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llwl

Sunct.y, June 23, 1

Pomeroy • Mhillllport • Gallpolle, 0H • Point PIIIUnt, WV

Dr. A. J. Rush..ew·· d~ro~~·o.·
in llt!lrition, health and filllen. but
phlces spocilll emphasis on preventive medicine, includin&amp; herblll aJid
wellness-oriented leehniques.
In addition, Dr. Rush was previOIIIIy employed IS an emergency
medicine physician at the Kaiser
. Permanente Southern Clllifornia
Mediclll Group in Bellflower, Calif.
While in this position, she worked

·-----------------------~----------------------------~
a strong pan of the community
in a high volume, inner-city atmos-

phere where she wu exposed to a
variety of medical llld traumatic
emergencies.
She also served u the director of
the Disaster Plannin1 Committee for
the Belleflower facili ty.
"Opening my_ own office will
give me the opportunity to build longlasting relationships with the resi -

dents of the tri&lt; OIInly area."
Dr. Rush hiS thrr:e chilchn, Robe•plaincd Dr. Rush.
by, 14, Danny, 8, both studenu 11
'"The main objec1i ve fOf bod! Christ Academy in Point Pleaaant,
Pleasant Valley Hospital and myself and Alexandra (~). 3. She also
is to offer quality healthcare services bu tine step-children. NichollS, 8,
Scott, 6 and Jamie, 6, who resicle in
10 the loci! community."
'
Dr. Rush and ber husband, David California.
Dr. Rush's J)lreniS, America IIIII
Surdyb, M.D., an orthopedic sill'· .
geon at PVH, currently reside in Rio George Jordan, live in ·l'llriot, IIIII
Grande.
that played an iategral p1r1 in her

decision to return to ~ area.
"My husband would have been
plewd with the advancements which
._ve been made in medicine over the
put years commented Mrs. W~hi me...
"He was a flTDI believer in being

know that Dr. Rush will be . . .~
commiued." • ·
For more information
Rush's office, or 10 make an ~p~:ioin~
men!, call (614) 44-0757.

Ohio Lottery

I.

Johnson sets
new world
record In track

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Sparta on P~ge 5

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Super Lotto:
1·10.1.21·21-35
Klcl1u:
9-2-7-3+2
Plck3:
3-2·2
Plck4:
5-7-9-8

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Partly cloudy tonight,

chlnce of lhon••· Low In

the eos. Tunday, aunny.
· High In 1M eo..

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FOIIlL Yotl

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Vol. 47, NO. 41
1 Stcilon, 10 Plgea

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35eente
AGlnnett Co. Newapapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 24, 1996

Southern Board.votes to. cut. bond issue lnillage
1997 F150

"AIR C()NDITION AND MUCH MORE"
WAS $17,365.00

1996 RANGER

1996 BRONCO

"EDDIE BAUER WITH EVERY OPTION I"
WAS $32,040.00

"REAR BUMPER, 4 CYL, BASE TRUCK"
WAS $11,085.00

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~24I 995°

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1996 ESCORT SPORT

1996 EXPLORER

PRE-OWNED SPECIALS
1993 FORO FESTIVA, 5-SPEED, CLEAN .................................................... $4,800.00
1!194 FORD F250, 4X4, XLT, AUTO., LOADED .......................................... $18,800.00
1994 FORO F150, 4X4, XLT, LOAOE0 ..................................................... ~$14,800.00
1990 FORD F150, XLT, LOADED ...........;..................................................... $7,495.00
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1991 UNCOLN IIK7, AUTO., LOADED~.................................................... $10,495.00

"AIR CONO., TILT, LOADED"
WAS $13,715.00

1992 FORD TAURUS, GL, AIJTO., LOADED............................................... $7,495.00
1994 MITSUBISHI ECUPSE, AUTO., LOADE0............... ~ ........................ $10,496.00
1993 FORD TEMPO, 2 DR., AIR, NICE CAR ............................................... $5,750.00

1993 PLYMOUTH DUSTER. V&amp;, LOADED ••..•••.••••••••.••••••••••.••••••••• ,••••••••••••• $8,995.00'

"XLT, AUTO., 4 OR., LOADED"
WAS $27,860.00

1995 FORD F150, 4X4, XLT, AUTQ., LQW MILES...........:........,................$16,500.00 .·
1991 FORD F150, 4X4, AUTO., XLT, LOADED .................:.......................:.$11,800.00

. 1994 FORD RANGER, XLT, LOADED.......................................................... $8,995.00
1995 DODGE STRATUS, ES, V6, ONLY 9,000 MILES .............................. $16,495.00
1994 S10 SUPERCAB LS, 4X4, AIR .............. :...... ri .... ................................ . $14,995.00
1995 FORD F150, XLT,4X4, LOW MILES .........;...:....................................$15,995.00

1996 TAURUS
.

"FULL POWER, LOADED"
WAS $20,590.00'

AU FACTORY REPURCHASE VEHICLES REDUCED FOR THE THIS SALE!II!
96 TAURUS, 96 SABLE, 95 TAURUS, 95 SABLE, 95 ESCORT, 95 CONTOUR,
85 MYSllQUE, 96 MYS11QUE,- THEY AU ~OTTA GOIII .

1996 AEROSTAR

That's right! An old name Is bringing a new
game to Ripley, WV and we need helpll

"XLT, quAL AIR, LO~DEO"

WAS $20,197.00

Applications for the following positions
are ·now being. accepted.
SALES DEPARTMENT - Sales persons for
new ana used vehicle sales.
SERVICE DEPARTMENT - Technicians for
vehicie repair. Ford-Mercury Lincoln Experience a plus.
Contact fluy. N. Sayre Jr
. ..or Mike Bing
.

1996 CROWN VIC. LX
•

"AM/FM CASS., CRUISE, POWER LOCKS"
WAS $16,195.00

"FULL OPTION VEHICLE"
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WAS $25,510.00

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RIPLE.V: WV

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Heavy rains swamp
·lower Gallia ~CountY

·Goeglein
slip work
underway
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
. Slip t:epair llld road reconsttuction
work has slarted in the area of a slip
which limited traffic to one lane on
the recently closed section of old
Stale Route 7 south of Five Points,
according 10 slate ltighway officials.
The section of c.ollapsed roadway
lhree miles nonh of Pomeroy. known·
as the "Goeglein slip," sank approximately eight inches after heavy rains
saturated the area May 4, according
10 Don Tillis Ohio Depanment of
Transponation project supervisor on
the 1-77/U.S. 33 Connector Project
The .old. road was close(! las!
Tuesday to all traffic at liive Points. ·
H0wever, the road remains open
from 'The Beacpn station in Pomeroy
. lo the .Watering Hole bar south of
Five Poin~ but is open to local!raf.
fie only, according to Tillis.
Excavation work began late las!
week at the slip, after t!le old road
was closed and all through lraffic was
detoured to the new 2.25-mile U.S.
33fl·77 connector project between
Five Points and Rock Springs. The
work on the slip is considered part of
!he connector project and is being
completed by Kokosing Construe·
tion, Fredricktown.
·
"Backhoes and heavy equipment
were in the area over the 'weekend
removing·all of the old asphalt. Once
!hat work is completed, crews will
beJin excavation work, widening the

SECTION- This siCtlon of formar
Stats
7, Jl!st north of the Watering Hole
bar near
Polnta, Ia closed while repairs are
made to a slip in the·old roadway. The old SR
area with fill for reconstruction ofthe
road. Plans also call for cutting the
slope of the bank beside the road 21 to control erosion," said Tillis.
Afler repairs are completed, the
section of highway will be abandoned
10 the county . and will become a
county road. The road will be known
as Chester Road, wilh @county road
number to be assigned after il is
turned over 10 the county, according
to Meigs County Engineer Bob
. \

7 between Five Pointe and Pomeroy Is open to
:local traffic only while road reconstruction is
being completed.
·

project, while construction ts comEason .
According to Tillis, the road will pleted on the eastbound lanes near
· follow its former route and will not Five Points.
. Seeding work is being completed
have limited access from !he east·
on
sections of embankment on the
bound lanes of the connector road.
project.
while excavation work and
This will preserve !he traditional
route from Five Pomls lo downtown sub grade work is being completed
Pomeroy for area drivers.
.
. near the eastbound off ramp, accord·
·
·
Meanwhile, work is continuing on ing to Tillis .
Completion
date
for
cpns1ruc1ion
completion of the four-lane connector project. Only a one-mile section on the four lane project is still Sci for
of four-lane highway is open on the Sept. 6.

GOP leaders pledge to dig into files dispute.
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1996 CONTOUR ·.~

By JIM .FREEMAN
to'the existing high schOQI. Southern voters,-earlier asked to pay $1(180,000 classroom into'an art classroom or other classroom.
Sentinel Newa Staff ,
of the 'proposed $7,370,800 building project, will now be aslfd 10 pay
:The proposed building program is similar to one cum:ntly underway in
The S~uthe~ Local Board of Education voted Friday to change figures $3,719,000, or approximalely 50 percent.
.
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the Eastern Local School Dislricl, approved in March.
·
on a dtstnct-wtde bond levy ballot for an Aug. 6 special election. .
Meanwhile, supporters of the new school hope the added stale money The'board almost missed !he deadline 10 change !he ballot language. havlt means Soulhern voters will be asked .to pay 5.42 mills for a proposed and resulting lower millage- will give the issue a boost in the polls.
ing until the close of business today 10 amend its resolution to comply with
building project instead of6.1 mills- a difference of slightly more than half
According 10 Lawrence: "(5.42 mills) looks a lot beuer !han 6.1 mills." the printer's deadline 10 have ballots printed before absentee votes can be
a mill.
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,
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The proposed two-story, 650-studenl K-8 building would include 22 reg· received, according to Meigs County Board of Elections Director Rita Smith.
The Secretary of Stale's office said !he figure can be revised if !he bai"The ame,nded resolution has already been delivered tb(County Auditor , ular classrooms, lWSJ science laboratories, six special education rooms, three
Nancy Campbell) and the election boll(d." said Superintendent James reading rooms, an art room, a music f09m, a computer laboratory, a lots have not been printed or notice of election published, Smith added.
Lawrence.
library/media center, a 300-seat gymnasium with locker rooms, a cafete·
'The printer was ready 10 make the ballots last week and awaiting a call
· _The change reflec(s a decision by the Stale Controlling Board last week rialaudiwrium and numerous· storage areas.
·
from the election board 10 proceed, she commented.
r
to mcrease by $461,000 Southern's amount of building assistance funds. This
The plan also includes additions to the existing high school, including a
Present were Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill and board members Susie ·
increases the stale's share of the proposed building to $3,651.800. ·
new library/media center, new computer laboratory, renovating the existing · Grueser. Dave Kuczma, Bob Collins and Many Morarity, who all voted 'to
• At issue is a dislrict-wi~e K-8 building plus a 4,900-square-fool addition media center into a business/typing classroom and renovating !he business amend the ballot resolution. Absent was board member C.T. Chapman.

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summaries of more than 400 Reagan
and Bush · administration officials
were "political operatives who were
known for digging up din in the
past. "
·
·
·
Administration officials insisted
there is no evidence of wrongdoing
and accused Republicans of inaking
unfounded claims for political gain .
While House Chief of Staff Leon
Panetta, appearing on CBS, said il
was a "sad commentary" lhat ·pre·
surnptive GOP presidential nominee
Bob Dole had become a "hatchetman" for the party. Dole las! week
pointed lo what .he said was a "pat·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Repub·
licans promised to shed light on
whether the While House was
engaged in political mischief in
obtaining FBI files and pressed the
· White House to tum over more con·
fidential documents.
· "Hopefully !here is nothing wrong
here, but it sure doesn 'I look good,"
Sen. Orrin Ha!Ch, R-Uiah, chairman
oJ the Senate Judiciary Cornmiuee,
said S.unday.
•· Hatch, speaking on CBS' "Face
the Nation," sail! that !he lwo White
House employees accused of-improperly obtaining the FBI ba,ckground

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tern of ethical arrogance. " in the
Clinton White House.
·
"I think that's pari of the vcn·
omous atmosphere that we have in
this town right now," Panetta said of
the attention given the issue. ·
Rep. William Clinger. R-Pa .. head
of the House investigation into the
files , said on NBC's "Meet the
Press"lhal he would continue 10 push
the White House to answer the ques·
tion, "Was there a darker motive ·
here?''
"The president is very angry that
fundamental questions cannot be
answered," While House spokesman

GALLIPOLIS (AP) - Heavy
rains in Lawrence and Gallia counties
in southern Ohio forced creeks oul of,.
their batiks, damaging bridges and
roads, authorities said.
A news release from Gallia Coun·
ly Sheriff James Taylor's office said
the areas most affected by the storms
early Sunday were Guyan and Ohio
townships in southern Gallia County.
Three to 4 inches of rain fell in
· about three l!ours Sunday on ground
that had been saturated from rain
throughout the day, said John Sikora. a hydrometrologist allhe National Weather Service office in
Charleston, W.Va.
About six bridges were damaged
or destroy'&amp;~ and anumber 9f culverts
wete washed·out, the release said.
No injuries were reported.
The water had receded in Gallia
County, but more rain is' •forecast
today, said Terry Hemby, director o·f
the county's Emergency Management Agency. A flash flood watch
was in effect for Gallia, Jackson and
Lawrence counties .
Damage to roads and bridges is
estimated at least $1 million. Hemby
said. Local and slate officials were in
the townships today to assess the
damage.
. Local agricultural officials were
~hecking crop dam~ge. Livestock
lossiis were minimal. Taylor said.
Most of the damage in Lawrence
County was to crops, said EMA

Supply shortfall correction. .
aiding decline in gas prices

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prices at the nation's gasoline pumps fell by
more
than a penny a gallon over the lastlwo weeks, according to an oil indusMike McCurry said today. However,
.
McCurry said he would leave it up to try survey.
The
average
price
for
all
grades,
including taxes, was $1 .35 per gallon
independent counsel Kenneth Swr to
on
Friday,
according
10
the
Lundberg
Survey of prices at 10,000 gas stations
find the answers because anything the
nationwide.
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White House did would be subject to
Supply shonages of early this year have boen corrected, and pressure for
further hearings, subpoenas and
lower
prices will continue now that Iraq has hcen allowed to sell oil for the
inquiries, "misery. "
first
tiine
since its 1990 invasion of Kuwait, anal-rsl Trilby Lundberg said
"The While House certainly
Sunday.
hopes and expects !hal Mr. Starr will
Prices increased by about 21 cents per gallon this year before peaking at
move promptly 10 get answers,"
just over $1.38 per gallon in the May 24 Lundberg survey.
McCurry said.
Unleaded regular gas at self-service pumps fell to an average nf just under
ClingersaidlheFBlholdsfileson
$1.29
cents per gallon, !he latest survey showed. Mid-grade unleaded aver·
some 75 million Americans, and the
aged
about
$1.39 at self-serve pumps and premium unlcaded '$1.47.
ease&gt;with which two political opera·
Full~ervice
prices averaged about $1.61 a gallon for regular u~lcadcd , ·
tives got access to them " is uhi·
mately going· to resonate with the · $1.69 a gallon for mid-grade, and $1.76 a gallon for premium .
American people."

AEP's transportation division lends hand
to annual ~1-eanup of Ohio ·River.shores
American Electric Power's River al various sites in Ohio, Wesl Vir- . Others who helped on 'the Safety
Transponation Division took a lead ginia, Illinois and Indiana during the Leader were John Rey,nolds, port
role in the recent eighth annual Ohio effort to clean up the banks banks of caplain, Randy Wedge, harbor boa!
operator, and Brian Ttilodzieski, son
the Ohio River.
River Sweep.
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A key element of the s_weep was a of maintenance manager Hank
Sponsored by the Ohio River Val·
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ley Water Sanitation Commission, the donation of equipment and lime for Tulodzieski.
',., ; .
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"We were happy ' to be of ass isevent provided a riverbank cleanup of the ihird consecutive year by AEP' s
lance,"
said Rhodes. "The Ohio Rivthe 981-mile'length of the river from River Transportation Division.
The' AEP harbor boa! MN Safely ·er is a vital pan,of our lnlnsponation
Piusburgh, Pa., to Cairo, Dl. ·
·
Leader
towed a barge equipped with infrastructure. It is imponanllhat we
Twenty-seven AEP River Trans·
a
crane
10
lift out larger items - such lake care of it - no! just for today•.
ponation Division employees and
as
mud-filled
tires and scraps of met· but for future generations."
their family members paniciJl!ltedin
Among the items found during
the cleanup that was coordinated al al - tha! were too heavy 10 be pulled
River
Sweep at Point Pleasant were
from
the
riverbank
by
hand.
The
Point Pleasant. In all, more than 75
buckets,
a wooden ladder, steel
Safety
Leader
traveled
a
seven-mile
individuals tnok part in June 15
cables,
52
tires,
a basketooll, a TV set,
stretch of the river from Lakin to
cleanup effort.
"We had a good turnout," said Henderson, W.Va.. loading two Ions auto pans including seals and a from
end, metal 4rums, a shopping cart, a'
AEP Kiver Transpor1ation Division of trash onto its barge as, il went.
rural mailbox, a 15 mph sJieed limit
Gale
Rhodes,
manager
of
the
divi·
·
stores supervisor Marty Gilley, who
coordinated the Point Pleasant sion, and Paul "Sonny" Haynes, oper· sign, a small boat ,dock, a hoi water
. RIVER PICKUP - ,A cmtelttllchld to Amer·
cleanup. "~'s a good bunch of ations s.uptrvisor, waded into the riv· '!Bilk and !' plastic wading pool.
er to hQok heavier Item~ onto the · Several Riv'er Sweep panicipanu .lcan Electric Pow.r'a MN s.t.lv !-••dlr lifted
people at this C'(FnL"
• mud-filled automobile tlra onto • blrOe dur· '
• More than 1.30 AEP employees cmne, oj,enlteilby Steve Newsome. also observed the presence of a fam- lng River ~WMfl 'IMI:the barge picked up up
ily of Canada geese on the river.
and their family members lOOk pan
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,.,. ....-"' ..:r~ •.. rl r"" • ' " ~ '·· .... " ~-..... ••· ·• '") '"'·•·'• "!],,· ~' ·11 ot •~.:.

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Director Ross Butcher. The damage
had n'ot been tallied.
•
The high water also damaged
three or four bridges, Butcher said.
In Wesl Virginia, a Cabell Coun·
ty woman died after being swepl
away by flood waters in Mi,lton,
while heavy rains quickly dumped
several inches of rain in soulbllrn
regions of !he stale, authorities said .
The wom·an 's body was found in
the Lower Creek near Milton early
Sunday, police said. The wo!Jlan's
name haS not been released pending .
nolificaliOI) of family.
Rains swelled the creek early
Sunday as a summer lhundorstorm
dumped as much as 2 inches of rain
in sqme ~reas during 1\-0nc;.hQU.!.IIC,Q• , •
od.
Water was at least 6 feet deep hi
pans of the county, said Bob Legg.
assistant chief of the Milton Volunteer Fire Dcpanment.
" It was justa downpour for about
45 minutes," Legg said. "There was
a car that washed on lop of a fann
tra.ctor. Probably an·togcthcr about 12
cars in the creek were washed away.".
The Cabell County woman had'
justleflthe home of her boyfriend's
family when her Ford Escon was·
engulfed by roilin g waters from tl]c ,
crcck ,.said Cabell Sheriff's Sgt. Bob
Adkins.
"According·to witnesses, (the car)
went into the water and got lodged," .
Adkins said. "She then tried to get
out of the vehicle."

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Commentary

~.June24,18tl

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OHIO We&lt;1ther
1\Jetlday, JUlie %5

MOnct.y, June 24, 1 •

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Pomeroy • Ulddlepor"., Ohto

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Acc:IIW~ r - ror daytime conditions and hip temperlltua

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MICH.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814·992·2158 • Fax: 192·2157

.!lr ·

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
·Publleher
.CHAR LEN£ HOEFLICH
Gene111l M-ger

"wtw do yoo think m.t lileans?"

By Jeck Andel eon
and ,l8n Molfu

MARGARET LEHEW
Control!«

Little-guy investors
sta.nd to be winners in
stock market probe

one cabinet member asked a ,colWASHINGroN- When Thomas le.,ue siftina beside him.
F. "MICk" McLarty served as White
Some officials theorize that the
House chief of staff, he acquired the White House W811ts to hetd off abusmoniker of Mack the Nice. But as es like those committed by Energy
senior counsel to President Clinton Secretary Hazel O'Leary, whose
lind the government's chief liaison to potentate-like tl'llvels .with large
' the International Olympic Commit- · entourages has prompted White
lee, McLarty has hll1dly been.meek. House reprimands and Republican
·
Sources say that at a recent cabi- investigations.
net meeting. MeLany told the freMcLarty, who confirmed the
quent-fliers in the room to unpack essence of the cabinet discussion, told
. their suitcases if they were hoping to us it was part of the "American spirattend the Olympic Garnes under the it" to attend the games,-- though not
guise of government business.
necessarily at government expense"I know a lot of you are going to He explained that the criteria for
want to go to the Olympics," McLar- deciding who wilt" attend the games
ty said. "But obviously we wi.ll be ~ill be made on an individual basis,
limiting participation." Then t.:fcLar- favoring those involved in security
ty tossed out the fact that the same and transportation issues.
rule applies to the Democratic con"That's quite a bit different than
vention in Chicago. Not even McLar- a cabinet secretary going to ·see the
ty's diplomatic demeanor could quell I 00-yard daSh," said MeLany. His
the intense speculation that ensued lead role in organizing die largest
over why some senior officials will peacetime event in modem ,history
not be among the 2 million visitors has included th,e drafting of rules on
expected to travel to Atlanta.
tickets and travel for senior

ment officials. ·
.
A White House soun:e provided
us with a copy or a conrtdeptial
memo that was distributed by White
House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta to
the heads of executive branch depairtments and agencies, as well as to
'"White House staffers who could also
be affected.
.
"Many of you, and some or your
staff, are likely to be invited to
attend events and functions at the
01 ympics this summer," the twopage memo begins. "Very few events
will require official attendance by
anyone in the Administration: In
light 'Of the very limited need for the
presence of any Cabinet officials in
Atlanta during the games, your attendance ~hould be cleared with the
White House prior to your de,Par-

ture. n

.

Federal law enforcement personnel, whose jobs include the " preventing of terrorist incidents," obviously pass muster. Others must hope
to qualify as part of the "support"
role behind Clinton's or Vice Presi-

By ROB WELLS
AP Buslnese Writer

'

FIELD OF DREAMS

· WASHINGTON- For months, the lobby of the Securities and Exchange
Commission has been full of men in dark suits, toting luggage with New
York airport tags and whispering into cell phones.
Wall Street, welcome to a Washington inquiry.
. :. As the two-year investigation of the Nasdaq stock market and its parent
n~ars an end, small investors pouring their money into the stock m111ket for
retirement already stand to be the big winners.
.
.. With one of every three American families invested in the market. one
of the biggest investigations in SEC history is expected to result in lower
co6ts, and a more level playing field, for many of the trades these smaller
investors make.
•
The SEC is not expected to fine the National Association of Securities
Dealers Inc., Nasdaq's parent. Instead, in a proposed settlement, the agency
intends to publicly rebuke the NASD for failing to enforce key rules, sources
familiar with the investigation say.
·
SEC officials have said they expect the investigation to be wrapped up
by August.
But behind the scenes, ever since the SEC and a related Justice Department investigation began in October 1994, the SEC has worked actively to
force a major house cleaning. ·
.• In the c0 urse of settlement talks, "there will be some background meeting of minds '' about new rules to increase competition in the trading on Nasdaq, says John C. Coffee Jr. of Columbia University Law School, a top securities expert.
.
Whatever happens legally, the case marks a turning point for Nasdaq, by
some measures the world's second biggest stock market after the New York
Stock Exchange- and the home to superstars of the nation 's new econo•
my such as Microsoft Corp. and Nets~ape Communications Corp.
The SEC and Justice investigations boil down to two broad questions:
- · Were big Wall Street dealers deliberately tinkering with stock quotes ·
to boost their profits, thereby forcing investors to pay too much for trades?
- Was the NASD an old boys club, reluctant to crack down on powerful Wall Street firms that flouted trading rules, thus allowing them to gain
an unfair advantage over smaller traders?
,
·
By Nat Hentotf
; referred to 'specialists -- because of
The NASD plays a crucial role in the U.S. st'!l'k market: it owns Naswhile much of the credit for the the added cost to the HMO -- until it
daq , a highly popular market wh.ei'e $2.4 trillion changed hands last year. demolition of the Clintons' health- was too late. Doctors requiring perAnd it also serves as Wall Street s own pohce force, overlookmg 510,000 care reform in 1994 was due to the mission from above for necessary' but
first lady -- and her spectacularly
brokers and 5,400 firms.
NASD investigators work with and refer cases to the SEC, the main fed- over-organized aide-de-camp, Ira .
NatHentoff
eral regulator - an important rel;uionship given the SEC's small enforce- Magaziner -- much of the discontent
so'· among the citizenry at large was
ment staff.
.·
'Ibe charges against NASD strike at the fat mess of the market. NA . ts
intensified by Harry &amp; Louise.
costly procedures on a patient are
accused of not punishing Nasdaq dealers who don't honor thetr ~uoted pnces·
This fictitious but mordantly per· sometimes turned down on the' phone
for stocks, known as " backing away." It also is accused of fathng to punsuasive husband.-and-wifc team by non-medical personnel going by
ish firms for reporting trades late.
.
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broadcast commercials sponsored by the HMO's rigid rules.
Among changes the NASD already has made: .beefi~~ up tis pol~ce arm
the Health Insurance Association of
Spearheading th.e. drive in Caliby hiring former SEC commissioner Mary Schaptro, gmng the pohce arm
America, In discussing the devasta- fornia to put patients at the center of
new independent powers and appointing a separate board of dtrectors. . · · tions to be visited on the populace by managed care is a union, the Cali·
Quickly, Schapiro made her mark, saymg she would ht~ 131 new enforcethe Clintons' plan, Harry &amp; Louise fomiaNursesAssociation . TheCNA
mept officials, adding $10 million to her budget and forgmg closer ttes wtth
scared Democrats as well as Repub- -- and its ~llies among consumer
criminal prosecutors.
licans.
organizations -- have gathered o•er .
The other element of the probe examines whether Nasdaq dealers con·
Harry &amp; Louise were the creations 800,000 signatures to qualify its
spired to keep the. "buy" and "~II " prices of stock artificially wide, which
of Goddard-Ciaussen!First Tuesday, Patient Protection Act for the Novemincreases the tradtng costs that mvcstors must pay.
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a public relations and consulting · .her ballot. (Four hundred thousand
Justice's antitrust division took the lead there, announcmg a broad revtew
firm . Now Harry &amp; Louise have been valid signatures were needed.) More
of the over-the-counter stock market. which includes Nasdaq. ·
hired put by the'jr creators to do hat - than 40 percent of the total was colJustice launched settlement negotiations in August with securities firms,
tie against a California ballot initia- • lected by nurse volunteers. Nurses,
according to. court records. But industry, officials don 't know when those
tive -- the Patient Proteciion Act -- on the front line of health care, spend
might' end, and Justice won't comment .
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which intends to set a standard for the much more actual time with ·patients
Agwnst this backdrop, the SEC last Septemller unvetled a sweepmg set
nation by making HMOs and otller than doctors do. Among the elements
of rule proposals to enhance competition on Nasdaq and other markets .
managed-care operations fully of the Patient Protection Act, which
Customers' orders would be allowed to mingle directly with professionaccountable to their patients.
Harry &amp; Louise will wittily try to
als' orders. Prices quoted on private computer trading s~stems. generally a
HMO abuses have been reported undermine, arc:
bciter deal than the public Nasdaq quotes, would be avatlable to everyone.
in newspaper series throughout the
An end to gag orders that prevent
The NASD has its own set of proposed reforms. a system destgned to
country. The core indictment is that physicians from telling patients all
improve handling of customer orders. but it doesn 't go as far as the SEC.
the priority of many managed-care the preferable trea!ment options that
Regardless of which proposal prcva1ls. says Lmda Lerner, attorney for
organizations is to cut costs -- with arc open to them -- including ex pena Nasdaq trading ft.rm All-Tech Investment, "when it's all over, the ov.~r­
medical care l)eing secondary. For. · sivc ones.
·
the-counter market ls going to look very dtfferent than what II ts today.
example, patients have not been
Bonuses would no longer be giv-

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Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are "riten for United
Feature·Syndicate, Inc.

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The return of Harry &amp; Louise _ ______;.

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Today in history

By Joseph Spear

The District of Columbia is currently
suffering from ,EPS.
Today, is Monday, June 24, the I 76th day of 1996. There are 190 days
That's
Extended Pothole Season.
left in the year.
Hundreds of holes that were gouged
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 24, 1948, Communist forces cut off all land and water routes in the capital city's roadways by last
between West Germany and West Berlin, prompting the United States to winter's storms arc still with us and
will be here for the IOIIfists who show
organize a massive airlift of supplies into the city's western sector.
up for the Fourth of July fireworks
. On this date: ·
extravaganza.
In 1314, the forces of Scotland's King Robert I defeated the English in
Some are so huge that they could
the Battle of Bannockburn.
be
filled
with water and converted to
In 1509, Henry VIII was crowned king of England.
catfish farms. Residents have been
In 1647 ;Margaret Brent, a niece of Lord Baltimore, was ejected from
tossing ·in mulch and bricks and
the Maryland Assembly after dem1111ding a place and vote in that governstones
and mauresses ·to lessen the
ing body.
.
·
dropoffs
4nd perhaps even coins al)'l
In 1793, the first republican constitution in France was adopted.
keepsakes to appease the hubcap
In 1842, author-journalist Ambrose Bierce was born in Meigs County,
gods.
.
Ohio.
.
·
·
The
suburbs
caught up with pol·
In 1908, the 22nd and t"th president of the United Sl3tes, Grover Cleverepairs
mariy
weeks ago. But the
hole
land died in Princeton, NJ., at age 71.
·
/.
District·
is
'different.
It has many,
I~ 1940, Ftince signed an~annistice with I~y during World War II,
many prpblems, the chief of which is ·
In 1968, Resurrection City, a shantytown constructed as part of the Poor
its
mayot, an ex-con named Marion
People's March on Washington D.C.• was closed down by authorities. '
·
8111fY.
A year ago, he promised a "72In 1975, 113 people were killed _when an Eastern Airlines Boei?g 727
hour tum81ound" for pothole repairs.
crashed while attempting to land dunng a thunderstorm at New York s 1ohn
You
report 'em Monday, they're
F Kenne;ly International Airport.
•
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fixed
by Th~y.
· In !983, the space shuttle Challen~er- canyi?ll America's first.WOman
What a typical, Slid, monstrous
in space, S~lly K. Ride -coasted to a safe laadmg at Edwards Air FOO:e
joke.
Base in Cahfornta.
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In' Washington. D.C., the po,licc
department has oply enough money
to keep a third of its Hect on the
streets. You don 't get a voice record.-

. Joseph Spear
ing when· you phone the police, but
it's almost as bad. Recently, a woman
spoued her previously stolen car
near her house, called the cops, waited a couple of hours; called the cops
again, then.stood helplessly by while
two teen-age thugs w~lked up and
stole her car again. The police never
did show up.
In Washington, D.C., the school
system is a ~isaster -- except for.the
school board, the members of which
are the highest-paid such officials- in
the country. Books m in short sup·ply. There is no money for substitute
teacher.;. The toilets are backed up so
badly in some schools th!lt the students can't lise them,
In ~u_hin~ton, D.C., corp~ !'0'
lit the cttylmotgqe because the refrigerators and crematoriums are in a
swe' of disrep:lir. Traffic lights go on

the blink because the District hasn't
paid its electric bills. Fire companies
are being shut down; courtrooms arc
so filthy that the judges have had' to
doff their robes and scrub; the water
treatment plant is so inadequate that
the city sometimes advise.s citizens to
·boil the water before drinking il
And how docs Mayor Barry
respond to the crisis?
He blames the U.S. Congress
because, he says. the ann~al S6sd
million federal subsidy to the city is
inadequate.
He blames the "District basher.;"
who are always tieing quoted by the
media. " Negative-based publicity,"
he said last January, : ·has cost D.C.
more jobs and destroyed more economic-development possibilities !hap
any 'other single force."
He blames the financial control
board that Congress set up last year
to get the District back on sound fi~­
cal footing . They are "pharaohs," he
recently said;· they should "let our
people go." He also likened them to
Nazis because they demanded tliat he
fire an allegedly incompetent aide

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opponents, the by now legendary paladin of the consumer is eager to do
battle for patients' due prod:ss rights
in health care.
Meanwhile, the California Nu11&lt;cs
As.•ociation ha.&lt; lired an opening salvo at 'Harry &amp; Loui..::
" By contrast with 1994, when
they fir.;! ·sutfaccd, if Loitise ha.&lt; a
lump in her brcasuoday, she may not
find out for two years -- because
some !1M0s won't cover the cost of
a mammogram every ,year --and she
. may have to light to' get her HMO to
refer her to a cancer speciblist for

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Avice· Frecker

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minister and personal friend, the
Rev. Willie Wilson, de,o;cri~ the
control board chairman. fonncr Fed- ·
cral Reserve member Andrew Brimmer, as a "handkerchief-head" and a
"foolish Negro." Wilson also charactcrized Newt Gingrich and two
·congressmen who oversee Districi
affairs as ''Ku, Klux and Klan."
Docs D.C. have .a revenue problem? Well, the District has a higher
per-capita income ($31,136) than
any state in the union. It has the high·
est corporate and individual income ·
taxes and the highest property taxes
in America. It has the highest revenue
per capita. ($8,958) than any state
except Alaska.
·
Is it an expenditure problem?
Wei), D.C. docs have more thari'
40,000 emploj'ees lo service a city of
580,000. That's 10,000 more than
Chicago, 20,000 more than Balti·
more.

·. JOHph Spear • a syndlc~ted
writer for. Newlfiiii"..EIIterprlle

Showers T-Monm Rlin ~,;;,. ~

lila_,.., Prou

Ice

sur:ny

Pt.

Cloudy Cloudy

G~t

Fair skies set 't o prevail
in area until Thursday
By The Associated Pres•

sertonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and
High pressure !&gt;uilding into the sunrise Tuesday at 6:04 a.m.
area will clear Ohio's skies tonigpt ,
Weather forecast:
s~tting the· stage for a mostly sunny
Tonight...Clearing west. Panly
day on Tuesday.
cloudy elsewhere. A chance of
Lows ~night will be in the upper evening showers and thunderstorms
50s to mid-60s, the National Weath- southeast third. Lows from the upper
er Service said. The cooler and drier 50s northwest to mid 60s southeast.
Tuesday...Partly to mostly sunny.
air associated with the high will keep
temperatures on Thesday in the upper Highs from the mid 70s north to the
mid 80s south.
70s to mid-80s.
.
· Extended forecast: .
Fair skies are expected again on
Wednesday...Fair. Lows in the 50s
Wednesday before sl)owers and thunderstorms return on Thursday, fore- with highs upper 70s to mid 80s.
Thursday... A chance of showers
casters said.
The record-high temperature for and thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s
this date at the Columbus weather with highs in the 80s.
Friday...Fair. Lows 55 to 60. Highs
station.was 97 degrees in 1914 while
the record low was 46 in 1982. Sun- from the mid 70s to lower 80s.

Unabomber suspect moved
to jail under tight l!ecurity
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) Amid security that included an
armored .convoy, aerial surveillance
and a motorcycle escort, Theodore
Kaczynski was whisked to a downtown jail to await arraignment on
Unabomber-related charges.
Kaczynski, his hands and feet
shackled and wearing a white bulletproof vest, arrived Sunday on a U.S .
Marshal's jetfrom Montana. In a procession that included at least one helicopter and a black armored van, he
was taken,to a special lockup at· the
Sacramento County jail about six
blocks from the federal courthouse.
There, he will await arraignment
sometime this week on a 10-count
federal indictment, handed down
Tuesday, charging him with transporting. mailing and using bombs in
four Sacramento-linked 'attacks.
It ~barges him in the first fatal
Unabomber attack, a 1985 blast that
killed computer store owner Hugh

By The A11oclated Preas
Seven people, including three
motorcyclists, were killed over the
weekend in traffic accidents reponed
to the State Highway Patrol and other law enforcement agencies.
The fatalities were counted from
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
McCONNELSVILLE - Frank
D. Fitch, 36, of McConnelsville;
when his IJIOiorcycle collided with a
truck on Ohio 60 in Morgan County.
SATURDAY
ALLIANCE - Anthony Gray.
17, of Youngstown, when the stolen
car he·was in left a Stark County road

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who ran human services. Barry\

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Scrutton, and the last fatal bombing,
which killed timber lobbyist Gilbert
Murray in Aprill995.
The Unabombcr is. believe&lt;!
responsible for 16 anacks that killed
three people and injured 23 over 18
years.
Kaczynski, whose trial is not
expected to begin for several months,
co.ul&lt;!, fa&amp;e execution if convicted;,in
either death. However, the Justice
.Department has not said if it will seek
the death penalty.
Lead defense lawyer Quin Den vir
said he he met with. Kaczynski for
about an hour Sunday.
"I stopped by to see if he was
OK,' ' Den.vir told radio station
KFBK.
Denvir declined to say whether
they discussed the case, but said he·
· would focus on assembling a team of
lawyers and preparing the defense, ·
which he likened to "being the first
batter in the first inning."

Traffic accidents kill seven

:

urgent action.
."If Harry &amp; Louise needed acces.&lt;

to care from their HMO today, they
would be 40 percent more likely t(\
report problems in getting needed
treatment, diagnostic tests, and referral to 'spccialisl&lt;.••
The managed-ca re operations
putting Hairy &amp; Louise back on the
air will be investing a lot more money on those and other commercials
than the California Nurses Assck:iation. But the CNA will be helped a lot
hy not having " reformers \' Hillary
Rodham Clinton and Ira Magazincr
on their side.
Nat Hentotr is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest or~ Bill
of Rights.

......... -. ..

The Daily Sentinel

and plunged into a lake while being
pursued by police.
BATAVIA- Mabel E. Hardgrow,
81 , of Cincinnati, in a one-car accident on U.S. 50 in Clertnont County.
WAVERLY- Christopher Tackett, 16, of Piketon, in a two-car accident on Ohio 772 in Pike County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
COLUMBUS- Steven W. Roth,
32, of Columbus~ when his motorcycle and a car colhded on a city street.
LOGAN - .Joyce Brown of
Hilliard, after ·the car she was in
drove into a ravine and caught fire
along a rural Hocking County road.
RITI'MAN -Timothy R. Webb,
23, of Rittman. when his motorcycle
was struck by a train at a crossing in
Rittman . , . .

Stocks

(USPS %t3-M0)

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Fridll)'. Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Vrlley Publiahiag CompanyJGannen Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769, Ph. 992-1156. Second
clals postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
Mtntbtr: The Auociared Prt:!s, and lhe Ohro

Newapaper Auocilllion.

!

POS'I'MASTIER: Send addn:u corrtdions to
The Dail)' Sencinel, Ill Court St:. Pomeroy.

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SUMCBtPTtON RATES
BJ Carrin' or Motor a-1~
One W..k ................................... :.............. $2.00
One Mondl ...... : ............... .................. ...... $8.70
o.. v..-..............................................$104.00

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Ohio 45769.

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SINGLE COPY PRICB
Daily ................................................ 35'C:....
Suhcribtn not detirinJIO pgy lbc QWrier tnay
retni1ln adv..c:e din:ct co The o.ily Sentinel
Oft a ttwee. siJ or ll month bui1. Credi' will be
pvm ania • week.
No subscription by mail permined In arcu
~ homt CMrier ~aVioe il available.

MAILS!IIISCRIPTIONS
.

t-Mo(lt~

.

t3 - .:..............-....... - .................... m .JO

16 - . ..~_,_,,, ,,, ................................ SS3.82

l2 - . ..............-...........................:.s•os.l6

n-.. . . . .

. --Molltc-r
l3 - . ......................................:.......$19.2!

16 - . ....... .......... ...,. ..................._,,U6,61

!..:.........:..................SI09.n

Am Ele Power ...................40 118
Akzo ..................................59118
Ashland 011 .......................39 114
AT&amp;T ...... .-.....;,................ :........63
Bank One ..........................34 314
Bob Evans ......... ;.............. 14 112
Borg-Warnar .....................39 718
Champion lnd ................... 18 314
Charming Shop ..................&amp; 518
c!t,'::ldlng ......................231/4
F
I Mogul ................... 18718
Gannett .............................69 318
Goodyear T6R ..................48 518

K-mart ...............................12 518
Lands End ............................... 24
Umlted Inc .........................21 518
Peoplea BaiiGOfP . ..................23
Ohio Valley Bank ...... :.......32 112
One Valley ...........................;...34
Pram Flnl .................................14
RockWell ..........................58 1[4
Royal Dutch/Sbell ..........152118
Shoney'alnc. ....................111/4
Star Bank ..........................67 1/4
Wendy lnt'l........................191/4
Worthlngton llid. .............21 511

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Stock report• are the 10:~0
a . m . = Pfl)¥lded by Adwat
ofQI

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Tile following land tl'llnSfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton :
Easement, Charles E. and Margaret M. Yost to OPC, Sutton;
Easement, Patrick V. lind Jill Johnson to OPC, Sutton;
Easement, George B. and Marvel
D. Anderson to OPC, Sutton;
Easement, Fern D. and Dorothy L.
Norris to OPC, Sunon;
Easement, Joseph A. Swain to
OPC, Suuon;
Easement, William and Becky
Amberger'to OPC. Sutton;
Easement, David W. and Mary A.
Findley to OPC, Sutton;
Easement, Charles E. and Margaret Mae Yost to OPC, Sutton;
Easement, Thomas and Ruth
Spencer to OPC, PomerOy;
Easement, Dennis Dwain Bryan to
OPC, Rutland;
Easement, Clyde D. and Nancy S.
Harrison to OPC, Rutland;
Deed, James E. and Linda Diddle
to Ruby K. Ludwig, Lebanon;
Deed, Wayne Samuel Michael to
Charles A. and Kelley C. Weddle,
Lebanon, 2.543 acres;
Deed, Sammy L. and Sherry Darst
to same, Columbia, 4.693 acres;
Deed, Winfr¢ and Evelyn Dent to
Wayne and Clara Jarvis, Middleport;
Easement, Ray G. and Freda Searles to OPC, Rutland;
· Right of way, Edward Roush to
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District, Letart, 4.2 acres;

I

Meigs announcements
Band to practi&lt;e
The Meigs High School Band will
begin practice sessions this week on
Wednesday, 9 a.m. to noon al Meigs
High School. All members are to be
present. Toney Dingess, director,
said.

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resi-

dence
S11urday.
Lightning SlrUCk a tree near the .Floyd Reynolds residence, blowing up
a satellite dish and throwing mud up on the in•ide of a porch roof, accordins to a Syrac~L&lt;e Volwneer Fire Deplrtmeilt repon.
.
In addition, lightning set a tree ·afire along Lemaster Road m Columbia Township. The fire was out on arrival of Columbia Township volunteer fire fighters.
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A goose-neck camper was destroyed in a fire on Buck Run Road in .
Columbia Township Sunday around 6:45a.m.
l
The camper. owned by Judy Brooks, was completely destroyed •

·Columbia VFD combats camper fire

1

although a nearby building escaped the fire , according to James Gaston,
chief of the Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Department.
No injuries were reponed and a cause was not determined, Gaston
added.

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Right of way. H111old Ted and
Randi Gillette to TPCWD, Bedford,
75.33 acres;
Right of way, Erma Cleland to
TPCWD, Chester, 4.50 acres;
Right of way, Jerry R. Cleland to
. TPCWD, Chester, 4.50 .acres;
Right of way, Danny Lee and Linda C. Will to TPCWD, Chester,
4.804 acres;
Deed, Judith A., Gene l'.. Kevin
D., Kristin M. King-, Letta A. Spencer
to Ora P. Bass,' Sutton/Syracuse;
Deed, Dale E. and Laura K. Hart
to Tina D. Neigler, Racjne;
Easement, Dale., E. and Laura K.
Hart to Tina D. Ne1gler, Suuon;
Deed, Phillip H. and Karen Werry to James R. Stewart and Edward
J. Werry, Chester;
Deed, Terry G. and Kay Russell to
Donald L. and Betty I. Moore, Salisbury;
Deed, Thomas A. and Dolly Ann
Snowball to James H. and Betty J.
Tyree, SY,acuse;
Deed, William H. and Wanda L.
Drake to Betty Lou Acree, Bedford,
17.21 acre,,

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Swim across river prompts search

A West Columbia, W.Va., man's swim across the Ohio River at Middleport early Sunday gave a scare to locljl emergency volunteers there. r,
According to Assistant Chief Larry Dyer of the M1ddleport Volunteer ' ,
Fire Department, Charlie Rieken jumped in the river, swam to the other '•
side and went home.
"We didn't know this until we got Mason County EMS involved, then
when we found out he was home we called off the search," Dyer said.
Volunteers spent between an hour and an 1-1/2 hours looking for R•ck -

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One-car crash results in injury

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A Racine woman was slightly injured in a one-car accident Sundaf on 1:
U.S. 33, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Carolyn A. Goodrich, 60, 47874 State Route 338, was taken to Veter- . i
ans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS.
Trooper.; said Goodrich was southbound in Salisbury Townsh!p at 6:20
p.m. when her car went off the right side of the road and struck an embank·

ment.

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The car then continued on and came to rest in a ditch. according to the , .
report.
The car was moderately damaged and Goodrich was cited for no seat- . ,
belt.
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·Health care union claims
part~time help excessive

Trial canceled·
The trial scheduled for Tuesday
has been canceled, according·IO Paul
Gerard, court administrator.

Scout outing planned
Deb Dowler, field director for the
Cluster 31 of the Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council, will conduct a sumDalKe to be held
A round and square dance will be mer registration event Saturday at the
held at the Cool ville Lions Club fairgrounds , from I 0 a.m. to 2 p.m.
building. Music will be by Out of the Activities will center on learning outBlue Band with Jim Brown calling door skills, pitching Ients, building
fires, learning knots. The charge will
for the square dance.'
be $5 for non-scouts, S3 of which will
go for registration, and $2 for scouts.
D.;;.t control ' ·
The Chester Township trustees Those attending _are to take a lunch
will put down dust control Tuesday and beverage.
if the weather permits.

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Squads log calls for 23 runs
Un'its of the Meigs County Emer- Road , Jason'Rowe •.V~H .
gency Medical Service recorded 23
REEDSVILLE
calls for assistance Saturday and
2: 13 a.m. Saturday, State Route
Sunday." including three transfer calls . 124, Long Bottom, David Cline,
Units responding incll!(led: ·
VMl:,
COLUMBIA VFD
I :06 p.m. Sunday, SR 124, ·
10:31 p.m. Saturday, tree fire on Reedsville, Ruth Barringer, St.
Lemaster Road, out on arrival;
Joseph's Hospital,
· ·6:44a.m. Sunday, camper fire on
RUTLAND
Buck Run Road, Judy Brooks own9:10p.m. Sunday, Township Road
er, no injuries.
I 004, Linda Pridemore, HMC;
MIDDLEPORT
10:56 p.m. Sunday, Malloons.Run
8:08 p.m . Saturday, Lincoln Road , Darrell·Thomas, VMH . .
Heights, Pomeroy. Ricky Laudermilt,
SYRACUSE
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
10:57 p.m. Saturday, VFD and
2:44a.m. Sunday. VFD and squad squad to College Road, lightning
to Middleport levee, search and res- strike at Floyd Reynolds residence,
cue, false alarm;
no injuries :
6:16 p.m. Sunday, Powell Street,
6:04 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
George Lemley, VMfl ;
Road, Louise Radford, O'Bieness
6:29 p.m. Sunday, motor vehicle Memorial Hospital;
accident on U.S. 33, Carolyn
5:08 p.m. Sunday, Apple Street,
Goodrich, Aaron 1imlinson, Jason Junior Offenberger, Ohio State Uni Counts and Alex Darst, VMH.
versity via McdFiight helicopter
POMEROY
,
ambulance;
10:58 a.m. Saturday, Sand Ridge
10:42 p.m. Sunday, Waters Edge
Road, William Frecker, VMH ;
Apartments, Opal Cummins. VMH.
II :44 a.m. Saturday, Meigs CounTUPPERS PLAINS
ty Courthouse, Enda Clark , Holzer
4:03 p.m. Saturday, Mount Olive
Medical Center:
Road, Elizabeth Bartow, Pleasant
2:46 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings Valley Hospital;
Rchabilitauor&gt; Center, Mary Durst,
6:04 p.m. Sunday, SR 681 , Jason
HMC.
Wallace, HMC.
•
RACINE
3:40 p.m. Sunday, East Lctan

COLUMBUS (AP) - The state ·
hires doctors, psychologists and other medical p10fessionals on a parttime basis at amounts that are as
much as twice the cost of hiring fulltime professionals for the same jobs,
a union sald.
District 1199 of the Health Care
and Society Service Union said it
reaclled that conclusion after examining $12.6 million in personal service contracts approved by the state
Controlling Board during the last
eight months.
. Peggy Kearsliy. a union organizer
who monitors state subcontracting for
the union, said a $114,000 contract
was awarded to a physical therapist
to work for the Ohio Departm~nt of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities .
A state employee doing .the same
job would be paid $40.976, or
$53,269 with benefits, she told The
Columbus Dispatch in a story published Sunday.
" Obviously, the union has a selfinterest in this," said Kearsay, whose
union represents 4, 300 state hcahh
'care and social service workers. "'But
when this is costing the taxpayers of
Ohio more than a full-time position
would cost, we're outraged."
The state often hires medical personnel on a part-time basis because
many medical professionals are not
willing to work in prisons or for other state agencies·for the amount the
state pays. said Joe Andrews, a
spokesman for the Ohio Department

"'

• · r. •

...

of Rehabilitation and Correction .
Andrews said he agreed that th~ .
work could be·done more cheaply'' ,
with state employees.
"
.. However, we have not been sue:., .
eessful in our efforts to recruit physi; .:
cians and psychiatrists to fill all ·the:· ,
openings," he said.
His department spent $6.5 mill ion,
on professional service contracts dur- , ,
ing the period studied by the umon. .
The Ohio Rehabilitation Services ·
Commission spent $3.1 million while
the Mental Retardation Depanment , ..
spent $1.8 million and the Ohio
Department of Mental Health spent , .~
$1.3 millio\!:•;:.·,......,.......,..
Connie Mack, who mcmagcd the
Philadelphia Athletics lilf 50 years. ~ ,
died at age 93.
, ,

·{

fll(

IIHC.IIU 1r Hill( 11,..(

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7:00.9:00 out.! lln'.SIIf/'!IU IL I :00 . l:XI ICI

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1:00 , '1 : 10 IJULT NW.Sitf/SUJ. 1: 00,J:10 IPC'Ill

7: 011, 9:20 ra.ILT _,. .51111'/-. 1:00, J: lO !JICUI

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'.

1:1\, , : Jd talLY flft'.SM'/SUI, l::U, J:JO IJIC1ll
fOMIJIC SOOMI DElli ~! 'STilJPf'USE
EDOlF. ~PNT In 'NUTTY P.OPES~'
CJrT ca~rriCA~ AVA l LAeLa!

ONE
LESS

THING
FOR YOU
• TO
JuGGLE

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions- none.
Saturday discharges - .none.
Sunday admissions - William
Frecker, Racine.
Sunday discharges - none.
' Holzer Medical Center
Discharges June il - Mrs. Todd
Stevenson and daughter, Mrs. Kenny
Reed and son, Glenn Roush, Jayson
Landrum, Mary Vance, Marcia
Keller. ,
Blrtlls - Mr. and Mrs. Mohammad Hameed, son, Oak Hill; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Sayre, son, Gallipolis Fer-.
ry, W.Va.
Discbaraes June 22 - H111old
Parsons, Mrs. Mohammad Hameed
and son, Donald Pietrzak, Adam
Israel.
Dilcbaraes June 13 - James

Truitt

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to your list.

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tt1 *-'MISt.

614-698-4011 (collect)
3222 S"art Rd.
Albany, Ohio 45710
• Annuities are inued by· ~~:::I
ind have s
withdrawals.

'

811111 - Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
HeodriJt, son, 'Syracuse.
(Publillled wltb )lfirllllaloll)

Aaoclatlon.

..

•

... .......... -- .. - - . ...

Lf!o~:!~!e
~:!~!~:!n~e!~~!~~~~~L&lt;e
late

Righi of way, Larry D. and Susan
A. Cleland to TPCWD, Chester, 4112 acre;
Right of way, Brian K. and Terri
L. Bowling to TPCWD, Sutton, .829
acres; .
Right of way, Josephine Smith to
TPCWD, Sutton, 2.643 acres;
Right of way, David and Bertha
Grindstaff, Victor and Virginia K.
Counts to TPCWD, Sutton, 10.5
acres;

j

Tral'lk on B"bu Road (County Road 28) will be limited to one-lane
between Morning St.- ROIId and McKcazic: RidJe Road in Sutton Township for approximately seven 10 I0 days, accordin1 to County Engineer
Robert Eason.
TraffiC is beinalimited to one lane so workers can repair a slip. Eason
explained.
·

Land transfers recorded

•

•

D.C. is a 'failed socialist experiment

•

By The Associated Press

.

en to doctor,; for ;ithhoiding care by
limitin1 referrals to specialists or limiting hospitalization or prescriptions
-- thereby saving money for the
HMO.
,
The creation of a non-profit con·
sumer organization "with the power
to advocate on behalf of patients and
publish reports on the quality of services provided by HMOs, hospitals
and nursjng homes."
The most prominent campaigner
for the Patient Protection Act is
Ralph Na&lt;lcr, a formidable debater
whose passion for consumer safety
has not dimini~hed since the publication in 1965 of his " Unsafe at Any
Speed: The Designed-In Danger.; of
the American Automobile ...
In addition to his campaigning for
the Patient Protection Act, Nader
himself will be on the California ballot as the pr~sidential candidate of the
Green Party.
In recent years. corporate critics
have been claiming that Nader is
becoming obsolete. They say that his
combative approa~;h to big business.
emphasizing its insatiable greed; has
diminishing support among the public.
But the' rise in job insecurity, along
with the resurgence of organi1.cd
labor, indicate that Nader is hardly
ready to retire. And in California,
even with I;larry &amp; Louise as his

One-lane traffic set on Bashan Road
Avice Frecker, formerly of Racine, died Monday, June 24, 1996 in the
Riverside Methodiit Hospital, Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

dent Oore's anendanee at the games,
or beeiUse they are pan of the " offi·
.
cial delegation." 1
The chosen Clintonitcs. whose
atteAdance is justifiable, "may attend
Olympic events free of charge. ...
However, such individuals should be
tngaged in officilliCtivities and not
merely observing the games."
Tile Panetta memo also seeks to
close another politipl Pandora's box :
Ticke\!1 to sporting ,events.
Tilere's a pointed reminder that
the standards of ethical conduct prohibit a federal employee from accept·
ing a gift, iocluding a ticket to a sporting event, that exceeds $20 in value
from a prohibited source or w~ieh is
given beeause .of the l mployee's
official position. Despite the exception in lhe law for gifts from close
friends or relatives, the friend or kin
"should have paid for the ticket personally, as opposed to the friend's or
relative "s employer."
Ethics rules allow seniot govern- •
ment officials to accept tickets for •
which they reimburse the giver a fair :
market value of a ticket. Setting a .
cleaner-than-Caesar 's-wi fe criteria, •
the Panetta memo declares:
" Because an appearance of-preferential treatment may be created by
attendance at certain ·events where
tickets are no longer available to the
&gt;
·public, you must receive approval •·,_J
from me .. . before you purchase tick· •
ets other than through the process ·
available to the gericrol public."
- .'., \
If, by coincidence, a cabinet official is in Atlanta or any "other
Olympic v~nue" on business or for ·
per.;onal rea.wns, they may nee&lt;! a hot .
line to their department's "ethics ofli- ·
cial." Invitations for cocktail panics
or other receptions f&lt;ir the.o;c accidental attenflces should be vetted like
other offers &lt;luring the year. · ..
"In other words. " the memo
advises, "your ethics oiTici;d' ,will •
need to determine whether the in vi- •
tation to the particular· event may
properly be accepted under the ~ift :
rules."

••

Local News in Brief.

•

The Daily Sentinel No O~ympic free ride for bureaucrats
'EsttWfisfrd in 1!H8

-

The DillY Seudnel • Pege 3

,

"'

'

-- . .

.
•

~

.~.

..

;.-. r i

·~a

�~. June 24, 1996

The Daily sentip.~l

Sports

By beating Indians 6-5,

Yankees capture
historic sweep

Monday, June 24, 1991

Reds notch 2-1 victory over N.Y. Mets
NEW YORK (AP) - John Smiley wanted the victory more lhan the
complete game. Getting il against the
l'!ew York Mets only made it sweet• ·"These guys have hit me pretty
*'hard
the last few years," said Smiley,
who held the Mets to four hits over
eight innings in the Cincinnati Reds'
2-1 victory Sunday night.
Smiley struck out five and walked
one, throwing only 85 pitches, 61 of
them strikes.
" I went to John al the end of the
eighth inning and asked him how
important it was for him to get a
shutout and a complete game," Reds
manager Ray Knight said.
"He told me, 'Not at all.' I've
tried to keep him on a 90-pitch limit . He was at 85. Anytime he's been
successful; he 's gone around 90, and

when we try to stretch him out to
100, he loses it in a hurry. On top of
that, Jeff (Brantley) needed $Orne
work."
Smiley (7-6) was lifted for a
pinch-hitter in the ninth with the
Reds leading 2-0, partly because of
the pitch count and partly because of
the bullpen.
Robert Person (1-2) pitched a
strong game for the Mets, striking
out a career-high nine and allowing
only two runs on seven hits in his
eight innings.
"I'm pleased with the way I
threw tonight. I didn 't walk anybody
and that's a big plus for me. I usually average two or three walks a
game," Person said.
Lenny Harris' RBI double in the
fifth gave the.Reds a 1-0 lead.

After Joe Oliver and Jeff Branson
singled with one out, Smiley bunted.
Mets catcher Todd Hundley threw to
third to force Oliver and Jeff Kent's
throw to first was in time to double
Smiley, but was wild. The error
allowed Branson toTeach third.
"He had time for the double play.
But that's a tough play when you
have a runner sliding into you like
that," said Mets manager Dallas
Green of Kent 's bad throw.
Harris then doubled to score
Branson.
Reggie Sanders led . off the
Cincinnati sixth with his fifth homer,
a 430-foot · shot over the Reds
bullpen in left field, to make it 2-0.
Then Person retired nine of the next
10 Reds.
Brantley gave up Kent's RBI

double in the ninth before retiring the
Mets on three strikeouts in the ninth.
Reds shortstop Branson saved
the Reds a run in the sixth with a
strong relay lhrow that cut down Jose
Vizcaino at the plate. Vizcaino singled with two out and tried to score
on Gilkey's double down the left
field line.
"We put the pressure on them and
they didn 't crack. They did what
they're supposed to do. They made
the perfect relay," Mets mamiger
Dallas Green said.
By winning, the Reds stopped the
Mets' two-game winning streak and
salvageQ a split in the four-game
series between the teams. Smiley
evened his record at 1·1 for the season against the Mets and is"now 138 against them in his It-year career.
I

In other NL action,

Braves blank Giants·; Dodgers·also win
.

.

"I love·these 1-0 games," Glavine
said. "Your concentration level realTom Glavi ne and the Atlanta · ly rises."
Glavine has another reason for
Braves had no trouble remembering
enjoying such games. The previous
the last time they won a 1-0 game.
On Sunday a(rernoon, Glavine time the Braves won by that score,
and Mark Wohlers combined on a it was a cool night last October when
three-hitter and Chipper Jones home- he pitched the Braves past Cleveland
red as t~e Braves beat,the San Fran- in the clinching Game 6 of the World
cisco Giants 1-0 for their season-high Series.
"It reminded me of the World
sixth strai~ht victory.

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer

Series," Glavine.,;aid. "It was a tight
game and I focused on one hitter at
a tame.
·
Against Cleveland, Glavine and
Wohlers teamed on a one-hitter and
David Justice homered in Atlanta. At
home against the Giants, ·Giavine
allowed three hits in 7 213 innings
before Wohlers finished.
Glavine (8-4) struck out six,
including Barry Bonds and Mall
•

I I

'

By KEN BERGER

Williams twice each. Wohlers
relieved with a runner on third and
struck out Robby Thompson to end
the eighth, and closed for his 14th
save in 15 chances.
The Braves shut out the Giants in
the last two games of the series, having done it Saturday night behind
. Greg Maddux.
"Atlanta's pitching was the same
as always," Bonds said. "They aren't

Johnson sets new
world mark in 200

FORCED OUT - Cincinnati second baseman Brei Boone ateps
aaide after getting the force out on the New York Meta' Alex Ocho6
at second base In the second inning of Sunda.y night's ~atlonal
League game in New York, where the Reds won 2·1. (API

going to change their s~ le . They' ve
been like this for how many yearsthree, four, five?"
Jones hit a 420-foot shot to center field in the fourth off Osvaldo
Fernandez (4-7). His 14th home run
extended his hitting streak to a
career-high 14 games.
Jones also matched an Atlanta
record by reaching base by hit or
walk for the 34th straight game,
tvin2 the mark shaned by Rowland

Office ( 1976) and David Justice
( 1994).
In other games, Los Angeles beat
Houston 4-3, San Diego stopped
Chicago 5-4, Montreal downed St.
Louis 3-2, Colorado defeated
Philadelphia 7-4 and Pittsburgh
topped Florida 5-3 .
Dodgers 4, Astros 3
Mike Piazza hit a solo home run
with one out in the bottom of the
(See NL on Page 5) '

I

Scoreboard
Baseball
AL standings
Easltm Di"Won

IBm

New York-. .

»:

I. &amp;1.

.. ... 41

28

.606

Ballimore .............. J9
Toronto ............. .....H
Boston ................... .JO
Detroit .... ...
.. .... 21

32
41
0

.549
.446
.41 I
.280

~4

till
4

IJ ~

14
24

Central Di\'ision
CLEVELAND ..... 46

28

.622

Chica&amp;o .............. .. .. 42 ll
. .Milwnukee ...
. Jll J7
Minnesota .......... .... J4 JS
Kansas City ... .... .... J2 4]

.49J
.472
.427

.57~

Wdlem Division
TeAas ..
.... ..45 29 .608
Seanle ................... ]9 .1 ] .!'i42
Californiu .............. ]9 .1S .:'127
Oakland ..
...... J4 41 .45J

l~

9~
II

14~

:"i
6

II ~

Saturday's seores
New York I I. CLEVELAND 9

Balrimon= S. Knruas City J
Detroit6. Min~ta 0
cr..kland 8, Toronto 4
Seutlle 4, Chicago 2

California 6, Milwaukee 4
Texu 8, Boston 2

Sunday's scores
New York 6. CLEVELAND .~

Detroit I 0, Minnesota 8
KA11Sns City 4, Bahimore 0
Chicago 7. Seattle 6 ( 10)
Milwaukee 8. Ca.lifornla 4
Toron~o 5. OQJcland 4
Boston 6. Texas 4

Today's games

DH : Cali fo rnia (Grimsley 4-5 ;~nd ­
Hancotk 2-0) at Chicago (AivW"ez ll-4 W'ld
Sirotka 0-0). ~ :05 p.m.
New Yurk. ( ~t1i1te 11-:\) at Minnrsola
(Robenson 2-8). 8:05p.m.
Balt1more (Mussina 9-41 at Teus
(Witt7 - ~).

8:J.5 p.m.

Detroit (Sadowsky J. J) at Oakland
(Wasdi l14-1). 10: 0~ p.m.

Tuesday's games
Detroit ('{lliv;lres J . J) aT Oakland
(Wengen 2-5), J: 15 p.m.
DH : New York (Boehringer 0·1 and
Mendo~ 2-J) at Minnesoca (Rodriguu 67 and Trombley 1-0). 4:05p.m.
CLEVEL AND ( Henhiser 7-4) at
Boston (Gordon 5-3), 7:05p.m.
Seatlle (Hitchcoc:k 6-3) :u Toronto
(HanJon 7-9). 7::\:'i p.m.
California (Langston 5·2) at Chicago
(Tapani 7-4). 8:0.5 p.m.
Milwaukee (Bones S-8) lll Kan1as Cily
(Gubicz:r. 4-10), 8:0.5 p.m.
Balli more (Wells 4-6) at Teu.s (Gross
7-S). 8:35 p.m.

NL standings
Hasum Division

IwD

»:

Atlanta .... ....... ... . .47
Montreal.. ............. .43
Florida ................... J4
New York ............. JJ
Philadelphia ....... J I

I. fit.

till

.446
.4JI

4~
IJ ',
14 ~
15 ~

26
Jl
40
41
41

.644
.581
.4.59

c~ntral DiYiston
Houston ................. :\8 39 .494
S1. Louis .......
...36 37 .493
Piusburr.h ......... .. J5 J9 .47J
Chicago ................. J5 40 ,467
CINCINNATI .......30 J8 .441

WtJtrm Division
loJi AnJCkS ........... 41 J5 5J9
Colorudo ............... J1' :ts .514
San0iego ............. J9 J7 .513
S:.n Fmncisco ........ J6 36 .500

2
2
)

Saturday's scores
Philadelphia 5, Colorodo 4
Pittsburgh 4, Aorida I (10)
Allan! a 6, San Francisco 0
New YorkS.CINCJNNATI2
Sl. Louis 9, Montrenl4
Los Angeles J, Hou11on 0
Chicago 9, S:m Diego 6 ( 16)

Sunday's scores
Atlanta I, San FranciscoO
Monneal J, S1. Louis 2
ColomdO 7, Philadelphia 4
San Olegn ~. Oaicaao 4
Los Angeles 4, Houston :l
Pinsburgh ~. Floridn ~
CINCINNATI2. New York I

Today's games
Pillsburgh (Dessens ()..()) a1 Montreal
(P. Mnrtinez 6· ~). 5:J;il p.m.
Snn Francisco (M. Leiter 4-S) :11
Florida (8urkt:ll4·7), 7:0~ p.m.
Phi lmdelfhio (Schillins 2·1) 111
CINCINNAT (PORUJII 2-S). 7:Jl p.m.
Colorlldo (Rebr 2-:!) or New York
(lsringh:~usen J-9) , 7:40p.m.
St. Loui1 (Andy Benes 4-8) at AIIIRfll
(Smollz14- l), 7 :40p.~ .

Tuesday's games

.

DH: Philadelphia (Quirico 0-0 and
Mimbt O.J) 01 CINCINN ...TI (Burba t-8
ond ,.,.;, t-1), J:JS p.m. ·
s... Francisco (V..t.andinpam 4-1)
1M Aorida (W..,het12-1 ), 7:0'l p.m.

Glnvine, Atl:mta. 8-4. 66'1. 2.70.
STRIK EOUTS: Smol!z, Adantn, 13:\:
Kile, Houslon. 11~ : P.J . Martinn. Mon·
ue;,l . 107: No mo. Los Ange les, 106;
Reynolds. HouSion, 104; Swulemy~. St
Louis, 97; A. Leiter. Aorida, 95.
SAVES: Todd Worrell, Los Angeles,
22 ; 1. Bromley, CINCINt'IATI. 18; Boualico, Philadelphio. 16: Beck. Snn Francisco. 16 ; Fnm~ o . New York , 16 : Tom

· Pinsburgh (Z. Smith 4- .l ) :it Montreol
(Ru&lt;ler 4-4), 7:35p.m.
Colorndo (Thompson 3·6) at New
YOfk (Jones ~4). 7:40p.m.
St. LAJUis (SioUiemyre 6-~) a! Ada11ta
(Schmidt2·J). 7:-40p.m
Chicago (Traschel S-4) al Los Angeles (Nomo g.6J, IO:OS p.m.
Houuon (H&lt;!mplun :li-4) ill Sm1 Diego
(fewbbury :'i·:'i), 10:03 p.m.

NL

LHP Brad Pennmgron from th.e 15 - d:;~ y
disa.bted list. Op1ioood C Jorze Fabrcgas
10 Vaocouver ufthe Pacific Coast League.
. CHICAGO WHITE SOX: J:&gt;e~ignatcd
LHP Joe Magrane ror :~ssi$nment . Rc ·
ca lled RHP AI Levine rrom N:lShville.
Promoted RHP Jason Olsen frum South
Be11d of the Midw~t s! League to Prin..:e
William of the Carolim1 Lcaguc.UIId RHP
Mike Place from PrirK:c William to Birm-

Jones , Houston, 1~ : Nc:n. Florida. 14 :
Wohlers. Atlanta, 14.

Transactions
Baseball
American IAa&amp;ut
CALIFORNIA ANGELS: AetiYaled

ingh:1m of th~ Su u!h ~!rn ~ague
CLEVE LAND INDIANS : R~callcd
LHP Alan Emhrl'c fro m Duffalu of tlk!
Amcri..:an As ~ oL:ialion . Opiinncd INJ:
Herbcn Perry m hufrnlo.
.
DETROIT TIGERS : Recalled RHP
Clint Sodowsk.y from Tokdn or 1111! lrile:rnation:~l Leii~Uc . Pla ce:d RHP Rich it!
Lc:w1s on Ihe l ~ · da)' Uisublc_d li st.

AL leaders
BAITING : R. Alomor, Baltimore .
.:l7J; Mo Vaughn. Boston, .:\61; Seilur.
Milwaukee, .J:'il ; Knoblauch. Minneso1a,
.3~9; Bogas. New ~urk . .J44 ; A, ~o­
dria~z . SeaTtle. J4J. F_lltomas. Ouc;~.
go. . J4J; E. Mar1inez. Senttle. J 4.l
RUNS: E. Maninez, Seaule, 66; Grif·
fey, Seaule, 62; Phillips, Chingo, 62:
Belle, CLEVELAND. 6 1; G. Vau1h11,
. MilwBUk.ee, 59: R. Alomar. Billtimore. 59:
Thome. CLEVELAND, ~7 ; Mo Vauglln,
Bouon, ~i-7; f , Thomas, Chi cngo. 57;
Brody Ande-rson, BaltimoR:, 57.
RBI: F. Thomos, Chicago, 7~; Mo
Vnuahn, Boston, 70; G. Voughn. Milwau·
kee, 69; Belle, CLEVELAND, 69 : E.
Mnrti~~ez , Sea!tle. 64; Buhncr, Seattle. 62:
R. Palmc:iro. Baltimore:. 62 ; Carter.
Toronto, 62.
HITS: Mo Vaughn, Bonon. IOJ: R.
.\lo mar. Bollimore. 10~ ; Molitor, Min·
nesota, 100: Lorton. CLEVELAND, 96:
f . Thomt&amp;S, Chicago, 96; franco, CLEVE·
LAND, 95; Seiner, Milwookee, ~DOUBLES: E. Maninez, Sennle. :\7:
I. Rodrigu~z . Texas. 24; A. Rodriguez,
ScatHe. 21: lohn Valcnun. Boston. 21 ;
Cordovn, Minnesota, 20; Greer, Teus.
20; Baergn, CLEVELAND. 20.
TRtPLE.4:i: Jo~e Valentin. Milwauk~.
b; Vina. Milwnukec, ~; Knoblauch, Mm·
nesot:., 5; Cart~r. Toronto , 5; Thome.
CLEVELAND. 4; Guillen. Chicago. 4: 14
:~ lied with l
HOME RUNS: Belle. CLEVELAND.
2.'~; Brady Anderson. Bnltimorc. 23: Mo
Vaughn, Boston, 24; Griffey, Sea11le, 23:
Canscco, 8oS! on, 2.1: F. Thomas, Chic a·
go, 21; G. Vaughn. M~lwaukee , 21, Buhner, ~nllk, 21: McGw1~ . O&lt;ll.lnnd. 21.
STOLEN BASES: L&lt;&gt;llon. CLEVELAND. .'\9; T. Goodwin. K:msas Cily, 31:
lis.:tch. Milwaukee . 17 ; Vizquel.
CLEVELAND. 17: Damon, Kama~ City,
IJ : Knoblauch. Minneaola. IJ: Nixon.
Toronto, l.l.
PITCHING (9 decisions) : Nagy.
CLEVELAND. 11 -1. .917.171 ; Pav lik,
Te~as. to-t •. 909. 4.57: B. Well s, Seanlc,
Il- l, .889. :1.27 : Boskie, Calift•rnia, R-2. ·
.800. :\.79: Pe!UIIt, New York. 11-J, .786,
4.JO; Karl. Milwaukee. 7-l .700. 4.:m :
McDonald•.Milwaukee. 7-J •.700. 4.5J.
STRIKEOUTS : Clenu:ns. Bos ton.
122; Finley. Cntirorni:l, IOJ: A. Fernandez. Chicago. 102; Appier. Kansas ·Ci1y.
98: Muuina, Baltimore. 94: Guzm;IR,
Toronto. KS: Alvarez. Oti c;~go. 86.
SAVES : Men, CLEVELAND. 2:\;
Welfelond, New York. 22; Percival. California , 20: R. Hernondez. Chicaso. 20:
Hennemnn : Tens. 18 : Mont~~:omcry.
Kansas City. 16: Timlin. Toronlo. 14: R.
Myers, B:Jitiftlon:. 14.

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about Polley.
"All I knew was that he was a
left-hander, and that was what I
wanted," Zimmer said.
Jeff Nelson relieved Polley to
start the eighth and walked Jeremy
Bumitz. Left fielder Gerald Williams
made a running, backhande!l catch
on "Kenny Lofton's drive down the
line, which went for a sacrifice fly
instead of at least a double.
"He should get part of the save
with that catch," Gooden said.
In the ninth, Baerga reached on an
error by rooki~ second baseman
Andy Fox leading off the inning, but
Wetteland retired Albert Belle on a

popup, got Thome on a grounder and
struck out Murray.
O'Neill homered in the first and
Martinez homered in the fourth.
Cleveland scored on an RBI double
by Omar Vizquel and a run-scoring
si ngle by Thome.
There were two-other sparkliog
defensive plays. Yankees shortstop
Derek Jeter made an over-the-shoulder catch on Alvaro Espino1.a's popup in the fourth. barely avoiding a
collision with Wiiliams. In the fifth,
McDowell turned away from Boggs'
shot back to the mound and ended up
laughing because the ball landed in
his glove.
·

Fruth .Pharmacy
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1

NL leaders
BATTI NG : P.iaz.u. Los Angeles,
Burks , Colorado . .346 ;
Grudztelnnek. Mon!Jeal, . ~:\8: E. Young.
Colorado, .:lJ8; Grace, Chiugo, .338 : T.
Gwynn. San Diego . . JJJ : Mabry, Sl.
Louis, X'\2.
·
·
RUNS: Burks. Colorado, 67; Bonds,
San Frnncisco. 62; Biggio, Houston. 61 ;
Bicheth=. Colon.do, 60: Grudziclanck,
Montreal. 59: Bilgwell. Hous1on. !i9 ;
Chirper Jones. Allanla. ~A .
RBI: Bogwell. Houseon. 72: Bichene.
Colorado, 69; H. Rodriguez, Monlrea~l.
64: Gtdan-aga. Color;~do, 64: McGriff. AI ·
lanla. 6J; Bu~k s, Colorodo, 62 , Mall
Williams. San Francisc.-o. 62.
HITS: Grudziclantk. Montreo1l, 1M:
L. JoAnson. New York , 101: Rich e u ~ .
Col~. 9K; Burks. Colorudo. 98: Lansing. Montreal. 91 ; B:~gwell. Houston, 91:
Piazza, Los Ang~1es, 89: D. Bell. Houli·
ton . g9: Griuom. Adar11a. 89.
DOUBLES : Bagwdl, Houston , 26:
Lunsing. Montreal. 2J ; H. Rodriguez,
Montre:J1. 22; Bicheue, CoiOroOo. 22: Finley, S:1n Diego, 21 ; CWTeon, San Fmncis·
w , 21; D. Bel l, Hous1on. 20: Ben-y. Hous·
lon. 20.
TRIPLES: L. lohnson, New Yofk, II ;
Morandini, Philadelphia, 3; DeShields.
lvJi AngeleJ. !'! : Vizcaino, New York. S:
GriJsom. Atlanta, S: WGrernt. CINCINNATI. 4: Finley, Sil.n Diego. 4: L Walter.
Colorado. 4; Burks, Colorado, 4; Devon
While. Florida, 4.
HOME RUNS: Sosa. Chica&amp;o. 25; H.
Rodriguez. Moafrcal. 2J: Kle5ko, Atlanta,
22: Sheffield. Aorida. 22: Bagwell. Hous·
ton, 21; Hundley, New York, 20; Bonds,
San Frnncat:o, 20.
STOLEN BASES: McRae, Chicago,
2:'5 : L. Johmon. New York. 2]; DeShields,
Los An&amp;etes. 22: B.L. Hunter. Houston,
20: E. Young, Colorado, 20; ~orandini,
Philadelphia. 19; Bonds, San Frnnchco.
17; R. Henderson, S11n Oit-&amp;o. 17.
PrTCHING (9 decisions): Smolu:. At·
· lanlll, 14· 1. .9Jl2.26; ·Gracc,l'tliladel·
pllio. 7-2. .778. J.49; Ashby, San Do.ego,
'1-2,
3.08; Olltdner, S:m Francuco,
7-l • .771, ) .66; tmale. Pilubouah , 8-J.
.727. J . IO; Hamilton, San Dieao. 9.4,
.692, 4 . ~ I; P.l. Martinez, Montreal, 6-:1.
.667.140: RilL Colorodo. 8-4. .667. SJ2;

GOOD JOB, TINOI -The New York Yankeea' Tlno Martinez (right)
gives a high five to third base coach Willie Randolph·after hitting a
solo homer In the fourth Inning of Sunday'• Amerlcen League game
against the host Cleveland Indians, who lost 6-5 to suffer a week·
end series aweep. (AP)

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Wallace wins Miller
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399 I

r..ool_ ,_

IMODIUM A · D 4 9 9
CAPL.TS

It was the first time the Indians
CLEVELAND (AP)- It would
were swept in a four-game series
be nice for the New York Yankees to
since May 1994 - at New York.
say they have the best recDrd against
Just as the Yankees weren't overthe team with the best record in basely excited, the mood in the Indians
ball. After New York got through
clubhouse was hardly grim.
with Cleveland this weekend, how·
"We still have the best record in
ever, the Indians no longer own that
baseball," said Sandy Alomar, who
honor.
was infonned that the Atlanta Braves
New York completed its first
now own the best winning percentfour-game sweep in Cleveland since
age because Cleveland is 13-14
1964, and Dwight Gooden won his
since May 27.
fourth straight start Sunday in a 6-5
"We don't worry about the
SETS NEW WORLD RECORD- Michael Johneon celebra•• attar
victory over the Indians.
Braves, "'Alomar added. "They're in
Winning the 200-meler daah In Sunday'• U.S. Olympic track and field
Bernie Williams, Paul O'Neill
the other league."
tritlla In"Atlanta. Johnaon'a 19.66-~eeond finish eat a n - world
and Tino Martinez hit solo home
Gooden (7-4), who has won sevrecord In the event. (AP)
runs for the Yankees, who·improved
en of his last eight starts, allowed
to 9-3 against the defending AL
eight hits in 6 1/3 innings in beating
champions this season.
the Indians for the second straight
' The Yankees lire 12-2 at Jacobs time.
A~
..,
Field overall, and 6-0 this year. They
Williams' homer put the Yankees
are the only opponent with a record ahead 3-2 in the sixth, and Wade
over .500 at the ballpark.
Boggs padded the ·lead with a twoDespite their dominance of 1 run triple off the wall in center in the
Cleveland, the Yankees are not mak- seventh, finishing Jack McDowell
ing plans for an AL playoff 'series (6-6). Boggs scored on O' Neill 's
with the Indians just yet.
sacrifice fly to make it 6-2.
"You never say that," said John
Carlos Baerga made it 6-4 with a
faster, posting a brilliant 19.66.
By _H ALBOCK
· Wetteland, who pitched a scoreless two-run homer off Gooden in the
ATI..ANTA. (AP) - Fast, faster,
And then he had some interesting
ninth for his 22nd save and third of seventh.
fastest.
news for the rest of the world.
ihe
series. "That's a long time
Rookie Dale Polley, making his
"I think I can go faster," he said.
That was how Michael Johnson
away."
major
league debut, relieved witH a
attacked the Olympic track and field " I think 19.5 is certainly possible."
The
Indians
entered
the
weekend
·
runner
on first and one out. He struck
The way Johnson ran in this
trials. Round by round, relentlessly
with
the
best
record
in
the
majors.
out
Jim
Thome and got Eddie Murrunning his races with a standup eight-day meet, anything seems posBut
AL
East-leading
New
York
ray to ground out. .
style that kept cutting numbers off sible. He bordered on brilliant
changed
that
with
its
first
four-game
Don Zimmer, who managed the
the clock, Johnson's assault on the throughout, accepting his races very
sweep
since
Mickey
Mantle,
Roger
Yankees
in the absence of Joe Torre,
matter-of-factly until he smashed the
record book was inevitable.
Maris
and
crew
did
it
at
Municipal
who
left
town early to attend his
On Sunday, the ine~itable became record. Then there was an explosion
Stadium
on
Sept.
22-23,
1964.
brother) funeral, said he knew little
of emotion from the Texan who likes
unavoidable.
. · After winning the 400 meters, to run in purple shoes .
He deserved the celebration. His
stretching his winning streak in that
·I"JICe to 53 straight, Johnson went races lit up the competition. Mike
~c;,o_n_tin-ued-fr-om_'_Pa_g_e_41_..._ _ _ __
after his 21st consecutive 200. He Marsh, who held the ~merican
plans that unprecedented double in record of 19.73 for the 200 and finVinny Castilla and Jayhawk
-the Olympics and this was his ished third on Sunday, said he did- ninth inning, capping his 9-for-16
Owens also homered for Colorado,
wannup.
n't see Johnson's record. " I had no series at Dodger Stadium .
Piazza's 18th homer came against which tied a franchise record by conOn Saturday, Johnson ran a 19.70" idea where he was," . he said.
for the 200 meters, smashing the old- "Maybe it was because he was so far Xavier Hernandez (0-4). It marked necting in its 17th straight game.
the· second time in his four-year
Gregg Jefferies singled, ending
"est track aild field record in the ahead.''
Piazza
ended
a
game
with
career
that
his 0-for-28 slump for Philadelphia.
books, a 19.72 set in 1979 by Pietro
Then Marsh, who finished behind
Mennen. Then Menn~a got a break: Johnson and JeffWilliams,let John- a home run , having done it last June In a new policy, the Phillies will have
five players sign autographs for 10
· '{he wind guage showed 2.7 meters, son's time roll off his tongue, one 26 against San Diego.
Houston
starter
Darryl
Kite
struck
·
minutes
befdre each home game.
number at a time .
.7 above the legal limit.
out
a
career-high
12
in
seven
innings.
Pirates 5, Marlins 3
" Nineteen sixty·six," he said.
· · Sorry, Michael.
He also helped himself with a twoMark Johnson, known for his
Hey, no problem. Inevitable could "He had to be going fairly fast."
run double in the fourth inning, strength instead of speed, stole home
In fact, very fast.
.
wait a day .
"I knew I was in condition to get which turned o~t to be the Astros' as part of a double steal in the first
On S~nday, with the wind a full
last hit.
inning for Pittsburgh.
meter lower at 1.7, Johnson ran even the record," Johnson said.
Padres 5, Cubs 4
The 6-foot-4, 230-pound Johnson
Rickey Henderson, Steve Finley recorded his first stolen base of the
and John Flaherty hit home.runs that season. The play highlighted the
sent host San Diego to just its fourth Pirates' four-run burst in the opening
win in 21 games.
-inning.
Joey Hamilton (9-4), ·second in
Pat Rapp (3-1 0) dropped his sixth
the NL in victories, overcame home straight decision and leads the NL in
runs by Ryne Sandberg and Jose losses. Greg Colbrunn extended his
damn sure he stays behind·me.
By MIKE HARRIS
Hernandez. Hamilton walked four hitting streak to 21 games, longest in
- · "We started"creeping back up to and hit two batters, but the Padres
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) Teams owned by Roger Penske have speed and I looked in the mirror and · helped him withihree double plays. Aorida history.
built a reputation of faultless prepa- he was starting to smoke the right
Chicago manager Jim Riggleman
front tire and running high on the was ejected in the ninth inning for
ration, no matter what the series.
Sunday at Michigan Internation- track. I knew his handling was going arguing balls-and-strikes with plate
al Speedway, Penske Racing South away."
umpire Greg Bonin.
-the NASCAR Winston Cup team
When Pemberton commented on
Expos 3, Cardinals 2
co-owned by Penske, team president how little gas was left after Wallace
Jeff Fassero pitched three-hit ball
Don Miller and driver Rusty Wallace took the checkered· flag, the driver
for S 2/3 innings and Moises Alou
- added to that reputation with a shook his head.
·
homered to snap a sixth-inning tie,
win in the Miller 400.
"That's scary," he said. "I felt . le.ading Montreal past St. Louis.
•
Part of the team's preparation was like I was saving so much gas that I
Fassero (7 .5) was one out aw11y
running the car out of gas during would have swore the thing had from a· complete game when Gary
practice on Friday to determine . about a gallon and a half left in it. If
Gaetti hit his 300th career home run.
exactly how much usable fuel they Labonte would have been on me, I
Ozzie Smith had a pinch-hit sinhad in one full tank.
might have cheated a couple of times gle for the Cardinals. Before the
The number came up to 22.2 gal- and we would have lost it."
game, the Expos presented him with
lons, and that's almost exactly what
"I knew l was in trouble when I a commemorative silver plaque
it took for Wallace to come up with didn't beat Rusty out of the pits on
engraved with the Montreal skyline.
his fourth victory on Michigan's 2- that last stop·(on lap 148)," Labonte
It was Smith's final regular season
mile, high-banked oval, running the said. "My car really tightened up game in Montreal, and the ceremolast 52 laps - 104 miles- without when I got behind other cars."
ny followed his recent announcea s(op.
It was the fourth Michigan victo- ment that this will be his last year.
"We wouldn't have made anoth- ry for the 39-year-old Wallace, as ·.
Rockies 7, Phlllies 4
er hundred yards," crew chief Robin well as his third win of the season
Ellis Burks boosted his chance of
Pemberton said of the fuel situation. and the 44th of his career.
returning w Veterans Stadium next
"We knew it was going to be borWith only two caution flags for a monih for the All-Star game, home-.
derline. If we stopped, there-was no total of nine laps, Wallace easily set
ring twice and driving in four runs
chance.'
a race record with an average speed for Colorado:
Wallace moved to the front 10 of 166.033 mph. The previous mark
Burks has six homers in his last
laps from the end of the 2()()..1ap was 160.912 by Davey Allison in
five games and 19 home runs overevent as most of the other leaders 1991. Wallace won $71,380.
all. He went 3-for-4 and scored
were forced to pit for gas.
twice, giving him a league-leading
Sterling Marlin, who had the
67 runs.
·
dominant car in the race and led 78
laps, was ahead by more than 8 seconds- almost a quarter of a lap before he was forced to stop for a
spla~h of gas on lap I 88.
.
·
That gave the lead to Jeff Gordon,
the defending NASCAR Winston
Cup champion. But- when stopped on
lap 191. all that was left for a crowd
of 130,000 to wonder about was
whether Wallace had enough gas to
go the distance.
"Usually we lose them on fuel
mileage," Wallace said after going
lot 111 "oil tr11t•allt"
the distance on three pit stops. "But
tUI'IIIIrl todly
E. .T.... ttll'l¥
at Darlington (in March) we got
llld
10111
tOtllffiW
ON I.....,
fourth by conservingfuel and Robin
More ••• MUCH MOREl loo flllooi ...IIU 1'110111
just kept reminding me about that.
ForUM lfl Gu lind O.Mt·
"Robin made some really great
Awllelt ... ••r t..al'ft txtta~lll
Powt\9d ~ CombuiiiOn
Truck1•II•• life for tilt ..terlxtwilefHrw E~otCatt~ails getting me cooled down and
Tr
- Farm venctn rsp1lrs, 11111 tilt 'lP
Mlln1111 - tnduslnll E~ - EIC
giving me enough infonnation to
cat ............._ .....
~- Manulactur.d and
know what I really had to do. He
~ran~Mi.t tot SllllfiCIIOn by
started telling ine to conserve the gas
"lHt-Of-Your.C:W' a.-.....1 e..,.n Au'lomo~Wt e,.,...,t
after about I 00 laps."
Thiltl the powert\11 FriehOfl " S\jprtUOf
hlilllclllo-loH-IIIIUIUI I lf.otll
1.... 1111--- - - - - l l l : a i i - '"" *Oftll tnCI lliyt Within thl tnglntl
Terry Labonte pitted on the same
UAJ ' mar'l,.... . . ..,..., ........... . . . ,
Wil-L NOT "FLUSH-OUT''!
lap as Wallace and took the same
Ewn w.th one 011 chine- afte1 1n0Nr!
• -loor-lliii'/HIOI ...
· g~ble, coming up 1.1 seconds about I 0 car-lengths - short.
For
tl~er Information: .
"There came a point where I felt
Sugar Run Aahllln&lt;f Station KID~Repalr
where I felt I had saved sci much
(&amp;as) that I could go baclc to running
Pomeroy, Oh. - 992·7097
Pomeroy, Oh.- 992·9949
ft;rct," Wallace said. "I'm thinking,
Dave Small Engine Repllr
Rutland Tire I S.les
'When am I gOing to stand on the gas
Oh, - 742-3088
and when is the ~ (Labonte) soing to
stand on the sas?' I've sot to mpke

the Olympic track and field trials,

-'

.

The Dally Sentinel• P-sae 5

Pomeroy • M~leport, Ohio

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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
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Pagel

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Mother's move to daughter's home proves to be big ,mistake

oblained his Masler's Dcp-ee in
Libeial Studies with 1 concentration
in JapaDeSe Business from the University of Denver. Knight, with 1 4.0
GPA, was also honored as valedictorian.
He moved to Colorado in 1977
upon completion of a Bachelor of
Science in business administration
from Miami (OH) University.
Cwrenlly Knight is managing
partner of KRA Partners, a Denverbased consulting
specializing in
corporate bailouts; and managing
director of Compressor lCchnOiogies,
a dental products manufacturing
company located in Englewood, CO.
He also competes in SCCA formula car racing.
His wife, Peggy, is a senior partner with the CoiOI'liOO-based law firm
of Sherman &amp; Howard. They reside
in Englewood.
Knight is the grandson of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Olan Genheimer, A.R.
Knight, and the late Mrs. Evelyn
Knight, of Pomeroy.
.

rum

By ANN LANDERS ·
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a fairly
level-headed person, and I can't figure out how I got myself into this situation . Can you help?
Two years ago, my husband died.
It never occurred to me that I would
leave the home and neighborhood we
shared for 40 years . I was physically, emotionally and financially capable of staying put. But my daughter
and son-in-law began to tell me how
foolish I was to stay in that big house
by myself. They had an extra bedroom, and I could pay them . something every month. That would help
them financially, and I would never
be lonely.
·
I wasn 'I crazy about the idea, but
they talked me into it. It turned out to
be the biggest mistake of my life.
Instead of a home, I now have a
room. I must be careful not to intrude
·· after all, it's llffiiR hmne, not
mine. I make myself scarce when .
their friends come over. They didn't
lay down these rules, but common

LL

few bored web crawlers foul up the
possible, consider a small apartment. Internet for the rest of us. The InterMeanwhile, let your leiter serve as a · net is one of the freest and ' most
warning to others who give up their promising technologies introduced in
homes to live with their children. In my lifetime. --Patrick Leahy, U.S.
some instances, it's the sensible thing senator (Vermont)
to do. But often, it is not.
Dear Pat: You are a superb senaDear Ann Landers: · You have tor. Vermont is lucky to have you. As
recently printed letters from people an advice columnist, however, you
,
whose spouses have left them for aren't so hot.
Granted, most web crawlers are
someone they met on the Internet.
As a 55-year-old who has been fairly decent people, but inany are noc
happily married for 33 years , I am interested in tbe Sistine Chapel or
living proof that the vast majority of Batman. The Internet is tailor-made
us Internet fans use our computers to for con men, the lonely and the bored.
browse newspapers, see the treasures The word from here is beware. More
of the Sistine Chapel, check the on this subject tomorrow.
Gem of the Day (Credit Eleanor
weather in Vermont or read the latest
Batman comic. •
Roosevelt): You gain strength,
I think your readers should be courage and confidence by every
assured that almost all Americans on- e&lt;perience in which you really stop
line have no intention of stealing to look fear in the face .... You must
someone else's spouse or leaving do the thing you think you cannot do.
their own.
·
Just as reckless and irresponsible
Send questions iq Ann Landen,
drivers should not ruin it for dri vers Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenwho act responsibly, neither should a tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

If returning to your home is not

Ann
~nders

-c.-.-...
. ,...loo.._

sense'llnd courtesy demand that I set
them for myself. My daughter and
her husband can't even· have a normal
argument because I 'm always
around. This must be hard on them ,
but they are too nice to say anything .
When I walk by my old house and
see all the beautiful flowers in bloom,
my heart aches. I miss my neighbors ,
and I want to go back. Is it •• Too
Late in New York?
,
Dear New York: I can't answer
your question because I don't know
anything about your financial situation , nor do I know whether you sold
your home or rented it, or what you
did with your furniture, etc. What I
DO know, however, is that you are
unhappy where you are.

TIICIIII ·
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

u-ue ..,. • Gnlvel
Dirt• s.nct
1154422

LIIDA'S
Pllnlll

~~

'41R1
•Newllomee

................
.. ,...
IIIIIIINIIU II

ROBBY WYAir AND MARCY ~Ill

noting that there are plenty of tall
accents for against a wall or unsightly spot, and enough flower powe,r for
both border display and cutting.
Creating perennial borders or garqens is really an investment in years
of floral beauty, she said, A careful)) planned planting changes from
spring through the fall as some
flowers fade and others take center
stage, said Rice.
Dorothy Woodard tal ked about
gourds as being among the oldest
cultivated plants. She said utensils
have been made from them and
found in the tombs of ancients .
Ornamental and · useful gourds
belong in two groups. the first kind
mainlv cultivated in the northern
states ·while the second are larger and

planted this year. It was noted that ·
usually grown in th~ south . Gourds
are subject to injury from the same
plants had been planted before,
diseases and insects as cucumbers,
Memorial Day at the mini-park in ,
Rutland and donations were con- •
she said. An Extension Service booklet was passed around showing pictributed toward the cost.
lures of shapes and sizes and telling
The .illness of the late Neva:
about when to harvest for different
Nicholson was noted along with that :
of Ann Webster. Blackwood, Lowery
uses .
and Woodard were named to the ;
Hint for the month was to plant a
garlic plant near rosebushes -to disnominaiing committee. A tour of the ;
courage aphids . Two blossoms from
Glass House at Stewart with the Star•
a tulip tree were displayed along with . . Garden Club was planned. Robson :
a booklet for those who wanted to won the traveling prize brought by .
know more. It was noted that. the Marcia Denison. It was decided that ·
new Ohio Association of Garden
the club will contribute to an OAGC .
Club's bulb catalog is now available. project. The 66tti annual c-onvention ;
Pauline Atkins presided at the of the state organization will be held ;
business meeting after devotions by
at Worthington, July 16-18, it was •
Blackwood and Lowery. For roll call announced.
'
members named plants bought and

'
I

.:couple graduate from OU
· Robby W. Wyatl and Marcy lor of science degree in biological
-Dawn Hill graduated June 8 from sciences and pre -medicine. He will
Ohio University, Athens.
be attending medical school at' the
Marcy, daughter ofDennie E. Hill University of Cincinnati in the fall.
,0f Racine and the late Sandra L
He is a memberofLarnbdaChap•Baer, received a bachelor of science ter of Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Beta
'in food service management and Beta, Golden Key Honorary Society,
business. She has accepted employ- · and the Student Alumni Board.
ment in Cincinnati.
A reception honoring the couple
. Wyatt, son of Brenda Phalin and · was held following graduation cere'I:erry Wyatt of Middleport, graduat- monies Saturday evening at the
'ed summa cum laude with a bache- home of Brenda and Keith 'Phalin.

Royalty
contests announced
.
by Meigs Extension Service
' . Application forms for the 1996
Meigs County Junior Fair Beef, Bunny, Dairy, Goat, Horse, Swine, Poultry and Wool Prince and Princess
Contest are available at the Meigs
County Extension Ortice, Mulberry,
ijeights, Pomeroy. •
•
Completed application forms
must be returned to the Extension
Ortice by 4:30p.m. on June 28, with
no applications to be accepted after .
that date ..
·. The contest is open to all Meigs
County boys and girls, ages 14 to 18,
as of Jan. I not married nor have been

~c

:·

married, nor have borne a c~ild , must
exhibit beef, horse, goat, sheep,
swine, rabbit, poultry or dairy livestock project in 4-H ur FFA.
Contestants will be interviewed
Friday, July 12, at I p.m. at the Meigs
County Extension Office. Announcement and crowning of the winner's
will be held July 22 at 5 p.m. during
the livestock Interviews at the Rutland Civic Center.
Anyone with questions may call
Chip Haggerty at the Meigs County
Extension Office at 614-992-6696.

The median or average Social Security benefit
By Ed Peterson,
If the median wage earner too disSocl.a l Security manager,
abled to work this year, he/she can
Athens Office
receive $682 a month from Social
SQCial Security touches the lives Security. If he/she haS{ dependents,
of almost everyone. Most people pay the family can receive $1,148 monthSocial Security taxes during their ly. This disability protection is equivworking years, and then receive pay- alent to a $203,000 private insurance
ments upon retirement. How much policy for a worker who has a spouse
does the average person contribute to and two children.
Social Security? How much does he
.This worker can alSo count_ on
or she receive in benefits?
benefits for his/her family if he/she
ln 1995. the 'average worker dies. The survivors benefits are
earned an estimated $24,825 and paid roughly equal to a life insurance pol$1 ,899 in Social Security and icy of $295.000. Likewise a widMedicare taxes. He/she was one of ow(er) and. two children would
about 141 million workers who paid receive an average of $1 ,407 a month
Social Security taxes . For 1996, the in Social Security benefits if he/she
tax rate is 7.65 percent on earnings up died this year. lhhe surviving spouse
to $62,700 and 1.45 percent' on earn- is age 60 or older with no dependent
ings above that for Medicare. For self 'children, the average monthly beneemployed people, the tax rate is 15.3
fit would would be $680 a month.
percent, and 2.9 percent on earnings
The figures above are for the
above $62,700 for Medicare, but they
"average" Social Security beneficiacan deduct one-half of the selfry ·who is making average wages.
employment tax when filing their
People who make less would receive
· income tax return.
less in benefits, and people making
The median or average wage earnmore would receive more.
er who retires this year ~ill receive
You can find out approximately
an est1mated $7.20 m monthly benehow much you have credited to
fits . If he/she has a spouse who qualSocial Security an.d how much you
ifies for benefits on his/her record,
can expect to receive in benefits. Just
they will receive a total of$1 ,215 in
call Social Security's toll-free numbenefits monthly. This benefit is
ber, 1-800772-1213, and ask for a
equivalent to around 42% of the
Petsonal Earnings and Benefit Estiamount he/she was earning when mate Statemeni request form.

.om munity
calendar·
· Stgman recent URG graduate
wo:king

· :. The Communit•!:Calendat is published as a free seMice to non-profit
·
Ps wishing to announce meetmg·
grou special events. The calendar is
and
not designed to promote sales or fund
· d
(aisers of any type. Items are pnnte
as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
days.

y
MONDA
M · C0
V.
POMEROY ·- e•gs ~~6 eterans Service CommissiOn, ~ p.m.
Monday at the Veterans ervlce
Ortice, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
RUTI..AND -· Rutland Garden
Club regular meeting Monday, I
p.m. at the home of Margaret Belle
Weber.
ATHENS -- Lupus support group

.

Monday, 6:30 at 8 p.m. at Grosvenor
Hall west room II 0 on OU campus. ·
J . Andrew Sigman. Jr.. son ofJack
Supported. by the OU College
Osteo • and Linda Sigman of Coolville and
·
· and the Oh'10 De pan· grandson of · Maxine Ow-ns
of
pat h'1c Med'1cme
y
ment of Health.
Pomeroy and Leora Sigman of
Coolville, graduated from the UniTUESDAY
versity of Rio Grande with a BachePOMEROY ·· Meigs County 1or's degree in Music Education,
Genealogical Society, workshop for vocal and instrumental, grades K-12
beginning genealogy researchers, on June 9.
Tuesday, 7 p.m . at Meigs County ·
The honors student was a charter
Museum. 4-H Club members, scouts, . member and first chapter president of
others doing projects, welcome .
U.R.G.'s Ohio Collegiate-Music. Educator's Association.
RACINE .. RACO, Tuesday. 6:30
He played trombone in the U.R.G.

works Chorale.
Sigman is a 1991 graduate of Federal Hocking High School.

June brides must
report name change
June is a favorite month for weddings . For Social Security, it means
· a big jump' in potential problems in
wage . rewning. One of the most
common mistakes in wage reponing
occurs when brides forget to change
their name. The result is that their
earnings may be reponed under their
new name, but Social Security computers may then be unable to process
the earnings because the name and
number are not consistent with Social
Security records. Social .Security

•I

I

•tMwGaraa11

'IIlLI ..........

.........

WilY.,•.,••_

......,

(.

'

•

''

'•

Reedsville UMWmeets recently
"The Wind Is Not Always At Our\'
Back". Forty shut-in . calls were
reported and cards were signed for
several friends . New railings for the;
church will be made at a later date. ·
A game was played with prizes:
given. The meeting closed with a:
prayer by Mrs . Boston.
;.
Refreshments were served to thei,
those named and Diane Jones, Lillian l•
Pickens, Rose Niday, -Regina Reed. ,
Mason Fisher, son of Gordon and
Frances Reed, Rosemary Young.
:·
Linda Fisher of Syracuse, was on the
There will be no incetings in July '
dean's .)ist both semesters of his first
. or August The Septe.mber meeting 1
year at Miami University. Mason is
will be with Mrs. Nancy Buckley. ~
a chemistry major and maintained an
A average.

On dean's list

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156

1

...1 .... ..:

Public Notice

Public NoHce

PUIUC NOllCE

s.NI

Sltwdly, Jun• 29, tiM,
et 10:00 e.m., tile Home
.......nat a-nk will ofler for
,....., ...
. - l i t public liUOILon on 1111
101
. ·=~~~~Irking Lot the
'
4

:.::=~::~-

.

-

'Eraser' beats 'Hunchback,' ("
'9able Guy' falls off at box df(ice
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Arnold
Moviegoers spent an estimated
Schwarzenegger's "Eraser" opened $25 million on tickets to Warner's
bigger than "The Hunchback of " Eraser" compared with $21.3 milNotre Dame" in the first weekend of lion on Disney's " Hunchback."
release for both films , industry
. "Eraser" stars Schwarzenegger as
sources e:!imated. ·
a federal marshal protecting a witness
Jim Carrey's dark comedy "The · played by Vanessa Williams.
Cable Guy " fell to fourth place a "Hunchback" is an animated venion
of the Victor Hugo novel. ,
week. after opening at No. 1. ·

. ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE

D,.....&amp;.lrvr
rllllftl'

·

t.lsG'W •

; ,2e,;:,._21_11c;_~ 32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

~~-.,1

614-949-3308
Cleaning
Alum &amp; Vinyl siding
Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks· Sidewalks
Experience • ·
References
•

Mld&lt;lteport, Ohio ~5760
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricldes

614-742-2193

"''

Summer Images
New Location
Ml,ddleport, Ohio
With 3 Beds to
Serve You BeHer.
12-$20.00
16-$25.00
Phone 992-2489

llltha

~

St. Rt. 7

(614)

LONG BOITOM · One Story Frame Siding Home
with 3 bedrooms, 1 beth, living room, spacious
kitchen. Full basement, covered cement sitting .
poreh, 2 car garage with work shop. Approx. 1 ·
acre of level ground. ASKING $43,500
,

..
JESS'

GENEUL
. CONTUCIORS

...

PRICE REDUCED • Beautiful River V-. Ornate
woodwOrk, 3 bedrooms, stained glass. Home will
be a Real Beauty with_A little TLC. NOW $18;900

COMPLET~

AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

• Siding • VInyl
Aluminum • Rooting
N-•Repalr
Gutters
Downspouts
Frile Estlm!ltes

Headliners - Custom Seat
Covers &amp; Carpet ·
-Convertible Tops - An~que Cars · Boat Seats ·
Over 20 Years Experience
(614) 992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

a

THE WEATHER'S HOT AND SO ARE
OUR BUYERS, THEY'RE SWEATING
TO FIND THAT-PERFECT HOMEII WE
NEED LISTINGS II LET US HOOK
YOU UP TO A COOL DEAL! II
Henry E. Cleland Jr .................................. 99Z..22!i9

992-3607
!112.111111 mo.

Sherri L Hart ......... ,.................................. 742-2357

(llmeSto. .
Low,.._)

KAthleen M. Cleland .............................. 992-6191

Office··········································~········· .. ····992-2259

HAULING

Public Sale &amp; Auction

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

ESTATE
AUCTION

614-992-3470

10:00 A.M.

wv.

I

COtiSTIUcnON

•

FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
JIDM

Pomeroy, Ohio

Yotlll

'

Installed

J. ANDREW SIGMAN, JR.

H&amp;H
Home

,Thanks to McDonald~ of
Pomeroy and all of those whfl
made our car wash a success.
Meigs High School
Cheerleaders &amp; Advisor

We Will Be Closed June 23rd·Ju~ 1sf.
Reopen Tuesday, July 2nd At9:30 A.A\

992•2768 or
992·3274

...,, mo.

CLASSES TUES.·SAT. 10 A.M.-NOON
TUES. &amp; THURS. 6:30 ·8:30
Summer Hours:

rue..-Thurs. 11:30 A.M.-e:30 P.M;

YOU MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF .
$7.00 ~EA DAY.

...,.

(f'III!E ElllMATESf
V.C. YOUNG Ill

,..,.,

PonttrOy, Ohio
....

\'

(No Sund~~- Calls)

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

."

90

Wanted to Buy ·

Clean Lare Model Cars Or
Trucks, ,ggo Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick. Pontiac, 1900 Eastem lwenJe, Gallipolis.

-.

Non- Worhlnq Wathers, Dr'ters,
Stovtl, Relrtgerators, Freezers,
Air Corlditioners, Color T. y~~
VCR's, Also Junk Cart, &amp;14·-~-

1238.

Paying Top ()ollar For JuniJ Cars,
Trucks, &amp; Running Veh icles To

o.... 61 ...&lt;8·9575.

'

Top dollar- antiques, furnilure:

gl..s, china, clacks, gold,

silva~

coins, watches. estates. ·Ost)y

Matlin, 614-992·7441.

I

EM PLOYM ENT
SERVIC ES

SUMMER
TUTORING

'.

$-WANTED-$
10 people who need to lose,
weight &amp; make money, to rry new
parented weigtlt·lou product.

Htrlts

Call

. Sce1tH

614·949·2096

AVON ! AU Areas I Shirley :

TODD BISSELL

4 Potential Leaders Senoual't In terested In lnves1ing Few Hours
Weekl't · ln Part -Time Business,

304· 773-5083 241nldoJ.

$5.00· per hour

Morning Hours .
M.B.B.
61411 mo.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Spears, 304-675-1429.

005

"

·

61 .. ·44-1236.
A respectable young man 10..,
spend time wfbf'ain damaged 25't f
old. 304·173·6093.
Able Avon . Repreaentathres .
needed. Earn money lor Chr ist mas bins at hOtne/at work. 1·800"
992·8356 or 304•88 2·264&amp;, Ind.

-:":"-~~-~~--1 Rep

Personals

''

AmNnoN:

Single white
gle white~:~~~~:~~~~~~;
photo &amp; phone
CW-17 clo Poinl
·- · ;o-itter 200 Main St.
PIOIIS&amp;rlll

40

General Help No Exper ience
Need&amp;d, Gallia Counrw Firm Seek- •
ing Energe!ic lf1div iduals To Fig'
Permaner11 Full · Time Positions .
Applicanrs Should Bl 18 Or Old- •
~~-----ler , Neal' In ApJJtarance, An~

Giveaway

1 Mixed Beagle Puppy, .Gr&amp;!ll
With Chlldrefll &amp;14-441 -0409.

Business

2 Female cats. 1blk, 1blkJwtn: lntef·lraintd, •tixed", declawed, lree
IQ good home. 304-875-6880.

Family Matters
Allow Your
Penonal Psychic to
Alllat You

2 Yellow l&lt;lllens One· Male One
Female, Litter Trained, Inside

......_

1..goo, 1118 8600

Only 814· 441-3897.

Ext1277 .

.

773-5185 Or 304· 773-5&lt;147.

lively. 614-388-_9303.

Available To Slart Work Thi•

Week. For PerKtnal, Confidential
Interview Call Monday Onl'r' 61"·
44 t -1969 $300 /Week As Per

Agreement To

Mult 11111 yrs.
T - T - AI Q I 1111

........ (111)f.lfta4

'

SUitt.

STUDENTS:

.. .

Summer Help Ne~ed. Scholar· ,
ships Available. FleJible Sched: · 1
ule, No ExJJerience Nec:esurr.· '~
Clll Monday For Interview, 81•·

+41-11119.

~~.

.._

lf36,0hio I Wasl Virginia, 304·

Wanled To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or W!!hou\ Moton . Call larr'r'

,LOVe

614·992·7643

Rick Pear10n Auclion Company,
lull time aucrianeer, campllle
auction tervice. licena&amp;d

., .....,.f'ART.

Need Direction?

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Alto~Work

ancl Auction

Wllnted To Buy: Auto's &amp; Trucks
Any Condition, 614:388·9062, Or,

RacluhaCIIIIt

Room Additions • Roollng ·

iio~--:P:-u:-bl:-:-lc'""Sa:-:-le--

Wanred Ta Buy Used Mobile

EveryW..aenay
5a30 P••·

}few Homes • Vlny' Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

•NiwG11 .....
o!Hictrlcll &amp; Ptumlllng
•!'ooftng
....riot • Exterior
l!lllntlng

ma Banks Harper restdence.

Homn Cal: 614·446·0175

WV.

·Room Adclttlona

•·

Top Prices Paid; Old U.S. Coins.,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old
Collectibles. Paperweigh1s, Etc.
M.T.S. Co1n Shop, 151 SeconG
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-4.48-2842. .

TUPSHOOT

BISSELL a·uiLDERS, INC.

:1

Moving tale· llarting Thursdfly ?, variety or househokl ilen'ls, r¥~W
tyJHWWit8f, aewing machines. cb,
dog llennei, Gold Ridge Rd., Thel-

773-5033,

Free Ellimate•

Thur.-sat. 111-5
Hlllllock Grove Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7573 11/2211 .... ....

1·800· 291·5600.

·

vaga vehichts. Salting parts. 30~·

Roofing &amp;
Block Work

Everl•••••··

Plck!:!rdld

YOUNG'S
CARPENTIR SERVIa •

S.mday odilion . 2:00 p.m. Fr~.
Monday ftdi1ion · 10:00 a.m. ~1 -

J &amp; D's Auro Pans. Buying sal·

Remodeling

Ge.......... .·

$3.11

MINERSVILLE

Advance. DEAOUN£:'2:00 p.~.
lhe day bel~re rhe ad is to r~Ht.

51'1&amp;'94 TFN

FIELDS

Carpenter &amp;
bette:!/:!::~':" • Paint Work
per min.
Must be II YJW.
S.V-tl (118) 11&amp; 8134
.... _ 61~~~;:s.MOI L-.9_8...:.$_·4_19-Jim:l!l

STATE ROUTE 124

All Yard Sales Mull Be Paid ,n

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
94&amp;-2168

about the tuturelll

eo uN·r~" ~~~~ eE ~AI+\Jes

Glllllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

FUGUNT

Let them tell you

1-IICJ0.868-41 00
Ext. 2469

Yard Sale

70

Howard L Wrltesel

tlwlltl Gtngts
.SIWII Doors &amp;wltttlaws
.._Atltlllats

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

••• to Help

Tlinnl: CUh or check wJID.
for ICCidents or lola of property.

~.:'.~~~~..~.::~

day edilion- 1:OOpm Friday, Uon·
day edition 10:00a.m. Sewrday.

8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

Limited Time Offer

LIVE PSYHICS

lOTI: vicinity ol 0... Brown"l Olfirlt,

All Yard Sates Mull S. Paid~}n
AdY•nce. Deadline: 1:OOpm l"e
day betofe the ad is ta run, sun-

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
6t4-992-2772

Call today with your
window sizes tor a tree
quote!

1 MelOn, WV. 773-5715 or 773-5447
1o-.: Jeff Hllt'breeht • Sheny Durst

~~~~~~~~100 ..

Pomeroy,

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung
•Insulated

Auction Conducted
by
.
Rick Pearson Auction Co. 166

LOST; Man'o ol'- 10 bnu:elel a1

1 Holzer HOtpllal or Fruth'• Phatm -

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Locally owned &amp; operated
Free Esllmates
Guaranteed results

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

t

Lost and Found ·:

A.M.·?

949-3151
742-2246

•New Homes
-Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

PONDEROSI
PRIMffiVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
On St. Rt. 338 W. 8 mtteo
from RIIVenowood
Bridge, 1 mite from
Apple Grove, Ohio.
Etectrle hook-up, dump
ltlttono, non-portable
· water, l•rge tot.,
hiking, flahtng.
Rent by week or monlll.
304-(172-5686 or
814-247·2120....,-

Strv·u
(619) 645·8434

. . -: .

291h, · Liltle KfQtr Ro•d. 'till

Racine, Ohio
Complete Commercial &amp;
Residential Service

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0266-1-800-950-3359
Free Estimates

T.T. Phone Req.

colfl!o.

Hou .. On Righi Pall R.V.H.S.: 9

Pest Control

IOIERT IIS$ELL

s19·soo

60

•!

Firat Time 5ale: MattHnity, GicJs
NB·4, Ment,.ladies, Sat Jliae

D&amp;T

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • lruured

1·900·988·8988
Ext.7907
2.99/llin 18+

~14) M-27515.

- 992-3838

THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1996 -

Located at the auction center on Rl. 33 In Malon,
Due to divorce will bil telling the folll_owi'ng
brand MW AnderRII windows.
·
(!j). 3' X 8 1/8" X 4' X 5 1/4", (!j). 3' X 2 1/8" X 4' X 9
114",~ 2' X 2 1/8" X 6' X l) 1/4",(D. 4' X 6 1/8" X 6' X 5
1/4"fb· 2' X 2 118" X 4' X9 1/4",(D. 4' X 6 1/8" X 4' X 9
1/4",(D. 3' X 2 1/8" X 4' X 5 1/4",0- 2' X 2 1/8" X 6' X 5
114",~ 2' X 1/Z' X 3' X f/2", pfUS others.
Auclloneer note: Wlndowa will be sold fi111t by piece
mill 'then ollerecl as a lot. House plans will
avaHable. Be on tlmell

Ton odorol&gt;lo kineno, oil

of Eorlh Work

..eplac._t Witdows

.Meet your
match

Se ..il0diol\300-e75-1710.

35 y,.,.. Ext»rlent:e
992·2364
1-800-889-394~

All Kinds

JONES' TREE SERVICE

WICKS

•

"1~.

Trucking·
Limestone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

. ..

&amp;'IIJ/1 mo. pd.

Male Slack Lab Mixed 2 Y.in
Old, Ploy Well &amp; E,....uc;, lfll·

Howard Excavatin

~~~~-

Tuppeq Plain., Ohio 45783

MGM

:.

u~.

Plastic Cutve11- Dual wall and Regular 8" lhru 36"
4" S&amp;:D- perf.- solid pipe
·
4" &amp;: 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp;: 6" Sch 3S pipe
112" &amp; 3/4" ~ P.V.C. pipe
I til" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; 1" 200 p.s.i. wa~er pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000' roll's)
3/4" U.l . approved Conduit
8" Graveltss Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" ·Fittings- Regulalors- .Risers
Full asso11men1 of PYC. &amp;: Fie• fillings &amp; Wiler fiuiogs
Full hoe of Cistern, Seplic &amp; Water stora)!C lanks.

one

--~~,

Ohio.

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Guners and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

614-1115-3813 or 614-667~

614-992·2979
., .,, mo. pd.

Long-Nrod, ud-Oyed ~­

moloo•nd_lol,.,_
1-.
IOrill, 33113 e - l l Ad.,
.• •

~ONSTRU~TION

I &amp; W PWTICS Ill SIHI.Y

Call
I. D. Coastrudion

POMEROY ·· PRICE REDUCEDII THIS HOME
COULD CHARM YOUII 3·4 bedrooms, Indian
Sandstone fireplace, N.G.F.A., full basement with
car garage, cable &amp; Central Air.

8

r-------...
-.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
B&amp;B ROOFING and

742-2803
or 446-3622

Remodeling

Kitchens
Decka
Roofs
Most
Add-ona · Anything

FrM kinens. "• WMkl Did.
llll2·5000.
1

Authorized AQA Distributor
• Waking S~Uaa • lnduatrlel Gasa • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Wilking
• Alumlnum/Stalnllls • ToOl Dr-ing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio FumHure, Fifeplace
Items, Planter ha~. Tre"lses &amp; tots of other stuflll
"No Job Too Lll~p~ or Too Small"
We will WOik within your budget
Ph. 773-11173 .
FAX 773-1811
108 Pome
Street
Mason WV

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
· MOWing
(r-ltial &amp; commercial)
· Weedealii'lg
- Tree Trimming
- Shrubbery Maintenance
No lawn too large
ortoo small.
Call today for free
estimate

742·3212

I~·

tftj,~&amp; !feta&amp;

448 Mtl

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Wlnclowl
Siding

- -......
I
•l
fNo Ki..,o, l""t Hoil8d Cl(lco
E•ctllent Mou .. rT t • fo
Goocl-11 .. 3117- · '

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C Condensers/Hose Assemblys

For Quahty Work

J

And AIIO 2 CelleD F - Aa.ilt

Stick/MIG :Aluminum Welding

A litHe Cottage In The Woods. That's what you'll
think · when you see this but in Reality It's only
seconds from townll Located on State St., In
Pomeroy, thjs cozy little home 'las a living room,
kitchen, bath, bedroom, some furnishings and in a
very quiet and privll!e location. OHI Almost lorgot
to mention .. .Jt's ·very Affordable" MAKE AN
OFFER $17,500

A4otaW. ""'' Cillll. 1111 1.: 10

Cat•~

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

_, ........

SA 338 - A-Friune with kitchen, living room, dining
room with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, carp.e t, beat
pump/C.A., Beautiful W.B. llreplace. Gsra;e In
basement. Cement driveway, river lront lot, fruit
trees. 8 Miles from the Ravenswood Bridge.

.

....twme..tPI • ·

1111,.,.,. ....~c. to *lr It up

Toll Frsa1-ICJ0.872-11117

SAWMILL

•

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

....2011FAX

Serving S.E. Ohio I Wilt VIrgin..

---~ H
"~I
II k
....,,, orne ,.., ona 811
...•• ,.,.. 1111 right to bid lit
the ull end or to fiiiiOft
eny or ell Item• from 1111
81
1_989_ChiVTO
_ _Lit_s_1_P_Io_ku_p_..;i:.;.:)te_1e,.:.;;;,:0;.:,':';;,z't-;.:,•
;;,24..;,.
-

••

0111, 114-441-0~

a.G 8ASHAN 110.
Recine, 0111o 41771
....3013 flltoM

Mobile HOme Heating &amp;Cooling

--2711

5

Mlh houto 1rlinH. lll4·t'RS·

IENNEnS
. .with

p.m. at Star Mill Park.

Brass Quintet, Low Brass Quartet,
Jazz Ensemble, Dixieland Ensemble,
HARRISONVILLE •. Senior Cit- Symphonic Band, '!fld PEP Band. He
izens blood pressure clinic. 10 a.m. to also was a member of the Ohio PriII :30 a.m. with meeting and lunch to vate College Instrumental Conducfollow at town house .
tors Association Honors Band, the
.Grande Chorale, and the Master-

.....

• II - .

-112 'SiiiMH
,...
.-.........
lyr old
Cll,
wtrr

fW¥0111:112

~,...

,_.,....., 1

--~P.,, 5 Pen Hulllr. ' .....

7

for limn 1 ' I lnalt U1U:n.
..,.. 1811111111

l'lenCdllrij
411• •
Raatli•

Kitt~Mt· S.llmatet,

bll..,._ tlltf lilT

UCIIIIYDUUUC REPAIR
&amp; lUCillE SHOP, IIIC.

and Manufactul'ed HOU81ng
Alit CoM~~! a-, HMt Pumpe,
f'umacu Ahqul;t u.,m In .-oct!

lh

;

retirement, silrvivors, and disability '~
beAefits arc based on the earnings ·
credited to a worker's Social Securi-:
ty record .
~
The application for a name change~
can be received by making a toll free (
phone call. There is not a lot of paper-!
work involved. We send you the ;;
application in the mail and you com- :
plctc it and send it back with proof of~
your old name and your new name. ,
Or you can stop by the Athens Soc1al ;
Security office. It takes only a few ~
minutes and the service is free .
~

The Reedsville United Methodist
Women met with Mrs. Nina Boston
for the June meeting.
To open the meeting, Mrs. Grace
Weber read the purpose of the organization, Mrs. Emma Durst read

_...J(r' ·,_.LA . .~

- . 1 - . lilt\ ... 1 - . ,

....a1J

•'d.l;tw

FRH IES11MAJES

614-tiHIIO

Chllt8r,Ohlo

•

s.rrii'J ·
C:OISIIICIIN

Annuals, perennials topic of garden club
Adventures with annuals was the
topic of Eva Robson for a program
presented at a recent meeting of the
Rutland Garden Club at the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church.
Clotine Blackwood and Betty
. Lowery were hostesses for the IJlCC[·
ing. Robson talked about annuals and
suggested that unusual plants can
contribute to a distiflctive garden.
She mentioned the polka-dot plant,
the wishbone flower, the plumed
celosia, the magenta flower, the pink
anemone; and the butter daisy. Annuals, she noted, have a one-year commitment and allow gardeners to
reconfigure their gardens every year
according to their mood.
Marjorie Rice talked about a never-ending perennial border garden,

[lilt . . . .

1~7or:1044JWI47.

• I

,
DENVER, CO - Steven R.
· Knight, son of William and BeUy
~ Knight of Point Pleaunt, rccenlly

Lat..

2 iid:l ...... -. • • ua

I

·:Knight receives master's
:~as class valedictorian

..._.

• jllll -

Monday, June 24, 1988

�'

'

~y,June. 24,1818

------------------~._M---~----~~J
NEA Cro1.word Puale
:
.,
...
.,
-

PHIL1JP
ALDER

: WOMEN/WEN. Earn ean

mt. Flticiblt hoursl 1200·
wetkly. Call 7 daya 14071
ep-21122
OliN H 25.

e...

A'/ON Salta. Sl -S1S IHr No
Cloor To Door. No lotini""m oro...
llDnusoa 1·800·827 ·4840 lndl

~

COL license driver wilh tanker
o{ldo&lt;IOINIII~ 2 ytars Ollj)fflen(t
required, for Columbus area, call
8 14-802·3220.
Compu1., Uaen Needed. Wark
O,.rt!l"ura. 20K To SSOK !Yr. 1·
1101)&lt;1&lt;8-7181 X 1173.

o.n•t Hrotenill Jor eatabl iahed

pracdct lr\ Alhano. Ohio. Mull be
lrltr\dlr. quallly orltntad and •
111m player. Stnd rtaumts to:
R.L. s.,.lo, ODS. 715 W. Union
Sr.... Alhlno, Otilo 45701.

DRIVERS: Notdtd lor OTR lial
bed "(rltr, homt most wte·

Qonoral Malntonanco, Polndng,
Yard Work Wlndo•• Waahod
Guttora Cloano&lt;l Ugllt HauMng,
C...,.,ical. RHidontial, St...;
61...381H14211.
Georgeo Porlable Sowmill, don1
haul your logs to lho mil lull call
304-875-1857.
Having A Party! River Cily SOund
Productions, The Right OJ's For

3560.
Earn 10001 weekly atuftlng: envelope~ al t.Jma. Be yoYr bou.. S!art
now. Ha fiipiH'itnce. Free tupplles Into, no obligation. Send

S.A.S.E. to Preatige Unit l, P.O.

Countrr. ·~nino. o4 btdroom, 2
beth, HYing room, eat·k1 kliChen.

................k i n - . 2 -

varao-. 1acre. 304·88~3321 af ~
tore.,m.

3433.

2 Bodrooma Available 1St 01 July.
large Yard, 1380/'Mo .• 114·448·

DR, FR. t.ncea tn yard, 1car g1 ~
rage, Watson Really. 304·875~

on this one floor home. 3btd-

rooma, 2baths, beautilul FR Wllif•
Place, inground poOl, 1acre. Wa t~
liOn RoaJ" 304-675-3433.

lnteriOt &amp; Exterior Painting For
Free Esbmate' 61 ... 245-5457.

2 Bedroom Brick In Rio Grande.
81 O.Z45-5430.

ottortnv S.-oomo. 2 112bolhs.

Mapl• Ave ,. SPACIOUS Trl·level

I would like to clean rour houH
or bulinen. weekly or monthl';'.
Low rates. ve-ty dependable.

PleiN cal -304-875-7675.

!410 HouSH for Rent

2 Bedr oom House, 2 Bedroom
Tralior AC, In Gaiilpolto, 81H4S.
tl840 For lnlormailon.

Youi Rtlaonoblt Rolli, 614·4*
0571 .

Near Rio Gtan&lt;te, price rtdu&lt;td

One bedroom home .n Pomeroy.
Will sell an land contract . 014·
1192·5858.
Story And A Half House With Ex-

2515.

3 Bedroom &amp; full basement, central air &amp; no pe!S. l400mo. &amp; depo sit. 2418 8 Monroe Ave Pt.
Plea1an1 WV. Call 304 -6 75-1743.

12070· ~

Three bedroom home '" counlry

2 bath, famll'j' room, pool, central
air SSSOmo. 30.t-675 ~ 3030 or

let', Hours: 6 A.U . · 7 P.M. Mon·
day Thru Fnday. Infants, Tod·

dier1, Pre·School, And School
Age Program. For More Inform&amp;·
tion Con1act Uta Coughenour,
614-446-.c.t67.

Two bedroom ranch , LR, DR.
kirchen With new oak cabinets. remodeled bath, laundry room .
lorced a~r furnace wtl h AC, at tached garage, separale garagel
workshop, storage shea , Syra cu&amp;e, 814-992·2365.
·

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x70 Homette 2 bedroom, luxury
bath, totally remolded Call 304-

875-«197.
1970 Schullz 12x65 W1th t21116
Addition . Many New Improve·
men11. Priced To Se111 $2, 000,

Boll 185108, Winter Springs FL.

32719

4-.t46-3,84. Seriou&amp; lnqutriea

liELP WANTED Men /Women
Earn $&lt;480 WHkly Assembling

300-87!&gt;3431.
Nice 2 bedtoom, basemen1, garage, nice ~ard, references, depoSit, no pert. 3)4-675-511!12.
N~ea

2 or 3 badmom houae in Po-

meroy, no

~fJ,

814 ·992-5858

Unlu rmshad 2 bedroom hause.
n1ce &amp; clean, na mside pels, deposit requlfed, 6t4·g92-3090.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x70 3 Bedrooms. All EleCitiC
For Rent Or Sale, 6t4·388-9311.

2 Bedroorr. 1n Mason, washer a

fkyer, ac, no pets. 304-713-5751 .

2 Bedroom Mobile Home No P,ers,
$2251Mo , $135 DepoSit, 614·446·

Circuit Boarda /Electronic Com·

ponen11 At Home. Ellpenence

3617

Unneceuary, Will Train. lmme·
diate Open1nga Your Local Area.
CaD 1·520-880· 7891 Ext Ot094.

Coii14-448-Gm •

2 Bedroom Tra1ler, 8 Milas Route
218, $210/Mo • Deposit, Refer·
encas , 61.t-446-8172, 614 -256-

GOOD

USED

legal Secretary, WP 8.0, good
communication skillt, typing
60w.p.m, references required .'
Send resume to Box CW-21 c/o
Pt. Pleasant Reg1ster 200 Main

Sl Pt Pleaoam WV 25550.

Trailer lor rent in Galli1•;..., .; .area
614-4&lt;46-8849 '

FINANCIAL

21 0

Business
Opportunity

Two and three bedroom mobile
homes, starring at $240 ·$300 ,
sewer, water and trash 1ncluded

11191 Schult Mobie Homo 3 Bed·
rooms. 2 Baths, Kltr;hen, Dining

Needed lmmecilalely: Repair Perl .R.. Hutch. Heal Pump, AC,
son Needed For Vaccum Cleaner
IHOTICEI
Porch, 112 Acre, Hilltop Drive,
Company, Dut1es Include Repa1rs OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
Gallipolis. $25.000 Cash Or
On Electric Moton. Some In ·recommends tl'lar you do buSI - $30,000, Owner F1nanced 9% Int.
Home Service. Must Be Neal In ness wirh people you know, and
Wtth $5.000 Down, 614-446·4455.
Appearance And Able To Work NOT to send money throuph the
Well With The Public, Wilt Train mall until you have investigated 1993 Clayton mobile home,
The Right Pera:on. Call6t.t·4o41- theolaina.
14x80, three bedroom, w11h two lull
t975.
Dalhs, take over paymen!S. 61&lt;4 ·
Businessperson, Small Siz.-'Can- D92-7454, only people With good
Needed: rowboat pilot, steady lractor, National Manufacturer
credit need call.
work, good pay, can 1·412·84:).. Awarding Local DEAlERSHIP
1814.
For Stoel Bliildlnge. Big' Profit Po· In The Renter Trap? Own You' re
OHIO'i NOW OPEN
tential On 5aJes And Construe· own Home for Ultle as $500.00

LooktnG For Financial Freedom?
We Are Recruiting Motivated
Pro-Active People With Leadership Oualnies. High Level Posiuons Ava1lable NOWI Join Us In
TM Advenrure Of A lifetime Gar
Pa1d To tlave FUN In the Travel

lndustr'j'. n Your Serious About
En1oymg 1 if&amp; To Irs Fullest. t.tUL
~~

1-800-·5734Ext 9375

Non·Smoktng Part· Ttme Live· In
Nanny Needed For 3 Year Old &amp;
2 Month Old Good Pay For E•·
pertenced Penon, R'eferences

Aequtrod, 61 ... 256·1 559.
Postal Jobs 3 Pos~tions Avail ~
able, No Experience Necessary,
For lntormal10n, Call 1-818-764·

c-. 1·(304)- 736·72115.
lpo':· ..,n..,
. 303-:"::C::759-:-:3200:-:::::':::E:-xt:. 2300:-:-' =-::

ClASSIC OUTDbOII WOOD limited Offer I 1996 doublewide,
FURNACE II The Most Elticitnl 3br, 2bath, $1799 down , $,2751
~nd Lowet,t Emissions Outdoor month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Wood furnaCe on .T he Market. Only at Oakwood Homes, Nnrb
c
at Bo"i
304·755-5885
1., 11 c urrenuy Look~
entr
ino For A Quality Dealer In This
lmmediale Area. For Information limited ciffer. Only SSOO dOwn on
On Becomtng A Dealer Or For A. any new single wide 1n stock .
Free Brochure Call , · 800- 248~ Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes, N1tro. WV 30&lt;4 4881 Or 1-218-762·2575.

wv.

230

Profasslon~l

Services

755·5885

mwarramy 304-755-7191

SAVEll Repo Double W1de . 1·

1304)-736-7295

Secretary F't&gt;SI don

.

340

.
For Immediate Hire · Full Timt
secretary For The CorTVnuniry Improvement Corporalion Of Gallla
County. Must Have Advanced
Computer Skills, Uierosolt OHice,
A.CT Helpful. Should Be Able To
Wr~te Business leners, And
Have General Command Of Sec·
ratarial Skills Must Be Neat,
Courleous W1th Excellent People
Sk1ll1. 5end Resumt, Covet' lener
Mel References To Executive 01reciOr, The Community Improvement Corporation Of Galha Coun-

ry, P.O. Box .teS, Gallipolis, Ohio,

45631. Deadline Monday, June
24, 1998.' AII .Apphcarions Are '

Strtctty Confidential.
SOmoont ·10 star with eldorty lady
lor room, board and small salary
Send resume and references t/o :
Sentinel , P.O. Box 729· 25, Po·
,..,.,, OH 45769.
~Meigs

Community

Action Agency ' II Seeking 'A

Houaing RohablNtarlon Spociallat'
To Fill A Posldon Wllh Tho Gotlla
Coumy CHIP Prooram. Tha Ca,..
chdate Should Have Four (")

All real eslale adYertlslng In
this newspaper Is 8Ubjact to
the Federal Fair Hooslng Ad
of 1968 which makeslliHegal
ID advertise •any preference,
llrpllatiM .. d!Serlmlnallon
based on """'· color, religion,
sex lamlllalsta!IJ8 or national
origin, or anr Intention to
make any such preference,
llmlta!IQII or dts&lt;:rlminallon."

Thltl n o - will not
icnowllngty accopt

Yeara Ellperience In Housing

REAL ESTATE

Consrruc:lion, Preferably Housing

Rollabiltalion With HUO Or Other
Government Funded Programs;
Supervisory Etperienca In HousIng Trades And Sensitive To The
Needs 01 low -Income Famillea.
Sai8ry Is Based On The Currarit
Salary Schedule. Sand Resume

To· TOM 1'1\SOUALE, Qailia •
Meigs CAA, 8010 North SR 7,
Bo• 272, ChooNre, OH 45820 No
Later Than June 28, 1008. For

Furlhor lnbt!nadon Cali 814-387·
7341 Or 814·g92·66211. Tho Ga~
ila ·Mtlgo CAA lo An Equal ep.
porturiiJ Employor.

170 Miscellaneous

Prole&amp;Sional/8usiness build1ng lor
sublease. Locat&amp;d a1 509 S. Th1rd
Streel. Middleport. Oh10. E -eel lent
for physic•rn ofhce or real estate
space. Am~le street park.ng
Avatlab le 1mmed1ately. Contact
R.L Kunz, 614·593·3375 collect

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
t Acre looters,

310 Homes for Sale

Water, sepuc, ga·

rage, blacktoP road . in Add1son
area 614·388-8978
25 Acres, Hannan Trace School
OisiJ'icl. Small Tobacco Allotment,
Mineral R1ghts, 61 ... 256·t611

BRUNER LAND ·'
614-775·9173

Acres $26,000, 9 Acres $14,500
Or 10 Acres $17,000 Towards
Huntington, 3 Miles Oul Teens
Run &amp; Chamb&amp;ts Rds. 10 Acres
$,0,000, 5 Acres $12,000 , 7•
Acres With Pond $12,000, Nice
level B Acres W1th Strum

$11.900.

814-GI82-4A80.

Call For Maps &amp; Owner F1nanc·
ing Into. 10!'4 OFF Cash Pur ·

2 11'2 badroom home wlbath, walk

.,. 0.

2 Bedroom Home, land Contract
'To Qualified Parsons. 10% Down

chases!

8u1ld1ng lots Fo r Sate · M1dway
Onve, New Ha"Jen, C11y Water &amp;
Sewer, 100111 77, Phon, 3p4· 773·
5948 Pnced 10 Setl
lots for rent: Now tak1ng applica·
11ons, Country Lane Mobile Home
Park . Gal lipolis Ferry Wll 304 ·

61 ... 258-6573 For Appoioonem

675-5421

All Natural fat Lo11 Product
Loae Weight, •Feel Better, In·
creased Energy 11 A Oar 814·

2-3 Dedroom flousa, 50x100 lot,
located 1n Syracuse, appliances

Fhver Frontage: Hartlord Wv.

S10,dOO -S12.000 .. Serious calls

448-1238.

included, call8t4 -992-5767 alrer

only. 304·882·2686.

180 wanted To Do
Any odd jobL Pointing, car""(llry,
repairs, lawn work, etc. 304-875-

7112 . .

2-3 bedrooms, br~ck., OR , new
wtndo"'•· carpet, complete new
Mltchen and bath, garage, fuil
b1Jemenr. 61.t-092r638Do.

Body - k on cors ·&amp; rud!~ raa·
sonable ratH, minor mechanical
ropalr~ Oil
call 814-742·
2835 oak lor 1\tP, Rutland.
'

~~~~~~~~!~G~rove,
water,

Secluded 5.5 Acres, Les s Than
From Holzer Hospital
S12.500, Financing Available

w-.

Oon'a Lawn Core. Floeldtntlal,
Churchtio, &amp; Ctmotlrltl, RH·
IICln1IIH .....1114-371-2147.
•

'

213 Bedroom, good condilion,
ctoso 11&gt; holpltai &amp; ochools In Pt. 814·388-!KI82. 814·44&amp;-7278.
Pltaaant. $47,000. Call 304·675·87.
Two acres on SR 12• 1oward Au·
3 BR .. 2 bolh ranch. 2 car garage,
Spring Valley area, clou Holzer
Hoopltal. 814-4411·71140.

61•·446-2957.

Antique BoUle Show· June 28.

8am·3pm. S1.00 admloaion. 4th
and Main, Pt. PIH181'1t. e1•·1D2·
.:.5088_;_300;:..._-41_7_5-::4-79_5_._____

=-

Buy or sell. Riverine Anuques.
1 t 24 E. M11n S1rMI, on Rt. 12•.
Pomeroy. Houra : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m . 10 8:00 p.m., Sunda'j' 1:oo to

lland, alorage bu1lding, septic
llnlc and uti~~ ... 614·Q02·7011.

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Cottage. newly remodeled, w1out
building &amp; priva~.:y fence, 1 boor ls;;;i;;;;;ibui;;;yo;;;r:'iha:;;;&amp;";;;;-:ro;;"ri;;;;:
plan, good for eldetly or renral, any condition, 30 acrea or more.
- - Auo., $3S,OOO. 30 ...875 • 1·8C0·2•START, ltiVt moaoagt
7412.
b' Cha~H.

Jack Ruueli ltrfler puj)pi•s. 10
ibt. lull grown. ~I colors, $2501...:
two Shelt 1e m1n 1ature Collies,

1

6 00 p.m. 61 ..992·2528.

Mower, 20 HP. 52· Cut. Koehler
MaQNJm Engine, Excetlent Condi·
lion, 81•·255-1224.

30oi-G75-n40.

4 Piece LIVIng Room Suite, Wood

Schnauzer pupp.es, AKC. aall &amp;

Wilh Cu&amp;hiono. Llka - · $295: 2
Recliners $25 Both, 814· 258·
1332 Allor 6 P.M.

pepper, shots &amp; wormed, chamPIOn blood line, 814-667-5404.
Th11 Week ' s S~8CIBI : Poodles,
Huskies, German Shepherds,
Chows, Pit Bull &amp; Alredll ... Pul)py

Btu• Ridge Spa wilh cover, red·
wood framal steps, 8 jtlt,· llke

new. ue1s

6.

er 1995, was liking $2700, now

570

$2200. 6U·992·4044.
Boott By Redw1ng , Chippewa,
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowell
Pr~ees At Shoe Cale. GallipoltS

Piano leuons: Luc'j' Jane Bulm·
Used Baldwin piano, very good
condiuon, excellent sound SSOO.

Box Springs I Mattrell Set New,
Not Used, ' tO Year Warranty,
$195; living Room Su1te1 From

580

1·80().537·9528.

References, Deposit, $3501Mo.,
614-446-8235, 614-&lt;446.0577.

King size waterbed wlmirror
headboard, 12 drawers underneath. S150. Couch, rocker, cgf.
fee I end table. $50 . 304-875-

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath. Upstair$, Utililiaa Furnishlld. Clean,
No Pets, Reference, Deposit RtFurnished Apartmenl. Upstairs, 1

Bedroom, No Pots, SOC4nd A•e·
nue Gallipolis, All Ulilities Paid,

Deposit, 614-448-9523.
Furnished EflieQenc:y Apartment.
Central Heal &amp; Afr Conditioning,

All Utilities Furnished, Private
Patktng. 81.-446-2802.

Gracious IMng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments al Village Manor and
Rivers;c:Je Apartments in Middle·
port. From S232·S355 . Call 8t4·
992·5064 . Equal Housing Oppor·
tur.liel.
Middleport: 4th Ave 2 Se&lt;lroom,
furntshed apt, depostt I rater·

ence. 304·812·25116.

30o4 -882~2566 .

8am· 5~

TWin Rwers Tower, now accepting
;ipphcahOnl for 1br. HUO subsid·
ized apt. for elderly and handi -

s.

1994 Dodge Shadow ~
Au·
tomatlc, Air, 23,000 Miles, 814·

37!1-11384, 814-245-9258.

109• Pontiac Grand Am Sport
Coupe, e•c:ellant condllion,
S9SOO, G1o4-940-2B6t.
1995 Camara, loaded $17,500.
364 _ 773 -8 1 ~66.

Alno Loans. Dealer will arrange ft.
nanclna even II you hiYe been
turned down elsewhere. Uplon
Equipment Used Cars . 304~•58-

1089.

John Hill Farm. Lo•rt Falls, Ohio,
614-247·30420&lt;It&lt;t-247'2142. •

.Sale
720 ""'uc:o..-,for
"
.. ..
Ninan

King Cab, 4x4, runs

Trucl&lt; 350 Motor, S900 Neg., 614·
448·0519.
1978 F· 150 P1ck-Up 302 Aulmoahc, $800 , t981 Mercury
MarquiS 302 Automallc SIOO ,
614·4C6-o899.
1986 GMC good condition. 30•·

Hay &amp; Grain

1 RANSPORTATION

&amp; Heatar$100, 614·441 ·1106.

710 Autos for ,Sale

RainbOw sweeper w1 anachmenrs

'84 Ford Tempo, 4 door automat·
1c, lett rear ta•l light damage,
97,000 m11es. $400 080, 6t4 ·
949·2311 days or 614·949·264&lt;4

evenings

'89 Thunderbird

5ectional 'and matching chair, 1WD
,..,. old, $250,., 4 1192 11855.
Singer Serger Excellent Condi-

tiOn, 814-245-5008

capped. EOH 304·675-6679.

Standmg timber for sale. moarty
pins, caiiJ14-742·2148

Very mc.e clean one bedroom -...rnlthed apartment in Middleport,

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

1SiH~2

IIUZU pickup, o4 cyl. 6
Speed, niCe, 70,000 mtlel, $5500,
may cons1der partial trade tof a
.tx4 or pontoon boat, 614 ~ 8822594ahtt 6pm.

ALFALFA HAY· Slonlge delivery · 1993 Chevy S· 10 5 S~ Ex·
a~allable·Morgan's Farm Rt 35, tended Cab, V-a.' 38,000 Muea
Plii'IJ. 300·!137·20t8.
ss .ooo, oars: 614 · 448 ·4~23,
Ni(i1ta: 614-441·0487. .

And Gauran,reedl $100 And Up,
WiH Otllvtr. 61 ...11811-1.
.

sc, IWO dOOr, 3.8

730 'lllns &amp; 4-WDs

15189 Do~ge Grand Caravan SE
NICt $e,500, 814·•"8·3237 ~ft.,
S:OO P.M.
1889 Ford 150 Conversion Van
Raittd Roof, PSIPB, Dual Air,

95 Pontlllc Grand Prix SE, 13,000

Dual Tanks, Ttl~ Cruloo, 4 Copllln
ChairoiSola Bod. TV. Good

miles, excellent condition, oarage

Cond. S6500.00. (814,...9048.

kept, S17,500, 6U·992-6955.

""O D
R
'••
odgo am Van B·250,
72.000 M1lea, I8,000,' Can Be
Seen At; Gallfpolil Dally Tribune,
825 Third Avenue, Qallipolia

Jackaon, Ohio, 1·800-1i37-9526

450

Used sweepers, all tlintts. 304·

Tom Kossei61H48·7787

011io.

1978 Malibu, looks good , runs

1001 Che¥y ••4 Ellttndtd C1b,
twa tone color, wllh top,er.

Rqoms lor rant • week ar monlh.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Hotel.

875-1728.
Vanoul Barbie I

mosnr

Ken dOIII,

'"110'' caN 61,..11tl2·2483.

614-046·95110.

WATER WEUS CRIUEO
Sleepin~ rooms with cooking. Fast Raasgnable Service 814·
Also tratler space on r~ver . All 11811-7311
hook -ups Call after 2.00 p.m.,
Woman' s bfldal let G•d1amond,
304· 773·5851 . Mason WV.
Slea pmp rooms. privata country
home, mdlviduals or c:ouplal,

614-742·1300.

Men's wedding Dand &amp;·diamond,
bought lor $800 Wilt sen lor S300.

30HT.HI589.

550

Building
SUpplies

former Raymond Uu~gr~~w law Block, brick, aawer pl.,.a. wind·
Olflc:e on 51h Slreel in Pt. Pteal- ows, linteta, ate. Claude Wlnterl,
ant . lots of Space. Grell Bull· Rfo Orande, OH Call 81•·245·

nell

Lr:~cation

304·e75-8897.

1500/month rent. 5121 .

470 Wanted to Rent
Clean, rtii)Onlible, chtldlen

Melli Roofing &amp; Siding Galvan·
lzed, Gatvalume, and Palmed. AI·
bler Farm SupptiesiJ1.t·2•5-511i~3

weal, $800, 614-DIS-3489.

nao Oldsmobile Cu11a11.

.

'

1995 SO&amp;IDI 285 Pro, XL OC, 17Jit

-~

~Bu-d:-oe-t"]"'ra_nami_,.,...,,,-on-.-."u-.od...,...,"Rt--~

buill. All Trpes. Ac~en1bfe To :
Over 10,000 TransmissiOn, AlsO~

I

Good Sha.,., &amp; Pans Car, $1,500
304-675-484t AFTEA&amp;~M .

Whaels. radia!Ora. lloOr mall, otc. ~
D &amp; R Auto. Rlptty, WV. 304·372· ,
3933 .. 1·600·273«128.
:::--:--:-:--:--:-~-:,.- 1
Wanted : radiator for '78 For~ \
Mus lang II, V·8 automatiC, 302 \
moiDr, call G14·24N!881 .

t
I

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

' '•

FRANK &amp; F.ARNF.ST

1972 Coachman, 2•·. seff-con'J.
tained, With power unn, 413 w1tt\,
auto., PB, PS, $&lt;4000 firm, &amp;1••
742·2259 .
i•
1972 Scamper 1811. pull · beh1n~
Camper, sleeps e. totaMy sen con ...
tained. Detachable awmng, de·.
mand pump, lhowtr, range-top I
oven, fu,nace, and hot water lank: .
Must
10 appreciate. CaH e1•~
446·3814.
.
;

1983 Bonneville (Brougham) Will

1083 Firebird, 305 v.a. 5spd. ac.
rod,$1,200. 300·576-4022.
1983 Ford Club Wagon XL3S1
12 Paoiongor S2.009: 814·386·
8306.
1D85 Citnl • Door, 4 Clllndor,
CMte, ntc. 0ttay 11,000 _.,. A
~. 814-388-0738.
•

TCO

HAWAIIAN

,, PVfi/CH"

'·

.D

•

1972-16 112ft Camper, tell con-

tained, new ttres, sleeps 6. ~
$1,200. 304-67!HI072.
'

•

.UIIU .Chateau Traveler camper,

THE BORN LOSER
~

~

Motorcycles.

18?3.!100 4 Cyilndor, Vtry
Qoo4 Co~diiiOn, Ntw ' Botto'l,
seso, 814·448·384i, 814 ·21 •
111111.
1803 Kawaoal\1 Vulcan eoo,
S,GOOml .. traat ohapt. Can bt
••en at Cracker 8011 grocery.
121100 finn. :JOU71-1823. · ,

'1111.-

~

W..T'-!1 T!WE ... II.E.f'I€.V£R(,IVE5

mE~~~[) .If'....,.

IT "TI\Cl()61-\T!

5TI LL f\P\ro A.T
~ ()I '1"1\E: VI t-1"

PF.ORJSN...? OOU..Y

•

• ,. twt

•.

. I!IIO!WID

11 Clillllf .... -

NGrtl
1•
3•

Eaat

Pass

Pass

:::a'.·.;.:.. ..

.·::-·..... _..:

Pa.os

23 l4lstwA4

Pae6

What do you think was the shortest
chess game between two grand mas·
tera in a serious tournament in which
neither los! on time?
The answer is one move! The former world chatnpion Anatoly Karpov
played 1. d4 and offered a draw, vlhlch
his opponent, Peter Leko, accepted.
This guaranteed Karpov first place,
ancUipparenUy he disa~ with the
10:30 a.m: start time. ·
In brlc!ge, sometimes one's best
ploy is to claim. Here's a deal from
Victor Mollo's book "You Need Never
Lose at Bridge." How would you play
in three no-trump alter a low·spade
lead to East's queen?
North's three diamonds is invitation:
al. With a stronger hand. North would
rebid 1wo spades, fourth·auit forcing.
Walter the Walrus ducked the first
two spade tricks, won the third,
cashed the diamond ace and spread
his hand. "I will not waste your time,
gentlemen," he said. "I'll take five dia·
'monds, two top hearts and the two
black aces." All agreed. It was plain as
a pikestaff.
"Two· people went cklwn,'' el ·
claimed West incredulously after
opening the traveling scoresheet.
"Seems impossible."
The only other successful declarer
was.the Hideous HOg. He no1iced that if
the oppoSing diamonds split 3·1, as they
rated to do, ' the suit was irreparably
bloclted. HH won the second 1pade and
Immediately played back his last spade.
Weal, the Secretary Bird, hapRIIY
' C88hed his spade winners. Even more
happily, lhe Hog threw a diamond from
lhe dummy end had nitie tricks.
If you've never read any of Mollo's
books about his bridge·playing ani·
inals, you should remedy the situation
immediately ~ if not sooner.
,

.

.

one'c 001

=~·=

,
.
,,,,,
...-1--t--1

31 Arubeor
Cubit

38 I M e 311 .......... toot
40 IIIMct

42r:::Jl;
•• aile"
41::;:;::,
41o--t

SIIWitdllllep

I

~.:
'

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

·1. ••

Cehlbrity Cipher l:f\itiUul•lw ... Cf.-t fTom tp
I wl:ly 1t1m1:MA ~. pall lnd PN11nf
EIKiw lin.r In lhl ciptw lllndl for lftOIMr.
OW: G trqUe1t F

r-,..

•J R P

BTXI!PAJ

A F PI J

MCA

c

M Z I J .P U
ADHHPU

ZI

POPU

A C I

..

..
v

(YZCI ·J

GUCIBZA .BT . '

z

HCICYPU)

.

...
'

EUPAAPI.

BRCUXZP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: aie bourgeoll."- Rlclietd Gere.
"Making movies Ia battar 1han ciMnlng toilell::- Klaus Klnlld.

0. four

Rearrange

of

letters

.,ramblod -dt
low ro '""" lour -.to.

I

........

....bo·

..

•.

I

GRAFUL

..

1996 Travel Trailer \/an Many '
Includes
Slide-Out!
122.000 614 -894 ·5321 Chesa·•

Exlrasl

peak&amp;. OH.

.,.

'

lit SJida-in truck camper, ;ecei11ty~
rtbuill, awning &amp; antenna $1,9915 •
'
304-458-1721.

BIG NATE

SERVICES

THIS tS. ASS.UR.D~

n

GOtN&amp; TO SCHOOL!

'!&gt; PAACTIC.ALL'I'
JUL'(, IT'!&gt; 1111\JE.T'I'

Home
Improvements

----~~~S~EM~E~N~T~~-- i
WATERPROOFING

.,

Uncond~tional lifetime guarantee-. \
local reler,nces furniehed . Ea- . '
••~iahed 1975. C•ll teto4) 446- ·:

I' litrl"l'l'l'rl
I I I I I I I .I I

•

PRINT NUMIIfRiD
LETTERS

•

UNSCRAMIILE FORI
ANSWER

DEGREES OUT, ANI&gt;
wH'I ARE WE DOINY &gt;.

...
'·•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

..no· ,_=-..~,.~

The freoJure You
{I lht
Sovine• You'll Find In the
Clossl(lfd Stcllon.

0870 Or 1-600·287·0576. Rogers '
waterproofing.
••

Glance - Trick · Rigid· Keeper - REPEATING
"She just told me the most useless thing in the world."
one nosy neighbor grumbled about her friend "She told
me gossip not worth .REPEATING!"

••
".,

I

7
A-pp~li-an_c_e-:P~~-rt-s_A_n_d-s-.,-.-,c-., A~H

~

I MONDAY

Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex· ..:1
parlance All Work Guaranteed •• •
Frenct'l City Mayrag, 614 ·446 -..,.:

7795.

.

JUNE24I ·

i

mobile home repa~r ai"'CC more For

Hang, lintih,

~:~ALL

J

.. . .

Ceilings textured , plasrer repa1r.:

....,.

Call Tom 304-675·4186. 20 years ·
~~

expenence.

~arl's Homa Maintenance, VInyl t1
Siding, roofing, exteriOr and tnteri· . ~
.
or pa1n11ng,
power washing, room l' ~
lddUions. Free Estimate,,
~~t~2·4232.
.•

..

'
814·:'1

.

~,.

001

s. wv :J04.5111·2308.

.,

• I • I

ASTRO·ORAPH

.•
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

&amp;

you understa~ what to do to make the
relationship. work . Mat I $2 .75 to
Matchmaker, p/o this newspaper. P .O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New Yorl&lt;.
NY 10156 ,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Something you
want to achieve can be accomplished
today. but you might .have "to put some·

one else's needs ·above your own.
I
Cortifiod.
8,1 ...258· 181 1.

840 · E~rlcal and
R~Jrlgel'ltl~

o=.

,

Tuesday. June 25, 1996

RSES CERTIFIED DiALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
HHI PumpJ, Air Condltlonif'lg, If
'jbo

Don't can Ua Wt 11011 LoHI ~·

FrH Eatimates, 1-800·281·008'·""'

814-448·1301. wv 0021145.

\

Relidenli_lll .. COmcntrclll Wiring, • (,

.'

• I•,.

•!

Ron'a TV Servic•. apecial~ing in
Zenith. also seryicing .mgjf other~
~rands . House "calls, 1-800-797· -

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Your chart
tndicB!es that signillcant changes might
occur at lhis time . You may h'ave a"
opportun~y to achteve an elusive goal. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct~ 231 Do not be
tnbmidated by challenges today btH:ause
you can ·achieve success you a~ bold
and tenacious .
·
SCORPIO (Oct.' 24-Nov. 22) Your ideas
and suggesllons will carry greater weight
than you realize today. People who seem
to ·be 11\different 'wll hang o~ your every
word.
SAGITTARHJI (Nov. 23-Dilc. 21) Joint

n

In the year ahead, you might t)ave an
opportunity to play a crucial role in an
important endeavor. Instead ol hiding
behind the scenes, you might be In a
poaltion to call the shots.
CANCER (Ju"l" 21-.luly 221 Endeavors
you lnHiate pereonally will inost likely SUC·
cetd today. provided you get moving ollorta will be more prorri!Wig today than
, quiCkly. Try to be a doer, not a dreamer. lndepenclenl yoork. Doonot flgh1 your- btlt·
trying to patch up a broken romance? tieS ~ r you ca~ lind • bokl, C8PI·
·
The Allro-Graph Matchmaker can help . ble ally.

. '

CAPRICOAH (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A close
associate might make an important dect·
sion that 'will aflect you directly today .

Make sure that your vo1ce is heard
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Today,
make an agenda to ensure that you wilt
be in control ol all e•ents. Taking precau·
tlons will enable you to be more efficient.
PISCES (Feb. ~ 20) Your orga·
niialional abilities will be stronger than ,
usual today. II there is a sttuafoon you'd
like to reconstruct, do· It now and don't
walt lor others.
ARIES (MitCh 21·Aprll It) II you let
your imagination run wild today. you may
start to believe that· certain things are
·much worse than lhey actually are. Get
outlrom und&amp;r this aloud. ·
TAURUS (Aprii:!Mby 20) II you schedule your day wis8ty, you win not have to·
run around unneceaaarlly. It will be
Important to make """""tlltteltts. '
GI!..NI (Miry 21-June 201 Try to kHp .
1111r1 today tor ....-1 cto&gt;elop:••ta !hal •
. • ,. potenllllly ~ · You a,. In an
arn lhat mlght ,generate thll kind ol

., .

OIJpOIIUnily.

'

:13110 alter •pm.

'

•

•

l
I

l

~

41 ActvlnOid Ill "

by Lula C1.ftpos

.I

lilt ·

-..,.-----·

milel, air, cru ise. ntw lirea,
$10,000. &amp;1•·982-3131.
,

441-8330.

i

•

t993 Ptymoull'\ Voyager. blaCk

Soli Cho8pi61H48·31133.

SPOONS, SIR!

New gas tanks, one ton truck ·

chen~ witl'l grar .interior, 17k

1"5 Chryllor T_, And Coun~r
Mini Van. Laalhor Soall, Loaded
Only 22,000 lllilta, S22.500, 814·

TIIESE AREN'T

SJ.IOVELS ...

r

tour

1980 Pontiac Trans · Am Au·
tamatic, 2 Doors, Sunroof •&amp;5,

suoo.

•

-•

1tl5 DodQt Lanctr, lour door 11114
350 4 Whaoltr E•· ·neW sernce or ,.._,•. Matter Ll- .. .,
coupto , _ cheap house 10 rent. 560
Pets for Sill
censed electrician. Ridenour,(
Good reterenr;u, wile employed 1·~-:------:---­ tliteiUck. 82,000 mllta on . - . catt•nit Condition , U.aoo OBO.
814-a8428.
EIK~Icti, WV000306, 304·175- "-by VMH, wtlling to do moderate AKC Ba11et1 Hound Puppies, 5 81 ....1192·1134.
' \.
ropatrs, 114· 982·1G30, ploaoo -.Old, 814-446-3354.
1D85 Pontiac $800, 814·3117· 1HI l'ltiarlo Jot Ski SLT 750 3 1711..
~~
ltltwmoooage.
02e7.
h~tar Llka Naw, 15,800 080,
Rolldontlal Or CommtroOil Wlr· A"'
A~C Lhooa Apao Puppiao,
tng. H• Strvlct 0, Ropalra. ll· •
wanted- three bedroom houM in RHdyl Sholl, Wormed, Prlva1e 1111 ThunderDird, turbo cou.,., 1I14-IIN741.
~~~.;_.;.......,_____
conHd Eloctridan, W..lh Eioc-'"
country, currently on Athens
Arhtns !Matlena. Slllt
~.OQO&lt;I cond.
7:14:773- ~':::~~rwoll •u ~114· •44·8880, Galilpolio.'-1' '
HUO, ntad immodlatetr. 114·985- Route 58C. 814-551-2722.

Ow"''·

WONDER/IT'S A IIUNDRED
WE COULD
VARDS FROM llfRE Dl6 A
TO TilE FENCE .. TUNNEL, IIUT
WE'tl NEED
MEASVRED IT..

•

10 c... ~

By Phillip Alder

1995 Kawasaki Jet Ski 900 CXI:/
304·578-2345.
I

790

I

I

Jet ~
.814 - 367 -~

0\torhuai Kit' 814·245-5677

' • 1
I wt,eOIII(ilt.) ·

before they notice

OF THEM

THINGS!!

$13,500, 814·948·2823.

door, 72,000 milea on body, 614·
992-ftt!M.

MESS

S~LIT?

Wal•r 650 K,pwasaki Sk1

~estimate call Cher, 614·992· ' ~

Con&lt;htion, Red Wnh All The Extras!-""'"~ 614-258-8224.

MY

1991 Brand New Ntvtt Bun In!

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

I Pll P.l.., rftlltf

1 ·-

Opening lead: a 3

STRETCH OUT
HERE ON THE
OL'BEANBAG

WHAI'S

SOLD A

130 HP Sll1irpl $7,500 814· 4•&amp;·&lt;
2510, Evenngs.
'

1987 Ford Ranger 4xo4 Exc:ellent

614·992·2178.

Furnished
Rooms

1D90 Celebfll)" 110 Boat 18 h.:

C&amp;C General ' Homo Matn·~
tenenc!t- Pamtlng, vinyl siding, 1
carpentry, doors, windows, batt'ls,

litte, V-8, elite model turbo, PS,
PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats
and locks, ·Great Car,• $5200
~~·. 8~4-992- 7478 or 6U-04\l·

·

AN' I

. TENSION, STRISS
,ANXIETY

1881 (:tw;y Full Size Convtraion
Van E11Ceflent Condition, Low
Mileage, 814.. 48·7928.

1975 Lincoln 46,000 Actual
Miles, A-1, Wtlite, Marroon lntetlor, Pr~ce Reduced. $3,900; See

Uprighl, Ron Evans EnterpriseS,

MY BEANBAGS RELIEVE

1986 Rockwood camper, ·sleeps
6, slave, 1cabol, good condition,'
814'9115-.198.

640

Stoves, Washers

Inboard Fully loaded, Tamdem
A~:les, Eagle Drive On Trailer ·I,Su~~.814-44&amp;-2072
••

,978 Chevy 112 Ton P1ck~Up

614-245-5585.

3 NT

"

Gravely uacror L model walk be-

S1mmental Cows, Calves, Bulls,

304·675-1725.

BARNEY

Crah CC 2iiO Hll'

610 Farm Equipment

620 Wanted to Buy

Queen S1ze Walerbed Sheet Set

Pass
Pass

t't78 Small Seii-Con1a1ned, 14·
Camper Wlltl Toilet, Gas Stolle,
Refngerator, Furnace, Excellent
Cond1h0n·, 11,350, 814·446·3334

E"'lpmont Co. 304-675-7421 .

In Piaatlc Colt S80D. Soli $250.
614·775-2360.

2a

..

'119 F·250, automatic, lliding windc~.. "cellon!
condlrron, great work truck. ntsl
$3400 080, 61 ...949-23t 1 doya

Green Machine trimmers. S1der1

Queen S1ze Orthopedic: Manrasa
Set And Frame. Never Used Slilt

Paaa

good. S1000; '81 Toyota Corolla,
runs aroo~ S400;e14-802·2979.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Sptlt1Q Clearance on Homehte 1

Complete, S450. 614·245-9737.

Weat

It

7Q12.

DOWN

Dealer: Soulb

see

Cabbage- you cui, 30-. head,

Trundla bod. 304-675-5773

New RCA 18 Inch Satellite Dlth,

Soutlt

equal •oluo·, S7250, 614·09:!-

1996 Metro Geo. at, a1r, abl. amfm canetre. Paid $13,000 sell lor

GRADE LOG WANTED: 'Daiiv· 875·5162.
erad 01 will Dfek-up contact: Harry 1967 Ford F250 3/4 Ton, 351
GofdsberryiPBUI Mercer Sawmill, Windsor 2 wheel Drive, 81,..448-7875.
Inc . 2606 US Rt35 South side 2845 .. 304-675-23115
W., 25187. Phone 304·875·7598
lafge Ch1na Cabmet. good cond
.. 304-675-7882.
' 1990 Ford XL' Laritt. 53,000
304·675-6866.
Milos, Standard, 5 Speed, Excel·
Livestock
lent Condtrlonl e1H•5-5628.
Lawn tractor, MTO lawnlhte, 1 t ·630
HP. 38. cut, 5 speed, electrrc 2 Hallinger Geldings Brake To
1992 Ctw;y s- tO Tahoe 5 St&gt;tod.
start, oqod condition, 1375, 614- Dnve &amp; R1de, 6 Yeara Old, 114AC, 35,000 Mlioo. 114·441-0421 .
040-2249.
245-9232.

Refri~eralors,

One bedroom apartment in Mid·
dleporl, au utilities paid, $270/mo.
plus S 100 deposit. Call 814·082·

1903 Red Ford Muatang, LX,
Loaded, 50,000 Milea, so.ooo.
614·992·5488.

ow in bod!, 300 6

New Gat Furnaces, New Galvanized Duct Work, New Hood Fans,
614·379·2720 AFTER 6 ~M.

t30 Mere. Cruiser, Wllh trailer, 111141
,_ lnalclo and out,'gtnlge kapl,
for sale or trade for pontoon rrf

t995 Trailer, 12,800,

ss

Vulnenble: Neither

tl88 Invader, open bow, t7't!.

111110 21 Ft -

to B 7

A a7
• 9
tAKQ3Z
• Q83 2

,_.ale, new awning, sleeps•s.e,,
luli bath, everything YJOrks: good
condition. asking S35QO, 61&lt;4 -98~ }
4194.
•

'

two bedroom apartment in And Dryers, All Recond11ioned

Pomeroy, no """· 6 14·1192·5858.

s,2,000.oo 81.t-441-os&amp;e.

a
a

;

5124.

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

IJ7152
• 4

J tO 5
KJ

UNit bola boat compltte will ail
....... $21)!10, will
ptoa•
,ure boat on tradt, (OH) 1924
8tS..

a Qo

Q 10 I
Sout.b

760

nus Engine; 1979 Monzo Round
Tube 4 L•nk Chassio; 1970 Nova
Badt Half Car AI New: 1D60 • 39e
Ensj,., 81.«142-2031.

hind wlrotary pJow &amp; til.lar $450

Cal Ron Ewana, t·a»-537~9528.

c-

A f

K J 8 32

lHEIC£

US' Y- Haul bOll I trailef,.

150hp

-

••• 7 •

a

WILL 5 A OEMilO .·..

11itD3 Ct\Jwlltt Le.Baron Con. E-.

,
Cond. S.l. Only Mtch Owned Firm

'84

JET
AERIITION MOTORS
Repa~red, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.

1171

~0 1J.IAT

HP Evenrude FullY Loaded,"'
Reedy To Fish, Or Play 8t4-441 -~
011111 Allar 5 ~Ill.

Drag Race Cars: 1959 Anglia Mt-

Fruits &amp;
Vegatables

E~K&amp;MEEK

11192 Ctw;y Camara RS 251h Anniversarr. Red /Black Stripes,
Fully Loadad, Aoklng S12,000,
81 ..2&lt;15-51112.

304-675-2571 .

Concrete &amp; Pfaltlc Seplic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

Furmsl'led 2 Bedroom Apanment.
Across From Park ~ AC, No Pets,

ss.soo.

n Oldsmobile 98, 74k. v.g..
$1750; '65 Dadge 800, 114ic, V.g..
S13S0;814·114Q.3228.

Musical
Instruments

Bl. Harrtord. CaH 304-882·2395.

F1ve tan air condnion, used one

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dr~ve
from $24&lt;4 to $315 Walk to shop
&amp; movies . Call 614· 4&lt;46· 2568.
Equal Hous1ng OpportuMy.

141-~5 or 114-041-2302.

:""::~;:C0;:·.;:6.:.;1...:.;388:::::;-G;:;4;:20:;·~---I $10,500. Cati:I0:'-6112-3413.

PaM:! $4000, Octob-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT summer, asking 1800, (81&lt;4) 742BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 2187.

7606,

Pup""' Palace Ke 1 a d
,..,
nne s, oar mg,
Stud Servtce Pupptas, Grooming,
Buy. Sell 1 Trade, All Breeds.
Payment&amp; Welcgme, 014 _388 •
0429
·
•
AMC Baa~ett Hound Mala t 112
y.
Old F
1 2 y,
0
ears
' ema e
ears ld,
$100 Bolh. 6t4·258-6765.
Registered Wetmaransr puppia&amp;.

Applications available a.r Village Cha~ra, Call For Brochure, 614 ·
Green Aprs 149 or call 81.t -992:· ·48·7283.
3711 EOH

N1ce

malts, S1251ea.,61n•2·2050.

RebltsForSo~.614-2S6· 1 3 1 8.

2bdrm ap t s, total electtiC , IP· Electric
Scooters
And
pllances rurn1shed, laundry room Wheelchairs, New fUsed, llan 1
faCilities, close to school 1n town Car lih Installed, Stalrglldes, lilt

~~~~~~~~-- 460 Space for Rent

MUt

Babysit In My Home, Monday •
Friday, J!ldwoll Area. StO Oay.
Wend!, 8"·388-8134 Alltr 5:30
P.M. Monday · Friday Anytime

w-

·~·

~parments,

Ma1gs

GaU18 County · GalliPOliS, 2 M11es
Out Ne1ghbornood Rd. Nice 22

CFA Regillertd Persian Kittens
$250 Malt and Female 81•·258·

Proc:torvllio, 61H66-6373.

1 Bedroom, Super NICe, $266/
Mo" Plus Utilities, Usually
Somethmg Avatlabltl .Sun Valley

es.

1 1/2 srory, 4 br., lr ' dr., fr' base·
ment &amp; sun porch, $38,000, can

• towf1 &amp; school. good condition,
remadelfnJIIn progre11, n~ 'UOI
10 suit buyer, 95% finance avail·
able to qualified buyer.,Properry
located at 131 Butternut, Pomer·

992·2218.

New Haven: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom fur·
mshed apts. Deposit &amp; rererenc·

County
Mmute s To
Athens , Nea r Albany , 5 Acres
$6 ,500 , 11+ Acr es · $8,500,
Many Good Hunt1ng lots

:~a::1!:-i_:..::n:-:._~:-;70_rlo;_'~-:~-:i.:-~-"..,!7_r~-·,7.0-ni-y,
:- · J zr;:.:..o:::-..v~a:.· :,~:

1 and 2 bedrOOm apartments, lurntshed and unfurnished, securily $275; Bunk Btd S28C Complete;
deposn requ~red, no pets, euRt 1 Beside Glovann1'1 Pit~a.

qwed, 814-&lt;448-151D.

Business and
Buildings

adv8ftlsements tor real estate

whidlis In violation of tho law.
OUr readers are hereby
lnlormod that all dwellings
advertised In thiS no-r
are avalkibla on an equal
opportunity baSIS.

Apartments
for Rent

440

New Bank Repos. Onty 3 lett S!lll

Johnson' s Tree Service : Trim - Price Buster 199fi 3bedroom
ming &amp; remov:al ol tree shrubs &amp; $825 down, $159tmo. Free dellv·
hodges.1-800· 719· 0793 or 304 · ery &amp; serup Only a1 Oakwood
586-1285.
Homes, Nitro YN 30.t-75S..5885.

90t6 Ext. 7t02.

614-992·2167

outboard , full cove11.
$2,000. 300.a82•3237 altor Sr&gt;m. '

--fr,

~.

• 10

YAK f 3

rr HAS Fl~V 6eEtJ

1118 Morcury Cougar LS, 1..,.
tow miles, exc. eond . $4 ,500.
304-675-71111i.

oao,

1088 Buick Regal, white,
11·-800~'::·~"~34~119~·-----1 _8,_0_7......,.-------l 311,000rri. ctaon.
Coll300·
;;:Do I C G
875-3511:1 Mon-Fri. D:C»-4:30.
Relr~gerstor, good cond . 1125.
G
at rooming: reaSOnable
Beige.carpet 131:27175. 304-875- prices, 15yrsexpenence. Call for 1D88 Otda Cutlau Ciera BodY
6676.
appa. 30..&amp;7,5-81131 .
Domogo, Run a Good, NSO, 81 4·
For Sale Or Tradt: AKC Rtgil· 4-C$ ~ 1815 , After Six 114~441·
vrRA FURNITUf1E
tared Chow Puppies, First Sholl, t 2" ·
81 ...4411-3158
Wormed , With Flapers, 814 -2.. 5· 1092 Camato Coi'I'Yertlble, RS
Oual!J Houaollo4d Futri.,re And
=11821~.:----.....______ 251h Anniverwy Sorlaa, V·l, Au·
Applionces. Gteat Deal a On
1
Cllh And Cony I RENT·2-0WN
full Blooded Collie Pup~~:o tomalic transml11lor., Only
.,._
18,000mltta, One •• a lcind. llllohl
And lay- AIIO '1\Yagble.
'"""'' sse. Parwnt On
., red, "-'-• top, ....... lta""erlnn-·
Free DeiN8ry Wilhin 25 Miles.
814-441-1083.
-..
·~::-:::-~::-:::---:---·1 ltrlar, loaded, a rul collecto,.a
___.....,.______ 1 Full-Blooded Golden Retriever car. GM confirms that lhll It a
•
PuJ&gt;pttS, Alf Males $75, May rare car. Must sae to aPCMricare,
530
Antiques
L.... Mnsage. 81 ...1149•2400.
like naw. Aoklno S14;,oo Call
304-675-1111 Iller 5PII.

Homo, No Pets, S225!Mo., $135
Ooposil, 6t4-448-3817.

2720 AF-n.R 6 P.M.

.

14 Mawaotki SOD Ninlt, Mun,
txhauat. tank bra, f3!0CI 080,
814·7•2·2125.

Shrpl 11 ,100,
114-378-2845.

1 New nrn, Real

~

300 EX S3.8GO. 11io.

1SI77 Starcrah 11', 111• uallet;.
t078 Uercurr 10 HP w1!h paww
1111. S2100, 304·773-5707.
\

Btaunlul AKC Ron Wollor Pup·
ptt~ 7 WHI&lt;o Old, 4 F.,..lta, 1 . ; _ - - , , . . . - - - - - - - -·
Male, Moving Must Sell I 112 1MD Serena 4Cyl, auto, aw, Jinled
Pricel8t._37'0.28117.
windowa , CD play•r. Am•ncan
..c i n g - 300· 773-!10711.
Bu~noa• For Solo: .,_, S11oiJ. Fu~
ly Equipped, &amp; Stldled, ar.r lo· tO&amp;a Buick leSabre, tJ:cellant

Vtno Stroot, Call 814· 441·7308,

lmmediat&amp;1 open~nos tor part hme

ono.

.

Washers, dry en, refrigerarora ,
ranges . Skaggs A~pliancea, 78

1905 Cralttmen Ridmg Lawn

In R1c Grande, References Required, No Pets ln11del 614-37Q-

AKC Reg1t1trec1 Pomtranlln
Pupa, Vttry Smail tn· Size. Rtady

APPLIANCES

2 Bedroom Unfurn ished, Mobile

player. Contact the Otrector of

...

•• -

750 Bolts l Motors •
55112,
.;.;...;;.,_-,..-....,.,.,,...,....,.--:
for Slle.
'
1118 Fonl T - GLS 2 Door, 5

AKC Rtglattrtd Boxer pupploo.
_30:;:•;:--e~75-;:-8011;.;.:.~:....._"7'_ _ _ Spood, AMIFM C&amp;aaon•. AC,

Big Sovings On Cari&gt;ot &amp; Vmyl ..

Cal 1-80().513-0343 Ewtll-9388.

Nurs1ng, Plnecreat Care Center,
170 Pinecrest Or~ve, Gallipolis
4563t 614-.t-46-71 12.

'

ToGo.I1 ......-G742.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3 Bedroom House Tra1ler located

l'lnac'*&gt;. 1o0 -

11•·1148·3028.

ms.

6251 .

RN'S and -LPN'S, ail shiUs . Com·
peridYe wages, diffeJenbal with ex·
perience.-jequal opportunily em·

UOO-.--1250,

Appl iances:
Aacondhianed
Wuhers, Dr rera. Rengea, Rtfrl gralorl, 10 Day Gu•ranteel
French Cily ua,.tag, 81.t-•.t8-

ad. $&lt;45,000 income potent•at.

HOME TYPIST, PC users need·

1NI F~lblrd V-6. 5 Spotd, Tires. 13,000 Milot, $4,200 0110,
roac~y Supot Nicol .en Boron• GT
Juno 15, accoptint doposlta, ! SUOO , 080 loadtd, IU· 245AKC -

eu-

258·1238,

FH· 1117 Ford T - 4dr, auiO, runa

turing Hydro IMh. Don Sllttta.

All Condilionert, Wather, Otyet,
Refrigtratot. FrMzer. Stow, Ltl·
crowavt, Color T.V., VCR ,

Country Furniture. 304-875-1120.
Rt 2 N, 8mtloo, Pt Pielun~ WV.
Tu"-S:at H , Sun 11r5.

614·7.t2-1507.
Profeallonal Tree SllrYice, Srump
Removal, Free Estimates! In·
surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 814·388·
9648, e14-36H010.

GoodI

3 Bedroom Houu In Kanauga,
Fenced Yard, Carport. $325/Mo .•
$300 Deposit, No Pelt, IS14·.t48·

FOR RENT OR SALE: 3 lltdroom,

wt11e1 Hili Rd.. Ruaand, one boll1:
"'1!nlUnd pool, 61 ...1192·5087

a.- ..., -I'll

Hou~t~eholcl

Referenc:ts.

'"' Lot In Bidwell, S22.500, 81 ...
245-9415.
'

a.-•••

:::-:---:-:---:-~'""'-·1

510

Stock, S8.00 Yd &amp; Up. Mollohan
Corpeta. R7N. 114-441·7444.

Mother of three will babysit, Ru·
rland area, any ag•. 7 : ooam ~
6 :00pm, Monda~ through Friday,

kendt, paid weekly, hotpitallzatian, .dlt"b•lily msurance, 401 K
retiremenr plan. mltlmum qualitac·
tian•. g~od talety &amp; drtvtng Sun Valley Nursery School
record, 23ytl ot tQt. 2'yr1 e~~:peri· . Chlldcare M-F sam-5:30pm Ages
ttnc8 or 1yr with driving school. 2·K, Young School Age During
Appllcarlona taken daily lrom Summer. 3 Days per Week Mfni8am-Spm Sat 8·12 at H&amp;W rrum 814-446·3857
Trucking Co. Inc. 633 Fudoe
Creek Rd . One WV. 1·800·826· The French City Child Care Con-

The Qaltla

-t304-6- . --.........,

fll NTAL S

=
I

ACMII

l

�P8ge 10 • The Dilly SenHnel

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 24, 1...

Racine Grange plans for J~ly 4 celebration
At its regular meetiDg Racine
Ol'lllge No. 2606 of OK Grove
made Plans to Participation in the
R~eine July 4 parllde were mlde
when Racine Grange 2606 Qf Oak
Grove met recently at the hill.
Members were uked to meet at
the home of Barbara Dugan on Tuesday, July 2, at 6:30 p.m. to help put
together a noat. Also at that time
pl.ans will be discussed for the Meigs
County fair exhibit booth.
Hemlock Grange visited Racine
Grange and brought the lecturer's·
program led b Hemlock Grove master, Rosalie Story.
Reported ill was Mrs. Geraldine
Cross, who . is in Columbus · for •

surgery.
Plans ue bein1 IJllde to remove
some trees from tbe .....,. property.
As . for leJislative atrain, pendinJ
actJon of the Hawaiian Supmne
Court to legaliz.e homosex1181 IIW'riages, which mOISt then be recognized all other stales ICCOI'dinlto the
U.S. Constitution, wu disc:IISHd.
Legislation is pending in Congress
now to counteract this move and
members were urged to write letters
on the matter. Also reponed was the
Clinton Administration's move to
grant Communist China " ~ost
Favored Nation" status. It was pointed out that this status should not be

Jflllted since China is in severe violation of buman rishl.s, uses pr00n
IIberto produce items, and ban U.S.
produc:ts with heavy t~lfs.
Chuck Yost, master, reponed on
the recent law sisned by Gov.
Voinovich which now recognizes an
unborn clJild as a ~fe_ This is the
res~lt of the recent death of an
expectant mother where the unborn
child was not considered to be a life
in the courts.
A repon was given on the recent
success of Racine Grange at the
Grange district talent contest. Rachel
Ashley won first place in instrumental solo and vocal solo; Rachel &amp;

·Agaasl upset during match
·at Wimbledon

Whitney Ashley won fim place in
subonliiWe vocal duet; Keith Ashley
won piano solo; Whitney Asbley won
piano solo in the age 1(}.14qtegol'y; and Whitney and Emily Ashley
won the vocal duet category qe 1(}.
14. All wiD compete at tbe Ohio Sllle
Gran11e talent finals at the Ohio Swe
Fair in August.
.
Racine Grange is working with
Sw Grange on a booth for the Expo
to be held at the Meigs County Fairgrouuds in September. The next
meeting of Racine Gra~ge will be
July ·II. Officers will be elect~ .
Refreshments were served following
the meeting.

Enhancements to the technology
elements of the OVAL program were
discussed at the recent meeting of the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries held at its
headquarters.
.
On the recommendation of Bill
Burcham, representing the Briggs
Lawrence County Public Library,
new computers, software, and a scanner were authorized. These items will
be used to develop world-wide web
pages for the member libraries and
OVAL to provide access to services
via the Internet.

Mountain biking
is taking off

CHESTERLAND, Ohio (AP)- mountain bikes began to soar in the
Mark Gulaian has just competed in a mid· ' 80s. Last year, two-thirds of all
cross-country race, and now he's on bikes sold to adults in the United
his hands and knees, wiping the mud States were mountain bikes .
off the frame of his moun lain bike.
These are happy statistics for the
"This isn't bad," he says with a makers of Cannondale bicycles.
smile. "The last race I was in was so Since opening shop in the early By POPULAR MECHANICS
muddy, I actually had worms wrig- 1970s as a manufacturer of bicycle A Hearet Magazine
·gling in the mud on my bike by the accessorie~ in a small plant above a For AP 'Speclal Faatt.irea
The World Decimal Time Society
end.
pickle factory in Georgetown, Conn .,
wants
to ket rid of leap year -and
"It was so cool."
Cannondale has turned itself into a
in
the
process institute the decimalPerhaps yoti don't agree that it $140 million maker of high-end bicyization
of time.
was cool. But there are more than cles.
" One world should have one
30,000 American mountain bikers
Can nondale produces all of its
·
chronology,
one calendar, one clock
who would agree· enthusiaSts who bikes, which range in price from
and
one
time
zone," Michael Pinder,
plunk down $30 annually for a $400 to $5,000, in a small plant
president
of
the
100-member Britainlicense to compete in a variety of tucked into the Allegheny mountain
based group, told science-technology
races.
town of Bedford, Pa.
editor
Jim Wilson in an article in the
There are screaming downhills
"We're the only large manufaccurrent
issue of Popular Mechanics.
and rugged cro~s-country races. turer that makes all our bicycles in the
The
10-year-old
group now is lobThere are races for professionals and U.S.," said Cannondale spokesman
bying
the
United
Nations to change
first-timers, for anyone of any age Tom Armstrong. "That's our single
. the way we keep track of time. ·
. and any·ability, from coast tO•Coast. biggest competitive edge."
Leap year, Pinder said, is the prodMountain biking isn't just for
Most large-scale bicycle producuct
of a forced connection between
gon~o. over-the-edge daredevils any- ers have their bikes assembled in a
days
and years. Calendars measure
more. Mountain biking has become a few Asian superfactories. Revamping
whole
days - but the year contains
recreational activity for riders from 6 lines and styles can take an average
· to 76, arid has changed the face of the of three years. Cannondale is able to a fraction.more than 365 days. Leap
bicycle manufacturing industry. This revamp its line annually. or, if nee- years, and more recently "leap seconds," take up the cosmic slack."
summer, it's even an official Olympic essary, daily.
Pinder doesn't argue against the
sport, making its first appearanFe in
Cannondale uses a sophisticated
this summer's Games in Atlanta. .
manufacturing system which lets' il
"Thj:re are I0 million mountain design and alter tube dimensions by
bikers in the U..S. who ride off-road computer. and make critical angle
at least six times a year," says Tim cuts for the frames with computerNEW YORK (AP)- Eddie MurBioomenthal, market,ing director of controlled lasers.
phy
is tired of reading how his new
the lnternati~?al 1'1ountain. Biking _ . It also has developed a patented
Assocoatwn. That s, pretty ompres- "tab and slot" design for assembling movie "The Nutty Professor" is his ·
sove If.you cons1der that m 1976, that their frames. The aluminum seg- last chance to hit it big at the box
office.
number was ze.ro." . .
ments are secured together like ajig"The reality of my situation is that
•&gt;~ountam boke.traols have sprung saw puzzle before being welded,
up all across the country, from those eliminating the very cumbersome if my career was on th~ decline I
in state and national parks, to trails at and time consuming jigs that other wouldn't he making movies," Murski resons seeking a new source of manufacturers must use to piece phy says in the July I issue of
Newsweek. "They don't give money
income in the off season.
together their frames.
to
blacks in Hollywood because
And for those seeking a little.
Says · Armstrong: "Basically,
they're
swell."
cross-country adventure, a mountam we're set up so if one of our riders has
The 35-year-old actor, whose new
bike trail reaching from Canada to a race on Sunday, and comes to us on
movie
opens Friday, says he does
Mexico along the Continental Divide Monday wanting to try out a bike.
have
a
few·
big career regrets, howis being developed by the Adventure with. say, longer chain stays or a
ever.
Cycling Association. One-third of the frame alteration, we can ha'vc it
. Among them was turning down a
trail, through Montana, Idaho, and inade for him by that afternoon."
starring
role in the 1984 smash hit
Wyoming, is open now, with the path
While the Olympics will push
"Ghdstbusters"
and a chance that
through Colorado and New Mexico mountain biking further 'into the
planned for .completoon by 1997..
spotlight, some hope that the rugged- same year to sing ·on the charity .
·
Whole thm-wheeled, feather-hght ness of the event will not. frighten record "We Are The World."
"I
was
working
on
my
own
album
road bokes domonated the bocycle away the averageTider.
and blew it off," he says. "I was like
busi ness in the '60s and '70s, sales of
'They' ll prclbably put me.in !he back

The member libraries served by
OVAL, the first state funded regional library system in Ohio, includes
Athens, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Ross, Scioto, and Vin·
ton Counties. Wanda Eblin is Meigs
County's representative on that board_
In other matters the board .
approved the adoption of the 19961997 salaries and benefits package
for employees. On the recommendation of Theora Bradley, representing
the Ponsmouth Public Library, the
Board granted a three percent salary

raise to regular employees, plus provided a series of one-time bonuses
based on employee performance
evaluations. Minor changes to the
personnel procedure were alsq adopted. .
.
Director Eric S. Anderson
informed the board that Margaret ·
Downey, member services assistant,
had done an outs(anding' job in managing the changeover to voice mail.
The system, . installed the second
week of June, will increase the access
citizens and member .libraries will ·

Pinder said, has I I timezones but
trains connecting the countries that
once were part of the Soviet Union
run on Moscow lime. In China,
where the consolidation is more complete, all five timezones operate on
Beijing time. The United States military uses a single world timezone, ·
Pinder has stepped up his lobbying efforts because he thinks the year
2000 is the perfect time to make the
change. If executed, it would occur
exactly at the stroke of midnight on
March 21, the vernal equinox, which
would hecome the new New Year's
Day. We would throw away our old
calendars and clocl1s.
The short name for the first new
year would be abbreviated 000.
Those who needed to know past dates
with precision would use a long version. ·
"Our planet is 4.6 billion years
old, so 2000 A.D., could become
4.600,002,000," Pinder said.

Public Notice
Th Olive Township
Budget will J;e opan lor
lnapecllon at the Olllce of
the Townahlp Clerk lrom
June 24 through July 4.
Public hellrlno and regular
meeting will be held et the
Townehlp Building July 5,
t886 at 7:30p.m.
u.rtha Dura~ Clerk
41645 Coolville RCNKI
Reedlvllle, Ohio 45772
(614)6674291
(6) 24 n:c
PUblic Notice

Public Notice
Section 6: Thatlhs salary
olthe Clerk of Beech Qrovli
Cemetsry shall be and Is
hereby eatabllahed at the
rate of .$600.00 par year.
Section 7: That the ealary
ol the Zoning Olllcer ahall
be and Is hereby
eatabllahed at the rete· ol
$1,060.00 par year.
Section 8: WHEREFORE,
this Ordinance shall take
effect and be In lull force as
ol June 10, 1886, upon It's
paaoaga and approval by
the Council.
PASSED liJ3I96
John Muoaer, Preeldent
Scott Dillon
Gerl Walton
LlorryWehrong
Geora- Wright
·
William Young
ATTEST: Kathy Hyeell
Clerk/Treaaurer

Public Notice
clearly mirkad aa "Tractor
Bid". The deadline lor bid
aubmlallon Ia July 1, 1996
at 5:00p.m.
The .tractor may be
Inspected by ·appointment
by contacting Truatee
Bonny Upton at (614) 985·
3340, Truatee Roger Rltchl,
et (614) 867-3882, or TruJamea Wateon 11 (614) 9854372.

The tractor will be sold
"ae Is" end no warrantl••
are exprea- or lmpllld by
this advertl..,ent or 111e.
The Bosrd ol Townllllp
Trustee• ol Orange ·
Townahlp reserve the right
to refuoe or reJect any and
all bids.
Osle FotlrOd, Clerk
Orange Townllllp Trueteea
(6) 21, 24, 27 3TC .

OROINANCE 642
An Ordinance to nteblleh
eatarlel lor varloua non·
elected eupervlaor.y
pareonnel ol the VIllage ol
Pomeroy, Ohio.
BE IT OFIDAINEO BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, OHIO:
Vlll•ae of P4meroy
Public Notice
Section 1: That the ulary Mela- County, Ohio
of the Chief of Pollee of the (6) 24 (7)1 2TC
LEGAL NOTICE
Tha Rutland Townllllp
Pomeroy
Pollee
llel*bloen~ ahatt be and Ia' ___:P..:u::b:::ii:.::C..:N.::o:::t::lce::!-_ Truot••• will held their
Annual Budget hearing on
haraby lltabllahed at the
Wedneedey Ju!y 3, 18INI at e
rete of $17,770.00 per ,..r. ·
PUBUC NOTICE
Section 2: That the Nlery
The Board ol Townahlp p.m. •t the Rutland Fire
ol th• Tax" Aclmlnletrlllor Trueteaa of Orange Stotlon. The public ·Ia
ehall be and le hereby Townahlp wilt 1111, by Invited to attend.
eatabllahed at tht rate ol Haled bide, a uaed tractor, (8) 24; 1 TC
St2,a11.oo par,.....
to·wll: a 1960'e Case,
Section 3: Thai 1M aelary Model 830 by I!NIIed bide et
Publl N0 t.1
of the VIllage ~lnl~ Ita regullr mHtlng on July
c
Cl
ahell be and 11 hereby 2, 1981; II 7:30 p.m., lot
ORDINANCE 141
estebllehed et the rate of which lime bids will be
An Oi'dllUinc.to aatabllah
S24,1130.00 par Jllr.
opasne;t·d
ld
Nlerlee lor verloua non·
11 •
Sect!~ 4: Thet IIMINiary
b 1 conta10 1ng al•eted aupervliory 1nd
ol the Streat Supervleor tha prilpoald elltlng price,
ahell be end le hereby end the buyer 'a name, non-aupervlaory employet~a
aetebllehed at the rete of •ddreae end telephone . ol the Village of Pomeroy,
S19,0H par yet~r.
number ehould be mailed or Ohio.
Section 5: Thai lheu••~ dlllvwed In peraon to Olle
BE IT ORDAINED BY
_,
F
II
d
Cl
k
10
THE
COUNCIL
OF THE
ol the Fire Chief of the
o ro , er o range VILLAGE
OF. POMEROY,
Pomeroy Fire Departmlnt Townlhlp II 415·2 0 OHIO:
•h•ll .,. end Ia hereby Keebeugh/Follrod Roed,
SECTION 1: Thlt the
establlelled et the rete of POmero,, Ohio 45789. The
exterior ol •II envelopea eallrlea ol the verloue
ti,030.IID
containing bide ehould .,. ••rvlce, general, etreet,

par,_.

Public Notice
pollee, water end
weat-ater emptoyeee eholl
be lnd are horeby
..tabllahed et retee eel
forth on Exhibit A, lltlched
herato, which exhibit 1hall
be end le her•by adopted
•nclepprovecl.
SECTION 2 Thia
Ordinance ehall take effect
end be In lull Ioree •• ol
June 10, 18M, upon Ita
paauge and opprovat by
the council.
PASSED: June 3, 1886
John Muller, Praoldent
Scott DNion
Gert Walton
Llony Wehrung
Georg• Wright
William Young

(8) 24; {7) I; 2TC

a

By ~Ill FREEMAt&lt;l
Slrltlnal Naw8 Staff
Meigs County Commissioners
Monday afternoon tentatively awarded a bid to Mid-Atlantic Storage Systems of :Washington Court House for
a glass-lined water. tank for a Leading Creek Conserv~y District water
project.
The action was based on the
assumption that a lawsuit filed
against the commissioners last year
·by Welding Inc. of Charleston, W.Va.,
a manufacturer of welded water storage tanks. was being dismissed.
The suit's dismissal will allow
work to continue on an LCCD water
line e!&lt;tension project in the western
end of the county. Water lines have
Qlready been installed iri the project,
which was bogged down by the suit.

· Both the long and short versions
of the new calendar would replace the
named months and days of the year
with a three-digit number.
"If you look at your office cal~n­
dar•. you may already see a small
three-digit number near the date."
Pinder said. "The higgledy-piggledy
Roman months and the mystic dates
of our week would be obsolete."
. Future February 29ths and Friday
the 13ths would vanish.
·
Time-telling would change even
more radically. Hours, minutes and
seconds would be stricken from clock
faces and digital readouts. Instead of
reporting hours and minutes, our
clocks would read in tims and millitims. Each millitim would last about
0.086 of what we now call a second.
"A millitim is a very small unit of
time," Pinder says, "but well within
the capabilities of our current watches."

The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section fdled with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
Th~ Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 19th issue of The Dally
Sen~.
·
·
Be sure your chlld, grandchlld or relative is included. Complete the
fol'lll below and enclose a snapshot or waUet size picture plus a $6.00
charge for each pbotogr~ph. (Enclose paymeJJt with picturb). : '
.

.

r-------------~-~-,

I PARENTS' NAME
'
. .
I
.
I
I
I CITY &amp; STATE
I
I CHU.D'S NAME(S) &amp; AGE
I
I
.
I
I
I
I
Submitted BY----------1

L---------------~-~
SEND TO: .

The Daily Sentinel

P.o. Box.129 • Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769

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Clearing tonlaht, Iowa
In tha 50a. Weinead,y,
sunny. Hlghl In the mid
lOa.

.,

31-

A Gannett Co.llewl,..,.,

Extension of LCCD lines·
to western end.of Meigs
significant for residents ·

"

For some residents· in the western end of the county, the decision by
Last year, Mid-Atlantic submitted
In addition, the board agreed IQ funds.
·.
the .tdeigs County Commissionen to approve the purchase of a water stora bid of $1.59,225 for a glass-lined grant $300 in Memorial Day funds to
Ashley said the &amp;UV is a legal vetage tank comes. as big news.
wafer tank, the type of' tank called the Meigs County Brooks-Grant erans organization .
Approximately 125 families along Loop, Side Hill, Carpenter Hill, Carupon by project engin~rs.
Camp of the Sons of Union Veterans .
"(The SUV). is both a lineage
penter-Dyesville ·and Cotterill roads in Rutland, Columbia and Scipio
Welding Inc- submitted a total bid for a next year's Memorial Day group and a veterans group at the
townships will be aff~ted by the Leading Creek Conservancy District
of $207,497 and. earlier filed suit observance.
same time," he slid.
waterline project, according to LCCD Manager Brent Bolon.
against the commissioners, acting as
Commissioners are allowed to
Ashley said the organization
Although many people, especially those in urhan areas, take fresh water
the grantee for L~CD, alleging that give $300 to veterans groups fQ cel- would have used the $300 to pur- . for granted, getting fresh water in rural are_as is often more complicated
it was not allowed to offer a tank bid. ebrate Memorial Day.
chase wreaths, nags and gunpowder
than simply turning a spigot.
·
·
Welding Inc. does not manufacLocal SUV President Keith Ash· for memorial salutes, and !hen used 1
"A pickup truck with a plastic tank in the back is a common .sight in
ture glass-lined tanks, whido LCCD ley .told commissioners that accord- the remainder to purchase re~roduc­
this part of the county," said Bolin.
officials claim last much longer and ing to the Ohio Revised Code, the tion Civil War-era uniforms and othWater lines and a pump station are alreadY in place, needing only the
require Jess maintenance.
Sons of Union Veterans is entitled to er items.
storage tank to put the whole project into operation, according to Bolin.
, Pomeroy attorney Linda Warner, the funds earlier granted to the Grand
He said he resented the use of the
Some families are already hooked up in areas not affected by 'the tank,
representing the conservancy dis- Army of the Republic, the Civil War word "costumes"· by Prosecuting
he added.
trict, informed commissioners Mon- Veterans organization which has Allorney John R. Lentes. who earli·
Meanwhile, Bolin.would like to see the LCCD recover some of the
day that the suit may be dropped. si~ce become extinci. The Sons of er recommended the group not be
estimated $30,000 it has spent fighting the lawsuit by Welding Inc. of
prompting the commission's action. Union Veterans is clearly named in granted the funds.
Charleston, W.Va.
"We don't have any documenta- the revised code section.
Hoffman said the re.quest by the
"Thirty-thousand dollars would lay a lot of waterline," he commentOther veterans groups in the coun- newly-formed chapter tQOk county
tion on this yet," Commission Presied.
.
ty
also
receive
the
Memorial
Day
dent Fred Hoffman explained.
"It !llaybe silly to fight (the lawsuit), but sometimes you have got to
(Continued on Page 3) .
stand up."

ode/ for the .future~ Middleport Cfluncil
.

.

.

approves 20o/o hike ·
in water/sewer rates

COLUMBUS (AP) . - Gov.
·George Voinovich's. chief of staff,
who has been with the administration
.since Voinovich took office in 1991 ,
.is leaving.
.
· Paul Mifsud, 49, announced his
resisnaiion o" Monday, citing family fe81ons'. He will resign from the
$9§:154-a-yearjob on lillY 26.
Voinovich praised Mifsud's work,
especially in economic development.
"Paul ~as done an dutstan~ing job
in serving the people of Obio,"
Voinovich said. "He js one of the
most respected chiefs of staff in the
Countty.''

·

Mifsud helped negotiate workers.
compensation reform and oversaw
the state departments of Development, Transportation, Commerce,
Workers' Compen~ation and the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
~ He also was the focus of a state
inspector general's investigation, but
was cleared last year.
Mifsud had been acc~sed of per·
suading a Cincinnati businessman to
drop a lawsuit against the state in
return for the promise of state business for his company.
. The investigation focused on a
telephone call Mifsud was reported to
have made to William Cargile in July
(992. Mifsud denied having the conversation, and Cargile later changed
. his story about what Mifsud told him.
· Mike Dawson, Voinovich's
spokesman, said at the time that the
investigation was politically motivated.
In his resignation letter. Mifsud
said he wanted to spend more time
with his wife, Kathy, and their chil-

When Racine's new branch to the Melge County Public Library Is complatlld, It will look like
the architect's modal above. Construction Is scheduled ~o begin In early July, according to
Library Boerd President Pat Holter.' A construction contract for $287,fOO was awarded to Home
Creak Entarpria~a of Pomeroy earlier this month. The 3,000 aqtlare foot library will encomptlsa
the old carriagt houu on the Tyrae-Pickens alta, right, with wings to the Iouth and waat

'

.

Meigs in~luded in disaster declaration
By The Asaoclat~ Prase
Storms that swept 'ihrough nonheast Ohio downed ~es, causing .
power failures and damaging h.ouses,
but no injuries were reiJ?rted,'iluthorities said.
.:
Meanwhile, residents in Lawrence
County i~ southern Ohi,o were irying
1
to recover from nash Hooding over
the weekend that destroyed seven
homes and eight mobilc,homes.
Water was up to 10 feet deep in'
some places •. said, Larry Jewell,
deputy director ofthe county's emergency management agency. •
Also on Monday, G'?v· George

Voinovich declared a st•te of comergency because of weekend nooding
in Lawrence and Gallia counties in
southern Ohio.
Three to 4 inches of rain fell in
about three hours Sunday on ground
that had been saturated from rain
throughout the day. the weather service said.
Terry Hemby, director of Gallia
County's emergency management
agency, said damage to roads and
bridges was at least $2 million. 1
The worst damage in Lawrence
County occurred east of State Route

775, primarily around Scouown, Jewell said. ·
Another 20 homes were heavily
damaged and 15 more had minor
damage.· Jewell estimated the prop.erty loss today at $500,000, plus an
additional $100,000 in crop damage.
Gallia County also was inCluded
in a disaster declaration issued by
President Clinton. The other counties
in the president's declaration were
Adams, Belmont, Brown, Hamilton,
Jefferson, Meigs. Paulding. Scioto
and Williams countie~.
The counties were damaged by
Hoods that began May 2:

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Upon the recommendation of the
Board of Public Affairs, Middleport
Village Councitapproved a 20 percent increase In water and sewage
rates during itS regular meeting Monday.
,
With the increase, the first since
1992, minimum village water bills
will increase from $6.65 to $7.98,
while minimum village sewer bills
will increase from $7.80 to $9.36.
Bill Browning, assistant water
and sewer superintendent, said that
the increase was "desperately" needed to keep up with increases in general supplies used by the departments,
land rising electric costs for opera1 loons.
' "This department is not a charity
· organization. This department is a
· business, and it should be run as a
business. If major repairs are required.
over a two-to-three-year period and
we go in the hole with, no monies as
surplus to fall back on,.we won't be
able to co(lle out of that big a financial hole," said Browning of the
depanment's current tight budget.
A I0 percent increase in operating
.costs over the last year will realistically limit the water department to a
I 0 percent rate increase with which
to establish surplus funds, Browning
said.
"We are never going to ·accurriu·

' a rainy day fund for emergencies. We
. need to be able to operate efficiently," .said Browning.
Council originally discussed
water and Se\¥ag~ rate increase
March II, when the Board of Public
Affairs ·first recommended the raise.
However, the issue was tabled after
a motion by Council President Bob
Gilmore to approve the increase died
without a second
Council member George Hoffman
made the motion during Monday's
(11eeling for the rate increase, noting
•that although he wasn't in favor of.the
·increase after. council first considered
:it, he had second · thoughts after
researching all the financial figures.
"When we first discussed this in
iMarch, I wasn't in favor of·it. After
extensive conversations 'with Bill
.Browning, and considering the
,increases in operational c.osts, innaition: and examining other figures
while preparing for the 1997 village
!budget, I feel that we must do this to
ikeep the water system and the village
;financially healthy," said Hoffman.
Council member Beth Stivers seconded Hoffman's motion, and it was
approved 5-0 with Gilmore, Stivers,
Hoffman, ~ick Childs and Rae
Gwiazdowski voting for the measure.
Gilmore .noted that even· with the
increase in rates. the village will still
have the lowest water and sewer rates

a

in the area.

late a real astronomical amount of I Paving work at the Middleport
money in surplus and it's not our bQiiter parking area ncar the Ohio
intention to do that. We do need to River levee should be C011Jplete withaccumulate some surplus funding as
(Continued on Page 3)

~igs deep for White House cohtenders .
'

By SONYA ROSS
AsiOCiated Preaa Writer
,
: NEW YORK - Bill Clinton and
Bob Dole went to the same New York
high-rent. district in search· of cash,
separated only by $1 million, a few
city blocks ,and. the celebrities who
planted themselves firmly beside the
president.
The take at the end of the day
seemed to reflect the advantages of
incumbency: Clinton raked in $3 mil·
lion at two big-ticket fund-raisers. He
was serenaded by Tony Bennett and
condoned' by jazz · legend Lionel
Hamp1on, who hasn 'I backed a
·
. Democrat in 40 years.
. Dole, meanwhile, raised about $2
million at a reception where business,ulted auests' paid.$500 each to sip
cocktails and gazed at the two big
Republican names of the night: New
York Gov. George Pataki and Sen.
Alfo111e D' Amato of New York.
· . One New York endorsement that
still ellldes Dole is that of Republican
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. The ~ay­
br- who faces re-election next year
ill this heavily Democratic; city declined an invilllionto Dole's event
· ~was not seen at Cllnton:s either.

•

'

Of poJitics and big bucks: the Big Apple

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12

Ill the CllrJao·OIIIce.

•

Voinovich's
$taff chief
quits post.

dren. ·

Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
Notice Ia·tt.reby ginn thet
on July 8, 18INI lrom 6:00
p.m. ID 8:30 p.m. e publlo
rMetlng on lhe Buclaet •nd
Rev•nue Sli•rlng for the
yet~r 1187 lor tile VIllage of
Pomeroy, Ohio will be held

Kllllly HY11111
VIllage Clerk
Poineroy, OH
(6)24 (7) 1 2TC .

"You got to under'Stand: We're a ·
little spoi led. We'll be staying at a
hotel with ·AC and all that good
stuff."
And roommates?
No again, says Hill. "Too many
egos to share a room."

.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 25, 1996

Water tank purchase gets nod
from coun~y commissioners

have to OVAL staff while at the same
time reduce the person hours required
to answer the phone.
On recommendation ·Of Mrs.
Dahlberg the Board approved
Books By Mail contract' with the
Wayne (:ou~ty Public Library in
Wooster, Ohio. This is the fourth nonmember library to contract with
OVAL for these services.
The Board renewed the contract
with Optimum Cleaning services of
Jackson for weekly cleaning of the
headquarters building.

'

Public Notice
SALISBURY '!QWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
A public heartng on the
annual budget lor yet~r lllall
1M hold on the 2nd hy,of
July, 18M at the townahlp
hall, Rockaprtnga, Ohio.
(I) 24; 1TC

Buckeyes:
8-12·26-31-35

.

THE DEADLINE IJAS BEEN
..
EXTENDED FOR

I

Kathy Hyeell,
Clerlc/TNaaurer
Villea- of Pomeroy
Melge County, Ohio

2~0

¥ol. 47, NO. 4Z
2'181 hne, 12,.....

Murphy's new movie, 'The Nutty Professor,' opens Friday
row with LaToya and Sonny Bono
"If we lose, we will be kicked out
any way.' Then I saw the video, and ~ of the United States," the Detroit Piswanted. to jump off the roof."
tons guard jokes in the July 1 issue
of People magazine.
NEW YO~ (AP) - For Grant
But one thing is certain- none of
Hill a~t,l his teammates on the latest the millionaire NBA stars will be
U.S . Olympic Dream Team, winning ·bunking in Atlanta's Olympic village.
the gold os the only option.

4-4-2
Pick 4:

\

Decimal Time Society .wants to get rid of Leap Year
. need for these timing adjustments. It
is the entire timekeeping system he
and his fellow members of WDTS
want to trash. Their plan is to subdivide time the way the metric system
dovodes space. Their year would consist of 36 I (}.day weekJ. Their day
would be divided into I million
units, called millitims.
"Dividing days into a million
units would complete the decimalization of all our common units," Pinder said. "We would have to throw
out our clocks, but clocks :ire pretty
cheap these days."
Pinder said the American government agreed to the decimalization of
lime in 1884, when · it decided to
divide the continent into four timezones.
Some of the ideas proposed by the
WDTS have already been successfully adopted in some areas. The
Confederation oflndependent States,

Pick 3:

·Spolta on Page 4

.
Library board discusses technology enhancements

PRESENT PRoGRAM • Geor~ and Debbie Plckene, veteran
ml11lonarln In Nairobi, Kenya, are home on furlough from the
million field thle summer. The Long Bottom netive preached at
bolh morning worehlp nrv!cee of the Middleport Church of
Christ Sunday Mr. and Mra. Plcl!ens and their two sons, George
Mark and John Michael, also did a slide presentation concernIng.their work In Kenya slast night.

Ohiq Lottery

The lack of celebrity - and M~rsalis.
national Republi~an leaders- althe
Ley performed a lusty blues
Dole fund-raiser did not go unnoticed composition whiCh the evening's
in the Clinton camp.
'
·
host, comedian AI Franken, said
"What's significant about Dole's Marsalis "threw together" especial·
fund-raiser is not who comes, but ly for Clinton.
Later, Clinton hobnobbed at a pri- ' ·
who doesn't," said Clinton cam'
vate reception · at the lavish Plaza
paign spokesman Joe Lockhart.
Dole dido ' t seem concerned to Hotel, where guests were enterlained
have Clinton in such close proximi· by comedian Rosie 0' Donnell. Ben·
ty. "It's .a big city," he said. And, nett performed two songs, ilnd pop
philosophically, the candidates are star Michael Bolton sang opera. .
Dole, speaking to New York's
"miles apart; trUst me," added state
GOJ' executive director Brendan . GOP faithful, cited a recent poll th'at
showed Clinton's lead has shrunk to
Quinn.
Clinton seemed .10 agree, telling 6 percentage points. "This race is
the crowd at a $1,000-a-head event at beginning to close," Dole declared.
Republicans were hoping to raise.
the Waldorf'Astoria: "We're right
and they're wrong. You know what . just over $2. million Monday to be
I'll do and you know what they'll split between the state GOP and the
Republican National Committee. For
do."
$500,
about 700 guests were offered
The crowd stOOd throughout ClincocktAils
and a buffet of roast turkey
. ton's speech, delivered against' a
huge, replica of the t1.S. Constitution, and rare beef~ but few chairs- in
with the words "We The 1 People" a ballroom dotted with l!alloons.
• Dole also attended a second,
enlaiged in black. The president's
comments drew applause from blind smaller fund-raiser al uother hotel.
pianist Marous RobertS, ·who per- State GOP chairman Bill Powers
formed in a quartet thai also includ· c;J~IIed tile night's total take "subed jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis stantial" bill.would not specify and
'
·
and his brothel, ·drummer Jason amount.

ON THE STUMP.- Pt ul~'lt Cll!'lton apolte
In New York Monday during a $1,000 paroparaon fu~l. . aa aupportws liatwned In the
~- They .... from .left, .Sen. Daniel
'
I
,
'

Patrie~ Moy!llhan, D-N. Y.; comedian AI
r,...ken; and o.mocn.t~c National Coiritnlltae
Chairman Dan Fowltlr. (AP)
·
,.

'

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