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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

St.·Louis
turns tables
on Reds

Pick 3:
5-9-4
Pick 4:
8-7-2-8
Buckeye 5:
10-12-17-21-31

Sports on Page 4

Clear tonight, fog developing late . Lows in the
mid 60s. Thursday, mostly
sunny and hot. Highs in

~----~--------------~----------~--------~~----------~~m
It

••

ent1ne
llbl. e, NO. t14

·c,...,, Ohio v.11ey Publlehlng ~ny

2 SecltON. 16 ~'agee, 3 $ A O.nnen Co. Nenp'lpH

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 16, 1997

Ready to move ahead
Engineering approval by Meigs CIC is final step as
Tuppers Plains opens up for business ·development
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News SlaH
(Editor's Note: Today, The Dally
Sentinel begins a four·part Com·
munlty Spotlight series on Tuppers
Plains, which will update readers
on several ongoing Improvement
projecta, 11 well as an examination
of the growth potential of this
community.)

propeny to warehousing businesses,
because of the small number of jobs
such businesses require, according tO
CIC President Paul Reed.Ron McDade. Meigs County economic development director, said
that the site has many benefits which
make the site readily marketable: a
level terrain, which requires little in
the way of preparation; three-phase
.
electrical
service, which is preferred
Completion of engineering and
·
by
manufacturers;
and a close proxapproval of that engineering by the
imity
to
ihe
Appalachian
Hi'ghway,
Meigs County Community Improvewhich
will
eventually
offer
four-lane
. ment Corporation arc all that stand in
from
Belpre
to
Cincinnati.
highway
ihe way of the development of a 60"Right now, Tuppers Plains prob~cre industrial park in Tuppers Plains.
offers the county's greatest
ably
The CIC's site was formerly
opponunity
for economic growth,"
owned by the Ohio Valley ManufacMcDade
s_
a
id.
"Its location makes it
8
acres.
Each.
lot
will
have
access
turing Co., and is located off State
readily
accessible
to Pomeroy, Belfrom
a
roadway
to
be
built
on
the
Route 7, the site of a former stable
pre.
Marietta,
Parkersburg
and
as
well
as
_
utility
services
propeny.
and sawmill firm owned by the Cole
Athens."
needed to establish a business.
fami)y.
McDade expects the CIC's govThe property is being targeted for
The Wool pen engineering firm of
erning
board to approve the linal
Ashland, Ky .• has completed prelim· development of light industrial busiengineering
plan by month's end'.
· inary engineering plans for the site. nesses - manufacturing operations
After
that.
the
required infrastructure.
Those plans include roadways and which can provide maximum
as
roadways
and utility lines.
such
locations of water, sewer and other employment for local residents.
can
go
in
place.
Because of a relatively small
infrastructure, necessary for the proper marketing of the site to potential amount of road frontage, retail busi- . He hopes that the central roadway
nesses are not likely to find the prop. at· the site, which will access both
developers.
The area will be divided into ·10 eny auractive, and the CIC is not state routes 7 and 681, will be finlots. ranging in size from 3.4 acres to especially interested in selling the ished by year's end.

.j

Spotlight on ....

.Cigarette-makers
await president's
settlement-stance
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ciga- er Bruce Reed. "We also gave them
• rene-makers predict President Clin- a clear message to take back to New
:: ion ultimately will back off demands York, which is that if the _seulcment
· • to toughen the proposed multi-billion is going to work they have a responsibility lo look out for our bouom
: dollar tobacco seulement.
.
"We didn't expect it to be rubber· -line. which is reducing smoking
• stamped." tobacco industry al!orncy especially by kids."
: J_ Phil Carlton said Tuesday after
Shalala appeared to defend a pro· meeting with top Clinton aides.
vision lhat outrages some members of
• He said administration signals did Congress: that the $368.5 billion in
• not reveal whether they arc receptive tobacc_o comrany payments called for
; to industry arguments supponing _the in the deal is fully laK-dcductible, giv• deal, "but I remain optimistic that ing companies a $147 billion tax
• after ... (the White House review) is reduction .
: done, the conclus·ion will.be that the
"To be fair ahouttax deductibili: negotiators did a good joh and we ly, il is standard business practice in
don 't need to change anything.''
a seulementto deduct the cost of that
Top Clinton officials interpreted sculcmcnt from one's husincss taxthe meeting differently. saying ciga- es." Shalala said.
relte-makcrs did not rule out paying
On another front. a Senate Approstiffer lines i'f teen-age smoking docs priations suheommiuce voted to pro.. not decline or giving up tax hrcaks in vide the Food and Drug Administra• exchange for White House support . tion nnly $4.9 million next year to
··.They didn't turn us up or turn us h9lp states enforce a federal law ban: down." said Donna Shalala. the ning toha'-=CO sales to minors. Clinton
• HCahh and Human Services seen:~ had requested $34 million (o he
_di vided among the st~les. and anti·
• tary.
"We made clear to them that wbaccn force~ vowed tO push semi: while we sec the scltlcmcnl as a real tors to at least matc.h the $24 million
: opponunity. w_e .will insist thai it he House appropriators hav'c cannarkcd
: strengthened in some areas:· added for the cnforCe!!]ent program.
And in an additional tobacco
: White House domestic policy advis·

SIGNS OF THE -TIME - These signs, relat-.
ing to the Tuppers Plains Regional Sewet' Di.strlct; were recently erected near the Meigs
County CIC lndustriaf site. The new sewer sys-

The engineermg work and the
infrastructure construction will . be
made possible by a grant from the
Ohio Depanmeni of Development, in
the amount of $500,000. The prop·
erty itself was purchased by the CIC
with a loan from the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co.

tern is expected to to aid In economic development at the site; and elsewhere In Its service
area. A portion of the Industrial alta can be seen
In the background.

McDade also anticipates ~cc king
iJ!hcr funding sources once the site is
ready for marketing, to assist in
allracting developers.
"It's hard to market a site until it's
developed." McDade said. "A corn-

The land is such a small pan of it."
Much of the marketing strategy
'l!ill involve utility professionals at
American Electric Power and Columbia Gas. who help match inquiries

field is nqt an industrial site. You
must have the infrastructure in place.

In the meantime. McDade said.
the -CIC has received ''a couple of
nibbles" from potential buyers .

with suitahlc si\CS state-wide.

elderi.Y pay. more
for .Medicare appeals to the young
Having·.~ better-off

By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - If they could
afford it, grandma and grandpa would
have to pay more for Medicare .
That idea. to make· bcuer-o ff
eld~rly people pay more for their coverage . has struck a resonant chord
with many Americans , panicularly
younger workers. recent polls suggest. And President Clinton has hint·
cd he may go along.
OPENING DEFENSE - David
The plan is drawing stiff resistance
Hardy, attorney for Philip Morris, in the House, where members fear
delivered opening statements retribution from angry retirees. A- a
Tueaday In Dade County (Fla.) bloc, Americans in their 20s and earCircuit Court In the class action ly 30s don't vote in high percentages.
s~lt brought by formar and pre- _ particularly in mi&lt;..lterm elections.
sent flight atlendants against Senior citizens. do.
tobacco compenla for Illnesses
''There's tremendous lear in the
allegedly caused by second·
House." said 'Ari
Fleischer.
hand smoke In airline cabins. spokesman for the GOP-run House
(AP)
Ways and Mc_ans Committee.
He said many mcmhcrs vividly
development, the Justice Dcpanment recall the outhurst ~nnong retirees the
last time Congress tried .. means-testsi~nalcd thai its criminal investigation was still active despite effons.to
ing'' Medicare. 1! was a 19HK law
scule civil litigation against cigarctle·
providing catastrophic medico:~! hcn10akcrs. Justice investigators brought cfits, hut requiring wealthier seniors
to pay a !(Urchargc for them .
in former Philip Morris research
The anger reached the point that a
chief William Farone 10 spend two
band o.f demonstrating retirees cha."'cd
days helping them interpret evidence
Dan Rostenknwski. D-Ill. - then
of industry research into nicotine and
Ways and Means ·chairman und a
safer cigarettes, said a source famil·
principal author- into his car in his
iar with the probe.
home town of Chicago. They then

banged the windows and the roof.
. Congress repealed the law 1in
19H9.
People who arc retired . and lhosc

ncar retirement, generally ICel that
they contributed to Medicare and
Social Security thr&lt;'&gt;Ugh their working

The political inllucncc of senior

citizens shouldn't-he minimit..:d. said
GOP pollster Frank Lun11..
" 199M will sec some of the lowest votinJ! in modern history. But you

can het your houom dollar the sen in"'
will still show up." Luntz said.
Every Hou:-\C scat is on the hallnt
Jives and the rules should !101 be
next
year. as every two years.
changed now. ,
House and Senate negotiators arc
Overhaul• supponcrs drew heart
grappling with the divisive issue as from Clinton's assertion la....;t week
lhcy work toward a Compromise that he could suppnn means-testing
plan to balance the federal budget in · so l&lt;ing as the mechanism is "fair and
li ve years .
workable."
The mean~- testing proposal, plus
Gene Sperling. director of Clinother Medicare provisions. including . ton's National Economic Council.
an incrCa.,c in th~.: age of eligihility said in an interview that Clinton isn 't
from 65 to 1&gt;7, nppcnr only'" the Sen- happy with the Senate language but
ate version.
has no problem with the concept.
Rabing the cligihility age looks
The Senate plan. passed June 25,
dead in the water anJ lawmakers arc would charge seniors with annual
cxpcctc&lt;..lto ahan&lt;..lon it.
incomes over $50,000 higher monthPolls hnve shown surprisingly ly premiums.
·
strong support for means-testing.
Advot.:acy groups for retirees arc
A poll hy the nonpanisan Pew waging a hcav.y lohhying ~.;ami)il.ign
Research Center showed that those again st it ·and nthcr proposed
surveyed favored requiring heuer-olf Mc&lt;..licarc t.:hangcs.
seniors to pay more. 60 ·pcn.:cnllo 37
House Minority Leader ' Dick
percent.
Gephardt. a 2!KXJ presidential hopeStrong support for overhauling ful . puts the hallie ·in stark panisan
Mc&lt;..licurc corncs from younger wurk- terms. "Their (Republicans' l intent is
crs . who incrca•:ingly resent paying to destroy Medicare. They want tu
taxes for generous health hcnclits for pull apart the sodal contract,'' the
the nation 's ril:hcst retirees. They Missouri Dcm&lt;lcru.t said.
worry there' ll he lillie left for thcin
once million.s of hahy hnomcrs retire .

Standards issue may creep into funding debate

FUNDING CONFERENCESen. Judy Sheerer, D-Shak·
• , er Helghte, conferred with Senate Mlr•orltv Lucier Ben Espy, D. Columbus, during a meeting of the
Finance Committee
at the Slatehouse Tuesday. (AP)

,

'

By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The issue of
local control vs. statewide performance standards could heat up as
litwmakers debate education reforms
designed to help win passage of a laK
increase for schools.
The House Education Comminee
began hearings Tuesday on a reform
bill. Rep. Randy Gardner, who is conducting the hearings, said the commiuec should be ready to vote on the
bill next week.
The bilf sets new requirements for
high school graduation, beginning
with the class of 2002. Gardner
'doesn't want the bill hogged down
with' amendments, even if it frustrates
those who think the state already die·
lates too much to local schools. · ·
"We have members who believe
very strongly in accountability and
we havt members who believe in
local control. Sometimes, those are in
conflict." Gardner, R-Bo~¥1ing
Green, said after the hearing .
Rep. Mike Wise, R-Mayfield. said

he was concerned that new standards
could supersede local control and

" I am convinced at this -critical
juncture in Ohio's educational reform

opposition to the legislati ve race tn
beat the Aug . 6 deadline fnr placing

overwhelm students and educa!Ors di.scussions, we must connect cduca- issu,cs 110 the N()\~Cmhcr hallot, argutional spending with accountahility ing instead that the legislation should
alike.
f•ir
results. assuring beucr condi.tions. he parceled out to various House .and
"As we have placed more mana"nd
selling new graduation require- Senate ..:om.mittccs.
dates on our districts. we 've seen
·
ments."
Ms. Harris tnld the commitWhile .Gov. George Voinovich
their performance drop, " Wise said.
tee.
and
Repuhlican legislative leaders
The bill would raise from 18 to 20
The
House
and
Senate
finance
have
insisted on the condensed
the number of credits, kn~wn as
committees.
m"
c
anWhile
,
continued
timetable,
Democrats maintain the
Carnegie units, that students would
hearings
on
the
fundin
g
portions
of
Legislature
could let the voters have
need to graduate. It also would pl ace
lhc
school
reform
paCkagepartietheir
~ay
in
a special election early
an emphasis on math, science and
ularly
the
penn
y-per-dollar
incrca~e
next
year.
social studies and reduce the number
R;ty's critique came before The
of courses a student can choose. The in the stale sales tax and plans to roll
ha~;
k
residential
propeny
taxes.
·;(Cleveland)
Plain Dealer and The
standards would go into effect with
Senate
Finance
Chairman
Roy
'Cincinnati
Enquirer
reponed that a
the class of 2002.
Ray,
R-Akton,
told
reponcrs
that
he
leading
Senate
Democrat
had urged
The bill's _sponsor, Sen. Gene
lawmaker.
to
have
a
new
vcr·
his
colleagues
to
oppose
Voinovich's
expects
Walts, R-Galloway, also wants a
tougher proficiency lest for students sion of the legislation ready for the plan as a way to gain political advantage in next year's elections.
to graduate.- The current ninth-grade committce Tuesday.
Sen. Leigh Herington -of Kent
That's too soo n filr Sen. Judy
test measures learning through eight
D-S
haker
Heights.
wrote
in a memo 10 Senate Minority
Sheerer,
grades. The new tests, which students "
We
should
take
our
time
on
Leader
Ben Espy that Democrats
could stan taking at the beginning of
thi
s,"
Sheerer
said.
"_
T
his
is
a
situashould
"not
give up our political
their junior year, would test knowlwill
affect
1.8
million
kids.
advantage
by'
agreeing to" the tax tion
that
edge through I0 grades.
It
deserves
the
full
attention
of
the
·
increase
proposal,
the newspapers
The Depanment of Education
Legislature."
reponed
today.
believes the refonns are needed, said
Sheerer renewed the Democrats'
Gene Harris, chief program officer.

�Commentary
D~y .Sentinel

.,

.

Fax 992-2157

.!2.

I

A Gannett~· Newspaper
ROBER I L WINGETT
PlltWM

CHARLENE HOERJCH
a..... , 1111111

n.-

IIARGARET LEHEW

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7

was RSpODSible for the infiiiiiOUS ·to conduct his inquiry with a thin
WiJiic-HortOR .:j$ during the 1988 ~ of lite-minded aides.

m

. . . .

q;,CWit

... ,~17,

What other newspapers
are saying around Ohio
By 1be Aaociated Press

lin'""'"'

As Sen. fftd
R-Tcnn..
~ in ihe anpaip

presidential campaiJn between
George Bush and Michael Dubkis.
flnl--nisingleaing&gt;,thc "ah:r~inves-- Four years later. Brown again made
tigabool across the Caplqllies in shim- news by advertismg a 1-900 ~
bles.
line on which listeners could hear
TI!ompson, the courtly Ten- the tape recordinl§ of phone calls
nessean whom some people dnnl between !ben-governor Clinton utd
will be our next president, got off to Gennifet Rowers.
,
a slow stan last week when former
Aides on the &lt;:Ommittee have
Democratic Nauonal Committee complained privately for months
finance director Richard Sullivan about Bossie's inflated ego. Unlike
failed to provide the fireworks that other commiuee aides, for example,
his depos111ons had indicated. Time Bossie doesn' t use voice-mail for his
and again the Republican senators calls. He insists that receplionisiS
tried to bait Sullivan into incriminat- tale all his messages by hand, so
ing President Clinton. Sulhvan other staffers can see how many
never delivered.
calls he 's getting. Unfonunately, one
On the other s1de of the Capitol , • of the calls he failed to return I.St
Rep. Dan Burton: R-Ind., probably weel was ours.
wishes he had Thompson's probOver the normally quiet July 4
lems. For Burton's parallel 1nqu1ry recess, the troubles that have been
mto Clinton's campaign finances brewing for months on Burton's
h;as hit a brick wall. Incessant squab- staff finally spilled over into public
bhng among aules has replaced any view. The commiuee's top investihint of a senous inquiry.
gator, John Rowley, quit the' probe in
SOU{Ces inSide Burton 's House disgust after Burton refused to fin:
Government Reform and Oversight BOSSie. Two other top -.:ommiuee
Committee tell us the wom predic- aides also resigned, leaving Boss1e

-

111 Cola1 Sllwt, .,_..,, Ohio

,.. 1117

""'*"

Recent Ohio editonals of slaiCwide and nauonal mten:st.
oons of Burton's cntlcs are now
corning true. These sources, who
Daytoa Daily News, July 14
•
11 is good to see that the tough tall comong out o f the Clmton admmls- also worl&lt;ed for the commlllee durtntion lately on Bosma IS not just talk.
'"l! the tenure of preVIous cha1rman
NAlO troops have moved upon two indicted war crimmals, obviously in Rep. Bill Clinger. R-Pa., say the
response to the growing feebng - represented by W~hmgton 's rhetoric investigation has turned in10 a partithat the Dayton peace process is in danger of aJroph~ing to death 1f the West san wllch-hunt.
doesn' t show a willingness to tale some risks.
House Re)iublican leaders arc
Tile two indicted war cnmmals - o ne of whom was arres ted and one concerned enough about Burton to
killed -are not the biggesa names in the category o( war cnminals. Never- keep him on a short leash. For the
theless, their arrest has changed the poht1cal situation in Bosma. It has deliv- past two months. Burton and his top
ered the message that the West has not run out o f resolve.
aides have-Tieen forced to 11rovide
World attention now focuses spec1ficall y on Radovan Karadzic. the weetJy updates before a four-man
wanune leader of the Bosnian Serbs. He IS still a central player in Bosnian adv1sory group appointed by House
Spealer Newt Gmgrich. Tile real
Serb territory.
This is a preposterous and unacceptable situauon . At the very least. he purpose of the meetmgs JS to male
must be scared out of the country.
sun: that Burton doesn' t do anything
1'ht (~vdand) Plain Dealer, July 13
that would embarrass the pany hierAs the House, the Senate and the White House resume budget negotia- archy.
tions, " tax'' and " cut" are fighting words. No matter wbo wtns the fight ,
At the center of the controversy is
many Americans Will get a taX cut of some description. But underlying the Dav1d ' Bossie, a 32-year:.O.d investishouting is a fundamental disagreement between Republicans and Democ- gator wbo is derided by his critics as
rats gener.ally: Who should get tax cuts - the people who pay the bulk of being a "loose canon ." Before joinfederal income taxes, or people who pay little or none?
ing Burton's staff, Bossie cut his
Both Republicans and Democratic plans support a per-ch1ld Ia&gt; cred1t, teeth as an investigator for Aoyd
wition tax breals and reductions m cap1tal-gams and estate taxes. The Brown, the Republican hn-man wbo
Republicans l!ear their cuts to Ameri~ans who contribute most of what Jloes
, nto the feder.al pot. 76 percent, they say to households that make less than
!575.000 a year.
The Republicans charge that the Chnton tax-cut plan is rediStnbullon of
' By Joseph Perldns
jneome. a handout in diSguise .
.
And it is, whJCh IS why we oppose 11 .... Whatever tax cu~' emerge, parBarbara Boxer, California's
l'cularly on tuition. will unduly comphcate 1040-!Jme for taxpayers and the Democratic Junior senator. was 1n
IRS alike. But the apportionment of tax cut• should reflect the proportion of San Diego recently, tal&lt;ing time to
13.11es paid. Thai general principle should prevail.
chide local congressman Brian Bil~
The (ZanesdJe) T'IIIMS Recorder, July 11
bray for proposmg legiSiallon on
• " Today Amenca's parents have won back their livmg room," the man Capital Hill that would deny autl&gt;who would be president said.
mallc U.S. citizenship to newborn
For ·Vicc President AI Gore, 11 .was a grand1ose statement to descnbe a babieS of illegal aliens.
111inuscule step by the tclev1&lt;10n industry. The mdustry agreed to a I)Cw plan
In a testy speech. even fur her.
to rate programs, just stx months afteiiCadopled a different system.
Bo•er
ac1dly remarked. " I find the
By October. broadcast and &lt;able stauons w1ll add "V '' for v10!enee " S ' '
story
cxucmcly
mtcrestlng ... that
for sex , "L" for exphc11 ratings and " D" for sugges tive dmloguc . 1
congressman
B1lbray
's mom d1d
But no matter what A I G ore says, the raung syste m isn't @OlD!' to do what
come here so he· d be a c111zcn r m
he says it will.
The problem IS that shows arc frequently disgusung and the parents don' t sure he· s very happy ..
/l.onitor their children's viewing And no rating system c an male them
Boxer in~mualcs that B1lbray 1s
hypocnuc al That he benefited from
the 14th Amendment guarantc~ or
CJilzcnship for "all JICfSOns born or
nalurali7_cd m the Un11cd States...
Thai h~ waniS to deny the same cni'.cnshlp " nght' ' to bah1es born on
US. SOli to illegal alien parents
Dear Editor:
But B1lbray would have been a
On Thursday evenmg, July 10, the Ofuo Umversity'Community Orches·
Clllzcn whether hiS mom .
U.S.
tra under the directiOn of John Chmer, perfonned in front of the Mc1gs
Mav1s.
bore him 1n the United
County Court House m downtown Pomeroy. Those that altended-wcre treatSlates.
m
her native Austria or at the
ed to a vanely of Big Band selections from Glenn Miller's "In the Mood" to
American
naval ba!'I.C on Guam
the grande finale of "Stars and StriPes Forever".
(where
she
re&lt;1dcd
at the t1mc ) Her
Rarely do eiti7.cns o f southeastern Oh1o have the opportu~uy to be enterhusband
wa'
an
Amcncan
servicetained by such a professional soundmg group wnhoul driVIng many mtlcs
man.
And
she
wa'
a
naturali'ed
outs ide of their areas The Me1gs County busmess communuy appreciates
very much this spec1al v1si1 to the Oh1o Ri ver valley and welcomes a return Arncncan ctttlcn
performance at a future date.
There is absolutely no compari Special thank. to the fine folks at the Peoples Bank who sponsored th1s son between what MaviS Bllhray
very entertmning performance.
d1d, when she was two months pregSincerely.
nant with the ruture U .S congressRon MtDade, man. and what roughly I00.000 JlleDirector of Development

''The career PfQSCCUlors (like
Rowley) wen: brought in with the
understanding that they had the
authority to (overrule) Bossie," one
committee soun:e told us. But when
puSh came to shove, the source
added. " Burton vetoed them."
Tile same source cited tenstons
that had g10wn ovet several months
between Bossie and his co-worl&lt;ers.
Bossie allegedly didn' t mesh with
the mon:-seasoned career prosecutors, who wen: unaccustomed to the
partisanship and quick pace of congn:ss10nal inqu1ries.
Burton, 1n choosine sides with
Bossie. showed that bipartisanship is
the least of his concerns as he prepares for the heanngs that are seheduled to stan in September.
_
Frt:tful that the probe 1s losmg
credibility, some committee staffers
have floated the 1dea of 1ssuing an
" mterim" report somcllme m the
next few weeks. That's a suange
notion considering that no hearings
have been held and hule concrete
information has been gathered

which hasn' t already been ~
1n the presS.
Alsd standing in Burton's way IS
Rep. Henry W8Jtnian, D-Cahf. , the
veteran h!letai from Southern Ca11:
fornia wbo is the lop Democrat on
the c;OIIIIIllttee. W1111man's asdes long
ago •topped taiJt!ns m B~on's staff
about the mvesugahon. mstead laking on the role of Clin«&gt;n protectors.
In the wale of the res1gnat1ons last
week, Waxman called for the probe
to be shut down-- a suggestion that
was naturally shot down by Republican leaders.
Yet if Waxman really wants to
protect the pres1dent, ll 's certainly m
his interest to keep Burton right
where he is. "Waxman is playing
rope-a-dope," one Repubhcan commiuee staffer told us. " He might hit
h1m hard enough (that he's forced lo
giVe up) ... But it's in Waxman's
benefit that he has someone hke
Burton in there ."
Jael Anderson and J"'l Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Letters to the· editor

Entertaining performance

akiller

Dear Editor.
1 have lnown Jason Hysell for 13 years and he IS not a killer. He JS a
fighter. Jason had to fight his way through hfe Not many peuple know what
a hard life he has lived. especially hiS childhood He has asked Me1gs County for help time and time agam but rcce1ved none. So Metgs County can
thank itself for the fighter he IS.
,
1 g1ve much sympathy to the Johnson fam1ly beq lUsc I know what they
arc feeling . I lost my mother when I was 13 and when e vent like th1s happen
you do blame someone. but I know J.Son, I know how he thmks and I know
the real Jason. the Jason he would be 1f g1ven the c hance And he 1s the·
nicest well-mannered, lovmg man I know he would do anythmg for anyone.
.
not ktll someone 1n1enuonally.
1 have seen Jason mad and he m1ght be qu1ck lo swmg but not to murder
Jf he were going to commit such a crime he would have done so a_ l,o ng ume
ago. It makes me so angry to hear peo ple talk about h1m when ther ve never
met him and mon: than hkely never seen h1m . II IS not anyone s nght ~o
JUdge somebody cx&lt;:ept God . In t1mc people w1ll sec the real Jason and w1ll
feel stupid for the thmgs they have satd. If there was any doubt m my m1nd
as to whether or not he ~:ould do such a thing I would nev~r wnte this. but I
know him and what he is capable o f I have seen the real Jason and I know
what he's feeling now. I know why be pleaded gu1hy: he was m shock and
didn't know what to do and they convmced h1m 11 was best And even though
he knows it was an a&lt;:cident, he doesn't even want to li ve . but he will, he is
a s trong-willed person.
Evel)lone assumes since he was there and he hll Mr J~nson and h~s
fought all his life and has a temper that he c aused Mr. Jobnson s d,e ath. Acc~ ­
deniS happen but what's meant to be IS meant to be because 11 s m God s
haods not ours . 1 am truly sorry for the Johnson family but enough lives have
been rumed ovet a temble accident, why rum more?
BI'IUidy Grover
Letart, W,Va.

OHIO Weather

George A. Blake

•
IToledo I 94' I

' .,

George A Blake , 69, New Haven, WVa , d1ed Thursday, July 10, 1997
in St. Mary 's Hospnal , Huntmg10n, W Va
Born Nov 30, 1927 in Chfton, W.Va., sqn of the late Artley and Bessie
Blake, he was a retired welder at E lemendorf Air Force Base m Alaska.
'AU S. Air Force veteran of World War II and the Korean War, he was a
member of the Amencan Leg1on and the DAV in Alaska.
Surviving are h1s w1fe, MarJone Strac k Blake , a son and daughter-m-law,
Steve and Laura Blale of Palmer, Alaska; five grandchildre n and three greatgrandsons ; a SISter and brother-m-law, Lorena and Von Stewart of New
Haven; and several meces and nephews
He was also preceded m death by a daughter. Beth Blake , and by several brothers and SISter.
Services Will be 7 p m. Fnday. July IR, 1997 m the F1rst Church ot God ,
New Haven, with Pasto1 Clem Lim ben officiating There Will be no VISilauon Arrangements are by the Foglesong Fun&lt;ral Home , Mason , W.Va
In heti of flowers, the family requests that donatiOn s be p1ade to a favonte
chanty, or to the fam1l y

..

'

I
• I

By The Associated Press

.

gal aliens do year by year, when they
spirit across the U.S. border and
have their bab1cs in, San Diego
maternity wards at California taxpayer expense.
If there 1s any hypocrite on the
illegal immigration issue. it's Boxer.
" We need to fix 11 at the border." she
said. " We need to fix 11 at the wortplace ... But then she adds . " I wa,n' t
for fi•mg II. by thC way. at the hospital or in the cla.m-dom ·'
'

So what the senator is saying IS
that as long as fon:1gn nattonals stay
on tbetr side of the U.S. border. tbey
have no right to Yankee largess. But
1f they manage to steal a&lt;:ross the
U.S bonier-· 3S more than I milhon
do ea&lt;h year -- then they get a free

pa.li.'\.
They arc entitled to free hospuaiIT..auon. free cducatmn. free wclrarc
hencfil,. all councsy of state and
federal taxpayers. Moreover. 1r Illegal ahcns have bab1es 10 a US .
matcrnny ward. those bab1cs arc
designated American clli7.cns.
Bo•er says that her v1ews on Illegal alien birth.' arc rooted in Amencan tradiuon. " Maybe I'm old-fashioned:· she sa1d. " but I lhmk. if
you' re born here. you' re an Amen-

can:·
But while that ha.' been the rule
s1nce the 14th amendment was railfred in 1868, the Unued States docs
make exceptions For instance, the

American-hom bab1e• of forc1gn
diplomat&lt; do not become U.S. citizens. Instead, they arc c i!J7.cns of the
countncs from wh1ch theu d1plomat
parents came . 1;hc rationale heinl'
that the pnmary loyally of an American cuizen must ncccs.o;anly he to
the United Stales rather than a forctgn nat10n

their Amcncan cit1T.cnsh1p by VIrtUe
or their longevity in this country and
their uncompensated labors. The
14th Amendment wa_, pa..sed to
right a pa.'t wrong -- the denial of
~1ti 1.C nship to nalive-bom blacks -not lo reward a future wrong-- steal'"! across the U S. bonier to have a
haby.

A _s1m1lar cxccptton ought to he
made for the offspring of 1llegal
aliens Thcu parents have no allegiance to the Unncd States and have
~arnved on th" country through Illegal -- fclontnus -- mean.' Ncrthcr
Illegal ahcn parents. nor their
hahtcs. have done anything to merit
Amencan citizenship

Boxer argues that B1lhray 's hdl.
the C1117.cnsh1p Rcfonn Act, wpuld
unfauly pumsh the children of diegal aliens But II hardly seems unfair
to say that if a 'hild IS hom to a

Mon:ovcr. constitutional scholars
say that ne1thcr Congress nor the
state legislatures mtended for the
14th Amendment tel ,apply to the
children of Illegal ahens That's
because. when the amendment wa&lt;
or1gmally proposed I :I(). some years
ago. the Umted States had a de fat:to
" open border" policy. There wa.' no
illegal immi!!Jlllmn to SJICak of.

In fact . that's how most nauuns
of the world dctenn1nc their ciuzenship If an Amcncan t:1ti:1cn ha.'i a
bally m Great Britam. France. Gcr,
many, Italy or Japan, that bally " an
Amcncan. Would Boxer suggest
that su'h foreign -born Amer~can
bah1cs arc hcmg unfa1rly pumshed''

The Rcconstructmn Ern amendment wa.' specifically wnncn for the
hcncfil or fonner slaves, most of
whom were thud- and rourth-gencr31100 rcsu:k:nb of lhis country. who

were hrought 10 this countl)l against
their w1ll, who found themselves'
d1,;cnfranch1scd m their new homeland.

mother who 1s RCithcr an Amcri..:an
1
4.:ili7.Cn nor legal rcstdcnt o f lhls

country. that her newborn shoul~ he
a cUJ7.cn of her oatton of on gin.,

h remains to he ,;ccn 1f Rep Bll hray 's h1ll even makes 11 out of commmcc , much less to the House fioor.
But whether 11 doe&gt; or not , he
deserves credit. not auack . for rais'"!' the scnous consmuuonal qucs'"'" of whether the 14th Amendment
needs to remterprctcd
Joseph Perkins Is a ~umnlst
for th~ San Dieao Union·Trihune.

1lJc cmanc1patcd slaves earned

If you think Gravano sbould be
applauded for h1s role in puttmg
these wiseguys beh1nd bars, think

·'I don't thilllc I wliS any
more vicious in this life
than anyone else," Gra·
vano said during crosse:ramintllion of his mur·
derous ways

.' -----:-------...1
agam . By h1s own admissiOn,
Sammy the Bull has sent 19 mcp to
their graves - a lot more than the
total of those prosecutors say Gotll
and G1gante had a hand m k1lhng.
But in the war agmnst organ1zed
cnme, the two Mafia bosses arc cons1dered b1gger fish than ihe coldblooded killer who has helped the
federal government put dozens of
mobsters behmd bars.
" I don't think I was any mon:
vicious m ' this hfe than anyone
else," Gravano sa1d dunng crossexamination of h1s murderous ways
while a member of the mob. Apparently the Justice Department agrees.
For what he did, Gravano. 52, got
off easy.
He served just five years 1n Jail.

Afterwards, he went mto the witness
protection progr:1m for a lim!' before
dcc1dmg he could do a better JOb
protecting himself That decision
was made easy by the money Gravano's bad de&lt;.'&lt;ls have brought him .
In court la&lt;t week, he adm1t1cd
gcuing $250.000. half the advance
that wa.&lt; pa1d to wntcr Peter Maa.&lt;,
for .. Undcrboss." the hook that
chronicles Gravano's life of crime.
He also expects to pocket a $1 mllhon share of lhe movie deal that 's
expected to put his story on the &lt;li ver screen.
Outrageous, huh''
HarperColhns puhhs hed the
book, and 20th Century Fox has pUf·
chased the movie nghl&lt; Both companics arc owned by Rupert Murdock. the conservati ve mcd1a mogul
who apparently sees nothmg wrong
with fcathenng Gravano 's bloodstained nest. In both c ases the
money is reponedly hem!! paid to
Gravano through a third pany so
that the media companies can cla1m
clean hands on this dirty affa1r.
And it gets worse.
While Gravano tcsuficd '" the
G1gantc case, the relatives of some
of his murder victims sat a few feet
away, frusuated m then efforts to
serve him with court papers in the

~

WASHINGTON (AP) - The IS popul01 ly known as the Green
commander of the Green Berets, Berets
Anny Gen. Hugh Shelton, IS lilccly to
She lion, a graduate of North Carbe Pres1den1 Clmton's. cho1ce for a lma State Umvemty and a former
chairman of the Jomt Chtefs of Staff, commandc1 of the 18th A~rbornc
. admimstration ofricials say.
Co'l's and Fort Bragg . N C. won
T"o mdes , mcludmg a m1htary praise for hiS role as the ground comofficial. satd Tuesday n1ght that mander of the 1994 U.S. military
; 'Defense Secretary W1lham Cohe~- operaHon 10 Ha111
1
::was expected to recommend thai
At the last m1nutc \VIth para' ,S helton replace Army Gen. John troopers already in the a1r. the miS' · Shahkashv1h, who IS ret~ring The Slon was swuched from a full-scale
' offiCials spoke only on cond111on of airborne mvas10n of the Canbbcan
· ;anonymity.
nation to a less confrontauonalmser~
I•
Cohen could make h1s recom- tmn of Amcncan troops m an effort
mendat10p as early as today II he to restore democracy
sucks wuh Shelton and t~c prcs1den1
And 11 was the cnmson-bereted
. concurs, an announcement
could Shelton who dwarfed Raoul Ccdras
'
-cometh" week,
1n October 1994, when Ha111 's m1h- ·
Cohen's first choice 10 succeed tary leader appeared at the claphoard
Winners announced
, - Shalikashv1h was Air Force Gen. army headquarters to rc&gt;Jgn
Wmncrs of the Relay for L1fc
-, Joseph Ralston, but he w1thdrow
Shelton also " a tavonlc of
. from contenuon last month after diS- Cohen, wh o took a hkmg to the scavenger hunt, sponsored by the
, · _p)osurc of an adultcrou~ arfatr sever- Green Berets dunng h1s scrvJcc on employees ot The Daily Sentinel,
al years ago Ralston rcma1ns as vice the Senate Armed Scrvtcc' Commit- were the teams Irom Anderson\ Fur
mture, Veterans Memonal Hospllal
chairman of the Jomt Ch~efs
tee
Extended
Care Unll and Veterans
In the past week. Cohen sa1d he'd
H" command ol Spcc1al Opera, 'sculcd on three or four cand1datcs . tums as the Army's top paratrooper Mcmonal Hospital's Home Health
' a'nd has diScussed the short list wnh put Shelton in dchcate miSSions, department. Honorable mcnl ion was
Clinton .
mcludmg &lt;mil -drug operations m g1ven to the team from Clark's JewPentagon sources. spcakmg on Latin Amcncn and humamtanan n1d elry Pnzes were prov1ded hy Sub' cond1t1on of anonymity, s01d hkcly campmgns m Afnca
1WtJY
· ' tllp cand1da1cs mcludcd . NATO ComDunng Ihe Pc1 swn Gulf W.1r he
mandcr Wesley Clark. Manne Com- wus assistant commnndcr of the Bible school to begin
B1ble school at the Middleport
, • ,mandant Charles Krulak,AnnyCiuct Army's IOist AJrh()]nc DIVISion.
ql Staff Dcnms Rc1mcr and Shelton. wh~eh led a helicopter assaul( pursu- First BaptiSt Church w1ll be held
, head ollhc Spcc1al Operations Com- mg h.1q1 guard dJ&gt;vtst ons all the way Monday through July 25 at the
mand a! Mac Dill Air Force Base. Fla. to the Euphrmcs R1vcr 10 one of the church . SJXth and Palmer. 6 to 8.30

Meigs announcements

1

All arc generals

larg\.'st

The Spec1al Operations Command

wrongful death suit they've bro.ight
agamst him. Their lawyer.. say : the
federal marshals assigned to prQtcct
the mnhstcr-turned-smtch won't let
anyone ncar Gravano - even the
court's process servers. With this
wall of protcctmn guarding h1m
until he goes hack undergruund ,
Gravano may avmd the civil cqun
procccdmg that could force h1m to
hand OYer his honk lind moVIC
IDjlS to the families of the pcopiC: he
k1llcd
II ·there IS a compelling rca;on
why federal officials &gt;i_h oultl :directly or nKhrectly - be 'so ·Jiotcctive nf Gravann's 1ll-gottcn g4m,
I'd like to hear it As far as I can tell,
he deserves thts nauon 's M.:orn; Pot
ns embrace.
,
Sure, Gr~vano ' s testimony . put
Gotu away for hrc . But what wco' re
talkmg about here 1s a man w'ho
k1llcd 19 flCoplc, dchvcring up: to
JUStiCe One who whacked r1vc.
Maybe what he '""d under oath' la't
week Will land Gigante in jail ror
what hulc t1mc he has le ft in hfc.'
Maybe
·
What worries me IS that the costs
of Salvatore Gravano's ser:vices :to
this nation may far outwe1gh the
benefits.

cam-

pm

opcrauon" ever mounted

Shelton 's emphaSis on a multlser- _ On July 26. a sw1mmmg party Will be
held fm those enrolled There w1ll he
classes lor children age tour thmugh
tmces By law the chamnan of the seventh grade.
Jomt Ch1cl~ IS rcquucd to act .ts ;.m
~tdVOL~tte lor ,til OJ Ihe seiVICC"i
VDS at Victory set
Vacation B1blc School w1ll be held

The Daily Sentinel
t USPS 213-900)
Published every afternoon. Mondoy rhrough
Fndny. Ill Coun St. Pomeroy. Oh10 by the:
' • Oh10 Volley Pubh~hmg CompanyiGnnneu Co.
Pomeroy Ohio 45769, Ph 992·'21~6 Second
da.'\.' po~ltlge pilld Ill Pomeroy, Ohio

'

. Membrr: Tiltl AS:«Xltlled

r~~~.

Stocks

1

Am Ele Power ...... .,.,,.,..., ...., .. .44
Akzo ................., ... ,.,, ,., .. ......,. 70~.
AmrTech .................... ,., ,. ,.....68'1.
Ashland 011 ........................... 48\1
'AT&amp;T ................................ .... 34'' "
Bank One ........................... ..49'~..
Bob Evans .................... ., ...... 17[•
Borg-Warner ......................... 561.
Champion ............................. 17},
Charm Shps .......................... 5"1»
City Holding .. ........................34\1
J;ederal Mogul. ..................... 37~w
Gannetl ...............................1 03'1•

and !he OhiO

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POSTMASTER: Send address com:ct10n!!- to
The Da1ly Sent1nel, Ill Court S1. Pomeroy.
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Druly . ....... .

Goodyear .......•...........•.......... 62i/,

Kmart ..•••••.••.••...•..•...•...•...•• ..10,~,.
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Ltd . ., .., ..., .. .,., ........, ........., ., ,... 20'1•
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Peoples ........................ ,........ 36},
Prem Flnl ........ ,.,, ...,., ............. 19'/,
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AD-Shell ,,. .. .,,... .,., ................. 55'1.
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Subscnbers Bot desmng to pay lhe comer may
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Publb;her reiiCne~ the nahtto adJU~I ra1e~ dur·
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MAIL SUBSCRIPftONS
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Inside Melp County
13 Weeb
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13Wccks ........ ............. - . . $2923

26 Weeks . ..

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-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
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of Galllpplls.

-$.16.68

. .... , .. ........... $109.7"

.

..

Llll

v1cc mJIIImy 1s welcomed hy othc1 s
m the lc;u.Jcrshlp of th e U S armed

S2~ -

•

COLUMBUS (API - lnd1anaOh10 d~rcct hog pnccs a! selected
buymg pomls Wednesday as provided by the U S Department of Agn culture Market News
Barrows and gilts · fully steady to
firm, demand moderate 10 good 0n u

Ronold E Sm1th, 61 , Middleport. d1cd Monday, July 14. 1997 at Cabell
Huntington Hospital m Huntington. W Va
Born m Rutland on March 5, 1936. he was the son ol the laiC Samuel I
and Lilhc M Nelson Sm11h He was a carpenter with Local 650. Pomeroy,
a veteran of the Korean War. and a former commander ol Fecney-Bcnncu
Post 128 , Amencan Leg1on, M1ddlcpon
He,. surv1vcd by three daughters. Bchnda Kay Smuh, Donna Elamc Smllh
and Janie Mane K~lley . all of Bakers held , Calif, three sons. Larry F Gauze
of Franklm, Ronme S Smith of M1ddlcport , and M1chael E Wails ot Fort
Bragg. N C , two brothers and a Sister-In-law, Raymond and Lyd10 Sm1th of
Pomeroy. and Charles Smnh &lt;)!'Rutland . three SISters and two hrothcrs-Jnlaw, Yvonne and Leshe Whmmgton of Pomeroy, Monna and Joe Andreoni
of Rutland . and Belly Schnccmann ol Middleport. mnc grand,hlldren and
four great -grandchildren. and several mcccs and nephews.
BeSides h1s parents. he was preceded m death by a brother, B1ll Smith.
and two Sisters. Wanda Smllh and JoAnn Banks.
Scrv1ces Will be I p.m . Fnday m the Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Bunal w1ll be m M1lcs Cemetery Rutland The Rev Charles Sw1gger and
the Rev Lloyd Gnmm Will ottichlle Milnury serv"es will he held. Fncnds
may call at the Middleport Chapel ol the FISher Fune1al Home Irom 2-4 and
7-9 p m. Thursday

I •

A Rutland man wa&gt; cued m a two-car acCident at the bottom of Lmcoln Hill 1n Pomeroy aro•nd 2 48 p.m Tue sday
Herman C M1chael , 79, Pom eroy, dn vmg a 1986 Ford Escort station
wagon, stopped at I he bottom o f the h1ll1o check for traffic bcrore pullmg
onto Butternut Avenue and was struck by a tollow1ng ea r dn vt: n by Jason
M. Dellavalle, accord1ng to a Pomeroy Pohcc Dcparlmcnt report
Damage !o M1chacl s car and De llavalle\ I ~8 8 Chevrolet Bcrcll a was
hstcd as hght. accordmg to Ihe repo rt Dellavalle .-as c ited by pohcc on
a charg e of fmlure to mamtam assured de ar dtslan cc.

Ethel W. Grueser, 85, Rutland, d1ed Tue sday. July IS , 1997 at Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal.
Born Sept 16, 1911 m Me1gs County. daughter of the late Edward and
Lyd~a MacCumbcr Hysell, she was a member ot the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene , and the Fratermty of Eagles 2171 AuXIh ary, Pomeroy
She IS surVIVed by her husband of 65 years . Allie Grucscc or Rutland; three
sons and two daughters -In-law, Bo Arran and Grace Hysell of Delaware, Jack
qrueser of Norfolk, Va ., and Abc and Sue Gruesc1 of Rutland, two daugh·
tqrs and a son-m-law, Dorothy and;fom Urban ofMom sv1lle, Pa. and Mary
McAngu~ of Pomeroy , e1ght grandchildren several great-grandchildren and
two great-great -grandchildren. three ststers. E1leen Martm ot Chester, Mar·
garct Wyan of Pomeroy, and Beulah Anderson of Rac1nc , and several meces
and nephews
She was preceded m death by a brother, Harold Hysell-. a mtcr. Helen
Vandall , a granddaughter, V1cky Abbou and a grandson. Jeffrey Albert
Grueser. ·
Servtcc s w1ll he I p m Fnday m the Ewm g Funeral Home, Pomeroy, w11h
the Rev Paul Taylor otfJclUtmg Bunal Will follow m the Rock Spnngs Ceme tery. Friends may call a1 the fun eral home from 7-9 r m Thursday

Ronald E. Smith

:likely to lead Joint Chiefs -

Officers issue citation in accident

Today's livestock report

Crank up the a1r conditioners, typ1cal summer heat IS forecast fo1 Oh10
·.the next couple of days.
· • The National Weather Serv10e says a stationary h1gh pressure system w1ll
"produce abundant sunshmc , temperatures around 90 degrees and moderate
humtdity through Thursday
Clouds w1ll build into the rcgum on Thursday after the h1gh s hde s off 10
the southeast
,
The record-high temperature for thiS date at the Columbus weather stulion was 100 degrees in 1988 while the record low was 52 m 1957. Sunset
tomght will he at M59 p m and sunnsc Thursday at 6 17 am
Scraphme Kokmas, 96, Pomt Pleasanl, W.Va , fonncrly oiMason, WVa,
Weather fo...,east:
d1ed Tuesday. July 15 , 1997 at Pleasant Vall ey Hospital
Tomght. .Clear Fog developmg late Lows 1n the mid 60s. Calm wmd ,
Born m Czechoslovakia on Oct 21 , 1900, she was a nurse at Lakm State
Thursday Mornmg fog, !.hen mostly sunny and hot H1ghs 1n the lower Hospual m Lakm, WVa., and aucnded the Bachtel Umtcd MethodiSt Church
90s
'
m New Haven, W Va
- Thursday nigh!...Mostly clear. Lows m the upper 60s
She was preceded m death by her husband. Dr. Serge Kokmas, and by a
Extended fo...,east:
son.
-:. Fnday ... Partly cloudy wnh a chance of showers and thundemonns. H1ghs
She IS surv1ved by a spec1al lncnd, Ednh Ross ot Poml Pleasant
: 1n the upper 80s
'
Serv1ccs Will be I p.m Thursday m the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home m
; : Saturday A chance of shower" durmg the day otherwise mostly clea r Pomt Pleasant. w1th the Rev Joanne Clevenger offic1011ng Fnends may call
· }..ows m the upper 60s and h1ghs m the- m1d MOs.
at the funeral home from 6-8 tomght
: Sunday Mostly clear Lows in lhc lower 60s and h1ghs m the upper 80s

- .~ ~Green Berets commander

No inJunes were reponed fo llowing a hit/skip crash at the JUnctiOn of
West Ma1n Street and the Pomeroy-Mason Bndge m Pomeroy around
12- 50 th1s morni ng.
.
Bnan J . Ju stiS, 21, Rae~n e, was stopped at the JUnCtiOn when a yellow
p1ckup truck struc k the rear of h1s 1991 GM C truck and the n Ocd the scene,
accordmg 10 a Pomeroy Pohce Departme nt report Justi s truck sustamed
light damage

Ethel W. Grueser

Seraphine Kokinas

hiS life just hkc Gotti.

NEW YORK
Salvatore
" Sammy the Bull" Gravano is back.
F1ve years ago he spent mne ilays
on the wnness stand m a federal
courthouse snitching on John Gotti,
hts longtime fncnd and the boss of
one of New York 's Mafia fanulics.
When the tnal ended , Gotll was
round gUilty of racketeering and
being m volved m five murders. He
llias _scnt 10 pnson fo_r ji(C wnhoul
any chance of a parole - and Gravano disappeared mto the bowels or
the Federal Wuness Protecllon Program.
Last week Sammy the Bull rcsurfaced.
Thi s time to testify atainst 69year-old Vmcent G1gante , the man
federal prosecutors say IS the leader
of the Genovese mob. They hope
Gravano w1ll help them conv1nce
JUrors that G1gante, who goes about
in public dr~ssed in a robe and paJamas and appears to he mentally disturbed, 1s crazy hkc a fox .
Gigante is accused of operating a
crime syndicate. He's also charged
With havmg a hand in s1x gangland
murders and conspiring to commit
three other killings. If convicted he
Will. probably be jailed for the rest of

MICH.

.

Services rendered by mobster may far outweigh benefits
Sy DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett NeWs Service

Hit/skip crash reported tQ police

AccuWealhc,. forecast for daytime conditions and high

.,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Local News in Brief:

Think today's hot? Just
( Wait for T~ursday's high

Does the 14th Amendment need to be reinterpeted:?

A fighter, not

..·"

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thunday,July 17

By Jacll ArlclilnM
and..., lkll

'Est#i6slid ill 1!U8
61~·21!6.

~~~-.July

. WednHday, July 16,1997

House campaign finance probe bogs down

.

The

•
Pege 2

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - The owner of one Buckeye 5 ticket With the
corrCct f1vc-number combmali on
may cla1m an Oh10 Lonery pnze of
$100 ,000, the lottery--announced
today.
111

Cleveland
Sales
$334.082

10

ow Mystcnes"

Will

he the theme

Questions may he dtrcctcd to the Rev
Jame s Keesee at 742 -2132
Meeting slated
A puhllc mcctmg to d1scus"' creek
lloodmg alnng West Shm..lc R1v&lt;!r and

tnhulanes Will he held Monday. 9
am . al the M(ldcrn Woodmen Hnllm
Burlmgham S pce~kcrs will he Barh
Flower"' ot the Ohm D1v1sion of
M1ncs and Rcclamalron. Dave
Gloeckner !rom JTPA and M1ke
Duhl Mc1g~ d1Stru.:t con~crvnuon1st

To conserve water
Syrat:usc wntcr customers an:
hcmo asked lO c onserve water lor the
next several days Cnn.,.umpllon

Tuesday e xceeded what the numps
t.:oultl handle, accordmg: to J:mu:c
Zw1llmg . clerk She asked thai cuswmcrs d1st:ontmuc all outs1dc water·
mg , washmg cars. and o1hcr acUVIIJCs

U.S 1-2. 230-260 lhs country
pomt s 58 50-60 00, lew 60 50-60.75 .
plants 59 21-61 00
US 2 3. 230-260 lhs 53 .0058 00 , 21 0-230 lbs 4~ 00-53 00
Sows mostly steady
US . 1-3 300-500 lbs 43 0046 00 , 500-600 lbs 46 ()(J-4X 00. lew
over 600 lhs 49 00
Boars 39 00-43 00
Estimated receipts 10 000
Prices from Producers Live·
stock Association:
H o~ maT ket trend lor Wednesday

Buckeye 5 total ed

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admiSsiOns - Henry
Ebhn Sr., Rutland '
Tuesday d1schargcs- none
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July IS - Paul Dull.
Jess1ca Yenan , Kamth Stone, Crystal
Burgess, Mark Wtlcox , Alice WhitIcy, Judy Ramey, Carol Rogers
Birth·- Mr and Mrs W&gt;lham
Cummings, daughter. B1dwell
(Publis~ed with permission)

The Wish List
A Simple Solution in Helping
You Wuhe&amp; Come True
Stop in For Deta~

(:•

~et.relers
,

I

anti down

'

Sheep and lambs 2.00 lower 10
4 00 h1 ghcr ch o ~e c \\.ool s 7~ 00 and

down. ch01ce clips 73 50 and down,
Ieeder lamhs 79 00 and down aged
she ep 44 00 and down
·

Pomeroy Mayor's Court
The lollowmg cases "''ere scttltd

Monday c\'cnmg rn the Pomeroy
Court of Mayor Frank Vaughan.
ForfcJtmg bonds were . Grover J
Arnold Pomeroy. diSorderly conduct,
public mtoXICatJon. $216. Bnan K
Arnold . Pomeroy. diSorderly conduct,
$83 , Gary R F11zwatcr. Pomeroy.
exp1rcd tags, $81 ;· Samuel Parsons,
Spencer, W Va , hangmg ouiSJdc a
vch1clc $81 . Paul Moore IlL New
Marshfield. speed, $67 .

H&lt;1l1 A

Rohrnson. Columhus .

speed. $64 Charles G G osna). Vmton no operator\ hce nsc . $X3. Duo~
ny R Stamper. Franklin . !&lt;iqucal1ng
tires $X3, Cynthia J Bmcman .
Raunc tmlurc to rnatnl~un assUicd
clcardJStance. $63, Dchr.1 L McVey,
Cross Lanes. W Va . lailurc to y1cld.
$6 3
Frncd w.ts J c nn~y Nc~cll Long
exprrcd rcg:H&gt;llallon. $63

Bonom
pJu-; Ubls

Middleport Mayor's Court
The followmg cases were sculcd
Tuesday n1ght m the M1ddleport
Court ot Mayor Dewey Horton
Fmed were James 1\ Wllhro.-,
Jackson Center, $25 plus costs, lmlurc to control Michelle L Starner
Middleport , $15 plus costs, speed:
Sharon Overton, Middleport, $200

Meigs EMS runs

'
Umts ol I he Mc1gs County
Emergency Mcd1cal Scmcc recorded seven calls for assiStance Tuesday Unus
responding rndudcd.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2 53 a m.. Ycllowbush Road.
Racme. Edna Ncigler, Hol1.cr MedICal Center:
8:37 a.m . Bashan Road. Racmc,
Naom1 Nev1lle. HMC. Racme squad
assJstcd .
II 05 a.m , State Route 7. Tuppers
Plams, Martha Rogers. CamdenClark Memorial Hospital. Tuppers
Plams squad asSisted .
5 I 0 p m, North Run Road ,
Albany. Silas Mullms. Oh1o Stutc
University Hospitals vm McdFilght
helicopter ambulance. Rutland squad

plus costs. as sault. $200 plus cosh
rcs1stmg arrest , James E Chapman.
M1ddlcpor1 . $2(]() plus costs, pclly
thclt: Jc1cmy C Hubbard. Pomeroy.
$25 plus ~.:osl:oi . und cragc ,consumpIJon, Shclhy M P~ekcns . Racmc. $19
plus costs, speed. David L. Manley.
M1ddlcpo11 , $100 plus cosls, diS&lt;&gt;rderly conducL Sheryl MeKlnncy
Middleport, $100 plus cnsls. men"
ang thrcal"i. Chester A Rou'h Mtddlcporl , $1W plus costs , open

tamer

\

\

aSSisted .

X 2X p m . Mount UnHm Road ,
Cmpcntcr.

Wand.r

Sw c.tnngcn.

HMC.
MIDDLEPORT
l X ,1111 South filth Strccl Bet·
ty Schncem,tnn . HMC
. POMEROY
~

1 1'l .t m, volunh.::cr luc dcpdrl ·

mcnt to Chest'.!! Road. hrush lire no
rcroltcJ

lllJUriC:oi

..0 ,Aut.• ItO -OMI1'!1Q!o11

710,t ZO OAL V

GIFT CERTIFICATES AV ..IlABLEI

r- B.a.RGArN'MATiNEEsSA'ru'i"oA'mUHo.Y,

IWEDNESOAYI
L -----------~

River Bed Tanning
and

wh1ch take large quantlucs of "ater

Lottery results

The wmmng lickct was sold

.1t Jhc Victory Baptist Church July 21 25 6 to X p m ages tour up ·'Mcad-

moderate m ovement

50 cents h1 ghc r
Summary of Thesday 's auctions
at Eaton, Farmerstown, Lancaster,
Wapakoneta and Caldwell:
Hogs s1cady 10 2 00 h1ghcr
Bulcher hng s 18 00-62.75 '
Calli e steady lD I 00 h1 ghcr
S laughter ~ leers LhOILC 60 . 00~
66 50. selcc! 55 00-61 10
Slaughter heifers chmcc 60 006SJ IO. sclccl 50 00-61 00
Cows 2 ()(} lower to 2 00 h1ghcr.
all cows 46 75 and down
Bu lls slcady 10 2 ()() lower. all
hull s 55 SO and down
Veal c,1lvcs stcad y.t hmcc 1:,7 50

Party Supplies
"GRAND OPENING"
Door
Prizes

July. 19th
.

T~nnin

Sesston
9:00-3:00 Give-aways

Drawings for '
Tanning Products
and Party Supply
Packs
SR 124, Minersville

I

992-4295

�Sports

Wednftday, July 16,1997

The D .........y ~ent~~!

•

•

1997 Kyger Creek Little League Tournament

1987

With 26teams pledging to play, the largest tournament of its kind in southeastern Ohio will stan
Friday at the Kyger Creek Employees Club field,
located between Addison and Cheshire on Ohio
S.R. 7, across from ·Ohio Valley Electric Company's
Kyger Creek plant.
.
1\mong the 19 teams making it this year that
were also present at the 1996 tournament, this dia:
mondfesl retained three teams - champion Lillie
Hocking, runner-up Coolville and Point Pleasant
Hardware - from las( year's final four.
Point Pleasant Hardware, which finished third

Giants' marathon ·inning
helps them rout.Padres 16-?

a paiS8d ball in the first inning of Tueaday night's
Netional League game in Cincinneti, where the
Cardinals won 7-4. (AP)

BOWLED OVER - SL Loul1 third baseman
Danny SIMeffer falls over backwards after the
Cincinnati Red1' Eric Owens 1IIdes Into third on

La:n kford's upper-deck HRs
,elp··cards down Reds 7-4
'.

was funny. They were looking for
By JOE KAY
·
. · CINCINNATI (AP) - A week another one. I got a walk and then
after he fizzled in All-Star home-run they walked."
Lankford was reminded of the ..
i;lerby, Ray Lankford has found his
leswn
he learned at his first All-Star
stroke,
game
:
Homers
don'! come from try.. The St Louis Cardinals' out·
ing.
'fielder hit only two homen in 12
" I know one thing: When people
~wings at Jacobs Field in the All-Star
·
expect
home runs, there'~ definitely
·competition, failing to survive the
pressure,"
he said.
'fint round. Since !ben, he has hit live
The two homers put pressure on
homen and done something no oth· ·
the Reds, who found themselves
er power hiller can boast about,
. Lankford became the tint to hit down 5-0 as Lankford rounded the
i)WO upper-deck homers in cine game bases for the second time. Alan
:-at Cinetgy Field on Tuesday ntght. Benes (9- 7) gave up three runs on
selling up a 7-4 victory over the nine ·hits over 5 2/3 innings, and
Dennis Eckersley got the final four
awestruck Cincinnati Reds.
"What goes through your mind is outs for his 21st save in 24 chances.
There was a footnote. Reliever
kind of like, 'Wow,' "Lankford said.
It was going through e•eryonc's T.J. Mathews made a wild throw to
mind. Only 20 other .homers have second base in the seventh, ending
reached the upper deck in the s!adi· the Cardinals' errorless streak at 135
um 's 27-year history, and only one innings. St. Louis had not made an
player has hit as many as two upper· ·error in its 13 previous games; three
deck shots in a · season - George shy of its major league record set in
1992.
Foster in 1.977.
- Tiro Reds have played errorless
Lankford did it in his first two at·
bats. His two' run homer in the first ball for their lastt3·gameS: a span of
118 innings.
inning traveled an estimated 448 feet
But those things were secondary
and landed in an empty section of red
on
a
night that belonged to Lankford,
scats in right field.
·
who
.now has 22 homen. three shy
ln the third inning, he hit anoth· .
of
his
career high. He ha.• hit safely
er one off Brell Tomko (5-2) that
in
his
last II games and has driven
went439 feet and landed in a sparsein 16 runs over his last I0, pushing
ly unoccupied secti.on i~ right.
The crowd caught on quickly. his RBI total to 69.
Those two immense swings stand ..
When he headed to the plate in the
fifth inning, tans migrated and called out frnm the statistics.
"Oh. man," Cardinals manager
for more.
"There' was nobody up there lor · Tony La Russa said. " The first one
my first at-bat," Lankford said. was a bomb and the next one - I
" The next time. there were maybe don't know which one he hit hcllcr.
three or four Jieople. My third time That's serious distam;c there ."
"I think I'm deaf. The crack of
up, there were maybe 20 or 30. It

Baseball

Mirl~Y~IIIa ITewt.)hury 4-Kl 011 Sc:JIIIc

(Low\."2-4). 101151''"

Euttm Dlvl._
New Y01lc. ............ !il

W

1·ownrtl .................. 4J

46

. ~71
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4K

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~ruit ................... 4.l

Boslun ................... 40

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New Yllfk
Ml•nlr~;tl

4J ~

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Centnl Oivisiun

CLEVELAND .......~ JK

Olilo'UJU............... ..7 ..w
Milwaulu."': ............. -1.\ 4S
Muanac&gt;ea .............. .W) .~l
KaiWllCily ............11 ~I

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w • n Divbttln ·
Seauk&gt; .................. ~2 -'1 ..\!IY

Anaheim ................ ~ -U
TtJUll .... ··-····· ......4:'i -'6

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O.tkland ..................\K

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CINCINNAT I

AO ."i I

ChtCi11U ....

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Wnlrm

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S;U) On:~n (H:nmhtiu 7.)) :11 S1 l.um'
t An Rt' Jl\."' 6 -.l ). ll 05 Jl m.

2~&lt;J

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409

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Tonight's gam~s
Lc.u Anjtcles (Nmno lJ. 7) :u Fl,,mJ:~
tDmwn ~ -6). 7 : 0~ I" rn
CINCINNATI (Burtt:' :'1 -IJJ;t P•m ·
bul}!h IUlaita 6·61. 7·J.'i p m.
Mon1rt:1l {Bullinger 6-tl/ ::tt Phd:u.ld·
,,hi;a tSdUlhnJ f().IIJ . 7 : 3~ p.m
Cht~·alto Cutts (Gonz.a let 6 -2) at N 'r"
Metli (R\."}' Jl OSO &amp;ll.? ..W p m
Co lorado (ThOmson 2-6) :11 All :una
(01a ... ina~ 9-.:lil. 7:40p.m.
San Dte10 {Hill:hrOI:k .'i-.'il al St Ul.u1s
CMonis 6-6), 8 :0~ p m.
Solo Fmncisco (Foulke t •.\ l at Houston
(H:tmpton :Ci-7). H : O.~ p m
·

Thursday's cam..

Thunday's games

Kansus Cit~ Ukl\ha' 8-8) at Ontlnnd
tKanaY 2-9), J,u p.m.
Boston (Scle 10-7t at Baltimore {Er-

Chicnso Cub1 (M ulholland 6 -9) u1

N.Y. M~u (Cinrk 7-6), 12: 10 p.m.
SIN! r:rand~o (Gardner 9-4 ) ut Houli·
ron (Holf· 7· .~). I J:'i p.m.
Los Angelel (Cnndioni 5·2) &gt;~T Florida

ickson II -,), 7 : ~~ p.m .
CLEVELAND (Henhiser 8-~; at Mil·
...,.kce (£14rtd 9-BJ, I:ll:' p.m.

(leiter 7·6), 7 · 0~ p.m.

·

1
.I

.!
.'i

h.lfl
+1-1
27\

1
-''

1i

K\1

frum

I1 1W'1

ul d11..• 1\mcnc;m

H~'l:hM" Clrr:uo.:u :mJ KHI 1 .'~~·11CI ~·r\ ~~~hi
Ilk: K:m~.~~ Ci1~ Ruy&lt;~b l"ur OJ! Jun Ntmnally :uhl INF-OF Chm Stylll.'' 'irj!IWd
SS Umnalon L•r.Mlll .md '""l!'IL·tl lum 1u ,.
Challmli•O~I of Il k! Suulho.:ntl..o.•u)!u~·
.
MONTHI :AI . I:XI'C)~ t\nm1nnro.:tl

II"-' rctlfi'IIJo.:l,llll HHI' 1-~.t Smuh

ft

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("1(,1
~XJ

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271

.I

l..u~

Anj!clc'

CINCINNATI {Smiley 7- 10) at Pius·
burgh (Cordova t..~). 1 .J5 p m.
Monm:nl (C Peru tl -6) :u Philnddphia (Bftch 0.•1. 7:J"i Jl m
Colorodo (Swifl 4-2) at Athlnra (Miul·
dux 12-~). 7:40p.m.

Y

Transactions
Ba.. ball
Amulnn Ltaauc
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Re1;tilleJ
INF f',arqp Lclksm.• from Ro..:hes1cr 11f
Ilk' lniC!tO&gt;IIIOnUJ le3f!Lit.
BOSTON RED SOX . R~;•lkd LHP
Rnn Mahay from PllWIUI.:kC:t or tht lnterlli!IIOn;il League .

•

KANSAS CITY RO'r" AI..S : Asl'e\.&gt;d to
terms w1th RHP Dan Rci..:~rf ilnd &lt;~S­
Mgt)t!d

hJm ro S t~tkaflt of the Northw1!1il

l.c:aguc Ortion.:d RHP Jim Piu~lcy tn
Om.1h.1 uf tile A)J'Itn~ tln Anul.'i:JtJnn .
NEW YOR'K YANKEE'i : PI:J~:cil OF
Btrnit Williams on the I !'i-day di t:~bled
lin. rcrrou\:li\'c 10 July 14. Rc..:nlled OF
Scoct Pose from Columbus of tht lnttrna·
riono.l L..ea,ue.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS : Placed
RHP M1ke OlJuist on the I:'i·day dis&lt;abled
list C111ted up RHP Gnry Haught hom
Edmonton ur the PCl Desigm11rd INF
S..:oll Sheldoo for ass1gnment
TEXAS RANGERS: Sigrrd INF Luis
Otttt 10 ~ mtnor !~neue contract

..

1------.

7118 lFrl.), 7:30PM
Gaiiipolis Yankees

Home Care Med.

Coolville
7119 (Sot.), lOAM

.;',7126 !Sat.). 6PM

1------,

Rio Grande Redmen
712t (Mon.). 6PM

1------.

Harrisonville
71t9 (Sal.), tl ;30AM
Deal &amp; Brown (PPWV)
7124 !Thurs.). 7:30PM

1----_J

Nationwide Ins. (PPWV)
7119 (Sal.), tPM
Kyger Creek II

Little Hocking

•

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
· A pair of fours usually doesn't go
far in a poker hand, but a pair of
fours was good enough to .win Tuesday night's semifinals in the Syracuse-Bill Hubbard Memorial Lillie
League Tournament. where Bidwell
I and Lillie Hocking earned berths in
the championship game.
Bidwell I downed Nev.; Haven 42 and Lillie Hock.ing defeated Racine
4-3 in two very competitive games.
In game one , Bidwell wa.." retired
in order in the first, while New '
Haven put the lead-off man Tony
Tulloh on (error) only to leave him
stranded .
In the second, Bidwell threatened
when Chris Brown walked. but he
too was left stranded. Donnie Johnson struck out the side for Bidwell.
giving him live strike outs in the poss-ible six outs.
Daniel Berry of Bidwell si ngled
for his club with one out i the third .
Charlie Hollonbaugh lofted ally ball
to center to score Berry Dn a misplayed ball. Hollonbaugh was elim inated , however, on a 1-4 cut-off
play. New Havcn 's lan Smith
reached on an error, but he too nev er passed first base as Johnson reg istered two more strike outs in the
third.
In·the bollom ofth.e inning. Johnson helped his cause with a long
home r.un to bolster a Bidwell lead,

2-0. Brandon Coe l~ter singled but
was left stranded. As the excitement
conintued . to grow, New Haven's

Ryan Mitchell reached on an error
and scored on ,a Anthony Mitchell
single to tighten the· game &lt;II 2-1.
Johnson came back in similat
fashion in the Bidwell sixth to hit
another s" lo home run. Ray Allen
reached on an error, stole a pair. of

bases and scored on Coc's sac rifice
lly for a 4-1 Bidwell lead .
In the sixth inning, Ryan Mitchell
again reached on an error and again
s~.:orcd, this time on an error on
David Smit~·, hit ball and two stolen
bases. New Haven 's comeback hid '
fell short as Johnson's pitching again
proved strong with three strikeouts in
the last fram e as the final eunain fell
ona 4-2 Bidwell win.
Johnson fanned 14 and walked
none , whiule giving up just two hits :
a singlct9 Caleb titchlicld and a sin·
~le 10 Anthony Mitchell.
Roush, Michael Jones, and
Mitche ll each shar.ed in the New
Haven pitching and all did very well,
fanning a combined 8 and walking
just one W&gt;lh live hits allowed.

Sears walked . A pair of stolen bases
. a hit baller and two errors produced
the two Little Hocking runs to make
the score 2-0.
• Racine fought back in the second
when Theiss was hit with a pitch,
stole two bases and came hom on a
fielder's choice to make the score 21. Lillie Hocking went up :l-1 in the
third when B. Gum singled and
Joseph singled him home .
Racine tied the game in the i(&gt;urth
when Marhqul doubled. Phillips
· walked. and Marnhout scored on a
Apperson hit ball that resulted in an
error. Adam Ball doubled home
Apperson to tic the game :l-3. In the
bouorn half the inning tWo errors

Lmle Hock ing repelled a Racine
tluca! in the lirst inning as Racine
stranded Hill and Apperson who
reached on an error und walked
respectively. Meanwhile, Linlc
Hocking scored when J. Blackburn
reached on an error in center and C.

allowed J. Hamilton to &lt;.:omc home

with the eventual winni'ng run off
Middleton's misplayed ball to make
lhc score 4-3.
Radnc threatened !n the sixth
when Phillips doubled, hut was left
stranded.
Connolly amJ Allen t:nmhincd in
a great game ror Racine with seven
strikeouts and three walks in posting
a two - hi11~r (hits lo Gum ami
Joseph ). Scars and Gum posted the
win with eight strikeouts. three
walks, and three hits ( M~lrnhout,
. Phillips, and Ball) .
Tonight, Bidwell I ·and Lillie
Ho~.:king plily for the ~.:hampionship
at 7:30 with the ~.:o nsolation game
hctwccn.Racin~

and New Haven at

6:15.

runner-up

Vinton
Point Pleasant Hardware
1125 (Fri.), I&gt;PM 1-------,

Gallipolis Reds
,7119 (Sat), 4PM
Mason VFW I
·Bidwell II
New Haven Reds
. 7119 !Sat.), 5:30PM

7126 l Sat.), 7: &gt;OPM 1-------l

Green I
7123 (Wed.). 6PMI-----,
Fruth Pharmacy (PPWV)
7120 (Sun.), IPM

1----....!
Winner-third
7127 !Sun.). 5PM
Loser-fourth

Kyger Creek Little League Tournament Hall of Champions
Yl:iu:

PICKENS
·MASON,
. W.VA.

New Haven and Racine lose
to Bidwell &amp; Little Hocking

7119 (Sat.), 2:30PM

Canners a·n d
gaskets
HARDWARE

Hubbard LL Tournament completes semifinals

Winner: chai"J1pion

Chester

our
~ Presifto
'llirromatic
Pressure

.

m

7120 (Thurs.), 6PM

Racine

The Dally Sentinel ·
has a supply of the
commemorative·
edition
.
for Middleport's
Bicentennial for sale.
Price is $1.50 and can
be picked up at
The Dally Sentinel
from
8am·5pm
Monday • Friday.

. Thu~sday's garf.es

Body Shop (PPWV)

Rio Gran de II

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Pomeroy Yankees

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7125 (Fri .). 7:30PM

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Bidwell I

Mike MQhlcr (1-H) pitched two ·
scoreless relief inning' at Oakland,
allowing one hit. Bill Taylor got four
outs for his 17th save.
Jamie Moyer (9-:l) lost for the
first time since May 29. allowing
five runs and eight hits in six innings.
He struck out six.
Orioles 8, Blue Jays 4
Lenny .Webster drove in four
runs and hit one of four homers off
Juan Guzman (3-6) at Camden Yards
as Baltimore completed a two-game .
sweep.
After Brady Anderson homered
leading oil' the game and Webster hit
u two-run shot in the second inning,
•uccessive homers by B.J. SurhoiT
and Jeffrey Hammonds in the fourth

I

PPWV - .Team is from Point Pleasant, W.Va.

7118 tFri.), 6PM

runs.

t.•

l'lt~-.·m-

last year, was the only club of the seven receiving
first-round byes in 1996 to get a bye this time. This
is the third consecutive year Hardware has ·accomplished the feat. ,
The team that will get the most-rested award will
be Racine, the club that made it among the final
four of the Bill Hubbard Memorial Lillie League
Tournament. After Tuesday night 's semifinals and
tonight's linals. the junior Tornadoes will be the last
ones to play their first game in this tournament.

Middleport Indians

two-run single, Gary DiSarcina had put Baltimore ahead 6-1.
Shawn Boskic (5-3) gave up two..
an RBI double and Tony Phillips
added a run-M:oring single in· the SC(.;-' runs and four hits in 5 213 innings,
ond. Darin Erstad's single chased struck out a season-high seven and
'•
Hill ..and Dave Hollins greeted Matt walked none.
Carlos
Delgado,
Shawn
Green
Whiteside with an RBI single.
lp other games, Oakland beat and Joe Carter homered for Toronto.
Twins 8, White Sox 4
Seattle KCS, Baltimore beat Toronto
Brad Radke ( 12-5) took a no-hit
8-4. Minne~ota lieat Chicago H-4.
Detroit heat Boston 7-5 in .l2 innings bi'd into the sixth and won his eighth
and Milwaukee heal Kansas City 5- consecutive stan. He didn't allow a
2.
•
hit until Mike Cameron's leadoff
Athletit:s 8, Mariners S
bloop single in the sixth, allowing
Mark MtGwirc hit his major three runs- one earned-:- and five
league-leading 32nd homer. tying hits in se\lcn-plus innings.
Joe DiMaggio for 42nd place on the .
Roberto Kelly hit a two-run
career list at 361, and drove in four
(See AL on Pat:• 5)

Tuesch1y's scores

Pllilaliclplua 14, At lama I
Sma Fr;IIICI:r&gt;OJ Ht . .Ibn U!C!f.t' :Z

N.Y. Valbta cPerciuc JO.~ l oil Chi~'il­
go While ~•lAivanz:l-6). -:0.~ p.m
Torotllo (Hc,.p:n UJ at Texas (Oii\'·
er 5-91. 8 ; ~~ p.m.
·
·
Kansns City {IW...ttl 7-~ J a1 Oi1kli1Ud
(Reyes· :\-0), 10:~ r.m.
Oeuoil (Moeblcr 6-71 of Anal"tt:im
(Finley. 6-6), 10: ~~ p.m.
Minnesma (Robenaon 7· 7J al Scanh:
. (Faneru 8-~). IO:.l.S Jl.m.

H t14J .\ IOil

~llitrlolll~·

Uuh

S1 louis 7. CINCINNATI -1

Tonllht'• r;ames

Iii!

~

In other games, it was Philadel·
phi a 8, Atlanta I; Montreal 5, Florida 0; Pillsburgh 4, ·New York 3;
Houston 5, Chicago 3; and Los ·
Angeles 6, Colorado 5.
Phillies 8, Braves 1
At Atlanta, Mike Liebenhal drove
in a ·career-high four runs and Gar- ·
r'ctt Stephenson (3-4) pitched a fourhitter for his first complete game in ·
nine major league starts as Philadcl- .
phia stopped a nine-game losing ·
streak to the Braves.,
Liebenhal hit a three-run homer ·
in a six-run sixth inning and Miek- .
ey Morandini had three hits, helping ·
the Phillies to just their fourth win in ·
27 games.
John Smollz (8-8) allowed a sea- :
son-high eight runs- seven earned
- and nine hits in eight innmgs.
Exr)os 5, Marlins 0
AI Miami , rookie Dustin Hermanson (4-4) allowed just live singles for his firs! career shutout,
walked none and struck out a seasonhigh nine of his former teammates.
Henry Rodriguez, Ryan McGuire,
Chris Widger and Doug Strange
dro•c in run~ for Montreal.
Tony Saunders (2-2) allowed one
run and five hits in six innings.
Pirates 4, Mets 3 .
At Piusburgh. pinch-hiller Mark
Johnson hit an RBI double and
scored on Tony WomaCk's douhlc 1n
(See NL·on Page 5)

Wtstrrn Cunft'rt'nct

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Pllb~Ur):h 4, N..Y Mt:ts .l

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12-51. 7 : ~5p . m.
.
ClEVELAND (WriJhl 1·01 at Mtl ·
waukee IM~:Don:ald "-6), M:O:"' p.m.

1'&lt;1.

Cl.I:\'1 ~ 1./\NU

()ivi~ion

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CHIC/\GO CUUS Tnu,k·J HHI'
Fro1nk Ca:o11iln lu tho: &lt;.:ult,r:w.Ju Hndt~·,
fur RHf' Mall J'1•nl. M.:o:;1lk.'\l J(HI' l&gt;;w .:

CINUNNATIHEI&gt;S : TroukJ RHI'

l!:

IwD

By The Aaaoclated Presa
Jason Dickson, the only reason
the Angels are in the pl,ayoff race,
may be heading for some honors
himself.
Just past the midpoint of the season. he moved halfway to becoming
the tint AL rookie to win 20 games
since Bob Grim in 1954, leading
Anaheim to its eighth consecutive
·win, 6-2 o•er the Texa.' Rangers on
Tuesday night.
"I'm just trying to go out there
and have quality stans every time
. out," Dickson said. "I mean, 20 wins
is unheard of. Mayhc a guy like
Roger Clemens is on a pace like that.
He's got a shot at it, but it's still
tough."
Dickson (I 0-4) allowed one run
and eight hits in seven innings.
stranding runners at third base in the
founh and fifth mnings. Texas got its
run off him on Wi.ll Clark's homer
leading off the sixth.
·• He threw a lot of offspeed pitches; a lot of changeups and a lot of
cur.cballs,"' Clark said. "He did a
prelly good job. He had good command and when he needed to make
a pitch, he did."
Anaheim. I tn games hchind
first-place Scaulc in the AL West,
scored five runs in the second inning
off Ken Hill (5-7), tagged for five
runs anfl seven hits in I 213 innings.
At Anaheim, Jim Lcyritz hit a

1\S~II!I:IIIIlll

1:-:astun l'onrrn-ncr

three times .
Barry Bonds finished with two
homen .and five RBis, induding a
two-run single in the seventh. Kent
had a two-run single , Ja~icr singled
twice and drove in a ·run. Mark
Lewis had an RBI double and three
pinch-hillers combined to drive ih
four runs .
San Francisco had nine hits, five
walks and a stolen base, and bene-.
filed from two errors, a wild pitch
and a hit batsman. Only one run was
unearned.
"I just sat in a corner watching,"
Kent said. ··1 dido 't even know
Javier had gollen two hits in the dan·
ged inning. ·somebody said he was
pushin.g for three. It put me to sleep
a lfttle bit. It seemed like II
o'ch:x:k."
The Giants had empathy for the
Padres. Kent" said. "because we ve
had it done to us." On May 7. Mow
treat scored 13 runs on 13 hits in the
sixth inning of a 19-3 win at San
Francisco.
Relievers Rich Batchelor and
Pete Smith absorbed the worst damage. Batchelor faced four ballers and
allowed four runs. giving up one hit,
two walks and hilling a baiter. Smith
allowed live runs on four hils and a
walk in one-third of an inniqg.
" You try 10 keep battling. try to
get your head iogethcr, but I just Oatout stunk," Smith said.

Angels defeat Rangers 6-2
to collect eighth straight win

Sw.U"ILhau~h

WNBA standings

.~

Tunday's scorn

N.Y Yllrlkc.-..-aiZ.CLEVELANUfl
OukhuMI !C, Sett~d~ 5
Dt-1roir?. !kJ~tun5 t 12)
Baltimore K. Torumo 4 ·
.
M iun~:MJIII )1, Chii.'BJU Whit~ Sux -1
Milw:.utte ;1, Kan~~ns Ciry 2
Amu.:im 6. Ttllll ~

While So• (Darwin 4-6), 1:05 p.m.
Toronto (Clemen• 14-3) at Tc..u (Burkett 7· 7). 1 : 3~ p.m.
Deuoh (Lira ~-6) Dl ~nnheim
(Spri~4-3J. JO;Ol p.m.

·))4
)4'1

!Ll!

Los Anf.~· k·s .
Culo,lf;tllo .

San

N.Y. Yantea (CoDe 9-4J at Chi~:uJO

6.~
:'ill~

Central Diwio;H.n
P111~bur!!h .
47 4:'i
:'ill
Huu!IIIIO
. 47 .!7 ~X)
St I ..!JU IS .
4.'i 47
4KlJ

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12

I

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.'il 41
)() 41
1fl tH

·'

The inning finally ended one batter later when Jeff Kent was forced
on Stan Jil•ier's grounder. Javier,
who opened the .inning with a single
off loser Andy Ashby (5-6), balled

Basketball

E:.!lltttm DMVoo

~-~ ............... ~ J~ · ~

hits.··

the bat was deafening,"' Reds catcher Joe Oliver said. "That was a pret·
ty good display. On his third time up,
I said. ' I hear you're prelly strong.
but that's ridiculous.' "
Lankford broke with his standard
practice and stood and watched both
homer&gt; rise and fall.
"I was admiring the ball more
than showing up the pitcher that 's not something I try 10 do." he
said.
Tomko didn't care . He was
watching. too.
" I dido 't watch the lirst one. hut
I did watch the second." said Tomko,
who took his first drubbing in eight
major-league starts. " I figured if he's
going 10 hit two of them, I might as
well watch and see where it lands.
" Both pitches were fa."balls. hell
high, right down the middle. They
weren't good pitches."'
Lankford homered in hoth games
of the series , which the NL Central
rivals split, and has a homer in each
of his las! three games.
"We don't know to pitch Lan~­
ford," Reds manager Ray Knight
lamented. "You don ' t wan! to give
him anything that he can get the fat
part of his bat on because he ' ll hit it
nine miles.··
Notes: The Cardinals have hit 12
homers in lhcir six games since the
All-Star break: five by Lankford,
live by Gary Gacui .... h was Lankford's third two-homer ·game of the
season and the eighth of his career.
... The Cardinals put stancr Fcrnan·
do Valcnzuclu on waivers in order. to
release him . They called up nghl·
handcr Eric Ludwick to take his
place.

NL standings

AL standings.

By ADAM NAZIMOWITZ
AIHC:Iated Pn111 Writer
The San Francisco Giants had to
catch a night to Houston. They
weren't cKactly running to.get there.
That's because the Giants · were
too busy running around the bases
Tuesday night in San Diego.
The Giants scored 13 runs- set·
ting tbe modem NL record for runs
in a sc•enth inning- in a 16-2 rout
of the Padres. The inning took 52
minutes, and 19 bauen faced 80
pitches.
San Francisco scored seven runs
before J.T. Snow grounded out for
the first out, drawing a loud, derisive
cheer from the cro'!'d of 28.539. By
then. the Giants led 10-2.
Four Giants scored two runs each:
and even staning pitcher Kirk Rueter
(6-4) got on base and scored. The
only regular not to score was Snow,
who struck out with the bases loaded
fo( the second out. .
''It's terrible," Snow said ofmak- ·
ing two outs. ··1,was trying to speed
the game up. We ha•e a night !O
catch. Especially with guys who'd
been sitting for a couple of houn; and
they come off the bench and get

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

• Middleport, Ohio

)

Chamojon I9Y5 ........ ............. Fruth 's Pharmacy
1959 ..................... Doc's Fine Foods
............................ (Point Pleasant)
1960 ................. Sommcrvillc Motors
...............·............. (Point Pleasant)
·1961 ..................... Pomeroy Rcdlcgs
1962 ........................ Pomeroy Pirates
1963 ....................... Gallipolis Ti)!ers
·191i4 ................... Gallipolis Red Sox
1965 ................. Middleport Yankees ·
1966 ................. Middleport Senators
1967 ... People' s Bank-Point Pleasant
· ' 1968 ........... .'... .McArthur Merchant&gt;
1969 ................ .... Fruth ' s Pharmacy
............................ (Point Pleasant)
1970 .........................City Icc &amp; Fuel
............................(Point Pleasant)
1971 ...................... New Haven Cubs
1972 ......: ....... . ... Danici ·Boone Hotel
....... :................... (Ripley. W,Va.)
1973 .................... :.... Green Senators
1974 ......................... City Icc &amp; Fuel
1975 ........... .Johnson's Supermarket
1976 .................... Middlcport Braves
1977 ... :.. ............... Pomeroy Yankees
1978-85 ............ ......... no tourn;unenl
1986 .............. .Tuppers Plains Tigers
19H7 ...... Mason Co. Bar Association
1988 ........... .. ... Middlcporl Cardinals
1989 ............. Hubbard's Greenhouse
..... ......... .......... :...... ... ..{Synu.:usc)
1·
~1990 ............ Hannan Trace Wi Ideals
.1991 ............................. ...... Coolville
'
'1992 ..... ........... Middlepurl Cardinals
:1993 ................... .'......... Bidwell #I
)994 ................... Gallipolis Yankees

~AL
;

llJ% ............ Quality Fumitu're Plus
.................... ,..... (Lillie Hocking)

NL games ... (Conttnucd from Page 41
the seventh. and )\inch-hitter Turner
Ward singled'home the go-ahead run
olf Juan Acevedo ( 1- 1) in the eighth .
Jason Christiansen ( 1-0) pitched
u scoreless eighth, and Ridt Loiselle
finished l"or his IJth S&lt;lVC In 14
chances.
Before the Pirutes swept the two-

game series, the Mcts had won .ttiix. uf
seven - ull after coming from
behind.
Astros 5, Cubs 3
AI Chicago, Bill Spiers· threerun. p&gt;nch-homer oil Mel Rojas (03) with one .out in the ninth lil'!ed

Houswn .

With Houston trailing 3-2. Scan
Berry led oil the ninth with an inlicld
single. Craig Biggio walked with one
out and Spiers: hutting for pitcher
Darryl Kilc ( 12-3), sent an 0-2 pitch
into the left-center lield hleachers,
Rojas' lihh blown sttve in 14
chances.

The freedom to go where you want.
The freedom to do what you want.
Maybe we're biased, but we have a
particular affection for freedom of speech.

.y ea h ,
fr ee d om

•

Right tlo\1 g•·t

one month free auess
and&lt; hooS&lt; ' i&gt;&lt; ' l\11'1'11

,1 ,,, , , .

4)

~tomcr in a fivc ·run fourth tll the

Plus, when you sign up for our residential

~ /lctrodotllc.

•

ing the tournament (three). Pictured after their
first place victory .In the Big Bend Youth league
Tournament are (L·R In front) Steven Sheppard
Jonathan Owen, Brandon Werry, William Woods,
J.D. Curtis, Russell Swart and Jo1h Price.
Behind them are coaches Tom Batey and Gilbert
Woods, players Eric Betey, Cody Faulk, Brian
White, Brandon Fitch, Putman, Brent Buckley
and ·T ravis Batey, Cacy Faulk and coaches
Chuck Faulk and Ray Werry,

Tci&lt;'TAC ,., .' )O ot I ott• phone .

action ...

(Continued from Page

PIRATES WIN TITLE - The Big Bend Youth
League recently concluded its tittle league baseball tournament held at the Rutland fields.
Clutch hitting and pitching gave the Chester
Pirates the championship with a 1·0 win over
Racine, a 5-0 win over Harrisonville, 9·0 win over
Reedsville and a 6·2 win over New Haven In the
· ·final. Excellent pitching performances were turn
· in by Jimmie Putman and Cacy Faulk. Putman
won the trophy for the most home runs hit dur-

·
Jaime Navarro (7-8) was pound·
for ei~ht runs and 14 hits in five.
'

long-dista nee service , you get

.:,d
Jflmngs.

long-distance

minutes free for one year.

j

Tlgen 7, Red Sox 5
· Damian Easley tied the score
;J-Yilh an eighth-inning homer at Feniray l'a(~ and Mel vm N tevc.s hn a
1wo-run shot in the 12th ott John
jNasdin (3-5).
·I Boston O\•ercame a 4-0 deficit
vith three rUfltS tn the fourth and one
~ the sixth. fOd Wtllredo Cord~ro
1omered for the second consecunve
jQme. His solo shot tn the seventh
111rned a stanping ovation.
Todd Jon~,s (l-31 hold the Red
~~QX s·eorcless the lasttO¥Q i~nings.

360

Celebfate yo.ur freedom.

(Sorry, s parklers not included.)

.

1

1051 East State Street, Athens, OH.(614) 592·4911

RUSINE$$ CUSTOMERS ;

(Call your sak!s r~presentative for an appointment.)

•

360" Communications
C•llul.lr, ~i nv ancllotlg dl1tanu, right doWn the 1trHt.•

.

'

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

July 16, 1997

Wednesday, Jutv 16. 1997

WNBA action continues

Liberty ·beat Rockers 76-59;
M. ~narchs top Sparks 78-73_

"~-...-"'"' ·#

_,.-. r-Aal!!.;e~~-','

'

GETS DOUBLE PLAY - New York Yankees
shortstop Pat Kelly watches his throw go to first
base to nail the Cleveland Indians' Marquis Grisson after retiring Tony Fernandez (behind Kelly)

at second base to start the double play in Tuesday night's American League game in Yankee
Stadium. The hosts won 12-6. (AP)

•

, Yankees down Indians 1.2-6
;
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By TOM WITHERS
NEWYORK(AP) - Ifitwasn't
the heat. it was the humidity. Everyone seemed to have an excuse for
Hideki lrabu 's unimpressive outing
against the Indians.
.
·
Everyone that is, but lrabu.
Battling oppressive heat that
made just watching the game a
demanding chore, lrabu was roughed
up for nine hit•- three home runs
- in five innings Tuesday but won
his second major league &gt;tart as .the
New York Yankee• beat Cleveland
12-6.
.
It was a far cry from his debut last
week when the Japanese sensation
SlrUCk out nine Detroit Tigers in 6
2/3 innings.
"The biggest difference in the
two stans was the Cleveland Indians
offense," lrabu said through his

interpreter. .. No, I'm not satisfied .
From the early irrnings on, our hillers
scored runs. If that didn'ihappen. it's
prelly scary to think what what
would've happened today."
Tino Martinez hit his 31st homer,
a three-run shot, 10 back lrabu and
the Yankees got 17 hits to stop
Cleveland's four-game winning
streak.
Pitching In a long-sleeved T-shirt
under his Yankees' jersey in humid
94-degrcc weather, lrabu couldn't
dominate the Indians the way he did
_the Tigers.
·
"It-'s really tough to gauge anything in this kind of weather," New
York manager Joe , Torre •aid.
"You 'rc not going to be yourself. ...
It was honerthan hot."
And although lrabu said the swel tering conditions didn't bother him,

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READY TO ROAR - Jason Hall of Pomeroy is shown in action
.if at Kanawha
Valley Dragway with his 1968 Camaro called the Neigh: .J)orhood Nightmare. He is a member of KVD's top point traveling

: 1eam.

i Hall tallies three victories
•

! with KVD traveling team
•~
:
1

:
~

i
~.

•

•
•
;
:
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•

Jason Hall of Pomeroy, a welder hy trade. spends his weekends in the
rast Jane at Kanawha Valley Dragway.
.
•
Hall. a driver of three year&lt;. drives 'thc Pro class I9nK Cam:m&gt; owned l&gt;y
himself. Carl and Danny Hall. The car name and ·racing team IS called the
Neighborhood Nightmare (Racing Team). The car ha.' clocked in with a fast
time of 7:04. an average speed of 96.51i miles per hour with the 355 Chevy
small block. under the hood.
The cur features a powcrglidc transmission, transmission hrakc and li.u.J ~
der bars. Sponsors of the car arc Forest Run Ready Mix, Wamsley Trucking. General Tire of Middlcporl and Pullins Excavating. .
His career highlights arc three wms and hJS lnp to Darlon~ton, S.C. as a
result of Kanawha's top point traveling team. Pit crew mcmhcrs me Danny
Hall. Carl Hull. Greg Savage. Crystal Norvell and Clifford Ashley.
Hall's favorite thing about drag radng is "the rush of the speed and meeting people", while the downside is "rcdlighting" and the cost. His most valuable Jesson learned in racing is "to save your money-you'll need it later."

Eldora Speedway to host
: 'Kings Royal' races Friday

•

'

When promoter Earl Balles
announced about 14 years ugo that
·he was paying $50.000 to win a
sprint cur race. the racing world was
" somewhat skeptical.
•
However, in 1997 the coveted
• "Kings Royal" sprint car race at his-~ toric Eldora Speedway remains one
of the crown jewels in the racing
•
• world.
Friday and Saturday night, some
= of the best names in sprint car rae' ing will be running for the $50,000
: to win payday rvnning this year
~ under the Pcnnzoil World of Outlaws
• sanction for the lirst time .
:
For years, the !(ings Royal was
; run under an inde~ndent banner. but
~ television rights and the World or
; Outlaws drawing card prompted the
·• sanction which will alsO be sten live
2.,pn TNN's Motor Madness Friday
• nd a special edition on Saturday.
=• Always a big draw on the sprint
: car circuit, Steve Kinser.. the multi: time Outlaw champion and mulit: \imc Kings Royal champ boosted his
1
~ 1tock with recent runs in the lndi-

anapolis 500 and Daytona 5lXI.
Kinser will he hack It&gt; regain his
crown in the Quaker State Maxim.
His cousin Mark, the defending nullaw champ, is also on the racing
card .
Johnny Herre•a or Albuquerque,
N.M. is the dcrcnding champion,
with other front runners including
"The Buckeye Bull in" D.ave Blaney,
"Siammin" Sammy Swindell, Danny
Lasoski, Stevie Smith, and Eldora's
favorite soh, Jack Hewill.
Although the richest race by mile
is now "The Historical Big One"
(HBO) at Eldora Speedway, much ot
the fame still goes to·the Kings Royal and all of its pageantry. A complete Outlaw show paying $7,000 to
win will be·run on Friday with qualifying and heal races again being run
on Saturday for the $50,000 to win,
$1 ,500 IC: start racing bonanza.
Warm-ups are at 6:30 at racing ,nt
8 p.m. Eldora is located fn Western
Ohio just north of Dayton and
Greenville on SR 118 at Rossburg.

·'

NEW YORK (AP-) - The New . playng but our record indicates othYork Liberty are tough at home.· erwise."
Sophia Witherspoon scored I5 of
When they start the game with a 26her
I6 points in the opening half and
4 run, it's just about over.
had
12 points. includin&amp; two threeThe Cleveland Rockers found
pointers,
in the opening run.
that oui Tuesday night as they nevAn
I
~
- root jumper by Lyncne
er_recovered from the game-opening
Woodard with 2: I I to play in the first
burst and lost 76-59.
' ' We had trouble maintaining our half brought Cleveland within 41 -27.
intensity, probably because we got but New York closed the half with a
off to such a big lead but I . had 5-2 run as Witherspoon hit one of
warned the team not to get overcon- two free throws and added a layup.
fident and not to play yu-yo," New
Woodard led the Rockers with 12
York coach Nancy Darsch said .
points, while Eva Nemcova had rI.
The closest it got was 41 -271ate
Kym Hampton had 13 points and
in the lirst half as the Liberty ( 10-2) Vickie Johnson added 12 torthe Libwon their third straight game and erty, who arc unbeaten in four home
completed the home-and-home games. Tuesday night's crowd of
sweep of the Rockers (3 -8). who 8,554 was the lowest of the season
have lost three in a row and are 0-5 at Madison Square Garden.
In the. other WNBA contest ,
against the WNBA',s Eastern Division . The first-place Liberty beat the Sacramento beat Los Angeles 78-71
Monarchs 78, Sparks 73
last-place Rockers 68 -57 Monday
At Sacramento, Calif., Bridgetlc
night.
"I've asked them 'Arc you going Gordon scored 22 points and Latasha
to do it"' Do you really want to be Bycars had 21, helping the Monarchs
. part of the team'!'" Cleveland coach rally in the second half In defeat the
Linda Hill-MacDonald said. "When Los Angeles Sparks 78-73.
there 's no nrc and n.o intensity for 40
It was the first start of the season
minutes you're just not going to gave for Byears. who averaged nine mina good game. What's frustrating is utes in the team 's firsl nine gmncs.
we're not as bad as we've been The 5-foot -1I forward linished with

10 rebounds and four assists.
"Tusha can really get on the
boards," Gordon said . "We call her
'Baby Barkley.'·
The Monarchs snapped a twogame ldsing streak despite playing
without their top player. Prior to the
game, the Monarchs placed guard
Ruthie · Bailon-Holifield on the
injured list.
The WNBA's leading scorer with
a 21.1 average, Bollon-Holilield
will miss a minimum oflhrce games
after suffering a minor left knee
strain in a game at Houston ono.Saturday.
·
"We didn't make a big deal about
Ruthie before the game," Monarchs
colch Mary Murphy said. " We just
went out and did what we had to
do."
.
Sacramento used a 6-0 run to
build 74-681ead with I: II left in the
game. Pamela McGee broke a 68-68
11e with a. haskct inside. Chantel
trcmitiere followed with a fast·
break layup and Gordon cmine"'ed
on a 12-l'ootc'r to give the Monarchs
the six-puihl lead .
Lisa Leslie led the Sparks with 17
points and Penny Toler had 12 pcunts
anti 10 iissists .

Pomerov • Mlddleoort, Ohio

'DOOBLE
COO PO

up to
andkle~Ldn9

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Assorted Varieties.

GERBER lND
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4-oz.

British Open to start Thursday

Shifting .winds _promise many
surprises at Royal Troon

he might have been feeling some
heat from another sourc·e.
lrabu dido 't get a chan£c to
respond to a published repnn that his
biologiCal father is an American. The
news made headlines in Japan and
created quite a pregame buzz at Yan- By RON SIRAK
TROON. Scotland (AP) ~The
kee Stadium.
But a Yankees spokesman asked British Open offers one constant. As
that no personal questions be. asked steeped as it is in tradition, nothing
of lrabu, and the subject was never stays the same. The weather makes
·
mentioned. 11 will be interesting to certain of that.
Royal
Troon
has
already
been
at
see how long Irabu is able to keep his
least
two
different
courses
this
week,
personal affairs private in the media
giving players a taste or what In
ccnlcr of the universe.
expect
when · the tournament gets
As for his pitching skills and his
going
on
Thursday.
supposed I 00 mph fastball. the IndiThe
fickle
wind off the Firth of
ans, like the Tigers last week,
Clyde
threw
a
strange curve at the
weren't blown away.
field
on
Tuesday
when it blew from
"He threw the ball well enough,"
the
opposite
direction
it usu~lly
said Marquis Grissom. who went 4«.:ames
frtlm,
making
whatever
inforfor-5 and hit one of three homers off
mation
gathered
likely
to
be
useless
.
lrabu. "He won and we didn't."
"It
probably
made
as
much
as
lrabu (2 -0) also commined his
1·20 yards difference as you hit off
first balk, hit his lirst batter and was
the
tee," Nick Price said after his
ripped by virtually every player .in
practice
round.
.
.•
the Indians' lineup .
"So
a
hole
like
No.
13,
you
hit
lrabu gave up his first homer in
driver
,
n
nd
you
are
hilling
it
100
the second to Tony Fernandez, and
allowed two more homers in the lifth yards farther than you would when
- a solo shot to Grissom and a you arc inlo the wind," he said.
"That's a lot of clulis there. Probathree-run drive by Matt Williamsbly
seven or eight clubs in between."
as the Indians trimmed an 8- I deficit 1
That's the difference between hit-·
10 8-5 .
ling a 2-iron second shot or a wedge.
Chad Curtis added a · two-run
II is that kind of change in course
homer for the Yankees, who hamconditions
- the kind of changes
mered ,Charles Nagy (9-6) for eight
runs 1n 2 113 innings. Ramiro Mendoza followed lrabu and linished for
his first career save.·
Martinez's homer matched his
career-high for a season and highlighted a siK-run second off Nagy,
who la."ed just I 213 innings- his
shortest outing this year·- the last
umc he raced New York .
"He was pitching from hchind
and he had the ball up," Clevclimd
manager Mike Hargrove said. "You
cant do that againsl the Yankees. You
can't d\&gt; that against anyone in the
league. especially the Yankees."
Pat Kelly 's RBI single started the
. outburst, and al'ler Paul O'Neill singled, Martinez connected on Nagy 's
lirst pitch. Maninez. one· hchind
major league-leader Mark MeGwire. also hit 31 homers i.n I995 h&gt;r
Scalllc.

that can come up in the middle of a most rct.:cmly last month - and secround - that makes the British ond in the PGA once. he has never
Open what Price calls "the ultimate hccn higher tl)an eighth in the Bntish
Open and has missed the cut lour of
test in one's strategies."
the last live years.
Monday. Price hit a driver and a
He hopes his local knowledge of
2-iron into the 463 -yard I lth hole ..
lhc
l:oursc where his father is the
Tuesday, he hit " a 3-wood and a
pitch."
club secretary will count t&lt;&gt;r a Jot
"I've played this course in all
On the west' coast or Scotland.
where all four scasuns can oc\:ur on types of conditions," Montgomcric
said . "Obviously, I know my way
t~e same day, a longterm weather
forecast is. hcing ablc.to say it can·t around here ...
Prke and Norman arc two other
rain for at least I0 minutes hccauSc ·
the sun is out. That makes prCdicting players who can draw on years of
which Troon will show up on Thurs~ experience playing British Open
courses under British Open condiday all but pointless.
tions .
·
·
And there Iics the challenge "Twenty years ago this week was
and lhc hcauty - of the British
my lirst major championship," NorOpen .
· " When the golf courses changes, man said ·ahout the 1977 Open at
everything changes," Greg Norman Turnberry, just down the road .
said .
"I rcmcmhcr Jack Nicklaus and
Norman. Price and Colin Mont- Tor:t Wat!'ion shooting it out down
gomcrie - who grew up within the strct~.:h and I rcrncrnhcr watching
sight of the first tee at Trm'm - arc
it on TV," he said ahout missing the
three players at peak form with the cut for the final round.
experience it takes to handle the
In 19K9, Norman - whn won the
changing l:onditions.
British Open in 19K6 land '93 For no one is the return to Troun hcgan the final round at Trc~on seven stmkes hchind but opened 'with
us pllignant as for Montgomcric.
hirdics on the first six holes
Secvnd in the U.S. Open twice -

TYSON/HO).LY FARMS·
. .

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Boneless
ChUCk IGISt

EXtRA.
COMING ,.UESDAY, JULY 21tH, 1917

Assorted Varieties

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FRUIT
JUICES
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BABY Sentinel

•

Drug
Surprises

~ Pain

~e~earcbers
(SPECIALl.- A drug that iscxcitin1
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992-6491

The Daily Sentinel BABY Sentinel is a
Special Edition filled with photographs of
local kids· ages newborn to tour 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
waJIQt size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each
phl&gt;tO!IrBJlh . If mo~e than
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Picture~ must
enclose an additional
be In by
$2 per child.
Tuesday,
(ENCLOSE
July 22th, ·
PAYMENT
WITH
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PICTURE)
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ByTheBend

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Pagel

-------------------~------------------~----------------------~~--~--~------r

Mother-to-be worried about. in.;laws chain smoking
Ann
. Landers
1!1117 . L1» Antclct

T1mc~

Syndol!'lllc ~nd Crc~hlr~
f;y...to(aiC

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I arc expecting our first child in
a few months. My husband's parents
are both chain smokers. We don't
want them smoking around the baby,
but my husband refuses to confront
them about this.
My in,laws live five hours away,
and we see them about once a
month . The visits tend to last three

or four days at a time, and we stay in
'

Family
Medicine
'

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Your supervisor is probably a lot
Question: It seems that everyone
is unhappy at the company where I like you and me in that she is giving
work, including me. My supervisor her best effort to accomplish the tasks
never stands up for us. All we hear she is assigned to do. Unfortunately,
about is how we do things wrong. her best isn't meeting your needs . l
The talk around ihe coffee machine · . suggest that you try to resolve the
is that killing her with an ax would troublesome issues by talking with
be ruled justifiable homicide in court, her again, since l assume you have
Do you have any suggestions for talked with her before. What I sug4ealing with a stressful workplace gest you try differently this time is
without re·sorting to committing a another style of "talking."
felony?
It is important that you identify the
Answer: AciUally, I'd recommend things that make work difficult for
using a spoon instead of an ax._ It you before you talk to the supervisor.
.Jiurts more 1 However, l should pomt You must be very specific. Clarify, in
· out that implementing this drastic detail, what causes problems for you
solution, by whatever method, would and also suggest a better way to deal
put you behind bars, perhaps on death with each of these problem areas.
row. I suspec t that 's an even more Now, ask for a meeting with the
stressful environment than your supervisor to discuss your work
workplace!
issues Qdon't just stqp her when she
Seriously, stress in the workplace walks by.
is a common problem. I see many
During your meeting, be sure to
people who are "at wits end" because avoid making general comments like,
of the-emot ional burden imposed at "the work is too hard.': Or, "I don't
~or(&lt; They often complain about the · like working with Angela.'' Such gen•voluihe of work, lint that rarely is the eralities often pro&lt;luce an emotional
·real problem. It is the emotional tone response without providing a clear
,of the workplace that makes most understanding of the problem. Also
:'people complain. · ·
- remember to focus on changeable
•· Stress and anxiety at work can be behaviors, not on like~. dislikes,
attributed to many causes. The com- appearance or other unchangeable
plaints I ))car most oftenQa demand- characteristics .. It is critical that you
ing boss , perceived as uncaring or avoid using emotionally charged
i~ompetent' an unrealistically heavy words such as "won't," "can't," "hate,"
~work load and troublesome cowork- and "liar." The work problem can't be
·ers .. have a common thread.
rectified by your supervisor without
, Usually underlying these com- clarifying . the specific issues, and
pl.aints is the realization, eit!Jer.~o?- making . them clear to her is your
scious qr unconscmus, that the tndt- respons1b1hty.
~idual has reached the limits of his or
Remember to stay calm during
bj&gt;r coping skills. All attempts to your meeting, even if ihc supervisor
jmprove the work ,situation have doesn't see_the issues the same way
been unsuccess ful , and these unre- ·you do. RaJSed vo1ces rarely ·resolve
solved issues cause increasing frus- problems. If you can't work out a sat·
lration until the ~eve! of anxiety is is!'actory solution with your boss, tell
bvcrwhelming . Performance at work her in a calm and pleasant way that
and personal relationships at work you will now present your concerns
;uid at home begin to suffer.
·
to her hoss .
•• Some individuals resolve this type
Hopefully your mecling with the
of problem by changing jobs. That boss will lead to a resolution of the
can work,' but us ually~ similar situ- problems. If it doesn't. you'll at least
ation develops at the new job after a know that you have done all that you
while. Then the anxiety builds anew. can to improve the work environment
the proper solution is Lo improve in you·r area.
your p(oblcm-solving skills so that "Family Medicine" is a weekly col·
you can resolve the present difficult umn. To submit questio~s~ write to
!iituation. Once thmgs are gmng bet- John C. Wolf, D.O;, Oh1o Univer·
ter. you can then wisely decide if sity College of Osteopathic Med_i·
another employer offers you a more cine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohm .
pro.sperous future .
45701.

'

Birchfield reunion held recently
The annual reunion of desccn- .
dants of the late W. B. and Mirl~y
girchfield was held Sunday at the
james Cotterill farm .
A cove red dish dinner was
cnjoy·cd at non with Jake Birchfield
· giving the blessing. Horseshoe . bm•~o. vollcyhall. aQd water balloon .
games were played.
Attending were Jeff and Sarah
Birchfield. Larry · and Ruth Birchfield , Denise Birchfield , Brendan
Gall , Wayne Bayne of Albany; Helen
Sible. Brad Bible. Sam B1blc. Lm·
da Finley. Michael Finley. Amanda
Finley. Michele Finley, Co_lumbus:
Debbie Birchlield, Dan Skmner of
New Marshfield. Lee Lysell, Linda
Johnson, Kay. Tim, Joe and Jessie
Dillon · and Billie Pooler of Racine.
Jyl 'Birchfield, T. D. · Dennis of
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Cynth13 CotterilrofPomeroy: Kelli: Noah Christian Hysell, Tella Meloy, Ray and
'Mary Birchfield, Kenny Ryna, Kenny and Shelia Carsey of M1ddleport:
Faye Cotteri ll , Roger and Kn stoph~r
Cotterill, James, Becky and Jusun

Pepsi &amp; Mt.
D.ew Products
211ters

STORE HOURS
Mondaythru
Sunday
8AM-10 PM

•

other mothers to take her, but it
made him uneasy. Now he is reluctant to ta~e our daughter anywhere
in public for an. ej(tended perilld of
time. Any suggestions would be
appreciated. -- Stockton. Calif.
Dear Stock : Some innovativ~
places have "family rest rooms " to
accommodate situations like yours.
If one is not nearby and the child is
5 years of age or older, the father
should take her to the ladies ' room
while he waits outside 1he door. If
she is under 5, he can take hc·r in the

¢

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT 'QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 19, 1997._
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

7 up, Dr. Pepper,
Mug Root Beer,
Crush Flavors

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY- SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

, 12 pk. 12 oz. cans

men 's room with him.

2/$500

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

'

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8

P 0 WELL'S

Wednesday, July 16,1997 .

each other's homes. I know that secI recommend the light touch.
· The other day, I was out on a in Charlouesville, Va.
ondhand smoke can be very damag- Near the front door, hang a small short run with my dogs when I wit- · Dear Va.: I hop&lt;; every smoker
ing to a baby's young lungs. I've sign saying , " You Have Just Entered nessed this phenomenon twice. Two
who reads your leti~r will relate to
also heard it may be connected to a No-Smoking Zone." If they light men were approaching me on the what you have written. Any fireman
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. '
·up after seeing the sign, get serious sidewalk. I was about 3 feet away will tell you that hundreds of lives
I don't know if my concerns are and tell them to please step outside if when one man thfew his still-lit cig- , are lost every year, plus millions of
justified. My husband feels that no they absolutely must smoke. The · arette directly in front of me .
dollars worth of property, because
harm will be done since the visits next letter was written by a soul
The second time, we were cross- someone was careless with_a Cigalast only a few days every month. I mate of yours whg lives in Char- ing the street, and the driv.er of a car reue.
need my husband to talk to his par- lottesville, Va.:
tossed his clgareue out the .window,
Dear Ann Landers! My husband
ents, but I don't want to ruin the
Dear Ann Landers: Why do and it landed on my dog. This really took our 4-year-old daughter on a
peace between our families. What smokers think the world is their ash- angered me . Since- it could have field trip with the school. Everything
can I do?-- Scared in Nebraska
tray ? They throw cigareue butts all burned my dog badly had I not was fine until she had to go to the
Ocar Nebraska: You can do noth- over the ground outside public noticed it. I then realized it could· bilthr\lom. He didn•t know if he
ing about this problem when you are .buildings when there are recep~acles just as easily have landed on a child . should lerher go into the women:S
guests in your in-laws' home. but nearby. And I have never seen a car Now I know how simple it \"Ould be bathroom alone or if HE should take
when they visit you, it is not unrea- built without an ashtray, yet smokers for a care less smoker to start a fire her into the men 's bathroom with
sonable to expect them to respect throw cigareues out of car wi ndows that could destroy a whole bui Iding him .
your wishes.
with reckless abandon.
or an entire neighborh1llld. -- Burnt
He eventually asked one of the

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Cotteri II. Ben and Tina Cotterill. Jay
Green. Taslia Green orHarrisonvillc.
Howard · and Marie Birchfield.
Rob' and Teresa Birchfield, Ray.
Kimbcr.ly Jmnitha and Cassady Willford , Jaincs Birchlield. Jake Birchfield. Maureen Burns. Zachary
Bums-PowelL Rutland.
The 199K reunion will be held the
second Sunday in July at the same
location.

S. U. V. objects to Rep. fiall's proposal
An apology by the U. S. gove(n- U.S. An apology hy the U.S . Gov- ed, he said.
ment for slavery would say that the crnmcm would suy that thi s sacrifice
He further reported on attending
sacrifice of the lives of 300))()() was not enough ." (.:Ontinucd Ashley. the July I reburial of the unknown
Union soldiers was .not enough.
He noted that a letter has been sent Ci.vil War soldier at Gettysburg. He
That was the consensus of mem- to Rep. Hall in orderto referthe mat- was a part of the honor guard for the
bers of the the Brooks-Grant No. 7 , ter to the national body.
la.•t Union widow, Mrs. Daisy AnderSons of Union Veterans of the Civil
The camp recognized Thomas son. She and the last. Confederate
War of Middleport, at a recent meet- Gorrell of Sandyville as delegate to widow, Mrs. Alberta Martin, shook
ing held at the Hope Baptist Church the June department encampment He hands across the stone wall just like
annex.
was appo inted as stale guide. '
the Civil War veterans did in 1913
Keith Ashley, commander, reportA rCport was gi vcn on the prob- and -1938.
ed to the camp the recent propos~ I of lems with the Ohio Civil War battle
lt was reported that a new book
U.S. Rep. Tony P. Hall of Ohio to flags at the Ohio His!Orical Society. has heen published on Moran's Raid
have the federal government apolo- These flags have hung for several concerning mostly the Indiana Por~
gize for slavery.
years in the. bu ild ing causing deteri- tion of !he raid . The camp plans to
He said that he had contacted Rep. oration. They arc now stored and they assist the Auxiliary S.UV at Frost,
Hall's office regrading the proposal. need conservation quickly, it w~s Athens County, in restoring the old
noting that the S.U. V feels that thi s reported . The cost will be $5000cach Grand Army Republic hall there .
. "sets a bad precedent for other groups for the 200 battle flags . The Ohio
Speaker for the evening was Prof.
to demand apologies and reparations Legislature has not funded the pro- Samuel Wilson of the University of
since no slaves or slave owners arc ject. it was reponed .
Rio Grande. He is a noted author on
living today.
Com. Ashley reported on attend"But the most strenuous objection ing the kick-off dinner fo_r the Gen.
to the proposal is that 300.000 Union William T Sherman statue in Lansoldiers paid for t~e cost to free caster. The' statue will cost $25,000
slaves by dying i·n the servic_c of the and donations are now being accept-

Hungarians and spoke on the little
noted contrihution of Hungarians in
the Civil War. He noted that Pres.
lincoln actually offered the head of
the Union ann to a Hungarian. Who
turned it down hccause he wa&lt; unahle .
to speak English. He also pointed out ·
that Pres. Lincoln invited a noted .
Hungarian to altend the Gettysburg '
Address. The reason that' foreigners ~
like Hungari.ans were sought for the ·
Union' forces is that they were professional military men.
The upcoming reenactment at
Bulling!On Island was mentioned as
being scheduled for July 26-27 at
Portland .
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gorrell ,
served refreshments. The .next meet~
ing will be held.on Sept. 8.

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

for the scholarship was made on the
basis of r.ecommendation by the faculty of Miami's Department of Chemistry.
M':lson~ son of Linda and Gordon
fisher of Syracuse and grandsop of.
Mason Fisher of Mincr.;ville, is a premcd student entering his junior year
with'· an~.\lll41;.tgraduate majQr~·in
chemi stry.
'

·aU1file/'· O.J/"
"-~.
V1 I I

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Pork Spareribs.~;

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ECKRICH

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$

4 99
99,.

of
Mash honqrcd Mrs.
,fD.
4
. Wayne Pullins with a birthday dinner.
. ,.
!•~61 a•~
~t
Allcnding were Bert Mash and Cecil I ------:;«-~'-"1~~..,~~"'~"'~,.~~"~:.:-~~~~·---=---:--:-..;:_:::_:~.:_::;:..::.;~.:.:.---~
Field. Jacksonville. Fla.: Mrs. Shar- t
,
c
•
line Johnson . Kelly and S_am. Wayne
and Jesse Pullins and Dwight Cuilums.
,
·
The Rev. and Mrs . . Wtlliam
f
Williams of Lima spent &gt;cvcral days
here with Mr. and Mrs . James
Gilmore. Mrs. Marge Fetty and Oscar
Smith were guests on Sunday.
Recent guests at the home of Mr.
Buy aowwith
and Mrs. Roy Howell were Mr. and·
ll mouth 1.a.c:. -~
Mrs . Leonard Lytms and grandson.
fiaaacing and · ____
Joshua. of Orlando. Fla.: Mrs. Cam]
0 % iaterat!!
Kcchlcr and daughter of Kansas
City; Mrs. Franc.,; Klein and son.
(with approved "f"'Terry of Cape Canaveral; Mrs. Emma
credit)
Fox. Mrs. Irene Couinryman or
Grcenlicld; Robert Burke. Columbus:
Mrs. Patty Hindy and daughter or
· Rutland. and Earl Roush, locaL
Leigh Ann Mash left for the Great
Lakes Naval Training Center July 7.
July 4 holiday ~ucsts at the home
of Mrs . Ann Mash were Chuck Mash
of Reynoldsburg. Bob Mash of Lons.
S. C. and Butch Mash, local.
The Rev. Peter Trembley, former
Laurel Giff Free Methodist Church
pastor, his wife and family have'
moved to their new charge ·in Penn~
sylvania. New pastor of the church is •
the Rev. Dave DeWitt who has
moved here with his wife and infant
daughter, Abigail.

¢

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Thighs ................·...~~-89

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1 gallon

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lb

·· RE-ENACTOAS ·The WoHe fllmlly, Eddie, Art and Rebecca, will
wear these period costumes during the ·second annual
Chester/Shade Days this weekend. The men will portray Gener·
al John Hunt Morgan and "Gray Wolf" during the observation's .
·time-line event Cheater/Shade Days gets underwll)' Friday

Aaue A "I
h

79¢

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Products
12 pk cans

LB.

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With Rutlanll Funalblra
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BONELESS

Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson, Kclly and Eric of Cambridge were recent
guests of Mrs. Lloyd wright.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs and Mrs.
Donna Gtlmore were recent guests of
Mrs. Phil Wise of McConnelsville
and also visited Mrs. Wilma Seaman

LB

Pork Chops.............

Syracuse man awarded scholarship
.Mason G. Fisher has been awarded a Miami University Alumni S.cholarship in recognition of his academic excellence (3.9 GPA), leadership,
crealivity, and ambition.
'
'
The award is the Lubri fol Scholarship in Chemistry. Fisher's selection

.

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Detergent

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July 19, 1997

�r : _Pe~ge:_1_o_•_The~~Da-l~ly~Se~nH-ne~·~I--------~---------------------P~om~~-ro-~y-·-M~Idd~~~~O~h~~~----------~---------w-ed
__n_es_da~y,_J_u~~-1_8_,1_~
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srael says Gen~ra·l Assemby ·vote will harm peace ·talks

.~FBI

UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- The
.. overwhelming
U.N. vote again st

By DAVID ROYSE
. · Aaaocleted Press Writer
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. - The
· wild pastels of South Beach's art·
. . deco district, whe!IO people naunt
their impeccable physiques with
· - revealing fashions, inspi!IOd some of
Gianni Versace's most colorful and
· sexy designs.
• Versace, apparently the latest vic, tim of one of t~eFBI' s most wanted
· fugitit&gt;es, died Tuesday morning on
· · the sun-soaked streets of South
· Beach , where he felt comfonable
)'nough to stroll alone for his morn·
ing newspaper.
~
Police said a lone gunman shot the
~ • 50-y.;ar.old Italian designer in the
': back of the hdad twice at close
•! .·range. Thelr prime suspect: Andrew
:-:Cunanan, a 27-year-old fugitive
:::peeled in the slayings of four men
&lt;· from Minneapolis to New Jersey .
:" We've been actively looking for
: him since April," said Paul Philip.
• head of the FBI in Miami. "Every·
... body 's at risk. Everybody's got to
. help us put this guy in jail. "
Versace, returning home after buy·. ing a copy of an Italian newspaper,
, was gu·nned down outside the gates
• of his Mediterranean-style mansion
. in view of passers-by.
Martin Weinstein said he heard
·,
.. · gunshots and ran down the street.
. " And when I arrived I saw a guy
· lying on the step in a pool of bl ood.
At first I didn't realize who it was.
. · But then I r-ealized it was Versace."
Miami Beach Po!ice Chief
Richard Barreto said .the shooting

Israel's construction of a Jewish
housing project in Jerusalem will
only delay dtrect Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations, Israel 's new U.N.
ambassador said.
The Palestinian envoy, Nasser' aiKldwa, said Tue~ay's v .&gt;te shows
that " the world is fed up " with the
government of Israeli Prime Minister
... Benjamin Netanyahu.
The General Assembly v0 ted 13 J.
" 3 with 14 abstenti ons to condemn
" Israel's decision to build the 6,500·

unit Har Homa housing project in a
pan of Jerusalem that Palestinians
want for the capital 'of a future state.
Israeli bl!lldozers resumed work
today at the building site. Uzi Arad,
an adviser to Netanyahu, described
th e U.N. vote as a " regrettable
sideshow."
·
Tuesday 's v0 te was the third time
the assembly has spoken out against
the project, in a• •110aArabs call Jebel
Abu Ghnem. II April , a weaker res-.
olution passed by a vote of 134-3
with I J abstentions.
"Violence will not make Israel

concede," Israeli Ambassador Dare the U.N. Charter " to ensure their
Gold said after Tuesday's vole. "Nei- rights and benefits" as U.N. mem·
ther will false international p!IOs· ben.
sure."
It also called on member states to
Only the tiny Marshall Islands in "actively discourage activities which
the Pacific joined the United States (directly contribute to any construe·
and Israel in voting against the latest lion or development of Israeli settle·
resolution . Russia and Germany ments in the occupied Palestinian ter·
abstained, but the 110st of the. Euro- ritory , including Jerusalem."
pean Union, Japan and Canada sup-.
The General Assembly also rec·
ported it.
.
ommended convening a conference
Io a veiled threat to Israel's U.N. to enforce international rules on pro.
membership, the resolution remind- tecting civilians in wanime as they
ed member states they should "fulfill pertain to Palestinians in occupied
in good faith their obligations" under territories.

The first draft of the resolution
had urged member states not to
impon goods produced or manufactu!IOd in settlements and in Jerusalem.
The sponsors removed the ' clause
from the final draft in hopes of winning mo110 support.
U.S. Ambassador Bill Richardson
said Washington shared ·the Arabs'
concern about the impact of tbe
housing project on the peace process,
bur the resolution, he said. would
" undermine rather than build trust
and confidence the negotiating par·
ties need."

Some Palestinian officials com·
plained the resolution didn't include
sanctions against Israel. But Hanan
Ashrawi a minister in tbe Palestiniilll
self-rule'Cabinet, said the vote was
" a stron$ message and should be perceived as such."
After the vote, Gold, a former
senior adviser to Netanyahu, said the
resolution "gives a sense that it's pos..
sible to build a bypass route from
direct talks in the region by creating
this kind of forum with its automat·
ic maJorities against Israel."

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Gunfire
exchanged .
on Korean
border

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Beat of the ·send ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Before another minute passes, I
want .to .mention that Lois Bun, life.
long resident of Pomeroy, is a patient
at the James Cancer Clinic in Columbus.
Lois worked ·ar the Farmers Bank
for a number of yc:~rs he fore retiring.
She is a talented vocalist and frequently over the years enhanced
local programs with her excellent
solos.
She undoubtedly would appreciate
hearing from friends right now. The
.address is University Hospitals, the
James Ca~ccr Center, Room 932.
Columbus, Ohio

Bonnie Krautter, a lifelong resi- .
dent
ofPqmeroy, is having a problem
By JU-YEON KIM
.
trying
to remember the names of
Associated Press Writer
movie
theaters in Pomeroy. Of
. SEOUL, South Korea - · Nimh
course,
they
have all railed from the
Korean soldiers exchanged heavy
local
scene.
gunfire today with South Korean·
Funny, but at the momel)t the .
troops in the most serious clash on
names
are a little fuzzy for me too .
the Korean peninsula in almost a
Perhaps,
you remember. You can get
year.
in
touch
with
Bonnie at 17.12 Chester
North Korea said several of its sol·
Road
,
Pomeroy,
45769 .
diers were wounded in the exchange
-··
and accused South Korea of a "grave
I ccnainly want to nominate Cork
armed provocative act." South Korea
Cleek,
High St. resident, as one of
called it an " intentional provocation"
Pomeroy's
most helpful citi1.cns.
by North Korea .
When
Cork
isn't working in his
No South Korean casualties were ·
employment
in
the
construction busireported .
ness,
you'll
sec
him
heading down
A
giant
homecoming
is
heing
It· was the most serious clash
Lincoln
Hill
armed
with
a weed cater
planned
in
the
Rutland
Community
between the rival Koreas since Sepand
olhcr
equipment
to
clear
"cx~,;css
by
the
Rutland
Civic
Center
Conitember, when a North Korean sub·
greenery"
which
would
probably
mittcc
.
marine went aground off South
The event is set for Saturday, Sept. take over if Cork didn't do his thing.
Korea's northeast coast. A massive
6,
and
the committee is hoping to get
hunt for its occupants ended with 24
Do you gci the sec the "Meigs
a
lot
of
former residents back home
North Koreans killed and one cap·
Historian"'!
for
the
event
which
will
be
held
in
the
tured. Thineen South Korean soldiers
KOREA FAMINE • North Korelin children
late October will prevent • looming famine, but
center area. There'll be benches anq
The publication is the product of
and civilians .also died, some from
weed llelds on the road betwe«t the capital of
shortages of fertilizers, pesticides end fuel
the
Meigs County Historical Society
seating
so·
that
people
can
visit
and
friendly fire.
Pyongyang end the northern town of Huichon
mean already malnouriehecl termers must lend
and
is published quarterly. It tradi·
entenainment
is
planned
..
Look,
for
Today, South Korean border
Thuradey. North KorN Ia hoping the harvest In
their crops by hand. (AP)
large
kettles
of
beans
over
open
fires
tionally
starts nut with a report by
guards spotted at least seven North
Margaret
Parker; president of the ·
and
other
nostalgic
scenes.
All
sorts
Korean troops .on the southern side of I0 monar rounds and two more Agency said.
.
peace treaty after the end of their
society,
whi~.:h touches on current
of
cont.
e
sts
arc
also
being
planned
by
the demilitarized zone and ordered rounds of unidentified artillery, the
It said soldiers were seriously 1950-53 Korean War, and their bor·
injured and outpost buildings der remains the most heavily guard- the committee. Churches and busi- happenings with the society and
them through a loudspeaker to with~ ministry said.
·
draw, South Korea's Defense MinSouth Korea called fora.cease-fire destroyed, but did not specify how ed in the world. While Nonh Ko!IO- nesses are being asked to prepare his· events coming up in the county. The
istry said.
.
45 minutes after the initial gunshot. many soldiers were hun. The South an soldiers ·occasionally ero.s ·over tories with photos to enhance the remainder of the eight page paper
When the Nonh Korean soldiers The Nonh Koreans stopped shooting Koreans fired some 3,000 shells and · into the southern side of. the border, homecoming which will carry the mostly contains a flock of interesting
bullets, the North Korean agency ex:changc·s of gunfire are not com- theme. "Com in' Home to Rutland", historical stories going way hack and
failed to respond, South Ko110an sol- shonly thereafter.
mostly taken from newspapers from
mon.
diers fired some 200 warning shots
· In a report carried by its official said.
much earlier days. Interesting and
We
lost
a
&lt;:ouplc
of
notables
The demilitarized zone is a 2.5·
The incident comes three weeks
into the air, the ministry said.
news agency, the North denied its sol·
informative
reading. The publication
recently
who
have
affected
the
lives
The Nonh Koreans fired their diers crossed the border and accused miie wide buffer that stretches the he fore the two sides are to hold a pre·
of
many
of
us
as
they
made
their
is
sent
to
all
society mcmhers. lndi·
rilles at the South Korean soldiers, the South of obstructing " the routine width of the Korean Peninsula.
liminary meeting in New York to dismark
in
the
world.
vidual
memberships
in the society are
South Korea said it will lodge a cuss a permanent peace treaty. South
· the ministry said, and the southern patrol duty " of its soldiers:
Jimmie
Stewart--and
who
doesn't
only
$7.50
annually
and
$15 for famguards then directed tire at the north·
"The people's army soldiers were complain with the military armistice Korea has promised huge economic
erners with machine guns and rilles . . compelled to take self-defensive · commission, the bOdy that oversees benefits for the impoverished North rcmemher his classic film . "It's a ilies in case ynu'd like to join in supWonderful Life" as well as scads of port and receive the Meigs Historian.
if it improves tics.
Nonhern soldiers at a guard post measures under the grave situation," the truce bet ween the two Koreas.
other
movies he madc.ovcrthc years?
The
two
Korcas
never
signed
a
across the border 110iurned fi110 with the North 's Korean Central News ·
Then there was the death of Charles
What was that you were saying
Kuralt who brought us those tclcvi· . about heing cold? How quickly we
sion views of rural America--and we forget. huh'' · Do keep smiling.
• certainly could relate to that.
TUZLA, Bosnia-Herzegovina The blast was in the northwestern destroying an OSCE jeep and shat· Monday, when the U.N. tribunal ,set
·
(AP) - A U.S. soldier was stabbed town of Prijedor, site last week's tering windows.
up to investigate crimes during the
U.N.' policc also have been repeat· 1992-95 Bosnian war sentenced
with a sickle today in Serb territory NATO raid.
I
Worried about the safety of NATO edly harassed since Thursday, when Dusan Tadic, a Bosnian Serb, to 20
in the latest attack on foreigners since
'
''
NATO moved against Bosnian Serb troops, President Clinton warned British troops killed one war crimes year§ in jail for atrocities at the camps
Bosnian Serbs on. Tuesday that " it suspect resisting arrest and detained in Prijedor.
war crime suspects.
'
Bosnian Serb leaders have
The American, with the NATO would he a 2ravc mistake " . to seck another in Prijedor.
'
nrrests of the susThe man shot to death, former Pri· accused NATO of overstepping the
peace force , was n.ot identified. U.S. revenge for
jcdor police chief Sima Drljaca, mandate for the peace troops it leads
Army spokesmen in Tuzla satd he pects.
On
Tuesday,
an
explosion
shat,
allegedly helped run detention camps in divided Bosnia. They warn that
was stabbed from behind ncar
tcrcd
windows
at
an
·apartmcnt
build·
in the region during the Bosnia war. further actions could lead to attach
Kladanj, I 8 miles south ofTu1.la. He
ing
housing
a
senior
official
with
the.
The arrested man, hospital director · on foreign troops.
was treated and released. The attack·
Organi1.ation
for
Security
and
Coop. l,canets containing death threats
Milan Kovacevic, is suspected of
er escaped. .
··
eration
in
Europe
in
Banja
Luka.
the
Earlier in the day, a hand grenade
organizing the transport of non-Serbs against the 30.000 member NATO·
exploded near the house of a U.N. largest Scrh-hcld town in Bosnia. On to the camps. He now awaits 'rial in led force , which includes 8,000
_Americans, also have hecn found .
employee - the third recent blast Sunday. ·a bomb went off outside a . The Hague, Netherlands.
targeting international orgamzattons. hotel in the eastern town ofZvornik,
Bosnian Serb anger increased

United States soldier stabbed with sickle in Bosnia

Foreign minister picked to be Cambodia's new co-premier

"

s
&lt;

•

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••

•••

•••
•

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••
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•!'

•••
••

Ung Hunt. who alsu will remain
PHNOM PENH. Cambodia (AP)
_; Giving a veneer of legitimacy to foreign minister. said he still respects
a bloody coup. Cambodia's foreign Ranariddh . but cannot accept the
minister today accepted coup leader 'prince's call' for anned resistance.
" I put the interests of my country.
Hun Sen's offer to serve as his comy
people. above anything else. '' he
prime minister.
said.
" Above political panics, above
Ung Huot. 52. will replace Prince
my
boss,
Ranariddh. I still respect
Norodom Ranariddh, who was oust··
him.
but
the
interests of the country
cci during a July 5 coup while he was
dictate
that
Cambodia
must go on...
out of the country.· He has been
King
Norodom
Sihanouk
also di•·
threatened with arrest if he retur.., .
lanced
himself
today
from
his
oustUng Huot is a memher of Ranand·
cd
son
.
.dh's royalist political party. Hts·
"Your Excellcney knows perfect·
appointment has been deemed
ly
that
I am neutral and take absolute·
acceptable by pany loyalists rcmam·
ly
no
sides
for my son." Sihanouk
ing in Phnom Penh. many of whom
wrote
in
a
letter
to Chea Sim. acting
have bCen co-opted or tcrrortzed '"
the wake of the coup. HIS lonna! head of stale and a memher of Hun
approval by the National Assembly •s Sen's party.
However. in his letter from Bciexpected.
·
. . . .
Hun Sen hopes to mmtmiZe lor· jing; ·where the 74-ycar-old king is
cign outcry over his takeover by undergoing medical treatment,
appointing a co-prcmtcr. hom Sihanouk said Hun Sen's opponents
Ranariddh 's party. Tho~gh ollcrmg to should be judged either accordtng to
share a title, Hun Sen IS expected to civil law or be held as prisoners of
war in accordance with international
retain all real power in the country .

treaties .

" I am deeply saddened that sol ·
diers and members of the national
police have cruelly tortured and piti ·
lessly killed their enemies after
arresting or capturing them, ••
· Sihanouk wrote. "They continue to
act in this fashion .~·
Human rights groups say at least
25 people have hecn killed in custody
since the coup. Opposition members
who have ned into exile rcpon wide·
spread torture.

Constitutionally, Sihanouk reigns
but docs not rule. Once the master of
Cambodia's political game, the king
has been increasingly sidelined .., his
health has worsened from cancer,
strokes and cataracts.
. Sihanouk is receiving diplomats in
thin a this week seeking a solution to
the crisis. but has been pessimi&lt;tic
abourt~e prospect of finding one,
By ruling with another co-prime
minister from Ranariddh's political
pany, Hun Sen said he will preserve

~ , -,.;..__---C.ommunity

~

~-

I

calendar-----

Goeglein. Those attending take a covThe Community Calendar is THURSDAY
• I publilbtd u 11 free servke to nonCARPENTER ··Revi-val, Carpen- ered dish.
proOf 1roups wishing to unounce ter Baptist'Church, State Route 143,
••• meedna
SYRACUSE .. Meigs County
ud special events. The Thursday through Saturday, 7 p.m.
of Mental Retardation and
•• ealendar 1s not designed to promote Singing Thursday, Church and ' Board
sala or tund raisers of any ty~. . Shirley Dailey and Many Short; Fri- Developmental Disabilities, Thurs·
• l~ms are printed as spare permits day and Saturday, Dan and Faith day, 7:30p.m. at Carleton School.
and rannot be pennteed to run 11 Hayman, .Sunrise· !rom Chester. and
. Evelyn Roush; evangelist, . Joe
specllk number of days.
Gwinn. John Elswonh, pastor, invites FRIDAY
••
• •
MIDDLEPORT .. Middleport Vii·
public.
••
o I WEDNESDAY
·
!age
Council, Friday, 7 p.m. to dis••
MIDDLEPORT
Pennview
0 I
cuss
budget.
·
POMEROY
..
The
Rock
Springs
• Chapel .Singers, Middlepon Holi Better
Health
Club.
annual
picnic,
,.
ness Church, WedneSday, 7:30p.m•.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Thursday, noon , home of Frances
Special
•

•

.
•

••
•

..•

,•_

the '-=•mslitution.
Toan Chhay, an ex-governor of
Sicm Reap province, had hccn positioned as the princes replacement.
He he longs to a breakaway pany faciion that denounced Ranariddh last
spring for incompetence. But the
. steering committee of his faction met
privately today and decided to mominate Ung Huot.
Because Toan Chhay is not an
elected member of the 120-seat
National .Assembly, making him
prime minister would have required
amending the constitution.
Meanwhile today, . hundreds of
Hun Sen's opponents and refugees
nccing Cambodia were trapped at the
border with Thailand. Many were
heing detained by Cambodian police.'
Sam Rainsy, le~der of the .opposi·
tion Khmer Nation Pany, h~ plead·
cd with Thai authorities to open the
border before . any major clashes
between Hun Sen and resistance
forces .

meeting, .Eastern Local Board of
Education, Friday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Toppers Plains Elementary School
for the purpose ol' personnel, school
renovation a~d new construction dis·
cussion .

'
SATURDAY
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878, fun night and potluck
super, Saturday, 6:30p.m. to be fol·
lowed by work on local and stale fair
booth materials. Subordinate grange
contests. needlework, an, and sewing
contests, will be judged.

.

·a;
.~
~

,(.,

, Igor Goncharov, II deputy mlt1sic1n
control c:hlef In charge of medical eftelrs, holds e microphone
as he speaks to reporters aboulthe condition of the Mlr's crew
In the Mission.Control Center lltlllr Moscow Wednesday. (AP)

RIVER CRUIS~
C...ejolollle ,

MEIGS COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
UWeiO- • •

S T! l

WHBBL!R.
INturrng

THE CROSSOVER BAND
fun, food •nd £nterta~nnwnt
INiud.ci 1ft th.
All ABOARD
•ALlASHOIIE

Tacb•ts AM l•m•tecl, so HUJUIYI On wl• NOW •t
the Chamber ofhu• •t 2JI
Mtnn 5trHt •

*•

.dark shorts and carrying a backpack.
The man fled on foot.
Witnesses led police to a fi ve-s to·
ry municipal parkin g garage nearby,
where a man fitti ng the desc ription or
the suspect was seen . ..._

There, police found a red Chevro·
let pickup truck that investigators said
Cunanan stole from his last known
victim , William Reese. a cemetery
caretake; in New Jersey. The truck
had a South Carolina li cense plate
that had been missing for a month or
two, said Joyce Watts, the mother of
the man it was registered to.
Clothing under . the truck was
traced to Cunanan, police said.
Poli ce described Cunanan as 5-

·
.
.

Madon na and Robert DeNiro at the
home. went to the beac h across the
street and liked to take leisurely
walks around the reborn shopping
aven ues. often alone.
" It's a place he loved and enjoyed
and · didn't feel he needed to walk
around with bodyg uards.·· said Jason
Bi nn, publisher of Ocean Drive magazi ne and a friend of the des igner.

" In Mil an and Paris he walked
arou nd with bodyg uards and an
entourage. Miam i was not a place for ·
him 10 manufaL: Iurc goods or have an
offi ce . it was a pl ace for him to

enJoy.

Summer Specials •••
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Pre-paid Phone Cards
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Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets
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Sales slump
spurs price
.cuts on cars

USDA CHOICE

DETROIT (AP)- A phrase hap·
· pily familiar to airline travelers has
now become music to the ears o(
new-automobile buyers: price war.
Despite a booming economy and
· low unemployment, automakers are
having a case of the summer dol:
drums. So after months of soft sales,
they arc offering big rebates and low
interest rates to spark consumer interest.
The goal is to move 1997 cars otT
the lot hefore new models arrive. Just
in the past week , Ford Motor Co.
boosted rebates on its popular Taurus
model by $500 to as much as $2 .500.
" A price war 1s under way,'' said
. Suzanne Kinsler, an analyst at the
Autofocts unit of Coopers &amp; Lybraild
Consulting.
In her 20 years in the auto busi·
· ness , Ms. Kinsler said Tuesday, this
is the first time she's s~en broad·
·. based price cuts with few or no
:· strings attached. Automakcrs often
. lower prices but offer fewer standard
· features .
The incentives cover a wide vari: cty of vehicles. from Chrysler Corp.'s
Cirrus and Jeep models to Ford
Escorts and R"angers. General Motors
· . Corp. is ollcring deals on Lumina
Sedans, Geo models and the Chcvro·
let Blazer.
Fat rebates and loan rates as low
was 1.9 percent were credited with
helping Ford become the l.one Btg
Three automakcr to report an mcreasc
i'l vehicle sales last month.
Autofacts said overall auto rebates
·rc running 30 percent ahead of last
y~ ar's pace. The average rebate at
Chrysler this spring was $980 per car.
up 56 percent from a year earlier. .
There are a number of reasons tor J
tiJC nat sales of new cars, including
c11nsumer debt and the availability .of
q~ality used cars.
The National Automobile Dealers
Association said curront used car
s ~lcs are roughly triple those of new
~~rs. Part of the reason is price - the
a·rcrage new car costs about $21 ,000,
n Farly double the price of the typical
uled car.
: Analyots ar.en't sure the incentives
fttr new cars wiU work.
.'
" I wonder if people even know
ti i&lt;'re are incentives." said Jeff Davis,
a researcher 't the Office for the
~tudy of Automotive Transportation
a the University of Michigan,
! "It might be that incentives sort of
st 'al the deal , not necessarily brin.g
"flmeone into the market that "" t
a !ready there ."
.
, Chequita Baldw•rr· 36.' . was
u~awarc ofthq cuoent mcenttves for
,
buyers when she bought her
97
Fol'll Es~on , which came with
1
500
retJate.
1
"I
was alre;•dy jlOing to buy a new
•
c;~ because! q'Y tq d~.thatfo~ myself
tWO year1 or SO. She S81d.

I

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Food land Spec,a l Coupon 41Jfi
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46oz. can

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the estate.
He tntcrtained stars such as

PRICED GOOD THRU

EASTMAN'S

Versace was the target
South Beach, with its thriving gay
community and wild party scene, is
the kind of place Cunanan could fit
in easily. Police, acquaintances and
his mother say Cunanan is a prosti·
tute who catered to wealthy men .
Versace was gay, but investigators
said they didn't know of any previous link between Cunanan (pronounced koo-NAH-nin) and Versace
(ver-SAH-chay).
"It's not clear that he knows all his
victims.'' Phi lip said.
Investigators said Versace was
shot by a white man in his mid-20s,
dressed in a white or grax shirt and

•o•rf'l

foot·8 and 160 to 180 pounds with one of revolt against such an unn at· Diana.
" What has happe ned to Giann i· is
ural and violent death and one of probrown hair and brown eyes.
a tragedy. My thoughts ana prayers
He is charged in the May slaying found grief."
of Minneapolis architect David Mad·
A native of suuthern Italy, Versace are with him and his family.'' said
son, who had once been his lover. He began designing for other firm s in Madonna, who wore: a Versace design
is the prime suspect in the killings of 1972 in Milan. He launt hed the - a li ght green ve lvet dress covered
in an ivy pattern - to the intcrn a~
Jeffrey Trail, another former Gi anni Versace label in 1978.
boy friend in the Minneapolis area,
Versace gained fame in the~ 980s, tiona! premiere of ''Evita" in Lonand Chicago. millionaire real estate staging his fashion shows with blar· don.
Versace added Miami Beach to hi s
developer Lee Miglin.
,
ing rock music. glaring fl oodl ights
Along ·with Giorgio Armani, Ver· and huge screens that showed what li st of homes in 1992. creating a stunning manse from two agin g Art Deco
sace was considered Italy's leading was happening on the runway.
Celebrities who have worn Ver· hotels.
ready -to-wear designer and a symbol
The mansion is the nnl y private
sace designs include Courtney Love.
of Italian fashion.
·
"Gi anni Versace together with a Elton John , Demi Moore, Rod Stew· ' home on the fashionahle str~ t ch of
han'dful of names symbolizes the sue· art , Jane Fonda, Prince , Juli e Ocean Drive. It is surrounded bv a
cess of Italian fashion all over the Andrews, Kim Basinger. Jane Sey· high wall and his Renaissance-sty le
world," Armani said. "My reaction is mour1 Oksana Baiul and Prin cess crest adonls the ornate entrances to

.......................................................................................................-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~--.

was not a random' act of violence.

·
,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

suspects serial killer in fashion designer's slaying

.

'

the

..••~

.

. Wednesday, July 16, 1997

$3 49 '-------;;:;.Su,;;,a;..;;;.r;;.;m;;;;;....a_r_k_e_ts_ _ _ __
111117 • USDA Food

andWIC

• Not

for

or Pictorial Errors.

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

July 1&amp;, 19117

Agricultural companies, units give NAFTA big thumbs

up ~

90

By ELLYN FERGUSON
Canada's markets have been a roller coaster ride for U.S. fanners . The
ciation and Farmland Industries Inc., the largest farmer-owned cooperative,
Gannett News Service
said their experiences make a good argument for further trade liberalization. net trade balance was positive before NAFTA and two years after NAFTA:
WASHINGTON- The Clinton administration called the North Ameri _
The six groups are part of a larger coalition of food and agriculture busi- It turned negative in 1996 with an $849.6 million imbalance.
can Free Trade Agreement a modest suc~ess last week , but the nation's largest nesses and groups that include the American Soybean Association, AmeriAltp gether, U.S. exports of agricultural products, except lumber, colton,:
agriculture associations and companies gave il high marks and called for its · can Sugar Alliance, Cargill Inc., ConAgra Inc., National Corn Growers Asso- tobaCco and seafood. totaled $6.4 billion to Canada last year and $5 billion :
extension Tuesday.
.
ciation, Philip Morris/Kraft and Grocery Manufacturers of America.
to Mexico.
An enthusiastic Nick Giordano of the National Pork Producers Council
The coalition released a report by Promar International, an Alexandria,
Not all sectors of agriculture think NAFTA has been a good deal.
Last week, Lynn McBride of the National Farmers Union said his mem-:
declared NAFTA an unqualified good deal for his industry.
Va .. research firm to back its claims of gains under NAFTA.
However, AI Christopherson, president of the Minnesota Fann Bureau FedMartin Abel of Promar said the report shows an overall positive picture hers worry about caule imports from Canada, Canada's resisl!'nce to U.S.:
eration, acknowledged some "bumpy spots in the road" for some farm pro- of NAFTA, although "there are a few outstanding issues. NAFTA is not per- dairy exports, and winter vegetable imports from, Mexico.
:
ducers , most notably winter vegetable growers in Arizona, California and fect. "
"Good things haven't happened" for NFU's members, farmers of smalj.
The report. coalition members said. will be sent to lawmakers to bolster and medium-sized operations, McBride said.
Florida.
·
•
'
Janet Nuzum, vice president and coun'sel with the International Dairy their argument that Congress should give the Clinton administration fast-track
"For the people we represent, there is no down the road." he satd.
,
Foods Association, ~aid the three-year-old trade treaty has meant greater dairy authority, which would mean the House and Senate could only approve or •
Members of the agriculture coalition said they have similar concerns but·
exports into Mexico but lillie headway in C'l.nada, which ha.s used tariffs to reject - not amend- a NAFTA extension to include other countries.
think they can be dealt with in future negotiations and by expanding into oth-:
Although coalition members rate NAFTA highly, the Promar repott not- er markets.
·
'
keep out U.S. milk products and protect its ¢wn dairy industry.
NAFTA is a three-way trade agreement among Canada, Mexico and the ed ups and downs for several agriculture industries over the last three years.
Christopherson said some ineq.uities exist under NAFfA, but they can be
The peso crisis cut into U.S. farm exports to Mexico, although the over- resolved eventually.
United States that over 15 years will lower import taxes and other barrier.
all net agriculture trade balance rose from an average of $320 million a year
to increase trade.
"We can compete with anyone around the globe, but 'we have to have
Giordano, Christopherson and Nuzum, alo~g with representatives from in the three ·years before' NAFTA to about $530 million a year three years access to global markets to do that, ·· said Kendell Keith, president of the
the National Grain and Feed Association, Natibnal Caulcmen's Beef Asso- after NAfTA.
National Grain and Feed Association.
·

Computer industry
working to limit
cybersmut access

I

WASHINGTON (AP)- Hoping to avoid a v-chip for the Internet, the
computer industry will announce at the White House today it will provide greater access to anti-smut software and work to flag Internet sites
that are clean enough for kids.
Weeks after the Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a law
designed to keep cyberspace's seedy side away from children. the White
House is urging the computer industry and parents groups to take such
voluntary steps to make the Internet safe for youngsters.
"We don't need to reinvent the wheel here and we don't need a v-chip
for the Internet. We have tools out there which arc I00 percent available,"
said Jerry Berman of the Center for Democracy and Technology, a group
that works to protect computer users' civil liberties. They just need to be
more widely used and understood. he said.
President Clinton and Vice President AI Gore, a computer enthusiast,
will be hosts for the private meeting Wednesday.
About 30 to 40 people are expected, including representatives from
America Online, Netscape Communications Corp., Microsoft Corp.,
Yahoo' Inc., the National Parent Teacher Association, the American
Library Association, makers of screening technology and electronic civil liberties groups.
.
The White House has said it wants a solution "as powerful for the computer as the v-chip will be for the television that protects children in ways
that are consistent with America's free-speech values. "
Instead of seeking new le_gislation to force the computer industry to
shield children from Internet smut- as some in Congress are doing and
some anti-pornography groups want - the Clinton administration is pushing voluntary ideas.
f
That's welcome news for the industry and electronic civil liberties
groups, which fought to overturn anti-smut provisions in the 1996telecommunications law.
"It's a very positive thing to try to come up with a constructive alternative to legislation," said Andrew Schwartzman, preSident of the Media
Access Project, a nonprofit media watchdog group.
No final industry-wide voluntary plan is expected to be announced
Wednesday, but some companies are expected to unveil plans.
For instance, Netscape Communications is expected to announce it will
back a software standard that allows people, using a Web browser, either
to block or select certain Web sites based on their electronic labels. said
industry and government sources, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Netscape did not return a phone call.

.

AIDS deaths fell about 13 percent in
the first half of 1996 compared to the
tim half of 1995: the report released
Monday, which included data from
July to September of each year, was
proof that the trend was continuing.
"Today is an imponanl day in the
progress of this epidemic. Today, perhaps, we glimpse for the first .timc a
different future," said Jim Graham,
executive director of the WhitmanWalker ' Ciinic, a major provider of
AIDS services in Washington, D.C.
The good news, presented at the
AIDS Action State of AIDS Forum,
was tempered by caution.
The estimated number of people
with AIDS continued to increase.
although at the slowest rate ever, by
only 5 percen~ in 1996 cbmpared to
nearly 8S percent a year at the begin ning of the epidemic. Combined
with the lower death rate. that means
more and more people arc living with
the disease'.
"We still have 40,000 new infections a year. and young and minority gay and bise~ual men remain at
risk," Gayle said. "Their·risk is similarto what we sao/ in gay men at the
beginning of the epidemic."
The groups that arc seeing less ot
a drop in their death rates need bet-

1877 Quachtta Wetare1'811,
Sa rial I XMRII28541177A
111&amp;3 Johnaon 75 HP
Motor, s.nat 1 23153394
Th• t•rma ot the 1at1 .,.
caeh. Home Nattonot Bank
th• right to bid et
tiM ul• and or the right to
rtmove any or •II ltema
lromtiMuleatanyllm•. .
(7) 11 14 I • 11 21 23 et
• • •• • '
e
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

rea•rv••

Ya

Jomea R. Boyer, II 11.,
Delenclltnta

NOTICE BY PUBUCATION
· To: Roger S. R~h, wholl
laot known addrtiHI are
122
Union .. Avt&gt;nue,
Pom.roy, OH 457118, and
3216 Franklin Avenua, Point
Plaaunt, WV 25550,
prao•nt eddraoa unknown,
end Marton Roach, wlloll
laat known addreaaea are
122
Union . Avenu•,
Pomeroy, OH 45789, end
3215 Franklin Avenue, Point
Pt .. unt, WV 25550, ·
praoantlicklrau unknown.
You oro hereby notified
that you hove ~n named
D•tendanto In the octlon
entitled Formara Bank &amp;

110 Help Wanted
HELP WANTED
Part-time
Secretary for
Meigs County
business. Flexible
hours. 15-25 bours
. per week.
Send reaume c/o The
Dally Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729-47, Pomeroy,
OH 45769.

ltJEIGS COUNTY FAIR EDITION
IS COMING AUGUST 7,1997
·ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS JULY 30TH
·cALL 992·2155 OR PLACE YOUR AD
IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION.
EXT. 1OS •
HARR EXT. I04

HELP WANTED
Experienced
Construction
worker for Meigs
County Area.
. ROofing, Electrical,
Carpentry.
Supervloory okllla
preferred.
Send reoume c/o The
Dally Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729-47, Pomeroy,
OH 457611.

Public Notice
Savtnga Compeny, Plelntlll,
va. J•m•• A. Boyer, ehll,
Def•ndente. Thle ICIIon hoi
- n eutgned Con no. 97CV.074, and 11 p•ndlng ln.
the Court of Common Pine
or Metgo County, Ohio. Tho
obl•ct ~f the Complelnt
claiTHindo judgmant agelnll
tho Defendant, Jam11 R.
Boyer, on Ill Second Claim
In the oum of $17,845.52,
ptuo tntaraot at a rota of
$3.118 p•r day from March
30, 11197; · on 111 Fourth.
Claim In the oum of
$18,531.09, ptuo tntoreot at
a rate of s-.o5 per uy trom
M,.,ch 30, 1997, In order to
torectooa upon mortgagee
upon real eatete located II
122

U nlon

Avenue,

Pom•roy, Ohio, which 11
more fully daacrlbad In
dead rocord•d In Volum•
317, Page 301, M•lgo
County Deed AltCOrdo, and
212 Filth St,..t, Mlcldl•port,
Ohio, which 11 mor• fully
d•.crl"-&lt;1 In d...t recorded
In Volume 320, Page 357,
Malgo .county Dead
R.cordo; and cooto or thlo

•ct'loni

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION.
•

J &amp; D's Auto Pans. Buying sal·
vage vehicles. Selling parts. 30~ -

. 773·5033.
Shepharo Logging BuYet Of Staoing tlmbet And land, Pine, Pulpwoad, And Saw Timbef, 814·882·
5402.

Wanted To Buy: Canning•Jan~ Or
Someone WantinG To Giveaway

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

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Air Canditioners Installed 128"' amanlh
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Consider:

in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
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Pomeroy, Ohio

10125i961tfn

21!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Love, Dad, Mom, Sarah, Sltane, Lori,
·
&amp; Friends.

D. Gea17's

CONSTRUOION

Bod31 SJaop

Ue. WV011030
Roofing, Painting
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992·905771 ,.,,'.,.

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CONSTRUCTION
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Aa the years go by- We think or you often
Knowing that you are there with
· .
Mom, Floyd, Jeff, Pat and Uttle John
And all the !ova you've left thla family
helps us to carry on.
We will love you always.
THE GIBBS FAMILY

YOUR MESSA!3E
CAN BE SEEN HERE

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GallipoliS
&amp; VlclnHy
336 LeGrande Blvd., Gallipolis,
10:00 To 5:00 Wad, Thurs. Fri I
Sa~

.;I SHARPENING
949·2641

No Early ~I

9484 State Roula 180, Corner Of

554 1 180, 11-&lt;1, Thur' Frt, Ctolhing, Women• 3 Mor-ths ·4T,
Wedding Dress, Baby Things,
HOUIIhold Goods, AC, Bunk

ALL Yant s.r.alluat
Bt Paid In Advanoo.
Qf AQI lfE: 2:00 p.m.
tltt dly btlonlltt ...
•1o run. Sundly
odltlaa • 2:00p.m.
Frldor- llondoy odltlaa
• I O:OOa.m. Sltuntoy.

. Frw•

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470
CORPORAL ELECTRIC
Dailey Ad- Racine
614-949-3060
John Williams· Owner
Licensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates Providing
Quality Residential
Service New
construction- Tolal and
partial rewires on older
homes
24 Hr Emergenty Servke

emnmo.

23228.
able, No Experience Necessary,
For InformatiOn, Call 618 -757·
3141, EKI. 3031.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
is seeking a lull lirmfpan time RN
for 11·7 ,ahil!. hperience preferred, but will consider tle right
canclidale. Excellent bene!l._t package lor fuU time and part
employees. Apply at Rocksprings
Rehabttltation Center, 38751
Rocksprings Road,- Pomeroy, Oh.

timft

45769.
We Are A Gr!)wing Conslruction
Company Looking For Someont
Who Has A BackgrOund In Sal•
And Is Comfortable And Confid·
entln Talking Wilh People. The
Position En!a!ls Estimating And
Bidding Remodeling. Jobs, New
Construcliori Jobs, And Other
Related Areas. There lA CusiDmer Follow-UP. Contract Writing,
Etc. Thai Go.es Along With Tht
Job Also. If You Feet Up To The
Challenge Give Us A call At 81"·

446-4514 Or Stop In At 1403
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, OH We
Are Christian's Construclion And
look Forward To Meeting ~u.

School Cook · Pr&amp;pare Breakfast '
And Lunch Daily For es -80 Individuals. Prepare Menus, Oider
Food, Complere Daily IMonlhly
Reports. Call Or Write: Guiding
Hand School, P.p . Box 14,
Cheshire, Ohio 45820. 61,.·387·
7371. Applicants Must Have High
School Diploma And Prior Cooking Expef'lenc:e. The Gallia County
Board 01 MIWD Is An Equal Opportunity Employer.
Applications Will Be Ar;ceptBd

Throut11.loiy 25. 1997.

For information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh •
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron Miller

tricl has the following teaching
pos1t1ons ava1lable tor the 1997·
98 school year to all applicants
with the appropriate certification :

elementary learning disab11it•es.
JuiW' 17th-HIIh, 8:00·? 51 Hilda

and generaii"'Ical rrusic.

ma Couch &amp; Lovesaat $125.
Drapes, Clean Kids Clothet,
TO)IS, Much Motel

Jarnaa t.owr.,.., SUporinlenciOnl.

Drive Behind

Of Eyerylllingl

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Sunday 6 Monday edltlon-

1:OOpm Friday.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VICinity
Yard Sale-Thur, Fri &amp; Sat Rt. 35
Three Mila Rd. Watch lor Signs. a

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•RepltKemenl Vflllllows
•BuDd Garages
•Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
•Roam AddiliO!IS

Help Wanted: Timber Cutter l
Powtf Saw Opetalor, loader Operator, Sickle, Experienced 'Only

Need To Apply, .Call

~1.4-882-

7318.

Pickupappica-

a.

.

on Equal O!&gt;Portunlly E~.

8+ family oarage sale, Lee Circle,

All Yard Saln Uual
Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia lo run,

?.~i)l

Southet-n Local Schoola, P.O. Box
I 711. ~. Ol1io 4577tc 5LSO i1

111 house BaileW' Run Ad., Thurs.
&amp; Fri., 10-7, dining table with 6
chairs &amp; hulCh, gun cabinet, exercise bike, bicycle. doltleS I misc.

18111 I SaDndey, 19111, 9·5.

•Dive Maatel
·Medic Flro1 Aid
•Liteguard Training

Pta ... Hnd lnqulriea to Mr.

TOMACEUTS·FAIIILY ENTEATAINIENT
202 North Seconct Avenue, Mlcl·
dleport. Billiards. video garnet,
music and dance, pizza 10 come.
Aceptino applicaOOns Friday, Julr

Rustic Hills, Syracuse, Friday,

Scott Walton, Open Woter
Scuba tnotructor
614-992-3314
•Open Water
•Advance Open Weier

BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
992-2772
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

Spring Valley Cin•

Thursday, 17th, 9:00 Till 7 35
Garfiled Avenu'e, Crahs And Litde

SCUBA CLASSES
NOW FORMING

537

·

The Southern local School Dil·

992-4025

1 f'JI1 tftO .

,

Shephard Loogtng Anyone E •p.,rience Wilh Chain Saw, Also
Sl&lt;idder t)pefa!Or, 814-eti2-M02.

$1,500 REWUDII

•Rescue Dive

ELIM
HOME CARE

'·

Yard Sale

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones .

Gravel, Sand,

WV25550

SAlES POSITION AVAILABLE:

to 4•H &amp; IFA
L
memuers
HUPP'S CUSTOM

'~'~~~IREE~mSEIMGE

Residential Heating
&amp; Cooling
Auto Air Conditioning
lnetlllatlon and
Service
American • Standard,
Janltrol &amp; HeaUng &amp;
Cooling Equipment
R.S.E:S. Certified •.
Arl Certified
Don Smith
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45!69
Phone 614-992·2735

992-5042

70

JONES'

Meigs
Refrigeration

For Handicapped
1 Elderly.
Dally • Weekly •
Contract
Family Atmoaphere
209 s. 4th Street
Middleport

Lo1t: black Angus steer with
sponed white face, 250-300 ~s..
Crew Rd. vicini~, 814-992·5532.

.. Eo
crnz£N
'I iNS\l" sENIOR uNT
f\ll.\.:
OISCO

Gravel, Umestone,
'ropaoll, Fill Dirt,
.Sand. No Minimum.
hta).

•
r

.

Beds. Oil Furana&gt;.

Limestone,

mY

·nome.
Must have references. Send to
Bo• G-12, %Pt Pleasant Reo·
1ster, 200 Mam Sl.. Pt Pleasant

Po11al Jobs 3 Positions Avail·

985-38t8.

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

WICKS ·

Babysitter needed in

Found: on Rt 62 at mouth of 8
Mile Rd, red &amp; white male Bea·

"""''"*'II. 814-9112-3056. .

(Lime St.o ne·
Low Rates)

AVON • $8 ·$18 IHr. No Door To
Door. •eonuses• Quick Cash II 1·
800·827·&lt;1840 lnd/SI&amp;Irep.

60 Lost and Found

found: uime bird, Cro11 Pointe

Sayre Trucking Co.,
614-742·2138

Avon $8 -$18 /Hr, No Door -To •

Plant Manaoer /Batcher • Production Experience With Concrete Materials, Dry /Wet Batch·
lng. Block Prod., Immediate Need
In New Haven Area. Please· Send
Resume To Rose Terry 57t 1 Sta·
pies Mill Road, Richmond, VA

glo. 304-875-1:144.

HAULING

JC

FREE ESnMATES

"A J'amU~ roea,_."

ing, 1-800-736-0168 indlsiSirep.

Poodle To Good Home, House-

2'5%0 DISfOUftf
•

Auto Body Repair Person Must
Ha11e Experience. 61•·4•111-1195.
Or 814-4"11·1073, After 9 P.M.

Colllo Puppiaa, 5 Weeks Old, To

· broken. Good Companion, 614 -72.

Limestone I Gravel
Septic Systems
Tmller &amp; 1
House Sites
. Reasonable Rates
Joe N•.Sayre

teactung staff ; Fourtl'l Grade
Teacher at Harrisonville Elemuntary and Special Education
Teachef' aa Pomeroy Elementary.

Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Relax-

--.:3734.

SHARPENING
SERVICE

Shirley

:~·Plt.'~~r~,:7,G;:t1 .home

Part Poodle Male Puppy, 814·

IAULIIG I
BXCAVI,IOI

THE MAPLES

YOUNG'S

• Top • Trim · • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 vn..Exp. - tna. OW!1or: Riel&lt; JohnaOn

4

Eastern High School area, 614-

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WI/
614-446-9416
1-80().872-59117 1391 Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

Tuppers Plains, Ohio
(614) 667-3526
School"
"Across from Tu
rs Plains Eleme

Week Otd Mala Mi•ed Puppy,

Loll· 3 male lab/PH bYU mixed
pupplel. mostly black wlwhite,

In The Poor House?

·St. At. 681

~·~~:·a:·~·~~~:
~~Cat, Ntultrtd, 614-

Frae Kitten&amp;, SOme Pari Petaian,
Utter Boxed Trained, Gende, 614·
256-1311, 614-258-8101.

wvo1oz12

·'

:w:1t1.

Free Kluenat To Good Homos
~1.!:_ week• Otd Call 810-

..,....,,_

I

As per Article 9, JraO!ilftCI and
vacanc;;jes Section B. &amp;li..og, ol
the Negotiated Agreement belween the ULTA and the Board ol
Education . . the Meigs Local
Sl:hool District is posting the fotlowin~ 11acancies for its· regular

~ et4-44&amp;-1032.

614-742-3090
614-742-3324

Help wanted
I All Area&amp;

Spe1111, 304-675-1429,

. . - 2.
Border Collie, SCottilh bloodline,
2 112moa. otd, mate, due to ill-

Barns. llect&lt;s, P4!nting
Call Us For A FrH Estimate

BENNE'IT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

Sla, Florence Warth, of all that weloat
You were tha one that wa1 ao hard to let go or.
But we knew that God waa holding on to
your hand on thla day, July 16, 1991
Aa you left ua for a better land.

•.Briggs &amp; Stranon ~~~ ~~~rray· McCollough,
Echo- Ryobl- Roper • Rally- Hydro Gear .
AND OTHERSII
ilrlgns &amp; Slraltoo: Mastor Senkt Todtlllclaa
Ovttloor Power Equl,-t Association: Ctrtlflad 2 Cycle
• State Route 338 • At VIne; Racine, Ohio
(614) 949·2804

Jlfon~"

"We treat you~· best frwnd like our best frwnd"

aWoekaotct,eu 41e

61

New Homes, Additions,
Roofing. Siding, Pole

"W. 5•u. You

AVON

Giveaway
2 PuP!)iel. 112 Engttlh s.nar, 112
llordor Colio, 1 Maio, 1 F.,.t1 ,

8

3351 Happy HolloW Road
Middlepor!, Ohio 45789

Will Your Utilities Put You

your children were the beat
But you left ua before you learned the truth.
That we are what- are becauaa of you
And all that you taught u1 aa - grew.
You, too, left ua on thla day, July 16, 1981.

• Mowers· Chain Saws • Weedeaters·· Authorized

·-· ..,........

742·2925

(Paymoirts ~&gt;&lt;!sed on approved creel~)

CLINIC

Part• antl Service!!

KINGS'

DREBELS
•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. off Rt. 7
Leading Creek Rd.

.

•

11 0

40

25260

RACINE MowER

SERVICES

,___4 EXT. 4!112

r

(No Sunday Calls)

MallO• lama llr CaadiiiDn•
.

r

EMPLOYMENT

Personals

005

ATTR~ ::,~ooKINO

UIIIG I.. Hom011, CDPMA

Pomeroy, Ohio

614·992-7643

Call614-843-5426

Public Notice
foractoa•d and thot the
ll•n• end/or lnt•reato In or
on uld pr-rty, II any, be
maroholl•d end the rool
••tat• tRio quilled end uld
prop•rty eotd In the
forecloouro action end all '
emounto du• Plalnllll be
paid from procHCio of the
ulo.
·
You are required io
anower the Complolnt
within twanty-elgtll (28)
dayo attar the toot
publication of thto NoHca,
which will be pubttohad
onea each week tor alx (&amp;)
IUCCIIIIvt&gt; WHkl. The lall
publication will be mado on
tha 20th •diy of Augu.,,
1997, and th• lwentv--tglit
(28) daya lor anow•r will
comm•nca on that d.... lo
th• caoe of your !allure 10·
anawer or · otherwlat
roopond •• requaoted by
th• Ohio Rut11 of Civil
Proc•dur•, judgement by
deleult will be rendered
agatnot you ond lor tht
rell•r demanded In tile
Complelnt.
•
Dated thll 11 day of July,
1897.
.
Larry spencer,
Clark of Courto

r

Digital metal detec1or, priced reaaonablo, 614-742-2502.

Wanted: Used Hatdwood Flooring
In Good Condition, Call 614·245·

FAMILY DENTISTRY

Quality Window Systems

Garages • Replacement Windows
ROOm Add It• 1OnS • R00fi ng
COMMERCIAl and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

~ITccts.

1.

Smith Bulc~ Pontiac, t900 East·
ern .twrue, GllipoKs.

31171941TFN

MASON. DENl'JlIL CARE

110 Court St.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

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

,At, Charles R. Gibbs, you always thought

Must have an EPA Refrigerant CertHlcatlon,
knowledge or oil, gaa I electric furnaces,
Including air conditioner~ I he.t pump1.
•Excellent pay biNd on .exparlence
•Paid vac:atlon• and holiday•
•Paid owrtlrne and medlcallnaurance
•Year around employment with new·atate of the 1rt
Mrvlce van with tools suppltld.
Call Bennattl M.H. Htg. I Clg. at 448-9416.or
1-800-872·5967 or send resume to 1391
s.troi'd School Rd., Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Clean Latt Model Carl Or

949-2168

!:==:;:::::::::::==:=:::::::::::::::::;::: -==9112=-4=11=11====wvt:II02=34=77===1=.aoo-==211=1·:5800::;~ '::":•nc:;lng;:lh:r:o:ug:h:N:o~rwe;;•:•:F:ln:•n:CI:a:l:::;;;::====~

On this Day or Days what Ia there left to aay.
Our thoughta turn to you, brother, Cpl. John
LGibbs
And the Thirty years you've been away.
Taken from ualn Korea on July 16, 1967.

HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN NEEDED

PRI...,

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

paroonal judgment to
oought agatnot the
Defendant, Jam.. R. Boyar; (7) 18. 23, 30;
that the mortgagee b• (8) 6, 13, 20; 8TC

COMMUNITY SKILLS INSmUCTOR WANTED:
Uve-in instructor (week-days) needed to teach
communily and personal skill.s to an aduh with
learning limitations in Meigs County, HOURS: 3-9 pm,
Sun.; .6:30-8:30 am/3-9 pm, M-Th.: ·£:30-8:30 am,
Fri.; sleep-over required; daytime hours oil. Informal
setting. High school diploma/GED, valid driver's
license, three years licensed driving experience,
good driving record and adequate automobile
coverage required. ExcellenJ i~surance and vacation
benefits. Training provided. Salary: $5.50/hr.. to slart.
II interested contact Cecilia at 1-800-531-2302 no
later than 7/18/97. Equal Opportunity Employer.

II"Es~

In Memory

no

POMEROY, OH.

Barr, B. Houston, D.D.S.

DJREcr

His Big
Wheels
are
•
turnr.ng,
Pete's

however,

~
. .

"FA(;TORY

the longer a pcr."ion takes one of tht:
older drugs, the more resistant hi~

hotly hccomcs tn its

Buying Standing Pine, 1 Acre

r.... er t..arvor. 81+2511 e038.
Trucks, 18to Models Or Newer,

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine.&amp; Welding Shop·

order. Missing dosCs can make ttic

A person's age. soc•occonomic.:
inhibitors, _but·thc increase act~ally · status. or race isn't what makes him

252e.

ROOFING

614-992~5479

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday·Friday- 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. - 12 noon

Women. minorities. people with
little income or education and n9

Public Notice
FARMERS BANK &amp;
SAVINGS COMPANY, .
Plalntlll,
Coli No. 87 CV 074

992-5535

113 W. 2ND ST.

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

AnriCIUII, lOP Pf'iCH paid, RiWJ·
int Antlqull, Pom•ro)', Ohio.,
Ru11 Waore owner, 114·Vt2-

Ha-rd L Wr lteael

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

"Build Your Dr•am"

CompleteMachineShop~rviceFabrlcatlon
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas

.
.
less hkcly to follow treatment tnstruc:
tions. she said: it's the complexity,
duration and cost of the treatment, a$
well as the amount of hehavior
change needed and the toxic side
effects of the treatment.
"No person should he excluded
from trcatnicnt." 'she said.
The drugs cost about $10.000$15.000 per year per patient, and that
doesn ' t include the cost of medical
care, blood testing to monitor the
drugs· cffecti·vcness, or of other drugs
that prevent AIDS-related illness.
They're complicated to take; some
must he taken on a full stomach and
health insurance or wiJO used some others well before meals, and aie
sort of public assistance. and had lit- always taken in combination wi(h
tle education knew the least about other drugs in a brutally specific

vi\lal rates was attributed to protease

CELLULAR PHONES

Wanted to Buy

Jars, 114-245-0406.

began before the new drugs were
introduced in early 1996, Gayle said.
Other, less potent combinations of
drugs were making a small dent
before the protease inhibitors came
along.
But many presenters worried
about the cost of protease inhibitors.
the fact that not everyone knows
about them, and signs that doctors
aren't prescribing them to all who
need them.
. A study hy AIDS Project Los
Angeles presented at the forum found
that minorities. people who made less
than $9,600 per year. those with no

protease inhibitors.

Free Estimates

.,. . . .=-.----"i

360° Communications

home improvements." Call Today!

992·2753

Remodeling

Mil

• Decks
• Roofing
• Siding

• Garages
'~Stop put.t ing off those much needed

drugs ineffective.
Winnie Fairchild, a Washington,
D.C..
woman with AIDS, told of a
health insurance were the least like-.
doctor
who tried to take her off her
ly to be actually on the drugs. the
protease
inhihitor~ because he
study said.
thought
they
cost too much lor someAnd despite recent federal recone
dependent
on Medicaid.
ommendations that all people with
"He
said
it
wasn't
policy to spend
AIDS he treated with a drug combiall
that
money,"
she
said. "I said it
nation that includes protease
wasn't
my
policy
to
die
today. •:
. inhibitors. some dot: tors won't prcThere
also
arc
fears
that
thousands
scrihe them if they think the patient
of
people
with
AIDS
may
not henecan't handle the complicated dosing
lit
from
the
new
drugs,
in
particular
schedule, another report !'laid.
ter prcvcnlion programs targeted
While AIDS treatments are cnm- those whi&gt; had hecn taking other antispecifically to them. more access to plicatcd. so arc treatments for dia- rctroviral drugs such as AZT. the r,rst
substance abuse treatment, and better betes and high blood pressure. said . AIDS tre:~tment approved by the
. health care and access to treatment, Dr. Linda Frank. director of the Food and Drug Administration.
Protease inhihiwrs work hcst in
the experts at the forum said. ·
Pennsylvania AIDS Education and
comhinatinn
with the older drugs, hut
Some of the upward tick in sur- Training· Center.

Jog:

/

•New Homes
• Additions
• Remodeling

'

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTI~E
Saturdey, July 26, .. 10:00
e.m., th• Hom• National'
lank will oller lor oate at
public ouetlon 11 Marine
Sarvlcoo, 2131 Karr SlrHt,
Syracun, Dhlo, lh• follow·

TO~

Custom Homes

Decline in AID.S deaths during '96
spur$ hope among medical circles
By ELIZABETH NEUS'
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - The number
of AIDS deaths declined fat the first
time in the epidemic's history in
1996, starting a trend health officials
hope will continue with the introduction of new life-saving drugs.
But while the number of deaths
&lt;lropped 19 percent between the first
three quarters of 1995 and the same
period in 1996 - from 37,900 to
30.700 - .the hopeful trend "is not
shared by all parts of our society,"
said Dr. Helene Gayle, director of the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 's National Center. for HIV.
STD and TB Prevention.
For the first time, blacks accounted for the most newly-diagnosed cases of AIDS- making up 41 percent
of the cases in 1996 compan:d to
whites. who made up 38 percent.
When the epidemic began in the
early 1980s. nearly 60 percent of people with AIDS were white, and about
25 percent were black. Cumulatively, .nearly 600,000 Americans have .
been diagnosed with AIDS.
Deaths among WQillen and heterosexuals barely fell at all in 1996.
About 6,000 women died of AIDS in
1995, compared to 5,600 in 1996. a
7 percent .decline. Heterosexual
deaths fell from 4,600 to 4,400.
The biggest decrease in deaths
came among whites (28 percent),
men who have sex with other men
(26 percent), and men overall (22 percent).
The CDC had reported earlier that

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

tittle ot everytt&gt;ng.
80
Public Sale
· and Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer. complete
auction
service. licensed
1615,0hio 6 Welt Virginia, 30-4-

773-57115 Or 304·773-5447.

90

wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil wer And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique' Jewelry, Gold

11thb'fu-.re~

UNfl£0 STATES

CELLULAR
WIRELESS
COIIIIUNtCAnONS
United Slates CelluLar Is Expaf'ICI.
ing tt.sTeam;
We Are Seeking Profllsional
Sales Consultants. The Deairab'e
Candida1e Mutt B1 An Aggreasiva Self· Sianer, With Effective
Communication&amp; Skills. A Solid
Work Ethic, A Positive Altitude, ·
And Must Pones Good Customer Sefvice Skill1.

Sa,loa ~~~ired.
We Ollor:
• An Excefltnt Starting 811• ~

ary, And Cornmisalon
• Cellular Phon&amp; ·'

• Fullllerwftll ~
• Uontlty Cat AAoWIIllCI
•Local Cellular Ttainlng

II You Are looking For An Op-

Rings, Pre-1Q3d U.S. Currency, · ponun!ty That Matches Your AmSterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry bition... Htrt II Thai Opporlurity.
. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

Avvnue, Ganipo6s, 814·4~6-2842.

Bob Wilson, Salea Manager Will

Be Holding A Recruiting Seminar
AnliqiJas, !Urniture, glass, china, .
coina, toys, limps, guns, tools, Fridl)', July 251h, 10:00 A.M. And
esta1es; also appra isals, Osby 2:00 P.M. ONLY, At Tht Dora
Inn On North Bridge Street In
M11111n, 614-~2-7.. 1.
Chillicothe.

�~ednHday,

Wednesday, July 16, 1997

The Dally Sentinel • Page 1$

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

July 16,1997

BRIDGJ:
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

Prt-Engln..,.ed Steel Bldga. NaCompany Awardl':'fa
• hi P In 0 pen Markelthgh Profit
Potential. Ccnatruc~on Qr Sales.
303-758-4135, Ext6200.

~

~~~~~~~~~E~Itional

Babysnler wanted in our home,
, Soulh~de areo. Mon·Frl, day11mo
• hours. Must have own transpcfta·
! Uon &amp; excellent References: Call
8Yel"'inga304--675-S580.

De•*·

Retirement Date It Near, Wh1ch
Mokeo Mo Want To Chaar "Pe1
Shop For Slit• It You're Serious
About Buying All Am About R•
tiring, Csll Today At 61 -4-446·
7507.

Bar help needed pari· time, upper
t.t'aaon Co Send resume 10 P.O. Steel building dealership ava11 Boa: 267 New Haven, WV. 25265.
abla In open market Dealers buy
tactory direct High proht potenComputer Users Needed. Work b•,
I sa1ea or conauuction. (303)
own houro S20k to S50kiyr 1· l'58-3200EIIl7850.
•
800-348-7186 x1508.
::?=:?'7~-:--~--1

230

Professional

Cooks Some Exnerienc:e
Necea•
S8NIC8S
sary, Applw, AI The Red Rooat8f,
218JecksonPil&lt;e, GellipoiL
HARTS MASONARY • Block

0ell ~o~ery Dnver Seasonal, Ferra· brick &amp; arona work, 30 years ex:

lgas Is Seekmg A Propane Dehwery Dnver To Work Through Fall
And Wlnrer Season . Excellent
,Opportunity For Someone Look·
fllg For Additional Income, To
Qualify, Muat Have COL Class 8
W1th Hazardous Materials Endorsement Call 614·446·2284, Or
t-800-488-2264.

pen1nca, reasonable rates 304-

89~3591 alt&amp;f 8:00pm, no JOb to

arnallartoBIG. W'l-021208
llvln~a1on·a

B-l-O·W-0-U·TI
1 TNE ONLVI
$499 Down on select si'\gle secDOn S999 Down on stlectmulli
SBCtiOfll 2-3 or • Beaoom models awilable Oakwood Homes
N1~~ WV. 304·75S.6885.
•
Mob1le I lome 12x70 2 Bedroom,
AU Elec:ric Washer Oyer HookUp Mus I Bo Moved 6 1&lt;·441 1084 After 8 PM.
19 70 Skyhne 12'~t80' Mobile
Home 2 Bedrooms. Like New Gas
Furnace, Fa1r Cond11 1on. $2,500,

614-4~7-23115.

tor

anr

1974·cameron mob1!t home, excellent condluon, $8500, 614·882·
3931

1990 ClaytDn Northridge 14X70, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Batha, Fireplace,
CA, Furmshed, 2 Porches, Outbuild1ng, Perfect Startet' Home For
A Yoong Couple, 614·593-3521
1993 Flem1ng 14x70 2br. 1bath,
central atr &amp; heat, eac. c:ond.
$13,500 30•·273·3214 or 304·
773·5957.
1994 14.1170 Oakwood 3br, 2ba,
ca, cathedral e~lllng, bu11t In
hutch', rerugerator &amp; s1ove, one
owner, llke new, must move.
$16,000 llrm. :K).(..fS75-4361 .
New-1997 14 W1de-1 bath, $6991
down, S139/mo, with approved
etedlt Call1-800-691-8777
1987 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
S995 down, S195/mo Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nitro, WV. 304755-~5

1997 U:cBO 3 or 4 Bedroom,
$1,359 down 1229/mo. free air,
sk1rtmg, &amp; delivery. Only at Oak·
wood Homes N1tro, WV 3041-755·
1997 doublewlde $1445 down,
$229/mo
Free dehvery &amp; setup
5885.
1-aoo.ag 1-6n1
1997 Fleetwood 14.x52, 2 Bedrooms, 1 BStth, Washer /Dryer,
CA. $18,900, 814·367·0516 Or
614 992·5428.
3 Bedroom Tra~let, 614--441-1G48.
4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, $500 Down,
S22Sit.lo, 304-738· 7295.
'
FACTORY DIRECT.
NO MIDDLE MAN
SAVESSSS
Oakwood Homea 11 the only
dealer m the tn-sta1e area that
bu1lds and sella the1r own
homes. For lacrory d~rect pnces,
shop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl·
TAO, WV. 304-755-~5.
IT'S BIG 1997 48R, 2BATH
OOUBLEWIOE. S1,949 DOWN,
$319/MO FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONlY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304·755·

5885 Urnlod Olfor
Large selecllon of used home a
or 3 bedrooms. Starting a1 $3495.
Quick delivery Call 1-800-837·
32311

wv 304-755-~5.

New 1997 14x70 three bedroom,
mcludes 6 months FREE lot rent
Only 5181 66 per Month With
$1050 down. Call 1-e00-837·
3238
Now Bank Ropo'ol Only 3 le11,
owner lmancmg available 304 ·
755-7191

FINA NC IAL
Business

Opportunity

Commercial Building For Sale Or
lllll, 4000 Sq Ft , S1 R1 33,
New Haven. WVA. 614-6982813.
Convenience Stor• For Lease,
lncludn AI Equlpmon~ St At 33,
Now Hoven W.VA.. 61•·698·
2813.

All rest estate advertising 1n
this newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Faw HOUIIfloQ Act
at 1868 whiell makes n111ega1
to advertise •any preference,
limllallon or diSCr1mlna11on
based on race, color, rellgton,
sex famiHal status or natiOnal
origin, or any IntentiOn to
make any such preference,
limitation or dtscrtminaUon."

TNs newspaper Wtll not
koowlngly occep1
advartiMmentl for real estate
which Ia In vlol8tion of the
laW OU' readefS are hel'eby
irlormfdlhot all-lngs
1ltMniNd In 1hio
n . . - o n 111 equal
OIJilCH1Ilnill' basil

-r

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hom 11
tl.- 11 • 2
stat
"' trash
• 80-$300,
watw ...and
included,MWer,
81 ..Gel2167

~~~--::---::----·1

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes
For Penmes On $1 Delinquent
Tu, Repo'l, REO's Vour Area
Toll Free (1) 800·216·9000 EXI.
H 2814 For Current Usttngs.
GREAT PRICE
GREAT LOCATION
By owner: Moun1 Vernon Avenue,
Point Pleasanl 6 rooms . 2 or 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, large kitchen.
baaement. vmyl sldtnQ, fenced
backyard. Reduced to $67,000
304-875-11310
In Rutland. 4 bedroom, 1 plus
acres, $1 8,000 OBO, 614·992·
451•or 614-992 2817
Newly remodeled three bedroom,
one and 112 bath home m M•ddlepon. 614·992·3465 after 5pm
Three bedroom two bath,' on
large corner lot, located 33164
New lima Ad , Rutland, $35,000
OBO, 941 -763-5762 evemngs
only
Use That Mortgage Payment lor
SOmething Benet Than lnlerestl
-·Pay your mongage otr 5-15
years sooner!
·'SaYe $25,000 $75,000 or moral
-•Make sure your Lender i\n't
miscalculating you r mortgage
and costing you thOusands!
-"Program works on mob1le home
loans tool
HOW?
Tho Mong191 Savlngo
Program I
C.Uior F,..lntormatktn
To11FrM
1·888·343-4738 EXT. 11
320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

S4U.OO DOWN, 8.8911- APR
FIXED BUYS ANY SINGLE·
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE,
304-736-340t.
IUI.OO DOWN l.ll'llo APR
FIXED BUYS ANY DOUBLE·
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE
304-736-340t. '

Westwood Home Show, Inc.
Check this out I llmlled 11me ott·
er. No down payment to quaU111d
buyers. Double w1des as low as
$249 per month, single w1des as
low as $149 per month. Call lor
tree approval 1-1100·25 1 5070
350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

Apple Grove-Scen1c: Valley.
Beautiful 2acre lots, public watet.
C Bowen Jr 304-578·2336 or
Wedge Really 304-675-2722.
Three Scemc Water Front Loti
Raccoon Creek, Older Uoblie
Home, Rural Water &amp; Septic Sys·
tern. e14 927 e575
360

Real Estate
Wanted

·wanted 30C Secluded Acres In
Ohlo With All M•neral Rights And
No Development Potential. Cra1g
Landefeld,
60410 Apache ,
Wash1ng1on . Ml 48094 Phone
1110 786-1439.
Rental Wanted: Homeownef'l R•
loc:aung Need 3 Bedroom Ohio
Home, In C""n~y. Good Roado 6
Sclioolo, Within 1 Hour 01 Galli·
polio, HOYOI'eta, 61 .... 58-121!9

RENTAL S
41 0 Hou$es for Rent
2 Bedroomo. 1300/Mo., Dopool~
No Pats. 81•·787~5. 111"'"&amp;0878To Sao.
3 Bedroom Houle With 1 &lt;;ar
Garage, 121 Graham Street In
Rodnel Vllage IL 81~543.
3 Bodroomo, Near Norllt Gailla
High S.:ltoal, No 1'811. S400!Mo.,
~ •• l)epool1, 614-446-11485
6 Roomo. r:Jo, $300/mo plua I
ltles, reference &amp; dapoalt. 304w
675-4874.
Executive Home For Ltase, 2,000
Sq. Ft Noor Golf Courlt $850/
Mo., Available lmmedialtly, 814446-21157
Houae For LH.. t3501Mo., Plus
Damage Otpool~ 814-38&amp;-ol778.
HOUle In Pomtrof' for sale or
""'~ 814-992·30!10.

Sl50, Ha-ost
Gold Rolrl--tor
Green
Refrigerator
Froat Fre•,
••
-··
Frost Free. $150: Wt11rtpoo1 Refrigara10r Very Nice, 1 Year Warranty $300; A1r Conditioner 5,000
BTU, 1125. Westinghouse Air
Conditioner 11,000 BTU $250:
G.E Washer $95, Uaytag Wash·
er $150; Hotpolnt Ory1r 195:
Electric Range, $95; Hotpo1nt
Waot..r 6 Dryer Sot $205 Each,
1 Year Warranty, Skaggs Ap·
plianCH, 78 Vine Street. Galllpoli1, e 1-4·4411-7398, 1·881- 8180128
-c;.::::__ _ _ _ _ _ __
K11Chan Carpel. $11.50 Sale on All
Room Size Carpets, Mollohan
Furn.rure, IIU·44&amp;-7...._

2 Bedroom Tra1ler Sc;:enlc Road,
VInton, S250/Mo, De~osll. No
l'llts, 614-446-0785.

Used Furfllture Store, 130 Bula·
VIlle Pike, Gas cooac Stowe H•d•
A-Sed Couches, Televi'aiona,
Desks, Typewriters, Baby Bed,
Mattresses, Beds, Dinettes,
Much Morel 614·448-4782. Hra.
10-4, Check Uo Out

2 Bedroom, prlvate,yard, porch·
es, near school, very nice a
clean, Haruord. 1250 monthly.
304-882-23811.

Air Conditioner, VCR..._ Washer,
OryDt', Relr~gerator, Stave, Freez.,, Microwave, Color T.V. 614258-12!18

-

L1m11ed Offer! 1997 doubtew•de.
3br, 2bath, S1799 down, $279/
month Free delivery &amp; setup
Onl)' at Oakwood Homes, N1tro

Bullne•• Space For Rent 2000
Sq. Ft. St Rt 33; New Haven,
W.VA., 814-8118-21113,

r
en
14x70 Suitable tor 1 child, no 1 ~
oldt pets. Applegrove, WV. 304578-2890.

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes tor Sale
El:perlenced Ha1r Stylist Wanted,
For Modern New S31on, 614-441 - 12 Rooms Ranch SWie Homa1880, B14-256..fS336
38edroom, 2 112 baths, large
kitchen &amp; dining room &amp; fam1ly
HOME TYPISTS,
rooms. 2 porches/screened, 2 car
PC users needed 145,000 In- garage, 8110 mila out Sandhill
come po1enual Call 1 80Q 513- Ad and bts ITIOf&amp; 304-675-41571
·ol343 EXl B-936e
199B Modular home 1n Rollmg
Need 6 lad1es To Sell Avon .Call Acres sub d1vis1on, pr1ced ro sell
614-446-33~
SO's Call Watson Realty 3048'15-:J.I:):l
Wanted· Optometnc Assistant,
expenenc:e preferred Send re- 3 Bedroom Home With Garage &amp;
sume CIO The Dally SenDnel, P.O Barn, Maintenance Free, located· Addison Townshtp, 81•-ueBox 729-&lt;18. """""'~'· OH •s789
4792.
WANTED: Part-Ttme Poaltlon
Available At A Community Group 3bedroom brtc:k house on 1acre
Home For Persons With URIOD lot m GaUtpol1s Ferry Ntcel 304In Bidwell. Hours 4 -9 P.M., Fn, 875-5010 or 304-675-4811
8:45 A. II ·7:15 PM .. Sac, 8 A II..
e P.M , Sun, 2 -Hour Weekly Staff 3bedroam house tn Mason, w/
• Meeting, Or As Otherwise acreage, heat pumpJa~r, rec:entl~
Scheduled. High School Diploma 1 remodeled, aakmg $68,000 304·
GEO, Valrd Driver's license, 773-5132 leave messag_e 11 no
Good Driving Record And Three answer:
Veara Licensed Drnung Expert·
ence Required Salary· $5 50 /Hr, 3bedroom modern Ranch slyl&amp;,
To Start Training Prcwidad Send LR. FR. concrete drtveway, 2 car
Resume To P.O. Box 604, Jiack- garage, off At 2. country aetttng.
aon, OH 45640; ATTN Cec•lla. $99,500. 304-875-5541
Deadline For Applicants 7123197. 4bdrm, 3 balhl, split level entry,
Equal OpPQ1'1Unl)' Employer.
2 garages, 3 112 m1les out Sandhill. $140.000. 304-675-5403.
180 Wanted To Do
6.8 Acres, 2 year old sectional
ANY ODD .JOBS: Extertor pamt- 3br, 2 baths, cenlral a1r, NICE I
mg, shrubs &amp; weeds tummed, somerville Real1)'. 304 875·3030
landscaping, sidewalks edged,
or 304-675-3431 Jean Casto.
lawn care, etc Call Bill 304--6757112
All brltk, 3bedroom Ranch, full
basement, central air, Camp
Ceratled daycare on Salley Run
Conley 30&lt;1-675-1371
Ad , Pomeroy, 81 4-992·3509
A'IHENS MORTGAGE COMPA·
Experienced carpentry and remo·
NY
dellno Inside and oullide,
When 1he bank JaYS no, let
decks, v1n~l aiding, add-on addiA1hens Mortgage say yoslllot
tions, cabinet refacing or newly
rebuilt. References-Free Esll - our staH help you get the loe.n you
need.
maiOI Jim Shul 304-675-1272.
WupodaUzoln :
Financing
hou... and mo·
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
bllellomoo
haul your logs to the mil JUSt call
S.11-omployodo rofinonclng·
304-675-1957
Home lmprovanwnts- Bill ConHome Or Oft1ce Cleanmg, Ret&amp;r·
HIIda11on- lnvlltment Properenc:es, 81-4-245-5887
ty· Ca•h out tor
nood.
No applicatiOn 1ee- Al hwela or
S&amp;t.t Water Hauhng Services,
credit welcome 10 apply.
·where Purny 11 Our Paulon•
Cal today lor a tree analys11l
G1ve Us A Call Today 30o4-875110().921-1 ~ 614-592-400&amp;.
3716

Building For Renl For Special Oc·
casions By The Hour, Day, Or
Week, St At 33 New Haven,
WVA., 614-eDI-2013.

420 MobUe Homes
fo R t

440

Unless you want lo Lose Weight
&amp; Fee1 Great. CALL NOWI (3041
!!62-ll373

!NOTICE I
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommenda thll you do buainHI with peo~e you know, lilnd
HOT 10 NM money through the
meil until you have 1nvest1gated
ilt. .llorlng.

3 Bedroom, No Pets. In Counuy.
8\4·379-25.a.
~

1972 Freedom 2 Bedrooms, 1 2 Bedroom Tro11er For Ron1 ·, 8
Acre la nd, Sc emc R cad• v mton, Miles Down 218, Galllpollo. $2251
$10 •000 0 r Bes t 011er, "1"
u ~ - 44"
u+ Deposit, References Re·
~0:..:785=-._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ l .q''""'"· 81•·44~172, 814·258-

basement
prool1ng, all basement
t979 14x70 Schult W1th Expando
done, lree eslimatea, lilo1:imtd L1vlng Room And A 1g86 12X42
guarantee 10yrs on job
Add-A·Roqm On A Ranted Lot.
ence 304-87S.2145.

QONI BEAQJHIS!

210

Or lo&amp;HI 3br, 2 112 boll!. 3 Cit
naragt Wlcar 1111, owl
I
I
wtdeck,
extra 70150 building,
Ia•
mm ng poo
catedon23ecrea.304-175-5431.

530

Apartments
lor Rent

Antiques

Buy or sell Riwerlne Anrlques,
t 124 E. Main S~oe~ on Rt 124.
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
1m. to 6:00 p m, Sunday 1:00 lo
8:00p.m. 614·992·2528, Ru11
Moore owner.

1 and 2 bedroom IIPIJJI8flts, turnl&amp;had and unrurn1shld, Mcurlty
depo11t required, no pets, 814992·2218

1.:..:::-=::.:..:::....:-::-::-:~,.,.....,-­
1 Bedroom In Gallipolis, No Pets,
V«r Nice, 614...&amp;46-7903.

540

2 Bedroom Apartment, Central
A1r, Gas Heat, W/0 Hook-Up
Close To Gallipolis, No PelS, 614·
•48-2072

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Atr ConditiOner&amp; [)liferent SIZes,
John Daera lawn Tractor, 1992
Toyota CoroKa, Brown Rocket Re-diner, 614-446-1610

2bdrm ap1s • total electnc, appl1ances furliiShed. laundry room
tac:llltl&amp;l, close to achool•ln town.
Apphcat1ons available at Village
Green A.pts. 149 or call 81,...9823711. EOH

Atr Conditioners Re-ConditiOned
AU S1zes Guaranteed, 6H-8867531.
Aflred Angelo wedding gown w/
~o~e1l, 3 br1desma1d dresses {red),
attendance dreu-b!ack &amp; white,
all match1ng accessones, all
dec:orat1ons &amp; bouquets. 304·
882·3Q71 .

2bedroom apt at Broad Run Rd,
NH, stove &amp; relfigerator, water lneluded, S2651mo plus depos11.
304·773-8171 leave meuago.
Apartment For Rent 1Naw Haven,
WVA One Bedroom, Furnished,
Phone 814-898-2613.

Are you buying new turmture?
Sell your used furmture to dle Pomeroy Thnft Shop. Tl'lere 11 a real
need for couches, breakfast and
dmlng room sets We also buy
baby beds, strollers playpens,
toddler car seats and walkers.
Call 61-4-992-3725 Tuesday thru
Saturday, 1Oam 4pm at 220 East
Main Street, PamerO'f

l~~~~~~~~~~

Boots By Redwing, Ch1ppewa,
Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed
Lowest Prices At Shoe Cale, Galhpohs

Downtown Gallipolis· Modern 1
Bedroom, All Electric, Carpeted,
Complete K1tchen, ElectriC Hea1 I
A1r ConditiOning, 614-4146-0139

Buying apor1t ctrdsl
I will buy any Elites or new Dia mond K10gs If you have cards to
sell let me know Call 614·9493098

Furnished 1br, ground noor duplex, 1deal br 1 person, $295/rno.
"' electric, no pe11, references &amp; Concrete &amp; Plalt~t Septic Tanks,
depoSit304-675-2651
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Furnished 3 Rooms 1 Batn, No Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
.,..., RoiJrence
o.po~' Ro- :1:--1!00:::.:·53:.7~·95::;;:28::;..._ _ _ __
quiNMI,814-448-151Q.
Exlcaaer B1ke, H•gh Chatr, Table
Furnished Efflctency SUS/Mo, Lamp, Oullttng Frame, Child's
Utllid81 Paid, Share Bath, 607 School Deck, Drapenes and CurSecond Avenue, Gallopolla, at•· IIIJno (814)-446-3375
U8 3BUAfter7P.M.
Grubb's P1ano- tunmg I repairs
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom Problems? Need Tuned? Call thEr
apartmentl al Village Manor and plano Or 614-446-4525
Riverside Apartment• In Middle·
JET
porl From S236·S304 • Call 814•
AERATION MOTORS
: : · Equal Housing Opper- Repa1red, New &amp; Rebl.ul1 In Slock.
Call Ron Evans. 1-800-537-9528
Nice 2 Bedroomo, 4 112 Mlloo
From Galllpollo, Wa,.,., SID\'0, RoKill ROACHES1
trlgerator Furn~shed, No Pets, ENFORCERIS OverNiteC8 Roach
1275/Mo., 814 "258 ' 188•· au- Spray Or Overnne Pest Control
888-&amp;236.
Concentrate Makes Up to 2 Gal·
N1ca Upata1ra Apartmenl, In GaUio- 1 .~&lt;&gt;n F,rcool.' Fast And lasung Roach
pOI1a, Deposit /References, $23511 •
GUARANTEED! A.vaiiMo..814-448-7130.
able
These Parucipatmg
Stores
O'dell&amp; True Value
One bedroom apartment in Pt
R&amp;G Feed
Pleasant Furnished. Very clean
CenU'al S&lt;Jpply
6 nco No pehl. 304-675-1388.
Valley Supply
Tara Townhouse Apanments,
Drowns Trustworthy
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floon. CA. 1 112 Bo111, Fully Car·
peted, Adult Pool I Baby Pool, l .lltOIOIS Jewerly 28 mch cultured
Patio, Start $350/t.to No Pets, pearl nucklace, d1amond and
lean Plus Security Deposit Re- sappt111e ~ 4k white gold rmg
qulred, 614-446 3481, 814 -446 Have current appratsat can 304 0101
875 - 1928 aher 6 OOpm weekdays, anytime weekends
Twm Rivera Tower, now accepbng
applications for 1br. HUD aublld· Lowrey Mag1c Game organ, mu·
Jzed apl. tor elderly and handl ate and bench, $400; anuque VIC·
capped. EOH304~675-6679
trola,
black pole lamp $10.

I

w

1

Two bedroom ajl&amp;rtmenl 10 Mid·
dleport. ... 814-992·51158.

Motor Cross Gear Air Brushed
Pa1nled Helmet, Alpme Star, AXO
Boots S1ze 9, Chest Protector,
Thor Jersey !Pants, Gloves, Scott
Goggles. Knee Pads, Shmn
Guards, Snow Sk1s R1d1ng Dyna·
mark Mower 35 8 HP 614 446·
2e47.

Upsraira Apartment For Ren1
$300.00 Month· Musl Pay For
Gat &amp; Phone - New K11c:hen One
Large Bedroom . Ltvlng Roam
And Bath • Excellent Condl11on
No Pets Deposit Required Can
Be S.en At U03 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, Call614-«8·45to4 Movmg Sale. 45 Gal. Pentagon
For AppoiOttnonl
F1sh Tank, 19 Inch Color TV A.r
Cond111oner 32,000 BTU. DishFurnished
450
washer: Entertainment Stand,
Much Morel614-245-5885
Rooms

Old OresS8r, 614-245-5887.
Sleeptn~ rooms w1th cooking
Also lraller space on river All
Old Hand Hewn Log Cabm,
hook - u~s Call aher 2.00 p m,
$5,000 F1rm, 814·379·24~4. 614·
304-773-51151, Mo!On
3711-9374.
460 Space tor Rent
Packard Bell Multimedia Comput·
located On Route 7 Water Pa1d, er 75MZ Pent1um Compaq 15
Inch Color Momtor, Complete
S12!&gt;'Mo. &amp;14-245-5024.
SyBiern S850, 614-4-46-1155:
Mobile home site available bet·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call Rally Wheels $150, Snowblower
$50, 25" RCA Color T.v $25, En814·385-4387.
c:yclo,pedlaa 125 Each, 814-446·
11390.

wv

MERCHANDISE

510

Household

Goods
Appllencea:
Reconditioned
Washera, Dryers, Rangel, Rtfrt·
orators, 00 Day Guarantee!
French Cl1y May1ag, 814·446·
1785.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahers, dryers, refrigerators,
rangoo. Skaggo Appllancaa, 7B
Vlno S~oe~ Coli 814·446·73116,
1~1SKI3498

Polly'o - • UHd FumHuro
2101Jeflart1onAvo.
Cllion D 30 • 5:00 Mon·Sat
304-815-SOfA (7632)
2 S1ngle Beds, Mattren, Spnngs

Rldmg mowera, generators , tour
wheeler, chain saws, Case trac·
10r Call lee Baird 304-875-5714.
Road BeN Gt&gt;Car~ 8 HP Engire,
1 Year Old, Bought New $1,600,
Allking $1,000,614-446--8114:
Seers 220 Volt Air Compressor 5
HP 30 Gallon 1300, soaro 18
Inch Jigsaw $120 ; Task force
10' Tabl• Saw $120, Delta 12
Bond Saw $120: Delli 1B Jigsaw
S120, 1114-o4-46·1311.
'
Full size lruck topper $45; new
porrable phone,
will seiJ al 1/2
··a-s.
pr1ce, $25 , 81•- ·.¥;U41
Sol 01 Amencan Racing Whoelo,
14 Inch, Pa1d $440, Will Sell For
1300, Headlight Covers Foe Berena, Pa1d So40 Will Sell For 120:

I ~B1~4~4~4~e~be!os~.~-::-,-,:--~-

&amp; Fromo, $25 Each, Slltl Desk Snapper ; 4 HP Ridmg Lawn

ISO, Roohop Corgo Carner $25, Mower, $800, 814-38~408 AI·
814·448-4141, Aller 8 P.M . Or lor 6 PM Or Anylimo On Weo·
OnWtalllndl.
'
kenda.

640

Hay

Hav, aquara bales
2854

304 -882·

M:RY 'TIME rr ~,

'M'T' LOSE AIJOlt\-.R..
!:Ue'SaZIPrtOJ

S118W. 304-675-50116.
Tobacco wa1er btd plan11. 304·
895-31154
SUMMER SALE: Central Atr
TRAN SPORTATION
Cond1boners· Full 5 Vear Warranty •If You Don't Call Us We Both
loset• Free E1t1matesl Add-On
Heat Pumps Only Sli~hiY H1~her 710 Autos tor Sale
Call Us Today 1g97 II Tho ~~:"":'_ _..;,.;_..;,.;~;.:,.-­
Twenly Seventh Vear In The '85 Chrysler LeBaron, 4 dr, auto,
Heating &amp; Cooling Bus.nessl 81,._ cruise, anvlm. tilt. runa goad, $475
...6-8306. 1-800·291.QOQ8.
080, 814-7.2-ZilO
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprtgh!, Ron Evans Enterpnaes,
Jeckson. Ohio, 1-1100·537 9528.

'87 Cougar, $2800 OBO, 814·
742·2785

I ::'::-::~-------'98 Plymouth Neon, • door. dark

Slroller, high cha1r, dressing green, Ellpreaso Sport, automadc:,
table, sw1ng, baby bed, car seal 11r, lfTV'tm ca11ene, cru•se, e.~ecel304-ti7S.4548
lent concltion, S12,i00, 814-9925254
Summer Special, New Aeration
Sapuc Tank MoiDrs, $399 00 Plus 1982 Malibu Chevy Wagon, V·6,
Tax Hrs 10-4. 814·..,.6-4782.
Automatic, V-6, $800, 080 et4·
256-&lt;110ll
Support Walker for elderly or
handicap &amp; eleclrlc Jill cha1r 1983 Olda Omeg•. 4 new t1re1,
new
new exhaust, 7G,OOO
304-875-2290
no flllt, $1,1195, 61 ..
Trampoline 1120 NordiC A1der 992-682-4
$200, 61 .. 24~154
-::-::-:-:.::..:----'---1985 Collactor'l Senea Cadillac
Used 3210 Ditch W1tch Trencher, Sedan Sev1lle, Roman Chauot,
614-694-7842
near perfect cond•on.
1g711 Ford F-150 auto, air, near
Used Garage Door Opener $40; showroom condition 304·875·
8 xe·e· Garage Door $50, Two 2290 alllr 111&gt;nt
4' xB'7• Slld1ng Pat1o Doors No
Tracks~. 614 388-9265.
1985 Mercury Grand Marquis,
1-~-':-;:..;.~...:.=.:.:..--­ AutomatiC, 302, V-8, Remanufac·
Utility Tra11er, N1ce Sola &amp; Love- lured Eng•ne Haa Only 35,000
aeal, Beds, Llvmg Room Chairs, Miles, Full Power, Aluminum
Microwaves, Color TV, K•no S1ze Wheels, Sharp Car, $1,900, 1990
waterbed, Complete Wllh Mirror Dodge Caravan, AuiDmabc:, Z.SL,
Headboard, Automa11c Dryet', aFt 4 Cyl., 25MPG, Clean, Rellabe
Topper For 8 Ft Bed, 614-379- Vehicle, $3,900, 614·446-7215
27201AFTER 6 PM.
1986 Chevy Nova, body goad
cond, needs head gasket &amp;
Building
550
-~ $600 304-882·221 9.
Supplies
t986 Ford Taurus, exc runn1ng
Block, bnck, sewer pJpes, wmd- cond .. $1,200 080. 30• ·675·
ows, lintels, etc Claude Wtnters,
5320
R1o Grande, OH Call 614 2455121
1986 SS Monte Car1o, $3,200
304·675-5339
Steel Bu1ld1ngs, Never Pul Up,
Publ iC LiqUidation 40x36 Was 1986 Toyota Camry, cru1se, 1111,
S6,370 Now $4,390 50x95 Was interm1ttent w1pera, cQid a1r, new
$18,660 Now $10,590 Other S1Z· ures. excellent m11de a out,
es Available, Dave 1-800-292- $2495, 61. 992·6624.
0111'
1987 Ptvmouth Voyager lE, Automatic, AC, Cru1se, AMIFM Cas·
560 Pets for Sale
sette, Good Cond1t1on. $2,400,
10 Purebred St Bernard PIJPPieS, 080, 614-245-5120.
vet checked, shots, cute and
1987 Red Trans-Am, Auton'lallc,
cuddly, $250 each, 61 ..985-:J.In
50 liter Engine low M11&amp;age, Ex7
Registered
Australtan cellent ConditiOn, $5,500 080,
Shepherd P1..pp1es, Blue Mernlls, 614-367-1386.
B~ack Tnes &amp; Red Tnes Vet
1991 Chrysler New Yorker (SaChecluid, 61&lt;,388 8388
lon) Oelu~~e lntenor, 68,000 M1tes,
One Owner, Excellent Cond1t1on,
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming. e14-448.0271 Allor 8 00 P.M
Fealuting Hydro Bath Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd. 1992 Reel Dodge Shadow, ES, 4
614-448.0231 .
Cyltnder, Auto, Alf, Loaded,
81,000 MileS, $3,000 080 61&lt;·
AKC Reg Blood Hound Pupp1ea,
256-1Zl3
8wkl old 304-882.0013
1995 Chrysler Cirrus, loaded,
AKC Reg BoMer pupp1U, de- 26,000 m1les, $12,000 or trade for
clawed &amp; tails docked, 11t •hats
truck of equal value. 614 -949 6 - - IWico. 304-875-31188.
2452.
A.KC Registered Champ1on 1998 Ponll&amp;c Grand Am SE
Bloodline Boxer Puppies, Tall• loaded, white, 4dr,\30,000 m1les:
Docked, Dew Claws Removed,
Vet Checked, Wormed, Six Fe- 304-875-64891oovt message.

1-::-:--.,..,..--------

malos, One Male, 814-4-46-7188.

90 Cawaller, Automatl&lt;;, 2dr A1r,
83 000 Moles $2,500 (614)·
AKC Reglatered Male Shelt1e 3
3799047
Months Old, Shots &amp; Warmed.
814-448-1767.
A Need A Car? No Credit, Bad
Cred1l, Bankruptcy? We Can Help
AKC Registered Yorkla pup~•••·
Re-Establish Crechtl Must Make
read~ to go $3SOea 30-4-895·
S150 Week Take Home, 15%
3926
Down On Cash Or Trade To
AKC Roll Weller Pupploo, 8 Qualify For This Bank Financing
No Cred11 Turn Downs! 814--441 ·
WoeltJ Old_ $280, 814·2511-1851
0607
Beautiful A.KC, Black WfTan
Markings Cocker Spaniel Puppy, CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boals,
Champlon Sired, 12 Week• old. •·wheelers, motor homes, furni$100 OBO (e141441-1417 Leave ture, electroniCS, computers etc.
b)' FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your
Message
area now. Call 1-800·513-4343
Female Blue Point Siamese K1nen Ext. 5·9368
Wormed &amp; l11ter Tra1ned, $~00,
1980 -1990 Caro For $100111
814·367-7123.
SIOzed And SOld
Reg1stefed Auatrahan Shepherd
Locally This Month.
Puppies, Red Mernlle's, &amp; Blue
Trucks, 4K4'S. Etc:
Menllle's, $100, 6141-388-9925
1·800·522·2730, X 3901
Reg1stered two year old blue. Dck
c:oondD!I. $150, 614-7•2·2631
Spec:lahzlng In AKC Rotwe1ler1
Ta1l1 Docked, Dew CIBws Removed, F1rsr Shots I Wormed,
Born 51251g7, Priced. $275, Talc·
~ngOepoaitsNcw 814-U8-3286
570

Musical
Instruments

6 Piece Royce Drum Set, 11 SO,
Eplphone Gu1tar $150, 614-367·
0657

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Now Open Beach's Farm Markel,
State Route 160, At Evergreen
Home Grown Tomatoes, Half Runner Green Beans, Corn, Fre&amp;h
Watermellona And Cantalopes,
We Also Buy Local Produce
Open 9-7 Dally, Call 6U· o448·

1984

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
10% OFF all larm lractor parts
S1der's Equipment 304 -6757421
Pnce reduced- 1G63 Ford 2000
traclor, hve power, 3 pt, new radiator, rabUII1 motor, brush hog,
plow"S, diiC. $3900, e14·1i192·2l43
or61•·992-8373a11or5
1ge• ford 1320" WO 5 Ft New
Holland Finishing Mower: 4Ft.
King Kuner Bruoh HDII, 5 Ft King
Kutter Scraper Blade Call614·
448·3430 19,500
-•e7 N.H. haYbine, s-~
~: IW01 50
gallon RubtKitrnald water trough's,
$100 oech, 814-247·1100
730 Case tractor wllh all 11vi power lind wet hneJ, $3500, 614-9923274
'
JTractor
0. 104 E.B Combine 4010 J 0
(81•(-370·25-40

L.:..::::.::..:~.:..:.~::..:;:.....___

Older 04 Cal Dozer Good Cond&gt;
tton. 61+379-2882.

SEIZED CARS From $175
Porsches, Cad1llacs, Chewys,
BMW's, Corvenes, Also Jeeps, 4
WD's, Your Area Toll Free 1800·218·9000 E&gt;l A· 2814 For
Current Listings
Upron Used Cars Rt. 62·3 M1le1
South of leon, WV Fmanctng
Ava1table 304·458-1069

SOuth

0

-BARNEY

1991 Kawasaki EXSOO, $1,51Xt
814-256-8012
'

1993, 883 Harley Dav1son
ster$6,500, 614-446-9543

750

;

1972 International Truck, 1 Ton
Dual Whee ls, 62,000 Actual
Mtles, Good Cond1t1on, 614-2588574
1984 Bronco II 4 WO Standard,
614--446 -7834
1988 Ford Bronco II reliable V-8,
au.to, 4x4, 112,000 m11as. $2,500
Call 304·675-5788
1987 4wd truck, call early am or
lale pm 304-675-3229

North

East

Pass

3 NT

AU pass

South saw that there were
no problems 1f clubs were 2·1 And
a 3·0 break wouldn ' t be fatal 1f he
could guess wh1ch opponenl held all

concern

a--carte

3 Sla..
4 PrOIIueed

(2wdtl ••
11 Lacking In

7 Taama
8 Speed

(a playf

color

19 Land
II"'..............
measure
,.,-+-'1'---1 21 curee
24 - out (makee
...-+--l--1
do wllhl
25 Prolix lor
plane
26 Actor O 'Neal
21 Author • .,
Mano 29 Cereal gr11a
30 Mine pa11age
31 Cravlngo
37 Became too
big tor
38 Plalmt lndlon
41 -Paulo
43 Ambush
45 Slap
46 Doll' s HoUH

.,.-+-+--1

aulhor

..-+--+-+-~

Declarer dectded thai tf
Wesl was long in diamonds, East
might be long m clubs. So, at lnck
two, he led a club to dummy 's kmg
Wilen East discarded a spade, though.
the contract was dead. Forlornly,
South gave West h1s club trick, bul
the defense was remorseless West
cashed the d1amond ace, then played
the dtamond four to hts partner's
mne . A sw1tch to the heart queen net·
ted four tncks m lhat suit, resulting

Fishing boal 1411 trailer, 20hp
Evmrude engme $800 304 -882·
2715 •
New Deluxe Alum1num Boat Trail
er, Holds Up To 26 F1 Baal,
$2,500 61 ... 46-9e62

Parts a

Accessories
Budget Pnc:e TransmiSSIOns
Starting at S9SI.OO and Up, Used
Rebuilt, All Types, Over 10.000
TJansmiSSIOns. Access Transfer
Cases &amp; Rear Ends, 614-245-

m five down'
Nof!h gave South a dusting
down for his lmpulstve play. "Before
comm1t1tng yourself m clubs," Nonh
said, "you should have cashed your
spade tricks. Here, you learn mnc of
East' s cards (siX spades and three d1a·
monds) 10 stx of West's (one spade
and five diamonds). So Wesl has sev·
en empty 'spaces for the club queen,

i

5677
Full lme or auto body panels
paints lilnd supplieS. also glass:
t~hl assembly O:cvgen and ac•
lylone lankl fi1~ and oxohangod,
614·742 2792
Jeep part 1or !lale 304-675-5010

whereas East has only four. This lells
you to stan by cashing lhe club ace."
"Sorry, partner. That was
emply -headed of me "

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radiators D &amp; R Auto,
R 1 ple~. WV. 304 372-3933 or 1·
1100·273-9329
Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

hairdo

49 Brace
....-+--+-+-~ SO Dryer
,
trappmga
52 Pa1n1u1
53 Author Feri!Jir
54 Raloe
57 WWII
;

area

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebn1)' Cipher c'YJ)fograms are crealed hom quolall.ll'1s hvl-.mou!!l poopk! pasl arn:l presenl
Each leller tn lhe cipher !lland&amp;lor llnother roa.&lt;~y 5 CICJ(I G E'qUit/s I'

R

'U L H V

WXRFVNG
SVXORXN

B MG.

' H MX

EMPW

D p •

MH

KMPWKMOVEVOW.'

H 0 U U

MH

'

ERUREON
MOV

U M 0 F

1975 Wmnebago, 27ft, -454 en·
gme, 4\kW generator, sell c:on
~ned. $4,500 304-675-41122
1981 29 F1 T1aska Class A Uotor Home, 454 Chevy Eng1ne, Unit
With All EKtraa, Mull Sell For
WhatsONed, 614·446-1311

WHAT DO

I DO AFTER I FINISH
READIN6 TilE BOOKS
ON
LIST?

A REPORT
ON EACH ONE .

WRITE

SURE.
MARCIE ..

TELL THE

TEACHER

SURE,

I

low to form four lirwple words

l
I
1

u NM I T y

I I I I lz

P E T E S 1...~'

hs,....,l-.;,1':"6......,.::....;..1--l-

I•

•

•

•

•

I- J.....,.-.1......1.~J.~.J.L....J1

L

MARCIE ..

ev~lrVIIhirto

."Don 1 oeueve
you see and hear," Mom
me. "I've learned that most

~h!~~~ are seldom what •

e

Comple1o 1ho chuckle quoted
~Y ftll1ng in the m1ss1ng words
yov develop !rom stop No 3 below.

Eraser- V10la · Decoy· Utopia -AT EASE
~·11 be (looting on o cloud with
rht ~ you'll find il the

"Have you ever noticed," one cadet sa1d to the other,
• that those w1th ambitiOn are seldom AT EASE?"

dossl(leds.

'"

'"

-.
•

"'

~~W~E~DN~E~S~DA~Y~·----------~---J-U-~-1~61 :

1993 filth Wheel camper, Sand ptper by Cobra, pnvate be&lt;lroona,
complete bath, sleeps 6, central
a~r gas furnace, SBOOO, 61-4-992·
2393 or 614 992· 2886, ask !Or

n

'"
'~

Bet~

ji{i~~~~~~~~~~
ASTRO·GRAPH

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1110nal l1let1me guarantee.
Lo cal references furmshed El·
labhshed 1975 Call (614) 44&amp;0870 Or 1 BOO 287 0576 ~ogers

BERNICE
BEDE'OSOL

Watarptoo~ng

'

C&amp;C General Home M&amp;tn·
tenence- Pamung, vinyl Siding,
carpentry, doors, WindOWs, baths,
mob1le home repaw and mort For
free estlmale call Ctlel. 814·8g2.
11323.

.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

1988 Pace Arrow 34'l basement
TV, VCR Sa!elhle, CB, 6 5 gan:
2 AJC, IENelers 304-675-17'31

Appliance Parts And Serv1c:e All
Name Brands Over 25 Yea rs Experi ence Al l Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag 614-4146 7795
•

,.'·

- - •

!lOW MUCI-I '(00
LIKED THEM ..

1984 Prowler 22' AIC Awnmg
1978 SWiss Colony 20' NC Awn:
mg, 1975 Mallard 27 With Awn
~S ~~~~ McCormick Road, 61~-

SERVICES

George •

letter1 • of the
0 Rearrange
four JCrombled words be-

~"'7""'TI..;...;,I...;;;,I.;.:...;I;..'..;.:,I.--~

MARCIE.

ZVOXG

ELUUVX.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ' Tome Is lhe nder lha1 breaks you1h " Herbert
~ Punctuality 1s the lh1ef ol t1me " -Oscar Wilde

K WE H A R

1975 Pull Beh1nd Camper 21 Ft
Good Cond111on, $1,400, 080
614 446-9853

810

48 Bushy

three.

Small Pop-Up Furnace, Stove,
Smk, Table, Ice Box, Sleeps 3 4.
Good Conduton. SSOO, F1rm 614256-6391
'

4·WDs

West

SUit.)

BUSINESS CLQSEOUT
All Kawasaki Jet Sk1s
Price's UndeJ lrwo1C8
900 ZXI
750 ZXI
750 SXI
750 SX
OnlY 12Len
HAMILTON WATER SPORTS
PROCTORVILLE, OHIO
1-614·886-7871

1g79 Chevrolet Scotsdale P1c:k·
Up Short Wh~ Base •h4, Excel·
lent Condition Protess1onal Paint
Job, And New 350 V·8 Engine,
$5,500 , 614 -446 -7111 o, 61-4·
••G-r.l75

&amp;

WE'LL.

21 FL Bayhnef Bow Rider Boat, Y·
8 Power Custom Tra1ler, Loadeb. ,
•
MustSel/,614 446 2030

20 Ft Argosy. (By A1r Slream)
T T Very Light, Pull W11h Any
Me&lt;hum S1ze Car, Completely Refu rbi shed, $2,800, 614·446-2957

Vans

South

2 NT

9 cairo's river
to Tennle term

5 Alr·traveler'o

~r-1'!....-rll'-

· empty skull .
Keepmg track of ell)pty
spaces someumes potn!s toward the
right hne of play at the bridge table.
Today's deal is an example. How
should South plan the play in three
no-lrump' West leads the diamond
seven 1wo. three. jack. (East's three
showed an odd number of cards tn !he

Wl~HING

1993 14 Ft Bass Tracker, Tra•ler,
Troll Mo1or, Banery, Cover, ExeS!·
lent Condit1on, 614·388-9443 Aller 6

790

llah

2 Jethro-

35 lmporutn111me
36 San Diego haa
one
39 Martini

By Phillip Alder
Ambrose Bierce had a par·
llcularly w1cked sense of humor. For
example, h1s " Devil's Dictionary "
includes th1s defimtton for erudllion:
Dust shaken out of a book mlo an

-

;gee Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·2•V
Trolling Motor, 150 XP Ev1nrude
Outboard, $9,800, 614·992·2770.

Auto

1 Hawllilan food

34 t..mony drink

Cards fill
vacant lots

1987 1T Thundercrafl boat Wllh
lrailer, $4500. 614 9•9·3221.

760

DOWN

-

PAW?

'87 Ford Ranger, l1ke new epg1ne,
t~res, clulch and pressure plate,
$2500. 614 949 2604 9am -epm
weekdays.

730

LIKE A DUCK
TO WATER II

Spor~­

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

l&gt;oloo

51 Hot opring
55 Cal. abbr.
56 JKob'o 1011
58 Mlnerol ~~~
59 Aclor Sll60 Ordor of
Whllel
61 Wild buffalo
62 Chooae
63 Undersland
64 1997, • g .

HE TOOK TO IT

FINISH HIS
C:OLORlN'
BOOK,

UQ3 Kawasaki NinJa 600R~.
$2,500, 614 446-9543.
1

48

Opening lead: • 7

DID TATER

1993
Kawasaki
SSOElO,
3,300miles, S1,900firm. 304-67~
50101
1

40-clll42 Trlclca

Vulnerable· East-West
Dealer South

I

1996 Dutchman excellent cond
loaded, rake over payments. 304:
675-5522

1991 Chevrolet S·tO Blazer, Tahoe Package, 4 Doors. 4 WD.
Fulty Loaded, Excellent Condmon,
4 3 Liter Fuel InJected V·6,
$8,800, 614-446 -7171 , Or 61o4·
448·7375.

•

• K J
I AJ 9 G

1988 Suzuki 4 wheeler, new en
g1ne, clutch, brakes, cl'laln and
sprockets, StBOO, 614-992·S.56
1989 FLTC · Ultra Harley David·
son wllh all the extras, s1ereo,
clock, caasatte rad1o, 1nte rcom
ayatem, cru1se control, CB radiO.
114,000. call6l4-742 316, .

South.........
lndlot111

'

44 .... "' - 5 Mucoro larpl
k9 Shoot lloep
47 - - loult
. 12 Crovlng
(owrmuchl

eAKQ
lfK542

720 Ttucks lor Sale

981 Ford Pick -Up 5 Speed.
$600, 614 44ti·3l 49

1

, 13 Director Kazan
I 14 Mrs. Cantor
115 Arm 1&amp; Roemo about
North
07-16·97
17 Mae Wool role
18 Sour bl'ew
• J 7 6
20 Frull ripener
, 6
22 Author
• 6 5 2
'I
UmbertoeKJOB 7, 4J
23 VIew
24 Piece ol
Wesl
East
1ewelry
• 9
11085432
28 Aid In
• Q J 9 8
• A 10 7 3
dlognoelng
• 9 8 3
• A Q 10 7 4
32 Lock opener
• Q 52
33 Fllghtleol bird

a Grain

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Thursday, July 17.1997
Noticeable improvements m your
cbosen field of endeavor 1s indicated
fa1 the year ahead. You will respond
fayorably to new assignmenls and
find success on the job.
CANCER (June 21 -fuly 22) Con·

di, ~ons in Jenepllook more encour·
a~lng for you at thts lime where your
c,leor is conCCfll~. prov1ded you'~e
n;~fratd to as~ume added responsl·
·tics. Know where to look for
r~ ance and you'll find it. The
Griif&gt;h Matchmaker mstantly
(C~s wijich ~gn&amp; are romanucally I
jfoc:t for you. Mail $2.75 to Match· I
,~~r, clo this newsp~per. P,O. Bo•

bl

~

.,
1758,

Murray Hill Station.

York, NY 10156.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You can
comfonably deal w1th abras1ve devel·
opments today 1f you don't let them
overwhelm you. Focus on postuve
possibilities mstead of negattve ones.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt 22) Today,
try lo do a lot more for your loved
ones than you expect in return Your
joy will come from doing and g1ving,
not takmg and cove!ing.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If
you ' re plannmg somethmg special
with friends today, mvite an old pal
you've been neglecting lately. It IS
ume to shore up the relationship.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your
chances for personal gam look rather
good today Two channels for acqu1·
s1110n m1ght be opened, but you
must be alert in order to spot them.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

arrangement in which you felt aban·
doned Their asSistance will enable
you to whittle things down to s1ze.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q.Feb. 19)
You can be a better fnend to some·
one you like by lifting some respon ·
S1b1ht1es from his or her shoulder. Do

• i

,.,
...

a good deed'
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Matenal obJeCtives could be more
Important to you today lhan usual.
You may acquire what you wanl 1f
you're not too self-seeking or aggres·

••

••
•••

..••'

sive.

•
•

ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) Be
devoted and conscientious today per·
taining to ISsues that req01re 11, but
don't let this ati1tude sp1ll over mto

l..,
:I~

.....

recreational areas.
TAURUS (April 20- May 20)
Much to your credit today, you ' re apt
to be more interested m domg things
w1th loved ones !han fulfilling your

~

~

••
•
••

21) You m1ghr stan 10 be well· • own needs.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
received by someone who is impor·
Before
making a cnllcal dec1s1on
tant to your present plans today It ts
today,
take
a second look to weigh the
an ind1vidual who is very difficult to
pros
and
cons.
Do not commit your·
contact.
self
unless
the
odds squarely favor
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Others are .about to intervene m an

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�Ohi.o Lottery

·Cincinnati
outlasts
PiHsburgh

Super Lotto:
4-18·20-27·36-38
Kicker:
2·9-2-o-6-1
Pick 3:
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Pick 4:
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Sports on Page 4

Clear tonight, Iowa In

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01117, Olllo Ylllley Publllhlng Compony

2 Sectlona, 111 PagH, 3 5 A 0annett Co. NeW IF"!*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 17, 1997

Dissection begins on governor's
tax hike pr·oposal to fund, education
!Jy AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbus Bureau

'17

COLUMBUS- Balancing ballot
politics with court-mandated require·
ments, Gov. George Voinovich proposed a $I .2 billion-a-year tax hike
ihat begins the legislative tightrope
walk to an attempted remedy of
Ohio's school funding system.
Binding together a penny hike in
the sales tax, a rise in the business
property tax hikes with property tax
cuts for individuals. the Voinovich
plan alle!Rpls to case the blow of the
billion-dollar sales tax to voters.
With an Aug. 6 deadline for placing the plan before voters this
November, the proposal zipped into
Senate and House Finance commit·
tees for several weeks of hearings.
Almost immediately, several provi·
sions were killed: a 12-cent hike in
the cigarette tax and a proposed hal- ·
lot issue removing judicial authority
over the slate's school funding system.
·The remaining corriponents of the

plan break into "three parts: the FY 1996 in combined state and local
method for arriving at basic "ade- support. Thus, that number became
quate" funding levels, other policy the proposed '" basic cost of an adechanges in the package and tax quate education."
changes designed to attract public
However, realizing the additional
support and foot the bill.
costs associated with educating
At the heart of the Voinovich pro- pupils, Augenblick added a second
posal beats the work of a school fund· tier of five add-on costs. The honus
ing expen Dr."John Aug~nblick. The money was ,included for special eduColorado-based expen, who was on cation. vocational education, trans·
·a three-member 1995 ExpenPanel on ponation c!)sts, a cost of doing busiSchool Funding, was the source of ness factor and .the costs of educating
'·
the new system's two-tiered approach low-income pupils .
Several
other
policy
changes
unre·
to determining the basic "adequate "
lated
to
Augenblick's
work
were
level of school funding .
unveiled
in
the
proposal
:
a
school
His method is based on a cost
analysis tying funding levels to per- facilities funding plan and a elemenformance measures. The basic tary ~c hool reading improvement
assumption underlying this theory: if program .
• School Facilities Program Fund·
certain school districts can reach
adequate performance levels then ing: Combining $5.1\ billion in state
other districts can do it with the same assistance with a 1 local matching
amount of money.
share of $7 billion, $12.8 billion is
After studying I 02 districts meet- made available from 1998 to 2007.
ing 17 of 18 performance criteria. However. the state share ofthe monAugenblick determined thpse dis- ey depends on budgetary contortions
such as half of the additional capact~cts spent an average of $3,930 in

'

ity of the slate 's next five capital budgets going to school buildings or
assuming $20 million in excess lot·
tery profits are·available annually.
• Elementary Reading Improvement Program: A $100 million pro·
gram focused on improving the reading skills of children in first through
third grades, it would identify reading problems, intervene as needed
and evaluate the results . -Attracting
the most attention has been the way
the plan pays for it's additional
expenditures.· The package offers
options to school boards in financing
local shares. hikes in several taxes
and cuts in other taxes.
Seeking more stability in local
school funding. the Voinovich plan
offers school boards new financial
tools to put on local ballots. Among
the new tools are "exempt levies" -

FOR EFFECT - Georgeann Blair, an art teacher at North
Ridgeville High School, scratched an Imaginary blackboard as she
testified before the Ohio House Education Committee Wednesday. at the Statehouse. (AP)
• Sales Tax Jncrcasc : The center·

not subject to the current state law piece or the plan. it raises the slate
preventing property taxes from rising sales ta• one percent with the $1.1
with infJation - and " limited hillion increase earmarked for
growth .. levies .. ones that expand at ·schools. Busincs~s would pay 1,1bout
a fixed percentage.
30 percent of the sales tax hike in

Ohio.
• Business Property Tax Increase:
Proposed halving of tflC husiness
properly tax rollback of 10 percent.
Savings to the stillc: $103 million a
(Continued on Page 3)

Ground broken
What you think: What do you think of Tuppers Plains'
future? What kind of businesses does your community need?
for new sewer
sysleril in village.
'

Project removes
final roadblock to
development in
Tuppers Plains
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Slaff

Ground was to be broken this
morning for the new sewer system in
Tuppers Plains. This IICW system is
exll!"'ted by many to break the last
boun~ary for growth in the eastern
Meigs County community.

_ Abuilding ban in Tuppers Plai'ns
has been in place for over 20 years,
and the completion of thi• $2.7 million project will lift that· ban. allowing the construction of new homes,
and it is hoped by many, businesses.
The project will be funded by
Issue II IROnies. as well as funds fro!R
the Ohio Water Development Authority, Ohio Public Works Commission,
Ohio Department of Agriculture Rural Development (formerly Farmers
Home Administration) and Commu·
nity Development Block Grant funds.
The only cost .to the customer will
be the cost of connecting their residence to a sewer tap. Assisted fund·
ing is expected to be available to
"I'd like to see a sit-down, famthose needing financial assistance in
Ily
restaurant in Tuppers Plain • .
connecting to the system. ·
We
also need something for
"A
prison
here
would
be
a
good
development.
Some
people
Once completed. the gravity now
not
want
progress,
but
Meigs
County
needs
It,
if
anyone
teenagers
...a place where they
might
and lagoon project will provide sew·
work
In
corrections,
and
I
think
that
go
where
there are activities
does.
We
have
children
who
can
.er service to approximately 200 proJ&gt;for them, like a bowling alley."
be
great.
We
also
need
a
drug
store
or
supermarket
and
a
would
erties within the imme.diatc Tuppers
hardware store. We need to get·things moving here."
' Michele Guess
Plains community.
Charles and Jean Mt.igrage
Tuppers Plains
Fields Construction of Kitts Hill is
Tuppers Plains
Cashier, BP station
the primary contractor on the project.
at a cost of $2.06 million.
·
The same firm constructed a dif·
ferent type of sewer system in Rut· al funding from the USDA Rural pletcd hy this winter, John Lentes. State Route 6R I.
land several years ago. Fields' cost is Development will be sought to pay auorney for the district said last
The di&gt;trict has discussed the posover the original estimate ror con~ lor the difference .
month . Con~truction is expected 10 sibility ufpruviding 'scrv icc toAr.plc
The project will be largely com- begin on the lagoon site, located on Tree Estates, a suhdivision just outstruction of $1 .98 million. Addition-

r

'

"Tuppers Plaine has a lot of
growth potential. I would like to
see a clinic or hospital branch. I
think a hardware store would be
a possibility too. We 1110 need a
drug atore. With the Industrial
park developing, I think we'll
also see a lot of jobs springing
up In .Tuppers Plains. •
Marvin KHbaugh
Selea representative
Bibbee Motor Co.,
Tuppers Plelns
and former buaineaa owner

side of Tuppers Plains, now under
development hy local husincssman
Frank Herald.

Mason County phone c.ustomers
coming closer to toll-free service
By MINDY KEARNS
OVP News Editor

MASON. W.Va.- Thanks to a
decision·by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Bell
Atlantic customers on the 773-telephone exchange came a step closer lo
being able to call nearby Metgs
· • County without paying long·dtStance
charges. U.S . Rep . Bob Wise
announced.
Wise, D· W.Va ., has been working
with the FCC to improve the local
calling plan for the residents, which
inc udes the Mason. Clifton and West
Columbia areas.
"In light of the longstanding a~d
substantial local interests that exiSt
bcitween Mason and the neighboring
towns in Ohio, I believe that the
• FCC's decision is clearly in the pub·
lie interest," Wise said.
"These towns essentially consti·
lute one large consolidated communi!)', with as many as half of the area's
residents living in one state and
working in the other," he added.
"These residents already shop,
bank and select their doctor without

•

regard .to state or municipal boundaries," Wise said. "Local phone scr- .
vice should do the same."
Danny Walker with the Wes.t Vir·
ginia Public Service Commission
said today that he received a call from
the co"ngressman's office Wednesday,
but has nqt yet seen a copy qf the
FCC's decision .
."Until I see the paperwork. I can't
be sure, but I expect it's what is n~d­
ed for the holdup that's been taking ·
place," Walker said.
Walker said .if it is the necessary
papers. Bell Atlantic can begin tariff
filing on an expedited . basis. He
added unless there are some technical factors on Bell Atlantic's part, service should he in effect at the e nd of
.summer.
"It should be in effect no longer
than the end of August, or sooner,"
Walker stated.
Bell Atlantic hegan the effort to
establish the local phone service
between Mason and the Pomeroy
exchange 'in November 1994. The
action by the FCC should resolve any

•

final" phone limitations that the area's
residents have experienced.
·"The old system of charging long· ·
distance rates to people calling from
('Aason to Pomeroy faik:d to recognize the communication !!!leds of area
residents," Wise said. "The old
arrangement was a Constant source o(
inconvenience, irritation and unnec·
essarily high telephone costs to local
residents and businesses."
Toll-free calling was established
from certain Meigs County
exchanges to the Mason area in Feb·
ruary, while the New Haven 882·
exchange began dialing Meigs toll·
free in the spring through Citizens
Telcom. Meigs residents are still
unable to dial the 882•exchange,
however.
Walker said the phone company
serving Meigs County was not under
the same "maze of restrictions" as
Bell Atlantic, enabling it to offer the

service sooner.
Walker said that as soon as addi·
tiona! details are known, they will be
announced.

AFTERNOON SHADOWS -A paddlewheel
excursion boat passed beneath a bridge as it
moved down the Ohio River near downtown

Cincinnati at high noon Wedneaday, leaving a
shadow effect on the bridge supports. (AP)

.

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