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                  <text>.Ohio Lottery
Chl_cago snaps
Red$' streak
with:shutout
Sportl .on

Super Lotto:

3·13·1~7~9-47

Kicker:
· W·2-8-8-1
Pick 3:

4-4-5

Page 4 ·

Plck·4:
9..().2·7

I

Pertly cloudy tonight, ·
lows In the 601. Tuesclly,
moatly cloudy. Hlgha rn
the 801. ·

•

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 46
: 1 Seotlon~ 10 P1lgel

•
35cente
A Gannett~. Hewtp8per

Pbtne~oy·Middleport, O'hlo, Monday, July 1, 1996

Authorities set mee~ing .
:on .disaster assi'stan·ce .
: By JIM FREEMAN
: Sentinel Nftws Staff
Local and federal officials are
: meeting Monday, July 8 to discuss
: federal disaster assistance following
· Hooding in early May. ·
· 1bc meeting comes in the wake of
; 11 presidential declaration on June 24
: providing federal aid to repair dam. ase to publicly-owned property in I0
: Ohio counties, including Meigs.
,
At the local meeting, to be held at
· the Meigs County Emergency Med. ical Scr¥ice in Pomeroy at8 p.m., the
: Federal Emergency Management
: Agency will instruct county, town. ship and village offici~ls on how to
· apply for federal assistance and assist
. in the application process, according
to EMS Director Robert Byer. .

FEMA has set a tight timetable on
the application process, according to
Byer, planning to implement a July
24 deadline on aid applications.
"It is very important that (local
officials) atte'nd this meeting," he
said.
Also, local officials must bring a
map identifying damaged sites, he
added.
Affected local governments in the
declared counties will be eligible to
apply for federal funds to pay 75 percent of approved costs for debris
removal, emergency services related
to the Hood, and repairing or replacing damaged p11blic facilities such as
roads, bridges and utilities, according
to the Ohio Department of Public
Safety.

A preliminw\o damage assessment
conducted by ftlderal, state and local
officials indicated more than $10.5
million in damage to public·roads and
other structures in the I0 counties,
OOPS reported.
Local roads and bridges received
approximately $1.5 million in dam- .
age during the Hooding, Byer said. In
addition, there is another $1 million
in projects that need repair or preventative measures, he noted.
Later, FEMA will meet with clerks
and trustees to physically inspect the
sites and determine eligibility, Byer
said.
The federal government will pay
FLOOD AID- Local and federal offlclala are
75 percent of the cost$, with the state
meeting
July 8 to discuss federal assistance for
. picking up an additional 12.5 percent,
damage
to
public roads end flcllltl&amp;8 In the May
(Continued on Page 3)

4 flood that struck Melga County, damage from
which Is seen above In this file photo. ·

Blast victims~ families
relay grief to Clinton

Air Force mistakenly lists airqman
killed in·blast a.s one of i:njured

PATRICK AIR FORCE BASE, declined to identify the pare.nt.
Fla. (AP) - President Clinton paid
At both se..Vices, Clinton vowed a
last respects to the dead and· wound- relentless hunt for those responsible
ed from the bomb attack in Saudi for last week's truck bombing at the
Ai'abia on Sunday, telling mourners, U.S. complex in Dhahran.
•
"America stands with you in your
"In our time, terrorism is the ene. sorrow and outrage."
my of peace and freedem," he said at
In services at this Atlantic Ocean- Eglin. "Americarts must not and
side blise and earlier at Eglin Air Americans will not be driven from
Forc.e Base in northw~st Florii:Ja, th~.t}ght "l!.li!nst terrorism." . .
. \:\linton eulogl~ the l~ricaur
_.(bout"~' f~tid_l and retaqves
)lervicemcn killed in the blast - t7 attended the iCrvJce m the base-theof whom came (rom these two bases. atcr at Patrick. The earlier one at
"1bcy represented the _bes! in· i:gtin was held irr a cavernous HagAme~ca and_they_~ave Ai'ne~ca thetr draped hangar. Open to tl)e public,
best, he .sBid, ·usmg near tdcnucal about 5,000 people showed up.
l·~guage m both speeches..
At both services. victims of TilesOf the 19 deceased, 12 were day's bomb blast were in the front
based at Eglin, five at Patrick and the row.
other two at air bases in Nebraska and
"Thank God for your presence
Ohio.
here today," he told a group of" II
Clinton, who cut an overseas trip wounded at the Eglin service, some
short by ·one day to attend the two in wheelchair1 and on stretcherS.
services, mel privately with grieving
At Eglin, hOIT\C of the 33rd Fightfamily members in both locations.
er Wing, a lone bagpiper sounding a
At Patrick, near Cape Canaveral, mournful tone and a military orches- .
onc;._grieving parent told Clinton, · tra playing "Amaring Grace" opened
"YQ.u need to thinli about this every the service. four jets roared overhead
day when. you see your dal!ghter, in a "missing ·man" formation to
Chelsea: One day your children are close it.
there, and thc next day they're not,
AI Patrick, home of the 71st Resand it's hard. to kno=hy."
cue Squadron, Clinton stood .on n
Clinton nodded u erstandingly. platform dctked with funeral
said White House spoke an David wreaths. As taps were play¢, ClioJohnson who relayed the moment but ton knelt befor~ one of the wreaths.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A West
Forensic teams thought the Va.
·Virginia airman initially thought to be unidentified remain' of the 19th vic- 1
She said Air Force officials told
. hospitalized has been identified as tim belonged to Airman Paul A. her that Blais is in a coma, bur his
one of the 19 Americans killed when Blais, who is assigned to Patrick Air condition is improving and·he Wi I
a truck bonlb exploded at a U.S, mil- Force Base in Florida. His relatives transferred to a hospitat ·in Germany
itary housing complex in Saudi Ara- were told that Blais' status was on Manday. .
bia.
.
unknown.
~stcr·~ f11mily earlier this week
Relatives of lsi Class Christopher
lnvcsligators, however, could not . cledtned -comme'nl on the !JQmbing.
B. Lester, 19, 9f. Pineville, W.Va., match the remains to Blais. Further c_ all~ II) Hi$ rlrc.6i ",!wlno q(u{dny.
\Wift first told that ,Jltr·was OOSflilaJ-· iJiv 'Sll8$li$!~, rel(ealed that 1119 · icillrlftJC~
W!lf: w&amp;cd.
ized in very seriousrcondition fol- remains were those of Lester, said
"The Air Force sincerely regrets
lowing Tuesday's bombing.
Cook. The unidentified patient in the all harship and pain caused 10 bnth
· Members of his squadron base at hospital was then identified as Blais. families," the Air Force said in a
. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in who. is listed in very serious condi- newS'releasc.
Dayton. Ohio, believed Lester to be. tion.
Earlier this week, Bobbic.Mixon.
the "John Doe" being treated a.t King ·
The mistake was corrected Friday a spokesman at Wright-Pau9rson
Faisal University ..HDspital in but not announced until Saturday.
said 1.ester had sulTcrod a conclliRion
Dhahran, Saudi A-rabia, Air Force
"It's a wonderful feeling . It's the in the blast 'and was in serious conspokeswoman Capt. Kathleen Cook best day of my life," said Blais' dition at an American hospital in Sausaid Saturday.
mother, 'Maria Taylor of Hampton, di Arabia.
·

\

MEMORIAL REMARKS Pl'llldent Clinton apoke during a
memorial aervlce Sunday at
Patrick Air Force Beait near
Cocoa Beech, Fla. The urvlce
waa for the five airmen atiltloned
at Petrtc;k who were killed In the
June 25 bomb blast In Saudi Are-..
ble. (AP)

'·

Ci!use of CSX derailment inve$iigated

LAKIN, W.Va. - Nine CSX rail
cars loaded with coal jumped the ·
"We will not rest in our efforts to track at Lakin between Tim-Rock
capture and prosecute and punish Farms and AEP's River Division
those who committoo this e~il deed," Sunday around 3:20 P·V' .. according
Clinton said at both services. "But let · to Mason County 911 Director Chuck
us put aside our anger for a moment Blake.
Five of the car~ act~tlly left the
to remember and honor those who
track,
landing on their sides or sidewere lost."
ways,,while four just left the railing,

The caus,: of the derailment is still
under investigation, Blake said, but
authorities'\!!ill_eve the cause could be
heat and stress on the 'track or anoth. cr mechanical probl~m involved with
the track.
CSX is currently cleaning up the
cars. Blake said. No injuries or private or public property damage was
reported. Area emergency service

,]I·

personnel rcspondina to the wrec:k
mcluded Mason Fire Departmont
and EMS. Point Pleasant Fiic
Department and EMS, the Mason
County Office of Emergency Scrvtccs and the West Virginia State
Police.
Blake said the .train wa~ 87 ci.n "
long and filled with coal. It wa.~
enroutc to the Mitchell Power Plant.

Confusion reigns over
legalities of fireworks

I

Rockin'
the 4th

•

'50s celebration
highlights music,
fun at Middleport
holiday fJyen~
Selections fro.:0 the Broadway
musical "Grease" and music from
the ·~will be featured in a Fourth
of July show to be staged at Dave
Diles Park in Middleport at 8 p.m.
Thursday.
' '
Sam Cowan and Sonne Smith
will take the leading roles in
"Grease." with the selections to
include the title song by Bill Crane.
Other numbers will be "Summer Nights" and "You're the One
that I Want" by Cowan and Smith,
"Hopeles~ Devoted to You" by
Smith, and "Sandy" by Cowan, .
who will by j.oined by cloggers for
his rendition of "Greased Lightning."
.
\
The "Fabulous Fifties" segment
of the show will open ~ith Jason ,
Riley singing "Rock-N-R?ll is
Here to Stay," backcd·by !nngcu
and danCers. Jordan Shank will
give his impression of Elvis on
"Thhdy Bear." and Sharon Hawley,
Dixie Sayre and Debbie Grucser
will sing the popular SO's numbers
"Lollipop" and "One t:ine Day.~
A medley of songs fcaturina

l·

'GREASE' DANCERS - Pamell Neece, Atfam Shank, Marlena Staats, Monica Zurcher and
Curtis Blelllng, Ill from left, will present 8 lively '501 dance It Thursday night's July 4 s'ilow
on the atage at Dave Diles Park In Middleport.

~los and ducts will incl~e Kelley
Grucser doing "Splish Splash";
Danyal Litchfield and Adam
Shank, '1llc Lion Sleeps Tonight";
Jason Riley and Monica Zurclfcr,
"Do You Love Me" ; Marlena
Stpts and Pam Neece, "Do Wah
Didcly Didlly"; and Jason Riley,
"Rocking Pneumonia and the Doggie Woogie Flu," backed by a
grilup of voice students of Sharon
Hawley.
,
Other stleetions of the variety
program will be "Lipstick" by
Monica Zurcher; "Where the Boys

'

Arc" . by Kelley_ ;Grueser;
"Unchained Melody" -g'y Cowan;
and "Goodnight Sweetheart" by a
quartet of Crane and Riley with
gui~. Cowan and Hawley.
Handling musical direction for
the program are Hawley and Cowan, with Paulette Harrison, Julie
Zirkle ·and Kelley Gruescr doing
the choreography. Curtis Blessing,
Erica Poole and Beth Wilfong will
join . other singers for a backup_
vocal group.
Cloggcrs are Lauren Anderson,
Debbie . Evans, Ashley Hannahs,

Hollx Williams, Dalana Eichinger,
Erica Poole, Danielle Crow, Jayne
Davis, Sara Anderson, Jodi Glass,
Paulette Harris~, Kristen Wright.
Rachel Elliot, tacy Smith, Kay
Hemsley, Jcssi Blaeunar, Charla Burge, "Rhonda Hannahs, Erin
Krawsczyn . Julie Zirkle, Alyssa
Holter, Brandi Thomas, Jodie Sisson and Angela Wilso~
Tom Dooley will e cee the prOgram. Councilman Bo Gilmore is
general chaipnan for the ulebration, w()ich will get underway with
ap~at6p. m .
·

,

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Con- limited to sparklers. snakes and small,sumers can oasily he confused about novelty noise-makers. Fountains and
whether it is legal to set oiT fireworks spinners. arc legal in Kcntudy and
that are readily available, regulators Indiana, but not Ohio.
say.
The reality is that a growing num11 is illegal to set off firecrackers bcr of fireworks arc illegally SCI off.
and rockets in Ohio, Kentucky and
In the bicentennial year o&lt;r 1976.
Indiana. But. it is ·legal to buy them a banner market for fireworks, 38 l
at Ohio and Indiana outlet stores and million pounds of fireworks were
from Kentucky wholesalers.
.
sold in America, a record high at that
"It's a total joke." said U.S. Fire· time. The record went to II S million
works Safety Council administrative · pounds last year. ·
director Tom Hinton. He .compared il
Federal staqdards for fircwnrks
with allowing liquor stores to se ll contents were enacted in 1976.
alcohol to people if the y promise not
'·'That seemed to make consumer
to drink it.
fireworks legitimate for the first
"The public is prcuy well con- time," said John Conkling, executive
fused about fireworks ... Hinton said. director of the American Pyrotech.. People sec fireworks advertised nic' Association.
,
and figure there's no problem. Then,
Chma has goucn into the internalhey 'rc told to stgn a form that tiona! fireworks market ~i ncc then
requires the fireworks to be taken out supplying 90 percent of 1Amcrica '~ ·
of state, and they start to wonder."
fireworks.
In a practice currentl y being
Conkling said hi~ trade group of
debated in court, many Indiana stores fireworks makers ~eve. r advocates
require fireworks buyers to buy a $2 that people break the taw.
membership in a " fireworks users
_But, he also said. " If people arc
association .~· which mandates that gomg to break the law, we urge them
fireworks be set off in a designated, to do 11 as safely as possible by
supervised, publ ic place.
• putung a .sober adult in charge."
"In reality, it doesn't work out that
Oh10, Kentucky and Indiana all
way very often," said Alden Taylor of ban setting off firecrackers, bottle
the Indiana fire marshal' s office. rockets, Roman candles and aerials
'' Few people go to designated areas
Still, all those fireworks are hcav~
and lllot of fireworks aren't taken out tl¥ ~vert~SC:d at stores just west or :
of state."
Cmct~nau \n Lawrenceburg. Ind.,
Fireworks legal to usc in Ohio, and JUSt cast of Cincinnati ncar·
Kentucky and Indiana are basically · Amelia, ·ohio.

"'

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'

• •

•

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. """·

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 1,1996

COmmentar

P•ge2
Monday, July,1, .ume
I

OHIO Weather
,.

TUesday, July l
AccuWbthe.,- forecast for

The ··fiaily Sentineb.

Why was Pentagon·mum on weapons?

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Olllo

By Jilek'~ .
and Jan Mollet'

.Gannett ~. Newspaper
•

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maoqer

MARGARET LEHEW ·
Coatroller

LETTilRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonls long. AU I~ are subject to editins and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
sllould be in good _taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

,L-----------------------------~

Throw out conventional
wisdom when it comes to
.presidential race
. By CHUCK RAASCH
•GNS Polltlclll Writer

-.J

WASHINGTON -- The recent
announcement bY the Pentagon that
some U.S. soldiers in the Gulf War
may have been exposed to chemical
weapons left several ob¥Crvcrs shaking their beads with disbelief.
In a hastily call~ June 21 press
conference, Pentagon spokesman
Ken Bacon claimed that "new"
·information about the bombing of 811
Iraqi bunker prompted the sudden
announcement. But a senior govern~
ment official -- and others who've
:been following the issue for years -claim the Pentagon bas known about
this for almost five years.
"The Pentagon bas"lmown ·about
it since October of 1991," the senior
official told us. "(The Pentagon)
wanted to low.-key..(the announcemcht). The big questions are going to
be: When did (the Pentagon) find out
they bad (the evidence), and how
long did they have it? How come it
wasn't put forward for the last five
Ye8!"S?" ,

The. new disclosure opens up .reviewed by our associate Aaron
·· many new questions, but it also caps Karp. "Some troops in the Vietnam
off five years of excuses by the Pen- War are known to have injured them- ·
tagon that have ranged from dubiOII\... selves by ingesting RDX, a plastic
• to bizarn:.
~ive. and a small number of
Defense Department officials have individuals were bound to have
steadfastly denied that exposure to ~xperimented with these and other
chemicar agents could be a cause for . substances."
the mysterious Gulf War syndrome.
As we reported·Iast week, the timWhen veterans first began complain- . ing of the Pentagon·~ ~nouncement
ing of unexplained symptoms, the has also raised eyebrows. In fact, the
Pentagon tried telling them it was all Pentagon came clean only after
in their heads by blaming it on post- receiving an ultimat'¥'1 frol)l a special
traumatic stress disorder. When that presidential ' commission investigal)didn't work, the DOD began speeu- ing the mysterious symptoms.
lating on other possible causes
A commisSion investigator ~is­
including insect bites, bad food sup- covered an October 1991 Uruted
plies, insecticides and oil-fire fumes. NatiC?Jis report buried in Pentagon
·· At one point, and without any fac- files"' revealing that chenucal weapons
tual basis exccpt~lcns learned were probably present at · the
20 years earlier in Vi
fficials Kamisiyah Ammunition Stora~e
offered up the "
hoi sub "tute" Depot, which was destroyed by _Bir
theory:
• .
strikes in the days shortly followmg
"No inquiry ba$ been
eon the the cease-frre.
extent of substance abuse (e.g. solThe commission threatened to
vent sniffing, etc.) in a population release the information itself ·in earthat was abruptly dePJ:ived of alco- ly Jul~ if the Pentagon continued to
hoi," claims i11994 Pentagon report stay stlent. When we calleiUI.!.con the

2'

._

WASHINGTON - With the White House's FBI files fiasco getting
curioser and curioser, it's a good time to challenge conventional wisdom of
the 1996 elections.
The dominant sense in these sultry summer days is that the status quo
- Preside~ Clinton and a Republican Congres$- will be hard to unseat.
Possible, bu~otc. especially in the case of Clinton, who leads comfortably in polls.
In a recent Gannett News Service survey of presidential scholars, only
two of 56 gave Republican Bob Dole miK:h of a chance of winning. Few
also seemed to hold out miK:h of a chance for massive turnover of the GOP
Congress.
..
'
Both could be~ wrong conclusions. It is folly to assume anything fow
months before an election in one of the most volaiile periods in public opin'
ion in a long time.
· Which raises a larger point about presidential election year conventional wisdom.
The term is barely half right.
.
Conventional, it is. Pack journalism is its perennial offspring. Sound, conq-uian analysis gets trampled in the stampede toward groupthink.
But it's rarely wise. Us!J8)ly, it's proved dead wrong .
Ask President Dukakis, or second-term President George Bush who could
-have been croWned king after the Persian Gulf War. Ask R!&gt;ss Perot, who
was leading in polls about now in 1992.
.Ask Bill Clinton.
Baek a little more than four years ago, many supposedly smart people
were swanning to the conventional wisdom that by now Clinton would be
a disgraced ex-Arkansas governor, fading into~ haze of draft dodging, womanizing and un-inhaled marijuana smoke.
.
The problem in sorting this election year out is the press covers Chnton
tbc way his critics say he governs: by the polls.
' When he's up, as he is now, he's resourceful, a deft political animal, willing to compromise to move issues forward, the great appropriator, the best
pure politician of our times.
When he's down, he's soulless, ~¥ithout center, a shameless panderer, the
most callous politician of our times.
'
Forgetting the polls, there are five longer trends that point to a very close
Clinton-Dole rnatchup:
_.
- Clinton may be the most analyzed presi&lt;fent in American history,. right
down to his underwear and cenainly his psyche. But in a strange twist, the
incumbent Clinton enters the fall election with much more mystery hanging over him than his principle rival Dole.
·
.
No one can predict where Whitewater prosecutor Ken Starr goes next.
Longtime Clinton aide and confidant Bruce Lindsey already has been named
an unindicted co-Conspirator in an ongoing Arkansas trial alleging financial
crimes by two bankers who loaned cash to Ointon's last Arkansas guberl)atorial campaign. And the ~omparisons be.tween filegate and Watergate
~orne less of a stretch with each revelation of low-level minions gatbcrU)g dirt on political enemies.
.
: · No administration that bas run as many low-grade scandal fevers as thts
should ever be considered a healthy front-runner.
: : -Clinton, who.looked as politically dead as an incumbent could a year
igo, bas gotten his second wind from a Republican revolution that the "poblic thinks overreached. His considerable political skills suit him best in n:cov-

day before the. announ~nt._ !Je was
still clin~ing to the offic1al hoe that
there is no evide11ce of chemical
exposuretEi Gulf.
Fearin · the information would
leak out,
Pentagon decided to preempt the media late on a Friday ~e~;
noon. " Your call was provocabve,
Bacon later admitted. "We decided
with your call" we should go ~
and announce it as soon as poss1ble.
A day after Bacon ·told us this,
however, Dr..Step'!en Joseph, assistant secretary \lf Defense for Health
Affairs, sang a different tune in tes1
timony before Congress. At a House
subcbmrnittee hearing chaired by
Rep. ·christopher Shays, R-Conn ..
Joseph strongly denied that possible
press leaks had anything to do1•with
the timing of the announcement.
Although Bacon admitted that the
Pentagon bad a report of the incident
as early as 1~1. he claimed it was
lost in the shuffle. "We had a report,
but we have a lot of papers," Bacon .
j said. "... For whatever reaion, 'the
report resurfaced. I don't kno\11 where
tlie report was from '91 to '95."
·
Yet some lawmakers who've
reviewed the transcript don't believe
the Pentagon was motivated by anything more than a desire to save face .
"The guy (Bacon) was incoherent
because he was faced with having to
tell the truth," said Sen. Jay Roc•
feller, D-W.Va. "He was distinctly
'"uncomfortable (at the ,.press conference) ... They've known all along.
How could they possibly not have
known all along?"
Brian Martin, a veteran ~ho
served in the battalion that detdllaild
the bunkers, made a videotape of the
bombings that lie's been showing for ·
years to anyone who was interested.
Since the war, Martin has become ·
seriously ill with several ailments that ·
his doctors trace to chemical expo- ·
Stile in the Gulf.
Martin says there is a good cxpla- ,
natjon for why, the P~n~on claims :
no evidence ex1sts of chemical exJIO' ._
Martin told us, ·"and no chemical
detectors were used (during the detonations). They were never used
during the ground war or during the
cease-fire." ·
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndieate, Inc.

Multicultural myths about Jews

In June, on CNN, Minister Farrakhan, no longer smiling, lashed out
at Jews, adding that he had no reason
to apologize 10 them for what they
are. Long before Farrakhan was
named by Time magazine, also in
June, as one of the 25 most "influential Americans, I asked a friend,
Bayard Rustin -- a strategist for
Martin Luther King -- why there was
such bitter anti -Semitism among
some blacks.
"ll's not theological." Bayard
said. "You're not being accused of
killing Christ."
was concerned, but had no fur~?'But despite the GOP's big legislative failures, a majority of the public therHeanswer.
Recently, I read an
still agrees with many of the basic components of the GOP's platform - a analysis by Clarence Page -- a con~anced budget amendment, tenn limits, smaller government.
tinually illuminating syndicated black
·: - The electoral college map has had a heavy Republican bias since
columnist-- in the Forward, a lively
Rjchard Ni~on unleashed his Southern strategy in 1968: Since then, even ' New York Jewish weekly. Page cited
counting Clinton's victory in 1992, Republicans have won an average of 381
James Baldwin, who wrote that
electoral votes 111 the Democrat$" I 50. Any GOP candidate has a buill-in base
"Blacks arc anti-Semitic becau'i!'
iri the South and the West on a scale that doesn't exist for a Democra~ . they're anti-white." Moreover, says
notwithstanding Clinton.'s big poll leads in California .and New York.
Page, "Baldwin explained that blacks
· -Ross Perot is again coining to play As he did in 1992, be could tum have watched Jews assimilate into
die race into a ~-dimensional scramble for survival, not a quest for a go v- . mainstream white America quite
etoing mandate. The possibilities for a 55 percent landslide fade rapidly wben rapidly compared to black folks, and
a.third·party candidate is poised to take I0 percent to 20 percent of the elec- many of us feel left behind, resenttonte. ,,
ful." '
: Perot is personally unpopular right now, but he heads a ·movement that
Obviously, nothing in the Ameri. 'bas uncoupled up to a fifth of the voting public from the two established. can experience compa· · . in any way
· political parties. A credible Reform Party candidate could still seriously· to the holocaust of the Middle Pastlireaten the twCI major parties.
·
sage and the terrors of slavery. But
. - Both sides agree that the key chunk of electoral college real estate
.
lies frOm f-lew Jersey to Wisconsin, a V&amp;lil swateh of RI!Jt Belt and ·East Coast
metroplexes where recent presidential elections have largely .turned. Clinton would be favored in many of these states right now. But all the big ones
"a(e headed by Republican~overnors : Christine Wbiunan of New Jersey. Tom
Ridge,of Pennsylvania, George Voinovich of Ohio, Jim Edgar of Illinois, '
'
By Joaeplr
Spear
JOhn Engler of Michigan, Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin.
When
you
commence to lose track
: They will be able to pound the Republican message 0 Dole surrogates,
of yow gates, you start thinking
g_..ging up on Clinton all fall. Their political organizations are likely to be
maybe you've been in this crazy busiin full gear by Nov. 5.
ne.ss too long.
: And one of these governors is a good bet to be Dole's running mate.
It started with Watergate -- that
much I remember. And then what?
Well, 1 seem to recall a Koreagate.
And then, during the Carter period,
we bad Billy gate and Lancegate and
The MIOCiltectl Presa
.
Vescogate. The Reagan reign was
. Today is Monday, July I, the 183rd day of 1996. There are 183 days left
infamous, of course, . for Iran-ConiO:the year. This is Canada Day.
tragate.
•
-Today'• Highliaht in History:
An.d 'then carne tbc Clinton gates.
· : Fifty ye.s ago, on July I, 1946, the United States exploded a 20-kiloScalpgate and Nannygate and
toia I10IIIic bomb near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific, using dozens of surplus Tt11Yelga~ and Troopergatc- (aka,
shlps II tlrJCII.
I Bimbopte) and Whitewatergate and
•On this dale:
. now ?legate. .
:In 1863, the Civil War Battle at-Gettysburg began.
Lei's put this in pers_pective. From
: 1n 1867, Canada became a self-goveming.d&lt;l!!'J~ioo of Great Britain us
Nixo~ through· Reagan, we bad an
If* British Nordl Ameri&lt;:a Act took effect
averaae of one gale every four years.
•In 1898, during the Spll!isb-American War, Theodore Roosevelt and his
Under Qinton, we 111e getting one
"'Rough Riden" waaecl a.,Yictorious 83Siult on San Jlian HiU in Cuba.
gale every, &amp;even months.
4l ~ : lnl916..1&gt;wight D.~~ Mary (""Mamie") Geneva Doud
· Why so many gates?
Given, the cumnt Wliite House
in·Denver. Colo.
.. .
'tbholdi be
•
·
. In 1943" "pay-u-you-JO liiCOme tax wt
ng gan.
.
g~ng'iS a bunch of ham-fisted geeb
·In 1963: the U.S. Poll Oftic:e iaauguratecl ill five-digit ZIP codes.
who lurch and stumble through sates
In 1966, the Medii:lre fedenl insurance pro;mm went intb effect.
willy-ni!ly. But that is only the half

one

for Jews, there were tenain badges of
exclusion.
As a child in Boston, a cradle of
abolitionism, it was foolish of me to

NatHentoff
go out alone after dark and become
prey to violent, roving bands of
Christian youngsters ,whoso; most
satisfying spOrt was to break the faces
of Jews . One boy on my street got an
ice pick in his head and was never the
same afterward. I received only a
busted nose ("YIJu Jewish, kid?")
and a lot of blood on my clothes.
One of my more vivid boyhood
memories is that of an old, bony Jew
' grabbed by his beard and thrown into
the gutter by an invading hooligan - like the newsreels from Berlin:
-Assimilation of Jews was not as
rapid as James Baldwin thought. For
a long time, there were areas of work
largely closed to Jews-- engineering,
architecture, insurance companies,
mainstrellffi banks and corporate law
firms. And there were jobs where
Jews had to change their names
because their own ·names were too
Jewish. Some public schpols and
radio stations, for instance.
In any case, if, as James Baldwin
said, blacks are anti-Semitic because
I

thefre anti·white, why the continuing obsession with only .Jews? The
Irish have come a long way from the
rental signs in Boston: "No Dogs oi
Irish Need Apply." Why are Wasps
given a pass? They were markedly
less involved in working with blacks
for justice than Jews and Catholics.
I think I may have finally come to
an understariding of black anti-Semitism. As Bayard Rustin said, it is not
based in theology. But, revcalffi"gly,
copies of The Protoc;ols of the Elders
of Zion -- a classic I 9th-century tract
about a worldwide Jewish conspiracy -- were sold, years ago. at a
Harlem mosque: of the Nation of
Islam. And the shadowy Protocols
have also been referred lo with enthusiasm in sorn'e black college newspapers.
Moreover, there are strong resemblances between the historic antiSemitism of Father Charles E.
Coughlin and that of MiniS1er Louis
Fmakban. Coughlin bad a weekly
paper, Social Justice, which gave pre· ferred space to the Protocols. II also
printed Coughlin's own homilies of
hate, wh~ch he includ~ in his very
popular national ractio programs.
Al~ng with my parents, I listened
to those broadcasts every Sunday. We
did not feel assimilated. The melliflu. ous priest from the Shrine of. the

Little Flower in Royal Oak, Mich.,
said he had discoveied that the international Communists-- and the international bankers depriving widows of
their mites - had one viciou$ thing in
common. They were. all Jews.
In a remarkable multi-dimensional April profile of Minister Farrakhan in The New Yorker, Henry
Louis Gates tells of Farrakhan 's
speeches "in which he · bas talked
about a centuries-old conspiracy of .
international bankers -- with narn~
like Rothschild and Warburg -- who ·
have captured control over the central banks in many countries and who
incite wars to increase the indebtedness of others and maximize their
own wealth .... Farrakhan really does
believe that a cabal of Jews secretly
controls the world."
Gates adds that fiarrakhan also
believes that "there is a small group
of Jews who meet in a Park Avenue
apartment or in Hollywood to plan
the course of l/8this."3/8 nation:"
Minister Farrakhan has cemented
the Nation of Islam's hatred of Jews
into deeply .traditional white antiSemitism. He bas, at last, found
I
· common ground with many whites. , .
Nat Htotol( b • nationally
rtnowiled authority on the Flnt
· Ameadment and the rest of the BIB
ofRights.
.

a

aJ

T

•

'

•

IND.

W.VA.

Showers T-stonns Rain

Flurries

VII A.ssocilted Press Graphk:sNet

Chance of rain re-enters
weather scene Tuesday_
By The Associated Press
A low pressure system will bring
more rain to Ohio on Tuesday, but
forecasters said skies will clear out in
time for outdoor activities on the
Fourth of July holiday.\
· Lows tonight will be '55-65. Highs
will range through the 80s.
The National Weather Service
said showers will linger in eastern
Ohio on Wednesday but the weather
should be dry for the holiday on
Thursday, with highs 75-80.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 98 degrees in 1953 while
the l'e~ord low was 44 in 1988. Sunset tonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and

House siair, whe·n they first cirne in,
hid used drugs in the laSt four or five
1ears." The McCarthyi18-charge has
yet to be backed up by a credible
source. .
· Or !Me Alfons:: "Slippel) At'' ·
D' Amato. Two years ago, the cheeky
-one. In a Clinton administration, · New York senator took Hillary Clingales are plentiful and sooner or lat- ton to the woodshed for making
er 'they might start selling, so every $100,000 in a si11glc year on a seri~s .
Babbitt in Washington is hawking &lt;lf commodity deals in the late !970s.
gates or buying gate stock or st1u-ting Then it turns out Slippery AI himself
a gate franchi~.
.
made $37,1251n asinglc dayin 1993
That's the problem with Republi- on a stock tranSaction that the Secu"WI"s: Their .greed often exceeds the rities ·and Exchange Commission has
commonly accepted limits of ~a:' described as dubious.
rum. They smell big profit$ and start
No 1\epublican inore sharply symto salivate and before long .the spit- bolizcs the · Republican lust for a
if1; inlliil'l1fijjdUWll dH:fronts of their vendible gate thari D'Aillato. For 13
pinstriW!Iits. They begin to set gid- months-, be presided ovei a Wbitedy and start acting irrationally and water committee that took I0,129
imsponsibly.
pages of testimony ~m 250 Wit- .
Recall how House Speaker Newt, ~sses and ml!lllied to CO\De up with
Gingrich byperveotilates when he httle more ~ ~ulallon ~~ an
"---•'- "'"".."'of some alleged Hillary-lr,CI consJ)IfiCy to
senses a'""'"'"""'"" ............
a1 d
1
d · the
kind According to a "senior law . conce . ocumcnts aoun In
' ·
t o ffic"al
Vince
enaorcemen
1 I •.. be said 1·n offJCC of the lalethe
Bal ·Foster.s As
1994, up to ." a quarter,of the White • ~s go, wrote
hmore un,
of ii.
The other reason for so many
gates is that the Republicans recognize-a potc~tial market when they see

ets with five of the numbers, and each
is worth $1.516. The 16.099 tickets
showing four of the numbers are each
worth $81.
In Kicker, four players had the
exact six-digit number and can each
claim $1 00,09&lt;J. The winning ticke.ts
were sold at"Burch 's Medina Shell m
Medina, Finast Superynarket No. 56
in Cleveland, Buddy Roe F\)0&lt;1 Marts
. in WheelerSb~rg,and Ru!r.!ell 's Mini
number was 445.
.; ·
In Pick 4 Numbers , the winning Mart in East Liverpool.
The 15 Kicker tickets showing the
number Was 9027.
,
Sales in Super Lotto totaled lirst five digits are each worth t;.ooo.
$I 5,1 08,528. Kicker sales totaled The 144 with the first four numbers
are each worth $1,000. · ·
$1,697,501.
~
There·were 214 Super Lotto tick-

CLEVELAND (AP)- No tickets
sold naming all six numbers drawn in
Saturday night's Super Lotto drawing
worth S40 million. so the jackpot for
Wednesday will increase to $45 million, the Ohio Lottery said.
The ~uper Lotto numbers were 3,
13, 15, 37, 39 and 47.
The Kicker number was 432881.
In Pick 3"Numbers, the winning

Weekend accidents kill 12
By The Aaaoclated Press
· Traffic accidents claimed I 2 lives
, in Ohio over the weekend, the State
Highway Patrol said today. Fo~r of
the victims were motorcycle nders
and two were pedestrians.
The patrol counted fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
The dead:
, ;_..
SUNDAY
CHARDON Robert H.
Chisholm. 53, of Chagrin Falls, when
his motorcycle hit a deer and crashed
along a Geauga County road.
MANSFIELD - Timothy .B .
Tilton, 22, of Bellville, when his
motorcycle collided with a van on
Ohio 97 in Richland County.
NEWARK - Bryan.K. McDonald, I9, of Newark, in a single car
crash on a rural road in Licking
County.
YOUNGSTOWN - John L.~
Patrick, 24, of Youngstown, in a onecar accident on a Mahoning Couoty
road.
::::·
LEBANON -Yelton J. Battle Jr. ,
25. when his motorcycle collided

Joseph_Spear ·

The Daily Sentinel
I

it was "a sorry spectacle."
Consider a couple of additional
sorry ~pectacles: ,
-- On June 16, the chairman of the
House Government Reform and
Oversight Committ«..-!tcp. William
Clinger, R-Pa., went on Fox News
Sunday to discuss the scandal involv-1
ing the requisition of Fl1&gt;files on '
hu!Kireds of Bush and Reagan administration officials. And who did
Clinger think was the brains behind
"'Filegate"? Well, be said, without a
molecule of ev;aence, Hillary's
. extensive record of sinister activities
had raised his "suspicions" about her.
-- A riotously right-wing periodi- ·'
. eal called the American Spectator
quoted" unidentified sources who
allegedly Slid that two of the late
Commerce SeCretary Ron Brown's
assistants bad shredded dOQilments
and ~moved files from his offtce on
the day of his death in an lirpJ.nc

.

eras~!-

JOiepb Spear is I
writer for Newapaper

-~

-·

~J

,•

sunrise Tuesday at 6:07 a.m.
· Weather ro...,.,ast:
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low s
from the upper 50s northeast to the ·
mid 60s south.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers or thunderstorms.
Highs from the lower 80s north to the
upper 80s exirel"e south.
Tuesday night.. .A chance of thun derstofms. Lows in the 60s.
Extended fo...,.,ast:
• Wednesday... A chance of showers
or thunderstorms east. Dry else,
where. Highs in the 70s.
.
Thursday and Friday ... Dry. Lows
in the mid 50s to mid 60s and highs
75 to 80.
••

No Super Lotto whiner
boosts jackpot to $45M

.

The GOP: Gates 'R' Us ___
. _ __

Today in 'historY

Geor11e 0. "Oss" Dabney, 55, Southside, W.Va., died Sunday, June 30,
1996 in Pleasant V;llley Hospital.
.
Born'Aug. 26, 1940 in Arlee, W.Va., son of the late George R. "Poodle"
and Eva Jean.Grady Dabney Fowler, he was a retired employee of the American Car &amp; Fbundry, Huntington, W.Va.; a U.S. Marine Corps veteran; a member of the American Legion-Mason C-eunty Post 23 ; and member of the Loyal Order of the Moose, Lodge 731, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Surviving are his wife, Bonnie White Dabney; two daughters, Ellen Dabney, and Pamela (Stephen) Hinkle, bolfl of Lesage, W.Va.; a stepson, Johnny White ofC~bin Creek, W.Va.; two grandchildren; and three sisters, Garnette Bacalis of Grosse lie. Mich .. Jewell Potts of Gallipolis Ferry. W.Va..
and Barbara Draper of Toledo.
Service will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Horne,
Point Pleasant, with the Rev. O'Dell Bush and the Rev. Lee Baird officiating. Buria! will be in the Dabney Family CemQtery, where military graveside rites will be conducted by American Legion Post 23. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.

I

sure. "I knew every order given,"

By Nat Hentotf

George 'Oss' Dabney

MICH.

USPS 1ll·960)

Publilhed ever)' afternoon, Monday throuah
Friday, 111 Court SL. Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Obio Vrlley Publi~hins CompanyiG:rDnet.t Co.,
Pomeroy. Oh1o 45769. Pb . 99'l-2.1.S6. Second
clasa ~"'ge paid Ill Pomeroy. Ohm.

M•btr: The Auocillled Pteu. hnd the OtUo
New~

AuociCMion.

POSTMASTER: Send addres• corm:tion~ to
The Daily Stntinel. 1J1 Coun St. Pomeroy,
Qhio·4l769.
.

SUIISCRIPTION RATES
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SINGLE COPY PRICE

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.. ............ .. .HCents

'

SubJcriben not desirii1JIO PlY the c.prricr may
·1 in odvonct dlrectto The Daily Stm.Jnel
:':ttne.ldl or 12 montll bUlL Credil will be

aiven ...,;er...., - .

No aUbscripcion by mail pcrmJ.ned in
Wl1efl home c.nier scrtic:c: il 3VIUitble.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
l - M4lp Cew-tly

IU'eat

S27l0

~ Et:~::::::: ~·. ::::::::: :::.::~ i?J:~
-

Oolllde Mtlp ~

:!'

*a::;~:::::::::::.::::::::::: : : : i::~

with a truckt on Interstate 75 in Warren County.
SATURDAY
TOLEDO Esperanza S.
Espinoza. 56. a female pedestrian
struck on a city street in Toledo.
LISBON - Joyce E. Seman, 44,
of Beaver Falls, Pa .. passenger in a
two-car accident on Ohio 14 in
Columbiana County.
WAPAKONETA - Shane Bias.
26, of Fort RecovefY , pedestrian
struck by a vehicle on a Mercer

Co~o:A~~~N FALLS -

-·-·-

Meigs announcements

~~th~~:.~ac~:-l~~:l~!of

Reullion planned
Robbie Pyrnell and
The Theiss family reunion committee will meet Thursday, 10 a.m. at the
Stephanie Johnson Jacks of Middleport, died Saturday, June 29, 1996 at ChilDavid
Kucsma residence to finalize plans for the July 14 reunion.
dren's Hospital, Columbus.
He was born Oct . 7, 1992 in_O'Bleness Memgrial Hospital in Athens.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by a brother, Benjiman Jacks, Auxiliary to meet
The Eagles Auxiliary 2 I 71 will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. for a potluck, then.
and a sister, Briuney Jacks, both of the home; paternal grahdparents, Robert
hold a meeting at7:30 p.m. Pl ans will be made to attend "Tecumseh" in Chilland Donna Jacks of Pomeroy; maternal grandparents, Jerry and Louise
Braswell of Wetrumpka, La. , and Joe and Connie Johnson·of Panama ·city · icothe.
Beach, Fla. ; and aunts, Donna Griggs and Melissa Stanley of Pomeroy.
Pickup date changed
He was also preceded in death by great-grandparents. .
Pickup of recyclables in the curbside program in Syracuse will be on·
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Fisher Fun"er~l Home, Middleport,
Wednesday this week because of the July 4 holiday. Recycle bins should bel•
with the Rev. Alex Turner officiating. Burial will follow -in the Chester Cemeat the roadside before 8 a.m .
tery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.

Gilbert

'Gi~by'

Martha Lee Rowland

Martha Lee Rowland, 70, Vinton, died Saturday, June 29, 1996 at her residence.
,
Born Aug. 23. 1925 in Springboro. daughter of the late William Henry
and Artie Cope Rowland, she was a secretary at the Associated Spring Co.,
Dayton, for 29 years prior to her retirement in 1981.
.
Surviving are four brothers, James C. Rowland of Palatka. Fla., Oste Row-'
land of Vinton, King (Rosie) Rowland of Mount Vernon, Ky., and BenJamm
(Betty) Rowland of Murfreesboro, Tenn .; t~r~ sisters, Mary. El!od of Day ·
ton, Gay( Bill) Akers of New Paris, and Coste (George) Cope of Berea, ~y.;
and several nieces and nephews.
·
She was also preceded in death by a brother and a si~ter.
·
Graveside services will be I :30 p.m. Tuesday in the Springboro Cemetery: Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Fun.eral Home, Vinton. from 35 and 7-9 p.m. today.
.--/

Arrests made in bre

I

I

'lhlstees to meet

Pullin

Gilbert E. "Gibby'" Pullin, 87, Point Pleasant, W.Va. , died Friday, June 28,
1996 in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation ,Center, Point Pleasant.
Born Oct. 17, 1908 in Middleport, son of the late Charles F. and Eunice
M. Petty Pullin Scarberry, he was the retired owner-operator o( li)e Anchor
Restaurant in Point Pleasant, a U.S. Army Air Force veteran of·World War
II· and a mem"ber 0f the American Legion-Mason County Post23.
' He was also preceded in death by his wife, June E. Hysell Pullin; a sister, Lula Shea; and two brothers, Hubert and Lester Pullin.
Surviving are two sons, Don·G. Pullin of Point Pleasant, and Thomas M.
Pullin of Venice, Fla.; and five grandchildren.
.
A memorial service will be held at II a.m. Wednesday in the Trinity Unit•
ed Methodist Church, 615 Viand St., Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Steven
E. Dorsey officiating. Private burial will be held at a later date. There will
be no visitation. Arrangements are by the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. Pomt
Pleasant.
In lieu of flowers , donations may be made to the Trinity United Methodist
Church Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 228. Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550.
'

~y,.

Charges are pending against at least three people arrested fo l~i the
break-in of the Raci Gun Club late last week, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. oulsby.
·
Daniel J. MurphY. , address unreported , and Jason Childress. I6, Portland, face charges of caking and entering, receiving stolen property, underage consump ·
a falsifi cation, Soulsby said.
Willie Chi dress, 19, Portland, faces similar charges other than breaking
aftd entering, he added .
.
According to a revised report, 97 cases of beer were stolen from the gun
club on Nease Hollow Road sometime Wednesday night or Thursday morning.
•
·
Possible charges are being considered against at least three othor, uniden·
.......
tified adults at th1s tu nc, Soulsby sat"d.

Squad.s answer., 1"9 calls

Michelle
A. Meyers, 16. of Chagrin Falls, dri- . Un"tts of the Mei gs County Emerver in a one-vehicle accident on a
Geauga County road .
gency Medical Service recorded 19
FRIDAY NIGHT
calls lor assistance Saturday and
ASHTABULA _ Robert J. "· Sunday, including two transfer calls.
Moon. 30. of Jefferson. a motorcy- Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
clist in a one-vehicle accident on an
,
a.m.,
volunteer fire depan23
11
Ashtabula Counly road.
ment and squad to State Route 7,
ZANESVILLE Brent A. train/semi-tractor and trailer collision,
McManes, 26, of Zanesville, motor- Wl\1. Grubb and Arthur Beegle, Vetcyclist on a Muskingum County erans Memorial Hospital. Pomeroy
road .
squad assisted ;
LIMA- Tonya K. Clemons, 23.
9:05 p.m. Saturday, Nonh Third
of Columbus Grove. in a one-car
ed
h
accl.d' en"t on Ohio 309 in Allen Coun- Avenue , Nicki Bentz. treat aH e
scene;
ty.
12:44 a.m. Sunday, North Second
Avenue, Christen Peterson, treated at
the scene .
POMEROY
Am Ele Power .......................42\
9: 11 a.m . Saturday, Maples ApartAlao .......................... :.: .........59'1.
ments, Gladys Barrett, VMH;
Aahland Oil .........v .................. 40
10:10 a.m . Saturday. Mapl es
ATaT ..........................:..........62~
Apartments,
Gwinnie.White, Hol1cr
Bank one ..............................34~
Medical
Center;
Bob Evana ............................ 16\
Borg-Walllll' .........................39\
·3:II p.m. Sunday, Union Avenue.
Champion Ind . .................... ..1"n. Steve James, VMH.
,
Chinning Shop ......................&amp;~
RACINE
.J
City Holding ............................23
4:28p.m. Saturday. Bashan ~;toad ,
Federal Mogul .......................18\
Linda
Diddle, VMH;
Gannett .................................70~
7:06p.m. Saturday, Bashan Road;
Goodyear T&amp;A ."......................48
K-mart ............:......................12'1. R
w0 1~ (olt.IIC
Land.a End ............................. 24\
oger
~UTLAN""~
Umhed Inc ............................21\
6:16 a.m. Sunday, ·Qverbrook
Paoptea Jh!neorp...................~
Nursing Center, Norma Faye Riggs,
Prem Flnt •.:............................13~
VMH;
,
Ohio Valley Bank.................. 33~
I
I
:03
a.m.
Sunday,
volunteer
fire
one Yalllr.............................34~
RockWell '"...........................5&amp;\
department and .squad, County Road
Aoyll Dutch/SMII .............. 153'1.
I. Sean Gibson and Orahna Perry.
Shonly'a ...............................1o\ O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
Star Bank ..............................67\
Wandy'a ..................................111 Columbia Township VFD assisted;
I:II p.m. Sun~y. volunteer fire
·worthlngton Ind...................20\
llepartment
and squad, auto fire on
.
Stock rej:lorta are 1111 10:30 Npble Summit Road, no injuries
a.m. quotea provided br Actwat repom:u;
-"""
of Galllpolle.
2:27 p.m. Sunday, Star Hall Road,
Margery Schuler, HMC;

Stocks

LEAD ROLES - Sern Cowan, co-director, rlQht. and Bonne
Smith wlll be In the lead roles of "GreaH" at the ~uly 4 show In
the Dave Diles Park, Middleport.
·

.

II :48 p.m, Sunday. SR .124, Effte

v 11 H
1
Black, Pleasant a ey ospota ·
SYRACUSE
9: I 6 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
department and squad. motor vchtcle
accident on Forest Run Road. Eddie
Buffington, VMH;
6:31 p.m. Sunday, SR 124. Tom
Lavender, St. Joseph's Hospital.
TUPPERS PLAINS
1I:56 p.m. Friday, SR 681 , Angela
Edman, 1-iMC;
9:41 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
d
SR 681
department and squa to
,
William Dorkoff, refused treatment.

Salisbury-Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Rock
Springs hall.

Three cited in accidents
Three drivers were cited in three East Main•in her 1992 Mitsubishi:
separate week_end accidents in Pagel was coming across Eas\ Mairi
Pomeroy, according to Police Chief at Lynn to enter the m·unicipal park'
Gerald Rought.
ing lot when he failed to sec Proffitt's
Edward Sar~ Wa"--._ vehicle, causing the vehicles to col:
cited foyf:U\ing to yteld after he 1i . Damage 10 both vehtcles was
strueVa 1993 Toyota Tercel, driven m · rate.
/ "-..._
by Amy Buffinglon, 20, Pomeroy,
Ja es M. Kelly, 37, Reedsville;•
near the Beacon Station on Nye · was c arged "'!ith three traffio;vjolaAvenue Friday.
tions fter an accident on t~{.rroger
According to reports, the accident park·ng lot Saturday at ~-. lJl · .
occurred at 4:06p.m. when Buffingccording to reports:"'reif)IJ was
ton was .traveling northbound on ba ing from a pal"king spot when he
Nyc. Sarver turned in front of Buff- fa ed to see a 1990 Oldsmobile Cut- ·
ington's vehicle into the Beacon Sta, ..J ss, driven by Melissa J. Myers, 28,
tion , causmg Buffington to stri~h{ Shade, striking the left front of the
rear passenger side of Sarver's 1985 vehicle and causing moderate damFord Bronco.
age.
Brian J. Pagel, 18, Racine, was citKelly was cited for improper
ed for assured clear distance after a backing, expired plates and no insur-•
two-car accident Saturday at 11 :40 · anee.
a.m. at the intersection of East Main
and Lynn streets.
According ~
o re rts, Leah Proffottu."2t3h
. Pomertoyiewsas lsraveclt
_ing on
0 oras InJUre
·
. A man"was trealed and; released
from Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Conti ed from Page 1) .
Saturday following a one-car wreck
on Forest Run Road near Minersville.
Eddte Buffington was transported
B explained. Local gove.mments
111 have to pay the remammg..12.5_ by the Syracuse squad of the Me1gs
ercent.
EMS to VMH after the wreck, wh1cti
On May 4, thunderstorms struck was investigated by the Gallia-Meigs
Meigs County. resulting in extensive Post of the State Highway Patrol.
nooding and damage around the
Further details were unavailable. •
county with more than 3 inches of
rain falling between 6 and 7:30p.m.
Culverts were washed out, roads
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
were closed for hours by the high
446·4524
water and the debris it moved in. and
T 1 ' • l ''
l l'
several homes were fiooded by the ·
downpour.
Township trustees ·in Salisbury,
Rutland and Chester declared emergencies there .
From 1989 through present, Ohio
has received federal funds through
FEMA administered federal disaster
dcclaralions for five events: June
1989, fiood , $3.5 million; June 1990. 1
fl ood. $ t5 .8 mil-lion; August l:!992,
flood . $9.8 mill ion; August 1995
flood. $7.5 million ; January I , .
nood, $5.7 million (to date); total ,
$42.3 million.

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Connie Karschnik, R.N .,
Meigs County Tuberculosis Office, will be
conducting free skin testing clinics at the

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following fire station locations:
Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
'
Saturday admissi ons - none.
Saturday discharges - Thelma
Starkey. Syracuse.
·
.Sunday admissions - none.
Sunday discharges- none .
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges June 28 - Bel"flicc
CallowaY, Edward Ross.
Discharges June 29 - Carol
Blackburn, ~ary Beals, Virginia
Gibbs.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Brian
BrumfiPid. daughter, Vinton; Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Craig, son, Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. David Mooney, daugh·
tcr, Gallipolis; Mr. and_ Mdrsl . Shannon
Northup, daughter, Mtd eport.
Discharges June 30 - Mrs.
Michael Craig and son, Mrs. Davtd
Mooney and · daughter, Marvin
Yeauger, Cassandra Brumfield,
George Knox.
.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Ryan
Bearhs, daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. Ill!~
Mrs. Dean Rees, daughter~ J1.1o
Grande.
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(Published with pennlulon)

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MIDDLEPORT FIRE STATION
July 8, 1996- Skin Tests Given 4 :30 to 6:30p.m.
July 10, 1996 - Skin Test Reading 4:30 to 5:30p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS FIRE STATION
July 15, 1996- Skin Tests Given 5:00 to 1:00 p.m . ..))
July 17, 1996 -Skin Test Reading 5:00 to 6:00p.m .

CHESTER FIRE S'{ATION
July 23, 1996 - Skin "Tests Given· 4:;JO to 6:30p.m.
1

July 25,"199.6- Skin Test Reading 4:30 to

~:30 p .m.

REEDSVILLE FIRE STATIO~
July 29, 1996- Skin Tests Given 5:00 to 7:00 ·p.m.
July 31 , 1996 " Skin Test Reading 5:00 to 6 :00p.m •
All food handlers are required to have yearly skin
tests. BE PREPARED TO WORK AT THE FAIR
BY GE'lTING YOUR SK~N TEST.AT ONE OF

.

.THE ABOVE EVENING CLINICS.

• and Save or Call For

Information

MEIGS COUNTY TUBERCULOSISOFFICE · 992·3722

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.Stars' early E!xit~, soccer and cool weather hurt attendance

Monday, July 1, 199.6

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o,ther NL action,

D9dgers be~ten;

Braves top Marlins

ALONIAR.CONNIEC1rS- The Cleveland Indians' Sandy Alomar
connects on a two-run homer In the fifth Inning of Sunday night's
Amarlcan Laague contest against the host Chicago White Sox,
whose 4-2 allowed the Indians to get a split In the weekend series.
(AP)

Indians notch 4-2
win over White Sox
By MIKE NADEL
ground but plenty of confidence
CHICAGO (AP) - Last season
"We know we can beat them,"
should be JUS! a pleasant memory for Ozlle Gu1llen sa1d "We have a betthe Cleveland lnd1ans, Orel Her- ter team than last year We 'II be
shlser sa1d
tough"
They won't repeat what they d1d
Sa1d Kevm Tapam (8-5), who
m 1995, wh~hey ran away w1th allowed I0 h1ts m e1ght mnmgs for
IheAL Centrallltle That, however, the Wh1te Sox "We're m second
doesn't mean 1996 w1ll be any less place, three games out, and the lnd•-"
tnumphant or any less enJOyable
ans and us are separated from the rest
"We're not gomg to have a fa~ry of the dms10n That 's not bad It's
tale year hke we had last year," Her- going to be entertammg for the
sh•ser said Sunday mght after h1s fans"
e1ght-mmng, five -h&gt;l performance
The lnd1ans can put some disearned the Ind1ans to a 4-2 v1ctory tance between themselves and the
over the Ch1cago Wh1te Sox "So we Wh11e Sox when the teams meet ror
need to gel back to realny -a pen- another four-game senes next weeknant race . hard work, struggles, and end at Cleveland, where Ch1cago 1s
bemg sat1sfied at the end of the year 4-11 smce Jacob~ F1eld opened 1n
1f you wm 11 because of all of the
1994
struggles you made 11 through "
"We have (82) games to go and
The wm gave the lndmns a spl1t :mly four agamst Cleveland," Tapam
of the four-game senes and put sa1d "We have to play them well
them three games ahead of the sec- because we don't have many more
ond-place While Sox After 80 chances "
games last season, Cleveland led
HershiSer (9-4) has made the
Ch1cago by 22 112 games
most of hiS chances lately afteuwo
The lndmns won the last two ternble months tic hasn' t allowed
games of the 5ene5 arter a 1-7 an earned run '" hiS last 21 1nmngs
stretch thatmcluded two losses here
and 1s lookmg very much hke the
The1r 10-mnmg VICtory Saturday- "B ulldog" who led the Los Angeles
after rallymg rrom a nmth-mnmg Dodgers to the World Senes title m
defic•t - m1ght prove to be the tum
1988.
mg pomt 1n their season Cleveland
"He's got h1s smker back." Indinever needed a tummg pomt m 1995
ans manager M1ke Hargrove smd
Neither Cleveland nor Ch1cago after HershiSer allowed one unearned
sec;Jll capable of runnmg away w1th run. walked one and •truck out three
the diVISIOn m 1996 The teams not m h15 longest outmg th1s sea.on.
only spht the senes, but each was 14- • "For two months, 11 was flat."
14m June
) Cleveland 's Alben Belle was 2"We' ll take a &gt;pht," sa1d Sandy fur-1 1 m the senes and was ret1red
Alomar Jr. whose two-run homer IW&gt;ce m bases-loaded, late-game Sllcapped .Cleveland's decisiVe three- uatmns. He hasn't homered m 57 atrun fifth mn1ng "Any wms are slg- bats over 15 games arter hll[ing h1s
mficant over the team that's behm&lt;J 25th June 12.
you
Su nday. he hncd a ball off the top
Ch1cago. meanwhile, ga1ned no of the left-field fence

.Meigs Legionnaires
defeat Glouster 9-5
,By DAVE HARRIS
• tered live hils
Sentinel Correspondent
Justtn McClintock w:u; the slilrter
Me•gs erupted for SIX runs w1th and losmg pllcher lor Glouster Sam
'two outs m the top of the mnth Scchkar came m to retire the final
mnmg to post a come-from-behmd out The two combined to slnkc out
-9-5 v1ctory 1n Amencan Leg10n DIS- nme , walk one and scatter 10 hils
tncl 8 baseball action last Thur.day
George helped h1msclf out at the
at Glouster
plate w1th two doubles and sconng
Me1gs wa. facmg a 4-3 defic11 m three runs Josh Merkle added a douthe top of the mnth Jnnmg w1th two ble and a smgles. I)lonn1e Ph1ll1ps
outs but exploded wuh some two out added a pmr of smgles, R•ck Hoover
hghtlng
and Kevm Deemer a double , and
Cass Cleland smgled wllh two Ryan Martm each added Cass Cleouts and Andy Wamsley followed
land a smgle.
w1th a walk. Kevm Deemer then
Chris Shafer led Glouster w1th
doubled to center field with Cleland two smgles. Sam Sechkar added a
sconng the tymg run and Wamsley double.
commg in for the go ahead run
Me1gs was 8-7 on the season and
Me1gs went on to score four more 2-4 m the conference prior to Saturruns'" the mning to take a 9-4 lead. day's doubleheader With Logan and
Glouster scored a single run m the Sunday's twmb1ll w1th McArthur.
bottom of the mnth on back-to-back Results of those two games were not
smgles and a M~1gs error, but Scott available at press time.
George reached baCk and put the fire 1llllin&amp; lllllb
out and give Meigs the wm
Meigs ............. 1~-1(}.2
George picked up the win in a Glouster... ......02(}.002-001=5-6-0
complete-game performance. He
WP-George
struck out 12, walked three and scatLP- McClintock

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
Hovefully, Tommy Lasorda's
doctors d1dn 'I let him watch this one.
In fact, II was a tood thing Lasorda wasn't w1th h1s Los Angeles
Dodgers thts weekend for a wild
four-game ~nl's _agamst the Colorado Rock1es. v
Lasorda, who is expected to be
released from a hospital thiS week
after surgery for a clogged artery,
m1ssed a doozy of a series at Coors
F1eld, capped by Colorado's !6-15
win over Los Angeles on Sunday
The four games had 11 all· 85 rups
A three-homer game by Mtke Piazza on Saturday. Consecutive SIXhomer games by the Dodgers Three
homers on three p1tches by Los
Angeles h1tters And six steals in one
game by Colorado's Enc Young on
Sunday in the longest nine-innmg
game m NL htstory.
And JUSt thmk, the two teams w1ll
do 11 agam begmmng July 4 10 Los
Angeles.
ThiS weekend's fireworks w1ll be
tough to match, though.
Tratlmg 15-14 With two outs m
the mnth, pmch-hlller Jeff Reed singled through the hole at short off
Todd Worrell (3-4) to t1e 11 and rookIe Quinton McCracken followed
with a double down the first-base
line to bnng 10 Vmny Castilla with
, the wmnmg run as the Rock1es won
their th1rd game of the set.
The Rocktes had scored 13 runs
tO Win the first IWO games or the
scnes, and the Dodgers put up 13 on
Saturday for a 13-1 0 deCISIOn So 11
was no surpnse to see the clubs score
m double dtg1ts agam.
"I told you the first team to I 3
wms," Dodgers acung manager B1ll
Russell sa1d. "That's the way 11 was
m th1s scnes "

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"We JUSt were not gomg to
demed today," Rock1es manag
Don Baylor sa1d "All I knew w
we had the last at-bat If we stayed
close, the1r guys out of the bullpen
were not gomg to contam us Of
course, we couldn't stop them
either."
The Rock1e&lt; had 20 h1ts and the
Dodgers 18 as the teams u&gt;ed II

In other AL games,

pitchers in the 4-hour, 2(}.minute
game - the longest mne-mmng
game m NL h1story, echpsmg !he
4:18 between the Dodgers and San
Franc1sco m 1962.
Young tied the major-league
record with six stolen bas~s. mcludmg three m the thud. The Rockies
stole I 0 bases, nme off Dodgers
starter Htdeo Nomo.
Elsewhere in the Notional
League, it was Montreal 6, Philadelphia 5; St Louis 10, P1ttsburgh 3;
Houston 9, New York 3, San D1ego
7, San FranCISco 4, and Atlanta 5,
Flonda 4.
SERVAI~ SCOREs- Advancing on Ryne Sandberg's doubl_e, the
Expos 6, Phillies S
At Philadelphia, pmch-h1tter Chff Chicago Cubs' SCott Sarvals (8) slides Into the plate past CtnclnFloyd h1t a three-run homer wuh two nati catcher Eddie Taubellsee during the eighth Inning of Sunday's
outs in the ninth mnmg to a cap a National League game-In' Cincinnati, where the Cubs won 6-0. (AP)
four-run rally.
Floyd 's second home run of the
season carne off Phillies closer Ricky
Bottahco (2-4), who blew his th1rd
save m !9 chances
Tra1hng 5-2 With two outs, the
Expos scored then third run on
Shane Andrews' RBI single. Pmchhmer Darrin Fletcher walked before
Floyd, h1ttmg for Mel Rojas (5-3),
homered over the nght-centcr field
the toughest one we've been m w1th
wall
By JOE KAY
M1ke Dyer pitched the mnth ror
CINCINNATI (AP)- Steve Tra- the weather."
" It's hard to breath," Trachsel
hls second save.
chsel's first w1n was m numbmg cold
Philhes starter M1chael M1mbs
at Wngley F1eld Ht;i latest was m the smd. "Then your legs start lcehng
allowed a season-low three hils in steamy cauldron of Riverfront Sta- hke jelly when you're out there a
long lime"
elght mnings
d111m
Trachsel left the game after the
Cardinals 10, Pirates 3
The nght-hander has won under
At St. Lou1s, Todd Stottlemyre all kmds of conditions th•s season. seventh mnmg when he started get p1tched s1x strong mmngs and helped developmg mto one of the Nat1onal lmg a headache because olthc heat.
h1mself with three hitS, and Ron
League's most effectiVe p1tchers and and relievers Terry A~ and Bob
Patterson completed the four-hiller
Gant drove m three runs as St Louis a candtdate for us All-Star team.
completed a three-game sweep. '
Trachsel pitched seven shutout Patterson struck out Enc DaVIs to
The Cardmals' sweep was thetr
mmngs m w1hing heat Sunday, wm- end a bases-loaded threat set up by
first of Pittsburgh smce June 1993
mng h1s carccr-h1gh fourth straight three walks m the eighth.
"Trachsel's throwing the ball as
and gave St. Louis its e1ghth Straight deCISIOn while leadmg the Ch1cago
wm at home
Cubs to a 6-0 vtctory over the well as anybody m the league," Reds
manager Ray KmghVSll1d. " He's
The Pirates have lost mne ol their Cmcmnall Reds.
last 13.
Rync Sandberg and Lu1s Gonla- throwmg h1s brcak:mg ball for
Pitchmg 10 98-degree heat, Stotlez each drove m a pmr of runs to stnkes He was a one-p1tch p1tcher
tlemyre (7-6) gave up four hi''--'"""' help the Cubs avmd a sweep ofthe1r the last t1me we faced h1m He's as
dommatmg as anybody in the league
became the first Cardm~. 1tcher to "· hot three-game series
agamst
us "
0?
get three hits in a game smce Swtt
Trachsel (7-4) ended Cmcmnat1's
Trachsel handled the wndmons
Terry m 1989. He had three singles, seven-game wmmng streak by hmincludmg two 10 one mmng.
1tmg the Reds to four hits and two much better than d1d Burba (2-9),
St. LOUIS scored su runs 10 the
walks . He extended hiS scoreless who hkes to p1tch m hot weather hut
second mnmg off Zane Sm1th (4-5).
mmng streak to 16 and lowered hiS had trouble puttmg the ball where he
(See NL on Page 5)
earned run average to 2 00, second - wanted. He walked four, gave up
best m the league.
c1ght h1ts and needed 120 p1tches
.Those numbers w1ll at least get through 6 1/3 mnings .
h1m conSideration lor the All-Star
Burba threw I(X) pitches m the
team
lirst live mnmgs alone
" I should have a good posSibili" I hke 11 hot, the hotter the hetty o~gomg," sa1d Trachsel , who IS 4- tcr." Burba sa1d "It mtght dram you
0 with two no-deciSIOns Since May a httlc bit, but I'd rJther have 1lthat
29. "I've pitched well m almost hot than cold.
every start. It 's up to (Atlanta man" In the l1rst two mnmgs, I was
ager) ' Bobby Cox I've made my havmg trouble breathmg. Then I got
Oakland beat Caltforma 1-0.
case. I' II let you guys make the rest used to 11. That's when I gave up the
Orioles 9, Yankees I
or II "
run"
Dav1d Wells pitched a four-h1tter
He's got a lot of boosters m
After wastmg sconng chances m
at Yankee Stad1um but wasn't m the Cmcmnat1. He beat lhe Reds at the lirst and second 1nmng~. the
mood to discuss how he d1d &gt;l
Wngley F1cld on Apnl 16 - when Cubs broke through m the th1rd alter
"Not today, guys," he satd.
the temperate was 40 degrees and Sammy Sosa broke a career h1tless
Wells (5-7) p1tched h1s lh1rd com- winds gusted to 25 mph - for h~&gt; streak agamst Burba
plete game this sea&gt;on, struck out first wm of the season. He shut them
Sosa, o-ror-20 With Clghl striketwo. walked one and allowed only down Sunday 1n the oppoSite outs agamst the nght-handcr,
one other runner to reach sconng extreme.
reached on an mlield smglc With one
posit1on.
The temperature was 94 degrees out Sosa stole second, contmued to
Second-place Baltimore salvaged at game t1mc and well over I00 on th1rd when catcher Joe Ohver threw
a spht of the four-game senes and cut the aruficml turf
mto center field, and scored on a
the Yankees' lead m the AL East to
"That was a tough day to puch," double by Gonzalez
4 112 games.
Cubs manager J1m R1ggleman smd
Sandherg - 7-for- 15 career oil
Brady Anderson, h1lless m hiS "H1m and (Dave) Burba showed a Burba - tnplcd olT the lop ol the
first 12 at-bats m the four-game lot ol guts m the heat That's ab&lt;&gt;ul w.all m nght field to dnvc m a run
series, hit his 27th homer, takmg \he
ma;or league lead .
Mariners 4, Rangers 3
Edgar Martmez of Seattle continued h1s record-settmg doubles
pace, hilling two more m the Kmgdome Martmcz. who also leads the
maJors w1th 59 extra-base hll&gt;, went
3-for-5 and has a major league-lcadmg 39 doubles thiS season.
He 1s on pace to break the major
league record of 67 doubles ~el m
1931 by Boston's Earl Webb
Sterhng Hitchcock (7-3) allowed
only one hit througl\' five mnmgs
before giVIng up three runs and four
h1ts 1n the six th .
By wmnjng two out of three
games m the weekend senes, tin&lt;
Marmers cut first -place Texas' I~
to five games m the AL West.
You·ve got a lot on your mind. You're building
Twins S, Royals 2
V1s111ng Mmnesota beat Kansas
your world and your insurance needs are
C1ty for the mnth lime m 10 games
real. But you don't need to add this worry
as rook1e Matt Lawton h1t hiS first
to your hst.
career grand slam and Frank
Rodnguez (8- 7) won hiS third
Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longstra1ght game.
tert]'liUcperience,
community ,presence, and
Mmnesota's Marty Cordova had
_l~maone who is with yoa both before and
h1s hitting streak: end at 23 games....-a lfer things happen. Just do this one thing;
the longest m the ma;ors lh1s season
-by going (}.for-4.
end leave tit• juggling Kl to us.
Mark Gubicza (4-12) lost hts
mth straight, and eighth in his last
four lrullfftlldent.Ap,.,
nine decisions, despite going the disSe~ .Ve;,.fto~~~~~y Since 1868
tance.
Blue Jays IS, Brewen 2
At Toronto, the Blue Jays ended
m~eoonc~a
a three-gan~e losing streak.
IIN3I1
Carlos Delgado, Joe Carter and
Ed Sprague homered, and Alex GonGroup
zalez had three hits to bllck Erik
ol,llteu- (:olnpeeolea
Hanson (8-9), who allowed five hits
. seven mnmgs.
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WHERE EKTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY
Dave Nilsson horneRd in the first
(See AL OD Pap 5)

Trachsel's pitching
helps Cubs tally
6-0 win over Reds

BoSox top Tigers;
O's down Yankees
By MIKE FLAM
Associated Press Writer
It was the perfect combmat10n for
Regg•e Jefferson: baumg at Fen way
Park, hiS favonte stadiUm, agamst
the Detrmt Tigcr5, every opponent's
favonte pllchmg start
The opportumty d1d not go wasted
Jefferson homered tw1ce Sunday
and had h1s second consecut1ve
three -h1t game. leadmg the Boston
Red Sox to a 9-4 v1ctory over DetrOit
and the worst p1tchmg staff m the
m3Jors
One game after bemg hhed for a
p1nch-h11ter wh1le needing only a
home run to hu for the cycle, Jefferson homered m h1s first at-bat The
Red Sox left fielder also homered 10
Ins second at-bat and added a smgle,
reachmg 10 e1ght stra1ght plate
appearances
"Th1s t1me I left h1m m to see 1f
maybe he'd get three," sa1d Boston
manager Kevm Kennedy, who sa1d
he d1dn 't know Jefferson was gomg
for the cyc le Saturday mght -and
m1ght not have p10ch-h11 for h1m " I
was thmkmg about that today."
Despite stnkmg out10 the seventh
to end hiS streak, Jefferson has
ra1sed h1s battmg average to .379 for
the year and 430 at Fenway
. "I can't e&lt;plam 11," he sa1d.
"When you hn, you JUSt have to nde
11 as long as you can "
The Tiger., who entered the game
w1th a 6 96 team ERA, held sluggers
Mo Vaughn and Jose Canseco to a
combmed 2-for- 1~. But at the same
ume, they let Jefferson go 6-for-7 m
two Boston VICtones.
Tim Naehrmg JOmed m the fu .
gomg 2-for-4 after gettmg three Is
in each of the two prevtous g
s.
"We conceptrated on gettmg
Canseco and Vaughn out this weekend and Jefferson and Naehnng beat
us," Detroit catcher Brad Ausmus
srud. "It's almost like we let out a
breath of au after we got past
Canseco and Vaughn. And that hurt
us."
Torn Gordon (6-4) was the beneficiary, earnmg hts firs! victory m a
monlh. He 'went 6 213 innings, allowing four runs and six hits.
In other ~rican League games
Sunday, Baltimor-e beat the New
York Yankees 9-1, Seattle beat Texas
4-3, Minnesota beat Kansas City 52. Toronto beat Milwaukee 15-2 and

I

By STEPHEN WADE
. : WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
:: - The second week of Wimbledon
~ has arrived, the f~rst chance for
: seeded players to face each other.
But where have all the seeds
: gone?
1 And where have the fans gone?
• Andre Agasst, Boris Becker,
· ' Monica Seles and a record number of
other seeds are out of the tournament
and attendance IS down by 9,615
from last Y~
"
The qutck loss of marquee names
has hurt. So has the nation's preoccupation Vfith the European Soccer
ChampiOnship, which brought the
. country to a dead-stop l&lt;lj;t week
whe~ England played Germany in a
· semtfinal before an 80,000-sellout ill
Wembley Stadium.
A 24-hour subway str1ke didn't
help e11her and, after two stra1ght
years of sunshme. the weather the
first week turned Bnllsh-bleak ,gray and chtlly.
Then there's the "Tarmac and

By NANCY ARMOUR
BOSTON (AP) - Coach Mary
Lee Tracy didn 't need to see the
score. She knew as soon as Amanda
Borden began flying through her last
tumbling pass that after four trying
years, Borden had finally made an

Wunbledon champiOn Becker retired
from their third-round match w1th a
freak wrist tnjury.
Radulescu made it riding a tournarnent-leading 91 aces.
The top half of the bracket1s sull
heavy with big names. Sarnpras,
two-time Wimbledon runner-up
Goran Ivan1sev1c and !991 champ•on Mtchael Such
The fifth remaming seed IS lothseeded Frenchman Cedric Pwhne.
who was set to face Sampras today
in the only men's match between
seeded players .Pmltne had never
beaten Sampras 10 s1x prev 10 us tnes,
losing to him most prommently in
the 1993 U.S Open final
In other fourth-round matches
scheduled for today, No 3 seed
Ivanisevic played Australian Patrick
Rafter. No. 10 Such faced Dutchman
Richard KraJicek, and No. 13 Martin played Thomas Johansson of
Sweden
If form holds _and 11 sure has-

Olympic team.
"Mtssing '92 JUSt made me want
'96 even more," Borden sa1d. "It's
a dream come true ."
Borden's seventh-place fimsh 10
1992 should have been good enough
to make the Olympic team at least
'

as an alternate But veterans Betty
Okmo and Michelle Campt asked to
be put on the team even though
m1unes had kept them from competmg at tnals, and Borden was left
home.
She found herself 10 a s1m11ar

posit1on at S~nday's Olymp1c gymnast1cs tnals. Though they sat out the
trials with inJuries, Shannon M1ller
and Dom1mque Moceanu already
had'lock:ed up two of the seven spots
on the team. D&lt;im•mqu~ Dawes, Kern Strug, Jayct~ Phelps and Amy

ish," said Labonte, who won
$22,620 foF his second NASCAR
Grand NatiOnal wm of the season.
"It was a tough race today."
Labonte started mnth and btded
h1s t1me in !he early gomg, patiently workmg toward the front He led
laps 34-4 I m the 82-lap race, but lost
the lead later to Joe Nemechek,
whom Labonte conceded had the
fastest car m the race. Nemechek:,
however, was eliminated by engme
fa1lure after 51 laps
Labonte and Bodine battled for
the last 30 lap's, wnh Labonte movmg ahead for good only 12 laps from
the end

Mtke McLaughlin fimshed second, w1th Bobby Lallonte and David
Green completing a Chevrolet sweep
ofthe top five. Rounding out the top
10 were Jeff Green, J1mmy Spencer,
Chad .Little, Kenny Wallace and
Jason Keller.
Davtd Green. who started on the
pole, increased his senes point lead
over Randy Laloie, who fimshed
30th due to a broken rear end gear
Green holds a 188-pomt lead after 14
of 26 races on the senes schedule
Here IS the order of fimsh Sunday
of the Lysol 200 NASCAR Busch
Grand Nat1onal stock car race at
2.4S-mtle Watkins Glen lnternauon-

al road course, wit start10g pos111on
10 parentheses, n ver and hometown, type car. I s completed, reason out, 1f any, money won and winner's av rage speed m miles per
hour·

T.erry Labonte Wl·ns
thl.rd stra····ght Lysol 2 0
.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP)Terry Labonte used a strategy of
·patience Sunday to wm h1s th1rd
.stratght Lysol 200 NASCAR Busch
Grand National stock: car race at
Watkins Glen InternatiOnal
Labonte, drivmg a Chevrolet, held
off Todd Bodine for a narrow .66'second v1ctory m the 200-mile race
'on the 2.45-mile track, the only road
course on the NASCAR Grand
.National circuit. In additiOn to wmnmg the event for the third straight
year, Labonte won the race for the
,fourth ttme in tts stx-year eustence.
"We didn't have the best car
'today, but we were m front at the fin-

Teny Labonce, Corpus Chris11 , Tcxos,
"· 82,122.620 91 468

2 ] ) Todd Bodine, OM: mung, N Y, Chcvro·
82. 4,870
3 (10) M1ke Mc:Lauahhn, Waterloo. NY
Chevrol&lt;t, 82, lll,S8S
4 (12) Bobby Labonce. Corpus Omsu Texns
0\evrolet, 82. S6330
!S (I ) Dav1d Green. Owensboro Ky . Chevro1&lt;1, 82, $9,780
6 (II) Jeff Green Oweruboro Ky . OH:vrolct
82, SS630
7 (17) )lmmy Spencer Berweck, Po 0\evro~t 82 S4 l.!S
~ •.

8 (2!1) Chad Unle Spt)ktlne Wuh , Ponttac 82
11m
J

~i. J1~17J~~ ... ~(C=o=nt=m=ued~f=ro=m~P~ag~e~4~)----------~--------------------------~-------------Astros !I, Mets 3
May 27 ·
At Houston, Darryl Kile P•tched
Cangelosi lltd three RBis and
a SIX-hitter and John Cangelosi'S stole two bases, on 'tonsecuuve
· the fourt h off s1arter
1ct
, two-run single highlighted a six-run ----.,;
~...J~es.
m
fourth for the Astros
Jason lsringhausen (4-10).
·
p8 d 7 G' ts 4
K1le (7 -5) struck out e•ght and
res ~ tan
walked two in his lirst win s1~ce
At San Franctsco, Bob Tewks!....

AL action... (Continued from Page 4&gt;
mning for the Brewers, who have
homered m 19 straight games.
Ricky Bones (6-9) lasted only I
213 innmgs, allowing s1x runs.
Angels I, Athletics 0
Ryan Hancock, making h1s second carefii'Siall,pltched seven scoreless mnmgs and Randy Velarde
scored from second base on John
Wasdin's w1ld p1tch m the first
Hancock (4-0) walked three and

struck out SIX agamst an Oakland
team !hat had scored 35 runs With 14
homers tn the first three games or the
senes

Velarde went 3-for-3 and has hll
m a career-best 17 stra1ght games
Wasdm (5-2) threw a wild p1tch
w1th Velarde on second. but dtdn ' t
cover home plate as Velarde took
advantage.

Baseball

,.,
II ~

11

H

Ctntnl Dlwlsion
CLEVELAND
49 11 611
Ctucago
46 14 S7~
MJiwllukee
40 l9 506
Mtnnesota
18 41 4S I
Kansu C1ty
l4 47 420

'\6
40

~

\8 41

469

'

:\18

lh
IOl

M1lwnukcc 7, TOQlJIO 4

Tc=•ru 9 Scnctle , ...
O:akhmd II , Cahromu• 9
Odrotl

6

MmneiCfo 12 Kansas Cily 7

Sunday's ~ores
Toronro I~ M1lwauker 2
Bccron 9 Detrott 4
Bllllu1'10fe 9.

47 31
l9 41

588
488

New York

J7

41

~l

Ph1ladelpht11

32 47

40:'1

1
I)

11
17'

Central Dl•isiun
41 19 ~n
42 40 ~12
16 19 480

Chi~,;Qg{l

;\8

42

4~

P111sburgh

J6 44

4\0

19
40

Sl2

19

l06

41

·~

1

'

'24
I
l''l

lh

I

Moot~lll6, PtuiU!!IPb1a 5
Ouca1o 6. CINCINN"ATI 0
St LouiS 10, Pitubor&amp;)! 1
Houston 9, New York J
Culorodo 16. Los Anttdes I'\
San DICJO 7, San FraiM:IS~&gt;O 4
· Atlanta 5 Flondll4

Today'• cames
Atl.:lnl :l (Avery 6· 71 at Montreal
(R~er54)

I Hptu
Colorado (ReynolD 4·6) at San FJWt
CIKO (Willson 6-8), 4 O'i r m
•
New York (Joaes 7.... ) at Ptu ladclph1.1
Today'a
(W1Ihanu I 6) 7 lll p m
Bltlimore (Copptn&amp;er 2-41 al TOlONO
Ch•caao !Nav11rTG 6. 71 :~t P•tt•tturah
tlleMaen 7-1), I :OS p m
(Oarw1n 6- 7). 7 15 p m
Koou Cur (H ...y 1-61 At CLEVECINCINNATI (Sc hourek 4·~) at St
t.AND(Na1y 1-1). l:O:Ipm
louii(AianBenes7 ... ) 80Spm
Mtlwaukct (Sparks l-6). at Octroi!
Flondt (K Brown 7 · ~) a! Houstnn
(0livawa4-\), 7 ~ pm
tHIIIIIJllon S-4). 8 0' p m
Bo.••l!• JCiemeu 3·6J.,.!!..H*- !ork ~ ..... ..__ -e.-....._t.Qs...A..rt~de&amp;..(£:Ap,~jg~tl ~ )

c•mes

\N'1

:f"\\j, '·';]~~~~.

0

&lt;

1

v""

MulOC.OIIl (Aa~ukta 1·2) a1 O.lcaJo
(S•rotlta CHJ), 8OS p m

Ten• (Oron S·'l ar Cahtorn1a
(l..aftJICon ~ .1 ) 10 0:' p m
O!k.!::nd (Wenjetl 2·6) at Se11ttle
(WDJner 1· 0 . 10~ pm

Tuesday's pmes
• Kanw Ciottll&lt;khet 6-31 " CLEVELAND (0.'" I ~ ~m.
Milw.au'\ee (Me
(u • 7) 1~

8-1) 11 Daroit

' .w p.m.
Bolninore
tl!ricbon 4-61 11 Toronoo

lao·

(n.•....-114-S' 7 JS

.,...~,

(R

"
pm
Bouon (Moyer 4 I I •• New York
• 1) 71c0
OJCI1
~- ·•{Afdred
p m. 3·5) al Cluc;:aao
Mi11neso1a

(-1-4),8jklpm.
Teuo (Hotl 1-S) • Collfonua (llooiUe
1-J), IO:OJ p!rn.
l 9) ~---le (Wd"
0oUaot1 ( o1w - 01 _ ,
•

·,_n

10: 0:1

p,m

~_ _ _..,.._ _ _

•

-~---. --

The Braves tra1led 4-2 entermg
the seventh before rallymg against
Flonda starter ; n Burkett, who
ret1red 15 stra1gH attcrs dunng one
&gt;1relch.

''

Jerma10e Dye's bloop smgle
scored Ryan Klesko to pull Atlanta
w1thm one run before Blauser h1t h1s
IOth home run off Burkett, who has
lost five straight decisions to the
Braves.
Brad Clontz (5-2) puched one
mnmg and Mark Wohlers got three
outs lor his 17th save.

0111do, 6H , '-1&gt;111 W1lhurru,
6'i, 0 Bell. Hoo!lon, 64
lanta, 64

HITS171~~1?.~~~:.'

' Johnson
urudo 107

Mn111rral 10"
L..ansmg Mon1rc: ~d 99 P~azzu lu5 Angek!s 911 , Gnnom Atlanta 9K

Hamilton, Teus, 99
DOUBLES E Mnruoez Sea11lc 19
A Rodnglle!z Seanle 24 I Rodncucz
Texas 24 Corduva. Mmrtetota. H John
Valen1 1n Boston 22 Greer TcAIU 21
Baeraa ClEVELAND 21 R Alomar
Balttmore 21
TRIPLES Knoblauch Mmnesotu. 7.
Just Valentin, Milwaukee b, Ymu Mil·
w11ukre '\ Gutllen Ch!caJo 'II C11ner
Toronto :\ Thome CLEVELAND 4,
Com, SeanJe. 4
HOME RUNS Brody Amki'IOa, 8.&amp;111
more 27. Belle . CLEVELAND 2'i
M~,;Gw!fe Oakland , 2" Mo Vuughn .
Boston 24, G VauJhn, tvhlwauhe 24
Can~o. lklslon 24, Onffey ~uule 21
STOLEN BASES Lorron ClEVE
LAND 42 T Goodwan K.1n ~~~~ C11 y 12
Vllqutl Cll::VELAND IK US!lkh M1l
waukr.."C, 17 N1J.011 Toronto 16. Damnn
K11nsa1 C1ty, 14 KnobiJtuch Mannrsnltt .
14 McUITIOI'r Texns 14
PITCHING (10 dc~,; li !on') N:ac.y
CLEVELAND. 11 - 1 917 112 8
Wrlls Seanle . 9· 1 YOO, l 10 . Ptlvllk.
Te .us 10 2. 8:\.1 ~ 16 Ptlllllt , New
York 12·4, 7~ 1 98, Karl MtlwlliJket ,
8 '\ 727 4 46 0 8utk.ie, Cahf0fn1u , 8· ' ·
727, 4 22 Huchcod. Sel!uie 7. \, 700
4 91, M\.:l&gt;onald, "411waukt:r 7.\ 700

444
STRIKiiOlft'S

C~mens

'

DOUBLES Lansmg Monucal 27
Oa[lwcll Houston, 26 H Nodnf.UCI:
Montreal H F1nlcy S01n l&gt;1cgn. 21.
B1 ~ he11e Colorado , 21 &lt;.:u~tllla~ Cui
orodn 22 IJ Bell, Huustun 22 C.ltrcun
San t rui'M.·u~,;o 22
TRIPLES L Juhnron New Yur.. II
Mor.mduu PluludciJlllla '\ l&gt;eSim: ld ~
Lu~ An¥dc:&amp;, '\ V1za.ouoo. New YOfk 1\
Gnssnm Allanto~, 11 7 ..re uct.l wuh -1
HOME RUNS S(1sa Chu.:.1go 2b H
ROOngutz. M on~u l l\ ShdlidJ. fl~
Lla 21 ; Klesko Atlant,l, 22 P1ana L1s
AnJdet 11 G durr.ll ·' Cn lur:ulo 22
B:a~well Houston 21 Burh Cnloratlu
21 Bonds San Fr.anciKO 21
STOLEN BASES E Youne . C1!l
urildo 27 OcShu:ltJs Lo ~ Anade~. 27
M~R.tc Om,.eo H . I. Juhnsun New
Y()rk H 8 L Hunter Ht•u ~t ton 20
Mor:mdmt Ptuladtlphill. 19, 801\&amp;h San
~r.lhl:IM:O

]9

' PITCHING tiO dccmons) Smoltz.
Allama 14·1 824. 2 98 , Ashby . San
DIC:JU 11 ·2 ROO. 2 91 p J MllrtiRC:Z
M()ntreul, 7-1, 100, 1 :\4 GO&amp;rdncr, San
Fran~;JKI) 7·1, 700, 1 %, Hunuhon~n ,
D1cgu. 9-4 692 4 !,1() R•tz Colnrud Q.
4 692 4 94 Neugle 1 Pnt•bursh H·4,
667 \00

STRIKEOUTS Smolf1, Allanta 14'\

Nnmo, w~ ..\nJelet, I M. Kt •. Hut.tston,
121 PI Murtmu Munuul IIY
Reynolds HouJton 11 2 F1uacru Monlrt·
a/ IIH Slottkn1yn: S1 l.oou, 10'\
SAVES Todd Worl'ell Los Anacla
22 J Br~tley CINCINNATI, I 9 Fra~~­
~,;o New York IM Wohler~ Allant~. 17
BouoJ1eo Pttibklph1a.. 16 Holfrnan San

Ou:ao. I ti Ncn ~furula I b Bed: S:an
fiW'ICikO 16

Bolton 12Jt

F1n ley Cahfor•1a Ill A F~rnanllez
Oucajo 110 App•~- K~~u--Snr .}06

---- -·

..

IUf'UfHO, 'N •.J\1\'W'CI, UUCU£0 '14

,.

SAVES Wtuelln"d New York . l.S.

Tuesd 's lamtl

M.... CLEVELAND 24 R Hernandez.

ay

Colorado (Ril.z 9·4) ar Slllt FraneiiCO
(Oardna7-ij. .1 35pm
AllanuftAaddua 8·j) at Montreal
(Cormier 3-'~ 7 ' ' p m

New York

D1ego handed San Franc1sco Its IOth
straight loss
San D1ego's four-game sweep
was Its first ever m San Franc1sco.
Tewksbury (6-5) was (}.4 1n e1ght
starts smce h1s last victory. Trevor
Hofrman pitched the ninth for hiS
16th save.
The Padres pounded starter
W1lham VanLandmgham (4-9) for
12 hils m 3 113 mntngs
Tony Gwynn and Ken Cammlll
had three hns each for the Padres.
Barry Bonds went 4-for-5 and
Matt Williams homered for the
G1ants.
Braves S, Marlins 4
At Miam1, Jeff l!lauser's two-run

Vaughn Milwaukee 74 Mo Va\lghn.
Boston, H, E Mnrunez, Seanle 11, k
Palmmu. Balllfi'\Ofe, 71. Stile. CLEVE·
LAND, 7Q, Bulmer ~anlc . 6S
HITS Mo Vuughn BoHun Ill , If.
Alumw, Ballunore, Ill Lofton, CLEVE·
LAND IO"i F Thomas Ch1~allu , 10\.
Mohtor. Mm~a. I04,,.Seuur Mllwau
kee, 101. Knoblmuch , Mmne•~o111 99

l''

CIN CINNATI 9 , Ctuc.:~co ~
St loutS 6 p;nsbur&amp;h "i
San Diego 7. San Frmnctsc:o 6
Montreal I . Ptnladelptua 0
Aonda '1, Atlanta l
Houston 9, New York I
Los AnaeleJ 11. ColoQdo 10

New Yort I

Mtnntsora S Kar~w Cny 2
Seart~-4. TeAaJ 3
Oolororm• I, Otoidtuld o
CLEVELAND 4, Cloi"''I 2

homer capped a three-run seventh as
Atlanta avoided,a sweep.

RBI F Thomn. Chu:aJo. 80 G

st Lou1s •
Houston
CJNCINNAT1

Sunday's !KOI'e•

CLEVELAND l Chu:ngo 2 (10)

JUG,GLE

6H

Monueal
Aorub

J. fd.

Saturday's ga111&lt;s

Saturday's games

11

.w

41
42
40
16

New York 4 Bakm.ore 1

8()1100

Aolanla ................... JO 10

WHIIPm Dl•iden

Wntem DMiion
48 l2 600
42
41

Iam

bury got his first wm smce May 6
and Steve Fmley homered for the
fourth 11me m four games as San

Bos1on.
A Rodriauez, Seattle, '"I
York 119
RUNS E Morunez Sutt le 72 R
Alom:11 B111tunorr. 67 Jltulhps. Chu:aao
67 G Vnushn Mtlwuukce 6~ Belle
CLEVELAND. 62, &lt;lnffey Seotlk. 62. F
Thum011, Ch1caao. 61 Brady Andersen
BnlumNe,61

Easttm Division

AL standings

• TO

~ Thee=,~asualty
\:!11

night and stronger favqptes than a
week ago.
"You lcnow, this Wimbledon has
been strange with all the upsets and
Boris (Becker) hurting his wnst,"
Sampras said "Soccer has been so
popular, it seem' like '!Yim~on
has taken a backseat tl(tS ye!i But '•
!here are sull a lot of players playmg "
uu• "'""Y u• u·~ ... - - .. ,., -·V·•"
w1thout a program.
Eleven of the top 16 seeded men
failed to get past the first three
rounds, :the most smce seedmg began
69~go . The bottom half of the
draw 1 aranteed to produce a first•
lime fi hst.
The ost obscure names are
probably Germany's Alexander Radulescu and South Africa's Neville
Godwm, two first-time W1mbledon
players who were scheduled to meet
m the fourth round Monday.
Godwm, ranked 223rd m the
world, got !here when three-t1me

. II

LESS
THING
FOR YOU

Pometor

Tea" factor. ·
A grassy picmc area where thousands of blanket-toting, low-budget
W1mbledon .fans used to lounge, is
now a construction site for the new
No. I Court. P1cmckers have been
shunted off to.a paved-over area.
But all wtll be forgtven 1f the
ummaginable happens and a Bnton
makes it to tlie men's quan~rfinals.
TII&lt;ii ;.~ .. ' :••1'1'•"....; &gt;I loW • &gt; I,,
and no Bntish mao has won W1mbledon smce Fred Perry m I 936. But
in th1s strangest ofW1mbledons, ~rhaps th1s could be the year.
Britmn's No I Tim Henman 1s a
sohd grass-court player- and he's
m the bottom half of the men's draw,
where Amencan Todd Martm IS the
only seeded player left.
Untouched by the upheaval, however, is three-time defending champion Pete Sampras and his counterpart - defending and s1x-time
women's champton Steffi Graf Bolh
are through the first half of the fort-

n't so far - Sarnpras would get by
Piohne, St1ch and then renew his
nvalry with lvantsev1c m the semifinals, a match likely to produce the
eventual champwn
Sampras beat Ivan•sev1c m last
year's sem1finals and m the !994
final.
The top-heavy top half of the
draw has nled Such.
"I tlllnk the All EnglaJtd Club
should look at the draw," sa1d Such,
who was seeded I Oth behmd basehoe players Agass1, Jim Couner,
Michael Chang and Thomas Enqv1st
"It's a httle bit surprismg that all
the b1g servers show up m the top
half and all the so-called clay
couriers -except Bons - show up
10 the bottom haj{."
•
The. women tiave also made h1story With e•ght of !he top 16 gone,
equahng a Wimbledon record. But
three of the top four are st1ll playmg
- Spamards Conchita Martmez (the
1994 champ1on) and Arantxa

Sanchez Vicano JOmmg Graf.
Unlike the J!len who pullod
upsets, the women who made tl 10
the fourth round have all been rankod
tn the top 30 m their careers except
23-year-91d Slovakian Katnna StudeJiilcova, ranked No. 59.
~udemkova, ·who upset Seles,
will have to play her way up through
the bottom poruon of the draw,
;,o here last year'.,.-u.-.ncr-up Sanchez
Vicario IS favored
Graf's fourth -round opponent
today was 16th-seeded Martina
Hmg1s The 15-year-old Swtss lost to
Graf 6-3, 6-1 last year m the 'first
round on Centre Coun, but they have
split thetr two matches tli1s year.
Also today, No. 3 seed Maninez
faced No 12 Kim1ko Date, fourthseeded Sanchez Vicano played
Sabme Appelmans of Belgium, and
No. 5 lana Novotna was set to meet
Patnc1a Hy-Boulats of Canada.
, 1

Borden qualifies for last berth on Olympic gymnastics team

ONE

Dow hi Oils Ill•• Miner llswance

The Dally Sentinel • ~- 5.

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.~~~~~~--------------------------~--~~------~------------~--~~
:At Wimbledon,

The Daily Sentie.~l

Sports
)

Monday, July 1, 1996

tHami~~:h

4-4J 11 Phlladel·
plio &lt;Strtoaa t-6). 7'!5 p m.
OtiQto (l'elcmoco l-4) I' Plnlburp
(Z. Slnllh .._.5),7 J5 P m
~ NCINNATI

(Salkdd
SOl

4-2 )

ao

Sl

Lotob
2
(Molpo -2~
Pm
Florida (Weathers 2·1 ~ 111 Hotmon

(Witlt6o0).1
...
Lo
..,.. pm.

I Aaaelos (AIIae~o 3·6) a!
"'-(V--Ia
4-S~ lo,Q$ p m.
--r

AL .......

S

aa

Ch1cago 21 Perctvol. Cahfornu&amp;, 22
Henneman , Tuas 20, Montaomery
KDIWIS Ctty 16. R Myers 8alumcre. I~

NLieaders
BATnNG Piam. l.oo Ani' Ia t~.
E Youn14Colondo. lS2, Burks. Col·
-•- 1 Bl-~ Colorado ' " T
~-. . ' ~IC.
• ·- ·
&lt;lwlJtn. San Diqo, 1:16, G...,., Cho.,..o. - -- 111: ~ ..~ s1 Loui 112
.. . ~, .
~ RUNS B..U. C.lonodo, 74, Bidtetle.
Colorado 69 111110 H0111 1 6j 8
' ' 64: Bonds.
'
on,FnwK::iaco.
' qwell. Houi{Oft.
S:ln
6) , Chtpper !0101, AIIIOII, 61.
o..
~- t. !ohMOtt,

a·

4zie-. -oaJ.

New

York.~.

~-•-~ ~ ~-•-

RBI Bidlol,., ~. - · u - ..-

Base~

Amtl"6eu
•
CLEVELAND INO ANS'?l»lu:ed
RHP Oenru1 Martuvz on the IS·dlly dn·
ab led 1111 Placed RHP Jeff SeJ.ton 011 the
60-day d1sabled Its! Pun:hllleU the cOli·
tmcl o( RHP Danny &amp;ova from Bufflllo
of the AmencaJI Auoc:u1111on

NEW YORK YANKEES Recalled C
J&lt;W-4" POSIIIIa from Colwmbuo ollhe l!tlernwonal Lcaaue Opttoned LHP B1ll)'
Brewa- 10 Colt.tmbus

N-~ ·
FWIIOA MA.RUN Aai¥aled Of'
A - 0tw1oa 1'rum the IS-day tiNblcd

U• OplionotllNFRalploMIIiardtoChar·
lotV:otrs~R~Ioced OF
Brian H - oo the U-day diNblatllial
Of Ra -

Chow also made the team.
M1ller and Moceanu 's scores
from the natiOnals were counted, and
It was malhemat1cally 1mposs1ble for
them not to fimsh m the top seven
after Fnday's low compul sory
scores. That left the 14 competitors
fightmg for five spots, and Borden
startedthenightinfifthplace.
She stayed on the bubble all
mght, leading Theresa Kulikowski
by just .55 pomts as they headed mto
the1r final routines. Borden na1led
her floor roullne, rocking to the ragtime jazz mus•c as her blonde ha1r
flew. Even before she fm1shcd her
linaltumbling pass, Tracy was JUmpmg up and down.
For good measure, Kuhkowsk1
fell off the beam and fimshed 6 7
pomts behmd Borden, who was in
fifth place wtth 77.162
" When Amanda finished that
floor rouune, 11 was an unbelievable
moment for us, " Tracy said. "I can't
even breathe. For her, I know it's the

happiest moment of her life. And it's
sweeter after everythmg."
Kuhkowsk:1 wasn't exa~tly sure
how she felt
"I really don ' t know if it's fair
They d1dn' t compete at Olympic trials, and that's how you get to the
Olympics," she sa1d of Miller and
Moceanu. "They're gmng to be a
great asset to the1r team, but I don't
really know how I feel about them
not competing and gomg."
But Kuhk:owsk1's coach, Tom
Forster, sa1d he can't fault the selcclion process
" I thought the process was fan
before the meet started, but now I
hate the process," he said "The seven best k:1ds m Amenca arc on the
team, and I can honestly soy that "
The sohd perfonnances Sunday
showed why coaches arc calling th1s
the strongest women's team the
United States has ever had.
l

f

Seven .local golfers
capture
WVAGT
berths
The 1996 local quahf1er ror the the 36 hole compeuuon.

·'

West V~rgm1a Amateur Goll TourM1tch Roush w1ll he retummg to
nament was held on June 22 at the the West V~rgm1a Amateur lor the
R1vcrs•dc Goll Course 10 Mason.
liHh umc m h1s golling career. He
W Va.
shot rounds ol 74-74 ror a total 1&gt;1
A total ol 45 players entered the
148 to get to compete thiS year. He
local quahlier, wh1ch 1s composed of ' hves at the Riverside Golf Course.
36 holes ol stroke play goll The where be IS asSIStant greens superquahlier allowed seven players to mtcndcntto h1s lather Gary.
attend the annual West V1rgm1a
The younger Roush '" rclurmng
Amateur to be held at the lamous
to the amautcr alter two years ol
Greenbn~r Goll Complex at While miSsmg quahllcauon and expects to
Sulphur Spnngs.
do well representing hiS home club.
The seven local players w1ll JOm
The th1rd local mcmher to quuh15 exempt player. and 56 other statefy was Ryan NorriS ol Lclart Falls.
w1de qualifiers to lorm the 1996 The 17-ycar-old attends Southern
championships.
H1gh School, where he IS ~ I so an outThis year's quahf'1er&gt; from outstandmg basketball pl;1ycr. Norns IS
s1de the area were !1m Bunch the
the 1995 Parker Long Award wmncr
medalist from R1verv1ew Country
lor the Tn-County Jumor Golt
League as well as the champuln ol
Club ol MadiSon. Steve Hussey a
Southern Methodist UniverSity
the ,1995 R1Ve"1dc H1gh School
golfer from Parkersburg, W. Vu : ~· Invnat&gt;unal. Ryan's rounds nl 72-77
Byron DaVIs of Manella Country
f&lt;&gt;r a total ol 149 allows h1m to mukc
Club and Bob Ramsey or Green
hiS lirst stal&gt; at the tamed GreenbnHtlls Country Club m R~venswood.
cr on hiS second attempt to qual1ly.
The other three quahliers were
Norns 1s the son ol Jan and Darrel
RIVerside Goll Club members und
Nurns ol Letart Falls
will auend the July 15- 18 alla1r at
The players w1ll be playmg u
The Grccnbner.
pracllcc round at the Old Wh1tc and
Ron Spencer Irom Chester IS
Grecnhner Go II Courses pnor to the
makmg hi5 hrst appearance at the
compellllon.
Gary Roush, the R1verS1dc ownGrecnbncr alter only three tncs at
quahlymg Run shot rounds ol 74-71
cr. w1ll also he at the tournament
lor a 145 to fimsh third overall ror scrvmg on the WVGA d~rectors
stall as a rules cha1nnan .

~~-~· '~ ~

~
~
1

fP"' .. (;J lb~l .....__-Thank you for your support in the 2nd ~
~
Annual D.A.R.E. Golf Tournament.

~

Los~e

l

..
I

~'"'

(;J

t

.. Don Tate Motors Inc.
Swisher &amp;
~ Home Creek Enterprises
Fisher Funeral Home
Rutland Furniture
Star Otl Co.
~ Jay mar Golf Course
Ill) Pat 0' brien
Paul Simon
Pool People
Tim Wolfe
Jeff Warner Insurance
George Nesselroad Jr.
Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating

-•u-

~ --

(i eiii~-----·

.; "'h••

&amp; Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
~ Herald Service Co.
I Farmers Bank

Locker 219
Acquisitions
Johnsons
lngel's
Mitch's
Judge Crow Ill
McDonalds
Krogers
Food land
Vaughans

..1

_,. ., . .

.. Fabric Shop
~ Office Service &amp; Supply
l9 Quality Print Shop
General Tue
Pizza Hut
Pamida
~ Home Elltenainment

Dominos
Middlcpon Trophies &amp;~
K &amp; C Jewelry
~
Charles H. Knight Attorneys

·,
l

..~

Laurie Custom Cake
~·
Tenogha &amp; Powell Attorneys
Wamer, Sheets, Little
Modem Sanitatton
~~
wot.. ....,1Un rt.UVJII""]:JI
J\
Keys Motors
~

Ritches Used Car
Subway
Forest Run Block
Crows Steak House
Bibbee Motor Co.
Clarks Jewelry

H. Roclripez. M. . rat. 69.
Btoru, Cot- ___!Purdtalc4:~:*:•:
...-rfrott~Tioaconofthe
Ji.~~~~j~E~~L_.;.._~~~~~-~Colondo==·~74:·:Btc:wc~t=l
, ~How~llon.~7=J~,
..:-:oi~~~Y-=:·J G

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···-----------------------------------...--"":::,...~------. .11111:11-ll:l!lll:;!::-::lill!il!~~·,.a~l!l'll\!l~!:!Q:ial'lll!p!'l'F"'""""~"F'-~~-------_,.,~-~·~-~·..,...,- - ·""'_.,':;:z-""
.-~,.....-.-~-· ·· ~ . ~-- - "

.r

,.

'

Monday, J"ly 1, 1986 -

By The Bend

.Daily Sentinel ·1
...
·

~

•
Page 6
Monday, July 1~ 1996

pomeroy,
.dteport,
I VICinity·'

&gt;,

Four 1am11i· Jul)' 1-2. vtne .....,

Mother should not continue to ~pport free-loading.s_on
Ann
Landers

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: You are sure to
hear from your readers about your
lame-brained response to " Frustrated m Pensacola." She complained
. because her career-student brother;
:·.Dean." is draining their mother
financially. You said his mother was
· · doing the right thing .
That woman should not continue

to suppolt her 38-year-old professional-student, free-loading son.
~ ;~re he gives no indication of completing the last six months needed to
obtain his doctorate, she should pull
the plug on additional funding. -~
West Palm Beach
Dear W.P.B.: I caught unvarnished
hell from readers who were outraged
at my' dumb advice. Here's more: •
From Shreveport, La.: I couldn 'I
believe your answer to "Frustrated."
I hurried back from driving c:u:pool
to write to you. "Frustrated" and her
husband jll'e under no obligation to
support her mother in her old age.
That mother was foolish to send her
son, "Dean," $1 ,000 a month so he

JONES' TREE SERVICE
,.

let us know she expects my husband to put an able-bodied son through Mom has any estate money. Dean
and me to take care of her when she college and not give a thought to her shouldn't be able to get his hands on
hits 65. We will be close to 50 then own retirement.
it.
and have two kids in college. This
Diarnopd City, Alberta, Canada:
Traverse City, Mich.: That 38woman spends a fortune on clothes, Your advice was off the mark, If that year-old college " kid" has been cripjewelry and cheap junk for her mother wa~ts to support a useless pled by his mother's excessive genalready-cluttered apartmenr. Her sav- son, let her do it. But she shouldn 't erosity to the point where he is
ings consists of a few hundred dol- expect her daughter and son-in-law to spoiled rotten. You should have told
Iars, which she keeps in reserve for . take care of her in her old age when her to pull the plug. Why'.didn't you?
those all-imponant shoe and lingerie she could have provided for herself.
Dear Traverse and All Who
t ales. Thank goodness my parents Are you on vacation or what?
Wrote: I have no defense. Let's just
planned ahead for their retirement'
Dallas: I think "Dean" is a dead- call it "temporap insanity." Thank
years. I am doing the same for mine . beat. 1lte daughter should consider an you for the reality check.
Yuma, Ariz.: Why don't YOU insura11ce policy that will pay for
Send questions to Ann Lande~'!,
wake up and smell the coffee? Your Mom's long-tef'l!l home health care or
Creators
Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
advice was loony. I would never asj---_,.p.Jirsing home care in I 0 or 20 years.
iny husband to give up his retireJP{nt ·She should also see an attorney who lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
p.lans if my mother was nutty enough specializes in elder law just .in case Calif. 90045

could be a perpetual student: I hope
they ignore your advice.
Vancouver: " Frustrat::d's" mom
shouiCJ not feel obligated to put her
grown, able-bodied son through college to the tune of $1 ,000 a month.
Had she deposited that same $1,000
in a savings account every month at
an ~verage rate ofS percent, h.er savings over 20 years would have been
about $411,000 before taxes. Had she
invested that same amount into a
mutual fund with an average return of
I0 percent, she would have grossed
$759,000. Not a bad retirement nest
egg.
No Name or State, Please: My
mother-in-law (52 and divorced) has

"

I'QE I8TIIIATES

TODD BISSELL

u.oo- per •o•r

Morning Ho••
M.l.l.
Happy Ad

J . E. DIDDLE, OWNER

. Mt-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Cleaning
Alum &amp; Vinyl siding
Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks - Sidewalks
Experience References

742-2803
or446·3622

-~

Industrial e Automotive....
New Radiators e Re-Cores

~;/"

f.

MISS WEST VIRGINIA • Miss West VIrginia 1995, Elizabeth
Mcintyre, left, crowns the QeW Miss West Virginia, Karl Safford,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stave Safford, Pt. Pleasant, during Saturday night's contest in Clarksburg. (AP)

~Community
The Community &lt;;:areliifar is
as a free service to non·profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed .to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
'Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
publi~hed

~~ ONDAY

calendar-

EAST MEIGS -- Special meeting
of the Eastern Local Board of Education Tuesday, 6 p.m. for the purpose of interviewing personnel and
other necessary business.
ALFRED -- Orange Township
Trustees will mel Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
at the home of the clerk , Osie Foilrod.

CARPENlER --Columbia Township Board ofTrustees meeting MonPOMEROY -- Meigs County
day, 7: 30p.m. at the Columbia Town- Genealogical Society workshop for
• ship Fire Station.
•· beginning genealogy researchers
Tuesday, 7 p. m at the Meigs County
RACINE -- Racine Village Coun- Museum . 4-H members, scouts,
cil. regular session, 7 p.m. Monday at doing genealogical projects, and anythe annex.
one having questi ons regarding
research are welcome to attend.
SYRACUSE -- Sutton Township
Trustees, Monday, Syracuse MunicCHESlER -- Chester Village Hisipal Building, 7:30p.m.
torical Association meeting Tuesday. 6 p.m. at the fire department to
TUESDAY
disc uss upcoming ChesteJ-Shade
CHESlER -- Pomeroy Chapter Days set for July 19 nod 20. All inter!86 Order of the Eastern Star meet- ested people encouraged to attend.
ing Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the Chester
Masonic Hall. Officers ar~ to wear
PAGEYILE -- Scipio Township
robes . Forty-year pins will be pre- Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
se nted .
Pageville town hall .

f'

MI DDLE PORT -- Middleport
Masonic Lodge #363 meeting, Tuesday. 7:10 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Hall. All Master Masons are
urged to aucnd .

WEDNESDAY
RUTI.AND -- Rutland Township
Trustees, Wednesday. ·6 p.m. budget
hearing following by regular meeting.

SPEAKER - Michael Struble, left, wea guest speaker on cultural landscape end Welsh settlements at the recant DAR meetIng held at the farm home of Mr•. and Mrs. Roy Holter. Pictured
hera with Struble era from the left, Mary Powell, community service award recipient, Mr. and Mrs. Holter, and Elesa Young. new
member.
Young, a new member of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter and attending her first meeting, was welcomed
to the chapter.
Patricia Holter, regent, jircsented
a "DAR Outstanding Community
Service Award" to Mary Powell for
her outstanding and dedicated service

to Pomeroy and to the Count y of
Meigs.
Pauline Atkins, vice regent and
program chairman , invited members
to submit suggestijllfS for the 199697 program year. 1llc next meeting of
the Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
will. be held in September.

...K.i!Cben

SELEcTED -lielgl High School choir members Pamele Neece
and AJ1ChW Kitchen luive been selected to sing with the Ohio
State Fair Alt-Youth Choir.

and Andrew

Y.e~n. -~1 . ~· ;~&lt;;;.

form in the Ohio State Fair All-Youth
Choir. Both are in the Meijs High
School choir directed by Jenifer
Eubanks:
The two will leave on July 28 for
several days of preparation before
they begin the rigorous schedule of
seven to 10 perfonnances daily during the two-week run of the Ohio
State Fair.
·
,.~ choir of over 200 high lChool
· students will live in dormitories on
the fairp'Qilnds.
Neece, daughter of Roy and Donna Neece, 'is a private vocal student
of Sharon Hawley. She will be
singing Sllp'IIIO with the choir. At
Meigs she is on the yearbook staff
and in the flag corps. She is an eight

-

•• ~ .... ~- Lo-1.,_ ...
._._...-, ,,.a \ .11-...

. . . . _;

~ - •• o ~ l

...,. ~ • . .....

•

,

• ... ., U V W.I\,1 W.IIU

f)

- 6' · •- .
.,.;. "\-

~

:;10

IN 3 DAYS

All Nlluntl T~"'
Wltll Chromium PIOcolln.-

(614) 992·2364

Public Notice
ORDINANCE 141
An Ordinance to eetabllah
aalartea lor varloue non·
elected aupervlaory and
non-eupef\lteory eftlployHe
ol the VIllage ol Pomeroy,
Ohio.
.BE IT ORDAINED IIY
THE COUNCIL
0 F THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO:
SECTION 1: That the
aalarlll ol the "v erloue

- •f'" t

po,lloa,
water
and
walt-er employeeellhall
be and are hereby
11tebllahed at riltaa 111
forth on Exhibit A, ltltaelted
11-..to, which exhibit ahall
..e and Ia hereby adoptad
and approved.
SECTION
2
Thla
Ordinance ahall take effect
and be In lull Ioree ae ol
June 10, 1tH, upon Ita
paiiJGe and approval by

$19 500

George Wright

WIIII8111Young

Limited nme Offer
Call today with your
window llzea for a free

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Pomeroy, Ohio
Public Nottce
ATTEB1!

•

\

Kathy Hyeell,

1·800-291-5609.

IOIEif IISSILL

co•n•umo•

Cllrtii'INuurer
Vllllge Of Pomeroy
llelo• County, Ohio
(I) 2.t; (7) 1 ; 2TC

•

Income

• High Safety!
• Wide Cboice or Annuities of
All Kinds
Call for lnfonnation:

SCOTTINSURJLNCE

Phone

_,., ...

614-98s.~

• Annui~ iJe issued by lllSUI'InCc
Com~tea and have substlndaJ
penalues for early withdrawals,

.Love
Business ·
F•mlly Maners
• Allow Your
Personal Ptychlc to
AaaleiYou.

1·900·988·8988
Ext.7907
2~99/llln 18+ .
J.T. Phone RtiJ. ,
. Serv·u
(619) 645-8434

llulti-lomlly yard ule, Sotui'Ciay,

Creek , anawers 10 the name Df

Rockoprtngo Rd.

·Fur•. About 11/2yra. old. It setn

coil 304·885-3035 or 304-805·

Yard Slla ·

Ext. 1277
$3.111 Per Minute
Muat be 11 yn.
T-h-T- Required
llerv-u (819) 845 8434

6.14·992·2979
f/1tllmo. pol.

•IMwOar.-

HeadNners • Custom Seat
Covers &amp; Carpet •

•ln~rlor &amp; Elltarlor

·Convertible Tope •
• Antique Cltl ·
t Seaiii Over 20 y,
Experience
\
(814)
-7~7
41484 S
Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. 46788
11111111 mo. pd.

p l=ngE Wort!
(FREE STIMATES)'
V.C. OUNG Ill
.
-G15
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

eem - tpm

•at

Pest Control

·

.....

Recine, Ohio
Complete Commen:ial &amp;
Raaldet tllal Setvlca
'

- ·~

~

-

949-3.151

.....
.~·~..

742-2246 '
l.Oclllt OMIId &amp; apll8lld
, ' FIW El(lrnatea
I, GtMianlaed I'8IUb

~-----.;.--...J ,1;!:;

I'

Bed, V1111, Olshe&amp;, ShHII. Twa
Old SchoOl Desk s. Trailer Milth ,

Furnitu(t, Pillowo, Geese Outlito,
Bedspread, lilac. ttoma, Uonday
July 1II And Tueodoy, July 2nd,
8-5. Rain Or Shine Aboolutety No
ea~y Bltdot

Two lomdy - July t -2, 821 Ath
Steot, Middltport, 91m-4pm.
Yard oalo· Beahan Rd. In front ol
liro dopilrtmtn1. July 1·5. Gao
range, dl IC.

r
.

•

••

1111ea 1 r:no-

Howard hcavatin
. Trucking· Umestone
Bulldo7.1ng •nd .
Backhoe
Services
Houaa ·sties and
Utllltl,a

-

All Kinds of Eorlh Work

Clean late Uodel Can Or
Truck&amp; , 1000 Wodels Or Newer.

Smith Buick Pontiac. 11100 eu t·
Don't Min 112 Oil SaOII Second ern Averue, GIHipolia.
Chanco Shop, 701 Socond A~•
J &amp; D'a Auto Porto. Buying ool·
nue, lnoldl Movlo Stoilon.
vagt vehicles. Selling par11 . 30•·
July lat. 2nd, :lrll, t To 4, 2 Milot 773·5033.
Oul Neighbofl1ctod flood, Ctolh01g,
DllhH, So..1hlng FOt Alii

992-3838

Julr 2nd Till ? 8:30 Till 8:00 lin-

PONDEROSI .
PRIMmVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
lrom Ravenawood

--

1238.

Salt, 014-448-4209.

Pay1ng Top Dollar For Junk
Trucks, &amp; Runn1ng Veh1cles To '
Davo, 81.,.•11-9575.

July 2nd, 3rd, Corner 01 ~1. 150 &amp;.
AI . 124, In Wllklville , A Phylli &amp;
Muholand's R..idtnc:e. ~

betow dime. Oishis. quillS. dolls.

atatlona, non-portable
water, ISriJI lobi,
hiking, llahlng.
Rent by week or month.
:JO.W72-668&amp; or

114-247·2120 ..... _

----~ ---- -

LINDA'S
PAINTING

IIIIIIIOI•IMIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
t.ka tile ,.ta " ' ef

,.,,..,

....II. . lat•••elt

......,.,....

WilY IIIIOIIIU
11ft BJIIIICU
01 mo.

a

Carpent•r
1••rr ...,•....,. Paint Work
1130 P.••
l•cl••... _.----1-r 985·4198

dothing turMure.
July 3rd , · Slh, 9 · 5. Corner Of
Burkhar t And 588. Lots Of Home

Inter lei.

Northup ttcond hou se acro11
br idge in Norttlup Thursday Clh;
t~ s. Flowers, Children Clothing,
Mtsc.
·
PIIIO Sate: Movmg, Evlf ythmg

..........,

SAWMILL

. Y•ID

.....
Portable

Let~ ttll you

about the futuralll
1-900168 4100
·Ext. 2488 -

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middllpolt. Ohio 4571!0

. . . . ptrfllln.

Danny&amp;.,... BrictdM .

lllult lla18 yra.

serv-u (818)teu::_.

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

814-112-2772
8:30 A.ll.-3:30 ~ llr-..11

a(!"1 Ill WlljJMs

-&amp;11·11

eSin-&amp;d las

814-742-21i3
rFN

...._----~

;"

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULIIIOI

... Atlld.
·.,

S1ar Wars 1tems wanled, Mil pay
t \ .00 lor figure&amp;, 15.00 lor veh1 ·
c le s. Pay more lor some. Catl
614 ·949 -2 474 Uonday or Tu ts ·
Top dollar - antiqu11, fu rnitu re,
glall, china, docks, gold, silver,
coins , watchet, esta tes . Osby

Martin,814-9i~- 7441 .
Top Pt~ces P&amp;Jd : Old

u.s. Co 1n1,

Sitvo•. Gold. Oiamondo, Ali Otd

Collecriblea. Paperweights. Etc
W.T.S Cotn Shop, 151 Secon~ .

Aolenuo. Galopolis. l1•·••&amp;·28-t 2. ·

Mu11 Go, Dirt Chupl loto 01
Brand Ni mt Kld't Ctorhoo, Toy,
Houuno1d, Etc. Oon'&gt; IIi II Thll
0ne1 ~otn Or Shine, Monda, And

Wanltd To BIIY Uoed Mobolt
Homos. caN: 6U-UII.Q 175

Tu11d6 y, July 111, 2nd , 8 :00· 1

wanred To Buy. Auto·•

21175St Rt ••• .Con10rery.

a Truck s

Any Condition, 6U ·388·0062, Or
81
•·••&amp;·PJIRT.
Re in rShlne Garage Sale : 7t2nd,
3rd, 9·5, Vernon's 23511 Groham.l Wan1ed To Buy; Junk Au1o1 With
School, 011 ,w . No Junkl
Or Wllhou1 Motora. Cl ll Larrr
Tuoadar Juno 2 8-5 128 Dta•· livll)', 8l 4.W.fl303.
field Boad Taka 58.8 turn 'onto

wanted : Old wooden Screen

Krouobact&lt;, 2nd ooad to ihl right
Mile.

Oooro. Arry Condl11on, Size 311 By
82 Coli Anytime, D1•·44D·i501 ·
1514·307·011 2.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

'

Er.1Pt ovr.1rrn
SUlV ICE S

4·1lrniy, 111, 2nd. 3rd. boby itlml.
ctoth1ng all sizes. loll ol ml ac

Wi owC-Rd.

110

HelpWinttd
1-WNITEN

·•

10 people who need 10 loal'
WliQhl I make monay, 111 try , ;
parenltd wtlghHoaa . product-

•

•
· lamily, July 2-3, lint houao 304-773-50113 2....,.,
on 0111, Belloy Run Rd. Clothfl.
AVON I All Areu I Slllrler:
gun cablntl. IYMIC. '
Splan, 304-175-14211.
•

H&amp;H

clrs,

clay.

~· ~--------~gag

LIVEPSYH~

Non· Working Wuhera, "Dryer s,
Stoves. Refrigera tOrs, Freezer-s,
Air Condlrloners , Color T. v:.·~
VCFts. Also Junk Cars, 014 · 2 ~

Ga llipolis. Furniture, Di1h11,
Home Interior, Clothea, Moving

July 3·• ·51h on Rou11 7, 3 Miles

Bridge, 1 mile from
Apple Grove, Ohio.

JUP SHOOT

.

,

Three family garage 1111, July
3rd, 4th. I 5th. II iho Weber lllidenct, In Retdavllle. clothing,
101a. ~ry. antique chH~ van.
ly oil-. llam-?

Fuf'IUiall

Eltctrle INIOk-up. dump

•RDOII) Addltlon1

614-992-4025

1:!

.

Heat Pump

Umntone • Gravel

JESS'
COMPLETE
AUTQ-I
UPHOLSTERY

lll8llY melala.

'

.

Air Condltlonln&amp;

. On Sl At. 338 W. 8 miiH

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

Pick~~

'

falrgrou ~n

£all
B. D. Construction

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

9115-4422
Cheater, ·ohio·

•Roofing

....
.....

one -mile north of

Tueaday, July 2. third houoe on
right. Scout Camp Rd, Ch11t11.
polnt·ball gun, prom d&lt;Hata lir,
2 Miles North 01 Holrer Hosplial 11 314, girts' bicycle, toys. gi•l•
On At 150. Ctolhong, Covan Wim clothaa airoo 10·12, misc . cfoth·

8atll8
Remodtllng
Windows Kltchens
Siding
Decks
Roofl
MOlt
AdcJ.ons
Anything

1-1100-988 8600

Dlrt•SIInd

=-~
~.1

"--~

Need Direction?

Meet you(,
match

•Eltctrleal &amp; Plumbing

~-

Jru Swart Rd.

LOST : Garman Shephard puppy,
loll In m, TNT aru, naar Pot11fa

1018.

&amp; VIcinity

992-2735

battariH,..,.,t~ •

::;

au .ue.

Monday 111 &amp; Tvt~Y 2nd, 112
milt up Bailey Ron
oft 124, L~­
tle Ttk01, Supor Ge t Boy &amp;
more.

Gallipolis

We will work within your budgat
Ph. 773-1173
FAX 77MI81

....:::

~
.....

60 Lost and Found

70

uNo Job Too urge or Too Small"

.Porchtl, SldtWIIkl
and Acld-on1.

.-••

·-

J~t 1 1· 2. 103 Pomeroy S1f tlt,
Mason, WVa, Home tnterlor, ptua
~reo, boby i*"' oalniithlno.

3o1M.

·Rerrlpl'11ton
Wa hive tha new Ffl12
Low Colt Replacemant
for Autoniotlve R12.

Roofing, VInyl
Siding, Gar••·

ROOPfNG
NEW-REPAIR

614-698-4611 (collect)
·
Albany, Ohio 45710 ,

AuthOrized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • lndustrill G - • Machine Shop
5ervlcel• Steel Sales &amp; Fabricallon • Rapalr Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dmsing • Omamantlll
Stapa·Stelrs, Railings, "etlo Fum~ure, Fireplace
~ems, Planter hanger$. Tt'en!Ses &amp; lots of·other stuflll

QUICK
CONSTRUCTION

FrH E•tlmate•

July 1·2, 11• mile on 143. aummer
&amp; wrintllf dolhing, pa110 furniture &amp;

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

lel. HOllON
TRUCIIIJ

\BOITTIII
B() \ D \1 \ I~ 1, 1·. I .'

• Accumulate or Momh ly

Plastic Culvert: Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
S&amp;:D · perf. . solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pi'pe
&amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
1/2" &amp;: 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe ( 100' roll's thru I,000' roll'•)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" .Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" · Fillings · Regulators· Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fining~ &amp;'.Water fittings
Full. line of Cistcm..Scptic &amp; Water stOrage 1anks.

e . LeW1 Rd, Racine,rHidenco. 514-247-21e 1.

: :mo::."':·. - - - -- -

.

coln Pike Northup, 8 ·MIIII from

.

• No Loads or Feel

H&amp;H
Home
Remodeling

cloth ing, lots at. knick -Knack-..

Sirong and active doa. mired wl
Baaglt &amp; Uinlaturt tollit, with
good nou. 3:14-417S.t484.

Found : Small Collie,

Street

••

Available

1102-31..0or5t4--

for QuaU,y .Work

Tuppara Plalsw, Ohio 45713

"quotel

1

•

Instilled

eTIIt·in
eDouble Hung
elnsulated

the council.

PASSED: June 3, 18!11
John Mu-r, Ptftldent
Scott Dillon
Gerl Welton
Larry Wehrung

1-800-889-3943

.;..

Giiiirailteed Safety ~
High Interest Yields

RetriiYef puppltt I klntnl, 11...

114/lmo.

614 985-3113 or 814-t87-8484

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

...ervloe, gener1l, atreet,

LOS ANGELES CAPJ - Eddie:·
Murphy 's "The Nutty Professor" ,.,
weighed in at No. I at tho box office·'
with weekend receipts of $25.6 million, industry sources estimated.
The comedy about an overweight
~cientisl who invents a potion that
can make him thin easily beat the oth·
er major debut of the weekend, Dcmi
Moore's "Striptease," which opened
in fourth place with $1 2.3 million. ;
1hc Arnold Schwarzencggcr1
action film "Eraser" and Disney 'sl
"The Hunchback of Notre Dame" ;
showed staying power, taking in an '•
estimated $16.4 million a"&lt;l .$13.4 ·:
million, respectively, to finish No. 2;
and No.3.
'
I. " The Nutty Professor," $25.6;
million.
2. "Eraser," $16.4 million.
-·
3. "The Hunchback of Notre ·
Dame," $1 3.4 m'i!lion.
~
4. " Striptease," $12.3 million. ;;
5. "The Rock, " $10.3 million. ;·
6. "The Cable Guy," $4.8 million.::
7. (tic) "Mission: Impossible , " ~
and "Twister," $4.5 million.
.,.
9. " Dragonhcart," $1.5 million. i:
10. "Eddie," $900,000.
.,

·

'
... .
. ....
- . , ' i t! n ..
' . ,. ,,. . _ ... \,.. ,.., •, . ... -. •• ••• -'..l.t'~ • .O

serves on the Meigs County Library -Church.
Teen Board.
Kitchen , son of Charles and
Sharon Kitchen of Middleport, sings
both bass and baritone. He is active
with the Meigs County Karate Club
and is involved in weight lifting and

St. At. 7

Residential - Commercial
Roofing- Rubber - Shingle&amp;- Mlnor.Rapalr&amp;
Gutter&amp; and Oownapoute
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

NERV&lt;&gt;US

year member of New Horizons 4-H · camping program s. He is a member
~=:.

I &amp; WPWIICS MD SIPPLY .

HOWIII'd L ~I

Neece, Kitchen to perform with
Ohio State Fair All- Youth Choir
"' Pamela Neece

£0NSTRU£TION

35YMIW~

'Nutty Profes~or'
No. 1 at box office

Landscape of area discussed at DAR
Michael Struble. Syracuse, was
guest speaker at the recent meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughtet'l or the American R~volu­
tion, held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Holter, Pomeroy.
Struble discussed his study of the
built landscape oftl1e region.with particular attention to the Gallia-Jactson
Welsh settlements. This study has
resulted in several journal publications on the subjects of Welsh church
architecture, chapel distribution and
industrial archeology.
In 1992, Struble was the coauthor of a book entitled "To Build In
a New Land: The Ethnic Landscapes
of North America" which was published by John Hopkins University.
Hr has served as a technical consul·
tarlt to several award winning documentaries on the American Landscape and currently serves on the
Board of Directors of the Pioneer
America Society which is a national
educational and prtscrvation organization dcdicat&lt;ll!,to l)le research, publication and preservation of the cultural landscape or this countrv.
During the busin~ss session Elesa

Stefanie
is the
50!

Gatogo sale- July 2·3, t.&amp;irol CiH
Set 01 Shcm. Giveaway To Good Rd. , _ Pomidl. hm-4pm. CNid·
Homo, 514-4411-7548.
. ron, INn and tduU dothlng pluo
milt. itamo.
4 lllacl1 """"'" . 10Wt1a oljl..,port
lab, good with chll&lt;lfen. 304-575- Huge garage t ale· 3 miiH. north
8757 or 304-4175-31147.
ol Cheater, July 1-2. gam·5pm.
Cl'romo Clinolto tlll&lt;e w/2 cnatra. Lata olaiUHI Choaplllull gal
304-ln-4201.
July 1,2,3, Homo lntlilor, AvolJ.---Tuppllware toys, old ~lthtl,l, "\
Cata, E•ct lltnt Mouttral To
Good Homol &amp;14-3117.0283.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

742·3212

watt , t t t mint in ttctx, Cmu nt
bank or Middleport 11h tray •

3 Month Okl All Whitt Kirttn 111

992·2768 or
992·3274

B&amp;B ROOFING and

wa re, li n•"•· h.~tniturt\ Gentra l
HarMgor Comtnomorotive ~ la o

I0!1IOii1lr'9oale"" :!em,-·
li~ 2nd, lour
3 KIIIOnl, I WHI&lt;o Old, 814-387- Gaoago
0451 Allor 5:00P.M.
n1i1H pu1 SA 143, Gem-4pm.

Free Ealimole.

MI-30131"MI-2018FAX

Fourth Str. .t homt of the. lett
Horolcl Hubllord, e-.c, July 4111, 5th,
eth , loti of choice lttmt, glatt·

3ft:l1 Gotdftlll, 514~7.

Roofing &amp;
Block Work

Rac:lne, Ohio 401'1

Apaltmen~ .Gontpo-

·-·

FrH Kittens, Long Ha1red CaUc:o
And Alto 2 CaliGO Female Adult

Assembly~ .

AJC

Upotairo

io.

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
-Mowing
(resklentlal &amp; commen:lal)
-, Waedealing
·Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Maintenance
No lawn too large
or too small.
Call today for free
estimate

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

21513 BASHAN RP·

I'Ait,

Serving S.E. Ohio a WHI VIrginia
Toll Fr1t1 1-80D-87a-5967
446-8418

614-949-3308

(No Sunda~ Calls)

Very lOYIIblt , HOUitbrotlen,
See Her At 510 112 Slcond A....

with file p111ta 4 ..me. to back II up

ROWE
POWERWASH
.SERVICE

614-992-7643

11411 mo.

Mobile. Home Heating &amp; Cooling

r.

20 Pound Fl ma to Mlled, Dog,

Limestone,
Gl'lvel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
814-992-3470

BEN

•Painting

/4ew Homes • Vlnyt Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
R9C)m 'Additions • Roo~ng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2096

CLARKSBURG, W. Va. (AP) ' }',.....
The new Miss West Virginia wants to
help her fellow Mountain Staters by
/
promoting health through good nutrition .
"West Virginia has one of the
hjghest rates of obesity, ~ancer and
heart disease," Karl Safford said.
"And much of it can be related to
how we eat. What I want to do is to
get to these people early through education to change their eating habits so
they're eating properly and will live
healthier lifestyles."
Safford said she has taught classes in promoting nutrition at her
church, directed summer preschool
nutrition classes and started a nutrition support group in her hometown .
She founded a "Nutrition For
Everyone"·program at Marshall University and published a low-fat cook·
book. She also writes a weekly nutrition column for the Point Pleasant
Register.
One .way Safford wants to send
out the message is to eventually have
fourth runner up, po88 at Robart C. Byrd High ·
MOUNTAIN STATE COURT • Jennifer Heaa television talk show.
School
In Clarksburg, W. Va., Saturday followson, Pt. Pleasant, third runner up, from left,.
Ing the announcement of Mlaa West VIrginia ,
"I think it's a good match of my El88 Kruahanaky, aecond runner up, Karl Sat·
1996. Mlsa Safford Is the daughter of Mr. and
interests in nutrition and communi- ford, Pt. Plaaaent, Mise West VIrginia 1996,
Mrs. Stave Safford. (AP)
cation," she said. "I want my talk Tracl Staley, first runner up and Malllae Murray,
show to focus on health and nutrition
issues, information that helps people, Atlantic City. She ·is the 'daughter of Broadway ~ow "SunseLBoulevard." ry, Miss 'Jefferson County, was first
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Safford, Point
The consumer science senior at runner-up. Other runners- up were:.
not just entertains them."
Marshall will .compete in the Miss Eisa Krushansky of Morgantown; ·
Safford, 22, of Point Pleasant was Pleasant.
Competing as Miss Ohio Valley America pageant Sept. 18 in Atlantic Miss Appalachia; lenni fer Hesson of
named Miss West Virginia on Saturday after finishing as first runner-up against 19 others at Robert C. Byrd City, N.J. She also earned $13,000 in Point Pl,e~sant, Miss South Central
in 1995. She succeeds Elizabeth High School, Safford won the talent scholarships and a trip to Disney West Virginia; and Melissa Murray o~
,
Morgantown, Miss Harrison County. ·
Mcintyre in re11resenting West Vir- competitidn by singing "It's As If We World .
Traci Lee Staley of Harpers Fer- .
ginia in the Miss America pageant in Never Said Goodbye" from the
"

•Roofing

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Call

Kari Safford, Point Pleasant,
croWneQ new
s West Virginia

oRamoclalliiO
•lldlng

(814) 182-IAII
~-~-14;,c.
-21;::.:A::,._.

2 Pupplea to good homl. will
big dog&amp; :JM.e7S.4431 .

,WICKS
HAULING

~NawGingn

' Free &amp;tlmates

SUMER
TUTORING

LowflaiM)

ofWwlfomel
•Addltlonl

Owner: Ronnie Jones
~6N»266- 1-800-950-3359
'

co•n•umo•

Cullalllllllldlng lllltl UIIIJI

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 ,Years E%perience • lna_urtd

"

Wli'S ·

Racine, 8:30-?-Houoohold ,......,
cloihoo, radio wlih I trodl pltyor
and speakere, small exercl"r

(Liml Slona-

Four tam1ly,
cuse. Jutt '

odro. lllby

Slratl, S~ra .
,

It"""'

were. mictOWa'le, aorna

Rlin cancott.

I

•) !'

Fuu\i... • I'Dttnlial Leaoora Sarioully 111-:
.,.llld In IIMttlng Few HOUfl•

Weflly 111 Part·Time llllat noaa;
114--12311.
•

'.\

I'

JuiJ 4, 5, e , guna, 'toola,- riding
- - . 414 rucll, IPMtr I'ICIOt
• llh lmplemen~•. 200 lb anvJt,
•lllmftllla,
..., clothing
' houllhlld
lliiC,
garCIIn
lrlctor Wliglltl,
1,:,:;:::;.._._.;...____
!liking c1111ra, CI'*·HI lllrd1- HOME TYPIST, PC UMrl notd·
er, e mllH from Recine, Bat111n td. 145,000 Income potential.
Rd.. 814-V411-2416.
Cal1...,51~ EIIL . . . .

·I

�·-'-· - -

...

--~

-·

..

'

•

- ~L

...

'

/

•

Ohio

Pomeroy•

July 1,1996

•• r

==

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

-~

:=.t,:v"Y
.
.......

PHD' UP
ALDER

:.~::;:;n&gt;
1fT-Ann
111 Georglll

Alzheimer Unil Full Tim. lndud- ·

ing Wktnd's Rtapontlblt For
Alllil~ ng In Tnt Ptlmlng, DMIoping, Organizing, tnoplemontlng,
Ev~ualion &amp; Directing Of ActivlU.s Prooram For Alzhelmet' Resi·
denta. Fun And Creative Atmotphere Wage Inc. After 80
Oaya. Apply In Person At Scenic
Hills Nursing Cttuer, 311 Buck·

ridge Rd .. Bl-11, Be-n 8-4,
IA-F
:lid.

0..polillano
on111a. Anyone
contacr Jacldt
Dtnlfpthtnt for
.
at 814-092-8472 Of come
1111 out an IPIIIIcation.
Pan-Time 1\dminion
CoordlntiOr
Ruponlli'"ltiao lrcludt The Fol·

-.;:

.

hook -upo. Call olttr 2;00 p.m.,
304-7J3.._l;e51, Muon WV.
~ ..... -ldW!M1g In
lhll.ntii'?J"P"f li IUIJjec:llo
tlle,_Folr~

Acl

-lo

-Of-ollo•llon
baled on r101, oolor, l'lllglon,
oexllrnlllal tlaiUI cr notional
origin, Of any
,.-.any oyclo

R E NTAL S

-or-non.·

the Negotiated

ween the IALTA
Education. the Molgo

Tllll nWtpejl"t wll nol
. -ogly IOQIIll

IIIII-•
- l l l n - d v.. ,.K.

School District it posting

--.... .. lor

1owln9 vacanclu for 111
teac: h1ng staff: Soya' Head
Coacll Olllcl Senior Claoa Advisor.

The Southern Local sChool Dia:
,Our raadero arw harwby
!riel haa lht potlrloir'ol va,.ilr
lnlonnad lhllal -IQI
Choerltadlng,
advlaor
available
ATTN: WOMEN /liEN. Earn E•adwNtlled1rlthll ne~·'lplp"'
ora Income. Fiellible Hourol $200 • lor ·tho 18118-0~ achool roar. Ali
arw avalliollll on en oqull
$500 Week i ~. Cali 7 Da~a 407- eppliCIInta mutt poatell or
quire a valid Olio .llalling c:or••··'l•
tlllPI)flunlly b88ll.
875-2022 E&gt;rt. 05211 1125.
car., a apom ~~~~ oardftl:alt
ATTN: WOIAENIMEN. Eorn ootro and a current CPR card. Please
income. Flexible hourtl S2CIO·

1500 weeki~. Coil 7 da1• (4071
875-2022 EI&lt;L 0588 H 25.

'"t:aWttenden\,

..ne
wrence,

to Mr. Jamea laSouthern
Local School. Bo• 170, Racine,

Ohio 4577t. SLSD Ia on Equal
to town
.
Beautician. hairdreajler wanted 0ppcorM1ty E"''IIDD'er.
remodeling In progrno, - ruga
f\111 or part·lime with e:tlenrale. Cell
to ault btipr,' 95'11. finance ovall·
304-875-3040.
WANTED: Poolton Available At able to qualified bti~tr . Prope&lt;ty
Cenilied Healing And Cooling A Co~1.1nlty Gro1.1p Home For locatftd at 131 Butternut, Pomer·
Service Tech, Experlenc:ed Only, Peraona WIIM learning limita- ~.Q
Atleast 3 Veara, ContBc:t: Jim tio~l In Gallipolis .. Hour:•: 3:30 •
11 .30 P.M., Thufl, 3-9.30 P.M., One bedroom home in Pomeroy.
Harmo~. VOtes HHUitll &amp; Cooling,
Fri: 0 AM. · 7 P.M., Sat g A.M. -5 Will sell on land contrac:t, 814·
1-80Q.Il28-3m
P.M., Sun: 2 -Hour WHki~ Stoff 9112·5858.
DRIVERS:
'Mealing; Or A• Otherwi11
Reduced Price, country home in
Scheduled. High School Degree,· rown. beautiful 1 3/4 acres with
Orlvero Needed tn A D&lt;hilng lOa- Valid Orlvefa Llconoa And Threo woodl. rmatly lovel. localtd In vi~
livery Operarlon. 128 -$34,000 Year~ Llctnoed Driving E•porior Middleport with 1 lovely
Firot Y•r. We Par Road E•peri• once Required. Salary: 15.00 /Hr.•
Schulro Special Edition moeo, Holiday&amp;, Safety Bonu181. Eo- To Start. Send Re1ume To: P.O.
home, bolh &amp; a hall, wilh car·
cellent Benallt Package Including Box 804 , Jackaon, OH 45840: bile
petlng throughout, some new,
lnturance, Retirement, Sk:k DlyL ATTN : Cecilia. Deadline For Applus many time's added to home
Steady Ptlycheck With lota Of plicants: 715190. Equal Opportuni· Includes deck &amp; cenlral air,.
Homo Time. RequirernontJ: ClaN oy Employer.
A COL, DOT Ctrtillablt, I Year .:........::..~..;___ _ _ _ __ phone 814-9g2-7350 (No Sunday
Exp., Safe Driver, Stable Work We need bide lor cemen1 Work · cal~) .
Hislory, &amp; Yo1.1 Mu11 live Within : done on parking lot at lhe Ameri· Story And A Half House With Ex·
75 Mllea 01 Ripley. Apply Today can legion Past 140 in New Ha·
ven. Call 304-882·3860 if no an.

At

Shonoy'a Dl•ributlon Conti&lt;
I· 77 Exit t32 (Fairplain)
1-1100-554-21168

.... rneaaage.

170

.

Miscellaneous

All Natural Fat Loss Product.
lose Weight , Foal Better. In-

~OE

Duke Cleanero (Pt Pleasant) help creased Energy 11 A Day 81-t·
notdad, lull tinto. Appl~ b e - 448-1238.
12-3pm Monda~. Tueoda~ a
180 Wanted To Do
Wednoooclay.
Earn 1000s weetdy stuffing lf'IVIt·
apes at home. Be your
Start
now. No experience. Free sup·
plies info, no obligation. Send
S.A.S.E. to Prestige Unill, P.O.
Box 195608, Winter Springs Fl.

bo..._

32719

Body won on cars &amp; trudls, reasonable rates, minor mechanical
repairs, oil chanoes. CIH 614·742· ·
2Q35aakbrKip,Rudand.
Clean Homes &amp; Offices Reason.
ab18Rates,&amp;14-«t-0870.

Expereinced OTR Drivers Want·
ed, Paid Percentage, Paid vaca·

Don 's lawn Care. Retldential ,
Churches, &amp; Cemetarles, Rea-

t•ons. Bonus Proiram, Box 201,

sonableRa.teStet•31'8·2847.

Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Work Windows Washed
Full Time, Husband &amp; Wile For Guners Cleaned light Hauling,
Management Pcsllion, Circle Mo- , Ci&gt;mrnoriical
tel &amp; Princess Video, Salary Plus •'
·
Residential, Steve:
Apartment, Apply In Person,,Cir- ~~~~~----­

cle Mottl.

tra lot In Bidwell, $22,500, 614·

245-9415.
Three bedroom home in country,

Whites Hill Rd., Ruland, one bolh.
in-ground pool, 814-9112-5087.

320 Mobile Homes ·
for Sale
14x70 Feattval, 3bedroom, 2ba.lh,
cenb"alair, se.soo. 304·675-2382

or 30H7S.2926.

1809 t&lt;irk Wood \ &amp; 3 acres of
land lor sale in Henderson· 304·

875-5956 or 304-875-2445.
1970 Fleetwood 1h70 3 Bed ·
rooms, 1 112 Baths, 614 -245-

0704.1970 Monterey, t2x60, two bed·
room, stove anc:l refrigerator, new
carpet. underpinning, must move,

$4000, 814-1192-5008 or 814-092·
74118.
1978 14x70 Freedom Wlrh 10x20
Vemc:o Add ·Room, Very Good
Condilian, Electric Heat. CA 01-t·

448-11034.
1981 HallPI House, Central Air, 3
Bedrooms. i 1/2 Baths. Underpin.
ning, Front Porch, Awning , Back
Porch. Deck. Very Good Condi·
11on, Must Be Moved!•&amp;14 ·245·
0604.

1990 Sunshine 14•70. 2 Full
Baths, 2 large qedrooms, large
CDYertd P,tio, AC, $21 ,000, 8 14·
... 1-1205.

19g1 14180 Single Wlda With
Cenrat Air, il-256-8420.
Ul91 14
Feirmonl, three bed·
roOms. wo baths. all electric,
40'x 10' deck lnc4bded, 6" house

walls, call814-1192-6134 .

FINAN C IAL

1991 Schult Mobile Home 3 Bedrooma, 2 Batht, ~ucnon, Dining
L.A ., Hurch. Hoar Pump, AC,
Porch, 112 Acre, Hilltop Drlvo,
Gallipoli.,.-us,ooo Coah Or
~.ooo. Ownw Financed 11'11. lnL
Wldt ss.ooo Down,el.-....55.
19g7 3 bedroom; 2 bodt, 14070.
$1,215 down, 12011/mo. lrot air.
Colt 1-800-;llgl.em.
1907 Double wide, ~ bedroom, 2
balh. $1,803 clown, $284/mo, ~­

air. 1-800-081-&amp;777.

In The Renter Trap? Own You're
own Home for little .11 SSOO.op
Down. 1-(30&lt;1)- 738-7295.

li mited Ollerl 199~ doublewlde.
3br. 2bath, $1799 down. $2751
moniM. Fr-. delivery &amp; lt(yp,
Only el Oakwood-Homea, NiNo

wv. 304-755-5885~

.

New Bank RepoL onty 3 ltll Slill
in warranty. 304-755-71g1 .
Price Buster. 18118 3beclroom.

$825 down, $159/mo. FrH doliv·
ery &amp; set!.t_P. Only It pakwood

Homes. Nioo WV 30&lt;1·755-58115.

Porry:a Gretnhouoa: End Of Sae·
10n Flower Sato1 t MUe Wea~OI
Rod~. 814-370-22118.

Household

GoodS ·

410 Houses for Rent

PI-""'·

AI per
Vacooq!ee

510

AI( Conditiiii\era, Washer, Dryer,
Refrigerator, Fteezer, Stove, Ml·
crowave, Color T.V., VCR, 814·

_258-;;;ili.ZI8~.;;--R,~;;di;j;,;;d

Appliancoa:
3 Bedroom Hotlao For Ren~ Btlh
&amp; 112, 2 Cor Gatoge, Rio Grandt, . Wathen, Dryers, Ranges, Refri·
No Pe11 Inside, Referenc:ts &amp; gtators, DO Day Guaranreel
Dopooit Required, 81 .. 370-2720 FrencM City l.hylag, OU ·UG·
AFTER8P.M.
?795.
Big SoVtngS On carper a Vi~lln
Nice 2 bedroom, basement. oa·
rage, nice yard, reference•. de- Stool&lt;, 18.00 Yd a Up. Mollohan
CarpetJ. R7N. 814-4 48-7"'4·
pooi~ no-· 30&lt;1-117S.5t62.
Brand n-. never bean uatd. 30"
Nice 2 or 3 bedloom nou.. in Po-- Kenmore drop· in electric range,
-~.no-· 014-1192-51158.
white on whilt, rotJH $770, liking
-. ... -. - Pomeroy, 4 bedroom, wid, ramo- $550 · -w~.
deled, Hud. ltncad. no pots, rel- Counur Furniture. 30ol-075-8820.
·erences. 1475, security deposit. Ro 2 N, 8mllea, Pt Pleuan~ wv.
81 ..002-6886, 5:30pm
•··
11 5
liue.. Sal ft~• . .,..n
-·
Unfurnished 2 badro'm hOuse, GOOD USED APPLIANCES
nice &amp; clean, no inside pall, de- Wuhero, d•yera, relrigtrorora,
posit required_ Blol-9112-3000.
range~. Skaggs Appl iance•. 78
,Vine Stroot, Call 014·448-73g8,
420 Mobile Homes
1-eoo-499-34119.

for Rent
2 Bedroom NoJt N.G.H.S. Stove,

-·

Refrigerator, Water, TrAsh Paid,
t250/Mo., 1250 Dtpoait, 814-388-

2 Bod,.., Traillf Nowtr DtoO&lt;ao:
ed lraeh &amp; · Waler Paid Near

""'·· 814-31111- t 100.

2 Btdroom Trwloer, 8 Mllea Routa
218. 1210/Mo + Deposit. Reier·
.,.,.. , 814-440-8172, 814-258 8251 .

614-245-5822 E,.,irlga.
Trailer lor rent 1200/mo. you pay

utilitiea, no - · JOol-875-2535.
Trailer lor rent in Gallipolis area.
814--448 8818.

640' Hay a. Grain
ALFALFA HAY· Srorago delivery

E 1 SO corweralon ..,,
78, ioO\ mllea, looka a runa
gooG. 13,700, 81'-742·2393.
•
t 085

OuHn Size Ortnopedlc Mattreaa

I Sot
And Frame. Navar Uhd S~ll
In Plaaoic Coat $800.
$250,
Sell

:O;_u;_tt:...n.:..:SI::z;:.t;_W_a_t_er_b_tG_W_i_ln-i

710 Autos tor sale

Orawen. 1225: Entirtainmenl
Center $150 , No Calla After tO

Ohio.

1

Sean roam AC for CIMmtnt

530
Antiques
=----,.......:...
___
Buy or aell. Riverine Antiqutl,

Building
SUppl~

Block, brick, saw.r pipe•. windowa, llnttll, etc. ClaUde Winttrt,
Rio Grandt, DH Call 814·2455121.
.

560

Pets

for Sale

AKC Bout puppioa, lawnlbrinde.
$250. 30&lt;1-1175-5711e.

AKC Lhoao Apao Pupplea, Now
Accepting Dopotlll Will Bt
1124 E. IAaln Sueet, on Rt. 124, Ready July 4th, 111 Shot• And
Pomeroy. t1ours : M.T.W. 10:00 Wormed 1175, Firm, 814-388a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 IO 8958 Alttr 5 P.M. IIU-388-1434
8:00 p.rn 814-1192-25211.
Befort 5 P.M.

540

Miscellaneous
. .Merchandise

AKC Reglttered Botton Ttrrfir
puppies, one male, one fti'T1IIIe,

:f.f

"14 FO&lt;d Tampa; 4 door auto.-.~
leo lelt rtlr tail light damage,

Paaa

gA0-231 1 daus Of 614 -UD ·UAt
~L
'

CROWD II

PEANUTS
SOMEDA't', RERUN,
THIS 15 WI-IERE
'fOU'LL 8E STANDIN6,
JU5T LIKE THE
REST OF US,
WAITIN6. FOR TilE
SCHOOL SUS ..

Many lttma To list! Excelle~'

Condition, 814·387·0859 Or etJ,
387-7370.
"'
304-1175-4841 AFtER o ~M .
11984 Mirada 18 Ft. Open
1014 FO&lt;d MUlling RtbuUt Motor 1With Sundtdc 4.3 liter V-8, IA~~J.
ITranomiotion. Air• 8, 8 t 4-448- Cruiser. With Ski Acce11oriew·,
8889.
614·2§8..6180.
..~ : '

;0,:

1085 Crown Victoria, one owner,
very good condition, 40 miles on
rtbuih engine, 94,'000 miles,
1:!400, 014-1192-3880.

11195 Slratol2t15 Pya, XI,. DC, 17:j ·
HP Evenrude Fully Loadecf\) '
Ready To Fi1h, 0• Play 814-44
989t AlterS ~M .
,.

1087 Caprrco 4.3 4 ODOr, Stereo.
Runa Slrong, Maintained Verv
Dependable, S1 , 700, 814-441·
11l115 5 P.M.
.

Polaris Weverunner 1994 850 ~

Auto

..•.

Parts &amp; ·

Accessories

needs braM line, 1rril. out Fogle·
lOng Ad, IUOII rrom Mason Fire
Otpanment

::---,-~:---.,.----:•·

FINDM&amp;!

Some of the best bridle boob In re: cent years have · come from
Engllabmen Terence Reese IJid Devtd
;• Bird. Their penultimate offering
: (fteeee died last January after these ,.
'' two were completed! Is "Famoua L....I...;;.J..-1jj Blddlag Declelona" .(Gollancz; U5.95
p,p. from The Bridge World, 39 West
: I 94th Street, New York, NY 10025-71241.
' j· Each of the 80 chapters contalas a
by Lull Camf»&gt;8
.blddlng problem taken from high·l-1
~Ciphor..........,..,.-,
--~~yr....... _
,,....,.,,._.
compelitlon. After deciding what you
bc::h \ictti In 1l'll clptW IWdl for anoller. TOdlly'l W.: f 11QU1MJ L
, would do, you read the authors' ·
•y
KGFMCKJMRCHM
RK
thoughts on the al.tlves. And usually tl!ere follows.the .fullatory of the
UFDNFFX.'
~ dl!al with some card·play lips thrown
A 8
y
Q M F I F S B H. X
• in for good measure. I really enjoyed J - : 1
LYSSFI .
reading tbis book.
..
K Q F M C K J M A C H M ) _w R T, T· D
If yoU had that fr:th hand
. partner~ op M-tnunp, sho~g
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When Mr. WUbur calls his play 'HaHway to Hell' ha
f. 12-14 pomts, what would you respond.
undere8timales the distance."- (Critic) BrookS Alklnaon.
"'
1: South waa Fritzi Gordon, one of
' Britain's best-ever women players.
' Being an ardent rubber-bridge .player,
• she leapt straight to elx spades. This l.s
: applauded by Reese and Bird as practical, giving nothing away to the defense.
Recrronoa" 'loi1tra 04 tho
lour ICrarnblatf -ell boo
West found the only safe lead: a ellalow 10 lorm lour -ell.
' mond. Declarer won with dummy's
; ace ·and called for the spade queen .
1 Howe.ver, Eas,t, Pat Gardener, played
, low smoothly. Fritzi went up with her
. 8pade ace and waa,pne down when the
' killfl didn't drop, aa she also had an
ounavoidable heart .lolf!r.
P I TEN
As Reese and Bird point out, if
: South wun't going to take the trump
· finesse, she should have rulfed a diamond In hand at trick two. Then, after
caahing the spade ace, abe could exit
=,'
"It would be a rtluch better
with a epade, getting luclty here. East,
world ," granny lectured, "if
out of diamonds, must lead eltber a
_ _ . .
people would listen to their own
heart away from her king or a club
....-----....--....., conscierce rather than other
Into dummy'e ace-queen.

-1-D87 Ford Taurua Wilh Air. Au.
tOfnltic: Tron~alion, Good Condition, 4 Doo&lt;, til!' Miloogo, 814·

1400. 304-l!7S.3824.

Four 18 inch loflory

Ch~

••

HSCFT ~ X

aliifYow'

nancfng even If you hiVt bnn
lurned down elsewhere. Upton

·eo f· 25Q automolic atlding lfind·
fiN in bad., 3oo e Cyt, excellent

....
. ..

~~~~=

I I PI I

S A NG I S

~.

7-1

II

---.O;.....;G,..E::.,:S--:.,0--11
" I' 1 1 ...

~

,.
'

I
•

PRINT NUMBERED
1
LfTTUS IN SQUARE~ 1

r I' 1 r I' I' 1· 1

II

4

_

II
.

I! I

I I I ,I I I

.

)

uneasy . Mucus • Hatch • Behest- ,SUCCESS
•A true failure." an old college professor once lectured,

...~ ... I-III ··· HEl-l. .

Tile TrtGIUif
Sovlnrs You'll find In 11M
.. Cloul(ltd Section.
. r..

'is one who srts and welts for SUCCESS.·

WW-,1 liiiNI&lt; IT'S 1\M&amp;
~ REO~NeD lT...

.

-·-

Eorl'a Home Malnrenarco, vi
aiding, rooting. onortpr and
or painting, .,._ wuhlng, roo
addllians . FrH .Eslimettt. ~1

1192-4232.

f

Ron'a TV Strvrc., apoalollz~
ill&gt;f ·
Zenith elso ltfVIcinQ molt o

I

. '

1077 FO&lt;d F-1 00 302. Automatic,
J FL Bed $500 OEO: t1113 c,_,
Vlctoril 302, Run1 Excelltnl,
Loadad, seoo OBO, 814·448·
4024, Dart : Or 8 14·448-4738

Rool ng • gultJf1 cOmpiell rol"odtllng dockt &amp; oldl~l---..
rtiira
· - - · 114
a ' -M2-ZJII
a,a.o•~ -·-.......,
and ContltUCtlon,
Of I -800 - »13.
•.

1gn f,o rG F2SO 314 To~ .
Wlndaor 2 D'rivt. 814-4-41·
21450f30&lt;1-117S-2385
'

I

A C I N N~ Epeople's • • • • • • • ·!"
1--,;~.;...;:;,17.,:....,,,;...;.;.-:=..,1--1 Q Comploto lho chU&lt;klt quc&lt;od
_L,...J.._J.I.-..L._J.--I
by lilling in lho .,illing -d•
L
·
you develop lrGni llop No. 3 below.

SCIAM-&amp;ITS ANIWHI

~" HA ..•

~ :
L'

At::

condition, grea1 work truck. rlrat
$34110p!!0,814·040·2:111 days.

V-8, 4 Speod,

I

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

,

brandt. Houoa calla, I"·IIOCI'7t7r. '
0015, wv 304-578-23118.
- -

Evtnirgt.

-

0

t&gt;EPT ..

••
•',.

Campers &amp;

....

l

LOAN .

oucij·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

lll

-·-

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

wheels, aluminum, good cond •:

790

.

'

~th Trailer W Cover. Call AttM'
6:30 ~ .... 81o&amp;-448-11253.
'•

760

NEVER

JJ · ~-- - -

bl

.

IF I I-IIDE
UNDER MV
BED, TI-e'( ILL

AITRb·ORAPH

.
BERNICE
\

'

•

820

BEDEOSOL

0

840 ElectrlCalllld

Rflrlgerll!Dn

,,

·•
A

new -

.

Matchmaker can help you underarand CAPFIICORN (Dec- ~- 11) Vou can
whallo de 11&gt; make the relalior\llrlp - ' !. conclude a buelneaa deal ~oulully
Mall S2.751li Matctrmaker. c/o lhli newa- IOday W you adhere 1o busineullka pnocpapor, P .O. Bo• 1758, Murray Hill IIcea. Trul aarlous alluatlona wllh
Slatlon, New York, NY 10158.
.
reepecl.
LaO(~ :IS-Auf, 22) You can 1rtWe al AOUAIWI (,.,, zo.f'eb, 11) This ccukl
.a aenalble deeiaion loday concerning a be one of' yoU/ bellor problam -aotving
aeriouf matter you've been pondering. dayS, ac make IIA 10 follow lhroUgh on
You
You w11 tie on the right ITIICk, bul con11n- aolutiona•you concef4.
.,
, can IUCC88d
•
UIIO prooMd caulicully.
Wyou~·
•
.
VIRGO (Aut. 23 lapt. 22) Y.CYU will con- PIICII (l'ab. »MNccl 20) You may
1lnut 10 11avt pel 1uc1t in regll'llto your have ..,ned accooelhing Vlluablt, bul you
ca'"', Howe..,., lhla good fortune may have not nocalvld H yc!l Do nol give up
c:ornt1hr0ugh lndlriCI c!Wollll.
../ IIOplat 11111 lltage of IIIIo gount.
(lept.l3oOciJ 23) T*r acme- .AJUq (lllniii21·Ap11111) T*Y will be
1111ng impoltll1l m1g111 dtveiOp UII'OUglr a · more lllltllying you Ghoole your own
accillenc:oucMr w1111 an old .Mand who IICIIvlll·
be la!y and 1111 othera
hll alway&amp; ..-d your beat inltrtal 11 _. your

Tony !lporaf, Old Alii Vl aga

Mtige CooMar IIDaiG of~
SIM ...... E-li!leOiotcltrt.
flt!!MIItiGnMIDail;
,_1!\ij
Dllal l.ll. 13t0Clllf1Dn.,..,
P.QBoor307, ~-ado
45770

By Phillip Ald~r

f

$4g5, Aloor 4

,..,..,eel

jBidding
jwith some play

1'

!

--

····'"'"'

Tho lltltl Couftly Board ol ManIll A-don and O..otopmen,
rei Dloablidat (Carleton SchooV
Moiga lriduarriH) -k• o aut&gt;- .
adi/W HHIII Strvicot Coordlna·
101r (AN oi li'NI » wor11·with ,...,_
tntl and adulll· wllh - -·
rei dioaiiiN rtoo. Muat bo • ''lfll·
tlt'ed nurM or hcenNd ptactacal
nurse currenttr licensed in lhe
Store o1 01110.
qual llca·
tiona: ·~ In p!llrllc haall!
nuralng, oxptrionco wonJng wllh
. , . _ and adoltJ wldt ...
...... dlaabllltiH. Send ....me
tr,Ny 10. 11111111:

I

l

11103 21 FL Morado 4.3 LX, Sreki:.
. loll Prop, Complttt Tops, Tan;
dtm Trailer With Brakes,- Too

1ga7 Caprice EX.QSP car, $800,

---

AIM TO 00 THAT,
BEANIE?

A VPUN•IR

~

AERATION MOTORS

Paaa

Eat
Pua
Pua

Opening lead: • 5

HOW·OOYOO

YOU NEED TO

- -- - -- -- --'.! ,..

Repaired, New a Rtbuik tn Stodl.
Celt Ron Ellllr\"' 1-800·537·9528.

West .Norill
tNT

97.000 mlln, 1400 OBO. 814-

me

JET

work. Clli30ol-182-3151 . Talk

Soetlo

i'

And Morel All Elcallent Shapel

Bunuel

3 Rllllllll red
4 Alludea

Vulnerable: Neither

_ _____

614-258-11089.

1 Nolwwtdng
2 Film diNCior -

---

"tal

61.0 F-rtn E,qulpment

Maria

DOWN

.

•

ready to go, call 814·848·2415,
,,
Motor Homes
371-2720 AFTER I P.M.
16' cheat deep lrttzer. $35. 614: . 814·9112-3752 or 814-002.3111J5.
Two and three bedroom motMJe . !149-221 5.
Ford Tempo .fdr, auto, runs 1972 Scamper 1811. pull·behind'
AKC Roglttered Botton Terrier
homes, atarling at $240·$300 ,'
camper, sleeps 6, to18lly 18" con·~ .
Puppleo,
E•cellont
Bloodline.
$900. 30&lt;1-87~98.
2
Rings
14
Carat
Yellow
Gold,
1·
sewer, Mter and trash included,
tained. Detachable awning, dt ·•·
Shota
&amp;
Wormed;
Now
Ttklng
1/4 Carat Cluster Retail Tag: lfi5
014-9112-2107.
mand pump, shower. range·top &amp;•·
Sell: 1450: 1-112 Ctrat Remil Tag: Deposita Vou Choose Your Own 1088 llo&lt;ttta, two door, V-8 MuiU· oven. furnace, and hot waret larA.! ·
Two bedroom mobile home in l4g9, Soli: 1250, Or Bolt&gt; $800, Pa~ment, Aaking 1300 Eoch. Col port, aull., ,_pain~ $2500, 8tol- ~ull see to appreciete. CaN 614-t ,
814---11270.
0411-2877.
•
.
coun1ry, depol it and references 814-256·0850.
440·3814.
_..:.
_:.;.
--;;,.• •
required, 814-9411-21133. ·
AKC
ROQIItered
Chihuahua
pupa,
lOBS Buick Sk~hawk 4dr, tUIO,
280 IBM Compatible computer,
1174 Chateau Traveler c:ampei: color monitor-S2SO, IBM 88XT tin~ remalt, 1300, maitl, 1250. 4cyl, loaded, 47,000mi, 14,500.
440 Apartments
0/C, awning, sleep• 5-t; ·~
Parents 3 &amp;41ba. 814-085-42118.
304-1175-4172.
cOmputer, color monitor·$1
lull bath, everylhing works, good
tor Rent
Cat1304·875-8083.
Reglarared Peraian Kinens tgae Firebird V·8, 5 Spotd, New condirion, osiling $3500. 814-98$=
1 and 2 becltoom apenmenta. lur$250 Malo and Female et 4-258- Tirol, 83,000 Miles, $4,200 080. 41~4 .
nilhtd and unfurnished, ltCurlty
8107
Super Nicel 11192 Dodge Shadow, tG78 GYC Tio;o Mo tor Home
depoai1 required, no peta, 814 - 3 Pea. Eolfcioa EQuipment ProAor, 65,000 IAI IOS. 12,g00 OBO FuU
Quality
In
Good
Condilenional
Bolh, Rool a Dash Air, 4,50q
Dog a Cot Grooming: rnaonablt
002-2218.
tion, (With Ont 01 Theao Vou price•, 15yra experienCe. Call for 814-245-5592.
~ilea, large Refrigerator &amp;
1 Bedroom, Super Nice, $20&amp;/ · Can Worll Out In The Comfort app11. 304-1175-883 t.
Freezer 18.300 614-4411-0781.
.
1881 Firebird, V·6 au10matic, red,
lolo.. Plua Utilltieo, Uouau, And Con¥enience Of Your Home)
good C&lt;&gt;ndioion, $2800, 014· 742One
Wett
Bed
5500
Multi
-Gym
Something Availablel Sun Valley
1984 t'issan Mirage 70 , 00Q~ .
2357.
•
.
Rowing Machine 175: One
20mpg, dual rear wMeels. 4c 1
"""'""""'' 81 .. "'8-2057.
Schwinn Signature Exercycle,
4 Cylinder, 5 Sspd, at ve , a•nk &amp; refrige,lt
2 bedroom in Pomer~. 1250 por Coso New $250 For $150 Caoh:
875-2949.
., :
.;.:;..;_
_
_
_
_
_
_
.,.....,....
,~P'ci)l~·~r;i
Caoaene, 21 $2,800.
1
month, plus utilities, deposit. pfua One Super Deluxe PTS Turbo
Condllion, Runa 1985 Palo /no pop-up c:amper, ;
1 year leaae, no pets, 814·667 · 1000, Coao !jew $1,000 For 1375 Full Blooded Dalmallono No Po- 1 '
1,850, OBO. 814 -3711.· hard Sides heavy awning ends,
6205.
Casn, Ca ll £ari Topo, 814 -446· pen, $75, 81oi-256.8QI2.
0181 .
....,. &amp;i•. ,000. 304-675-8503. -:
Groom Shop -Pat Grooming. F•- 0.. G
2bdrm. IPII ., total eleCtriC, IP·
Bath. Don Shtttl. 1 rand Am 2 Door, Burgan·
pllances furnished. laundry room Beauty Shop Equipment For Sail. turonn• H•dro
~. Air Auto, Power Win_, Ex·
•
S l' RVICES
fae~lilles. dole to school in town.
304-773-0123.
Ca~814·448·0231 .
•
celtent Condition, 13,500 080,
Application• avaitabl• 81: Village
14
Green Apts. 14a or c:all 814·992· Boo,ll B~ . Radwlng, Chippewa, Jack Ruueflltrrier puppi11, 10 _8__-448_-623..;;.._1._ _ _ _ __
Tony lama. G11arantted L
1 lbs. lull grown, al coloro, $250/ea.: 1gee MOZdl 323SE 4 door, 5 810
3711 . EOH.
I
Prien At Shoe Colt, Goft
two Shellie minialure Colllea. speed, great gas iliage, nice
Improvements · '
e Roomt &amp; Btlh, Laundry Room,
main, $1 25/H. : 014-742-21151t
d•n car. $1000 81ol-370-2:178
--....;....,_.,.=--_...;,
·
.
c Tanka,
Canuel Air, Heat $350/Mo., Pluo Concrete a PlaaUc
BA9:UENT
::
1350 Otpoai~ Nica 81 .....8.74"' 300 Thru 2.000 G ono Ron PUPPV Palace KeMtll, Boarding, 1DiD Bu1ck leSabre .~x c tllent
WATERPROOfiNG
,
Evana Enterprises ackson, OH Sllld Sa~ PuppiH, Grooming. running condition, V-$, PB, PS, Uncondilional lifetime guarantee. 1
Ai&gt;PIY Mollohan CarpeL·
··~·537.0528. /
Bu~. Soil I Trade, All aroada. AC. windows, $3100, 8 14· Local references furnished. E\; f
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Pa~monta Wotcomo, 8U-3a&amp;- 0411-20450&lt;0t4·g411-~2 . .
oabhsiMHI 1975. Call (8 14) 448· ,
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Dark Oak Badroorro"Slli!o. Fun 0420.
0870 Or 1·800·287·0578. Rogers ' ·
ESTATES, 52 Wettwood Drive Sizt Bod, Hutch, And lor~ Size
Oldt CuUut Cieri Body waterproofing.
~:
lrom $244 to 1315. Walk oo shcip Ortner With Shelved Mirror, Rtlflllttred Wolmaranlf puppioa. 1~:~~:\'; Runa Good, $850, 814I
• ''
&amp; movies. Call 81,·4•6 · 2568 . Mattrtll Anti'Bo• Spting ·Includ30&lt;1-675-7740.
t
5, Alter Sl• ou-448·
ed. 1400 0110, l)ol-4o46-t825.
Equal Housing Opporounily. ·
Appliance
Parts
And
Service:
Two Ai&lt;C ·Roglotorep ChOw pup- 12....
ame Brands Over 25 Years E)\.M.
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartn:~ent, Doll 433, 120 -MB HD, 4 MB Ram. pies, one cinnamon female and 1gao V.fl, Toronado Oark Blue, 2
erienee All Work Guarantee4,..,i. ·
Ac:ro11 From, Park, AC, No Pets, SVGA u Inch Color llonltor,. ant ~a"ck male, lirat shots and Ooorw, ~ID. AMIFM Stereo Cit~h .(;II~ Ma~ttg , 8 14-44tr-' 1 •
References, Otposit, $350/Mo., Ooa 8.0 lnrot, TILPIIPPIA St.SOO, wormed, $150 each, 814·040· aeue, All Power. AU Ltalhtr,
mnJ""'
..;J:
OEO, 814-3117.0213.
814-448-8235, 814-448.0577.
2280.
Good Tlru. Good Shape, 304 ·
C&amp;C Generl t Home Main.
Fruns &amp;
875-38119.
Scooters
And 580
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, Up· Electric
tenence· Painting, vinyl sidinQtt!
Wheelchairo,
New
/Uaod,
Van
1
~ irs , Ulilities FurnisMed, Clean,
Vegetables
1goo To~oto Cross1dt, V-8, Auto,
Car
Uft
lnslatltd,
Stalrglldu,
lift
c:aij&gt;!ntry,
"""''· Windows, boo,._..·
No !='811, Reference, Deposit Re·
.,....,.,---=--~::---:-~ floadtd , Electric Sunroof, Ma•nChairs, Call For Brochure, 114· Cabbago· you out, 30c hood, m;,...r, Garage Kopo, 18,500, 814· rnoliite horht repair and mort. Fo~f
quired, 61H46-t5t9.
free estimate call Chat. 1114·902&amp;'•.
448·7283.
John Hil Farm, tellrt Falla, Olllto, 44Hilll5 5 P.M.
8323.
.r,. .
Furniahed Efliciency All Utilities
81._247-3042 Of 81ol-247-2842.
ELEMENTARY TEACHERS .
Paid Share Bath, l14!i/Mo. 919
1891 Olda Cutliat Ctlaia 4cyl,
DRYWALL ' '1t ·
Second Avenue. Gallipolis, 814 · Cornpltte IAacMWien Scltrct Unit
Sspd, sunroDf...-eJn=fm ca.ssene.
For Primary Grades. Bookl.
448-3045.
.
runs &amp; looka gran $2,800. 304· - ~
· - '·
, ptt
FA Rr.1 SUPPL IES
Games, Art Ideas. literature Er·
CeUinga tulured, plaster repalr.t·.
875-2!140.
&amp; L IVF STOC K
Call Tom 304..75-4118. 211 y• •
lend~~· And _ca;,y•ng Fjles, New
Conclaon, Pa1d $575, Proce: $200:
Aua Loana. Dealer will arrengo fi.
PIANO
Old Acrosonic Console

14~

Dealer: North

'1080 Pontiac Trena ·Am Au ·
tometlc, 2 Ooora, Sunroof 455,
Good Shope, &amp; PartJ Cor, ff,500

550

113 Omllnentll

K· J10t4
&amp;88532
8oudl
a A J 10 8 7 I 5 4 2
• A 9 5
• 10

~118~,1ow rnllu, $1200,

949,3228.

Washer Whirlpool laS; Wringer
Washer $150 ; Dryer Hatpolnt
195: FrtelotO-'Chott Typo St SO:

82~

• 'Q 2

~~:::IA:...
. 8::1..:.._..:.446-.::..:222=1:.:.·_ _ _ __ _ ·•2 Pontloc T-1000, runo good,

Ouoon Size Wattrbtd $100:
Chelnaow 20" $75: 305 4 Btrroll
It 50; 350 Turllo Long Shift $75:
18 Fl. Utility Trailer 1700. 814·
"'8.0575.

t1Culofl

• K s
•iKSS2

'"'Y

1000 Dodge Rom Van B-250 ,
72,000 IAifea, U,OOO, Can II•
Soon At Golllpolla Dally Trlburw,
825 Third Avenue, Clolllpolt

TRAN SP ORTATION

614·775-2a00.

a7 a

Eul

•

Plano By Baldwin, 1800, 814-4.46Equipmenr Uatd Cora. 304-458· .
4022 Alter 8 ~M.
· FARMALL CUB WI cultivarora, 1080.
hy'itraulic 1ilt, good liroa, runa
Furni tUre Sale: living ROom
720 llucks for Sale
Sultn. Counr r ~ Tobit &amp; Hurch good. SI.OOO. 30&lt;1-117S.31124.

Sub-ConhCIDr 10· do interior tnm

• A

oloolr

aee-.rcs ....·
eo IIIII1IUIIJ.

•AQ7

Tobacco Pienta Wanltd, 8 tA- · 1989 Dodge Grand Caraven sE
Nice $8,500. 814·448-32:17 Altt r
...e-1052 Gtorgo !if&lt;&gt;vor.
5:do P.M.
,

Fret Dallvory Wll!ln 25 lAIIta.

Lovel~

S.les Person With 2 Years .Uin• ·
mum Experience And Building
Mlletill, Hardware. PleaH Call
l.iOdl Or 0tno er•-448-21102.

~ord

IIOfiMCIIWn
II Number on a

aQa
•Qt07 ,4

J

wi,_, St2S. 30ol-773-5171 alllr
800prn.
·eo ThunOtrbird SC, two - '· 3.8
litre, V·O, elite model turbo, PS,
STOR~•GE ~·NKS
'"'
'*"eOOO Gallon PB, AC , 5 speed, power seats
Uprlgh~ Ron Evana nterprlaoo,
locka, "Great Cor," $5200
Jaclllon,Ohlo, 1-8111-537-0521.
noo.; 814-092-7478 or 814·949S
C k S .
p·
2878.
tor~· · lar pont! oano And 1 -:-::-:-::---:-~~--Sunburat Strlt Walt Mirror. 814- 1087 Plymouth Sportlury, 82,000
....e-3878.
actual mlln, 311k:u. In, $1 ,800.
D01
p
1878 Chry. New Yorkor, parto or
Uatd FurnitUre 130 Buoavnoe Pike, ~
Rtfr igeralor s, Washer, Tabltl, .andy
Matrix rlnter Wllh
car. 304·175·2158 after
Typewriter&amp;, Entertllinment Cen· Paper &amp; labtlt $75, 014·441·
tert, Beds, Couches, Chairt, 814· 40&amp;4.
107S. lincoln 48,000 Actual
448-4782.
Miles, A-1, White, Marroon lnteri·
VI'RA FURHIT\JRE
or, Price Reduced . $3 , ~00, Sot
014-446·3158
Tom- 014-446-7787.
Cluallty Houtehold FumiOUrl Anti
1877 Oldsmobile, 2 door, ale, full
AI&gt;PIIarcu. Gr•r Dealt On
power, 73,700 ~
· rea . drive any.
Caoh And COrry I RENT-2-0WN
And ~ Alao Avalablt.
- ·· very JlDO ondition, 814-

anytime.

Rent: 2 Bedroom Mobile Home
Cora Mill Road, Deposit, No Pets,

vans &amp; 4-WDs

I g79 VW van. $050 OBO. 81-4·
002~412.
'
•

avallable·M·organ·s Farm Rr 35,
P1iny. 304-837-20-18.

Pioneer 8 Inch Subl. Pioneer 8
Oil~ CD Chtnger, 814-245-0401.

2 Bedroom, furnished, ac, wt~lher
&amp;'dryer, $250/mo + ulilitiea. No . Refrigerator Frigidaire Frost Free
pett. Rt""trcot a dtpotil 304 - ' StSO ; 30 . IncM Electric Range
e7S-o4174.
· Horpoint $95; Air Conditioner
2 Btdroomt, Furnlahed, 1 Ouaen 8,000 BTU $75: G. E. Woahor,
Size. I Full Bod, 2 Batha, Ctay :Dryer Sal. 1205 Each. G.E. Ralrlg· ·
era tor Like New Choice Of AI ·
Chopol Road, 81ol-258-11408.
mond Or White 1350: Skaggo
Furnl aMed, private lOt, porch, Appliances, 76 Vine Street. Galligood clean condlllon, no . polls, 814-446-7398, 1-800-499•.
1280 wllh water, 304-882- 34911.
Mobile Home For Rtnl 814-440·
1270.

730

NMw Gas Furnaces, New ~
ized Duct WO&lt;k, Now H'19d llano,
. 81ol-3711-2720 AFTER e P.ll.

MERCHA NDISE

d 111811 "'*&gt;&gt;I-~ legal
1o adwftlle 'any ptOIUCt,

~~~~·
.... -

Manre11 And Heater Only, fill
OUten Size Waterbed Like New
$80, NIM 5 P.M. 814-448-8313.

SlttPt"g rooms wllt1 cooking.
AIIO lralltr IPICI on riVtr. All

'1:Jur

.rill_..lwl_ .

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UIRA

.....-u.-y
.
tutldly, .My 2. 18118
of InCOme mlghl open lot

you. in lha year ~;;innay lle. ini!Oo
ci1C1C1 by a bold t4(nd YllhO"IrRrulfil you
gocJdluck no11o0 10ng
.
1100
CMCIJI (.IUM 21,.,..., 22) An .~· :

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SCQrJIO ~ M-Now. 22) Thit wllll. 1

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a fioocl day 10 devote a lew hcura to a • c~Mn~~e adllanlllgiiOdly. You Will haVI
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.. Cal Raoi For llapai

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\

Page 10 • The Dally ~nUnel

Pomeroy
• Middleport,. Ohio
.

Monday,

•
.
July 1. 1-:

Moody receives degre~

Lisa Stan:hcr Mocidj of WI
Zachary Arms, Michael Blaettnar,
Sixth Grade • Erin Bush, Jessica Melissa Holman, Jenny Howenon, ·
Collllllbia Jeeeiwd a becbelor of
The following student \l..as omit- Ashley Browning, Meghan Clelland, Cundiff, Becky Jacks. Chelsea Mont- Justin Jeffers, Jessica Johnson, Becky
dearcc in cduea!iQn on May II ·
ted from the honor roll list for stu- Randy Collins, Cecilia CQre, Evan gomery, Josh Napper, Krystal Pen- Johnson, Kristina Kennedy, Kelli
Marsball UnMriil)'. Sbe has
dents in the Eastern Local School Dunn, Healber Elam, Kayla Grover, nington, Kristy Puckett, Misty Puck- Lightfoot. Jennifer Mankin, Tamra
de~ in ·elementary -edllcati
'
· O'Dell, Stefani · Pickens, John
Disirict, according to district super" Courtney Haggy, Daylon Jenkins, ett, Jessica Schuler.
with a specialization in teaching
'
intendent Ron Minard.
Scott)' Musser, Dru Reed, Casey ~bury Elementary
Post,Franco Romuno, Rebekah
m~tally impaired.
)
First Grade- Shauna Clark, Faith&gt;&lt; Smith, Jeremy
Bridget
Chester Elementary
Richardson, Britnee Saulers, Adam
She received the Undelw~ '
.
r--....
Sixth Grade: Erin Gerard, overall Wilson, Jerod Wyatt, Christeena Dye, Charlie 'B&amp;lin, Andy Garnes, Vaughan.
Smith
teacher scholarship for fOil
honor roll.
·
Young, Tiffany Zornes, Valerie Car- Bobbi Lee, Chelsea Manley, Andy
Tenth Grade· Melissasai~tN~~
years
and
gradualed~um laude will
Meigs
penter, Michael Cottrell, Mark McAngus, Nathan McClure, James li Bentley, Michelle B
a
3.47
grade
point average.
The following students in the Cozart, Ashley , DeMoss, Heather Morrison. ~on Pearson, Hannah Chasteen, Jerica Clark. Robin DonoMeigs Local School District have Fink, Jessica Fisher. Sarah Jeffers, Pratt, Bra ley Ramsburg, Hollie hue, Crystal Eblin, Elizabeth Farley,
Sbe ·is thewife of James M~ '
been named to the honor roll for the . Rebecca Klein Ronnie Powell Ash- Richard, Aril da Smith, Jennifer Jeffrey Fowler, Emily Fowler,
and daughter of George and J~iil
final nine-weeks grading period. ley Russell M~tthew Salyei'S '
Smith, Bradley oulsby, Brook Wat- Danielle Grueser, Downey Kennedy,
Starcher, also of West Columbia. ~
a~cording to district superintendent
M.H. • 'Gene Buckley, ~~auana son, Caitlin Williamson, Cory Wil- Heidi Legar, Michael Leifheit, Candace Miller, Sheila Neace, Amy See.
B1ll Buckley.
·
Fetty, Jessica Gray, Katie l)ibble, son.
Second Grade - ~rek Brickles, Wendy Shrimplin, Sabrina Smith,
B~bury Elementary
Chuck Nye, Angie Queen, Joey Ray,
Kindergarten · Jam1e ·Ash, my Ruth Snyder, Crystal South
Ashton Bush. Travis Butcher, Mike Smith; Amy Smith, Zinnia ·
Barr, Nathan Cook, Be_n Copp1ck,
DHI . David Day, Robbie John- Matthew
Meadows,
Bro.oke Spears, Nathanael Sroufe, Adam
Michael Evans, Laura F1elds, Edgel son, Kyle Kinnan, Jill Reeves, Kay- O'Bryant, Sabrina Oldaker, Christo- Thomas, Matthew Williams, Sandra
Gable, Heather Graham. Jared Gng- lene Slater, Anessa Wolfe, Richard pher VanReeth.
Young.
gs, Kay lee Kennedy, Kirk Legar, Josh Ward Amber Ward.
Third Grade - Grant Arnold, April
Elev911th Grade · Adam Barrett,
.
Lewis. Katie Patterson, Anastasia
s.;;ond Grade . Chelsea Dent Coppick, Ross Well.
. Amy Clonch, Joshua Howard, LibThe 102nd state session of the Maxey, Marcia Keller, and_Margaftt
Fourth Grade. Nikki Butcher, Sla- erty King, Erin Krawsczyn, Timmy Daug~ters of America will be held at Amberger.
Riley, Joseph Rosier, Michelle Scar- Amanda Jeffers Nathan Jeffers'
"
brough, Valerie Schoeppner, Joseph Jacob Kennedy,' Joshua Kennedy: cy Pullins, Derrik Randolph.
Lewis, Joshua Marshall, Jessica Marie'na in August, it was announced
Arrangements were made to ha¥e
Fifth Grade . Marc Barr, Jon McElroy, Teresa McGrath, Julie by Joann Baum, state councilor a1 a the books audited. Enna Cle14Cl
ScheJmann, Eric Wood.
Alison Woods, Wes Ault, Bryce
McGuire, Brandi Meadows, Andrew meeting of Chester Council 323 held reported on the rally held at Hillstx:fv
Grade F1ve · Casey Dunfee, Davis, Weston Fife, Cody ' H.t~U,Jii- Halar, Meghan Haynes.
Sixth Grade . Mindy O'Dell.
Myers, Stacie Reed, Eric Siders, recently at the hall.
A~ram Sayre,, Emtly Story, Beth ian Jenkins, Lacey KennedYi\lo&amp;&amp;n
and read a poem, "Little Things.":~
Jodie Sisson, Darrick St. Clair, BevWilfong: All As. Troy Brooks, Zach S)taii\. Abby Stewart,:~ffiiey Meigs Junior High School
Goldie Frederick presided at the
Qu~Uterly birthdays were observ4J
Seventh Grade . Cara Ash, Whit- erly Stewart, Chandler Watson, Ricky meeting which opened in ritualistic with Erma Clelan,d, Iva Powell, B~,
Butcher, Came Darst,_Tirzah Dod- thoent, Jake · venoy, 'Jtlsh Venoy,
son, lenmfer Foreman, Zach Gilkey. Jeremy Yincent.
ney Ashley, Chasidi Biggs, Derrick Yost.
form. A report was given on the dis. ty Young, Ethel Orr, Eva Robs&lt;J\:·
Lucy Howerton, Amber Lee, Brad
Third Grade - Erin Bauserman Bolin, Marianne Carsey, Jessica
Twelvth Grade · Amber Bennett, trict picnic held at Logan Saturday. Keith Ashley, everett Grant. a~
Morrison, Jen:my ~ider, Brandy Donald Boling Hope Boring, Sarah Chapman, Andrew Davis, Chiislo- Gina Blackburn, Anne Brown, Chad Reported hospitalized were Beulah · Goldie Frederick being honored. ;
Shea, Carla Sm1th, Hannah Woolard, Bush, Alisha Cremeans, Shawn Day, pher Dodson, Tylan Gonzalez, Burton, John Card, Chris Chapman,
••
Ross Stewart, Angel Stone, Stephame Justin DeMoss. A.J. Dickens, Justine Michael Hammon, Curtis Hanstine, Mega9 Clark, Jeanette Cline, Pepper
Story-Schwab. Scott Taylor, David Dowler, Eddie Fife, rl.ochelle Gloeck- Alison Hays, Sarah Houser, Andrea Cole. Bryan Colwell. Susan CotterVance, And~ White: AlB Honor Roll. ner, Jesse Haggy, Amanda Hoyt, Tim Krawsczyn, Carrie Lightfoot, ill, Carrie Counts, Bonita Cremeans,
Grade SIX · Heather Fry, Tara Klaiber, Maggie Molden, Amber Bethany McMillin, Cecil "Midkiff, Darlene Doerr, Terri Fife, m omas
Wyatt: All A's. Erica Bryan, Do~ . Pierce, Regan Shuler, Zachary Beatrice Morgan, Melissa Pauley, ., Gannaway, Alison Gerlach, Elena
aid Eakins, Heather Fetty, Come Shuler, Clare Sisson, Kelli Tatterson, Christopher Pickens, Shannon Price, Gorbunova, Nicholas Haning, Amy
•
Hoover, Ryan Kra\Juer, Monica Tiffany Timmons, lenni Young, Jilli Jessica Powell, Bradley Searles, Jef- .Harrison, Jeremy Hartson, Todd
'
Moon, Autumn Phillips, Richard Young, Jerri Bentley, Jenny Bowles, frey Shank, Albert Steams, Patricia lfawley, Suzanna Henderson, By SCOTT LINDU\W
hacking each other and kicking i:aCb
Ramsburg, Alhson Story: AlB Hon- Brittany Cremeans. Jason DeMoss, Walker, Michelle Stahl, Stephanie Michael Jarvis, Gregory Jordan. Associated Press Writer
other understands why."
': .
·
Courtney Knapp, Heather Knight,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Vice
or Roll.
Trevor Depoy, Rosanna Dillard, Wigal.
Addressing_.,500 entert~inmelll
Eighth Grade - Grant Abbott, Dorothy Leifheit, CarolineMagne, President AI Gore, denouncing industry profe$Sionals Sunday, Gore
Harpsonville Elementary
Brandoh Grover, Larry Hawley, DeiSteven Beha, Melanie Blevins, Donita McClintic, Mark Mills, Tonya shows such as the "Mighty Morphin repeated President'Ciinton ·~ suppon
First Grade - Damel Bookman, dra Strong, Felisha Stumbo.
Charlene Chilcote, Cory Dill, Lucas
Fourth Grade - Ty Aull, Jessica Bet~oyles, Stacey Brewer, Phalin, MicheUe Pooler, Paul Pullins, Power Rangers," told entertainment· for requiring the television network&amp;.
Fackler, A.J. Haning, Douglas Herd- Blaettnar, Thurien Carter, Jaynee Chad Brown, Beverly Burdette. Ash- Tricia Richards, Faith Rose, Sara executives they need to produce to air three hours a week of educll- ·
tional children's programming. :..
tnan, Heather Kerns, Sarah Lantz, Davis, Ryan Hannan, Nicole Harper, ley Burton, Melissa Davis, Patrick Roush, Tracy Shaffer, Natasha Slater, better children's television.
"Shows
like
the
'Mighty
Mor"If we give our kids potato chiP&lt;\
Cayla Meli, -Sean Phelps, Jonathan Brandi Thomas, Paul Will, Corey Erwin, Heather Ferrell, Sara Fife, Amy Smith, Kelly Spencer, Cynthia
phin
Power
Rangers'
are
just
not
·
and
hot fudge sundaes every mom•·
Stacy
Jo
Gilmore,
Marjorie
Halar,
Spencer,
Jessica
Stobart,
Tabitha
Preast, Daniel Steinmetz, Celeste Woods. Tawny Bauserman, Kara
good
for
children,"
Gore
said.
"Any·
ing,
pretty soon they'll think that'~··
Taylor, Joshua Williams.
Buffington, Joel Clelland, Andrea Claude Hale, Brooke Hart, Michelle Swearingen, Donald . Vaughan, Lee
body
who's
seen
young
children
what.
breakfast is,"
'
Second Grade - Miranda Beha, Fettyl._Aira Little, Angela Wilson, Hart, Amber Huddleston, Bridget.· Williams, Stephanie Wood, Donald '
. , .he
. ...said.
after
watching
the
shOw
go
around
Johnson,
.Erick
Johnson,
Christopher
Yost.
:,'
·
Travis Burbridge, Rachael Gardner, Sylv il. Bollock.
Brittany King," Amanda Lenigar, LauL.D. -Tim Caudill, Joey Richard, Krawsczyn, Joseph McCall, Amanda -==~::=:=::=::===r-==::=:=::=::==.==:::::::r==:=======l-::========·~
·
ra Marcum, Nichole Mull, Joshua Bqbby Warnecke.
Miller, Seth Rawson': Jennifer Shain, •
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Jennifer Shrimplin, Kyle Smiddie,
Spires. William Taylor.
Fifth Grade- Cassie Braun, JassiJeremiah
Smith,
Joshua
Sordon,
Julie
NOTICE
TO
BIDDERS
Treiiii{W
of
the
Tu
Admlnlelrator
rete of $600.00 per year.
Third 'Grade - Miranda Casteel, line Carter, Maria Drenner, Michelle
J
S
The Melge 1.oc11 Bllllrd of
Melge Local B011rd of shall .,. and 11 hereby
.· s
Section 7: That the ..
Jodi Donohue, Peggy Duff, Patrick Drenner, Kyle Hannan, Heather Spaun, D&amp;Jsy pears, ames tan 1ey,
Education
eetabllahed
at
the
r-e
of
Education
wlaheata
receive
••
of
the Zoning Officer a 1111
McDaniel, Carl Noel , Jarad Runyon, Hysell, Katie Jeffers, Jason Murdock, Renee Stewart, Wesley Thoene, blda lor the fallowing:
P.O. Box 272 $12,875.00 per year.
be and Ia here 1
Pomeroy, OH 45769 PH • 'Section 3: Th811he ealary Hlabllahed at tha rate ~f
.Jenna Wilt.
Michele Runyon, Ben See, Andrea Whitney Thomas. Shawn Workman. Breed/Bakery, Milk/ Dairy
producta, FIHt lneuren~e.
·
(614) 992-5650 of the VIllage Admlnletretar $1,060.00 l)llr , . .
Fourth Grade • Kevin Butcher, Burdette, Kayle Davis, AmandaFet- M • H' h Sch001
e•gs •g
and Tubelfflrea.
r
(6) 19, 25, (T) 1, 7 4 tc
aha II be and 11 hereby
Section 8: WHE!'EFOAI,
Douglas Dill, . Megan Dodson, ty, Robyn Freeman, Brandon RamsNinth Grade · Lacy Banks, Me lisAll bide ahall be r-Ived
eatabllahed at the rille of thla Ordinance shall tab
Herdmao ._~~Courtney burg, Jerem·y Roush, Jennifer Zielin- sa Darnell Tricia Davis, Ryan Dill, In, end bid apacllloatlona
Tiffany
Public Notice
$24,930.00 per
effect and be In lull force WI
Kennedy, Sarah Lee; Bobo ue Nap- ski.
All A's . Brad BaYIor, .,.aron
A
· B
may
be
obtelned
tram,
Section
4: That the salary of JurMI 10, 1998, upon lt'i
owerORDINANCE 642 .
of the Street Supervisor
per, Holley Williams.
An Ordlnanea to eatabllah a hall be and Ia hereby paaaaga and approval ~
Sixth Grade - Carrie Abbott, Dan- sock, Amber Ellis. Gabriel Jenkins, TRE~SURER'S OFFICE, 320
Fifth Grade- Wesley Call. Derrick ny Buffington, Marvin Day, Delana Ryan Kauff
. , Darrick Knapp, Johnny E. Mllln StrH~ Pomeroy, OH aalarlea lor various non· iatabllahed at the rate of the Council. .
PASSED 6131116
•
· St,,095 per ya~r.
Fackler, Christopher McDaniel, Jes- Eichinger, Caleb Ellis, Jason Miller, Lentes, Melissa Richmond, Chris 45769,Moon or before 1:00 • 1ecte d auperv 1a or~
· John Mu-. Pmldll(lit
p.m.,
ndlly,
July
22.
1998.
personnel
at
the
VIllage
of
Section
s:
Th81
the
aa
.....
sica Preast.
.
.
Soott '?'!'01,1
Erin Moore, Nichole Runyon, Caleb Rupe
The Melga Locel B011rd of p
Ohio
-· •
OIMI'oy,
·
of the Fire Chief of the
Sixth Grade - Joe line Allen, Ash- Jones, Sara Moon, Jessica Roush,
Gerl Wllltoil
LD. Pri·mary· Amanda Maxwell Education reaervea the
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE Pomeroy Fire Department
ley Burbridge, Amber Haning, Jen- Mary Schultz, Euva Stumbo.
LarryWelwof!J
LD Intermediate - Lana Barrell, right to reject eny and all COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE ehall be and Ia hereby
O.O.ge Wriglit
blda, and the aubmllllng of OF POMEROY• OHIO:
nifer Reeves.
Richie Dill, Carrie ,,,
walker
eatabllahed ~~ the rate at
Riadand Eleme111:lry
William YOUIIII
any
bid
a
hall
lmpoae
no
Section
1:
That
th
.
.
alary
s
Middleport Elemen!ary
First Grade - Andrea .Bartrum,
ATTEST: Kathy Hyeall
DH Primary • Caleb Cherry, ll1blllty or obligation upon of the Chief of p'allce of the 1'030·00 per year.
_,First Grade • Angela Casci, A. J. Gary Hess, Keilah Jacks, Bethany David Young
theuld Board. . ,..
Pom•r 0 y
Po 11 0 e
Section 6: That the aalary
Cha~:ller, Cody Davidson, Billy
All envelope• li'iBat b•
d
of the Clerk of Ba.ch Grove VIllage of PoiMfOy·
King: All A's. Alisha Compson, Sal em Center Elementary
CLEARLY
MARKED Depamn.nt, ahall be an 1a Cemeter~ ahaO be end Ia Melp Collllty, Oh!o
Fink, . Steven Hudson Beth Hysell, Natashia Ginther, Corey Jarvis,
••'
First Grade· Ryan Barnett, Court- eccordlng to the type al bid. here!Jy lltabllahed et the hereby eatabllahed at the (6) 24 (7) t 2TC
Erinne llennedy, Cayi\1 Lee, Chalsie Dustin Knapp, Adam Lambert, ney Barrett, Anthony Davl·s, Renee
Cl dy J Rh
rat. of $11,770.00 per year.
,.
'! · onem~ . Section 2: That the salary
Manley, Christy Miller, Dariielle Amanda Miller, Timmy Spires, Edmonds, Terry Light, Cain McKinPhillips, David Pooke, Whitney Joshua Taylor, Brittany Varian, Mor- ney, Casey Molihan, BraAdy NotSmith. Dustin Vanlnwagen, Michelle gan Wolfe.
tingham, Nikki Parsons, Raymond
Weav~r. Cassi Whan, Dylan Dailey,
Second
Grade
Adam Reynolds, Brittney Rife, Kay Ia RowSarah Engle, Tasha Jarrell, Jennifer Humphreys, Brittany Hysell, Sarah ley, Jamie Wallace.
Kuhn, Matthew Landers, Kay Ia Prid- Dawn Jenkins, Taryn Lentes, Maggie
Second Grade
Nathan
dy, Katie 'Rodehaver, Amanda Schar- Rupe, Valerie Diddle: All A's. J"sh Argabright, Julia Johnson, Alexandra
tiger.
Solin, Joe Bush, Holly Davis, Cari- Mitchell, Kelly Napper, Joey Sears,
Second Grade • Travis Cundiff, ta Gardner, Tyson George.
Zackary Weber.
Sarah Davis, Michael Durst, Ashley
Third Grade - Kris Ginther, Adam
Third Grade - Jeffrey Baughman,
Engle, Erica Haning, Laura Hollen, Snowden, Renee Bailey, Ashley Bay- Eric Bumem, Zackary Bush. Jason
Tara Lee. Kayla McCarthy, Meghan lor, Madison King, Kimberly Taylor, Crisp, Julia Cross, ~y Hart, KayLeslie, Jo Beth Rodehaver, Cory Sarah Wilkes: All A's. Justin Cole- la Icenhower, Aaron tll1e, Samantha
Shea, Eric VanMeter, Tyler Wayland, man, David Tucker, Heath Nelson, Pierce, Kimberly Reynolds, Carrie
Melia Whan, Laura Fields, Nathan · Miranda Simpkins.
Rife, Curtis Varian.
Becker, Justin Bell, Mall Boyd, BranFourth Grade - Tyler Barnes,
Fourth Grade - Jodie Barrett.
don Chandler. Samantha Cole, Jamie Christina Miller, Pamela Rupe, Joanna Bpwersock, Jessica Curfman,
Ellis, Kayla Felty, Aaron Fife, Anna Miranda Stewart: All A's. Randy Aubrie 'Kopec, Candice Molihan,
Hartenbach. Briuney Jacks, Kathy Hudson, Nicole McDaniel, Matt Brittany Power$, Joshua Ray, Jessica
Johnson, Kylen King, Amber McK- Salser, Jamitha Willford.
Smith.
own, Joshua Slater, Bobby Stone.
Fifth Grade - Rachel Argabright,
Fifth Grade - Brook Bolin, MalThird Grade - Brandon Bell, Ter- lorv Kin~ : All A's. Ashley Bartrum. Lindsay Bolin, Ashley Colwell,
ry Bell, Erin Cullums, Nick Dailey, Melissa Cremeans, Hollie Ferrell, Austin Cross, Krista! Johnson. Kelly
Tonda Ellou. Lisa Gheen, Matt Hol- Jessica Justice, Casey Tillis.
Johnston, Megan Haefner, Deidra
ley, Ashley Johnson, Michelle Neece,
Sixth Grade - Amber Snowden: Barnell, Rachacl Morri"
Kevin Phillips, Lucas Roush. Kasi
Smith, Mike Stewart, Megan Tibbetts, Cassi Windsor, Natasha Wise,
Brandon Carpenter. Clifton Chandler,
Eric Cullums, David Kuhn, Cassie
Lee, Matlhew Thomas. Brooke
The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographs of
Venoy, Chet Wigal, Megan Mayes,
local kidB, ag,es newborn to 4 years old.
Carrie Michael, Jordan Rawson,
Katie Reed, Anna Sayre, Daniel
NEW YORK (AP) - "Hello, wood veteran lames Caan says he's
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 19th issu~ of The Daily {
Thorn !On, Donnie Whan.
Newman ... "
had a lesson in true star power.
Sentinal.
'
Fourth Grade. · ~age Bradbury.
Wayne Knight, who plays portly
During the filming't&gt;f "Eraser,"
Jamie Chapman, Kindra Snouffer. postal worker Newman on "Sein- where he plays a villain being purBe Bore your child, grandchild or rel~tive is included. Complete the
Angie Smith, Ryan Stoban. Tyler feld ," says he just can't get away sued by Arnold Schwarzenegger,
French. Candace Casey. lonalhan from the halfhearted welcome thai Caan says he got second-class treat·
fonn -below and enclose a snapshot o~ wallet size picture plus a $6.00
Larkins, Jessica HowelL Kenny always greets his appearance on the menl during some of the stunt work.
charge for each photograph. (Enclose payment with· picture) •.
Carsey. Ashley Halley. Da\:jd Boyd. NBC hit show.
"Arnold got to fall gently into a
Katie Childs, Jeremy Dingcy,... ~en"When people see me. they feel .Cur-lined box ttult had 'Arrnani'
nifer Dunn, Ryan Frazier, Heidi like. they can come over and say, stamped on the outside," joked Caan.
Gilmore, Kim Johnson, Beth Lan- 'Hello, Newman,"' Knight says in "Mine said 'Eggs."'
'ders, Kanndies Lee, Ashley. Payne. the July 6 issue of TV Guide.
And it didn't stop there;-Caan said
. IPARENTZ:'
Erica Poole. John Roush.
"Everybody knows somebody like in the July 8 issue of Peo_ple magaPo-roy f(lementary
Newman, and I must do a good job zine.
, " __.. ·
ICITY&amp;S ATE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
Kind~rgarten · Samantha Acker-~ because they really l!aJe II!~· " . _ " . J "Everyone said 'Arnold, don't go
man, M1chael_ Ball, Ryan Brownmg,
Knight, who plays Jerry Sein- ~near the gators! Jimmy run right
~akayla CurtiS, TravJs Ebhn, Kelsey feld's pesky neighbor, explains: close to them ."'
:CHILD'S NAME(S) &amp; A G E - - - - -.......- !
F1fe, Robert Foreman Rebecca Hans- "Newman is the guy you never want
-tine, Chelsea H1cks, Stephanie 10 see allhe door."
NEW YORK (AP)- How did a \
Knight, 40, says he doesn't mind virtually unknown actor land a lead- '
Hysell. Br~dley . Jones , Natasha
l(ilapp, Jess1ca L1lley, Drew Long, that no one seems to k.now his real
ing role in a big Hollywood movie?
Subm~8Y------------------~
Joshua Lunsford, Bnttany Maxwell , name .
Hejust asked.
Lindsay M¢Kinney, Jesse Mowery.
" I enjoy being just the third suit
As the story goes, Matthew
Gregory Mu~. Cassandra Patter- lo the left," Knight says. "I find · McConaughey, who was slqlpOSed to
SEND TO:
son Grant Philhps, Morgan Powell. bemg a character actor a great thing. ~ve a minor part in John Grisham's
. Bri~na · Riffle, Zaclwy Robinson, .m.that I have never had any desire to
1)le Dally Sentinel
.
"A Time to Kill," asked director Joel
"Tre Rupc, Amorette Salser, Jessica hear people say, 'There goes Wayne Schumad~~:r if Brad Pitt was playing
P.O. Box 729 e Pomeroy7 Ohio 45~69
Sheets, Jordan Smith, MlltN Smith, ·Knight."'
the leading role.
..,
Caitlyn Thomas, nenw.; V.ison
BABY Se~tlnel
First Grade - Dakota Arms,
NEW YORK (AP)
Holly-

Eutcru

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Ol)io . Lottery ,

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Meigs County honor rolls announCed

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Reds bounce
back with win over St. Louis

P-Ick 3:
.2•7.()
· Pick 4:
2-3-5-7
Buckeye 5:
2·7-1 ~-13-24

Spgrts on Page 4
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Gore seeks better
television for children

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ClerkiT~rer

.: Vol. 47, NO. 47
·: 2 Sections, t2 Pages

Knight enjoys being
third suit to the left

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35 centa
A Gennett Co. N...,..,.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 2, 1996

By JOHN NOLAN ·
Associated Preas Writer
,
Ohio officials and lawmakers overhauled the state's welfare system •o win
By The Aasoclated Preaa
political points with taxpayers, not to get people out of poverty, opponents
Changes in Ohio's welfare system that took effect Monday :
,_
said.
• Recipients must sign a self-sufficiency contract with the stale, promisA key requirement of the changes thaitook effect Monday makes it mandaing to work themselves off welfare.
tory for recipients to sign a conttact promising to work themselves off wel• Applicants for Aid to Dependent Ch1ldren must search for work before
,fare.
.
.
and while receil.ting assistance.
The Welfare Rights Coalition, a statewide organization of advocates for
• A welfare worker must assess an applicant's employment potential
the poor, said it will work to get legislation introduced next year to put empha·
• within five days and send that persoo in search of a job or into a training
sis on education and training that welfare recipients can use to gel betterprogram.
p'aying jobs.
• Recipients will be allowed to keep a bigger percentage of their welOhio's new policies include a th~re-ear time limit for Aid to Dependent
fare checks during the. transition to a full-time job.
irements .that recipients work first,
Children payments, sanctions and
' • .t-fothers and fathers in a two-patent household can work more than
rather than obtain education, the co · 1 n $aid. Those requirements appear
100 hours a month and remain eligible for some benefits, depending on
aimed at pleasing t~e public but will n .gel at the heart of the problem, the
income.
coalition said.
.
"We see the new policies as using refonn for political gain and not meet-:
ing the real goal, which is getting people out of poverty," the coalition said
At rallies in several Ohio cities Monday, advocates for the poor said the
Monday.
.
state should devote more money and emphasis to training welfare recipients
Gov. George Voinovich on June II signed legislation that authorized the
in jobs that pay at least $8 an hour and offer benefits. Otherwise, it js unre:ichanges. He said the theme is "no more handouts without responsibilities, .sonable to expect welfare recipients 10 work themselves off of society:s suband no more opportunities without Obligations."
sidies just by holding low-paying service jobs, ihey said.

Welfare system changes take effect

"ll's not going to ever get people bft' welfare," Katy Heins, director of
the Contact Center, a Cincinnati social service agency, said Monday.
"If they get the education and training they need. they could rise out of
it. The primary emphasis should be education," Heins said at a rally outside ·
the Hamilton County Department of Human Services.
Nearby, about 12 protesters carried signs and chanted oppositilon to the
new requirements.
"Self-sufficiency is fine, if you can get a gOQd job," said Cassandra
Barham, 46, of Cincinnati.
Barham, who has two children, said shoulder and knee injuries she suffered in 1995 and this year forced her oul of a building mainten¥Jce job before
she could qualify for training.
In Aleron, about 15 people marched on the sidewalk in front of a Sum mil
County Human Services building with .signs denouncing the change~. The
Summit County Committee for Welfare Rights organized the demonstration .
Since April 1992, the number of welfare recipients in Ohio has dropped
by 28 percent from 746,862 to about 538,400, the Voinovich administration
said. Welfare spending has declined by 21 percent since 1992 from $977 million to about $773 million this year.

By JIM FREEMAN
Young. _"VIy need to get signs put up."
Sentinel News Staff
Req!Qnding to a comment that the
Polneroy Village Council mem- parking policy was published in The
bers exhibited mixed feelings on the Daily Sentinel, Young commented: "I
new downtown parking ordinanc~ know it was in (The Daily Sentinel),
implemented Monday, but the new · tiut not everyone gets the paper."·
J,lOiicy will remain in effect.
Council President John. Musser
&lt;;:ouncil members, speaking at disagreed, indicating that motorists
Monday night's village council meet· would take advantage of the situation
·ing, discussed problems surrounding if the village postponed writing parkthe new ordinance, designed to han- ing tickets in the parking lot.
. dle.parkivi.iJl the ,do)Vntown area.
-Young cqu0tered that i! )&gt;Ya~· !lle .
, ·lSiSi't ·'lii~n~ \i"Hlfoii~~· pai'l£lng·~-yi'liage's probiem.-since the signs
areas we.,e not installed while other were not installed.
areas lack operable parking meters,
"Whose stupidity is it? Ours, not
.. leading to ticketed motorists and · theirs," he asserted. ~~ gm~c we
plenty of complaints, according to don't have that posted?"
Clerk Kathy Hysell.
Mayor Frank Vaughan said signs
"There should have been no tick- would be installed on the parking lot
ets written," said Councilman Bill this week.

It was agreed to continue ticketing
motorists with the understanding that
drivers erroneously cited could have
the tioket invalidated at village hall .

According to the Pomeroy Police
Department, 42 tickets were issued
Monday, with only· II of those issued
on the parking lot.
Parking lot peJlllits are sold at viilage hall for $50 a year or $25 fon
half:yw.. .- ··. . ~ , . .... .
- The parking policy limits 1&gt;arking
to pennit holders only on the river
side of the parking lot and limits
parking to two consecutive hours
along downtown streets.
_.
Police !Jave not started enforcing
two-hour parking, it was reponed,
(Continued on Page 3)

,,

There has been a 53 percent increase since ,1992 in participation by welfare recipients in the JOBS program thai provides job training services, the
adm.iruslralion said.
.
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PUP fund

Pomeroy Council.stands
fast on new parkin.g policy

Commissioners
approve setting
up trust to aid
animal shelter
Sy JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners Mond~y afternoon
approved establishment.of a fund to
h~;lj&gt; with the proposed Meigs CounPound Upgrade Proj4ct.
,
The pound ~pgrnd~ )rpj~ct, or
_..&amp;1?, spcarhe~ded by 1\lifcn ~ailt o('
. " A~ny: is &lt;f,C.sigi),ed Jo adllrc~s and'
improve• conditio~•· at the existing
county dog pound ncar the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
TICKET
- Motorlata caught unaware of
new
What the board did was cs1ablish
Pomeroy parking ordinance may have been greeted by a ticket
and appropriate $100 into an
similar to the one shown above. The ordinance became elfectlve . "expendable trust fund for the dog
Monday;
pound." Estaj)lishment M the fund
creates a "ltl6tion for donations and
gfanl funds toward the PUP.
Total cost of the upgrade comes to
just under $23,000 and oonsisls of
in~g the size or lhe existing
pound to 66-by-30 feet, including the
addition of three runs and a block
hit Ohio last week. when the jackpot
Lesko Mounls said Wednesday's wall, ant!'covering the structure with
for the June 26 drawing increased to jackpel is interesting for a couple of a pole building making it more rcsis$35 million. When nobody won, the reasons. besides the big jackpot
·tant to ¥ttlfdl\ls.
jackpot rose 10 $40 million for SatShe said tickets IX&gt;ught for SaturCurrcntly.\)he PUP fund contains
urday's drawing, boosting sales to day 's drawing covered 74 percent of $3,000 from Jhe Edith J. Goode
SIS million , said louery spokes- the pos!lible cQmbinations of the six Residuary Trust for the Pl'cvcntion of
woman Sandy Lesko Mounts.
numbers, meaning the winning num- Cruelty to Animals and $950 ·donatS!Je expects sales to hit around . hers fell in the 26 percent of combi - cd by local benefactors. The comSiS" million for Wcldnesday's dra~ nations r~aining .
missioners have also pledged $9.000
ing. The chances of one personw The jacllpot also has had the tqward the project !&gt;ringing the total
ning are about one in 10.7 million .
largest number of drawings ~.ithout to almost $14,000 - or morc. lhan
If nq one wins Wednesday, t
a winner, Lesko Mounts said. There half of the .total amount.
jackpot will be $50 million for S 1- have been nine drawings since the
Also, Waitt said she has applied
urday, tying the largest' Super Louo jackpot hegan building on June I.
for a $5,000 granl frum the WJIJiam
jackpot in Ohio Lottery history. This
Ed Morrissey, a technician from and Charlouc Parks Fnundmion for
week 's jackpot breaks the second- Parma, kn.ows it's a long shot, bul he · Animal Welfare
•
pla~cord of$ million.
bought a fickct any,way for. the draw- · In addition In Wain . the h&lt;'"nl m~t
The ayo
aries, depending on ing.
·
with other Hlflllane Sucic1y meml&gt;c"
whether
winner piclied a lump
"Who knoi'IS.1may. ll!;, th~one," and county Prosecutor John R.
sum or annual paym~hell._t~orrissey saiQ.... ~d if I a I aiJ)..--tcntes.
.
ticket was purchased. After taxes; i~ ~oing on· a long..Yac:itloq,_tr~~i'll_g · The Humane Society ha.' not l&gt;ccn
would be an annual payment of around the world. All that money 1s part1c1patmg m any spaymg or ncu$1,185,576,93 for 23 years or a lu.;pgoing IO be real nice to spend ."
tering bperations this year. causing
som of$13,841,345.23.
j
some members to predict n dog ·and

'*

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$45 million Super.lotto.jackpot
spurring sales, buyers' dreams

~!)EADL. HAS BE~N
EXTENDED FOR

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12

'

opponents slam overhaul as vote-getting move

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tine

:J ,,.,

Marietta to host D Of A ~
session in August
.~

Moatly cloudy tontght,
chance of atonna. Lowa In
tfl9t 60s. Wed~day, part·
ly cloudy. Hlg1near 80.

'

A DAY TO REMINISCE - John W. Brogan Sr. dlaplayed aome
menus, roatera .tnd company newspapers from hla atlnt In the
Civilian Conaerfttlon Corpa 60 years ago.
.
.

For this CCC veteran, it
was a day to recall a . ..
stint in national service
Monday was a day of reminiscing for Jeiu).__W. Brogan Sr.
Auired in the shirt, Ire and hat of the uniforni he wore 60 years ago as
a member of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). he circulated around
Pomeroy with a collection of memorabilia from his three years in the corps.
Brogan was ind'ucted.inlo the CCC. then under the U.S. War Department, on Jqly I, 1934. He.was 16 years old.
With 240 others he went to Fort Knox, Ky., for two week.s of basic
training before being senl on to Boville, Idaho, to carry out a weed control program.
There, the CCC enlistees were involved in a battle to save white pine
from blister rust that was killing them. During their three months at Boville,
they also fought forest fires.
From !here, Company 1508 moved on to Romane, Calif., to build telephone lines and construct roads. A few more months and th~cre off
to Pritchard, Idaho. for more of the same, then back to CedarviDe, Calif.,
to build fences and do road work.
Brogan's company also went to Pioche, Nev., to work, and took another trip to California before returning to Fort Knox.
Brogan was discharged on Nov. 29, 1937.
The next year be marriedll!d had a flimlly. which kepi him in a deferred .
status durin9'World War ll. Of his many children, seven sons and a daughter served in the Korean and Vietnam wars.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Real
estate agents take note: A winning
ticket in Wednesday's $45 million
Super Lotto jackpot could mean a
windfall for you.
While waiting in line 10 buy tickets downtown Monday, several
would- e millionaires said they
woul ut some of their winnings
in a new home. Taking care of credi ors also was high on the list.
"I would give up my job, pay my
bil s, buy a better home, help some
people, do something for the homeless," said Nancy Cordero of ColumJl!,a Station, a Cleveland city employee.
Brad Welch of Cleveland had
smooth waters on his mind .
"If I won that jackpot, I would
buy a sailboat," Welcl();aid. " I also
would prepay for ~Ji_ds' college
education."
The recent wave of lottery fever
1

Pavement marker replacement
set for Mel·gs start·1·ng ·1·n Au' gust

I

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eat~~::~:~~i~ccdtoadvcnisc
for bids to sell the property it recent-

~e=~~~~~~c~~~:~~~n~~~~~::~.~:~~

•
med1cal arts bu1ldmg adJa~cnt Vclcr,
•·
ans Memorial Hospital in Pnmcmy.
By TOM HUNTER
• SR 7 North frqm the junction of within the next couple of weeks .
The advertisement will specify
Sentinel Newa Staff
SR 248 for 4.5 milesf)&gt;
"The fairgrounds signs have been minimum bid of $150,000 and hoJd
Ohio Department of Transporta··u.s, 33 North from the Pomeroy ordered fonhe new section of the the buyer subject to the CHS lea.~
tion officials have announced pflUJs to corporation to the Athens . County connector, along with the letter
"If someone else has the highcsJ
brighten up 51 .4 miles of ~tate road line.
• chl)ngcs fo~ existing sign between bid, they'll own it despite th\: fact that
for motorists in Meigs County. with
• SR 32 from the Vinton County the PoiJleroy on-ramp and . Meigs there'll be this (Consolidated Health
the sale of contract to repl\ICe many line to the Athens County line.
High School. We, anticipate having Services) building there," Lentes
of the reflective raised pavement
• S)\248 from Chester to Long the changes completed and new signs · explained.
markers throughout tile nine county Bottom.
erected within the n~xt month," said ·
Last month, tbe bollrd approved a
District 10 area.
• SR 143 North from the junction Yoacham.
50-year lease on the propeny with
Traffic Specialists Inc. of Okean- of SR 684 for I0 miles.
The cg¢usion for out-of-stale . CHS paying the county $1 ~0.000, Qr
na will hegin the $448,463 replace• SR 681 West from the junction motori~ts concerning t~~f-,simplc $3,000 a year,
30 days of the
fnent project on Aug. I, which. will of U.S. 33 to the Athens County line. "Road Closed" sign on fonner SR 7 execution of lhe J.,a:;~replace reflectors on the center line in
The project also includes marker at the BeAcon Station should lle corPlans call for CWS, ann~~::~:;
the pavement which help light replacement at various locatio~s rected with more detailed si.gns_con- tion consisting of VMH Ill
motorists way on some area roads, along state route~ in Athens, Galha, cemmg l~e closmg and mai~I\Jnmg Clinic, to build on theoroooc\-tv'la
according to Nancy Yo8chii11,.11Ublic Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Noble, local traffic on?- on the old highway, million medical arts
info~ation ofllcer with ODQ'l"Dis- Vinton, and Washill&amp;ton counues. ~oacham sa1d .
house three to seven
'••~ .....-~_,. ..!
trict 10, Marietta.
In other news conci{"ing the new- . "ODOT Central Office initially employ more than 18
The projei:t will cover about a ly opened sectiCJn of ~e 1- 77AAS: 33 slated that additional signs weren't .
In other business,
said needed for that area. W~ know there ·
• Mel with Sheriff -:;;;'~iii?
third of the 181.2 miles of state road Connector proJect, Yoach
in the count)', including the following that signing problems con ming have been some 1111ffic problems, so Solilsby-abOut funding for u
seetlo~ :
the Meigs County Fairgrou 5 and we are planning o,n placing addition- menl's Dnlg Abuse Resistance
, State Route 7 North from' the the closed section of old SR al the a1 signs up there and along'U.S. 33 cation program. Commissioners said
. tothe us
Gallia-Mei4s county Ime
. . Beacon Station will be c ·.rrecled to eliminate confusion for motorists," program cos"
.,. a'-ve
"" the DARE grant
33 interchange,
·
-;said Yoacham.
(Continued 011 P9 3)
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