baer, home extension agent for the Meigs County Agricultural
E•tension Service, said that many outdoor cooks operate under the assumption ihat the.flames and high temperatures that come with a barbecue grill
llfC sufficient to kill germs. That, Baer said, is a dangerous assumption.
Grill users should consult their owner's manual for specific cleaning tips.
Grates can be easily cleaned by soaking them in very hot, soapy water, followed by a thorough wiping wilh a damp cloth. As an added precaution, Baer
recommended covering the grill with new aluminum foil he fore the grate is
in place and the fire is lit.
· Cleaning a grill shonly after it has been used and cooled makes the job
ea5ier but grill grates should be cleaned before each use.
Ha~ling summer leftovers begs caution, as well . Perishables should be
returned to a cooler or refrigerator as soon as the meal is finished. They should
.pot be left 0111 during swimming or hiking. The passenger area of a car is
much cooler than the tNnk.
If you were gone no more than four or five hours, and your perishables
; were on i~ except when cooked and served, you should be able to save the
leftovers.
·

Sentinel -to publish Friday
The Daily Sentinel will publish an edition on Friday, July 4.
The business oft"ICC will be closed Friday and Saturday, and will resume
1101111a1 hoiB'S on Monday .

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Among the repaus was a complete

Contrary to convenlional wisdom, mayonnaise is not a bad warm-weath·

r

Other changes at the pool include
installation of new chain-link fenc·
ing, repainting of the structure,
removal of the· wood frame slairs
which led to the top deck ofthe pool,
and replacement of the milin steps to
the pool deck with steel and concrete
steps.
Most recently. the Pool People of
. Pomeroy closed the joints running
around and across the bouom of !he
poOl with a synthetic sealer, replac;·

to fill the pool because the sealer had
to be wet before it would expand and
fill thejoints, Horton said .
·
"This time it filled in about 24
hours," he said.
· They stoned Tuesday around 4
a.m. and finished around 2 ·a.m.
Wednesda~. he said.
Around the bottom of the unusual above-ground pool, Honon
showed where water had leaked out
during attempts to fill it last year. The

•

' et' picnic food, and adding ilto salads does not increase !he risk of food poi-

~,

$1 oo·,ooo In renovatlona. Mayor Dewey "Mac"
HortOI\, above, polnta to one area - the drain
- that pre1ented problems during the renovation .

H t h #•d
th
0
0 .I ay wea er . . ,::===~~,.~~'::~~~·-~~=·~;~::;~ ;;:::~~~=~~~=~~
' ~-~r ~. ood sa ~et y· . many~·
~
ca. llS·-~
~ulation
0~
V'

A cold drink, a small plastic dish filled with water and then frozen, or a
freezing gel designed specially for keeping lunches cool all help keep food
cool and fresh.
'
. What foods are best for take-along picnic meals? Commercially precooked
: meats like corned beef and bologna are good choices, as are canned meat
; and poultry, whicb can be opened and eaten immediately. Other meats, such
as fried chicken, can be packed into a picnic basket, but only if kept cool.
Fresh, firm produce travels and keeps well, and washing_it well before
; , packing helps to remove soil you can see, as well as bacteria, viruses and
insecticides you can't.
·

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POOL TO REOPEN- For the first time alnce
1883, Middleport Pool Ia holding Wltllr and
ewaitlng the splashing antlca of IIWimmera. VIllage offlclala are hoping to reopen the pool on
Independence Day following mora than

spotsaredrynow, !epointed.

icals each year, with constant recir- years to seal sailing ships).
shape for
opening. We,dn&lt;OS·
and refiltering the water
The repair cost around $8,000, day found him and others stockin!( up
mthepool-savmg the vtllagemon- according to Honon.
ey over the
haul.
In the past it took about 48 hours on last minute supplies and cleaning.

Storm leaves
area outages
in Its wake
Meigs County residents might
have thought they were seeing Fourth
of July fireworks two days early as a
powerful thunderstorm swept through
the area Wednesday night, knocking
down trees and intenupling electrical
service.
Powerful lightning lit the night
sky and strong winds caused damage
to buildings and power lines, especially near the Gallia-Meigs county
line. A tornado, or a wind shear,
touched down in the Cheshire area,
causing lhe closure of State Route 7
in the Little Kyger community due to
71 trees being downed by the winds
from the Gen. James M. Gavin Plant
to Little Kyger.
Robert Dyer, director of Meigs
County Emergency Services, said
loday that a regulation National
Weather Service rain gauge used at
the EMS offices in Pomeroy reflect·
·ed a half-inch of rain last night, while .
a similar gauge in Syracuse showed
· that .4 inch ofrain fell there. .
Left in the dark Were 3,()()7 CUS·
tomers of American Electric Power,
formerly Ohio Power, affected by a
power outage at approximately 9 p.m.
That outage affected all customers
served by AEP's Pomeroy substation,
and was caused by a substation line
damaged by high winds.
Aboul I ,400 Columbus-Southern
·Power customers from Mason to
Camp Conley, W.Va., and Pomeroy,
Syracuse and Racine were also
affected.
According to Clarence Robson,
-AEPs district line supeFYisor, restor&amp;·
tion of service was hampered by trees
and the steeple of the Spillman United Methodist Church in West Colum·
· bia, W.Va., being wrapped up in power lines used by the Rutland substa·
lion.
Customers served by that substation , 69 in all, also experienced out·
· ages. Those CIISIODimllive in the area
from Bradbury to West Columbia.
Both CSP and AEP service was
restored at approximately 1: IS a.m ..
e•cept for power to 360 customers· ·
served by the Addison substation in
the Cheshirt ma. Their power was
back on around 8:30a.m. this morning, Ro.bson said.
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department reported to the Dexter
Road resideace of Robert Varian
after a tree falling on an elecqic line,
(Continued on Pllge 3)

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FIRE SCENE- Shown here are the remalna
of the Tareaa and James Eaklna residence on
Collegil Road, Syracul8. Mra. Eakins daahed

back Into lhe burning hoUM to rescue one of
her children In the early moming structure fire.

'•

Mother saves child from burning
Syracuse residence early today ·
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Amother's heroic action saved the
life of a 2-year-old girl trapjled in a
burning house in Syracuse early
today.
Acandle being used for light, after
a thunderstorm knocked out electri·
cal service to the area; apparently
slarted the blaze that destroyed the
Teresa and James Eakins residence at
1422 College Road, according to a
Syracuse Fire Depanment repon.
A neighbor, Pam Theiss, thought
the electricity was back on when she
first saw the glow of the Hames, but
quickly realized tbe one-story house
was on fire.

The family exited the burning
structure, witb Mrs. Eakins giving the
youngest child, I0-month·old Sarah,
to her husband before disappearing
back into the house for the next-toyoungest child, Tara, said Theiss.
She brok9 out a back window'and
passed Tara to a rescuer, stripped off
her buminirtop and then went out the
window herself, Theiss said.
·
Mrs. Eakins was transported by
the Syracuse· Squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
to Veterans Memorial Hospital 'in
Pomeroy for treatment of seconddegree bums to her atms. according
to the repon.

. The home was totally gutted.
After the fire was extinguished, about
the only thing left undamaged was a
pair of porcelain praying hands.
Left homeless were the Eakinses
and their two lxiys and three girls,
ages 12 years to I0 months.
Firefighters responded to the
scene around 12:20 a.m. and left
around 3:39a.m. The Pomeroy VFD
assisted with a pumper truck.
The children stayed with Theiss
until being laken in by a relative.
This was .the second fire for them,
Theiss said.
"They've got an awfully brave
mommy." shC added.
l

Lightning strike causes fire at Gavin
Lightnins struck a 25-foot !all · . morning lhat lightning struck 1he
step-up transformer at the Gen. James transformer on Unit 2 of the plant at
Gavin Plant in Cheshire, Wednesday approximately 9:20 p.m., during the
night, burnil)g for over two hours and huge storm thai hit the tri-county
causing extensive damage.
area.
In addition, during the course of
The hit caused the transformer to
fighting the fire, mineral oil con· catch fire, sending billows of black
tained in the transformer traveled by smoke into the air. Firefighters from ·
storm drain into the nearby river.
the plant brigade, as well as the MidPhil Moye, AEP Corporate Com· dlepon, Pomeroy and Gallipolis fire
munications spokesman, said this departments, battled the blaze for

·:

over two hours before bringing it
under' control.
.
Moyc said tl1e transformer containe~ mineral oil. whi,ch)Juring the
course of fighting the fire was lakcn
by storm drain into the river. He said
crews immediately set out to control
the spill by setting "booms" into the
water.
· Moyc said a team from th·e plant,
(Continued on Page 3)

�Thunclay, July 3, 1817

OHIO Wei1tllcr

•

ew ideas .o n race

The Daily Sentinel
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111 c-t..

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'114 1111-21••Fa .a4117

.£ .'

Alorton Kondracke

RCRCaiiiTLI~L~=-E111Ti
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ln short supply

IIIPI'i«*"* lleDCitowml a dt.cla- .make S33.SOO; black f-ms.
mion IIIII. .em:pt wban-prior' dis- .. $26,SOO.
crimiDalion can be ilcDwnstntled.
All Ibis is a fM: IllY from die Jituspecial prefcrences for minorities 8liOil in 1960, when a black wlle,e
·
.
pxi1111e made leH 1llan a white hip
sc®ol srac~ua~e. but 110111e numbers
remain dismal - IIOiably die fact lhal
42 perceru of black children Jive in
will nat pan &lt;:onstitulionaJ muster.
M llime. new .Qmsus Bureau poverty, compaed with If percent of
Whites.
•
fj~ 0111he black popu1alion indiCleady. if race-based preferw:nct(S
cate tlult. while sipifican1 progress
bas ..._, made, blacb 'and Whites an: 1111 their way out, meuure~ need
10 be tlktn 10 replace diem.
nmWn unequal.
The median persooal.income for option i• preferences based 011
all white Jld\lllli 6 520,900, but for povmy backJround. Anocber is speblacks it's $15,000. White high cial efforts to give poor people of all
sc.booJ dropouu 'make $11,700 • riCeS die education and training cbey
~ blat5101lr.e $8,900. While hiJb need lO compete equally,
'To 50lllC uteol, die federal it~•·
scbool •craduate' m* $17AOO;
emmeDI bas taken a 11ep iD cbe rip
blacb, $14,500.
Whites 'Wbc&gt; .-..! but don't fin. directi011 tbrougb die combination of
i&amp;b c:oJiegc mUc $22.SOO I year; cbe 1996 welf.-e reform law. Which
bllcks, $19;6)0. Ana whiLe cdJep: reduce• clepeQdency. and die $3 bil·
gaduau:s eilnl $35 ,500; bl~eks, boo oontail)lld in thi1 year '1 blldeet
apa:meii!IO help welfare recipienu
$29,000.
find
jobs.
llltemtiagly, the income diflerNo
one Should !OI'JCI, however,
emial bet•een males and females is
!bat
cbe
$3 billi011 to be spent on jobconsi."- nhly peaa- lhall bet •oe~~
fiNiiag
ow:r
five y. . is f.-leu than
bJa:ks ...d whites.
the
$27
billi&lt;a
in welfare balefltl thai
For eumple, while male ccUete
eam S4S~ .....mle. white are beins cut.
Moteover, ewm as die e~~Vemment
femalei make $27,000. Bid males

~-1348

one

··=·

HOSUCH

:,::~":':.::.:

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1111'
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Democrats, GOP vie
for tax-cut advantage
ltrTOIIIWMI
hu c'c

a',_ Ww'il
WASHINGTON - Wllile savcriDJ ¥iclory ill Jl'lt"l.llalC CIIU dlmucb

V""'·-

boC1J bcMes ofCoq: Ul, ,....,..,_ -l*''wf'.. &lt;:P1 iollily to dJe tieD
ata,e - with a clote eye oa public ~pOlk. 1'bey doe'~ . , . to Jd
-vemd.,.U. ·b yfr ai1WQinloD.
'
1be Replb.IX. N«imft! Commi'W .paid line GOPpalliBJ firms frw a
SVt:Yf:Y of vola' llliQI!IIl:l. Tile mutts 'were luldly ~to die .RNC:
Nearly half oft!QewYe)lod said IIIey belie'lllld GOPtuau -tu.ed

""'-•crP. die !tepuH¥

pulfllllllb- .

«is coi-.tobMetitdac. ,,,.. uicl&lt;ilaiBol.,:, ODe of die pollalcn.
1\e-* d
poll mi!CJw4 dQe d _
.. _
Jlllioo1l'ide ~in licK
iw,a wieldy beld view M GOP taX pl-. favored
dleafflueat.
For twi!:eW ~;, .,,, the lasllhin&amp; IIIey - i s for CliJib to
VetO cbe fiDa1 mCSFJIR ~ e•pected .... this se
, , . once
and $eo..
· a1e d i t f - are~
011CJ'I)U8ds of rewanliDJ die riciL
Thill would e!llib1e lbe paideol and CODJI'Ciaioaal Dtm» 11U to seize
lbe 1fiCiic31 hichJIOUIICI. as lbeydicl succ:emUIIyill lbe I99S-9610Yfii_. ·
Ululdowu ud ill political .~ over dinner idid.
"RepubliQN .., "'*ially will' of beinc ·IIICtaod 011 cbis - .•• uid
lhomlls £. ~. 4lfClCIOr d JO~ ~ at the Brootincs lllitiwti.oa. "Tbey willdoeY«)''hiDC IIIey thiak is neoe '"Y 10 JCl die pcaideal
w sip die bill, :Ibm cJaiJD .cmlit {or illllboria1 it."
·
l«piblican ~Slid oae 1esto11 from lbe fwco last iiiOIIIb ill wbidJ
Republicans rook die beat for delaym1 d i - aid was 10 .develop a ~
mlelll melUJe udtodrive it~.
The "'' n· - · • · whidl Rqlolblicul are rqJPa«ins ia loclt 51ep, is
!bat llreesquartm ot die ta1t CUill in die GOP plan would JO to lbole arainJ less IbM $70.000 a Y-·
NRC dNiirma Jim .Nidlokon uid in an inlerview .._.cbe inlentaJ OOP

ao.e

gaw.''

aalil. cbe pnllinc II!IIDI·
brn i!llprDv~. be uid.
" Those MyinJ cbe plan favored lhe rich dropped Jro111 48 patelll 10 26
~- Thirty_, penlMI said die OOP pile WOIIId taera cbe middle class,
up from 16 pm&lt;en~Wialhe q~u f~ Mbd: all!f 3611id il would
bmefa "everybody," up from 2.3 pacent, JlliclxJison said, ·
Slill, PUdloiJOII Nlid, Repuhlic:am mug wort lwd to ooac:oa.e cbe limOTheR is a mi5sing
in !he
type dial dley favor the rich. ''Thai's our cblllaJUnd !hal's our job," he
.
. .
.
sre*tobacco debate DIJW going on:
~.
P-R-0-H-l-B-1-T-1-0-N.
J!cmM i~ polls have alto ~fon;ecllhal ~ imace.
Why is die P-wC)rd taboo? In some
A USA Today/CNN/Qallup Poll 011 Tuetday lbowcd !hal people have
1arJe
measwe, it is a residul: &amp;urn our
JIIO{C j:DII(~ in Cli111011 lhln in !tepuHM;111110 IIMdle ta1te1 IIIII other
experience
with the conolitutional
ee,clllOIIIit: issues. llllhe poll. Sl pm:at llid cbe OOP plan favored dJe rich.
prohibition
of
alcohol from 1919to
AW.JI Slled Jour:nai/NBC News poll last - " 111&amp;1: sl.ed Americans pes
1933.
After
all
,
as we all know, Profcrred Democr.aic inpedieniJ for a tar. cut 10 lhe Republieaa plans by almost
hibition caused speakeasies, ganga Z. I ratio.
·
seers,
bathtub gin, murders in ChicaOn Monday, Clilllon olfeml ~ on rcdueinc fiiPilal pins and
eswe laJCeS -two 10p OOP priorilict- but dwpd lhe overall OOP planJ go. and anyway, Americans kept
right on drinking. We an: told that
.still favor atnuenllaJH)aym.
"prohibition doesn't work."
No politician wanu 10 wind up on die losiae aide of a tu-cut debale.
Wrong. HeR is what Mark Mcxn,
"In a siwation wbue a wr. cut does pass, anyone who opposed it can be
professor
of criminal justice at Harhurt more than anyone wbo voced for it," said pollaler Andrew Kohut Of die
vard
University,
rcpons about the
Pew ReN!IidJ Ceftler, ''Taxea ~Kn't popular, and if you'rw: _ , . obstnJcPr&lt;lhibition
yean:
American contionill and swimmiiiJ apinst die tide, it'a politically danccrous."
sumptian
of
alcohol
declined by 30
Jutt ask Republii:MI Oetqe Buth. His llbMdonment of his "Read my lips:
perceniiO
SO
percent.
Cinflosis death .
no new tnes" helped deny him a second tmn. Or former Va Prnident
!'lies
for
men
declined
by two-thirds.
Waller MOndale. Mondale'l JUIJellion in his 1984 c:onvention acceptance
Arrescs
for
public
drunkenness
and
speech thal .he would raiJC tileS if electe4 contribuled 10 Ronald Reapn's
"
disorderly
conduci
decreased
by
SO
re-ele&lt;:tion landslide.
·
percent.
II
figures:
Such
are
the
quite
Or even Clinwn, who took a hit from Republi&lt;:lftl for the $275 billion
logical results 'fmm making a prodlliX inereue in his 199~ bud,et. dlen IOOic it again from c:onpnsional Democrats for a 1995 IJ)Oioey at a fund-raiser for having "raised your taxes 100 uct much less accessible. This all
came about tttrougb a rather weak set
much.".
.
of
laws that did not pmhibit use or
Do Republicans think Clintan will be able wclaim credit for thia year's
production
for ont 's own consumpGOP-initiated lax cut?
tion
•.
and
gave
people a year 10 stock
"Sure," 1aid Rep.John Linder, R-Oa., chairman af the Nalional Republican Congessional Committee, which raiHI money for OOP House can- up before banning commercial man- .
ufacture and distribution.
didate&amp;. "He takes credit fiK everything."
During Prohibition, .violent crime
'
did
n()l increase, says Moore. OtgaEDITOR'S NOTE- TIIID Raum ro¥tn polltlcs IIJid aadoullllrain.
nized crime' II existed before and
for The AHOCiated " - ·
after Prohibitian. And what happened when Prohibition was
repealed? Alcohol consumptian
increased substantially.
Another reason prohibitian seems

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" Gewgaw" is aliiKISt all that ·
either party i&amp; civing die pi obkiJIS of ,
race and poverty in this p of mid-,·
dle-dass laJ. cuts. With"VIi'malive •
action ooits way out. they ne.lfto get -1
buiy doing better - and S\)011.
(Morton KoedncR is executive
editor of Roll Call, the I4A papeor,, .
of Capitol HIU.)

.

Alcohol consumption dropped during prohibition ·
wooJ

--'~

be out of die current dialogue
.elates 10 the lboupt that ciJaJellei
always. were, and therefore always
will be. Wrong .. According 10 Dr.

10

AIDerica are caused by cigarettes. er nutty scare story, an:n't quite:
Once called "coffin nails." cigarenes· ready to say what they really want···

cause 38 percent of cancer cases in
the United States. Cigarcnes an: the
leading cause of preventable blind'
ness , pancn:a!ic cancer and male
impplenc:e at ages over 60. Nearly
ElizabetliWhelan's book "A Smok- · 200,000 deaths per year from bean
ing Gun: How die American Tobac- disease a1e caused by cigareues.
co Industry Gets Away With Murda'" Cigarettes are a cause of colon can(Lone11111n Trade/Caroline House, cer and linked to metastasized brain
1984 ), tobacco has been around for a cancer. Cigarettes are often implicatJoog time, but cigan:ues as we now ed in kidney failure. The list coulll go
know diem wen: not an item of mass on and on. They a1e P-0-1-S-0-N.
If cigamtes didn't exist until relconsumption until alxMI915. Inter·
atively
recently, if prohibition worts,
eslingly, a major factor in dleir emergence was the advent of die pon.able if cigareucs are so hannful -- coold
safety maid!. Suddenly. using tobac- we un-exist diem? Why don 'I we at
co didn't involve fussing with pipes least talk about prohibition? ·
()I' cigars, which a1e nicotine-deliVery
Lots of 'folks think prohibition
systems not usually associated with would be tenible. Libenarians think'
inhalation of the weed. Mo.e inter- it's antilibenarian, and worry a.bout
esting is this: Cases of lung cancer an intrusive Nanny State. Plaintiffs'
were extremely rare before ciga- lawyei'S would lose their clients. Big
reues came alang. Professors in med- · Tobacco· would have 10 peddle its
ical schools would tell students that poison plants overseas. Federal, state.
if they heard of a case of lung cancer and municipal gavcmments would
.. go visit the patient quickly because have to find huge new soun:es of rev;
they wooldn'tlikely ever see anath- enues. SQCial Security would be
er.
harder to fiX because people would
The reason that prohibition ought Jive longer. Many politicians would
to be in the dialogue is health. Ciga- need new sources of cas)l. Smokers
rettes cause 4SO,QOO P-R-E-V-E-N-T- need the weed, although several tens
A-B-L-E deaths each year, according of millions have wisely stopped.
to U.S. government estimates. That's Fanners, .etailers and distributors
from intended use, as opposed to need the money. Advertising ·agencies
about 100,000 such deaths from need the commissions. Most conabuse or misuse of alcohol. Half of sumerists and environmentalists, prethe P-R-E-M-A-T-U-R-E deaths in pared to pump up just about any oth-

Ben Wattenberg

about cigarenes, even though they
cause more harm than all the olhcr :
stuff put together.
The argument is made that the:
govcrnment shouldn't prohibit private behavior which doesn't harm · :
mhcr people. But preventable pre- .
mature death deeply scars the souls. ·
offam'ily and friends. The argument· ·
is made that we ought to concentrate
on preventing teen-agers from smok- . ·
rng ciga.enes. But it is nmtecn-agers
who are dy1ng prematu.ely.
I am not (yet) endorsing a consti- ·
wtional amendment to prohibittobac~o.. There are plenty of cuts and pass- .
es m the argument. I do not favor the· .
prohibition of alcohol. I do not favor
the legalization of marijuana and oth-. •
er allegedly recreational drugs. I
have not seen plans f()l' various forms · :
of phased-in prohibition.
But it is prclly stupid to have a
huge national debate without talking
about the rhinoceros in the rcfriger-· ·
ator. Instead. we lalk about whether
Joe: Camel-is f~ir advertising, and
whether we should eliminate vending.
machines. If we want to decrease the
dying, we ought to increase the talk:
ing, about die P-wmds. ·
Ben Wattenbera,a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise lasti•
lute, is the author oi"Values Mal· .
ter Most" and is the host or the .
weekly public television Prolram
"Think 'lllllk."
~

.'

Boxer Mike Tyson becoming a joke
By TONY SNOW

.,.,_...... •

•

CHUMMING
J

•

Creltore Syndicate
WASHINGTON .; Mike Tyson
• has become what every .adult most
fears becoming: a joke. For the rest
af his life, no matter what he does,
1por11 fan will remember him not as
·die Greatest Boxer Ever or even
somebody who could have been the
Greatest Boxer Ever, but as die guy
who treated Evander Holyfield's ript
ear as snack food.
Tyson's bizarre behavior :•. he
chomped off a 112-by- I-inch chunk
of Holyfield's flesh during last Saturday night's heavyweight·tille lipt
-- set off a frenzy of invention. The
press dubbod him the "champion,"
described the televised fistfest as
"pay-per-chew" and labeled the ellchamp's traitsgression as a "sucker
munch."
While public men can recover

from just about every humiliation, the
Foraging Bull may have discovered
an e'l,ception that praves the rule. He
earned a place in history not because
of savagery-- afw all, we're talking
prafessional boxing here-- but for his
chasmic stupidity.
.
.In one I5-seeood spurn of lobenoshing, Tyso9 sunendered any last
hope of being taken seriously as a
fighter 6'r a human being, and committed an aci that stunned boxing
fans, who as a grpup are mole inured
than most to the varieties of human
sin.
Tyson seemed to grasp this
· instantly. The mament be was ·disqualified. his handleiS tussled with
Holyfield's and assorted dopes
climbed through the mpes to join th~
fun. Yet, dle.e amid it all, was.Mike
Tyson, young and washed-up, pawing
listlessly at cops and bystanders. It

was as if be were trying to make himself give a rip. But rather than proje&lt;:ting ferocity or passion, the exchamp looked like a man drifting
slowly and complacently to the bottom of the pool.
Afterward, he explained he went
denial because Holyfield had buned
him with die crown of .his head, opening a gusher of a gash in Tyson's left
eye. That move, Tyson said, put his
kids at risk.
·
Cowards aften use youngsteB as ·
foils, as Saddam Hussein pmved. Bu1
Tyson has been spending too much
time fondling girls and gelling into
brawls to qualify as Father of the
Year. ~~~ugh people naturally think
o~ their children when they get pink
shps. a ·boxer has other concerns
when somebody else's fist is
whistling toward his temple.
This macabre tale also has a

IND.

•IColumbual73• I

.

.

!

,,·

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)- About 200 workers are expected 10 lose
dleir jobs thi~ year 'when a Ravenswood Alwninum Corp. plant reduces its
Paul Baker•.81, ~Street, Syracuse, died Wednesday. July 3, 1997 at sheet metal pt'Qduction by one-fifth. company officials said.
die Sc:eai~ Hills Nursine Care Center in Gallipolis.
Ravenswood's parent company, Century Aluminium Co .. plans to alTer
He was born Aug. 12, I!liS in Gallia County, son of dJe We James and early .etiremcnlto about 300 eligible workers, said RavenswOOd President
Ann Baker. He was a tetired owner/opemtor of Baker &amp; Seiferd Heating and · and Chief Operating Otfrcer Gerald Meyers.
Air Conditioning, Syracuse.
Meyers said Wednesday the company is trying to avoid layaffs. but if too
He was married 10 Iris Romona Butcher on May 8, 1938, iii Kentucky, few workei'S take the early retirement, "we'd have to cross that bridge when
and she preceded him in death on Dec. 2, 1993.
we came to jt:•
.
\.,..
He is survived by tWo daughters and a san-in-law, Marjorie Ann Bake of
The cut is due 10 a product shift to sheet metal used for automobile radiJaclcson, and Lynne and Ron Brinker of Gallipolis; a son, James "Jim" R,oben aiOIS and to plate products used in the aerospace industry, Meyers said.
and Becky Baker of Fort Worth, Texas; a daupter-in-law, Sue Baker of Mid'l'hese products have better Jlll&gt;lit maigins than "lower-end" products such
dleport; and I I grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
as aluminum cans.
He was also preceded in death by two sons, Robert Carroll Baker and
Last year. Ravenswood announced plans 10 invest $28 million to increase
David Paul Baker; two sisters, Freda Henson and Rea Bales; and by a broth· plate-product autput, .esulting in 40 new jabs. Meyers said those hires may
er, David Baker.
.
still be made after die cuts.
Private graveside services will be held at the canvenience of the falilily
at the Reynolds Cemetery, Addison. Friends may call at the C.emeens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis on Saturday from ':'oon to 3 p.m.
(Contlnuacl from Page 1)
caught fire. FiielijlhteiS used a comas well as fmm the corporate office bination of water and a foam agent to
in Columbus; are at the fi.e scene extinguish the blaze.
Mabel B. Pickens, I OS, Pomeroy, formerly of Cliftan, W.Va., died Wednes- today to estimate the damage . .He
The AEP spokesman said the fm:
day, July 2, 1997 at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
added equipment near the trans- will not affect custamers even though
.A former seamstress, she was born March 30, 1892 in Broad Run, W.Va., fanner was also destroyed.
the ~nil will not be able to generate
daughter of the late William H. and Lovina Gosset Yonker. She was a memOhio Environmental Protection electricity. He said dleie a1e 19 major
ber of die Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church.
Agency and Coast Guard officials are · plants to feed electricity to the transShe is survived by several nieces' and nephews.
at the spill site, but Moye said he felt mission grid and when one plant canShe was•preceded in dealll by three brothers and two sisters.
there was "good containment" af the not produce, the .emaining 18 kick
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, spill.
m.
W.Va., with the Rev..Herbert Orate officiating. Burial will be in the Suncrest
Moye ·said the transformer is on
Maye credited both the plant and
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Friday.
the back of 1be'planUJnit2, and that volunteer firelighters for containI
there a1e three transformers per unit. ment of the blaze.
The transformers an: isolated by- lire
"Together they did an outstanding
walls and there wete no -employees job," he said.
Word has been received of the death of !JoiJlSE. "Rabbit" Waliers, 75, near the area when the transfonner
Moye said the firemen not only
ofT&amp;rpon Springs, Fla., formerly of Bashan, on Monday, June 23, 1997 at
had to banle the blaze, but work in
his residence.
the lightning, pelting rain and winds
He was born in Wahalla, S.C .. and was a retired foreman for the Florida
that had earlier been recorded at the
Power Ca.
plant at 60 miles per hour.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Anny during World War II and was a life Road to be closed
State Route 325 in Salem Town- ·
member af VFW Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains. He was also an active mem. ber of the Bashan Volunteer Fire Department. He was a Baptist, and a mem- ship will he closed Monday from 7
ber of die Narth Side Lodge 283 F &amp; AM in St. Petersburg, Fla., Scotlish a.m. to 4 p.m. to allow the State
Highway Deparunent ta complete
Rite, Valley of Tampa and Egypt Shrine Temple in T3Jllpa.
He is survived by two daughters, Bunny Bruce and Clydene Ackett, both bridge work.
af St. Petei'Sburg; a son, Danny Flinner of Gallipolis; two brothers, Fennan
andSkiMy; and two sisters, Sara F. Dobies and Kathern Mickler, all of Tar- Trustees to meet
The Sutton Township Board af
pon Springs.
Trustees
will meet in regular session
Funeral arrangements we.e under the direction of Thomas B. Dobies
Monday,
7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Funeral Home in Tarpon Springs.
Municipal Building.

Lightning strike causes

Mabel B. Pickens

Chan~e of rain ·m ay mar

celebrations on holiday
By The AIIOCietecl Pnlu .
:. It's liable to rain on your parade this Fourth of July.
It will be cloudy with shawers possible all day on Friday, die National
Weather Service said. And thunderstorms could happen in soudlem Ohio on
F'riday nipt.
. Highs 011 Friday will be mostly in die 70s.
· , 1be weather piciUR is brighter for the rest of the holiday weekend, forecasters said. Temperatures will be unseasonably cool and no rain is in .the
forecast fmm Saturday through Monday.
. The record-high temperature for this date at die Columbus weather stalion· was 101 degrees in 191 I while the recard low was SO in 1968. Sunset
tonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:08 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Moslly clear. Lows in the lower 60s. West wind around 10 mph.
Independence Day...Ooudy with a chance of showers. High ncar 80.
Chance of rain SO percent.

Land transfers.recorded
The following land transfers were ley to Patricia A. Elliott, Syracuse;
recorded recently in die affice of
Deed, Terry Brewer 10 Argyle and
Meigs County Recorder Emmagene Ricky Deeter, Lebanon;
Hamilton:
Deed, Barbara Shuler ta Jerry
Deed, William Don and ·Patricia Bentley, Bedford;
Grueser ta James and Marcella MayDeed, Jeancue Abrahamson 10
nl\nl, Letart parcels;
Linda Lee Becker, Salisbuiy, 80
Deed, Christopher T. and Pauline acres;
Wolfe to Jeffery L. and Jennie L.
Deed, B. F. and Iva P. UPIOn to
Dilcher, Letart;
Homer E. and Mary L. Cole, Orange,
Easement, Southern· Oluo Coal 3.361 acres; .
Deed, Dwight.and Eulonda Haley
Co.; Ohio Power Co. 10 WilminJton '
Trust Co., Calumbia/Salem parcels; to Dwight Haley Jr. and MarJe Haley
Easement, Garrett and Ruth Sr., Rutland;
· · Watkins to Columbus Southern Pow·
Right of way, Deidra K.· and
er. Olive;
Amos B. Cross Jr. to TuppeiS Plains·
Easement, Nonnan an.d Vera- Chester Water District, Chester;
Weber 10 CSP, Orange;
..
Right of way, Phillip D. and Rita
Easement, Harlan Ec and Karen Radford Ia TPCWD, Chester;
M. West to CSP, Orange;
. Right of way, Richard M and
Easement, Dale E. and Marlene Shirley J. Friend ' ta TPCWD,
Harrison 10 CSP. Bedford;
Chester;
Easement, Mllljorie E. and Albert
Right of way, Roscoe and Sandra
C. Tromm to CSP. Bedford;
J. Mills to TPCWD, Sutton;
Easement, Billy T. Dailey to CSP,
Right af way, C. Thomas and LinOlive;
da V. Hamm to TPCWD, Sultan;
Right of way. C. Thomas and Lin·
Easement, Rick and Paula
Chancey to CSP. Salisbury;
da V. Hamm to TPCWD, Suuan;
Right of way, Ray W. Johnson 10
Easement, Chad N., Charles,
Krista and Margaret Sinclair to CSP, TPCWD, Sutton;
Orange;
·
RiJhl of ·way, D.excl C. ·and
Easement, Bruce D. and Elizabeth Panhenia L. Vance ta TPCWD; SciA. Johnsoo to CSP, Lebanon;
pio;
,.
·
Easement, ·Randall L. Roberts,
Right of way, Francis and Mary
Audelle and Norman McCain. Judy Kibble to TPCWD, Orange;
Right of way, Randall and Judy
Roberts to CSP. Chester;
Easement. Ge01ge D. and Dalla D. Roberts, Audelle and Norman
Weddle, Odessa Proffitt to CSP, McCain to TPCWD; Chester;
Lebanon;
.
Right of way, limothy L. and
Easement, Karen S. and Philip H. Crystal L. Curtis to TPCWD, Orange;
Werry to CSP. Chester;
. Right of way, Anthony and Linda
Easement, H.W. and Shirley G. Westjohn to TPCWD, Orange;
Belt to CSP, (.ebanon;
Deed, Ronald W. Vance to limoEasement, James A. and Donna J. thy and Sharon Diana Gabbert, Olive;
CrumptoCSP.Chester;
Deed,Aud.eyM.GioydtoMamie
Deed, Bernice K. Saxton to Craig Dawn Harmon, Salem;
T. Chapman, Pomeroy;
Deed, Bradley B. Johnson to Mark
Deed, Ricky A. and'AiisaA. Find- Mcxn, Bedford;
Deed, Charles and Faith D. Pennington to same, Salisbury;
Deed, Lowell D. and Bonnie Sue
The
Se.,.tinel ChevaJier to Kenneth W. R,ussell,
(USPS liJ.9M)
Olive.

Daily

PubH~ evny afternoon.· Monday lhroulh
Friday. Ill Court St., Pomeroy. OhiD. by 1he
Otlio Valley Publishing COI'I'fW'yiOaooeu f:o .•
""""""· Oh;o •3769. Ph. 992·2156. Se&lt;ood
dad poMIIC pAid Ill Pomeroy, Ohio.
.

Member: The Auodaced Press. And lhe Ohio
Newspepct AsM&gt;Ci:lliOil

POSTMAS'I'ER: Send t~ddr~" comclion• to
The D.aily Seflrinel. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy.
Otrio 4l769. ·

piquanllpoignant side . .Contrnry to.
popular opinion, Tyson is not a fool .
-- an untriggcred bomb, yes, but not :
a moron. He has studied boxing and
its lore more closely thnn perhaps any
champion in history. He can name all ·
the previous champ11ms and give a
quick precis of theirtactics and light· .. ,
ing styles.
•
For more than two decades, the · :
kid has tri,:d to intim.idatc the world · · •
into acknawledging his lists and his •
brains. He k~ew wh'al he was doing . :
when he entered the ring without a : ;
mouthpiece. He was trying to get dis- , ;
qualified.
•
He also knew what he was doing '
Monday afternoon, when he striod '
before the press and delivered an
abject apology fllf his spontaneous
cannibalism: "I expect ... a se~ere
penalty," he said, "and I am here
today to say I will not fight it.
·'

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Ravenswood plans
to reduce work.force

Paul Baker

other-·

I

p~···-·..,
Wbea 11M:* Sllr\'eyed were Biven more infOI'DIIIion on cbe COIIteaiJ of

!he OOP propou~. IIICb "" iu SSQO-per-dlild w

tarJdl $3 billion Cor~ reApir
eoiJ, it is euui11 S:J biJIQI ft- . .
1993 empowerment ZOlle P'C'IIM,
effectively elimillllinc it.
En!MJrise zones were 1 R.cpubtican idea for tarJCiin&amp; tax beaefiU •
lOW-iiiCOIIItC IRIS. The ide~! picbd up·by Clintoli, and 105no\v exist. ineludine some l'lhllloasly succ:euful cines like Pdroit's.
where the 11110 induilry is rcbuildiaJ
(QniiCI' wastelands.
However, anocher 41 5 Mielthrourh the empowerme11t Z.ollie
applicllioo proceil, whidl involwd
extensive poverty-area ecoaomic
~velopment planninr. but were
exl:Juded for Jack of money.
Many anticipated inclusion tm,
yeu, but opposition from the Treasury Deplnment. wltic:h contends
!bat bmb for poverty areu simply
cause businenes 10 leave
scDII::hed lhe propam.
Ointon'• ~te wu a $2 billion "brawnf.elds" iniliative,
designed 10 reclaim pollulod iDdus: :
.trial IIU( , some in poverty neiJbborhooch. The proJTUI made it
throup the budset aereement •
process, but no1 in "protec:ted* - . .
oo it was elirninalCd &amp;urn die House's
budJet package and slashed 10 $241
milli011 in the Senate' s.
President Oinwn complaisled
about die cuu in his speecb 10 lhe
. U.S. Conference of MayOB iJn JuDe
23, but die direct()!' of the American ·
Asoociatioil of Enterprise Zones,
Richard Cowden. says Clinton ~
"ihedding crocodile .tear('......... rse · '
he failed to protect die
Moreover, Cowden points 0111,
die Republicans' supposed new alaernllive poverty-fightins measure. die
community .enewal initiative liJ'Oft' .
sored by Rq&gt;s. lC. Watts (Okla.),and
Jim Talent (Mp.), is going ~ .
fast.
"Congress will hold hearit(gs 011 '
it in die fall," Cowden said i'! an oped piece, "but die fact that it1was not .
considered imponant enough to ..
reserve room · for it in die budget·,
agreement is a dead giveaway that it'
is intended pu.ely as political sew-.

JIIUti•"-

llle-..,

... - ·

MICH.

.

toward die rieb.
·~·s ddlllildy - - .. .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrin' Dl' Mo&amp;or Routt

g: =-~:::.:: : : : : : : : : :::::::::::::::::;;!!:5
SINGLE COP\' PRICE
Doily ..................................................,.35Ccnu
SubKriben 110t ~iring to I'IY dM! .currier ~)'
remit in advance dirm to ~ Daily .suuncl
on a three. u. or 12 lt'IOfl~ buis. C~1 will be
a,iven Cllriereac:h week.
No Aub.criplion bf ~il ~.tted In areal ·
when: home cllrier ICMte II IVIIIIabte.

Publilhet re~~eJWs lhe riJhtto adjast rait. dur·
lnJihl' a~b~ription period. Subscripd~a raiC
· ch111JC5 ·may be implemented by chan&amp;~ns lhe
durltioll ·or lhe •ubscripbon.

Mt,ll·
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~=:::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::: : : : : ::::m:~
52 -

....._.......................................SIO:!.~
--r.s.~pc--,

~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
52 -

............................_ .. ._ .........$109.72

Stocks
Am Elt Power ...................42 718
Akzo .....................:............61 314
AnirTeeh .........................69 5116

"'hland on ..................";.. 48 318
AT&amp;T .............................35 13116
B•nk One ........................50-1/16
Bob Ev•n• .................... ~.17 5116

Borg-W•,.,., ...........................54
Champion ...............................17
Charm Shpa ...................... 5 t/16
City ttoldlng ......................33 318
Federal Jllotlul ...................34 518
G1111nett ......................... 105 7116
Goodyear .......................... 63 1/4
Kmert.......................................f2
Landi! JEnd.......................2119116
Ud. •..........: ......................20 3116
oa: Hill Flnl ............................20

OYB ...................................38 112

OM V•lley...... - ................ 411/4
Ptoplea ···-····~-· ...............35 1/4
Pram Flnl-.......................... 17 314
Rockwell ............................ 58 1/4
RD-SMI ............. ~···-~····5615116
Shoney'a ...................................6

Hollis E. 'Rabbit' Walters

AnnQuncements

EMS units answer 8 calls ·

Units of die Meigs County EmerCOLUMBIA VFD
.
gency Medical Service recorded eight
10:07 a.n1., State Route 143, eleccalls for assistance Wednesday. Units trical fire, no injuries.
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
CENJ'RAL DISPATCH
• 9: I 5 p.m., volunteer !i.e depanI: 14 a.m., Stiversville Road, Port- "menl and squad to SR 554, possible
land, Randall Conga, rw:fused treat- structure lire at Josh Markins resiment;

To be observed
.
An open house will be held from
Ito 3 p.m. Sunday at the Burlingham
Modem Woodmen .Hall l&lt;5 honor
Ralph (R.E:) Douglas an his 94th
birthday. Friends and family an:
invited to allend.

dence, no injuries;
9:43 p.m., VFD and squad to
Gavin Power Plant, transformer fire,

11:13 a.m., Pinetree'Drive, Tuppers Plains, Myrtle Craft, treated at
the scene;
. I 2:40 p.m., Fourth Street, Middleport, Mick Miller, Holzer Medical
Center;
.
I 0: 10 Country Mobile Home
Park, 01\rWin, Ann Griffith, treated at
lhe scene.

Scoll Walton, VMH.
·
RUTLAND
9:19p.m., VFD and squad to Dexter Road, Robert Varian residence,
smoke odor, Salem Township VFD
assisted.

Collapse calls company's
safety record into question
The company was fined $33,000
KENOVA, W.Va. (AP) - 1be
Grove City, Ohio, company wprking in the Kanawha County death.
Mahan Construction President Jeff
oo an Interstate 64 bridge that col. lapsed and killed two workers has Mahan refused to comment Wedneshad four fatalities in bridge projects day about the campany's safety
record.
in the past 10 months.
The company began work on the
C.J. Mahan Canstruction.Co. specializes in bridge work and handles 1-64 pmject in March.
The accident occuned on the eastjobs in Ohio, West Virginia and Kenbound side Of the bridge on the West
lucky.
·
The latest fatalities occurred Virginia-Kentucky border. Traffic in
Wednesday. C.ews were remaving a bath directians already had been
.100-ton beam with twa cranes when diverted to the westboUnd side of the
bridge.
another beam came loose and fell.
Workers below had only moments
The weight toppled one of the
to
scatter.
crane's booms, sending two --:orkers
crashing I00 feet ta their deaths.
Two other workers were injured
when they were thrown from the
beam to the bank of the Big Sandy
River 65 feet below, said lim Perry ·
of l,he U.S. Coast Guard afficc in
Huntington.
Last October, a company worker
fell 80 feel to hts death from ajmdge
in Kanawha County. !hat same
month, anather worker d1ed when he
fell 120 feel at a Logan County canstrucllon " 1• ·

·RIVER BEND TANNING
AND PARTY SIJPPLIES
992-4295
(Localed In Minersville AdJKint to Brown'el'rllller Park)

• SIIJOfD TANNING SPJ:CIAI.S •

15 VIsits for '20.00
(Muat be purchued •nd UHd by Auguat 31, 1997)

•unlhaltetl Tan•l•l throu1h Septe•h•r 30, 1997
for 160.00
NEW SUMMER HOURS
Monday-Friday 9:00 am-6:00
Saturday 9:00 am-3:00 pm; Sunday Closed

ORAND OPENING TO BE HELD JULY 19, 1997
(Watch newspaper for details on drawings, door prizes,
. give-aways and storewide savings)

LET US HELP YOU IAIE YOUR PARTY A SUCCESS
«:heek oat our ~~eleetlon of liuppllea for Weddlnp.
. Analvel'llllriM, alrthdayN, Showers,
Gartllen and &lt;:artll «:lu.... or any celebratl-.

1111111 B••ll••h
lftlll.ll ftr 1ll
111111111 ,

.lily It Blrtii••Y M1etlll
C1111 Ia 11il rHIIft 10% Off 111 8lrtU1y
Seppll11 ••rl•l til• 1111tll ef J•ly

Storm leaves

(Continued from Page 1)
creating a smoke odor.
The Middleport VFD responded
to Liule Kyger Raad in Cheshire
where a tree fell on a house owned by ·
Inn an Bales, resided in by Josh
Markins. No injuries were reported in
oither-incident.

Hospital news

Pomeroy, OH 45769

42976 SR 124, Suite A ·

/

Holzer Mledkai Center
DJscbaraes July l - Do11ald
Thacker, Mildred Perry.
Birth - Mr. and Mr.&gt;. Gregory
Sias, son, Bidwell.
(Published with penuission)

Actions to end
marriages filed

The following actions to end mar·
riage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar~ Blink .... ,.............44 311 3116
IY Spencer:
·
WOI'UIIngton ...........- ........ 18 1/4
Dissolulians grimted - Delmas
Stock reporta •• the 10:30 Goff and Carol Goff, June 16; John
a.m. quote. provided by AdYHt William Krider and Mildred Ann
of Qelllpoll..
Krider, June 18; Melanie Rae Rife
. and Charles Stanley Eugene Rife,
l!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!l June 23.

-·-·-

•

�•
Thursday, July 3, 1997

Sports

.

'

..JJ. •

Reds record 7-4
win over Brewers
in finale of series
.

By JOE KAY .

CINCINNATI (AJ')- Manager
Ray Knight spent thnee m011ths vain·
ly trying to get the best out of !lis
Cincinnati Reds. The Milwaukee
Brewers did it in just three days.
The Reds reached one new height
after another during a visit by the
American league's worst road team.
A7-4 victory Wednesday completed
the Reds' first three-game sweep of
the season, the final breakthrough in
a series full of them.
The Reds also got their ftrst com·
plete game of the season, their first
seven-run inning and the first hit in
three weeks by Brei Boone during
the interleague ·series.
J
'"They just happened to come in
j ~re when we got everything going
~ - al the Sl¥fle time," Knight said.
• ''That hadn't happened yet this year.
! We haven't pitched or rut or played
; defense at the·same time all year."
i
It's not a coincidence that it hap~ pened against the Brewers, who fall
apart when they leave Milwaukee, County Stadium. The Brewers are
• 12-30 on the rond, having lostl5 of
1 their Jastl9 away from home.
j "It gets worse, doesn't it?'' man·

j

ager Phil Gamer marveled. "Same
old .story. We struggled again. My
favonte word (to describe it) is discombobulated."
For the Reds, the only downside
to the series was the crowd. The
Reds offered half-price reserved
seats to try to stir interest, but aver·
aged only 22,999 per game, a typical gate. Heading into the series, they
were averaging 22,751 per game.
It proved one thing: c;incinnati
fans will turn out to see the likes of
Albert Belle and Frank Thomas, but
not the Brewers. A series against the
Chicago White Sox from June 13-15
averaged 33.343, . the Reds' bestattended home series this season.
Ani! there were no discount tickets
for those games.
·
.faus were &amp;realed to something
rare on Wednesday: Boone getting a
hit.
With the score tied 1-1 and runners on second and third with two
outs in the fourth inning, Boone
'l:amc to the plate in the worst skid of
his career. He was O.for-26 and had
not gotten a hit since June 11.
Ben McDonald (6-6) served up a
(See REDS on Pace 5)

'

l.
Florido .................. .49
Mon1real .............. 46
New York ............ ,.45
l'tliladclphia ...........23

.AL standings
.

ll! L rd.

Baltimore ............... S:\
New Yofk .............. 46
Toronlo ...... ., ..........JS
Decroit ................... 38
Boslon............. ,......37

l7 .662
35 ..568
41 .41U
.-2 .47!\

•s

.4~1

!il

•

•

s•..
7
IJ

/nter/eague

•

.

I

" . •.

-

~ .""'-:-:~'

j;}. . .

REACHES FOR THROW- Cleveland ahortltop Tony Fernandez
,..ci!H for the thr- from the platlaa Houaton'a Jeff llegwlllslklla
Into MCond baae during Wedne&amp;41y nlght'a game In Houlltol'l, where
the A1troa won 11-2. (AP)
r
.

Fifth-inning rally
pushes Astros
past Indians 6-2
By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) Mike
Hamplon got what he wanted from
the Cleveland Indians. and then he
took a little more.
Hampton won his fourth straight
home game and hit a two-run triple
in a five-run fifth inning, leading the
Houston Astros to a 6-2 viclory over
the Cleveland Indians on Wednesday
night.
Then, he wen&lt; for his first com·
plete game in a year.
"Against a team like that,• you
want to give your team seven innings
and come out with the lead, but then
you get greedy,'' Hampton said. "I
wanted to finish. I knew ifl gave up ·
one more hit, Wags (reliever Mike
Wagner) would be out there."
Hampton he!ped the Aslros •·
offense too. His fifth·inning triple
shot through ihe infield past shanstop Tony Fernandez and roll.ed all
the way to the left·field wall .

"I knew the outfield would be
playing me in so I ran hard 'out of the
bo&gt;," Hampton said. "I run wilh my
head bobbing and my eyes are blur:
ry but you know if you can. make it.
I did il on my own judgment."
· The Indians' Sandy Alomar
extended his hitting streak to 28
games, longest in the major leagues
this season and the second-longest
for a catcher in major league history behind Benito Santiago's 34game streak in 1987.
" He 's a very talented player and
he 's got alol of confidence going for
him ," Indians manager Mike Har·
grave s~id. "Yo~ get those two
things in combination and you'll sec
••citing things happen. I'm happy
for him."
Alo111ar went 3-for-4 Wednesday
night and is batting .426 with 15
RBis in the streak.
But the Astros were ready for this
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

(Rial&gt;&lt;; ().I) 01 Sail

().()), 10:0' p.m.

PalrM:k Ewin~: ton four-yc:ar ~:nfttr.K:I.

6

INF Cnia Shiple)' from lhe IS-day disabkd lilt . Optioned INF Jorp: Velandillto
l...u Veju of ttw hcific Coolr Leuaue.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : Op·

NEW YORK kNICKS : SiJncd C

PHOENIX SUNS _ Re-:roigned C-F

for all your party and Lottery needs

Mart Bryanr to ~ lwo-yenr i!Mink:l.
·
~AN ANTONIO SPURS: Re- ~i~raed
G ~very Johnson In n lhrce· year~-a•tracl.
TORONTO RAPTORS: Re-siJned F

TONY'S CARRY OUT

Wah Willilml.
W~SHINGTON

WIZARDS: Silrted

Chud. Dot!&amp;la.&lt;~. dtrc-ctor of rkl)'a' pcraon·

nel. tu 11 lwv-)'C41' contr.acte•tensioo.

Mill St.

tioMd RHP D:lD Clrhun to Phoeni1 or

Middleport
992-2929

Our Line Up:

Kanawha Valley

/JtagwayPat~ Inc.
~

Friday'• ca....

. .

Chica.o Cubs (Mulholland S-9) at

Phi !adelphi:~ (Ruffcorn 0-:21. I :0~ p.m.
PlttsburJ.b !Cordova 6--!H Dl Sl. Louis
(An.Benes 6-)), 3:05p.m.
.

4th~July
·• 2 Days.of Racing·

CINCINNATI IMorpt 2-~) at Hoos·
ron (Gmene 0.0), 7:~ p.m.

Allanra (Brock

(~z S.S&gt;. 7::ts p.m.

Florida ILcJter

0 ~ 0)
7 - ~)

a( Montreal

111 N.Y. Meu

(Reed S-4), 7:«&gt; p.fll.

Los Anacles (AJtac:iu ( :7) 1U San
Diega (Jack1011 1-6). 9:0!li p.m.
Colorado (Wriaht4-4) ar S111 Fl'lln&amp;.'ia..:o (Cnnlnerii·•U. IO:M p.m.

Tran sa ction s

fnuw:ii&lt;O

llaRball

Lot Ansck• (Noma 7-7) at Anlheim
(Watton 7-4), 10:~ p.m.

Friday's games

Minncta~a (SieWtll 0-l) at MilwAUkft
(Kirl:!-9). J:O.&lt; p.m.
Baltimore {Bod:te 4-3 aad Muulu
1~1) at Dm'oir (Oilvara ~~and TlKlql1011&amp;-6. Z.~ : ~p .m .
Bolton (Suppan 2-0l 111 Olicaao While
Soa (AIYIRI7--6). 7~ p.m.
·
~WJa~ aoy (Rooado 7-4) " CLEVELAND (AndmoD 2-ll. 7:&lt;r.l p.m.
N.Y. Yontees (Cone 8-3)' lll Toronto

(Guz"""' J.~). 7:05p.m.

auia~~~:d

Seall e (Lowe 2· 3) at San Dieso
tHitchco&lt;:k ~5), 9:0S p.m.
Oakland (Ri&amp;f&gt;y 0.1) Ill San FranciM:o
tCreelo: 1)..()), IO:OS p.m.
Los Anp:a (Nomo 7-7) at Allaheim
tW:uson 7...(), IO:OS p.m.

H), 7:0!1 p.m.
N.Y. Yllllkeel (Wells 8-4) at Toronto
(W. ~illianas :vn. 1:35 p.m
.
Boston &lt;Scle 9-6) at Chic:AJO Wh1te
So• (Or.ll:let. 6-S).Il:&amp;.ii p.m.
Colorldo (Ritz 6-7) 11 Tcau {Oliver 491. 8 : J~ p.m.
Seattle ~Lowe 2·)) II Saa DleJD
IHilehco&lt;k !\.~). 9:0!1 p.m.

·

o.tlluMI (Konay 2-7) 11 Te141 (HUI +
5). I :Jl p.m.
Seaule (Johftlol 11-2) at Anaheim (0.
Sprina~4-2), 10:0:5 p.m.

NL standings
.... -

10

G Teny ~hrR . Renoolll't!d t~ ri8hll to

C Dwayne SchintUus.

the contract of OF
Ward Calpry
of the Pacific Coat!
gue. Dcaicnutcd
Of Mtdn'i
ror aui&amp;ntnl!nt.
SAN DIEGO PADRES : Actintcd

Friday, july 4th·
10 am untll 10 pm ..

BasketbaU
NacJGul a.kdhell .-\110datkJn
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS: Wai~

NEW YORK METS : Si&amp;J'Cd LHP
~flrey Goetz nnd SS Mart Proctor :UMJ

them to the Mets ur 1he Gulf
Coast l...enJue.

will be open

the Pac.:lfh: Coatt L..ea,&amp;ue: Rc.:;lled LHP
Dou&amp; Crcd. from Phneni 1..
,

4-9), 8:J5f..m. .

Minnesota (RacUtt 9 -~) IU Milwau•ee
(0' Amico 6-;\), .1 :~ p.m.
Bakimo~ (Key 11--4) .at Detroit (Ura

r..

4~

Tonight's cames

Houston 6. CLEVELAND 2.
St. l..ouis 2. Minnetotll (10)
Toronto 7. M0n11rnl 6 ( 13)
Soo Dicao 8. Scaulc 5
Lot AD&amp;elcl ~. Anaheim 4

Oak)....

San Fmncisco ........47 )6 .566
Colorado ................43 41 .512
lAR Anscln ........... 41 42 .494

Chicaco Cuba (Gonzalez 4-2t at
Pllibdelptlia (Schilling9-7), 7:0S p.m.
Atlanta (Smaltz 7 -7) at Mon1real
( BullinF. S-7), 7:JS p.Jil. ·
Aorido (Hernandez I .OJ~ N.Y. Mcts
&lt;Reynoso 6-1), 7:40p.m.
P1t1sbur1h CLoiUw 5-5) ill St. Louis ,
(Valenzuela 2-10), I :OS p.m.
CINCINNATI (Smile:)' 5-10) at Hous·
ton (CNJn;.ia 3-6). 1:05 p.m.
Colorado (Ritz 6-7) at Te1.u tOiiver

Tt!IUII 9, Colorado I
Florida 3. BotiOft 2

(~

INF Ale• Arias from the l~day disabled
list. Sent INF Owi1 Klapinsb lo CharJoue
or •""= lntcrrwtional Leaaue.
MONTREAL EXPOS: Recalled JB
Doug Srruge from Onawa of the lnttma.
tiona! Lcaauc. Optioned INF Jn~ Vidftl
10 0ttnWil

1
2
5
7\

M

Today'• games

!

30

.432

au..,.

'

.S49
.184

.4~

Baltimore 10. "lilldelphla 6
Oakland 8. San FranciJCO I
p;ou~uat&gt; J.
Wloite So• 1

.

37
58

7'•·
K'~

San Oicao .............. 37 46 .446

(ALYLNL)

..''

.Stil

J
5
6

CINCINNATI7, MilwMikc 4
Detroit 9, N.Y. Me11 7
Atlanl:a 2.1( Y. Yanlccl 0
Chic~~&amp;&lt;l Cubal. Kon~a~ City 1

"

·.'

Ttcen 9, Meta 7

Detroit pounded · three more
bomers against New York, giving the
Tigers a total of 14 in their threegame sweep of the Mets.
Tony Clark hit a homer - his
21st - off the Tiger Stadium roof,
while Damion Easley and Melvin
Nieves added homers. The 14
homers were two shy of the record
for home runs over three consecutive
garnes: The Boston Red Sox hit 16
over three games in.l977.
Willie Blair (5-4) went five
innings plus for the win, while Dave
Mlicki (4-7) was the loser.
Cubs 3, RoyUI l
At Wrigley Field, Sammy Sosa
drove in two runs with his 17th
homer and an RBI groundout and ·
Kevin Foster (10.5) pitched 6 1/3
strong innings as Chicago won its
first three-game series of the season.
Kevin Appier (6-6) was the loser.
Orioles 10, Philles 6
President Clinton showed, but left
before Jeff Reboulet snapped a tie
with a three-run double in the seventh that carried Baltimore to its
sweep of Philadelphia at Camden
Yards.
Scott Rolen hit two homers and
Ruben Amaro and Mike Leiberthal
also homered for the Phillies, who
have lost a season-high nine straight
and 17ofl8.
Arthur Rhodes (5-2) was the winner; Jerry Spradlin ( 1-4) the loser.
MarliDs 3, Red Sox :Z
• Felix Heredia struck out Reggie .
Jefferson with the bases loaded in the
seventh to preserve Florida's second
win in the lhree-game series at Fenway Par1&lt;.
Heredia replaced Kevin Brown
(8-S), who allowed eight hits in 6 I·
3 innings. Robb Nen pitched the
ninth for his 24th save. Tom Gordon
(S· 7) was the loser. .·
The Marlins scored their runs in
the third on two walks, a two-run
single by Edgar Renteria and an RBI ·
single by Gary Sheffield.
Bl•e Jays 7, Expos 6
At Skydome, Joe Carter ended an
O.for-16 slump with a three-run ·
homer in the . fifth and then gave
(See INTERLEAGUE on Pap 5)

Tony's Carry ·Out

PriTSBURGH PIRATES: Pun:h"""

· Wednesday'siCOI'es

~

36

.494
.468

WntcrnDhiMn
Scank ....................48 JS .578
Anaheim ........... ..... 42 40 .n2 .
TeiUUI .......................0 41 .494
Ooki:UKL ...... ........ J&lt;&gt; 49 .42)

'.•.
.,

4'~;&gt;

Wnlml Dlvltlan

11

Ctollnlllli-

a.iClllo..................40 41
Mil•.uw .............n •2
KIWU Cily ........... 36 4~
Minnrsota .. ............3:\ o46

.S91!

Pinaburlh ..............J9 43 .476
CINCINNAn ........ J6 ., .419
Cbjc:aao .................. 34 49 .410

7\
'"'·:
15

Cl.EVELAND .......41 l6 .5J2

.U

Crntnl Dlvhlon
S1. Louis .: ..... ,........41 41 - ~
Houaron .................41 43 .48R

&amp;lllcrn INv.._

Iaa

.

the World Series at Yankee Stadium
last season, faced only 28 battersone over the minimum -and threw
88 pitches - 65 of them for strikes.
Chipper Jones had an RBI single
off Dwight GOoden (3-1), and Ryan
Klesko homered in the sixth.

Scoreboard

"•'

l

By The AAociNd P,...
Talk about power ... Mark MeG·
wire has it even when he doesn' t
think he has iL
McGwire became the first player
to reach 30 home runs this .season
when he "shanked" a low outside
pitch from Kirk Rueter into the right·
field stands in Oakland's 8- I victory over the San Francisco Giants on
Wednesday.
.
Backed by a 10 mph wind at
3Com Park, the ball shot into the
seats as McGwii'e became only the
lOti! llll\ior league player to reach 30
· homers by the All-Star break - and
just the second to do it twice. Willie
Stargell was the other.
•
.
"He's as strung as Paul Bunyan,"
Giants manager Dusty Baker said
after the teams who met in the earth·
quake-interrupted 1989 Worid Series
played their first regular-season
game. "Only he and Paul Bunyan
could do that."
McGwire's three-run shot high·
lighted a six-run f~ inning and was
. his 359th horner, movinc him into a
tie with Johnny Mize for 43rd place
on the career list. ·
"It was a golf swing that would
have been a shank," said McGwire,
who in 1987 had 33 homers by the
All-Star break and finished the sea·
son 111ith 49. "When I hit it, it just got
into the jet stream and took off."
McGwire was an All-Star hit, too,
on Wednesday. AL manager Joe
Torre chose two first basemen as
reserves- McGwire and Chicago's
Frank Thomas- as the teams filled
out their rosters.
.
In other interleague games, it
was: Atlanta 2, New York Yankees 0;
Detroit 9, New York Mets 7; Chicago Cubs 3, Kansas City 2; Baltimore
10, Philadelphia 6; Florida 3, Boston
2; Piusburgh 3, Chicaso White Sox
I; Texas 9, Colorado I; Toronto 7,
Montreal 6 in 13 innings; St. Louis
2, Minnesota I in fO innings; San
Diego 8, Seattle S; and Los Angeles
S, Anaheim 4.
Scott Spiezio added a two-run
homer in the A's big fifth. Dane
. Johnson (2..()) was the winner with
two innings of scoreless relief.
Rueter (S-3) took the loss. ·
Braves 2, Yankeea 0
Greg Maddux (II-3) pitched a
three-hitter as Atlanta won its second
· straight against N~w York after a Joss
in the opener of the three-game
series at Yankee Stadium.
Maddux, the loser in Game 6 of

-DI~

ll L rd.

......... ., ........ 54 29 ·.6.'11

Ia

•

A-Lnpt
A,NAHEIM ANGELS; PJik:cd RHP
M1ke JIHTlCS on Ihe I' · da)l dil abled hsl.
Rculled C Todd G~nc rrom Vancouver

or the PCL.

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Claimed
orr wni~ers from
Kauu City and desianatecl him ror u ·
sipmen1.
NEW YORK YANKEES, Opfioned
OF S1:00 Pole to Colull'lbus or lhe lnrernatlonol Lea1ue. Acrivatcd OF Bernie
William~ from the l:kSay dilllbaed lj1t.
LHP Casey Wbiuen

11JH:UHP
j~arJf!

COLORADO ROCKIES: Recalled
Jt,HP Ja~y Wriaht frem Colorado

Sprinp of !he heific C04&amp;1 ~­

FLORIDA MARLINS: Acirwoted

To Win
- Featuring-

HIGH WINDING·GEAR JAMMERS

Heads Up Racing
PLACE
,.J.5Q7

12 miles South of Henderson

'

(675-6760)

us Rt. 35 Southside, wv

••

Picking up at 6-4, 4-2 against
Korda, Sampras appeared headed to
a StraiJht-set win when he quickly
finished off the second set. But Korda fought back to win the next two
sets in tiebreakers, saving two match
points in the third. After winning the
sets, he celebrated by doing scissor
kicks.
·
Sampras broke in the first game
of the fifth set and lost only two
poin~ on serve the rest of the way,
finiShing the ma~h with his 28th ace.
Sampras was never broken during
the match.
.
"I could have made it a lot easier on myself," Sampras said. " I
worked a lot harder than I would
have liked."
Henman has generated huge suppor:t from the Wimbledon crowds as
he bids to become the first British
man to win the title since Fred Per~
ry captured his third straight cham- ·
pionship in 1936.
"Everyone thai's heen out there
knows they are continually behind
01e, lifting me to greater heights,,; he
said. "They give you thai confidence
and keep willing you on. It's also
tough for my opponents. They know
every point of mine will be shouted
about."
Krajicek, who heard Henman's
name chanted throughout the match,
said, "The only thing I know is that
' I'm not going to name my kid 'Tim'
because I hate that name."
The only break ·of tlie fourth set
came in the fifth game, when Henman - trying to guess where Krajicek was serving rather than react·
ing at the last second - carne up
with strong returns and the Dutchman missed four straight volleys to
Jose at love.
. · "He didn't really have to do
much, just put lhe ball in the court,"
Krajicek said. "I just put the ball in
the court. I missed two easy volleys,
and I misjudged one volley, terrible
break."
"I ~ouldn't believe that it would
be worse than yesterday, but I played
even worse than yesterday, and Tim
didn't make any mistakes," lie said.
"It's a shame that somehow I couldn't play my best tennis at the moment
that I wanted to play it."
Henman saved-a break point with
a service winner in the eighth game.

Two games later, he served o~l the
match at Jove, finishing with a forehand volley that wrong-footed Krajicek.
Henman walked off to a standing
ovation, which included the applause
of fonner President George Bush and .

his wife, Barbara, in the Royal Box.
Krajicek said Henman, who faces
1991 champion Michael Stich in the
quarterfinals, is a legitimate threat to
win the title.
"The way he played against me,
he has a good chance." he said.

.

..

..

RETURNS SHOT - Spain's Aran'txa Sanchez Vicario returna a
shot to Franca's l\lathalie Tauzlat during their alnglel quartarfl1111l
on Wimbledon's No. 1 Court Wednesday. Sanchez Vlc:arlo won 6-2,
7·5. (AP)

Kanawha Valley Dragway
posts weekend ·results
I

•

•

,

Here are the results from last
week's Kanawha Valley Dragway
races, held in Southside, W.Va.
All participants will be listed by
hometown, car (if listed) and miles
per hour.
Pro Division
Winner: Steve Maynard; Kenova, W.Va., 1986 Muslang, 133.08
Runner-up: Dave Moore. Peytona, W.Va., 1990 Carnaro, 101.37
· Modified Division
Winner: Leroy Louder, Ncl·
son ville, Camaro, 114.24
Runner•up: Jim Saunders,
Eleanor, W.Va., 1968 GTX, 70.53
·
Street Division
Winner: James C. Moces,
Logan, W.Va., Dodge pickup truck,
60.9

.Runner-up: Brenda Mobley,
Ripley, W.Va., 1969 Mustang, 72.23
Junior Dragsters
Winner: Tyler French, Middlepan, 64 .56
Runner-up: T.J. Snodgrass, Gallipolis, 59.21
Quick 4 Dragsters
Winner:
Lewis
Reese,
Maysville, Ky., I 99S Boulton,
133.07
Runner-up: Jim Pierce, Gallipolis, 190 Spitzer, I 20. I 3
Quick 4 Door-Slammers
Winner: Tony Ours, Crown City,
1991 LeBaron, 135.14
Ruimer-up: Steve Maynard,
kenova, W.Va., 1986 Mustang,
135.52

___

... ·

Reds.

(Continued from Page 4)
....::..:...;;;;,;.;,_;,_..::......;.

...,..-_

two-run single to. left, and Boone time and climbing. Scott Sullivan
came·around.on Pokey Reese's dou- pitched the last three innings to get
his first major-league save.
ble for a 4- I lead.
"MC)st of this thing is mental;"
· "lt·was a tough game mentally,
Boone said. "When you spend an
extended period on a roUer coaster trying to beat the heat," Tomko said.
-good-bad, good-bad, good-bad- "I drank a Jot of fluids and had the
· it weighs on your mind. It hurts your ammonia towels. I just tried 10 stay
cool between innings.
· confidence."
;· The three-run inning took a lot ·
· out of the Brewers, who seem to
· "Because of the heat, I lried to
: expect bad ).hines on the road .
·
rush too much and I got caught in a
:
"We're not playing to win these couple of bad situations. I thought if
: games, " said third baseman Jeff I sped up, I could get off the field.
· Cirillo, the only Brewer chosen for But you can't do that. I'm learning
.; t)le All-Star team. "We're playing to every game."
: stay in them. We wait for them to do
: something, then we try to come
Notes: McDonald, who had nev· back. We're not putting pressure on er batted in a major-league game,
: the other team."
struck out in his only at-bal. BrewBrett Tomko (5· I) allowed four ers pitchers are 0-for-11 with seven
: hits over six innings, including strikeouts in NL parks. ,.. Milwaukee
: Jeromy Burnitz's 12th homer. as he is 4-5 in interleague games, Cincin·
: won his .fifth suaight decision. The nati 6-3 .... Outfielder Willie·Grecnc
·• rookie has won both of his inter· was scralched from the Reds ' lincup
league stans- he also beat the lndi· Wednesday hecausc of a sliff back.
ans in Cleveland - and struggled ... Cincinnati 's Joe Oliver, who
more with the elements than oppos· played for Milwaukee in 1995,
caught all three games and wenl 4ing hitters.
On Wednesday, he wilted in the for- 11 with two homers and five
heat, which was 84 degrees al game RBis in the series.

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: · Jndians... ------------------~
(Continued from Page 4)
one after airing out their feelings
before the game.
,
"I guess the word is out that we
~·had a team meeting before the
' game," Astros manager Larry Dierk: er said. "They talked about thc•r
: problems and our problems. I don't
' know what was said. It's not des·
·' peration time, but whatever was
: ·said, we played well."
: Hampton (4· 7) bas struggl~d on
' the road this season, but now IS 4-0
: at home. He allowed I0 hits, struck
out three and walked one.
: Bill Spiers :md Brad Ausmus
:each singled offO';I Hersh•~r (7-5)
· to start the Astros b1g fifth·mn10g .
· Hampton then blasted his one·out hit
: to score both runners.

-Sports briefs--

25 STICK CARS

N..- ........
Nl.: Suapell&lt;kd Montreal Eapos J B
David Squi for oDe aame and fined .an
undi a&lt;:losed amount ror charal•s the
mound in Floridllut Solurday.
CHICAGO CUBS: Sil,.d JB. QF
Mill Mauck and lllliped him Ia the Cllbl
of 1he Arizort~l.eque.
.

Friday, July 4
51500

'T d say Wednesday, for the sus- match that resumed Wednesday, toptained quality of tennis, this is the seeded Pete Sampras was stretched
best I've ever played, " said Henman, to five sets by Petr Korda before
who also reached the quanerfinals completing a 6-4, 6-3, ~ 7 (8-10), 6last year. "It's probably the biggest 7 ( J. 7), 6-4 victory.
win of tny career so far."
Sampras advanced to the quarter·
With fellow Brit Greg Rusedski finals against fellow three-time
already in the quarterfinals. it's the champion Boris Becker, a match that
first time two British men have many view as worthy, of the final.
reached the f~~J. eight since Mike Sampras leads 10.7 in career 'meet·
Sangster and B~y Wilson did it in ings, including victories in their two
1961. ·
previous matches at Wimbledon.
Henman is the first British play" We ' ve had some unbelievable
er to beat the'defending Wimbledon matches in the past," Sampras said.
champion · since Roger Taylor "We have a Jot of respect for each
· downed Rod Laver in the fourth other. I've always .admired Boris.
He's a class act. "That's what it's all
round in 1970.
about
- walking out with Boris to
In another men's fourth-round
a packed house.
"I'm going to walk into it like a
action~ (Continued from Page 4) final.
You have to against Boris. He
has
that
aura and presence about him.
Toronto the win with a two-out sin· completed a sweep of the Twins.
gle in the 131h.
St. Louis, which has won 10 of illi That's what the game needs now is
Carter's IISth career homer at . last 12 games, reached the .500 mark a rivalry. We kind of have that. "
While Sampras vs. Becker headSkydome was his first to right field. for the first time after slaning the
lines the men's quarte111, a showdown
· Mike Timlin (2-0) allowed one hi I in
season 0-6.
3 113 innings for the win. Anthony
McGee hit his homer off Eddie bet"(een 16-year-old rivals Martina
Telford (2-2) was the loser.
Guardado (0-3). Mark Petkovsek (4- Hingis and Anna Koumikova will
The Expos won the opening tw9
4) retired all six batters he faced for showcase the women's semis. The
other semifinal pits No. 3 seed Jana
games of the first series between the win .
Novotna against No. 8 Arantxa
Canada's major league teams by
Padres 8, Mariners S
Sanchez
Vicario.
identical 2-1 scores.
Tony Gwynn - 2-for-4 with an
Koumikova
displayed remark·
Pirates 3, White Sox 1
RBI double- got his average back
able
poise
on
Centre
Court in downDale Sveum homered and drove
to .400 and Rickey Henderson had
ing
French
Open
champion Iva
in two runs and Jason Schmidt (4-4)
four RBis as the Padres finally beat ·
Majoli
7·6
(7·
1).
6-4
to reach her
pitched a five-hitter as Pittsburgh J~ff Fasscro (8·4) in a game played '
first
Grand
Shun
semifinal.
completed its first three-game sweep
in San Diego.
After winning lhe · match, the
· of the season.
Fassero was S-0 with a save and
unseeded
Russian turned to her
Frank Thomas and Albert Belle. · a 1.30 ERA in 10 games at San
boyfriend.
Detroit Red Wings star
named to the AL Ail-Star team ear·
Diego, all with the Montreal Expos.
Sergei
Federov,
and her mother,
Jier in the day, were a combined 1- He w.S traded to Seattle in the off.
Alia,
and
pushed
up
both arms in a
season .
for-8 and went 4-for-20 with si•
raise-the-roof
salute.
Jpey Hamilton (6-3) was the win·
strikeouts and two RBis in the series .
Despile ailing from a cold and
ner:
Jaime Navarro (6·7) was the l&lt;is·
fever,
the top-seeded Hingis breezed
er.
to
a
6-3,6-2
win over Denisa ChladRangers 9, Rockies 1
Dodgers 5, Angels 4
kova.
At Arlington, John Burkett (6-7)
At Anaheim, Eric Karras' one·out ·
Hingis has never lost to
pitched a four-hitter and Damon homer off Troy Pen:ival (2-4) in the
.
Kournikova,
defeating her twice in
Buford's bases-loaded double high,
ninth lifted Los Angeles. Karras has
junior
competition
and beating her 6lighted a five-run fourth for Texas. . four homers in his last ro~r games
l,
6-3
on
clay
at
the
French Open last
Buford was hitless in his last 21 and 19 for the season.
month.
.. at-bats before his liner to center
Scott Radinsky (3-1 ) retired the
" She's now a different player on
sailed over the head of Quinton only bauer he faced in the eighth to
grass
courts," J.Lingis said. "She's
· McCracken and gave the Rangers a get the win. Todd Worrell pitched the
much
better
here. I played very, very
.. ninth for his 18th save.
. 5· I lead.
well
in
Paris,
but on this surface, she
NL batting leader Larry Walker
The game was delayed five minfeels much more confident."
. went O.for-4, dropping his average to utes in the fourth after Dodgers
Novotna dismissed Indonesia's
· .397, the lowest its been since May starter Chan Ho Park threw a pitch
Yayuk
Basuki 6-3, 6-3, while
high and tight to Tony Phillips, who
·26.
Sanchez.
Vicario downed Nathalie
had three RBis and a homer earlier
Cardinals 2, Twins 1
Taliziat
6-2,
7-5 to continue her run
At St. Louis, Willie, McGee 's in the game. The dugouts emptied.
of.matches
without
dropping a set.
·homer with one out in the lOth pushing and shoving ensued, but
• ·inning gave St. Louis the win and lhere were no ejections.
By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
.-'The Uaion Jack was flying high
• at \Vjmbledon Wednesday, with two
·Bnttsh men in the quarterfinals for
the first time in 36 years.
In a country desperate for its first
men's champion since 1936, "Henmania" reached new heights when
..: Tim Henman knocked out defending
·.champion Richard Krajicek 4n the
·fourth round.
·.
; · In a match that was suspended
: Thesday after three sets, Henman
needed just 36 minutes to complete
a 7-6 (9-7), 6-7 (7-9), 7-6 (7-5), 6-4
; victory before 13,000 wildly cheer- .
: ing and chanting Centre Court fans.

•

Ba sebal l

·

Henman and Sampras advan~e to quarterfinal .round

GETS AWAY -11Ht Clnclnnd Aecla' Joe Oliver
the reach
of Mllwllukee catcher Mille Mldheny to ecoreln the fourth Inning of
~•day's game In Cinclnnd, where the Redl won 7-4. Oliver
lloNc:t on Bnlt Boone's hit (AP)
,

'

!he Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Wimbledon·action continues .

McGwire hits 30th
homer to help·A's ·/'
defeat Giants 8-·1

(4

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Crai'g Biggio 's single scored
Hampton and Chuck Carr tripled to
score Biggio. Carr scored the final
run of the inning on Jeff Bagwell's
grounder to shortstop Tony Fernandez, who threw home for an error.
Kevin Seitzer singled and Manny
Ramirez doubled to stan the sixlh,
,and Alomar's single scored both run·
ncrs.
Hershiser allowed seven hits, si•
runs and struck out five and walked
tWO .

Houston took the early lead when
Biggio led off lhc game with a lriple
and scored on Luis Gonzalez's sac:
rifice fly.'
"They are the kind of team thai
is not a power hitting team except for
Bagwell. Biggio and maybe Bell, "
Hargrove said. "But they pul the ball
in play a Jot and they stay after.you.
They arc a good team."

Basketball
NEW YORK (AP) - New York
·forward Rebecca Lobo played in her
. 1OOth consecutive winning game as
. the Liberty improv~ to 5..() with a ':70.67 over Houston 10 the WNBA.
'
:: Lobo, who had nine points and
five rebounds, has ·not played on a
{osing team since March 26, 1994,
.when Connecticut was beaten by
North Carolina in the NCAA tour·
parnent in her junior year. The ne&gt;t
season the Huskies went ~5-0 .10
winning the national champ1onshtp.
Lobo was a member of the U.S.
national team that won S2 straight
games

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•
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992·5829

I

�BaNball's AII-Btar Game set for Tuesday

T~rre

,

chooses White

By TOM WnHEAS
NEW YOJUC (AP) -

For one
morepme,AlbertBellewillbeback
in me bome duJOUI at Jacobs Field.
Belle was one of 19 American
League reserves named Wednesday
by manager Joe Torre to play in next
week's All-Star game in Cleveland.
· He'll be making. his second trip this
year to the city where he spent his
fint eight big-league seasons before
joining the Chicago White ~ox as a
free qent last fall.
"It'll be ·awesome." Indians
CIII:her and fellow All-Star Sandy
Alomar said wiih a grin.
Alomar said the Cleveland fans
mi&amp;ht give Belle a hard time, but
~. " He won' t care. I don't
know if everybody will be booing,
~use not all of them will be from
eveland. But I like Alben, I know
can handle it. He's always maned to handle it before.. He gets
jK&gt;oed everywhere he goes, and it

t

Thursday, July 3, 1197

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pllgl 8 • The O.lly S1ntlnel

.

~ox's

NOtHING
RUNS.
UK£ A DEERE"

Belle among 19 AL reserves

. .

NHL free-agent signing period begins

.

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

isy The ASioclated Preu

Islanders.
myself available to Dallas."
Belfonr, a ~o-time winner of the
In signing Belfour, the Stars
Vezina Trophy\.as the NHL's best closed the book on Moog, who had
goalie, was the biggest name of those a resurgent season to lead Dallas to
signed on Wednesday. He turned a division championship this year.
down a more lucrative contract offer However, the Stars were knocked out
wilh the San Jose Sharks to sign with of the playoffs in the first round jly
the Stars.
the EdmonCon Oilers as Moog was
"I really had to look at what my overshadowed by Curti.s Joseph.
·goals were as a professional alhlete,
"The background Eddie Belfour
and· money isn't everything in my , brings to the goaltending position
life," Belfour sliid. "My main goal puts us in strong bands," Gainey
is to win lhe Stanley Cup and be a said. "He's 32, and so we have an
pan of a team that is headed in that accomplished player at that position ·
direction at the present time, and while (understudy Roman) Turek
lhat's the reason why I chose to make continues to develop. It's a ·strong

move by our organization, and we
hope it will be viewed that way by
our fans."
Belfour is a three-time All-Star
wilh a goals-asainst average that
never nudged above 2.64 until last
season wilh Chicago and San Jose,
when he was 2.89 in 46 games.
His brightest moinent carne in the
. 1992 ,playoffs when be won II •
straight games for Chicago to lead
the Blackhawks to the Stanley Cup
finals.
Belfour signed a three-year contract, as did Ellett and Nemchinov.

No tenns were divulged
Ellett was the second ee agent
signing in two days for t Bruins,
who picked up Anaheim ~le
·ng
Ken Baumganner on Tuesday. The
Islanders signed three free agents
Tuesday: Florida forward Mike
Hough, San Jose gbalie Wade Flaheny ·and Dallas left wing Jim Stonn.
Ellett has 148 goals and 381
assists with 881 penalty minutes in
941 NHL games. The 33-year-old
Ellett played 76 games with Toronto and New Jersey last season,
recording six goals and 15 assists.

r;:/,1

million for his new deaL Did those
So what is market value?
Ewing made $3 million last sea- numbers sound right to Falk?
son after collecting a balloon pay"I'm not sure PaVick took the last
ment of $18 million lhe yea{ before. dollar off the table or wanted to," the
Miami cenler Alonzo Mourning. a attorney·said.
close friend of Ewing's and also
Various newspaper and broadFalk's client, makes $16 million per casts reports put the dollar value of
season, and·Shaquille O'Neal of the the four-year deal from $56 million
Los Angeles Lakers is the league's to $6S million, but none of the prinhighest-paid center at $17.1 millioo cipals w~re commenting for lhe
per year.
record.
That suggests Ewing was seeking
Ewins. chosen one of the top 50
somewhere between $6S and $70 players in NBA history as part of the

league's Golden Anniversary cele- ·
bration, has often talked about being
the No. I salaried player. Did this
deaf accomplish that?
"I am No. I in my mind," he said.
"I wanted to get what I felt was fair
for me. "

To make sure that happened,
Ewing sat in on lhe marathon talks
between Falk and Knicks brass.
Dave Checketts, president of Madison Square Garden, and Ernie Grunfeld, president and general manager

Guaranteed ~rvice

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About JoltnAncltonl'o cryin&amp;ln
your May 16 iauc: No one will
nm wilh him 'cau.e lboUI SID ptT·
cent fA the time lie tpina OMt And

lboul 90 percent of thole limes.
he llltett """'""""•loni1tnlly believe he'll lie teincor·
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100 pm:oot Jeff Goodon ttr1ic:lel.
When he win~, we hive full-pqe.
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r.g ... clr'llwtdllng during 1111
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IWlYIIm•.
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~- Uof-ly, lllelndi·

comment. wrltl: NASCAR.Thla

In his 11181 42 races.
Yea, Eamhlldllalhe alltime wtnnlngeat d~ 81
Daylona tnt8me1ionll Speed- NASCAR lllls Week Motor&amp;pOrla Wrllllr Monte Dutton
way, but only twice hallhe
gives his opinion:
lntlmldelor wen an ol1lclal
Wlnlton Cup , _ an
'Eainhardl wl1l take • 1110NASCAR'I 111011 flmOUI
tory
M)'Where, and
track. Mlrlld In 1heiongllt
to be
lllump 1n hll carw. Eam1111011ger at Daytona and Talh8111t WoulclioW to the
ladega than anywlwl, 8118.
Ice In ""' Pepll400. Eemh8111t hal not tasted victoly
1'11 not the 500, but Mwill do."

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Dear NASCAR Thll Week.
Love yGUr- in 1lte
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OPII!M Aaod ·-

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34 ol CltNl1ill ~­
McUugNn ....... No. 38 ·

-~Todd-,_

Cll'l ftniii'IICI 1·211 ......

Glen loll-.

MECHANICS' COlliER

~!_II!_!JD spe~~~~~.!l..!~~ng !~!!~~~~~~ho~!!.~!!~t. ~f£'? ~~
NASCAR This Week
Johnny ,Ben 1011 ha been tum·
ing some liPS on the inform•tion
supcrhiehY~•Y·
ne 1996 Winston OAp Rookie
oftbe Year boughl hit own com·
puler 1nd modem during the offsetlson, inshlling it in the pl'lgt
. H ·.• ..~ N C home
I I hIS UTl ....... O" • . ,
•
"l' m no1 1 n e.1.pert by far, but
I'm learn in&amp; 1nd h's ltilld of fun
to play around on i1," he said.
Benson logs on moo ni&amp;hts 10

across the nation. He said tlis
dynamometer 10 the computer,
interrst in oompUters begin when · and wife Debbie does the
he conducted interviews with
fin~ncci there. He also said be
ncing sili:s on the Internet.
plays 1 "mean game of Solilaire
"I 1\ive a few newspaper sites
•nd Minesweep."
bnokmlrked &amp;O I can read the
Worth i lrilllon: Ernie Irvin
racing anittcsand some r:A the
·beCI.me lhe first TexaaHpOO·
online race pages." Benson said. sored driver to win a race during
"I don'l have as much free lime
die company'1"Race 10 Milu I woukllike·to read lhll SlUff, lions" program. Tbe c:on!CSl
but it's fun to do. Sometimes I
allows customers 10 win cash
find ool more about what hapawards bued on the performance
pcned during the weekend by
of TelliCO MOIQrSpOrts drivers.

stock car racing urecr with Joe

Oibbs, lested an Indy Racing
~gue open·wheeled ear at an
inaedible 214.548 mph al
Charlotte Motor Speedway,
which will host its firsliRL
C\ICRt Slturday, July 26.
Stewart ~ his firs&amp; IIlL event
last weekend in ColonOo lithe
P'k .p k I
. I
new 1 ~s ea r~ternaiiOIUI
Speedw1y.
Stewan's speed wiS the fulest
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W'llicel1d all tnd wl ~ . . . analw

of the Knicks, began the negotiations
at midnight Monday, when Ewing
became a free agenL The deal was .
completed at 4 a.m. Wednesday. ,
Was Ewing surprised the contract ··
was completed thai quickly?
"Nope," he said. " I thought we'd
have it done yesterday."
After r)'making the roster last ,
summer, Grunfeld said lhe Knicks ,
felt re-signing Ewing was vilal I() ;
their hopes for a championship. "All ,
(See EWING on Page 8)

.

THIS
WE'EK

IAUMLIUEI
St. At. 241

Nemchinov. a center with Vancouver, is coming back 10 the New
York area. Nemchinov played for the
Rangers before they traded him to .
Vancouver last season.
'
"Nemchinov is a character player who has two-way ability and has
more offensive capability than he
showed wilh the Rangers," Islanders ,
general manager Mike Milbury said
of Nemchinov, who had six goals
and 19 points in 63 games for the
Rangers. "But when you play behind
· Mark Messier and Wayn~ Gretzky,
there's not much room for offense."

I

••

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

HE WINSTON CUP CIRCUI

~nicks keep Ewing with four-year contract in $56-65M range
about bow much it cost the Knicks
IJyHALBOCK
! NBWYORK(AP)-Mostly,the to sign Ewing to a new four-year deal
!'lew York Knicks talked about Wednesday, just one day after his old
l&gt;atrick Ewing's loyalty to the fran- contract expired ind left him as a
free agent.
~hise.
One thing was clear: Ewing did- ·
; tolostly, Ewing talked about front
pffice stability and the desire to fin- · n't come cheap.
"I'd rather not cimunent on the
ish his NBA career in New York,
numbers,'.' Falk said. "It was imporwhere he has played for 12 years.
Mostly, agent David Falk talked tant !hat he feel he was paid fairly by
the commitment ofthe Knicks the learn. He always has been. The .
dollar figure was fair, reflective of
his client.
No one, it seemed, wanled to talk market value.n

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Pallas $tars acquire Belfour; N.Y. Islanders sign Nemchinov
: Andy Moog is history in Dallas.
tofake way for Ed ·Belfour.
i "We want to take the franchise to
!IJIOiher level and believe Belfour can
help us do that," Stars general man1tgcr Bob Gainey said after signing
the highly regarded goalie as a lice
agent on Wednesday.
. Belfour was among three players
j.Yho changed teams as NHL teams ·
~onlinued U.ir efforts to rebuild
through the free-agent route.
pefenseman Dave Ellett signed wilh
lhC Boston Bruins and cenler Sergei
~cmchinov with tbe New York

MUFFLER SHOP 8112·2191

Plrla
8H steve Meldaws .

.

v'

Mussina and Randy Myers. He also . Minncso~a's lone ~ntative is
offered a roster spot to Orioles left- second baseman Oluck Knoblauch.
hander Jimmy Key, who is getting
Six of Lofton's new teammales
married over the All-Star break and - including pitchers Greg Maddux.
declined.
Tom Glavine and Denny Neagle "Key deserved to be picked," dominated the NL team chosen ~Y
Torre said. "Once he refused lha~ we ' Braves manager Bobby Cox.
picked a lO-man staff." ·
Joining Atlanta's ,pitching trio
Filling out Torre's pitching staff and Lofton were catchers Javy
· were Cy Young Award winner Pat Lopez and infielders Chipper lone·•
Hentgen and Toronto teammate and Jeff Blauser. ·
Roger Clemens, Kansas City's Jose ·
Cox added Houston's Darryl Kite ,
Rosado, Anaheim's Jason Dickson to his pitching staff as well as Shawn
and Detroit's Justin Thompson.
Estes and Rod Beck of San FrancisThe Seattle Mariners wound up co, Pedro Martinel of Montreal,
with five All-Stars, w~ pitcher Kevin Brown of Florida. Bobby
Randy Johnson and infielder Joey Jones of New York and PhiladelC/xa joining elected starlers Ken phia's Cun Schilling.
'
·
Griffey Jr.. Edgar Maninezlind Alex
The remaining players added by
Rodriguez.
Cox were catcher Todd Hundley of
Dickson and Boston 'infielder the Mets, infielders Andres GalarraNomar Garciaparra were the only ga of Colorado, Mark Grace_ of
rookies chOsen. Also on the AL learn Chicago and Tony Womack of P1tts·
for the first time were Cora; Rivera, burgh, and outfielders Moises Aloe
R~sado, Th?mpson, Willi'"'!ls and . of F)orida and Ray Lankford of St
Milwaukee mfielder Jeff Cmllo.
LoUIS.
.

The O.lly Santlnel• Page 7:.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
-~2111

·

doubtful bec:IUIIC of •I"'in injury.
and didn't have statistics to match
In ldd.itioo, Clevelud fans will teammate Paul O'Neill.
get to root for Alomar, named a
"Certainly, I'm disappoioted,"
backup, and David Juatice, seloctcd O'Neill said following the Yankees
as a starier; but also ~njuml.
game wilh Braves. "I'm not going to
They'll also have a chance to lie to you.Joemadehismindup. and
greet Honorary captains Fran)( I'll live wilh it."
Robi1110n and !..any Doby.Robinson
Wilh so many talented first basebec;ame the fint black manager in the
men out there, Torre had a tough task·
majors wilh Cleveland in 1975, and
in selecting a reserve- so he took
Doby became the first black AL
two: Oakland's Mart McOwire, who
player SO years BiD - shor'tly afler
leads the majors wilh 30 homers, and
Jackie Robinson bloke baseball's
Chicago's Frw Thomas, the AL's
color barrier.
leading hiner.
Tom; filled out his rosier · by
Left off was Cleveland's Jim
naming three members of his New Thome, second in the balloting to
York Yankees as reserves: pitchers
Martinez, and Boston's Mo Vaughn,
David Cone, Mariano Rivera and
who is on the disabled list.
outfielder Bernie Williams. They'll .
"There were a liunch of them join first baseman T1110 Martinez, O'Neill, (BJ.) Surhoff, Rusty Greer,
who was picked by the fans in the
Thome, Will Clark," Torre said.
closest voting for any position.
"First base is impossible. I spent a
Williams' selection to his first
lot of time on that today."
All-Star game was a bit of Sllrprise. · Torre added two pitchers from AL
He missed 14 games with an injury East leader Baltimore, picking Mike

doesn't seem to bolher him. Obviously, every time you boo him. he
gets better. You might as well give
him an ovation."
When Belle made his fint visit
fcrathree-gameserieslastmonlh, be
was booed mercilesaly !lY Cleveland
fans, who tluew fake money at him,
jeered his at-bats and taunted him in
left field.
Belle showed his appreciation by
hitting a three-run homer in his ftrst
game, and then flashed an obscene
gesture to the same fans who adoml
him while he was with the Indians.
This time, fans would be ~ise to
cheer him. Afler all, he'll be trying
to help the home club win.
Indians fans could get their first
look at cenler fielder Kenny Lofton
as an opponent. Lofton, traded by
Cleveland before lhe seasop to the
Atlanta Braves, was elected as a
starler in fan balloting announced
earlier lhis week, but his status is

Thul'lday, July 3, 1997

Come See Us For All Your

..

Parts and

•I

Service Needs

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'

lJ

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• I

�'

Page 8 • The Dlllly Sentinel

NSAC to hold hearing next week

Mem~ers

expect Tyson to &amp;$k for mercy

:-New Cleveland football
.~·stadium to have .more
'j.steel &amp; less concrete
,.
.

.

,
,
•
•
••

CLEVELAND (AP) - . Fans
shouldn't notice the difference, but
Cleveland's new football stadium
will have a bit more steel than first
planned and less concrete in a costsaving move.
"In our judgment, that should
r help save some money," said
: William Mullen, a vice president for
~· the stadium construction manager,
r Huber, Hunt and Nichols Inc. of
•• Indianapolis.
. Switching to more steel, panicu, lllrly for supporrs under the seating
: area, is meant to wipe out more than
:• SIS million in possible cost overruns
•: on the $247 million project. Assemr bling steel requires less time on the
; site than pouring concrete into forms,
: Mullen said.
: ' Mullen testified Wednesday at a
~ city council meeting as council
•. ;members pressed him, project man&gt; ager Diane Downing and city
: Finance Director Martin Carmody
· abolll possible cost overruns and the
· city's ftnancialliability.
Carmody assured Councilman
Michael Polensek !hal the construction cost for a ready-to-use stadium
wu unchanged from earlier projec-

t
t

•

~

.

.

"I want the price with the commodes," Polcnsek said.

The price will be $247 millionlandscaping, sidewalks and working
plumbing included, Carmody said.
Downing said the stadium, which
will be hoine to a replacement
Browns team, will be completed as
promised in time for the· 1999
National Football League season.
Last month, the city rejected bids
for stadium foundation and superstructure work. The bids ran~ed
from $55.5 million to $&amp;.4 milloon
but the city hnd estimated that cost
at $40 million.
The work has been divided into
smaller packages to encourage more
contractors to bid, Downing said..
She said cost overruns on the
· rejected bid work would he elimi·
nated by replacing concrete, where
possible, with steel. That also will
reduce problems related to pouring
concrete in cold weather, she said.
Mullen said the high bids were
due, in pan, to the limited number of
bidders. Afte~ the bids were opened,
Muller said he was told by contiactors who didn't bother bidding that
they were concerned about some.
requirements, including deadline
penalties and payment schedules.
Councilwoman Helen Smith
· complained that the projected.cost

;:n~~===~~t~':c~use it

Ewlng...ccontinu&lt;firromPage 6&gt;
that bap~ne&lt;! in.~e last I ~.months .rel!ounds (9,513) and points
led to thos poont, he saod. We felt_ (21,539). He averaged 22.4 poinrs,
we had th.e ~ucleus to co'!'pete for a eighth in the league last season, with
~hampionship, but DOl Without hav10.7 rebounds~ fifth in tbc:.NBA and
ing Patrick Ewing,"
made the All-Star team for the 'ttth ·
There was no competition for titne.
~wing,. l~ly ~ause be wasn.'t
. Falk said Ewing is driven by his
onterested m playmg anywhere else. desire to win an NBAchampionship.
The No . .I pick in the. first lottery
"Totally," he said. "He could have
draft 12 years ago, Ewmg has been
stopped playing after last year and
the cornerstone of the franchise ever . 6een financially" secOR: for the rest of
since. •
his life."
Ewing calls that issue "unfinished
· "We really didn't talk to any otherteams," l'alk said. "There were no business" for himself and the
other offers, there was no need to
Knicks. "We didn't get to our ·liouil
have uother offer, because Patrick goal last year;" he li8id. "I've been
wanted: to slly here. It says a lot here Ia long time and I want to be
about the Knicks organization that on
h!:re when we win the champithC second day you can sign, they got onsbip. I'm glad I'll finis~ my career
it done. It's a Slltement of the
here in New York. These fans
Knicks' commitment to Patrick deserve a championship. and I hope
-Ewing, a commitment to winning, to get one.while I'm here."
and on Patrick's behalf, we're grateAnd he wants longtime rival
ful for that"
Michaellordan, another Falk client,
Ewing, who will be ·35 next arou!ld wlien he does it.
month, is the Knicks' career leader in
"I hope Michael stays," Ewing
said. "I want him there so I can rub
virtually evety 'major slltistical catcgory, inclu_di.?g. games (913),
it in the way he's rubbed it in on

me." ·

The state a110mey general's office weight title lighrwith Lennox Lewis
asked for the revocation of TYson's in February is any indication, Tyson
boxing license in 'irs formal com- ligures to face more than a year out
plaint, a legal move that allows the of boxing.
commission to impose irs stiffest
McCall agreed to a one-year susfine, 10 percent of TYson's $30 .mil- pension for quitting against Lewis,
but commissi'oners have said theJ
lion purse.
view
Tyson's. biting of Holyfield as
If Tyson's license were revoked,
more
serious.
he would have 10 wait alleast a year
roe
Rolston, a deputy anomey
befoR: reapplying, but the commisgeneral
prosecuting lhe case, said the
sion bas the authority 10 make that
state
doesn'
t plan to call any witeven longer. A suspension could be
nesses
during
the hearing and will
up to five years with a maximum fine
simply
play
the
llpe ofthe lipll for
of $2SO,OOO. ·
·commissioners~
·
Ghanem said !hal any speculation
"
It's
not
a
situation
~ we ·
about possible penalties is just that.
need
to
find
a
smoking
gun,"
RolHe said he hasn't discussed TYson's
ston
said.
"
The
llpe
speaks
for
fate with any of the other four com:
irself."
missioners, and won' t until the hearIf Tyson changes his mind and
ing, which is tenlltively set for
,
decides
to' light the sanctions, RolWednesday.
ston
said
the scope of the hearing
"I' m not the type that would
will
enlarge
dramatically.
sllnd for a secret deal, and I don 't
"It's different in this case because
know how we could do a secret
deal," Ghanem said. "It's pure spec- Mr. Tyson has said he won't be
ulation from everyone that isn't resisting," Rolston said. ·"If that
involved. There is no done deal and chaitges, we would have a full blown
there won't be one."
hearing with witnesses and everyHowever, if the way the commis- thing else."
sion handled Oliver McCall's quitGhanem said he wanrs to hear
ting in the ring during his heavy- from Tyson himself.

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Head helps St_
a rzi beat
Monarchs 73·68. in OT· ·
shot blocked by Sacramento's Pam
McGee with 43 seconds left, made a
three-pointer for her only basket of
the game with 5.5 seconds left in
regulation to tie it64-64.
·
After the Starzz opened a 40-'35
lead early in the second half, the
Monarchs scored ·seven unanswered
poinlS to take a 42-40 lead.
The lead changed hands several
times until Utah scoR:d nine unanswered points to make it S 1-46 with
10:26 to play.
The Mo,.,.,.chs answered with a
pair of 3-pointers by Tremitiere and
Bolton-Holifield to go ahead S9-57
with 4:47 left.
The Sl8fZZ missed II of their first
12 shots, before hitting 14-of-24 to
take a 34-33 halftime lead.
Baranova, who missed her fir.il
· four shots from the field, finished 6for-11 in the first half and scored IS
• points.
The game drew 6,156 fans at
ARCOArena.

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Jimmy Stewan credits: Film:
The Munier Man; I93S
Aller lho ~ M .., \936
Rose Marie, 1936
Nen Time We Love, 1936
Wife vs. Sccrctary, 1936
SmaU Town Gill, 1936
Spc:Cd, 1936
The Goq&lt;ous Hussy, 1936
Bom to Dance, 1936

·

Scvenlh Heaven, 1937
The Lasl G11111Jier, I '137
Navy Blue and Gold, 1937

OfHumanHC1111,1938
Vivacious Lody, 1938
The Shopworn Angel, 1938
Yoo Can't Toke i1 Wilh You, t938
Made for Each Other, 1939
Ice Follies of 1939. 1939
ll's I W011dcrful World. 1939
Mr. Smith Goes lo WuhiJIIton, 1939

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"SPORT TRIM"

Broken Arrow, 1950
The lacl&lt;pot. 1950
Harvey. 1950
No Highway, or No Highway in lhe Sky,
19St
The Greatest Show on Eanh . 1952
Bend of the River, 1952

The Glenn Miller Story, 1954
Rear Window, 1954
The Far Country, 195S
StrategicAirCommand, 1955
The Man From Laramie, l9SS
The Man Who Knew Too Much,
The Spirit of St . louis, 1957
Night Passage, 19S7
Venigo, I 958
Bell, Book and Candle. t9S8
Anatomy ot a Murder, i 9S9
The FBI Story, 1959

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1956

By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer

LOS ANGELES - Another
angel got his wings.
James Stewarl's image as an oldfashioned hero was not some Hollywood concoction. The lanky, slowThc Mountain Road. I960
talking
actor left behind not only an
Two Rode Togelher, 1961'
unrivaled
body of work but also a
X-t5. naqotor. t961
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, 1962 legacy of dignity and generosity.
Mr: HObbs Takes a Vacation, 1962
From bis courageous war service
How the West Was Won, 1962 •
to
his
steadfast devotion to his wife,
Talco Her She's Mine, 1963
the
"Mr.
Smith Goes to Washington"
Cheyenne Autumn, 1964
Dear Brigitte, 1965
star exemplified the values of decenShcllandoah, 1965
cy and moral courage that he created
The Flight of lhe Phoenix, 1966
on scre!h:-· t ~-.~
t.
The R"" Broed, 1966
"He.
is
the
last
of
the
gR:at leadFire....,k,l968
ing
men
,"
said
actor
Robert
Wagner,
Bandolero! 1968
The Cheyenne Social Club, 1970
a longtime friend who was co-host of
Fools' Pande, 1971
Stewarl's charity road race. "He was
That's Entertainment, nanator, 1974
The Shi&gt;otist, 1976

Airpon.'77, 1977
The Magic of Lassie, 1978
The· Big Sleep, '1978
A Tale or Africa. or Green Horizon, 1981
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) An American Tail 2: Fievel Goes We$1,
1991 (\/Dice)
Bronzed and noble, the Egyptian
Telnislon:
prince dominates the limestone paintThe Jimmy Stewart Show. series, 1971-72
ing,
his fist clasped to his chest, his
Hawkins, series, 1973-74
face
fixed
in a patrician stare that surKrueger's Christmas, TV movie. 1981
·Right of Wily, TV movie, 1983
vivCd millennia buried in the Nile
No~ and Squth, miniseries, 1986
Valley., ·
North illld South Book II , miniseries.

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

When we arrived at ·the church, I and interesting and we probably
asked someone to point out Gladys. would have been good friends had
I then went over and introduced we not lived so far apan. -- Surprise
myself. She .seemed ill at ease. I Ending in Corvallis, Ore.
made a point of sitting ne•t to her at
Dear Corvallis: You've made an
the dinner thar followed, and I final- excellent point, which is as follows:
ly worked up the courage to ask her it 's always a mistake to judge peaabout Alfred. I said I had found him pie before you get to know them.
brilliant but eccentric . She said he . And P.S. If you liked Gladys, you
hadn 't changed and mentioned- can be reas\)nably certai n that
some of his strange habits, and we Gladys liked you. ·
'
both laughed . .1 decided .Gladys
•
must have been quite a woman to
Gem of the Day: If at first you
have put up with Alfred's idiosyn- don't succeed, sky diving is not for
crasies for 40 years. I found myself you.
admiring her for it
After our long conversation, 1 Send questions to Ann Landers,
regretted that I had avoided meeting Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenher yeats before . 1 discovered that tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Gladys was intelligent, attractive Calif. 90045 ·

'

.

'

the Holiday Inn in New Philadelphia
from August 17-20.
.
The books will be audited June 30
at 7 p.m. at the home of Jo Ann
Ritchie.
The flag bearers escottcd Everett
Grant and Red Carr to the altar. A
Father's Day poem was read and gifts
were presented.
The meeting Closed in regular
form .
After the meeting, quarterly birth- .
days were observed and birthday
cake served. · Observing birthdays
were Betty Young, Everett Grant, Eva
Robson, Goldie Frederick, Erma Cle-

land, and Iva Powell.
Refreshments were served by
Opal Eichinger, Roberta Maidens
and Deloris Wolfe.
Door prizes were won by Erma
Cleland, ·Goldie Frederick, and Ella
Osborne.
Members present were: Mrs.
Wolf, Mrs. Maidens, Mrs. Osborne,
Mr. Carr, Mrs. Frederick, Margaret
Amberger, Katheryn Baum, Iva Pow.ell, Mrs. Robson, Charlotte Grant,
Mrs. Cleland, Gary Holter, Mary
Holter, Thelma White, Opal Hollon,
Esther Smith, Mary Barringer, Jean
W~lsh, Mrs. Ritchie and Betty Young.

Beverly"Hills home from a biood clot
in his lung. He was 89.
Fighting illness and mourning the
1994 death of his wife, Gloria, Stewart had become something of a
recluse in recent years. His image .as
a beloved symbol of Americaft
integrity, hqwever, never dulled.
"Jimmy Stewan had a wonderful ·
life, and there was no one more dear
or more fun than he was,'' Doris Day,
his co-star in "The Man Who Knew
Too Much ," said in a statement.
" America lost a national treasure
today," President Clinton said,
.I
describing Stewart il$ ''a great actor,
a veiy kind, very generous person. a gentleman and a patriot."
Everybody who knew Jimmy is betStewart played the hero even
ter off...
when the cameras stopped rolling.
: Stewart died Wednesday at his ·From his noble film characters to his

' '"""'

offscreen role as devoted husband,
dutiful sori and genuine war hero, the Academy Award-winning actor
championed simple values, giving
decency and courage' a face-'- and a
slow, stamm~ring voice.
Not so much the suave matinee
idol as the guy-next-door type, Stewart mostly played devoted, sometimes ·
bashful heroes, slow to anger but possessed of extraordinary valor and
endless perseve'rance.
Decades after Stewart's films
carne out, they remain among the
most beloved in the American movie
canon.
He played an idealistic young senator in 1939's "Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington" and a suicidal businessman in 1946's "It's a·wonderful
Life," his personal favorite.

Trove of artifacts sits in basement of-Berkeley museum

But 91 wet Northern California
winters
have proved too much for the
Radio: .. ·
Lux Radio Theater, guest s·tar, 1940s
4,500-year-old relic, now consigned
Screen Guild. Theater. guest stAr'. 1940s
- with a trove of other anthropoGood News From Hollywood. guest slar.
logical treasures - to the basement
Carbine Williams, 1952
1940s
of
the University of CaliforniaThe Naked Spur, 1953
Ttle Six-Shooter, series. 19.52
T~under Bay. 19S3
Berkeley's . Hearst Museum of
Anthropology.
fv;luseum curator Rosemary Joyce
isn't happy about putting the prince
back underground. "This is a 'national treasure," she said.
Faced with a tiny display spaceOsie Mae Follrod led the program ing shop dedication "{OS delayed due
arid
one without the climate control
"Sarah and Hagar - Lost in the to staff illness, and visiting the School
necessary
.to keep exhibits from
Wilderness" when the Alfred United of Mission for a day was discussed.
falling
apan
- she doesn't have
Methodist Women met recently at the Discu~sion was held on changing the
much
choice
but
to keep more than
meeting time.
· 'i,hurch.
99 percent of the Hearst's collection
Mrs . Follrod had the prayer calMrs. Follrod read the leader's
locked away.
parl; Sarah C81dwell, Sarah's parl; endar and chose Gail Quigg, in laity
A trip. through some of the Hearst
and Marlha Poole, Hagar's parl. Oth- work in Congo, Africa. The society storage rooms illustrates the problem.
er members are Th~lma Henderson, signed a birthday card for her.
Thousands of baskers woven by
Mrs. Caldwell gave a report from .
Charlotte Van Meter, Nina Robinson,
California Indians ate stacked on
Nellie ' Parker, and Pastor Sharon "Response" about prostitutes in shelves. Alaskan kayaks from the tum
Hausman read Bible passages and Brazil. Mrs. Parker read a letter from of the century hang from the.:eiling.
joined in the discussion. Conclusions Judy Matheny, church and commu- Shrouded in dim recesses lie sarwere that all should learn to share nity leader at McDowell Mission in cophagi, mummies and relics of the
problems and tolerate differences West Virginia, describing, networking myriad possessions well-to-do Egypand helping work.
with love and forgiveness .
tians· thought would come in handy
During the social hour, Mrs. HenRev. Hausman o(iened the busifor the afterlife.
ness meeting with prayer, followed derson served sloppy joes, cheese
"We have all this great stuff that
by a group reading of the Purpose, curls and cookies. Rev. Hausman people rarely get to see,,. said Ira
.
secretary's report and treasurer's offered grace.
Jacknis , the museum's research
report. Friendsl\ip calls reported were
The next meeting will be July 22 anthropologist.
45 . A report were given on the deliv- at the church. Mrs. Van Meter will .
While · most. museums struggle
ery of Zaire donations to missionar- lead the program, and Mrs. Follrod ':"ilh limited storage and exhibition
·
ies Tom and Sharon Crow. The cloth- will serve.
space, comparable institutions exhil&gt;it about 5 percent of their collection,
Joyce said - li've times as much as
the Hearst
Joyce estimates it would take 300
ye\lf'S to rotate , the museum's four
million or so ao:tlfacts through the
4,000-square-foot gallery space.
lt '.s probably not what founder
Phoebe Apperson Hearst, mother of
newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, had in mind.
After her first husband died, leaving her $20 million, Hearst traveled
the world . ln 1897,' she became UC's
Jr. Clothing Boys: Nike,
first woman regent and started plan ning a museum for Berkeley. Unlike
Fila,
Russell Athletic
8th
many early collectors who preferred
only cenain types of artifacts, ·she
B•~
hired top archaeologists and sent
them
out to collect a broad range. of
D,.Ycleanlng Drop-Off &amp; Pick Up!
items.
Middleport on the "T"
992·51n
Among other things, Hearst's
1990

experts gathered a world-class collection of California Indian arlifacts.
from full-size canoes to thimble-size
baskers.

The problem began in 1901, when
regents created a Department of
Anthropology butdidn't provide any
money for a building. The collection

was shown in a San Francisco building for a while, but that space was
taken over by the expanding UCSF
medical school in 19J I.

.

COMING ,.UESDAY, JULY. lftl, 1117.

Alfred UMW holds meeting

-rhe Daily Sentinel
BABY Sentinel •
The Daily Sentinel BABY Sentinel is a
Special Edition filled with photographs of
loCal kids- ages newborn to four years old.
The BABY Sentinel will appear in the July
29th issue. Be sure your child , grandchild
or relative is included.
Complete the form below
and enclose a snapshot or
wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each
photograph . ~more than
' one child·is in picture
Pictures must
enclose an additional
·be In by
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(ENCLOSE
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BEST DElLI

••••rs

Jimmy llbow811'1 film credlta:
BylheAMaci-Preu

Ziegfeld Gid, 1941
It's a Wondciful Life, 1946
M'l!ic Town, 1947
C.U Nonluidc 777, 1948
On Our Mmy Way, or A Mimcle Can Hap·
pen, 1948
Rope, 1948
~
You Gotta Stay Happy, 1949
The Stratton Story, 1949
Malaya, 1950 .
.·
Winchesler '73, 1950

1993 PLYMOUTH

Startl•g At

•

James Stewart, embodiment of
decency, moral ~ourage, dead . a~ 89

Stewart's film credits

The Shop Aroqnchhe Comer, 19&lt;10
The Mottal SIOnll,.'l940
No Time for Comedy, 1940
The PI!Hadelphio Soory, 1940
Come Live Wich Me, t94t
Pot O'Gold, 1941

~~TU~D

Wagon wheel

-

MR. AND MRS. JIMMY STEWART

· O.Say Rides ApiA, 1939

'

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) It was an up-and-dow.n night for both
the Utah SllrZZ and the Sacramento
Monarchs, who exchanged the lead
several times before the Starzz
pulled out an overtime win.
Dena Head hit five free throws in
'the final 47 seconds of overtime to
lift the Starzz to a 73-68 victory over
the Monarchs Wednesday night.
Head scored seven of her II
points in overtime as the Starzi
improved to 2-3.
wendy Palmer bad 18 points and
II rebounds, while Elena Baranova
added 17 poinrs and 10 rebounds for
the Starzz.
R.uthie Bolton-H&lt;ilifield scored
20 points and Bridgette Gordon
added 18to lead the Monarchs (2-3).
Chante,l Tremitiere bad I0 assists. ·
Tremitiere made a jumper with
I :52 left to play to break a tie, then
added a free throw with 14 seconds
left in regulation to give the Monarchs a 64-61 lead.
·
Utah's Tammi Reiss, who had a '

able to forgive each other, and· it recently faced ttois problem with
saved our family. The lesson to .be interesting results. Perhaps this letlearned is that true love d.;es not ter will help others.
always travel over calm water. No
My son called to say1 would be
marriage is perfect. We must accept getting an invitation to his daughthe fact that there will be problems · ter's wedding soon and he wanted
of one kind or another. Being able to me to know that my ex-husband's
forgive is the glue that hoids many widow also had been invited. Our- .
marriages tygether.-- The Voice of ing the 40 years th~t "Gladys" had
Experience In Portland
been married to "Alfred," I had
Dear Poo:tland: Well said. Not decided she wasn't my type, even
only is it important to forgive, we though I never had met her. It upset
must be able to put behind us what me that my son thought Gladys
it was that we forgave. That's the needed to be invited to the wedding.
hard part.
· After all, Alfred had been dead for
several years, and this was another
Dear Ann Landers: I read the let- generation. Upon reflection, I.
ter in your cdlumn from the woman decided not to let Gladys' presence
whose ex-husband was invited to a spoil the occasion for me or my
family wedding and reunion . I granddaughter.

Chester Council 323 Daughters 'o r ing therapy treatments at Western
America met recently at the hall. Hills. The members were pleased to
Esther Smith, Councilor, presided. have Eva Robson and Iva Powell in
The pledge to the Christian Aag was . attendance. Both are recuperating
given. Matthew 4:1-4' was read. The from illnesses.
,
Lord's Prayer was recited in unison
Margaret Amberger sent a card of
and the pledge to the American Aag thanks to anyone who helped in any
was given. The first sllnza of The way during the death of her father. A
Star Spangled Banner was sung by letter was read from the State Councilor for Ohio, Ruth Zingler.
all.
It was voted to be in a Fourth of
Roll call was given. Reported
sick were Elizabeth Hiijes, who is July parade. Erma Cleland reported
recuperating at Western Hills. Opal on the rally at Toledo ..
The district picnic will be at
Eichinger is not well. Cora Beegle is
recuperating at Rocksprings Reba- Kackelmackel P~rk at Logan.
. bilitation Center. Esther Smith is hllvThe state session will be held at

tops·Comets

NEW YORK (AP) -,.Rebecca then won the gold medal with eight
Lobo has almost forgotten what it's straight victories in Atlanll.
·
like to lose.
;
"We all know what it feels like to
Lobo won her I OOtb consecutive . lose," Lobo said. "That's a memocompetitive basketball game as .the ry that stays with you for a long time
New York Liberty remained the and you use it and feed off it."
only undefeated team in the WNBA
Trailing 47-40. with II: 13 left,
with a 70-67 win over the Houston New York went on a 13-0run behind
Comets on Wednesday night.
six points from Sophia Witherspoon
"Yes, I've almost forgotten, and and held Houston scoreless for live
I'm glad," said Lobo, who had nine minutes.
points and ftve R:bounds for New
Witherspoon led New York with
York (5-0). "But I'm sUR: tomorrow, 14 points, and Teresa Weatherspoon
(coach) Nancy (Darsch) will come in scored 12, including four at the freeand say, 'I want us to treat practice throw line in the final 17 seconds to
as if we bad lost yesterday.' I think hold off the Comets H-2).
that's what keeps you hungry."
Cynthia Cooper led the Comets
Lobo hasn't felt the sting of a loss with 19 points, scoring 18 in lhe secsince her junior year at Connecticut •nd half, while
Thompson hail
in March 1994. She led the Huskies 15.
'
. .
to 35 victories en route to the NCAA
New York had a season-low nine
championship in 1995, and she was tum overs, while Houston had IS
. a member of the the u.s. national before a crowd of 8,792 at Madison
team !hal won 52 games befo~ the Square Garden.
Olympics. Lobo and her teammates·
·•
·

.

Chester D,of A holds meeting

VB, auto, A!C· front &amp;
nar, PS, PB, PW, POL,
Ult, cruise, AM/FM caaa

'164

counselor told us that forgiveness is'
essential in a marriage and that if we.
are unable to forgive e'!(:h other
Landers
when we make mistakes, we should
think twice about making a lifelong
commotment.
My parents got a div~rce when I
Dear Ann Landers:
was 12, and it was the most trauThe letter from "Under 25 and malic e•perience of my life. I knew
Single in Michigan" about adultery what affairs and divorce can do to a
and male infidelity inspired me to family, and yet I risked taking that
write to you. When I went through same road. A woman I worked with
marroage counseling with my wife, · paod attention to me when my wife
the counselor asked the "group what did not. We had an affair. My wife
each of us thought was the most found out about it and got even by
common reason for· divorce. Adul- having an affair with this woman's
tery,. of course, was No. 1 in this husband. My wife and I had three
children under 10 at the time .
survey of young adults.
Imagine our surprise when the
Thanks to the wisdom of our
counseling group leader, we were

Ann

1995 MERCURY
VILLAGER

95

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

F()rgiveness is key to a successful mar1riage

.

By nM DAHLBERG
Ghanem said. "I don't want to press
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Mike anything and tell him he has to.show
Tyson will plead for leniency to the up, btit we are really talking about
boxing regulator.i wllo will decide Mike Tyson here."
his boxing fate.
Tyson is expected to ask the
Sources close to Tyson ~Y he's commission, which could revoke
ptannins to appear before the Neva- his boxing license, for leniency so
a. State Athletic Commission when that he can someday resume his boxit meets next Wednesday to deter- mg career.
Tyson signed papers Wednesday
mine his fate for biting a chunk out
allowing the coinmission to go ahead
of Evander Holyfield's ear.
Tyson's presence before the com- with a bearing where he could face
mission is not required, but com- a lifetime l!lan .from boxing along
mission chairman Dr. Elias Ghanem · with a $3 million fine.
Tyson has.said he will nOl fight
suggested that the former heavyweip champion is the only one who the sanctions, but pleaded earlier this
can tndy explain what happened in week to be allowed to box again
the rins during the third round of the when the commission meetS at 9:15
a.m. PDT July 9 at the Las Vegas
WBA heavyweight title fight.
"I really think there's only one City Hall.
"I only ask that I not be penalized
guy who has to justify his actions in
the ring, and that's Mike Tyson," for life for this mistake," TYson said.

.: . By THOMAS J. SHEERAN

Thursday, July 3, 1897

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Junior Girls Shorts &amp; TORS
30%
CK,
~~ ~~v.
· Cre•t Seleetlon of
Clfts

The Daily Sentinel
"BABY SENTINEL"

,._:________I::Q:..!!2~I~J.f!!!!I!!:.OJ'J..Q~.Lo_______ ,
ICHILDS NAME(S) &amp; AGE(S):
I
·
1 !PARENTS' NAME:
' I'CITY &amp; STATE
:, I

lI

I
IPbone No

The Above Information WiD Be Used In Ad
Sobmilled By:

I
I

I
I
I
I

. 1:.-----------------· -------·~-~-~-~~~~~~~~u

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursclly, July 3, 1987

Pomeroy o MlddlepoJ\ Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

.

Have·A Safe and Fun Filled
~ *
*

•

•

.
JULY MENUS ;:.

..

.

.

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER
.

MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
. THURSDAY
FRIDAY
.:
r-~---------------t~----~--------~,_-----------------4------------~----~------~---------1
8
9
10
11 .
·:
7

·:

S·l oppy Joe on Bun
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Lima Beans &amp; Corn
Strawberries on
Angelf_ood Cake

Chicken Cacciatore
Mashed Potatoes
Buttered Carrots
Bread .
Pineapple

Baked Pork Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Green Beans
Bread
~
Blushing Pears ·

Ham Salad
Baked Beans ·
Macaroni Salad
Bread
Cantalope

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes ·
wi-th Gravy
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

Beef BBQ on Bun ·
Cole Slaw
Green Beans
Apple ·Cherry Crisp

Hungarian Style
Pork Chop
Parsley Boiled
Potatoes
· Buttered Broccol.i
Bread - Pears
30
Soup Beans &amp; H~m
Cole Slaw
Cornbre.ad
Cottage Cheese on
Pineapple

Salmon Pattie
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Green Beans
Bread
Cantalope

Cheese Ravoli with
Meat Sauce
Three Bean ,Salad
Bread
Tropical Mixed Frui
Cookie

.;
.:

&lt;
.·:I
:•

~~

r-~1~4-------------;~15~-------------+~.1~6~--~--------4-~1~7~-------------~1~8~------------~ ••

Ham and Scalloped
Sausa·ge G'ravy
Potato Casserole
on Biscuit
Mixed Vegetables
Hash .Brown Potatoes
Bread
Orange Juice
Hot Cinnamon
. Hot Applesauce
Peaches

Want something new to do?
Come to the Meigs Senior
Center and try out the
horseshoe pits located behind
the Maples. James Grueser,
an RSVP volunteer, boUt the
wooden pits with wood
donated by O'DeU Lumber.

Meigs ·
July
activities
The ·Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing, cards, games,
pool. Weekly activities are Line
Dancing on Monday at 1:00,
Chorus Practice on Thesday at
11 :00, Knitting Circle on

I
·

July 15
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
Glazed Carrots
Roll - Beverage
Tro ical' Fruit Cu
July 22
Hungarian Style ·
Pork Chop
Baked Potato
Broccoli &amp; Carrots
Roll - Beverage
Ice Cream

-'

Beef Tips in Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
Buttered Corn
Bread
Pineapple

Chicken Patty
Augratin Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Peach Slices

29
BBQ Chicken Fillet
Baked Steak
in )lushroom· Gravy Scalloped Potatoes
Mixed Vegetable~
Mashed Potatoes
Bread
·
Green Beans
Waldorf
Salad
Bread
Creamy Fruit Sala

28

.

Hamburger on Bun
Oven Roast Potato
Lima Beans
Oranges &amp; Bananas

Spaghetti with .
Meatballs l Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Fruit Cocktail in
Red Gelatin
ugus
Meatloaf
Mashed Potatoes
Peas &amp; Carrots
Bread
Peach Slices with
Orange Sauce

THURSDAY
July 10
Chicken and Noodles
Mashed Potatoes
Three Bean Salad
Biscuit - Beverage
Cherry Cheesecake
July 17
Oven Fried Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
Creamed Peas
Roll - Beverage
Carrot Cake
July 24
Spaghetti&amp; MeatbaU
in Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Raspberry Bishop
Cake

August 7
Oven Baked Chicken
Potato Salad
Green Beans
Roll - Beverage
Honey Bee Ambrosia

Every Wednesday Storewide Savings

15o/o off

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I

11:30.
Friday, July 18 • The Arthritis
Support Group meets from 10:00 to
11:30. Pam Booth, Occupational
Therapist, will speak about
improving and lhaintaining hand
control.
lbutsday, July 24 - the monthly
birthday party will be held. Keith
Ashley, State Commander of the
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War, will be speaking at 11:00
about the organization and the
Buffington Island history.
Thutsday, July 24 · the monthly
AD/RD Support Group will meet
from 1:00 to 2:30. A video of Dr.
Leopold Liss's recent presentation
concerning Alzheimer's Disease
will be shown.
A tril) to The Living ·Word
outdoor drama at Camb~idge is
scheduled for lbutsd~y. July 17,
with a visit to the Cambridge Glass
Museum, and shopping at the
antique shops and craft stores in
downtown Cambridge. .For further
information call 992-2161. Persons

MIDDlEPORT

'

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•••

:..

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.••

AMERICORP members from Ohio University In .Athens p..,senttd a 4 week procram tailed ·
"Action-for Health" at the Meigs Multipurpose SenlorCeuter/ 'Toplcs Included: nutrition, stress
managemenl, Intimacy and relationships and exen:lse. The Retired and Senior Volunteer
Program and the Meigs County Coundl on Aging, Inc., spousoted Ibis event.
with reservations for the trip need
to make final payment by July 10.
The Area Agency on Aging, PSA
8, day at the Ohio State Fair is
Friday, August 8. The Center vans
will be going lo the fair, with a cost
of $20.00 which includes
admission.

.·.•
:·.·•
,•.

.·.·

r-~··-··~·.-·----------------------------~
WEHONOR
'·=

lti)'

EAST MAIN•ST.
OMEAOY, OH.

... '

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\-

,

_

6:00 p.m. - Parade
7:00 p.m.-Awards presentation and
.entertainment by Dazzling
Dolls, Swinging Seniors, Big
Bend Cloggers and Sweet
Mountain Sound, Pam Neece,
Jason Riley, Monica Zurcher,
B. J. Smith and Marlane
Staats
9:30 p.m. -Fireworks

Save 15% off everything in our store.
Sele
Mert:hendlse

Not Included

•'

·'•'
·';~•

·'..
:!

The Shoe Place and Locker 219

.•

K&amp;C Jewelers
POMEROY, OH~

992•3715

· Quality Print Shop
MOIFITA&amp;. ....

MTIIItT Ltnl

W1t11L 01W111

~

Oll'fOIII

COMPLETE HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT cUUPPLIES

SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS

446 ·2206

1·800·445·2206 .

992·3345

..
.

mEE DEUVERY &amp; SET-UP
• HOSPITAL BEDS MEDICARE
HOME
MEDICAID
o WHEEL CHAIRS
OXYGEN
PRIVATE INSURANCE , UHOUR
• UFrCHAIRS
EMERGENCY
• BATHROOM .UDS
SERVICE
"We treat You
• NEBULIZERS
USPIIIATORY
Like Family"
• STAIR GLIDES
11111APIST
I I I I I 'I I ) I'
I II
~:: ~
~I I 1'1 \ I ' I.

I.

I I II I I I : I I

I ::1111 1-.:: r.::1 1

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·Ewing

Funer~l

POMEROY, OH•

POMEROY, OH.

992·2556

.

POMEROY, OH.

992·2104

Ridenour Supply

'

,. Home National Bank

. STATE ROUTE 241

SYUCUSE
992·6533

. UCIIE,

STATE ROUTE 248

CHESTER, OH.
985·3308

Crow's Family Resta~rant
992·2432

POMEROY, OH.

King Hardware

Veterans Memorial
Hospital
.

MIDtLEPOIT
99 • 144

UCINE
949·2210

OH.

Downing·Childs·Mullen·Musser
Insurance
. 992·2342

CHESTER, OH.

915·3301

. Ridenour ~ Supply

Home
PO~EROY,

Baum lumber

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

992·5020

,,

Fisher Funeral Home

949·2493

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Adolph's Dairy Valley

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Roseis Excavating
-:

Ingels F·urniture and Jewelry

MIDDLEPOIT,
OH. 992·2121
.
.

992·5627

~·

HAVING TROUBLE FINDING SHOES
THAT FIT CORRECTLY?
CALL

School
9:45 a,m.-Fiag Raising ceremony
.
10:00 a.m.-Parade begins
11 :00 a.m.-Barbecue and ice cream at fire .
department, Racine Youth League Home
Run Derby
Noon-Parade winners announced at Star Mill
Park Stage
2:00 p.m.-Antique Tractor PUll
2:10 p.m.-Entertainment on park stage with
Big Bend Cloggers, Swingi'ng Seniors,
High Country Band, True Country and
Sounds of Countl)i
5:00 p.m.-Frog Jumping Contest
10:00 p.m.- Fir.eworks

9:00 a.m.-Parade line up at Depot
. and Brick Street
9:30 a.m.-Parade ·
1:OQ-Big Time Wrestling with
Bloodwar Wrestling Alliance
2-5:30 p.m. - Karaoke
6:30 p.m.-Renegade Band
10:30 p.m.- Fireworks

MIDDUPOIT, OHIO 992"2635

992·6611

Storew~

. Rosanna Manley,Jin RSVP voluuteer; donated her lime at the
Rutland Civic Center on Tburaday, June 19 daring the Great
Ohio Bicycle Adventure. Other volunteers who helped were:
Gladys Cumlnga, Jack and Joan Sorden, Ttd Hatfield, Juanita
Well11, Joan and Bruce May, Barbara and James Grueser. .

9:15 a.m.-Parade line up at Southern High

.

·992-3785

SeniorI Citizens
Day
.

-

UCINE

RUTLAND ·

Valley lumber &amp; .Supply

I

\

PLEASE DON'T DRINK &amp; DRIVE!

:+

.,..•••

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE
•

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·.••:~
::••

July 31
July 29
Meatloaf
Soup Beans &amp; Ham
Scalloped
Potatoes
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Peas and Carrots
Cole Slaw
Cornbread -Beverage Roll ' .:. Beverage
Rocky Road Pudding Peaches ·with ·
Orange Sauce
August 5
Salisbury Steak
Mashed Potatoes
Spinach
Rol;J. - Beverage
Bananas in pudding
on graham crackers

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Wednesday from 10 to 12.
by the 4-H Fashion Board at 11:00.
Meigs County· 4-H members will
A representative from the Athens
Social Security Office will be at the be modeling their fair projects and
. Center on Wednesdays, July 9 and . favotite fashions from their closets.
23, from 10 to 11 a.m.
The public is invited to attend the
fashion
show with a free will
Wednesday, July 9 - shopping trip
offering
taken for the fashion
to Lancaster Mall, leave the Center
board.
at9:00. Call for infonoation.
Wednesday, July 9 • Becky Baer, . Wednesday, July 16 • the monthly
Blood Pressure Clinic will be held
Meigs County · Family and
from 9:30 to 11:00.
Consumer Science Agent, will
Thutsday, July 17 · " Margie
narrate a fashion show sponsored
Lawson, · DDS, will conduct ·a
dental screening from 10:00 -

The Senior Center is sponsoring evening ·meals each Thesday and
Thursday with serving from 5:00. 5:45. A suggested donation for the
evening meal is $4.00. The intent is to provide a nutritional evening
meal for a very reasonable cost. Dollars generated will be used to
support the existing lunch and home delivered meal programs. The
public is invited to attend.
- •
·
There will be musi~ by The Classics at 6:00, Thursday, July 10. A
Blood Pressure Clinic.will be held from 4:45 to 5:45, Tuesday, July 15.

July 8
Roast Pork in Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
Green Beans
Roll - Beverage
Texas Sheet Cake

~=

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~ ----;-~~-------------4~n.o--------------~~---------------4
&gt;.
21
22
23
24

Evening dinners .

TUESDAY

Oven Fried Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Creamed Peas
Bread
•
Watermelon

•

CHESTER, OH •

Fruth Pharmacy
992·6491

Farmers Bank
GALLIPOLIS
446·2265

0,.

992·2155

POMEROY, OH.

TUPPERS PLAINS

Birchfield Funeral Home
792·2333

. '

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•rOUIIAII• fOI lfff•

985·3307

The 1.Daily Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

RUTLAND, OH.

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�By The Bend
Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

NEW YORK (AP) -The driver
WIIS the wrong man in the wrong
place at the wrong time- a Yankees
Stadium VIP lot, malting a hogus
claim of George Steinbrenner's
friendship. ·
Thxlble was, thai was the night the
Yankees owner himself was working
as the worfd's hil!,hest-paid parking
lot anendant
" He looked at me, surprised, and
just said, 'I guess I've got the wrong
lot,"' Steinbrenner said Wednesday
after he personal_ly investigpted the
traffic problems 10 and around Yan-,
kee Stadium in the Bronx.
Steinbrenner sat for two liours in
a stadium parking lot before theY~­
kees played host to the Atlanta.•
Braves. He was appalled by the double-parking, the illegal parking and
the people wrongfully slipping into
VIP lots.
Steinbrenner said he chased at
least another car from an illegal spot
Tuesday night, announcing, "You
can't park there, pal! " The chastened
driver pulled away.

Tl"l

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) Next time Jeff Van Glllldy goes to
court, he WOII't he calling shoes from
lhe bench.
The New York Knicks coach was
chosen Wednesday 10 be a juror in an
altern~ murder and rape trial in
Westcliester Codnty, north of New

weight fight Saturday night.
Since !lien, some museum patrons
have complained about 'tyson's statue standing next to the likes Of pro
basketball legends Michael Jordan
and Larry Bird, said John Blanchem.,
a museum publicist.
"They just came up with the idea
10 put him next to Hannibal Lecter as
"It's a aood tbina it's the off-seaa joice. People like that - it's'son of son,
York City.
or else all the · Knicks fiDI
amusing," be said
would have hltod us," said Leonard
Paduano, deputy commissioner of
REDMOND,, Wash. (AP) - Dr. jurors. .
Rulh Westheimcr wonders if employALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) _
ees at Microsoft Corp. might be over- Aj'udge didn't buy the claim that Sriworked.
After all, it's difficult to "have an Wilson's mother's repuwion was
time to have good sex if you work 80 damaged when her !1011 wrote that she
hours a week," lhe diminutive sex stood by and watched his father belt ·
him as a child.
therapist mused.
Audrcc Wilson cannot sue the
Her diagnosis followed a June 20 ·
tour ofthe software company's head- publisher of her son's 1991 autobiography because s)le failed to show
quarters. She sensed something was that his words in "Wouldn't It Be
wrong at the company. known for Nice: My Own Story" caused her any
long
work hours and
communications.
· frequent e-mail damage, a federal judge ruled

"

CALL ·

992
215 6
.· •

:::~~•••
G.lgesWilllows

··

·

R. L. HOLlON:
.TRUCKING

Lordv
Lordv
"'
"'
Dale Thoene,
Who Work. At
The Post
'

Qm-e ..
'JI"" '

VIICKS .
HAULING

&amp;COOliNG

WILL UUL •
JUS,. CALL.
992·7074

Umestone, ·
Gravel ' Sand'
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

61"'992·3470

Gravel, Umaatone,
Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

..,..)

985 4422
Chester, Ohio

Rock Sprlnp
Glen Thoma of Chester was hon- U.M.W. meets
ored recently.with a retirement pany
The recent meeting of the Rock
at his home on June 8. He worked at Springs United M~thodist Church
Baum Lumber Company in Chester. opened with scripture reading and
Attending were his wife, Grace; prayer by Dorothy Jeffers. The Purdaughter Gaul Thoma and guest pose was read in unison, followed by ·
Amanda Burcb, both of North Car- the hymns, "It Took a Miracle" and
olina; daughter Linda Jones, Jeff "I Don't Know About Tomorrow."
Jones and Bradley and Taylor Jones;
Nine members answered the roll
Ruby Burnside; Tom and Mary Etta call. The secretary's report was givBumside; Pat' Thoma; Marcia and en by Frances Goeglein and TreasurKenny King; Kay Koehler; Jalre and er'• report .bY Hazel Ball. The card
Brittany Watson; Marylou and Rich report was given by Pandora Collins.
Houdashelt; Audra, Rob and Wade
Prayer for the sick was offered by
Harrison; Sandy Carl; Pat Welch Rita Radford.
and Dorothy McKinnis; Mildred
The group voted to give $50 to a
Ziegler; Diane and Dustin Johnsori; __missionary, $25 to the senior citizens
Billy and Jennifer Thoma; Helen .. and $21 to a Christmas fund. ·
Wolfe; Opal Eichinger; laura Mae
The program, "With .a Purpose"
Niece; Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Pool- was by Rita Radford and Hazel Ball.
er; Jim and Dereck Baum; John HarThe next meeting will be a picnic ··
rison; Eli Fink; and Mr. and Mrs. Sam at Frances Goeglein's home. The
Combs.
meeting closeil with prayer by Norma Baker. Refreshments were served
•J
by Hazel Ball and Rita Radford.

OIBE(T

Freedom
P
Heat ump
(814) 992·7434

CORPORAL ELECTRIC
Dailey Ad- Racine
814-949-3060
Jolin
WIDI•msOwner
Licensed
Electrician
Work Guararrteed

PBi~ES"

Quality Window Systems
110 Court St.
992-4119

..........

1.aiJ0.291-MOO

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

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

•

•New Homes

•Garages

•Complete
· ·Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

FREE

I

Big Bend Fabrkation, .
Machine.&amp; Welding Shop

.

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
A DMsion on·Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
FSX: 304-m-5861

ESTIMATEES
985-4473

71221tin

fl IJt

DIEBELI
•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
·Weed Eaters ·
2 mi. otr Rt 7
Leading CrHk Rd.

')

K-9 Designs

"

..742·2925
.._....,.r_
•--."-·-

ELIM
HOME CARE
For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Dally • WHkly •
Contract
Family Atmoaphere
209 S. 4th StrHt
Middleport
992·5042
.........'

Uc. WV011030

,. __

.

I

,,

o£leCtriCIII &amp; Plumbing
oflootlng
&lt;lnwrtor &amp; Exllrtor

MOOSE LODGE #731

Fri. &amp; Sat Nights 9-1
1st time in this area.
"Southern Junction"
Band

In celebration of l!"dependence Day, Cellular One is offering a
dynamite deal for new customers. Sign up this month for one year of wireless phone
receive one full year of free local paging service.

No~·s

.

MEIGS CO. BIKERS

the time to stop by your Cellular One location and let freedom ring . Expires July 31, 1997.
.

CELLULA

Independence Poker Run
July 5, 1997

I

Run Starts At
The Watering Hole
First bike out 12 noon
Last bike aut1 p.m.
· Last bike in 5 p.m.
For info. call
742-2869 or 742·1116
Free Food &amp; Band

•

Pometoy 204 Wesl 2nd Street 614/992-7070 GaHipolis 1502 Eastern Avenue 614/441-0547
. Athfns 11 ()() East State Street 614/594·4800 Jackson 384 Main Street 614/286-6073

• -

~RAGE

SALE JULY 5
34269 New Uma Rd. l ~1;:f'.
Rutland. Furniture,
Appliances, Misc.

.

'

&gt;

C.Otlle~

July Srh, 8·5, Bucluidge. Rain Or

Shine.

m

July 5th, 0 :00 A.W. 12 Court
Street, Gallipolis, Antiques, Col·
lectables, Treasures &amp; .A.Ink.

Large Garage Sale: 201• Sllte
Route 141, (2 Miles Out), Friday,
&amp;
Glmteman SNking Companaionthlp From Nice Female For Tatka.

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS
Wagner lane

Pomeroy
Delivery or Dine ln.
More than Just 11
pizza place.

Call fer 01r s~.. lals

992·9200...,.,_,

8aakefs, Accessories.

Walkt &amp; Friendship. Send Re·

plln To ; CLA 309; CIO GaiUpoli•

July 5,
Aven ue ,

Oai?' Tribune, 825 Third Avenua,

Clollmg

Galipolia, OH 45631.

Crawford 's Flta Market Plus in
Henderson, WV. Vendor's 112
price In July. Call for deta tls.

304-875-5404.

Clothes, Docke r's. C ity Slteets,
Auzona Jeans, 'Al fred Du nner,
Bedding, All Sizes, Priced To Sell!
836 Skidmore Road , Inside If
Ra in, 614 -446-!it283, Saturday
Ever'(ting 112 Pticel

Alao Concrete Work

992-6215

614-992·7643

1-

Pomeroy, Ohio

.,..,..,_

CELLULAR PHONES

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

40

BIULIIII
IXCIIIftDI

Umeatona &amp; Gravel
Septic Syaten\1
Trailer a 1
. House Sltea
Reasonable Rates
Joe 1'4. Sayre

360° Communications

JEFF WAINEIINSUUNCE

Sayre Trucking Co.,

POMEROY, OH: .

614-742·2138

2mll711n

614-992~5479

Bobtail Kluens , 3 Males, 1 Fe·
male, 614·992-3380, leave Mes-

:1127/TFN

Howard L. Wrttesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
31171941TFN

ugetiNoAI1swoo.
Found: Hysell Ru n, orange and
black female cat, will giveaway,
1514-992-5275.
~
•

Free Kittena, 614-446-3407.

Free kittens. 614-949·2719.
... 1• &amp; 4--·Je Shellie. must ,;;
_,,_
together; 2 male Beagles: male
Ba!set£;814-742-3188.
T~er

•

UY'S
TUNSMISSION

..........

(formefly of Dean'o
Trano., Albanyj

•New Homes

• Decks

• Additions

• Roofing

• RemOdeling

• Siding

NewOJNnfer
123 Pleaaant Ridge
Pomeroy,OH
Call 992·9045
for all your
lranamlalon naecla.
...,,_

• Garages

"Stop putting off tho'e much needed
home improv~ments." Call Today!

992·2753 Free Estimata,s 992·5535

SHARPENING
. SERVICE
25~ DiSfount
to 4·H &amp; lfA

Hollow

McCumber Rd.
· Rutland, OH ·
•Small Jobs
•Large Jobs
ReasonableRel81

Experienced

.........
,.
HU,'S CUSTOM

"Buil4 Your Dream"

SHAIPEIIIIIG

Joe Wilson
(814) 992-4277
1

•

•

949·2647

stripe Tabby kittens, g wks.

old, lit1er trained, good mousers,
614··985-·4-442 please leave mas·

sage
Two long haired gray kittens to

Talk Live To A
Real Gifted
. .Psychic

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
~ New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

1·900·868·4900
Exl. 1817

Call 614•843-5426

Ser-U (619) 645 8434

(614)742·310'0 .

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 vrs.
"'-'2Ml1-.

1 ....

Meigs
Refrigeration
Residential Heating
&amp; Cooling
Auto Air Conditioning
lnllllllltlon and
Service
Amarlcln • Standard,
Janltrol &amp; Heating &amp;
Cooling·Equipment
R.S.E.S. Certified Art Cirtilled
Don Smith
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457CI8
Phone 814-812-2735

60 Lostand Found
$so reward - loll 711197 ; lillie

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

........... llr

Easy Bank Financing

Jir Wlioners Installed 128" amonth
Heal Pimps kblaled 138" a mon1b
!"-

-on

lflii"'Wd crodil)

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

MOBILE
HEATING &amp; COOLING

UVLO&amp;&amp;;j

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV . 114 4488411
1-600-872-61117 1391 Saftord School Rd .. GallipOlis, OH

$1 ,500 REWARD!!
For information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
1.0. Caller!
Contact:
Ron Miller

992-4025

adult cto'thes, camcordef. Hallo·
ween cos tumes, nice toys, lots

misc. baby items.
Moving sale· Tuesday, W&amp;dne&amp; ·
day &amp; Thursday, 655 112 Syca Saturday, July 5th- one mile out
Hemlock Grove Rd., Arnold telidance. lots of children's dalhes.
all sizes, 1 ~ 5 • exercise bike, 14~
!ires on rims and misc. .
Two family yard sale, July 2-4,
927 Brawl'lell Av-enue. tain or

shine.
Yard sale -Friday, Silver Ridge
across lrom Eastern High oft Rt 7,
chest freeze r, $35; couch, $35;
talle set , S20; humidiflef, 112: W ·
cuum, $13i cabinet stereo, $15; fill
abagbr$1 .

Pl. Pleasant ·

--:-=====:---

boy's pel, female pup, black w1
&amp; VICinity
brindte. wNte apor on neck. aShe· 1
. ba•, Ia at trailer on Cook Ad .. ·
· 2-Big Big YardS..
CheshilevlcinifJ.
11 4 Miles out Crabereell' Rd. Fri·
Found : Black &amp; Wh ite Kitten
Wearing Putple Flea Collar. Vicinity : Willis FJJneral Heme, 614446-8717.

day JIJiy 4., g..?
2) l/2 u 1 ~ 5 out Jim H~l Rd.
4 ·famrly yard sale. ~00 Second
Sl., Mason. July 2-3. 9·? Little bi1
of eve,yth ing. If rain, JuiJ 7, 8,

Found : Blaok AnQ W t'lite Killen
Witr'l Flea Collar Roum 141, Near
5 Ponsmouth Road. Gallipo lis.

9th.

614-446-o317.

Drive. July 4-5.

Found: garage door opener,
White Oak Rd. vrcinity, call e 14·

Vard Sale ~th &amp; Anderson St.
Mason wv.sat .Ally 5th. 9-3.

992 316
.
"
Found: Male Husky, '614· 388·

80

Yard Sale 2939 Meadowbroolrl

Public Sale
and Auction

8962 leave Message.

Lost Black lab &amp; Collie ,Mix, Very
Friendly, 1 Year, Green Co llar,
With Name. Ei 14--446--9535.

Lolt Or Sto len: Large Female
Oalmao;on, Columbus Tag, F&lt;om
Clar Chapel Road , CMd'• Pel.
1314-256-1710.
Lost male Golden Ret nevet', SA
12~. Portl and viciNty," very lnend:
ly, 614-949·2463.

70

" Yard Sale
Gallipolis

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

July 1·3 Flatwood1 Ad. lnfanc:

more Street. Middeport

good home, 614·992-1322.

KINGS'

POHilLE
WELDINI

Sals,t: Wed 712nd TIYU Sat 71
9·5. Everything Must Go! Old
&amp; C o lletibles , New

. (FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

FREE ESTIMATES

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Saturday,· Ml si:ella!lleous.

Clothi ng. Retired Longabergtr

A'alntlng

NOW OPEN

814-742-3090
614-742·3324
614-742-3076

•

MEIGS LIBRARY BOARD OF TRUSTEES • CUrrent mambart
of the Malga County Public Library B011rd of Trustees are left to
right, eeatad, Mary K8y Yotl, aecrel8ry; Patrlcl8 Holter, president;
Patricia Mlill, vice pNtldant; and tlllndlng, Wanda Eblin, OVAL
repre1811111tlve; c;. E. Bl8kaalaa, Robart Crow, and Douglas Little. one truatM wee Incorrectly ldantlflad In an adverti141filant In
the Mlckllepart Blcet tlilitnlal commemondlve publication. For that
error The Dally Santlnalapologlzea.
.
.

July ~ th, 9-? 2.2 160 Past Holzet
On left Srde Road, Watch Signs,
Linkt Eyerylhingl

J

-New G8ragea

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

113 W. 2ND ST.

· LocaiArea
Pick Up Dlecarded
Appliance• &amp;
Many Malate•
614-992-4025

- - . Additions

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

#J

Middleport, Ohio 45769
New Homes, Additions.
Roofing. Siding, Pole
Barns, Oecl&lt;s, Painting
Ca/1 Us F01 A Free Estim81o

se~ice and

' ·.CARPENTER SERVIa

. 992"2156 .... l•pre•·-··
Happy
Road

.

The Community &lt;:alendar ·Is 778 and Star Junior Grange 878 regpubluhed as a free serVIee to non- ular meeting Saturday with a potluck
prol"d groups wishing to anDMIDCe dinner at 6:30p.m. followed by a reg·
meeting and specllll event&amp; The ular meeting at 8 p.m. The Junior
Clllendar is not designed to promote · Grange will have inspectipn.
lain or Cunei ralsen of any type.
·. Items are printed as space ~~Cnnlts SUNDAY
•
MIDDLEPORT-- Revival 7 p.m.
J and rannot be guaranteed to nan a
nightly through July II at Ash Street
; spec:llk: number of days.
Freewill Baptist Church featuring
Clovis Vanover.
· THURSDAY
REEDSVIlLE -- Olive Township
.
Board of Trustees regular meeting MONDAY
CARPENTER-- Columbia TownThursday. 7:30p.m. at the township
ship Board of Trustees regular meetbuilding on Joppa Road.
ing Monday, 7:30p.m. at the fire sta'
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers tion.
· Plains Veterans of Foreign War Post
ROCK SPRINGS :. Salisbury
9053 Ladies Auxiliary !lleeting
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
1 Township Board of lrustees regular
· meeting Monday, 6 p.m. at the township hall.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER -- Star Grange

IN(~

(East·End) 33 ~mithers
Street (Backyard Gate) Toddler
Clothing. Teen Girt' Boys &amp; La·
d.es •. Uisc. ll&amp;ml (Nice Sale) I

US8d Corpe~ 614-446-0 175.

JC
CONSTRUOION

J

CommL:Jnity calendar

YOUNG'S

St. At. 681
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
. (614) 867-3526
- •Across from Tu
rs Plains Elemen
Schoor

~

.~,~. ·;·-~~:~.4'·

-·-

MWe treat your be1t friend like our be1t friend"

I

I
"'-

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) ~;~

Supplies .

3351

~

For lttlormation
leading to the arrest
and c•vlctlon of the
persons who broke
Into the A·fr•e oH
681 In Reidsville.
Call Meigs SheriH
992·3371

1-900-656-2700
Ext.8789

(No Sunday Calls)

3rd, &amp; .th, 10 A.M. · 1 No

1 Sales, Kerwood's Resi-

. FREE

$200 REWARD

Boarding - Training-

Sentinel Classifieds

,•.:

0on GNry, OWner

Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones

' Fre.............

UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll

BISSELL BUILDERS,
614-992-3120

20 Yrs. Exp. •

25280

Professional Pet Groommg

FW th ..., 111ys 11 th · To pltKa •• ... cal

.

July 2nd, 3rd. 71h, 81h, 9ltl. 9:00
A .M. To S:OC P.M . 1514 Buck·
ndge Road, Olf S.R. 160 1 1/2
Miles Nc rth Of Hospital. Furniture.
Linens, llousehold Items, Tools &amp;
~ lsc., l&lt;nives, Silver Coins.

LJ2~4~~~~*~·k~'~L----------------~wm=-1--~~~--~~--~-------.-

992·9057or
992·1056 f/i/1 .

.

Quality Work at
a Falr~cal
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 457eO .
HomaPh:

Attorney William Safranek
Attorney At .Law
(614) 592-5025 .
· ~thens, Ohi!, - ·

Roofing, Painting
Guaranteed
Qtu!lll)!
Worlnll4lldlllp
FraaEitlmatee

I

. . .J'.Sfaop

F~::~=:ing ~~~~:~~a~~~egarding Bankruptcy contact:
partial rewires on older
hOmes

Clotnes, Baby · Ciothes, lrems,

M.on,wv

CDPJfA

D.Gea17'•

Pomeroy, Ohio

wv 11023477

J.......,

FREE ESTJIIATES

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a lair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep ·exem'pr property lor their personal use.
This may include a car, a house, clothes. and

const=:-~~and

let freedom nng.

Tho- boiiOftd

''FA£TOBY

319 S. 2nriAve.
. Middleport
Sales Service
Installation

Shine)

Toys, Household hems.

At 1, Box 44-C

Horst lit Flnlncill .

Z5 YEARS IN BUSINESS

SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel .
Dirt • Sand

MoiRISOII'S

LowRitn)

u=t·

SOLID VINYL
. REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
.

DUMP TRUCK
(Umastorii-

304-n3-5822

rrublic is invited

Wiltlows •
..... A.Itlou

tRain Or

a-n 837 Potoc:ao Rood, (314 lliloo

FAMILY DENTISTRY

Serving from 5:00-5:45
Doaatioa $4.00 for meal

-st-Doars&amp;

July 111 Thtu 51h,

...,., B. Boustn, D.D.S.

Mulberry Heiabts, Pomeroy
Tuesdays 8Dd Thundays

112-2172

Some Collect. I Antiques, No

Early Birds; No Dealer Di ...

OH Georges Creek) Name Brand

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER

I :OIIe.m.-3,30 p.m.

Monday through Frkley.

(1) 3,4, 7; 3TC

AT

IIIIDOLEPORT

Secot-G. Galipolls. Huge .Ill~ 3!11"" 51h. 11-4; Adding lt8IN Doily.

~ 11501 DENTAL CARE

EVENING MEAL

137 IRYAN PlACE

PUIUC NOTICE
The propo .. d 1111
Budget lor the VUIIII Of
llllddteporl
IVIIIabla
lor
public view. II
The
budget e111
be vtew et vm-a- Hall, 237
R1c1 Stroet, Middleport,
Ohio, 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

~a~w~s~u~~-t~~~~N~e~w~~~o~rk~-b:a:s:ed~b::=:4I~s~~====~~==::~~==::::::::~:::::::::::::::·:i~::::::::::::::;

Society ~crapbook

-

J&amp;L SIDIIII I
IIISUIATIOII

Public Notice

~:~~~~~~~=======]I

"H uman rea
1 t'Ions hi ps and 1augh· Wednesday.
However, Wilson's brother. Carl,
ter and touching cannot be replaced another member of the Beach Boys,
by any computer," she said, accordf
i.ng to Microsoft's employee newslet- can go ahead with his de amation
ter.
Not to worry. Redmond has plen.
ty of woodsy places for a "romantic
interlude," she suggested during the
tour.
Still, Dr. Ruth was disapPcinlell
that Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates
·was not available to give her a tour
of his new suburban Seattle ho'use, a
mega-mansion filled with high-icch
gadgets.
.
·.
"I need to sec his bedroom," she
said.

Gallipolis
.
&amp; VIcinity
Fl.. u.,ket Ariel Theatre. •21.

r.sll

~

vent sate

10

Want Ads

CLASSifiEDS

RlfiL

Holyf~eld's ear during their heavy-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13

• Middleport, Ohio

S.ESI&amp;SI
SIIJplhe

Wrong man, wrong place, wrong time .

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mike
Tyson's statue . in the Hollywood
Wax Museum isn't in its Spans Hall
of Fame. He's been demoted to the
Chamber of Horrors.
The boxer's new wax neighhor js
the demonic Hannibal "the Cannibal" Lecter, made famous by "'l'he
Silence of the l-ambs."
The move "seemed like the right
thing to do," museum owner Raubi
Sundher said Wednesday. The museum hoped it would bring "an ear-to- .
ear smile" to visitors, it said in a
statement
Tyson bit a chunk out of Evander

;
·
,

--

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P~oy

Thursday, July~. 19!"

&amp; VIcinity
2 Fam 1/y Yard Sale: Thursday,
Friday, Satu rday, 9 :00 A.M. To
P.M. 78 Ri v-e rside Dr.,
Cheshire. Clolhes, Kitchen Items,

e:oo

Bedding And lots More!
2 Fam ily : July 4th, 5th, Linwood
lake R io Grande, Bike, Drums,
Books. Household. Collectables,

ClOih&amp;s, 9-~

3 Farri6es: FOOay, .AJ~ 41h, SaiUrday, 5th, Sunday, 6th , Monday,
7th. &amp;-? Rain JShine. 1 M•le North

Of Cheshire, Turn left Of Route 7
To ~oush lane (Follow Signs1 .
Antiques, Collectables, HouseWare Items (New !Used) Boy s,
Girts Clothing. (Adults), Furnii!Jre.
3 Fam ilies: Juty, 3rd, ~th . Ar nold
Drive, Benind Old Bid'wol School
9·5, Clothing, Bedspreads, Cur·
ta i ns. Albuma, Games. Sewing
Mach ine, FJoor Polisher, Home

Rrck Pearson Auction CompanJ,
fun ume auctroneer, compl~.;tt
~uction
serv-ice .
licenS'ed
r66,0h1a &amp; West Virginia, 304·
n3-5785 Or 304·713-5447.

90

Wanted to ·Buy

-.,,..,-..,---,-.--::~:=
1, 500 tobacco sticks. 304· 578·
2238.
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Silvet And Gold Coins, Ptoofaets,
Oiarooods, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Amgs. Pre - 1930 u.s. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acqu isitions Jewelry
. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. GaniPOIIS. 6 ~ 4-446·2842.
An trqu es. lurnrture, glass, china,
corns, toys, l amps, guns, too ls,
estcites: also appraisals, O sby
Marlin, Ei14·992·7441 .
Ant1ques, top pric~ paid, River·
me Ant 1ques. Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Russ Moore owner, IJI14 · 992·

2526.
Clean la te ,.odel Cars· Or
Trucks. 1990 Mod~s Or Newer.
Smith Bu ick Pontiac, 1900 Easl·
ern A~e. Galipoli'S..

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buyinlil salvag&amp; vehrcles. SeUing parts. :lQ~-

773-5033.
Wa nted to buy used Mo bile
Home. call 61~·446-0175 or jQ4.

675-Silf;S
Wanted ~

Used Hardwood Floor ing
In Good Condrrion. Call 61~·245 ·

5887

Decor. Misc.
3 Families: Jut;' .Cih, Sth, 8-'? 9276
State Route 218, Mefeet\rile, Ruth
Ann Mon tgomery's, Clothes,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVIC ES

Kr&gt;cl&lt;-Macks, Ei.e.

5 Fam rly Yard Sale : 5573 State
Route ,U 1, Q-8, June 30th, -July
51h, Lo" Clolhosl

110

Help wanted
($HC1W YOU THE SS$)

ALL Yon! S.loo lluol
Bo Paklln MV11nce.
Qf1Db!NE: 2:00p.m.
11\o doy boloro 1ho od
It to Nn. Sunday
IHIHion • 2:00p.m.
Fridoy. llondoy IHIHion
·10:Co a.m. S.turd8r.

CABLE GIANT Seek Orde&lt; Tak·

CaiCIWelrs e;g Yard I Crah Salo:
Baby Clathtl, Klda Clolhu;

Babys itter Neoded G&amp;llipO iia
Area , Your Homo Cr fA int, 24
HJur Care, 7 Da1s A Week. 2
Weeks Per Month. Goad P:ay,
814·256-1559.

ars. Earn S15 To 1 18 , .. Hou'r
Hrgh Cammrssions &amp; Bor"lls, Can

Mr Cru rse, Toll Free 1·886·432·
7378
AVON I All Areas I St'litlay
Spoon, ;304-675- "~·

Crotr&amp;. T01s. Nd&lt; Nadc, So Muth
More, 8·? Ftkiay &amp; Saturday,

ti&lt;lt Col- Trvdoing.

Be·

�'

Thuradlly, July 3, 1997

Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

The Dally Sentlnet • Page15

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHD..LIP

MOutolbecl
• UMd • p8IICII

ALDER

,;

Al.-tDPI&amp;da n .......

r:IIIO.

.......!..,
31

.'
•.
•
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rrn..
40 L1

41 Iorin)
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42 Crl1i111n

rn'n•·• .

-

41Drlw~

•A

•u.-vtno

••

11WWI12 Rullllln

•Kt7852
• QJ763

water bed pl1nt1. 304·

EaR

..

n.. rent
,_ In mobile homo wllot In ••·
chonge lor _11/er,.ndo. r....

K Q t8

portadon a muat. Send reaume
..-.. re•enca• 10 Point Pteaaant

......

Computer Uaer1 NHded. Work

houro. l20k to I5Diclyr 1·
100-3471. 11508.

'
~~~---lnflin

... _

...,.orany-10

ICJIIIM11dge Of Ftaml'lg. Concrete,
Plumblnt. Electrical. &amp; Rooflnt.

make ll'rf SUCh "'afliiii11a.
~or discriminadcn.•

Soullt

This MWJpaperwtn

.

23 FIN
rJJida
24FaodfWI
Zl ......ncl

Weal

Norilt

1•
Dbl.

2.
4•
All pass

EM&amp;

,..,......

-~--

27 Wll aut

21Citylnlllllh

a

rQ

~foJ real estate

~a

-

which II I n - 011110
law. OUr- are nereoy

intonnodthalai-Wngs

..........
OIIIIII!....Y

Tollll

31More

FACTORY DRECT•

33;;:;r.b

The cardworm in

NO MIDDLE MAN.
SAVE$$$$.

Oakwood Home• 11 lhl only
dealer in th• tri-state ard tha1
builds and nus lhllr own

action

.tl":'a·•
t.t

Thunclay, July 3, 1997

41 ,,... Aeteft'l

·-...............

.......,otvee

homas. For factory diFKt price1,

ohop OAKWOOD HOMES.

TRO, WV. 304-755-5815.

Nl·

42 ao-tpiUIII
OWCIIk

By Phillip Alder

. What does a bibliophile have in
44 Air pollution
common with a bridge expen? ·
Both spend lot of their time read·
~
ing: lhe bibliophile words· and !he
47 :.il::"
bridge player cards. In Ibis deal, Lar41 c-llllo
ry Cohen, South, read !he distribution
perfectly.
.
.
50 Aar.-Nonh's two spades was a
Michaels cue-bid, showing at least 55 in hearts and either minor. When
CELEBRITY CIPHER
East jumped to four spades, Cohen
.
by Luis Campo~
was in an unenviable position. If
Celabrily ~cryptogram~ In CfNIIICI from qucJUibCN bf tetftOIA pe&lt;1911. pall and pn!Mnl
North, Arleen Lehman, had both red .. · ·
Efld'lltl.r 1ft the Cipher llanelli lor at'IOtMt. Todt)ls clw· G equ~As Y
suits, it was probably right to bid five
•
'F 0 A H
HWTJ U
T
,D 0 D Z
WDI'ZV
hearts. However, if she had beans and.
clubs, it would surely he better to
MYA
HWYH
T
LYZZTDV
AD Y J
defend. Perhaps hoping the opponents might g~ to five spades, Cohen
XDJ J .
YJV
T'V
JDODZ
OODJ
LDH
bid five ·hearts. West's double ended
the auction.
WTL.'
BOAAG
LKUTRATA.
After a spade to dummy's ace,
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
"After
playi~ Chopin, Ileal as ~ I had been weeping
declarer played atrump to his queen
over sins that 1had never committed. -Oscar Wilde.
and West's ace. Back came a low club
to East's ace. Now East should have
returned a deadly diamond, but he led
the spade· jack. Cohen ruffed in the
dummy and drew trumps. finessing
dummy's nine in the process.
Needing the rest of the tricks.
Cs;;;;;;;;;;:~ . declarer
had to broach the diamonds.
West was known from the bidding
and play to have staned with five
spades and four heans. Yet he had
RIVAYA
only seven points in those suits. If he

acMirtlled ln 'l hll na:: JNII)8I'

PART· TIME POSinDNS AVAIL·
AILE: DUALITY FARM AND
IUET, Q~UPOUS, DH.

17=-

4 --Ially

Opening lead: • 6

8143810385.

........., catl
to &amp; tom auctlono. coli 81 ..9112·
281111 .,._, S.7:3Cipm.

•VII\',..,
,, .,, .....
11

11-oldgo

otalusor-

Experienced Conatructtori Hetp,

1'111 dmt -

2

1D Altdloo

Dealer: West

limitation
or baed
on race.
color, ..uglon.

F-.114 4tl!l 341D.

DOWN

Vulnerable: Neither

CA, 118,000, 8"·387· 0!18 Or
61 ..1102-5028.

11111 no · rot• iloubjecl to
W10 F-.. Flit Housing Act
0118118 which makes Rillogll
to ldWrllae •any j:ielerience,

lAdy To U.. In, Companion, Rent

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

t AK 9
• J 7 53

19g7 Fleetwood 14JI52, 2 Bed·
rooma. 1 Bath, Washer /Dryer.

own

4343 Ea. &amp;.e3IIB.

~:::...-=

• 10 • 5 4 2
• A' 10 I 2

• Q. 3
• Q J.

Reglltii ' BoX G·24 200 Main SL
- {'looa1t. wv 25550.

PC u1e11 nHded. J.r$5,000 in·
come potential. Callt-800·513-

11-81111-

:.

CtiNIIllor/IWMiyman to

· -moiSTS,

14 Author Tololo;

•Jesz

TRANSPOFlTATION

IQCTAfMTH!S!

uao.~

a

balls.

.....

FlFAI ESTATE

-

310 Homes tor Sale

THE BORN LOSER
~

YOO~~Of~Nh

~

f\NtMSIN(, ~ CJU.':&gt; Ito-~ mE
1&gt;\1 DCil£ Of lii,E.

TO {'. litNIC.ID W.

........

VWli..U~T~!

1105/Mo.,
Bath, 807
114·

1993 Polaris Wave Runner Runs _..
Like A Top, $3,800 , Days: 61-4 - r
446-6579, Or Evenings: 614-446- .~

1324.

2bedroorn
Manor 1nd

,,

•

24 Foot Admiral Pontoon With' .,
Trailer Cap. 16 People 4S .Mer- ~ ~

In Middle·
. Cell81•·
Opj&gt;or·

cury Elcellent Condition, $5,000 ...,.
Can See AI Boat Club Dock •
lOne, B1H46·4949.
,;:

I

Mariner outboard motor 9.9hp. ~
like new. 304·e75-5724.
~t
'---'---'---- ~I
Two 1992 eso Yamaha Wave • t
RunnelS, Purchased. New In ~
1992. Deluxe Double Trailer, · ,
$5,800, Daro: B1•·4•B·B57U, Or '
Everings. 814-44&amp;--1324.
~

Grubb's Plano- tunlno &amp; repairs.
ProPtems? Netd Tuned? Call the
piano Dr. 01•-,.525
Hot 4th or July aale, Dave's Swap
Shop, 12 gauge single shot $25;

12 gauge pump $59; 15 speed
Mountain bike, $29.50; air conditioner, 8,000 BTU, 169.50: there
will be a table with free l18ms, one
per customer. sate items and free
i tem1, Fri. only, 1·5, 814·992414:

;. 1

·~ ·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

have the king-queen of clubs. And if
s.o. why did he switch to a low club
rather than the king? He must have
wanted panner on lead .. to deliver
.,. diamond ruff. Backing his read!ng
lf lhe position, Cohen played a dia:nond to his nine'
When did you lasl make a conlraCt
Nith a fi~l-round finesse against a to
while holding !he four top honors in
the suit?
·

"': i

:;-;;-::::::-:~~7.:::::::" - )
2.8 Fronl Wheel Drive Engine, \ r
New Headgukets, $250, Neg . ....-{

-··---····-..···570
Musical
Instruments

614~46-3407.

"'
II

Budget Price Tranami11ion1, '!!:
Slarting at 199.00 and Up, Used I , •
Rebuilt, All Twopes, Over 10,000 •

Credit Problems? Gauranteed fi nancing, 10% Down, Payments

AI low As 1160 Per t.tonrh . No
Tum Downs I Cell Aulh ~814 -446 ·

2897.

.

Transmissions, Access Transfer
Cases &amp; Rear Enda, 614-245·

"I

1

5077

I
I

I

Full line of auto body panels,
paints and 1upplies. also glass,

580

Fruhs&amp;
Vegetables

Upton Used Cars Rt . 82-3 Miles
South of Leon. WV. Financ ing
Available. 304-458-1069.

J

light assembly. Olllygen and ac•
tylene tanks filled and exc:hllnged,
ti14~7o42-2792.

T~AT'S 600D ADVICE, SIR ••
I'LL REMEMBER TIIAT, SIR ..

I 6VESS I LEARNED
SOMETHIH6, MARCIE .. A
BIWI&lt;EN HEART STAVS
· .WITH VOU FOREVER ... .

Using lht Cl1usifitds

Js AS

I

''
'
•'

New gas tanks, 1 ton truc:k
wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R AulD.
Ripley, wv, 304-372-3933 or 1·
800·27:).9~.

790

PEANUTS

SCIAM liTS ANSWIIS

-

ICicle · Windy • Yokel- .Bisque - SILENCE
If you have children taking music lessons you wHl know
!hat the sweetest music may tum out to be SILENCE. ··

.'

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

~i

• I

:'9::5c:C:::o~lem~an::-:c:-am=pe=r."=l;::ol~dl:-·:-ou:::r-:::to ~
22', sleeps si.ll, canopy, sJove. r• '"'
lrigerator, $5300 080, 814·ii2- ~
6084 .
·~ .

I THURSDAY

~~-:--::-::-~--=-:::..~
1975 Midas Pull Camper. 21 Fl.

JULY31

Good Condition, Asking 11,500, 1 .1
,;_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ o&lt;~' Il
814-448-9853.

'

"

,;

'

,.~

1981 Viking pop-up camper, new 1 ~
c'anvas, new tires, sleeps 8, very .,. 1

good cond . $1,200. 304·937·

r

2832.

:

..

1998 Dutchman e•c:el!enl

'

c:ond.

loaded, lake over paymems. 304·

875·5522.

~~~----~~-:~~
:20 Fl. Argooy, (By Aor Siroam) ••'
T. T. Very

''

1

light, Pull Wllll Any •..,

Med1um Size Car, Completely Relurbshed,$2,600. Gt4-~ll-2957,

a
'' t

SERVICES

..,..

ASTRO-GR.APH

.,.

,

.
...

'"

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

In the year ahead there could be a ·
welcomed rum-around tn your finan·
cia) affairs. This might be one of your
mo~ fonunate cycles where maten·
.at interests are concerned .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Be patient, no! impulsive, when
conversing wilh others today.
care not to jump to ~onclustons,
because the merit of their comm~nts
will be evident -if you take. the u.me
to listen.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Use yaur common sense today
when sharing your confidenc.es.
Nothing will be gained from telling ·
your troubles to individuals who
aren't in a position to help.

!Bk"

Rnidenlial or comfl'181cilll wiring,·

new service or repairs. Ma. .r U·

. ,,..

censed eleclrlcian. Ridenour
E!eclrical. WV000308. 304 -875- w •
1786.
'

"

•

•

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Even if you aren't trealed as kind·
·ly as you think you sh~uld be by an
acquaintance today, don t lower yo;ur·
self to his or .her level by behavmg
similarly. .
LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct. 23)
Forego taking credit for someone .
else's ideas today. You will come out
better in the long run with your associates by being filllt to acknowledge
the aulhor. ·
·
SCORPIO (Oct: 24-Nov. 22)
Everything should go smoother
for you today if you don't take your·
self or others too seriously. Be at
peace by innately knowing that any
mislake can be mended.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21)
You will have better luck today if
you work through a competent inler·
mediary. Select a n:presentative who
knows the ropes and all !he angles.
CAPRICORN (DeC. 22-Jan. 19)
Today you're likely to be innovalive and imaginative, but also a trifle
too impt11icnt. This might impel you
to put a bright conception i~to action
~maturely.
·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Keep both outsiders and in-laws
out of your confidential domeslic
affairs today. Persons from \tither
classificalion could upset somethmg
that is running smoothly.
- PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar.ch 20)
Take extra pains ·wilh any projects
for which you're responsible today.
You could be lhe one who is held
accountable should something nol
come out right. .
.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) .
Male rial prospects. lf10k. ~~cour­
aging today, but your probabtbbes for
personal gain aren't apt to come from
risky enterprises. Play 11 close to the
vest.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
A close friend might make an
effort to cover for you today. He or
she will repeat to another not what
you said, but what you should have
said.
·
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Gains and loses can balance each
other out today if you conduct your
affairs appropriately. Use caution
and intelligence to ensure that all
your projects will succeed.

.'

�Have a happy and safe Fourth of July
Ohio Lottery

Wimbledon
competition
narrowing

1

Pick~:

4-4-5
Pick 4:
1-6-3-6
BuckeyeS:
3-12-14-34-37

· Sports on Page 5

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at

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entine

IIIII. q, NO. 511

2 SICIIona. 12 Poges, 35 cen11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,.Friday, July 4, 1997

01117, Ohio 'llllley Publllhlng CompMy

•

A Gannetl Co. Newojlllper

Captains .---Parade preparations--. Contractor argues
•
.cleared
against distortion
Racine man's
of safety .record
conviction in
•

dumping case
is tossed out
By JOHN NOLAN
Aaaoclmd Pre•• Writer
CINCINNATI- A federal judge
has rejected some of the convictions
the government obtained from a twoyear investigation of illegal dumping
in the Ohio and Mississippi rivers.
Lawyers who defended a barge
towing company and its employees at
the 199S trial said Thursday they
were pleased with the ruling.
They declined to elaborate
because the company and one of its
retired executives face sentencing
July II on the remaining charges.
U.S. District Judge Herman
Weber's ruling Wednesday was a set·
back to the U.S. Depanment of Jus·
Thla ftoat from the HMth United MelhociiBt Church Ia one of meny lhel will be Included In
tice, Spokesman Bill Brooks said
Mlddlepan's Fourth _of July parade thla evening. The floet'a theme, •camp Milling," ws1 ereThursday the depanment is considsled to be In keeping wHh Mldclleport'a blcentennllll obHrvstlon, snd highlights the humble
cring whether to appeal.
beginnings of lhe Methodist mo--.u, sccordlng to the Rev. Vernsgsye SUIIIvsn,the church'l
Weber upheld defense arguments
Pllllor.'Memben of the congregation wiH sing hymn• from the flollt. .
that evidence submitted during the , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
, _ _ _ _ _ _._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
two-month trial did not supJ"&gt;M the ·

::~SD:~~:e~ $yra_~_gs~ -~~YJ1CJt \ J!~&amp;.Jjr&amp;l t-~
~:~~:~~::~.as::

steps in initiating zoning laws

president of operations in I~2. The
convi~tions we~ a felony offense oF" ··By KATHRYN CROW
consp1rac~ t'_l v1ol~t~ the Clean Water Sentinel CorrespOndent
.Act by splllmg oil mto nvers and a
Syracuse Village Council Thursmosdemeanor of failure to report a day night in recessed session agreed
spoil to the Coast Guard.
that zoning laws arc needed within
Weber cleared !h,omasscc and _the the village. ·
c~mpany of co~v1cUons of dumping
Kathryn Crow, council member,
Without a permo!.
was designated to meet with village
Weber's ruling cleared towboat solicitor I. Carson Crowto execute the
captains Fred E. Morehead of Vien- necessary steps to bring zoning laws
na, W.Va., and Roben S. Mont- into effect.
gomery of Radne_. Ohio. The judge
. Alan Crisp. pool manager. met
threw out conv1ctoons that they had with council to discuss pool. operadumped pollutants wnhout a permot. tions. He reponed he had moved the
Four other captains indicted o~ con· entrance from its present location
spiracy charges were acquitted at tri- back to the original entrance.
al.
. .
Crisp and council commended
MIG Transpon was a sub;;odoary of the lifeguards.for the excellent maothe Midland Co. of Conconnatt. It ncr in which they handled a recent
operated hundreds of barges and emergency when a youngster fell
towboats until the subsidiary was from the steps !Oing to the high dive
sold in 1994.
and also for their regular duties.
Thomassec, of Paducah, Ky.,
He asked to rent the pool for the
could face five years in prison and a Southern High girls baseball team,
$250,000 line on the felony and one with the proceeds to help defray the
(Continued on Psge 3)
cost of uniforms. Council tabled that

request for study.
Larry Lavender, council member, ·
asked how the work on Founh Street
was proceeding. Bill Roush, council
member, said workers are waiting on
a larger backhoe to finish the culven
and sidewalk project.
Roush also reponed that the docks
are in at the marina for boaters.
At Lavender's suggestion. council
approved the purchase of a new tape
recorder to record meetings. Councilwoman Donna Peterson reponed
that the c.urfew during the summer
months, June, July and Au gus~ · be
changed from I 0 p.m. to II p.m. for
those under the age or 18. That was
approved by Mayor George Connolly.
Council expressed its condolences
to the Eakins family, which lost its
home in a fire early Thursday. Council will see what can be done to assist
them, it was observed.
Crow mentioned that Mike Ralston, village employee, was doing an

By MARGIE MASON
Asaoclated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The Division of Highways docs not c0 nsider
a company's safety record when it awards contracts, the deparlmcnt's director of consiruction said.
Cpntracts arc simply awarded tp the lowest bidder, said Bob Tonney. How·
ever, all bidders must be experienced and run a financially viable business.
A company with a bad safety record would have high insurance and work·.
ers' compensation rates that would hinder its ability to submit a competitive
bid, he said Thursday.
"We depend on tharprocedure to keep unsafe contractors out of this mar·
ketplace," Tinney said.
TWo workers died Wednesday as a crew from C.J. Mahan Construction
Co. of Grove City, Ohio, removed a I00-ton beam from an Interstate 64 br.idgc
connecting West Virginia and Kentucky. Another beam came loose and fell ,
and the weight toppled a crane's booms.
Kim Perry, 48, of Fon Ga~.and Greg Gentry, 28, of Stephens, Ky .. fell
100 feet and died.
TWo other workers, Many Aleshire; 33, of Poca, and .Kevin Berry. 32, of
Genoa, were injured when they fell 65 feet to the bank of the Big Sandy Ri•er, said state police Sgt. Kirby Stickler. They were in fair condition Thurs·
' day at St. Maoy's Hospital in Huntington, hospital spokeswoman Renee Moss
said.
A crane operator escaped before the beams hit his cab.
According 10 records from the Occupational Safety and Health Adminis·
!ration, Mahan, which specializes in bridge work, has had 85 safety viola•
tions since 1984.
The company has been inspected 26 times in the last 13 years. OSHA officials released some of the citations Thursday, but said most could not be
released immediately or without a written request. The agency also would
not disclose the total amount of fines the company has paid.
my O~;(i)SftMBfcty sufiervioor.;n eliarlcston, could' not siiy whether
Mahan's 85 violations were unusual . Not eveoy company is inspected every
year and violations vary in severity, he said.
The number of infractions would not be "any less than average." he said.
"But there's a lot of companies that haven't received any."
Company President Jeffrey Mahan said it was distorting to say the.cum·
pany had 85 infractions.
Often, violations cited by OSHA inspectors arc corrected immediately and
no fines are levied. Mahan said.
"That's what they initially asked iQr. but I'd be interested to sec what the
final outcomes were," he said.

excellentjob on park upkeep. Council agreed.
Connolly reponed the new concession stand at the ballpark was
approvea by the state and that the old
concession stand will be tom down.
Council approved the mayor's
repon showing receipts of'S I ,079 for
the month of June.
Police Chief Tim Gillilan reponed issuing 16 citations and investi·
gating six complaints in which 36
charges were filed against four juve- .
niles.
Treasurer Janice Zwilling issued
the following financial repon for the
month of June: general fund,
$10, 787;
street
construction,
$27,561 .78, highway, $4,427.43; fire,
$14,553.14; water, $5,227.61; pool,,
$6,818. 16;
guaranty
meter,
$3,254.14; cemetery, $95.65; total,
$72.724.91.
Also present was Councilman
Eber Pickens Jr.. Absent was Councilman Mony Wood.

Meigs SAR encourages
people to fly their flags
Meigs County residents are being asked by the Sons of the American
Revolution to fly their flags today in celebration of Independence Day.
The SAR is a patriotic, historic and educational society which has as
its purpose to perpetuate. the' memory '!f Revolutionaoy War patriots. It
also promotes the fellowshil&gt; among the descendants of the patriots and
takes special care in honoring individuals for outstanding patriotic achicvemenis.
.
Ewing Chapter was funded in 1986 and has 56 members who come
from Athens, Pomeroy, Coolville, Cutler, Shade, Marietta. Oak Hill Gallipolis, Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Parkersburg, W.Va. Regular meetings
nre held at the Meigs Museum in Pomeroy.
Eligibility is based on Revolutionary War ancestry and i"nformation may
be bbtained from Keith Ashley•.992-7874.

Smithsonian looks to preserve
Old Glory at' cost of $15 million .
. By CARL HARTMAN
Asaoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - It could cost
$15 million to save the original StarSpangled Banner, the huge flag raised
over Fon McHenry in the dawn's early light of Sept. 14, 1814.
It now hangs in the Smithsonian
Institution's National Museum of
Amencan History - 40 feet long and
threatening to crumble.
To preserve it from timt and pollution, $15 million will be sought.
Just how to do all that is still under
discussion. One problem is keeping
the na!! on display during the long,
high-teeh conservation. One idea is to
let the public watch at least pan of the
work.·
·
"I" think it's our duty to make it
available to people for as long as we
can," said associate museum direc1or
Ron Becker, in charge of the opera·
tion.
' ·
The flag dates from the War of
1812, when a decisive British victory might have reversed the Declaration of Independence a generatton
before.
Francis Scott Key. a Washington
lawyer, was trying io get the release
of a fellow· Washingtonian the British ·
· had taken the month before when
they attacked and burned the capital.
He arrived at an awkward time. The
'British were .try
. ing to take Baltimore,

OPEl

IOI..fll.

SAtt..

.
•',

·'

tOO.
They kept him all of a stormy
night aboard a SJ!lall sloop in the Patapsco River while they bombarded
the fon. which ~guarded the sea
approach to the city.
The rockets' red glare and the
bombs bursting in air - a new invention at the time -)!ave Key glimpses
of a smaller storm flag above the fon.
In· the morning Maj. George Armistead, the Amer.ican commander.
raised the big one - the size of a
four-story building - that he had
made the year before.
Americans stili hCld the fon.
The flag, which inspired Key to
write the national anthem, was kept
in Armistead's family until 1907.
Souvenir ~unters snipped away large
pieces of it and persons unknown. for
unknown.reasons. stitched a red V to
one of the wliite stripes.
"We're researching who did 'that,
and why," Becker said.
· The 15 stripes and blue field arc
wool. The 15 stars - two feet
across, point to point - are cotton.
Sewn with linen thread. the ·nag had
cost $40S.90 by the time Baltimore
widow Mary Young Pickcrsgill and
her 13-year-old daughter Caroline.
finished it a month before the attack.
The museum used !O hang a plain
cloth hung over it, and raised it eveoy
hour so visitors could see it as the

national anthem played. Bin the cloth
seemed to give little protection from
visitors' breath and fibers . in the
atmosphere, so the nag is now on permanent show.

It got a light cleaning in 1982, but
nothing like the preservation effon
now planned, said Suzanne
Thomassen-Krauss, the museum's
top texti lc e xpen.
"We used a vacuum with vcoy low
suction, so as not to remove any of
Jhe _original fiber," she said. "It.just
took off the same liglii dust you'd
find on your furniture."
.
.
Last .November, Becker asseni-'
bled about SO conservators from
Britain ·and Canada as well as the
·United States. They met for ~o days,
then broke up into groups available
for consultation. Each group deals
with a pari of tbe problem - how to
build a showcase and how to control
the environment inside.
Building a ca&lt;;e would require
about seven tons of glass. That would
be a much more complicated job than
making a display ease for a small
document like the Declaration of
Independence.

Many problems still need discussion, "including how to get it down
without damage. It is uncertain just
how much the flag weighs. Becker
estimated 125 to 175 pounds.

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES- Work continues on the new •1g1 County Msdle~~l Com·
plex nesr Vetarsns Memorlsl Ho1pltsl In
Pomeroy. Wortcers hive lnatslled much of the
brick outalde of the building snd sre slso work·
lng lnalcle the $2 mllllon-9lu1 atructure. The

.

building will house doctor• ahd ia designed to
complement the existing hospital. Groundbrellldng for lhe new building WIIS held In April.
Here, workerslnstsll brick• nesr the building's
enttsnce.
•

•

n

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