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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

''

Sunday, July 14, 1~:

WV

lDespite slump, bullish mood pervades Wall Street
' BY BRUCE MEYERSON

..

: AP lualnna Writer
: NEW YORK:.._ Perusing a graph
: of lhe Dow Jones industrial average
· that only ploiS year-end prices. you
: misht forget that there was a stock
~ mlltf)tcrash in October 1987. With: in 2-ln months, most of the damage
· was undone.
Fortunately, stock market crashes
.: can still be counted on one hand, bear
• markets have beerr sandwiched
; ~een bull markets and those steep
: cleclines euphemistically duhbed cor·: ~lions have seldom been as abunt dantand long-lasting as Wall Street's
' rallies.
~
But• such long-tenn prosperity
ir breeds unfamiliarity with market

~ALLTEL
:

'POMEROY -

ALLTEL Long

; vice. has started offering long dis; lance service to customers in the
: Reedsville and Chester service areas,
: effective July I.
~
ALLTEL Long Distance is part of
~ the ALLTEL group of companies and
: a sister company to ALLTEUWest: em Reserve Telephone Co., the local
; telephone service provider in the
: ana. according to Hugh Hindman,
• vi!:e president for telephone opera• .
.

: According to ALLTEL Long Dis. tance General Manager Terry
; Roberts, ALLTEL Long Distance is
! designed to address customers' con: · cems and confusion about long dis~ tance service.

'

~·Insects

'·: By CINDY JENKINS

percent gets more severe. That's not
the case yet."
Hays, in fact, is readying lo lead
his clientele back into battle soon.
"We think the market's setting the
stage for the best rally in small-cap
stdcks since the 1960s. We're not
moving in ye~ but within two or three
weeks we're going to release a big
list of new stock recommendations."
Not everyone is so optimistic. of
course.
J
"While most people think this is
a long overdue correction. I think it's
much more serious," said Stan Weinstein, editor of The Professional Tape
Reader in Hollywood, Fla.
"The odds are pretty strong arc
that the Dow and S&amp;P have seen their

hig~s for this cycle." he added; referring to the period. heginning in late
1994. when •the Ia'! cnrilmonly
acknowled•ed mar""' corrccuun ended
'
And while many analysts look to
the big-company :rrena for market
signals, calling the Nasdaq too
volatile, Weinstein is focusing specifically on thai sector. The tumbles taken hy several high-ll y111g i&gt;Sue&gt; such

as diskwJri q·

m .1~c r f ~&gt; J11L'~&lt;.I

arc

par-

trcularly tl'llrn g. he sa rd .
"As usually happens. first you
lose the speculative crazies, then you
Jose the aggressive stocks, and then
xou see the unportarrl stocks break ing down ... he said. ''Yqu clearly lost
the Nasdaq lin June). Now you're
losing the Ouw and the S&amp;P. That \
how a market tops out."
Alfred Goldman :r market analyst
al A.G. Edwards &amp; Sons in St. Loui s
minute between 3-11 p.m., and 12 is stoic in rejecting any such dcdacents per ntinute between II p.m.-8 ralions uf the bull market's death . But
a.m. and on weekends.
the market 's failure to quiLkly snap
Hindman noted that ALLTEL ha~..:k from its latest tumbles are sit!Long Distance has designed its business to focus on smaller, non-urban
markets. Major carriers like AT &amp; T
and MCI, on the other hand, concentrate on major cities like New York.
Chicago, and L9s Angeles, Hindman
said.
ALLTEL telephone customers
who sign up for ALLTEL Long Distance service will receive one bill and
one number to call for both local and
long distance telephone service.
. For more informatidn, may eall 1- '
800-ALLTEL-2 ( 1-800-255-8352).
There is no fee to si·gn-up for the service.

service available to east Meigs

t Distance, a new phone calling ser-

• 110115.

trauma. So wben the Dow plunges as a new high on May 24.
sharply a5 it has in recent sessions,
If you insist on a 5 percent cutoff,
analysts invariably start debating then consider that.the Dow was off as
whether it's a little indigestion or a much as 5.3 peJCent before reboundturning point in the market's fortunes. ing into Thursday's close.
In reality, it may be more an arguAnd none of this takes into
ment over nomenclature than sub- account the nearly II. 7 percent slide
stance. For some experts, a market in the Nasdaq composite index since
decline as small as 3 percent can be June 5.
"People call every little wiggle a
a correction, while for others, a correction doesn't become a bear market correction. These are semantics. I
until there's a 15 or 20 percent slide. have my little definition. You can
The market's recent stumbles have always have a 3 to 7 percent correcalready qualified as a correction by tion (in the S&amp;P 500) out of the blue.
some measures. The Dow is off 4.6 That doesn't destroy the integrity of
percent since it set a record at 5, 778 the markc;J at all," said Don Hays,
on May 20. and the Standard &amp; director of investment strategy at
Poor's list of 500 large companies is Wheat First Butcher Singer, Inc. in
down 4.8 percent since that index set Richmond, Va. "Anything over 7

"There are a lot qf long distance
providers out there today offering different plans, options, and calling circles, in addition to minimum charges,
start-up fees, quotas, and unexpected
costs. It is difficult for customers to
know exactly what they are getting or
what they are paying. ALLTEL Long
Distance dqes away with all of the
complication and hassle," Robens
said.

Roberts said ALLTEL offers a
simple, hassle-fre~ approach.to longdistance service. "We wanted to
develop a program that would be easy
for people lri understand, " said
RobeJ:ts.
"ALLTEL Long Distance will
offer a flat pricing structure which
will enable customers to know exact-

ly what they are paying per minute
for in-state and out-of-state calls," he
said.
"We don't want there to be any
surprises for our customers. Customers wilt pay the same per minute
rate for specific time periods no matter where they call in the country," be
added.
Calls made within Ohio are just 25
cents per minute for calls made
between 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; 19 cents per
minute for calls made between 5-11
p.m.; and 16 ceniS per minute for
calls made between II p.m.-8 a.m.
and on weekends.
For calls out of the state but within the Continental U.S., rates are 22
ceniS per minute for calls made
between 8 ~t-m.-5 p.m.; 17 cents per

•

nificant, he said.
_
" I think this will be a correction
wonhy of that title , but we see ve,Y
lillie evidence that the almost 6-yeai:
hull market has wrne to an end, .. h'
said

a thousandfold. Less than I percent
of insects are hannfill, but these
destroy about I0 percent of our
crops, causing a loss of billions of
dollars annually.
\
On the other hand, this would be
a . sorry world without insects. We
would havl) no apples, grapes or
clover, much less cotton, and fewer
oranges and garden vegetables, for
these and many other plants depend
in insects to pollinate their flowers.
Some insects aid the process of
decay, a process Jhat is essential to
life. Some insects help control others,
and all help maintain a balance in
nature.
In the broad view, insects play an
imponant natural role, not only in
ways that benefit man, but as food for
many kinds of fish, amphibians,

Sports on Page 5

Sports on Page 4

Story and photo on Page 6

8-25-26-31~5-40

Vol. 47, NO. 55
1 Section, 10 Pages

ye 1 to undergo a 6 percent Cl')fT~

US Cellular

Advat

Eagles Nest Sports Shop
Norris Northup Dodge
Health Maaeaement Services

A•yro flonrl Foshtoao
Wore~l- Propertlto

Ire said. "If the curreclion goe~
beyond II or 12 percent, it statU
materializing rnlo a bear market. BUl
we thrnk this correction will be
ited to 7 or 8 percent."
On Friday, the Dow industrials
9.98 to 5,510.56
Iron ...

Rock fall causes closing
of Mason County road
I

: HENDERSON, W.Va. (AP) -1
Officials closed U.S. 35 for 12 hours
Sunday after a 170-ton rock fell from ,
a construction site. crushing an emp- '
ty car and damaging a mobile home. :
"The rock is not blocking 35," ;
~aid Chuck Blake, Mason County's
director of emergency services.
"However, the remainder of loose
material stilt hanging precariously up
on the hill is the problem. We wanted to make sure thai was removed
before we opened the road."

Officials closed the highway at 3
a.m. and reopened it about 3 p.m.
No one was injured when the rock
fell Saturday night, but the woman
who lived in the mohile home had
just gotten out of the car was badly
shaken up by the incident, Blake said.
She had recently purchased 'the
vehicle from a used car dealership, he
said. Blake declined to name the

derson, which is located on the Ohio
River just across the river from Gallipolis.
The highway is a major thoroughfare for truckers traveling
between Charleston and Columbus.
Sunday morning and early afternoon, motorists were rerouted 45
minutes out of their way, Blake said.
Blake said the construction comwoman.
pany had quit work for the weekend
Construction crews are working to prior to the incident, but was called
widen U.S. 35 to four lanes at Hen- back to help with cleanup.

Coastal residents return to weigh
damage left in wake of hurricane

·-

cc Coldw• TriiCkioa
Car•k..rl't Farm &amp;: Llwn
Dr. E. John Slrouu
WttiiiTire
Allldl Acc0111li"'
Sieve Clia,.ao, CPA
David T. Erou, Allorory
MTS lotoraolloool
Tope, Do-. ood Tope
S.prr I
HoHktoy, Slltrll, &amp; So11drn
S•ll~ Bilek Poaliot
btk II JUh

K.....,.

EIMIH Plrot..roplry
E....v... ,...

Sbrnl oo4 CoblniAoo

.CHiftlllc c;.er c.....
Olllo Valley Wlloltlalt Dlslribltlon

Goyea fire O.pan••••
Okk lrowo Nolloowidt lonrao«
US A,.y Corpa ol E111i1ftn

..

[enter

SURF CITY, N.C. (AP) - Residents returned home to find sand
dunes in the street and waterlogged
belongings after tJurricane Bertha
battered the Carolina coast. Damage
estimates shot into the tens of millions.
More than 4,000 residents of Topsail Island, pan of North Carolina's
Outer Banks, were allowed to return
to their evacuated homes Sunday, but
vacationers were being steered away.
Some residents were kept waiting
on the single road to the island. Offi- ,
cials said there were still sojrie loose ,
ele~tljcal'-Iinlis-c,llitct· '!hat- sewage
pumps were clogged with sand.

"I've been here since yesterday,"
Bobby Harrelsorl of Greensboro said
Sunday as he waited to get to his
vacation home. He said he had slept
in his van with his wife and two children.
By Saturday, assessment teams in
several southeastern counties had
tallied close to $60 million in damage estimates, including $40 million
in coastal Onslow County. Tourism
officials estimated a loss of $24 million to businesses over the weekend.
P!'operty ~age in Topsail Beach
was $2. mil bon, ..including major
damage to 40 residential units, Town
Manager Eric Peterson said. The ,·

island's southern end was under more
than a foot of water at one point during the stonn.
Towering drifiS of sand covered
the streets of Surf City. The town's
two major piers had partially collapsed, leaving broken pilings jutting
from the surface of the water.
"Removing the sand and debris is
the largest joh we have," Peterson
said.
•
It will be several days before vis.itors can get to the island.
Graham Hood returned to fmd his
condoiJiinium's.first Ooor cove[I:Q.in
sand and water.
.
"
·•

l

,_.

Enter.

Rlepenholl Distrlbutlag
Holzer Medical Center

''1.

G&gt;-G&gt;
Explore.

AEP-GoiHpolls Dtstrlcl
BrHihton food1
Frolll Corponlt Hndquorlrn
Poul Davitt Jewdtn
Unity Savin&amp;• Baok
A&lt;qiiAIIIll RIYrr Elcttrir
CUll's CllJio
Cre•oaoo Cootnlr
Golllpoth Clilroprorllc Oioit
Hukl ...Tooarr
Saaaden laa1nHt
To•'• Auto Ctl1ic:
Dr. Aorlllo Roo~. M.D.
Moao--.Topr At10tio1a
Plrasool Votloy Hoopilot
Tokr &amp; Tokr luuroo&lt;r
Slor Bilk
Polot l'lr11111 MOOH Lodl&lt;
Dr. J. Erl&lt; J...., DDS
T1lr hl-011-lihop
My Sillrr'o CloHI
Joto...,.•s Soper•arktl
Ur Ark
Groo11 II Sopply S~op
Crolnl Sopply
Ilia ltod Rtolty
M•la-A..n.ao Colt
Wlllh Foorrol Ho. .
n. Slowowoy
Lourd U•oulor Sonier
Sotollio Roto'o Dht..ol Tolnlcce Stort Solnroy or GoHipolb
Soollt&lt;lltrro Eqotp•etll c.,.,.oy
T1lr Pool P&lt;optr or Gotttpolll
Gtottil OIYJtl on llo•&lt; Mtdlcll Esjai,.rol

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l~--~------------------------------------

bear from the Ohio River ·Bear Co. At right Is
Susan Baker, owner of the Ohio River Bear Co.
Meigs Industries Is working on bears under
contract with Ohio River Bear Co.

OFFICIAL VISIT - Lt. Gov. Nancy Holllater'
toured the Carleton School In Syracuse and
visited downtown Pomeroy this morning. Hoi·
lister, second from left, watched as Lisa Mont·
gomery and Linda Will, from left, worked on a

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - There is
a glimmer of hope on welfare, but
election-year politics appear still to
be standing in the way of passing a
health insurance brtl both parties say
they want.
Senate Democratic leader Tom
Daschle used a national television
appearance Sunday with his Republican counterpart. Trent Lou. to propose a way to break a three-mOnth
deadlock on health insurance. Lou
dismissed it out of hand.
Daschl_e 0-S .D.. suggested on
1
NBC's "Meet the Press" that the
main aims of the bill - to ensure that
~dple who lose or change jobs keep
their insurance and are not punished
for pre-existing medical conditions
- he handled separately from a
GOP-backed plan to create taxexempt medical savings accouniS. or
MSAs.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
has blocked appointment of senators
to House-Senate negotiations on
working out differences 'in their
liealth .care bills because GOP leaders intend to include the accouniS for
millions of employees of small busi- ·
nesses.

...

_.,:.,

·~;·~ · ~'M=Jf '"
Electric customers In Pomeroy, Racine and Syracuse were affected today as a result of this
outage at the intersection .o f Union Avenue and Osbourne Street in Pomeroy. The outage
occurred at 8:35 a.m. wtien tree fell and and struck two poles, pulling utility lines down In
the roadway, according to Ron McDade, American Electric Power district manager. Crews for
AEP began work on the outage around 9:45 a.m., with repairs expected to be completed earl this afternoon accordln to McDade.

a

·Repo·rt:-t)hio makes'·most·mtsta'kes
in deciding who gets food stamps
AKRON (AP)- Federal officials
are expected to force Ohio to spend
as much as $10 million to improve
administratiOn of its food stamp program, the Akron Beacon Journal
reported.
Ohio has made more mistakes in
determining elrgibility for food
stamps than any of the nation 's s~v­
en largest states, the newspaper
reponed Sunday.
Ohio's worst performing county,
Summit, had a disbursement-error
r~te in budget year 1995 that was
nearly triple the national average,
according to the newspaper's investigation . Summit County's rate was
nearly twice that of the state's second-worst performer, Mahoning
County.
·
, Each month. Ohio releases about
•$80 million in food stamps to about
I million people statewide.
But for every $100 worth of
stamps distributed, more than $11 is
going'to people who shouldn't be getting them, a. federal audit determined.
As part of its annual audit, the
U.S. Department of Agriculture cal-

Congressional gridlock blocks
progress on health insurance

Gtot Joh1011 Clinnlet Okhatollllr~

~-----~ -~-----------------.--------------------------------~,·
'

\

'

SPECIAL THANKS TO.•••.
THE GILLS FAJlM OF MASON COUNTY
CITY OF GALLIPOLIS" GALLIPOLIS POLICE DEPARTMENT
GALLIA COUNTY EMS" GALLIPOLIS FIRE DEPARTMENT
GALLIPOLIS AREA JAYCEES" POINT PLEASANT EMS
POINT PLEASANT VOLUNTEER FIRE DEP~TMENT
MASON COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT
THE 1996 RIVER RECREATION FESTIVAL COMMITIEE

35 centa

AGennett Co. NeweiJIIpor

Outage hits Meigs villages-

l·nsert.

Do icy Qor.. or Goltlpolis
BowMan's HoMrtlrt
Skyliar to...
J.E. Morrisoo &amp; Auodoltl
Tri-Siolo CoiTrr
WiHmoa Rut Eslolr
Boird's Brollltn Aoto PoriJ

Partial clearing tonight,
Iowa In the 60a. Tueaday,
moatly •'9'fiY,-HJtlh• In the
801.
-

6·2·3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 15, 1996

G&amp;J Pepsi 6'11- Pinkerton Tobacco 6'11- Bob Evans Farms, I~c
The Wiseman Agency 6'11- R.J. Reynolds
Gallipolis Tobacc_o &amp; Candy

Boll·Warner

Pick 3:

en
tine
r
.

ever interest rates nse like this, it hllJ
invanably led loa markcl'correclio'
ot at brst 6'i percent. So far. we hav. ,

·

Holzer Clinic
McDonalds of Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande
Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association
Gallipolis Elks Lodge 1#107
Jolao W. Clark Oil

4-5·7·5·5·2
Pick 4:
1·2-6·2

BURLILE OIL ~ LITTLE JOHN'S FOODMARTS
PHILIP MORRIS l}.S.A j"~MAGIC 101 WMGG

Eastman's Foodlaods
Gallipolil Rotary Club
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
~ltio Valley Bank
Reliance Motion Control

Kicker:

New Rotary officers

t.:cnt this year.
:
" If we l&lt;x&gt;k hack in history. when}

How do I surf the net?

Financial and "In Kind" Contributors who made the
1996 River Recreation Festival possible

Super Lotto:

•

birds and mammals. Many of our
songbirds depend almost entirely on
an insect diet. Insects help make our
rich plant life and wildlife possible.
If you have an insect control
problem with your trees, you may
call me at 446-8687.
(Cindy Jenkins is the district
torester tor the Gallia Soil &amp; Water
Conservation District.)

THE GALLIA COUNTY CHA~BER OF COMME~CE EXTENDS
SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS

Reds edge
Pittsburgh 7-6
at Riverfront
•

Some analysts look to the bonil
market for signals.
,
Steven Goldman, market strategi~~J
at Weeden &amp; Co. in Greenwielt,
Conn .. noted that the yield on th,.
long bond - a key dctenninant of
long -term horrowing costs - ha~
surged from 5.94 percent to 7.20 per•

may be pesky, but world needs them

for the most part hann less, are the
GALLIPOLIS - Insects are maple bladdergall mite and the maple
·: found everywhere. even in the spindlegall mite. You don't actually
·: AntarCtic. More inseciS and more see the insect on either of the above:- kinds of insects are known than all mentioned infestations. By the time
: other animals visible to the nakey the gall is seen, however, the tiny
midge larva, which occupies a
,eye.
depression
in the lower leaf surface,
• InseciS have been called man's
has
usually
fallen to the ground.
• worst enemy. A few are. But some
Because
insects are the largest
: have economic value. and for other
gro_up
of
animals
in the world, time
: reasons, we would be hard put to
does
not
permit
a description of
· exist without them. Insects are an
the
most
common ones.
even
: important food source for many aniWhether
cenain
insects
are consid: mats; they are gems of natural beauered
helpful
to
people
or
otherwise,
; ty, zoological mysteries and a condepends
as
much
on
us
as
it does on
. sistent source of.interest.
insects.
· The insects vie seenrto find most
Our ways of farming and raising
: irritating are Ieafminers, which eat
· out the tissue between the top and animals have provided some insects,
bottom of the leaf, leaf hoppers and · which might otherwise be rare, with
. aphids. lnseciS that are unsightly, but conditions enabling them to multiply

Ohio Lottery

Free agency continues

culates a "potential liability" sanction
levied on states that post a worsethan-average error rate .
Ohio ·s tab for 1995 was $24.6
million , the most of any state. The
state's accumulated liability for the
last four years stands was $62 mil lion, also the highest in the nation.
It's unlikely any of the 20 states
with worse-than -average error rates
will be forced to pay their full bill,
said Diana Pihos, spokeswoman for
the USDA's regional office in Chicago.
Instead. the federal government
usually negotiates with the states to
mcrcase the amount they spend trying to solve their problems rn the
food stamp program, Pihos said. ·
In Summit County, nearly $29 of
every $I 00 worth of stamps was
wrongly distributed . according to
stale figure s. Practically all of the
county's mistakes involved stamps
being issued to people who had no
right 10 them .
Patrick A. McGrath , director of
the Summit County Department of
Human Services, a.: knowledged that
the county has had a worse-than-

average error rate.
McGrath blamed most of the
problem on lack of money to hire
enough caseworkers. He said the
county has 15 caseworker vacancies
but no money to fill them.
This year, the county is spending
$3.2 million of rts own money on the
department, which costs inure than
$20 million a year to operate. The rest
comes from stale and federal sources.

Arnold Tompkrns, director of the
Ohio Department of Human Services.
disagreed with McGrath 's cnntention
that Summit County's high cascload
was the problem.
"There's no correlation" between
the caseload and the county's error
rate, he said. "Those people aren 't
dealing with 300 cases a Jay. People
deal with three or four .:ases a day ...
Tompkins said his department is
putting more pressure on local oflicials to improve.
Tompkins said Ohio followed
Indiana's example in January hy
ordering all of its large urban counties to revi ew every fond stamp case
lin which recipients work and should
have their income deducted from
their stamp allotment.

Buchanan fears Perot
run will segment GOP

Democrats say they would suppon found that everything was being
only a small-scale experiment with blocked and I saw for the first time
the program. They contend that a it looked to me like there was a
large-scale program would siphon off · planned gridlock in the Senate," said
healthy and amuent people from Lou, who took over as majority
group health insurance plans and thus leader from GOP presidential candiraise premiums for the ill and the date Bob Dole a month ago.
- " We're not going lll.apologize for
poor.
Lou, R-Miss ., responding to stopping extreme legislation,"
Dasc hle's suggestion that MSAs be Daschle replied.
The two leaders have tried to
dealt with separately, said: "As soon
maintain
an image of civility, but Lou
as S~nator Daschle gets Senator
snapped
at
a Daschle comment that
Kennedy under control and agrees
his
support
for
endmg taxpayer fundthat we are going to have MSAs and
ing
of
the
National
Endowment for
ponability, we are going to get health
the
Arts
was
an
example
of Republiinsurance reform this year."
can
extremism.
The Democrats put forth anotber
"I don't impugn Tom Daschle's
compromise proposal on MSAs last
integrity
when he disagrees with me.
week, but chances for an agreement
but
when
he disagrees with me he
were cast against an increasingly hos·
calls
it
extremism,"
Lou said. "I
tile election-year atmosphere that
don't
appreciate
his
response."
has brought legislating in the Senate
Lou said attacks on Republicans
to a near standstill.
; Nevada Sens. Harry Reid and ,are coming from the "looney left" in
Richard Bryan, both Democrats, Congress who "have nothing realty
angered Republicans last week when to say."
The GOP leader was somewhat
they blocked the 1997 defense spending bill to filibuster over legislation more optimistic on an overhaul of the
to set tip temporary storage facilitie! welfare system, saying "we're going
for nuclear waste in their state.
1 .to get it through the Senate in the (\ext
·"To my shi}Ck all of a sudden I couple of weeks if the Democrats

_.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Bob campargn frnance refonn and AmcrDolc may have little chance of win- ica-first economics.
· ning in November if Ross Perot
Perot, the Texas hillionaire who
launche&gt; another third.pany presi- garnered 19 percent of the popular
•dential run, says Pat Buchanan, who 'vote in the 1992 election, said last
was Dole's chief rival for the Repub- week he was wilting to challenge
lican nomination.
Lamm for the nomination.
In the long run, Buchanan said
Buchanan, who came in second to
Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation," .Dole in the primaries, has declined to
the emergence of Perot 's Reform Par- ·fonnatty endorse the Dole candrdacy
ty "threatens the viability of the and stressed that "we're not g01 ngto
Republican Pany."
that (Repubhcan) conventiOn as suP'
Buchanan said the Rcfonn Pany •·plicants."
would attract many of the "conserv" We have access to voters who
ative populists" who backed him in can give the Republican Pany victothe primaries, and in future elections ·ry. Our people are going to be treatdon 't filibuster this, too."
President Clinton said Saturday the GOP would have no choice but to ed with respect," Buchanan said.
It has not been announced whether
that the Republicans' decision to fonn coalitions with the new group to
have
any
hope
of
defeating
the
Buchanan
will be allowed to give a
meet Democratic demands and sepDemocrats.
prime-time
speech during the con·arate welfare from changes in the
"The
Perot
candidacy,
as
opposed
vention
next
tnonth in San Diego.
'Medicaid health care system for the
to
Governor
(Richard)
Lamm,
rs
a
Buchanan's
fiery
speech at the GOP
poor "can be a real breakthrough."
mortal
threat
to
the
Republican
Parconvention
in
Houston
four years ago
He indicated willingness to sign welty
rn
1996
because
Ross
Perot
can
set
a
right-wing
tone
to President
fare legislation.
win
the
Buchanan
voters,"
the
conBush's
campaign
that
many
analysts
Clinton has vetoed two previous
said contributed to his defeat.
we1fare bills produced by the Repub- serva11ve commentator sard.
Lamm. the fonner Democratic
Buchanan would not say whether
lican-run Congress because he
objected to certain provisions or governor 6f Colorado, announced he might gi~e a speech outside the
opposed the packages in which they earlier this month that he waul~ seek 'convention if the Dole people snub
the Reform Party ·nomination and him .
were included.
push its platform of fiscal austerity.

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Monday, July 15, 1996

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Commentar

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

5 states
contend
•
with fires

OHIO Weather
Page2

Thesday, July 16
Accu Weather• forecast for daytime

Monday, July 15, 1996

I.

MICH

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

GllDD.ett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long All letters are subJe&lt;:l to editmg and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number No unSigned letters will be published. Letters
should be tn good taste, addressing issues, not perso~alittes.

Assumptions about
economy need to be
studied, not accepted
By JOHN C\INNIFF
AP Buslnesa Analyat
NEW YORK- When assumpttons are repeated so often they are accepted as facts and no longer questiOned, 11 ts ume to subtmtthem to the test.
The assumptton, for mstance, that any mcrease in wages ts destmed to be
reflected in higher pnces, and that those htgher pnces ~nevttably w1ll compel the Federal Reserve to ratse mterest rates.
Judgmg from comments and acuons followmg the July 5 strong employment report.lhat assumption ts now automatic and pervas1ve, the words barely chang~ng from one commentator to the next.
That m1ght have been the case- in fact, 11 probably was the case in most
of the years sance World War II. Buttlts questiOned now by economiSts who
would have defended 11 in 1985 as strongly as many brokers do now.
In the old vtcw, explams economist Wtlliam Dunkclberg. there was a bnck
wall called capacity, against wh1ch the' economy could push and push but
produce linle more than ns1ng pnces Capacuy couldn't be exceeded.
The wall was always out there , and those m charge of economic policy
generally knew when the expandmg economy approached '' You knew you
were geumg close. for example, when plant utilizatiOn reached 85 percent.
Times have changed, and the wall m1ght not be there now, sa1d Dunkelberg, a Temple Umvers1ty professor and c~ economiSt of the National Federation of Independcnt Busmess He sugg ted some reasons why
Ftrst, the world economy When Gen I Motors m the past reached the
llmtl of us abthty to produce cars the consequences were clear If you wanted a car badly enough you would have to outbtd other buyers
It was once the same w1th steel When U S Steel and Bethlehem and the
other b1g producers were neanng capac tty 11 could be seen clearly and the
effects measured: Now you can 1mport steel from almost any pomt of the
compass
Technology represents another vast change. Through the use of modem
tcchntqucs and equ1pment, the same or fewer workers often can produce an
ancreasmg amount of goods It allows for nonmflalionary wage mcreases
The cvtdcncc of thts ts nghtthere for anyone to see - butu doesn 'I always
show up m the offic1al producttvt ty measurements, which contmuc to resemble those ol a decade or more ago, before some of today's techntques.
The problem tsn t so much m measunng manufactunng productivity, since
you can always count the number of Hems tumbling off an assembly line.
But how do you do measure advances •n servtce&lt; such as bankmg and health
care ?

Agam. you can sec the changes wnh your eyes but you can 't quantify them.
The Improvements don't show up m the productlvtty numbers; m Tact, us1ng
convcntmnal measurements the Implication ts that produ&lt;ttvuy ts falling.
"I don't believe the numbers." says economist Edward Yarden1 Government staltsltctans. he concludes. are probably "woefully undercsttmatmg"
the Improvements m production cffic1ency, espec1ally m the serv1ces sector.
Such dtsbellef 1s Widespread among cconomtsts, and so 1s the feeling that
Wall Street 1s gctt1ng unduly exctted The feeling ts that wh1le stocks m1ght
1ndeed take a d1vc , they probably won't be for the reasons cncd
The wall. the lnntt of econom1c capac tty, •mght be out there. but so far
tis ommous shadow has been cast mamly on Wall Street. But a mere shadow. 11 seems. IS suflictcnt to make Jlllcry ponfollo managers rump.

•

'Travelgate' memo doesn't back some theories
By JACK ANDERSON
and JAN MOLLER
WASHINGTON- Htghly confi- dent1al Jusllce Department documents on travel gate puncture a fanciful consptracy theory that has been
hurled by House Government
Reform and OverSight Chairman
Wtlllam Clinger, R-Pa ., and other
Republican leaders
The Justice Department's " prosecution memo," wh1ch prompted the
tndtctment of former travel office
ch1ef Billy Dale, contams a treasure
trove of ev1dence JUSltfymg charges
of embezzlement, a htany of metdents of travel office miSmanagement
- and not a llnge of proof that poiIIICS played a role tn the decmon to
tndtcl Nevertheless, Dale has
become a cause celebre among
Republicans smce betng fired by the
Whue House m 1993
Clinger has charged the Clinton
adm~ntstratton w1th launchtng a
" pohltcal prosecu!ton " of Dale He
also says the FBI was recru1ted by the
Whue House to "harass" the travel
office employees
The prosccullon memo even
presages Dale's defense: "Dale w1ll
probably make the btg-ptcture argu-

tracked down every last depoSit and
of the evidence, whether conscious- diSbursement, both m the travel office
ly or subconsctously," he told us. A and the Dale household Jusllce's
former federal prosecutor, Taback- ' lndtclment Rev1ew Commtttee recommended unan•mously that the proposed mdtctment be approved by Lee
J
Radek, chtef of Jusllce's puhllc
By
mtegnty sectton
"The trial team has concluded
that despite (Dale's) defenses. the
only reasonable explanat1on for the
ev1dence IS that Dale was steahng
man added : " Had I been putting thiS money." a related Just1ce Department
case together, I know I would have memo reads. "There IS, at bouom, no
felt the pressures to go forward. I legmmate busancss reason for Dale's
thank there was too much nd1ng on 11 b'ansacttons . . Moreover. a cash
.. I'm not talkmg about direct, overt expenditure analysiS was done of the
pollllcal pressure . I would be very Dales, wh1ch found that the fannly
surpnsed tf there was a phone call was hvang above us known ~nc ome
(from the Wh1te House to Jusllce)" by approximately the same amount as
Release of the prosecullon memo, the funds lhat Dale was stealing "
wh1ch outhnes the government's evt- Tabackman notes how sw1flly a
dence, has been fiercely reststed by federal jury acquiued Dale of charges
Just1ce and Clinger, who has demand- he embezzled $68,000 from a fund to
ed pub he d1sclosure of thousands of whtch news organiZatiOns conother documents rclatmg to the trav- tnbuted in order to cover c.penses
el office
mcurrcd while travelmg w1th the
The August 1994 memo, which prestdent However. m 199i Dale
we have obtamed, wetghs all the evi- offered to plead gu11ty to one count
dence and shows how career law of embezzlement, pay a fmc and
enforcement offtcials tirelessly serve no more than 60 days m Jail.
affected the quality of the assessment

Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

IToledo! 86" I

The Ju$ttce Department rejected the
deal, wh1ch Tabackman told us would
have mcluded an "apology" but no
acknowledgement that Dale stole
money
Dale dtdn't share hts allbts wuh
the FBI. wh1ch might have forestalled
an tnd•ctment, because Dale's camp
(before Tabackman entered the case)
dcctded 11 " would have beuer luck
spnngmg the explanalton on us and
the Jury at the same lime, .. according
to a DOJ memo
Tabackman argues that Dale mnocently co-mmgled the travel off1ce
funds wllh h1s own money over the
years m a "good-fatth. hut disastrous.
deCISIOn."
The W)]tte House made 1ts own
dtsastrous deciSion when 11 summartly fired seven longt1mc employees of
the travel office at the behest ol Clinton cromes who wanted a p1ecc of the
travel office operation. Bu\ the Juslice Department's own documents
hardly flesh out the dark polnical
plots that Whttc House enemies have
alleged.
(Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are columnists ror United Fealure
Syndicate.)

ment
that by
th1stheprosecution
1s simply r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - an
effort
Clinton admimstra1
tion to avotd further embarrassment " ~ e- f'OID -t\'9tlllt'1Eo..HfiA--Thc allegahons defame hundreds I t4Ui:MIS
of career FBI agents and prosecutors
- as we ll a• grand jurors and the
judge who ruled on the cv1dence presented 10 the jury If provable, however, 11 may represent an tll)peachable
offense.
So wh.ere's ,the GOP's smokmg
gun?
Clinger and House Speaker Newt
Gmgnch arc strangely rct1cent to
respond
Clinger spokesman Ed Amorosi
breeztly offered one conspiracy theory. "There's •mpltcll pressure, tl
doesn 't have to be explicit." Amorosi
told us "I thmk documentmg evidence of a grand consptracy probably
can't be done But anyone fam11iar
wuh the Jusllce Department knows
that a prosecutor has a fatr amount of
dtScrct•on about wh1ch cases to bnng
to tnal. "
AmoroSI sa1d Clinger refuses to
approve the release of the prosecution
memo because of the amount of
"unsubstanttalcd matenal" agamst
Dale and the fact some of llts "thtn."
Dale's auorncy, Steven Tabackman, stnkcs a more Freudian note
"The poliltcal context of thiS case

of knowledge . they can 1nfcct the
ch1ld through breast fccdmg
Smce May of th1s year. New York
hospitals have heen rcqu1rcd to at

NatHentoff
least ask new mothers tf they want to
be told the test results Of 18.150
mothers surveyed tn the month of
May. II 200 never answered the .
questiOn and 1.038 d1d nnt want to
know.
·
As the number of dead and dymg
mlants mcrcascd. a state asscmblvwoman. Neute Maycr&lt;ohn, tned for
three years to get a bill passed rcqutrmg mandatory t•'Simg of all newborns
- with the results g•ven to thctr
mothers. who dtd not have to sign
consent forms.
Maycrselhn IS a Democrat. a femtntst. and tn 1989, the Nallonal Orgamzauon for Women named her Lcgtslator of the Year
Smcc she started to spread the
word ol these careless deaths, Maycrsohn has been btl!crly opposed by
the Nattonal Organtzat1on for
Women. gay groups. AIDS acUvtsts.
some medtcal organtl.altons and the
Amcncan Civtl Liberties Umon .
They charge that mandatory te.rmg of mfants - whtch reveals the'
fact that the mothers arc Infected-

Today in history

Berry's World

1s a Vtolauon of pnvacy Also, they
say, forced tcs11ng would lead mothers 'to llec the health care system
There ts no cv1dencc of that, but there
ts growmg evidence of mothers cursmg the Ignorance m which they were
keptli&gt;r their "protection. "
The ACLU and others demand
that mothers he wunscled t&lt;ttake the
test voluntarily. That approach has
had only scatlcrcd suc.:~.:css m New

York's hosrttals Moreover. many
poor women do not get to a hospllal
helotc gtvmg htrth So they get no
prcn,ual counseling ol any kmd at all
NcUtc Maycrsohn never gave up.
(l'tus lethal secrecy. 11 should he noted. h,., also heen gomg on m many
other stales. hut the stnry made news
only m New York hecausc of Maycrsohn.) "I got up wtth 11m the monimg. · she told me. "and I went to
sleep wtth tl ..
At last. m June, Nctttc Maycrsohn's htll rasscd hoth houses and
was stgncd hy Gov George Patakt In
the asscmhly. she was gtvcn a standtng ovat1on.
The new law was the (irst m the
country to requtrc mandatory tesung
of all newborns - and diSclosure ol
the results to the mothers. (A htll
passed hy Congrc" earlier thiS year
had many rrellmmary stages and dtd
not ktck m until the year 2000 )
"Every mfcctcd HIV baby," Net -

ltc Maycrsohn says, " will finally he
able !&lt; ~ access health care and treatment that really can prolong Qnd
enhance thctr lives And under my
law. mfants who arc not mf'ccted Will
he rrotectcd from gcumg inlcctcd
through hrcastlccdmg." And II treatment "early enough. an 1nhmt wtth
the vtrus may he ahlc to escape
AIDS
Stncc mlcctcd ncwhoms Will now
quality lor the qualny ol ircatment
that adults Wtlh AIDS nghtlully
demand. one would thmk that AIDS
acllvists would have lilUght for the
•nlcctcd 1nlants all along. But they
have not .

At the end of' June thts year. the
Amencan Mcdt&lt;·al Assoctutmn
endorsed mandatory tcsung throughout the country ol all newhorns for
the AIDS vtrus - as we ll as all pregnant women hct:ausc il has been
cstabltshed that pregnant women
who arc tested and treated can cut the
mk to the unhom ch1ld hy two-thtrds
' Meanwhtle. the ACLU has
expressed no regrets to certain gncv~ng mothers As one ol them put 11.
" We should not have been pmtccted
to death."
&lt;Nal Hentofr is a nationally ;
renowned authorily on the Finl •
Amendment lind lhe resl or lhe Bill :
or Rights.)

Planning ·ahead averts making hard decisions ·

.tid.
•
0 I 11M~ NEA, Inc.

MORE HEADS WILL ROLL

By DIAN VUJOVICH
When John Mann 's w1fc d'ted carIter th1s year, one of the family bu&gt;~ ­
ncss detail s he had to cope wuh was
a name change on thctr mutual fund
account.
Losmg a loved one bnngs a flood
of cmot1ons, gnef and moummg and many financial techmcalittcs.
One of those can be changes m
account rcgtstratlon
" I've put off changing the names
on this account because n's just too
pamful, .. satd Mann. "Because n was
a JOtnl account, I needed to get
another death certificate and think
about what to do wilh thts money and all these thtngs that have little
meanmg when you've just lost your
w1fe. But I know 11 has to be done."
One partner of every married couple whose mutual fund account is
registered in both names will probably be in Mann's position at some
point Since it 1s difficult to make
sound financial decisions while you

. arc gncvmg, take some t1mc to constdcr your opt1ons before you find
yourself 1n a dtfticult sttuation .
Mutual fund accounts arc typ•cal-

Dian VU/OVich
ly opened as Ctlhcr single accounts,
jotnt-tcnancy accounts, Un1form Gtfl
to Minors Act accounts IUGMA) or
trust accounts. In this column, only
smglc and joint accounts will be
addressed.
A mutual fund account opened as
a single account will have one name
on the regisrration,' along wuh the
Social Security number of that person. Information about the account
carJ't be given to anyone Without the
permission of the account owner;
only the owner. can redeem the
ac'count's assets; checks from lhe
mutual fund will be sent to the
address on the account; and probate
is,needed to transfer the account to an

'

heir All thts. accordtng to rcprcscn he had to wntc a letter of mstruwon ••
tat1vcs from Scudder's MRP In vest- ILOI) not1fymg the fund of' the :
ment Program .
a&lt;.:~.:ounl changes. get a sagnalurc :
In JOint accounts . all assets arc guarantee on that letter and mcludc an '
shared equally, only one Soc tal Sccu- ortgmal death certificate wtth 11.
'
nty numher ts used on the account .
Alew months after he closed that :
anyone ltstcd on the account can get .tccount . Mann dcctdcd to mvcst tn '
tnlormattnn about II , and hecausc another mutual fund. Thts t1mc he :
Jomt tenant accounts have nghts ul wanted the acwunt rcgtstcrcd in hts ·
survivorship, all assets pass 11 tthout name and the names of hts two chil- ·
rrohatc to the surv1ving owners of the dren But because Mann lived m '
account.
Texas and hts chtldrcn hvcd else-. ·
However, because there 1&lt; no llm- where - one in Florida and the nth- .
11 to the number of owners of a JOint cr In Mmpcsota- just opening the
account, transactions m these brokerage account meant gelling sigaccounts can be more difficult. For natures from two out-of-state indtmstance, when a check ts sent to a vtduals.
jomt account, all people whose names
" I don 't know 1f all of this 1s :
arc on the account have to endorse worth 11. It all see ms so complicat- 1
the check before it can be cashed · cd,:· he said.
l
When Mann's w1fc died, lookmg
(Dian Vujovich is tile author ol
at hts government bond f~nd account "Straight Talk Aboul Mutual •
proved to be just one more remmder Funds" and "SlnliJht'lillk About :
of her-untimely death. Consequently, Investinc for Your Redrement," •
h(s first decision was to sell all shares botll of whic:h are published by
in that mutual fund account To do so, McGnw Hill.)

I

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IMansfield 183' I•

.... · ,
~' •lcolumbuslas'

I

W.VA

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

VIa Aa&lt;&gt;datocl Pross GrapltlcsNet

Rain expected t~ clear
out of region by tonight
By The Aaaoclated Preaa
The National Weather Service is
forecastmg clear skies with temperatures mthe 60s tomght, followed by
sunny skies Tuesday as a high pressure system dominates Ohio's weather. Htghs wtll range from the low 80s
m the north to the upper 80s in the
south.
A large area of showers and a few
thunderstorms moved across the state
overnight. Heavy rain fell in some
areas, especially across southern
Ohio
The most ramfall reported was
1.52 inches at Shawnee Hills in
western Sctoto County. Dayton got
f.J3 inches, Cincinnati I .09 inches

and Columbus 0.23 inch.
The record high temperature for
thts date at the Columbus weather
station was 100 degrees m 1988. The
record low was 49 degrees in 1930
Sunset wtll be at 8:59 p.m. Sunrise
Tuesday w1ll be at6:16 a.m.
Weather forec&gt;ast:
Tonight .. Partial clearing. Lows 60
to 65.
· Tuesday .. Partly to mostly sunny.
Htghs in the 80s.,
Extended forecast:
Wed~sday and Thursday ... Dry.
Lows in the 60s. Highs in the 80s
Friday ... A chahce of thunderstorms. Lows tn the 60s. H1ghs m the
80s.

One ticket claims prize

Infants, mothers have right to know test results

By NAT HENTOFF
In recent years. several New York
newspapers and magazines have
reponed the rage and hopelessness of
women, many of them black and
Latma, who have discovered for the
first ltmc that lhetr very young children arc Infected Wtlh the HIV v1rus
"They should have told me ," sa1d
one funous woman, "so I could ha-;:c
taken care of myself- and h•m "
These women were subject to the
state's stnct confidcnuallty law that
was pan of the cp•demiolog•cal test
By The Associated Press
ol all mfants to track the geographtToday IS Monday, July 15. the I97th day of 1996. There arc 169 days left cal spread olthc mfectton leadmg to
m the year.
AIDS If an mfanttcsted pos1tive for
Today'&lt; Htghllght 1n H1story
HIV. the results were not routmely
On July 15. 1870. Gcorg•a hccamc the last of the Confederate states to g•ven to the mother or her doctor
be rcadmmed to the Umon .
because ol dtscnmmatton agamst
On tht&lt; date
people wtth AIDS. The mformatton
In 1606. the Dutch pamtcr Rembrandt was born in Letden, Netherlands shouldn't get out. But thC\pults of
In 1916 Bocm('Co. o11gmally known as Pacific Aero Products. was tests for other diseases were fevealcd.
loundcd m Seaulc by Wtlham Boc~ng
Every year. some I .200 to 1.400
mfants test postttvc 1n New Y•&gt;rk
In 1918. the Second Battle ol the Marne began dunng World War I
In 1948. Prcstdcnt Truman was nommatfd lor another term of office at state Seventy-live percent arc s1mply
the DemocratiC Nat tonal Convent ton m Phtladelph1a.
carrymg thctr tnlcctcd mothers· ant•In 1964. Senator Barry M Goldwater of An zona was nommated for pres- hodtcs and arc not trul y ~nfcctcd But
tdcnt at the Rcpubltc.m Nat tonal ConventiOn m San Franctsco.
25 percent arc lcavtng the hospttal
'In 1965. US sctcnttsts dt splaycd close-up photographs olthc planet Mars Without treatment , these chtldtcn.
taken hy the spacecraft Marmer 4
thctr infecuon undtsdoscd. arc prey
to devastating opportumsttc anacks
on thetr •mmunc systems .
And although the 75 percent arc
healthy when they get home. the
mothers arc mlcctcd , and 1n thctr lack

PA.

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

CLEVELAND (AP) - A stngle first five dtgtts are each worth $5,000.
Super Lotto game ticket shows all six The 45 with the first four numbers are
numbers m Saturday mght's drawing, each worth $1,000. The 437 wuh the
first three numbers are each worth
the Oh1o Lottery said
$100,
and the 4,534 w1th the first two
The winnmg ticket was sold at
numbers
are each wonh $10.
Mock Road Super Market in Columbus. The wmner chose the discountHere are the results of M1llion
ed lump-sum option for $1 ,796,119, Dollar Giveaway, wmning serial
which ts the pre-tax amount the lot- numbers from 3-of-6 Super Lotto
tery would have invested expecting to 11ckets 'sold m June·
pay $4 million over 26 years.
$300,000: 181 -00515691 -033,
, The ,!l.u~t Lotto jliCkP&lt;?.I. will Trotwood. · •
again- o'ftet Slf 'million f()f Wednes$150,000: 177-01589082-205.
day 's drawmg.
Columbus.
Here are Saturday night's Oh1o-- $1-00,000. 176-04174691 -186,
Lottery selectwns:
Columbus.
The Super Lotto numbers were 8,
$90,000:
174-00329474-009,
25, 26, 31,35 and 40
Loudonville
The Kicker was 457552.
$80,000: 171 -07145370-056.
In P1ck 3 Numbers, the winning Columbus.
number was 623.
$70,000: 167-05458987-071,
' In Ptck 4 Numbers, the winning Youngstown.
number was 1262.
$60,000: 177-02894496-044, WtiSales in Super Lotto totaled lowtck.
$2,842,198. Sales in the Kicker
$50,000. 172-07071726-079,
totaled $497,498.
Tol~do.
_
There were 73 Super Lotto tickets
$40,000· I18-05102990-019, Port
with ftve of the numbers, and each ts Clinton .
$30,000: 174-04345834-141,
worth $1,071. The 3,007 tickets
show1ng four of the numbers are each Euclid.
$20,000.
176-05935081 -157,
wonh $81.
' In Kick~r. no player had the exact Alexandna.
$1 0,000· 164-08171736-202,
six-digit number worth $100,000.
The SIX Kicker tickets showmg the Columbus.

4 killed in weekend accidents
By The Associated Preaa
· At least four people died in traffic accidents on Ohto roads th1s
weekend, the State Highway Patrol
said today
The patrol counts fatalities from 6
p.m . Fnday through m1dmght Sunday
The dead
SUNDAY
LISBON:._ Rebecca T. Perry. 63,
of Finleyvtlle. Pa., a passenger in a

The Daily Sentinel
, IUSPS 213-960)
Pubhabed every afternoon. Monday throuah
FridaJ, Ill Coun St . Pomeroy. Ob1o. by the
Ohio Volley Publishtng Co,.....y/Ganr&lt;tl C. .
Po....,y, Ohio 4l 769. Ph. 992-lll6 Second '
cluJ posta&amp;e pa~d 111 Pomeroy. Ohto
M•ber: The ,6.uooatcd Press, and the Otlio

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correctionl

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The Dally Sentinel. Ill Coun St. Pomeroy,
()ft;o 4l769

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NEPHI, Utah (AP)- Firefighters
were close to containing blazes that
had spread over more than 13,000
acres m central Utah, whtle crews
battled fires in four other western
states.
The fire along Cherry Creek m
Utah's'G1Ison Mountains was 80 pel'
cent contained Sunday night, satd
Ben HlJll. spokesman for the Bureau
of Lwfil Management. He sa1d full
containment was expected by today,
unless sb'ong winds fan the flames.
Tllousands of firefighters, meanwhile, were battling blazes in Cali fornia, Idaho, Colorado and Oregon,
according to the National Intera~ency Fire Center.
A lightning-sparked w1ldfire that
consumed more than 1,800 acres or
brush in Piru Gorge in Southern Cal•forn•a was 25 percent contained
Sunday.
But exb'emely rough terram hampered the more than 800 firefighters
who fought the blaze straddling the
Los Padres and Angeles National
Forests Five firefighters suffered
minor injuries, said U.S. Forest SerVICe spokeswoman Shawn Lawler.
Another wildfire that had burned
over 400 acres m the Angeles National Forest was 75 percent contained by
Sunday. Lawler said. The fire
prompted evacuatiOns of 200 people
1n 90 recreauonal cabms
Elsewhere:
• A 4,000-acre fire m western Colorado's Dmosaur Nallonal Park
threatened a lookout tower and sev- .
eral structures. Ftre crews expected to
have 11 wntained by Wednesday The
fire was bummg far from the monu1 ment's popular attractions and most
visitors were unaffected.
A fire outs1de the Black Canyon of
the Gunnison National Monument in
Montrose, Colo , had burned about
250 acres.
• A fire in southern Idaho had
burned 2,400 acres of grass and sage
by Sunday. Four small fires started by
a locomotive between Bo1se and
Mountain Home m southwestern Idaho burned about 1,600 acres before
fire crews contained them Sunday
evening.
• A fire m central Oregon had
burned 1.100 acres by Sunday.

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio dtrect hog pnces at selected
buymg pomts Monday, as provided
by the US. Department of Agriculture Market News.
Barrows and gtlls: fully 50 cents
htgher; demand moderate on a moderate movement.
U.S . 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 55.5057.50, few 55 00 and 58.00; plants
57.00-58.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 48 .5055.00.
Sows: steady
U.S . 1-3, 300-450 lbs. 42.0044.50; 450-500 lbs. 44.00-46.00;
500-650 lbs. 46.00-49.00, few 50.00.
Bom: 37.00-38.00.
Estimated receipts: 35,000.
Prices rrom The Producers
Liveslock Assoc:ialion:
Cattle: steady to 2.00 htgher.
Slaughter steers· chotec 59 0069.50; select 45.00-63.00
Slaughter heifers cho1ce 58.00,68 50, select 42.50-64 00
Cows. uneven, 1.00 lower to htgher; all cows 44 25 and down .
Bulls. steady to lower; all bulls
48.00 and down
Veal calves steady to lower,
chotec 130.00 and down
Sheep and lambs· steady to 7 50
htgher, chotec wools 80 00-116.50;
chotec cltps 87 50-116 50, feeder
lambs 95 00 and down; aged sheep
35 00 and down

car wh1ch colhded With a truck on
U S 62 m Columbiana County.
LEBANON - John L. Neeley,
50, of Lebanon, m a one-car acc1dent
on a Warren Counly road
SATURDAY
CINCINNATI - Ntc ole D Bellamy, 19, of Batav1a, a pedestnan
struck by a car on Interstate 27-5 m
Hamilton County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
Holzer Medical Center
MACEDONIA - Jenmfer J. EarDischarges
July 12 - Mrs.
le, 24, of Ravenna, m a one-car crash
Mtke
McClaskey
and daughter,
on a Macedonia ctty street.
Joshua Crabtree, Su~an Noll. Mrs
Chad Marquts and daughter, K•mberly Hatton. Ellswonh Salm?ns,
Chester Lemley, D1ana Gtll, Shelby
Am Ele Power .......................42'1.
Sctor, Christy Lavender, Harold HarAkzo ,, ......., ... ,...................... ,56}
rison, Nancy Coleman .
Aahland 011 ................. ,..,...... 371.
Discharges July 13 - Robert
AT&amp;T ................... ,................. 57'1.
Taylor,
LouiSe Farmer, Mary BrumBank One ............,................. 32'.1
Mrs.
Jeffrey Copley and
field,
Bob Evans .....................,...... 14'.o
daught.er, Zeldon West
Borg-Warner ....,....................38\
Champion lnd ....................... 17'J.
Birth - Mr and Mrs Denms
Charming Shop ......................8'.1
Robinson, daughter, Pomeroy.
City Holding ............................ 22
Discharges July 14- Mrs. DenFederal Mogul ............. ,....,....16'1.
nis
Robinson and daughter, Geneva
Gannett .................................87'4
Brewster.
,
Goodyear ,., ................... ,.......44'1.
{Published with permission)
K-mert ..................................10'4
Landa End ...........,..........,...... 20\
,Umlled Inc .......,...... ,....,........18r
Ohio Valley BanL...............33 ~
OM Vallly ................... , ... ,., .....34
Peoples Bancorp, .... ,.,,.......21 '!.
Pram Flnl .......... ,.............,.,...,13'!.
Rockwell ..................... .,, ...: ..51\
Royal Dutch/Shill ........,..... 153\
Shoney'a .................................&amp;'!.
Star Bank ..............................6t4
Wendy' a ..,....................,........18'1.
Worthlngton .......................,...20

Hospital news

Stocks

-·-·-

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Aclvttt
of Galllpolll,

PROJECT COMPLETED - The Middleport
boater parking project has been completed and
Ia now available for use by local boaters. The
project, completed by The Shelly Co.,
Thornville, Is part of a two-phase renovation

New CSU
trustees
to tackle
problems
COLUMBUS (AP) - Trustees
nommated to oversee Central State
Umversity have several obstacles to
overcome, mcludmg a $6 million
debt , an estimated $71 m1llion m
needed renovatiOns and a spec1a:
audn.
But they remain opllmtsllc about
the future of Oh1o's only state-suppaned, historically black untversny.
The previOus trustees res1gned at
the request of Gov. George
Vomovich, who so far has nommated stx new trustees to the nine-member board. The nommations are subJect to the state Senate's approval
The 2,300-student sc hoo l m
Wtlberforce, 20 m•les east of Dayton.
has laid off teachers wh1le the state
has closed us ntne dormlloncs
because of structural and safety VIOlations
Fredenck L Ranster Ill satd h1s
status as a Central S{ate graduate
played the btggest role 1n hts nominatiOn The black Democrat ts a
Columbus lawyer ~nd law dtrector
for the v1llage of Urbancrest, about
SIX m1les from the state capital.
" As an alumnus, I th1nk th1s 1&lt;
probably the highest serv1cc I can
g1ve back to the ·umvcrs1ty," he satd
" In thts early stage tn my tenure as
a trustee . my focus will be on· 'What
arc we gmng to do about the month
of September?'"
Claire E Freeman sa1d her work
m tum~ng around the troubled Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housmg Authority prepared her for Cenb'al State. Th&lt;Y
black Republican said she wasn 't
about to tum down Vomovich 's offer.
"When Gov Vomovich calls you
and personally asks you to help turn
something around that means as
much as a htsloncally black untvcrSity, there really ts no other answer
than 'Of course.'" the Lakewood resident satd.
·
The nom~nees sa1d thetr new •dcas
Will benefit the school
" I thmk 1t's good to loo~ at an old
problem ,w1th the fresh eyes of people who are not entrenched in the
management of •colleges," Freeman
satd.
Paul E. Dullon, a member of the
Ohto Board of Regents and a
Youngstown State Un1versny trustee.
agreed
"You have a clean slate, a fresh
start wnh fresh 1deas There IS no
tnslt!Ultonal memory. you're not burdened by the practices of the past."
the whue Democrat sa1d
Montgomery County Commtsswncr Vtckt D. Pcgg sa1d that when
Vomov1ch asked her to JOin the
board, she hes1tated
"I w1ll admit that I had to swallow
hard. and I dtd thmk about II for some
t1mc," sa1d Pegg, a wh1te Republican
In the end, she was swayed by
Vomov1ch's example.
"The governor clearly has a commttmentto Central State, and he conveyed that to me. I thmk u's a mtsSIOI\ well worth accompllshmg, .. she
sa1d
Pegg thmks she got the job
because of her fiscal conse rvallsm
and her focus on fam1ly 1ssues as a
county commtsstoner.

project at the Middleport levee, A 3D-foot aluminum dock will also be Installed later this
summer near the levee, according to Mayor
Dewey Horton,

l~;»eath Notices I .'I
I
'

David Dewhurst

'

Dav1d Dewhurst, 68 , Letart, WVa., dted Sunday, Jul y 14, 1996
Arrangements w1ll be announced by the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
WVa.

Fred B. Sayre

I :

Fred B. Sayre, 87, Rac1ne, dted Monday. July 15, 1996 at hts res1dence,
followmg an extended •II ness.
.
Arrange':!lents Will be announced by the Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Dole's flagging campaign
worries GOP governors·
By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
FAJARDO. l_'uerto R1co - Welfare, education and en me are the ofli ctaltoptcs of th1s summer's National Governors Assoctatton meeting,
but among ..Republicans on hand
there ts another prcss mg concern
Bob Dole's stru ggling prcstdenttal
campa•gn
A little more than a month ago,
when Dole res1gned I rom the Senate
to campa1gn fullt•me most of the 31
.Republican go vernors rushed to
praiSe htm and predict the dramatic
move would free him to mount a
more foc used campa1gn
But as they gathered 1n Puerto
Rtco over the weekend, mo~ t ol the
GOP governors conceded Dole had
lmle to show for h1s cffons smce quttltng the Senate . Whtle h1s standing
has t1cked up 1n some tradllt onally
Republican states , Prestc,!ent Clmton
has mamtamed a comfortable lead 1n
national polls and m most ol the btg
states considered cnt1cal to Dole's
comeback hopes.
Many of the governors shrugged
off the polls wtth stones of thetr own
political comebacks " lthmk tits sttll
early enou gh to tum thmgs around ...
satd Rhode Island Gov. Ltncoln
Almond " Peopl e don't pay much
attention over the summer "
But there was obvtous frustratton
and concern among the Republican
leaders that Dole has not mounted
any sustamed locus on economtc
tssues and has tnstead been tangled tn
dtstracung, 11 not damag~n g, controverstes over the Republican plat form' s aburtiiJn language, whether
lo bai.:C O IS t~tldJ&lt;.:ti\'C , ~md h1 s d CL: ISHnl

nol -lo anend the recent NatiOnal
Assoctalton lor the Adv ancement of
Colored People meeti ng
"Too much ttmc on the st lly
1
ISsues," satd Alm ond
.
" I thtnk the cantpatgn needs to
focus on 1ssucs that arc tmportantto
voters. stanmg wtth the economy and
JObs." satd Iowa Gov Terry Brans tad
Dole ISwell liked among the gov ernors, and while offer1ng advJLC or
UltiCISm , most wen: t:arcfulto refer

to " the campatgn' ' as opposed to
Dole personally Sull . 11 was clear
many beltevcd he has not shown the
dtsctpltnc and focus as a cand idate
tltat they thtnk IS necessary 10 overcome Cli nton's lead
Oh1 0 Gov George Vomov tch.
sometimes menttoned as a prospect
for the GOP vtce prcstdcnttal nom tnalton. satd Do le has yet to answer
the fundament al question of any
prcstdent•al elec llon " Why am I run-

nmg and what am I gomg to do tf I
am prestdent '"
" If he docs that. he wtll he clccled." Vomov1 ch smd " If he doesn't he
wt lllosc It ts th at stmple "
He and several other governors
sa1d Dole was takmg a mcttculous
approach to craftmg an econom1c
agenda because he IS commtlled to
cuttin g taxes but also to kccpmg true
to h1s decades- long commitment to
balancmg the budget
"He ts a lillie reluctant on mmc ol
the substantive thmgs and the tssucs
because they are ,;ull draftmg the
message." Vomovtch satd
None of the Rcpubltcan govern ors
would say so publi cly. but rnvat ely
many sa1d thai after 35 years tn Congress and two pnor prcstdcnttal runs.
Dole should be ahlc to do a hcner JOb
laymg oul hts rationale lor runnmg
Several also compla tned that he was·
st1lltrymg to settle un an econom1c
plan w1th JUSt a month to go belore
the Republican convention
When asked to chart a course lot
a Dole comeback, several Republican
igovcmors talked not of any maJor
Dole poltcy lntlt altvc hut of the
Whitewater and FBIItles controverSies takmg a poltttcaltoll on Clinton
"The elccllon wtll turn on the
ISsue of character Dole has 11 and
Citntun doesn't," sa td Tennessee
Gov Don Sundqutst Eve n tl Dole
were to craft a compcllmg ecunonuc
plan. Sundquist sa1d II would be hard
to compete wtth Clmt on "hecause the
Whtlc House co-opts every tssuc I
have to believe the Amcncan people
arc go1ng to eve ntually sec throu gh

I

I

It ..

Ltkewtsc , Alll\ond noted that
"more olten than not, the mcumbent
loses more than the chal lenger wms. ·•

But Branstad satd 11 was luoi1Sh to
count on a Clmton co llapse " I do
thmk Clmton IS ktnd ol on a sli ppery
slope, " he smd " But Dole has got to
spe lr out hts own postltve vt&gt;ton for
the future "
Several governors s.ud the media
were rartly to blame for Do)e 's
dtlcmma. suggesttng there was too
much focus on tssucs ltkc aborti on
and the tobacco controversy

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�Sports

The Daily SentiJ!~l
Monday, July 15, 1996

'

Four HRs help Reds beat Pirates 7-6

TRAFFIC JAM - The Cincinnati Reds' Barry Larkin sprints
between teammate Reggie Sanders and Pittsburgh pitcher Paul Wagner to score on a passed ball In the fifth Inning of Sunday's National League contest in Cincinnati, where the Reds won 7-ti. Wagner
was at the plate trying to catch the throw from catcher Jason
Kendall, while Sanders was batting. ~

un.: u1t

Team owner Robert Yates satd
lrv.m came to hmt and asked, "Arc
you gomg to fire me'!''
" I s:ud . 'Erme, I don't have any
pl."" to fire you . I want to get you
hack to where we got you, and that's
h,1ck to

w1nilmg

races '"

And thai 's where Ernte lrvan ts
today
The popular dnvcr made 11 all the
way from a ncar-fatal crash almost
two years ago and won the lilfy
Lube 300 Sunday at I he New Hampshire lntcrnattonal Speedway It was
hiS lnst v1ctory Since May 1994
"Unlil you wm , you never know
II you're gomg to do 11 agam." lrvan
sa1d " Mayhc thiS Will shut them
up ." he s:ud of those who doubted
h1s return to the top

Hts
crew
ch1cf,
Larry
McReynolds. also showed hts
annoyance w1th the repeated ques11 oi S

" Hope ful ly, Ern1c's comeback 1s
over.. , he sa1d

~

Yates acknowledged "people
"'ere startmg to quest1on us. and I

another run moved me even more.
He tned \O be maJOr league about it,
but he was gnnnmg from ear to car."
"It really dtdn't htt me unttl I got
to the bench," Perez sa~ d. "Guys
were congratulaung me, and I said,
'Hey. I JUSt htl one out of the park'

.

The homer made It 7-4 and turned
out to be tmportant when Mark
Johnson htt a two-run homer off Jeff
Shaw an mning later. But Jeff Brantley pitched a perfect ninth for his
24th save
./
The Pnates have lost six of eight
tn large part because of thetr rotation.
whtch was overhauled· last weekend
Ptttsburgh's starters ;ue 3-8 with a
7.39 ERA smce June 30.
Paul Wagner (4-7) extended the
slump. The right-hander gave up five
runs on stx htts m 4 2/3 mnmgs,
mcludmg Burba's first homer m 85
career at-bats and Sanders' two-run
homer tn the th1rd for a 3-0 lead .
Wagner IS 1-7 with a 6 75 ERAm
his last II starts, but carne away from
th1s one encouraged He threw the
ball much harder in hJS second start
since commg back from a sore arm
"He was all nght," manager J1m
Leyland satd. "I thmk he's perfect-.
ly fine . lthmk he broke some adhe-

Giants almost no-hit Dodgers in 6-0 win
•

probably had a queslton or two "
But lrvan and hJS team answered
them all Sunday by beaung teammate Dale Jarrett by 5.7 seconds. He
took the lead on the 278th lap after
Dale Earnhardt and Ken Schrader
had to pillar gas lrvan last pitted on
lap 244.
lrvan was gtven little chance for
surv1val alter he crashed at M1ch1gan
on Aug . 20, 1994. But he was out of
the hosp1tal several weeks later and.
after s1ttmg out 14 months, returned
for the final three races last year.
He appeared on the road back th1s
year w1th e1ght finishes m the top 10,
mcludmg a second. He was fifth the
past two weeks But he sttll had not
won
Now that he has. he 1mmedtately
turned h1s attenuon to the Wmston
Cup potnt !tile agam He had trailed
Earnhardt by 27 pomts m 1994
before the crash
" I stJII haven 't won the championship yet," he sa1d . "A human
hemg IS a grce~y person . From the
ltme I started th1nk111g about commg
hack, I wanted to race and w1n races.
"A lot of people say, 'Why aren ' t
you satiSfied n ght now because
you're able to racc' 1 Youjust haven ' t
won a race.'

,(See NASCAR on Page 5)

NL standings
t:;~stun UIVI\ ton

AL standings

Iwn

,..., "

lo:a"ltrn l&gt;it&gt;1~um

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291

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Ctnlral llu•1s.on
II
U I VII AND
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Saturday's S('CJres
IHI 1\i,·w Yml. l IJ .th rlll,h'

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Nt' ~&lt;o.

I ll ,tlltllltlrt' 'i

L ,th t P IIItil (J Sc.lllll' ..
n ,~ t nn 10 IA-trt&gt;lt c;;

l'h ll, ,~,, 1 K . 1n ~ "

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16

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CINC I~NA II

~17

JJ

JO

Pill \l"-uq!l•

II

By The Associated Press
Nothing Wtlliam VanLandtngham has done this season would
make people forget that he has the
longest name 10 baseball htstory.
On Sunday. he came wtthin s1x
outs of bemg known for another rea-

son .
VanLandmgham . whose 6.22
ERA entenng the game was the third
worst m the Nallonal League , took a
no-httter mto the etghth mmng
before allowing consecutive smgles
m the San Franctsco Giants' 6-0 VICtory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
After a second-mnmg walk, VanLandmgham (5-9) rellred 16 stratght
batters before Raul Mondest lined
h1s f~rst puch of the etghth cleanly
mto left field
"Los1ng the no-h1tter ts no btg
deal I waS JUSt glad I pllched well,"
sa1d VanLandmgham, who won fer
the f~rst lime after two losses and.
four no-deCISIOns stnce June 3. "I've
been struggling the whole year, and
11 was good to pllch a good game for
once· ·
M1ke Blowers followed With a
smgle and VanLandmgham needed
rehef help to close out the e1ghth
VanLandmgham, who turns 26 on
Tuesday. struck out three and walked
two m 7 2/3 mmngs m front of
42.862 at Dodger Stadtum. H1s ERA

l11' Allfl'k'
S.1n Otq!.o

-l'J
41'!

~(\ ~

7

timor&lt;' 77 Buhrwr SL::urk 76

'I

lil TS Mo V.tughn Bo slo n, 1 1~
I nftu n ( U VII AND 121 Molitor
MrnnL'MJI,t 121 R Alornar llalt•nmrc
1 ~ 0 Krwhl.iu Lh Mrnn L·~ ut,l 119 I
ll wm. t' ( hl l,tj!t' lit. I RuJngut'l
l o,.,, 114
I&gt;OUIIll S I M•• rttul'l St.·.mlt- .&amp; I
A k ...lllj! lll'l s•..•IIIL' 12 I Rndrtj!U~/
ro ..!~ 21) rt. llllhl 0 .u i!I J 2"i (urJw•'il
Mmrrutll.! 2' (,u:cr 1.- l .l' 1J I ol thlll

Ctd••r ,,1.,
S.m I r II ~&lt;"~"

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l'l.l VEI.AND 111 M•nn c~.u., I I
It'\,ts K 0.1kl,mJ I

Sunday 's scorrs
B n• llln tl Dl'lrrtll J

Nl'W Yt1rk 4 B.tlllmurl' ,l
Mlllncst•t;l ~ {'LfVII.AN[) .j
L'hl l.lj:ll 1 t\,m,,L, Citl ~

( 1.• u .11l\l ., r~·'·•~ 1
S&lt;'.tlll\ M C.r lil rt rtU.l n
I ornnlu 1 Mtlw.IULL'l.' "it 10)

'i

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7

Saturday's scores
Huusltlfl at New Ynrk ppJ r 1111

St Luuu 10, C ht l. t ~ll 'i
All.mt,, I flunJ .t 0
C'INCINNATI I l 'lll s bu r ~ h (I
l' lul.ttlclphtJ 6 Montrt:.tl ~
Ctllnr.tJ,, II S.m Ott:}.!u 0
S m I ranl '""u 7 Lt•S 1\nj.!d •~ 0

Toni~ht 's 2•mes
Ynri. ( ~knd tl/,1 I 41 .11 Bu, ltlll
! W . t~l'ltdd 'i-'H 7 n~ p n1
f uron tn tFienL·r 0 01 .1t B .rlllnwr~·
( l\rtHia1 -ll 7 \&lt;liprn
NL' II.

l&gt;l'rro tf ISaJ!CI I JJ

11 M•lw .t u~ t"c:"

r nl

('lu,ap1 ( ~•t. Ca.s kd l '&gt; -l) .11
! AIJrL-d 1 7) H O"i p m

Sunday's scor~s
IJH HliU IIon 7 ~ •• ,., Ynr~ Ci N,. ...,.
Y11rl. 10 Ht•uslon ~
All.mt.t I 'i I lnnd.t I 0
Mo111rc.tl ~ Jllul.rJdplu.r 1
CINCINNA II 7 l'tl hhur~h to
Si l.t•UI\ 7 0Ul.ll!tl (\
C" l"r.u.Ju 1'1 S,ut Ot&lt;~·' 4
S.m l r.tnl r ~'IP b I tb An)!d&lt;~ 0
Tuni~~:ht's

CLEVELAND ( fl var~t \.~) .11
KansouCr ty(Putth0- 11 HO'ip m
C;~hlo rn la {Han t.:OL k 4- 1) Jt Texas
tWtll 7·Kl. K 1~ p nl"
Sl"allk: (Wok'ou ~·7) a1 OakiJnd tTd!! hL'dcr Q.()), JO 0~ p ffi

Tuesday's games
:oic:,,ulc tHnch~oci. 8-.l) at OaL:IanJ
tChownard 1-2). ll ;'i p m
Nl'll. York ( Kt' y 6· 61 at Boslo n
( Cit!mc n ~ ~ .MJ 7 0~ p m
l 111\IHIO (G uzman M-6) at 8 ahr more
(Mu\~tn.t 11-6), 7 l"i pIll
l.k:Hntl 1~ Wtlhams 2-ttJ at Mil'lllaukt'(!D Amt .. o 1· 11 II'O"irm
(ht&lt;.tj!ll (Aiv:un IO·:'il at M r nnc ~u1 a
t K .t d ~c: 'Fi -l i i K O"i p m
('LfVELAND ( M cOow~ ll 7-b) a l
K.m ~-:1~ C1ty (Haney K-61 XO"i p m
C.dil nr n• a IAbbou 1- 11 ) at Ten~
t01ner 7-1) 8 1'ipm

rlt•c•J,, rR.tpp

4 II ! 7 O'i p m
St I t' tll \ ( M t~ ri! .lll 1 q .11 CINtiN
NflfiiS.tl~dJ-1 ~~ 7 \'ipm
M 11 ntrt· al IRu..-tt:r 'i til .11 AIL1nt .1
(MtJJ u.\'l ttl7 .&amp;0pm
Plul.l~klpht.l iSprtni!(f 1 1'1 ) al N~w

Yorli (W1I :wn

~ - 'i l

Pm ~b urgh
MJn lk"~uta

games

tl t •u ~ tt'n ( W.tll b- 1) .tt

7 .Wpm
{MI \t" ll I -' 1 a! Cht~aF-o

(Ct\ll lln2- 11) 80'ipm
San Fr:Uk: IS~O IBOOrJI.." 'ts I · I 1ar Col ·
orado (8mkr 0.11 9 O'i r m
San D1ci!o (Ashby 8 - ~1 :11 Los An-'~ ·
lei (Asltli.'Ul -'· 71 10 0~ p m

TuesdMy's pmts
MontrcaiiPau crn lt -7) :11 Allanca
((.ilavmt l(). 'i), I 10 p m
Plllsburgh (Ntnglt I 0·41 Ql Chr\aEo
(NavllfTO 7·8}, 2 20 J1 m.
San Dte&amp;o (Ham1 hon 10-4! at Los
Anaeles tR MiVttnez 7- ~I . 4:m r m
Houston (Dnbek 4 -7) :.t Fl&lt;l rtd :.
I Burket I 6-Sl. 1 O"i p m_
S1' Louts (0sbornt K-"il ar CINCINNATI (Smiley H·8l 7 l'i r m
Ph1ladtlpht a (S.: hill •ng l- l ) ;n N..-w
Yon (&gt;'1 Clari&lt;O-b) HO p m
San frafi('IKO (M l..ttlt'f "· "I ar Col

or:xkl (Frt't'man 6-~1. 9 0~ p m

AL leaders

HAn lNG Kn&lt;1bl .tud1 M•nnt'~ otl
IM H. Ah1mar U.lltlnHl tL' l 'i 2 F
Owm.t\ ChJl .t(!.o 1.&amp; 11 St:tll~r Mtlwau
~l' l' l4"i A Rudul!Ul' l , Sc.ntk 144
M'v w~hn R u~tn o 14 1 i-. M.1rtmcz
S. .• nl, \.If)
•
RUNS r Mantnl'l S,·,,nll' H1
IIl ii,• f'll VLLAND 7.&amp; Ph•lllfl~ Chili!
):!" 1"
A
Rndnj!Ul'l Sc.111lo• 71
t\noh l,tu dt MlniiL'Ml t,t 72 R Alom,u
ll.lltmwrc 71 Mn \l,tu j!hn. Dn~ rnn 71)
RIU I· lhnrn.t \ C hi l.t~ u 1\'i Mt•
V,lu j!hn IJn\lon K-1 H~llc , C I.I·V t l i\NIJ 1(1 (, V.uij!llll MtiW,iUh'c 71J
I M.ulllll'f Sc.111k 71! R l'.• lrnc nt• B.tl

-'.JO

City I

l •lrllnh• I Ci Mrlw.ruln• 7

! Buno 6- IOt K0'1

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10
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A1l.m11

fell to 5.18.
VanLandmgham 's recent htstory
wouldn't suggest he was capable of
throwmg a no-h1tter. Though he
entered the season wtth.a 14-5 career
mark. he allowed 15 earned runs m '
12 2/3 mmngs m h1s previous three
starts th1s season.
"My mechamcs had been pretty
temble the last couple of games and
I've been workmg on them m the
bullpdn. " he sa1d.
The Giants, who won for only the
fourth lime m 21 )!ames, haven 't had
a no-httter smce John Montefusco
did so m 1976 m Ailanta. VanLandmgham almost threw a no-hJtter
July 17, 1994, but Lenny Webster
doubled w1th one out in the ctghth m
Montreal.
"We weren't really hlllmg too
many balls hard off him the "hole
game, " Blowers sa1d. "But I've
been 10 a couple of no-httters and I
JUSt felt hke somebody was going to
get a hll tn there somewhere "
Los Angeles was shut out for the
second lime m a row. and the NL
West leaders have gone 21 eonsecutJve mnmgs wuhout a run.
Chan Ho Park (5 -3 ). who started
1m place of an athng Tom CandtottJ,
allowed four run' tn f1ve-plus
mnmgs .
In other NL games Sunday.

CI.LVH AND ~"
• I RIP! L'i Knnhl.md1 Mml'k.'ml,r 9
Vm.t Mil~&lt;o. ,tu~ cl' fl Jm.- V.th:nttn Md
w.•ul n (l Gu11lcn ( h l&lt;,l)!ll 11 C.lrlt'l
l nrt1111 n Ci l 1nllt• M•lwiukclo' -1 Pruk
D.-n on -l !hom.- CLI Vl.l AND .&amp;
Ctlf,j SL'.illk"
HOMf RUNS llr.rJ y Antk: r~nn B.tl
II mort• II Re li c Cll Vl LAND 'H
1\oh(, wtrl' O.tk l.1nJ I() Mr1 V.t u~ho
Hrnt11 0 2K C.tn sntt Bnstnn 27 G
V,m~hn MIIYo,tuk.~-c ln :-ipra~ul! luron
'" 2-1 ( mtky s\'olllk 2"
•
SlOI EN IMSLS Lultuu C LLVL ·
!.AND 4 1 I GnodwiH 1\..m~.L' Cuy 11)
Nu. tut fort ui t ~&gt; 2~ VtZt.jucl C l EVr
lA ND 21 I. J, t,tdt Mtlw ,tukct• I M
Kntthl .tu t h M1nrtc ~ota 17 M ~ Lc m tttL'

Tt''•'' lh
!'ITC HING ! II J L't i\1\!0s) l' .n hk
I, '·•~ 12 ~ H'i7 -1 Ci7 N,!J:Y C l EVI
I ANO I I 2 M-lh l 62 B Wdh s.;,,,
11&lt; 10 1 Ill I 1"1 Pcllillt." N.-w Yt•rk
IJ -1 171'1 I t-.7 Boslw!' C.illtnmt.l 10-1
7t-tY 4 21 Md.&gt;nn.tld Mllwault ~c 1) 11
7'i0 l IJ() Hlldll:r~~:k Sc,tlllc K- 1 721

RBI Brdu.•uc l'ulnr.tJu H"i Rurh
Colnrad11 7H B.t!!w~ll Hmr ~ ton 77
Gal.rrr.tga Cnl1•r.tdn 77 M\G ull AI
l,tnta n ClupJl(r Jonc~ 1\ll.mt.t 71 H
Rodrt(!.UCl , Mnnuc.tl 71
HITS L J n hn ~urt New Yo1~ 127
Bu,:lu: llc Cnlnr.tJu 124 GruJlldanclo.
Monrr~al 121 IJurb Cttlur,tJn 122 lur
l~y

II.&amp; Gn~~um Atl.ml.,
fl t.tlt.l ltts An~clu II 2 L'.l•tdl.t
Color .tdn II Z

111

DOUBLI: S l'mlcy S.m Dlc).!o 2K
Montreal 27 B t~wdl How. tou
2h Hurk s lolur.tdt~ 20 H Rllllfi):.Ul'l
Mnnlrc.tl 2'1 C.t~llll,r Cnlur,u..ln 2 ~ IJ
lkll HI&gt;U~Itill 2Ci
TRIPLES I }i&gt;hn ~un Nn.,. Yor~ 1.&amp;
Gm~om Atl,u\1,1 7, hnky, S.111 Utc~o 7
Mur.tnt.hm Plul tJclldU .I "i UcSiud~l s
Lus Anl!cb IIi Vlll.llllll NL'W Yorl. "i
1.\.'VI \11 Whlll' llnntl,! 'i
HOMI RUNS Stt, ,t u~~ ~· '!!" 1K
ShcllrciJ llr ,nJa !ft tJI ,tll.t I'" An~ l'­
lo 2Ci H H.ntl o ~ ue/ Munuc.tl 111
Kk '.ko All.ml,! 24 Bu r l. ~ { ulnr .tJn H
Botu.l ~ S.111 I r . mu~~~~ 1"
S lOll N HAS IS I Y •U II J! Cu i
or.tdu 12 I. J u hu ~o n N~w Vorl I I
IJL·S hJdJ , Lo1 Art).!dn l() M l R .IL'
Chn·•!!u 27 R HcnJL'IIIln S.m D•c!!u
24 L&lt;llktn liNCINNA II 11 tJ .11c llctl
l;,msm~

Wllh 2()

rllCHING (II t.lcu ~ wnq Sm11ltt
All,mt .l l'li ol 7tW 2 % G.uJn~r S.m
Fr.tnll\~ n )( I 72'1 171 H.tmilwn S,tn
Drq u 10-4 71.&amp; 4h1 Nc.tF,Ic Put ~­
hurgh 10.4 714 101) Rcyot)IJs Uuustnn II 'i f!IO 160 Rur Cnlor.JJn I I
11 fl)(7 ~ fl' I V,tldc ~ 1.. •~ An~dcs 10"i M7 1 Ill Gl.tvruc Atl.mt.l. IU 'i M7
2 ()()
STRII\.LOUTS Smt•IIJ: Atl.tm:t 1'1'1
Nnmu Lm Anj!Cic\ 141 K1k: Ht'ltl)fun
11 2 P J Marttncl . M nntr~a l 121J
Rt• ynolth Huush•n 124 l , IH L'f'll Mnnlrc·•1 II M Stnlllcmyn: S1 Lu ut~ II~
'\AVES J Br.. otlcy CINCINNA Tl
H Tti\IJ Wurrcll l..m Anj!t:k ~ . 21 801 ·
r."tho,;n Phl latllo'lphl.t. 21 Wnh&amp;cr" All&lt;.~nl . t
1'.1 Fr.trt.:o New York, 1'1 . Hnlhnm. San
OtcF.n. I K Ncn Flnr1t.la IM

n•

Sl RIKEours Ckmcn \ Bns ron
I_... l'tnk y l'.1ltluuu a 12l A ~rn:~n
dc.r: C h'" ·' ~~~ 121. Mu s~r r1.1 Bahtmnr.:
Ill Gu1nun Tor o nt o II 0 Appt..-r
Kansas Cuy . 109, K Hrll T.:.1..L~ 102

s ~ n Utt:~t\

Transactions

".

Baseball
Amtrlc•n Leeau~

SAVES Wcucland . New York . ll
K Hernand ez . O u .: ago 28. Me sa
CLEVELAND. 2-1 Pcrcr val Ca hlornm
21. H~OII('ITUIO rc.'lttlS 21' Momgomcry
Kan)nl Cuy 18 R Mycn 8.1hunorc, IH

RHP Ru,;h Montdcune on lhe 1~ -d.ay dt5·
able!~ l111 Recalled RHP Shad WrlliamJ
frnm Vancouver of I he P:.u(u: Coal!

NL leaders

ll.'rms wnh OF Paul Farrcs on a mmor-

CALIFO RNIA ANGElS Phu:ed

Lea~uc

CLEVELAND INDIANS Air«d 1o
leaJI!C

BATTING P.aua. l os An,:eles
159 E Youn(l Colorado. l4:'i Gr~ e .
C'tllcogo \4~ . Burks Colorodo '-'~ - T
Gwynn San Olel!n. lIM . BIL'htllt Col·
on do 1 ll Grudllelanck Mon trea l

111

Burk ~

Co l n r:~d u.

Kl
81 .: he11 e , Colura d&lt;J 76 Ftnlt"y , San
Diego, 72 CpJonn, Atlanta, 69. Bagwell.
Hou11on ~ - Btt;JIO, HouSion 69 . Bonds ,
San Fratk'JK'O, 69
RUN S

~onlroct

DEI'ROIT TIGERS Placed INF Alan
Trummell on the I '~ ·d11 y d1ubled lui
rrfroocnve 10 July () R«aUed SS Faustu
Cruz and RHP Jeff McCurry rrom Toiedu
o( lhc lnltmlllonal Lcncuc.

Atlanta outslugged Flunda 15- 10. St.
Louts ntppcd the Chtcago Cubs 7-6.
Colorado doubled San D1cgo 8-4,
Houston ~cat the New York Mets 75 m II mntng~ m the first game of a
doubleheader before the Mets won
the second game 10-3. and Montreal topped Phtladelphta 5-2
Braves 15, Marlins 10
Atlanta needed f1 ve runs m the
bottom of the etghth to w1n after
blow1ng leads of 8-3 and 10-6
Ryan Klesko. who had gone 71
at-hats wnhout a home run, hll a pa1r
ol homers and drove m s1x runs as
the Braves won for the fifth lime tn
s1x games.
MarquiS Gnssom had four h1ts
and scored lirur runs for Atlanta Jeff
Comnc homer~d twtcc and drove m
four runs for Flonda
The score was lied at 10 1n the
c1ghth when Gnssom Singled off
Yorkts Perez (2-31. A bases-loaded
walk by Javy Lopez . from Terry
Mathews put the Braves ahead. Jcrmatnc Dye had an RBI grounder and
Klcsko htt hJS 24th home run.
.. I wouldn't say I'm hack m the
groove I've still got a Jot of thmgs
to du," Klesko sa1d .
· Greg McMtchael (4-1) won
despHe allowmg three runs"' I 1/J
mnmgs
Cardinals 7, Cubs 6
After losing the senes opener, St.
Louts outscored )lost Ch1cago 30-14
m wtnnmg ,hrce stratght to take a
one-game lead over Houston for first
place 1n the NL Central
Bnan Jordan stnglcd four t1mes
and drove m two runs. g1vmg h1m 32
RBis 111 hJS last 18 games .
"I don ' t watch my stats, honest,"
satd Jordan , who ts battmg an NLhlgh 443 w1th runners m sconng
posllton
Alan Benes (9-5) won dcspne
allowmg four runs Ill five shaky
mn·mgs

Sammy Sosa hll his lcague-leadmg 28th homer. but Terry Adams' (2J) couldn't hold a 4-3 lead. Adams
allowed· ftvc runs in I 1/3 mnmgs
Rockies 8, Padres 4
Ho•t Colorado tratlcd m each of
' 1ts last four games but still earned the
first four-game sweep m the history
of the Rocktes-San Otego series
Vmny Castilla hu h1s fourth
homer m four games and ElliS Burks
homered and stole home as Colorado
won lis f1fth stratght .
Armando Reynoso (5-6) earned
hJS &lt;econd wm m h1s last nine starts
and his first smce June 15.
Fernando Valenzuela (5-7)
allowed five runs in 4 2/3 innings.
Astros 7, Mets 5 (II)
Mets 10, Astros 3
Dernck May celehratcd hts 2Kth
birthday by htttmg two home runs in
the first game at New York But
Houston needed Jeff Bagwell's goahead homer in the II th inmng off
Dave Mllckt (4-4) to wm the first
game
Xavter Hernandct. ( 1-4) struck
out four m two httlcss innmgs.
In the second game. Pete Harnisch won hts first game smce June
I and Edgardo Altnnzo drove 10
three runs as the Mets gamed a spilt
Harmsch (5-6) allowed three runs
m 6 2/3 innmgs for his ftrst vtctory
1n etght starts
Mtke Hampton (6-6) allowed SIX
runs m the ftrst three mnmgs.
EKpos S. Phillies 2
Sherman Obando hit two home
runs for the first lime in his career as
host Montreal salvaged the linalc of
the lour-game series.
M1ke Williams (3: 7) allowed
Mtke Lansmg's uebreaking single m
the seventh mnmg that put the Expos
ahead 3-2
T1m Scott {3 -4) won despite
allowmg a run-tymg single to Mickey Morandm1 m the sevcntti.

ONE
LESS

THING
FOR YOU

• TO
JuGGLE
You've got a lot on your mrnd . You're building
your world and your Insurance needs are
real. But you don't need to add thts worry
to your list .
Talk to your independent agent . Insist on longterm experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen. Just do this one thing,
end leeve th•juggling !let to us.

Yow lndeperule111 Apnu
Se,..,;,., Me;,. County Sinee 1868

Do. . . OiWs Mlh• Mlsser

111 Second Sl

1•--•

812-3381

®

rep&lt;eaentlng the

The Ohio Casualty Group

• ., ...._

~Twins hand Indians 5-4 loss
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - With
• Kirby Puckett now retired, Paul
Molitor is the obvious choice to
become the leader of the Twins and
the next hero for Mmnesota fans.
After all , Molitor is from nearby
St. Paul, ts a former World Senes
MVP and is just 90 hits shy of No.
3,000.
But Molitor, who htt a solo home
run with one out m the ninth innmg
Sunday to give the Twins a 5-4 win
over Cleveland, satd he wants hts
friend Puckett to retain that status for
as long as possible.
"Let's just let that nde," sa1d the
soft-spoken Molitor, whose seventh
homer of the year snapped the
Twins' five-game losmg streak.
"K1rby, he stands on h1s own. He
deserves to maintain that for as long
as he can I'm not go10g to try to be
somebody I'm not."
Mohtor's homer off Enc Plunk
(2-1) snapped the lnd1ans' fourgame winnmg streak It also prevented the lndtans from sweepmg a
four-game senes tor the first time at
the Metrodome
Mohtor's homer, on a 3-2 count,
jli!i1 cleared the 23-foot-hlgh plastic
barrier in right field.

"I've been trying for 13 years to
hit one over that bag," said Mohtor,
whO homered to the opposite field.
"It was a fastball , up a little and
outs1de," satd Plunk , who had
pitched a perfect e1ghth 10nmg. "It
doesn't take a whole lot of pop to get
11 out of here."
Eddte Guardado (5-3) ptJched a
1-2-3 ntnth for the w10 afier Dan
Naulty had p1tched hitless ball for I
2/3 mnmgs m rcl1ef of Frank
Rodnguez.
Mark Carreon , acquired by
Cleveland dunng the All-Star break
m atrade that sent pitcher ltm Poole
to San Franctsco, hll a two-run
homer off Rudnguez in the seventh
that lted tt at 4.
It was Carreon's first home run
for the lnd~ans and Ius thnd hll of the
game Carreon has nme hils 10 15 atbats smce JOtntng Cleveland.
"My concentration level is up,"
he sa1d. "IItke h1ttmg here and I'm
seemg the l)all well "
J1m Thome htt h1s 18th homer m
the f1rst for Cleveland, wh1ch scored
37 runs m w1nnmg the first three
games of the series
The Twms came back wtth three

runs in the bottom of the first agamst
All-Star starter Charles Nagy, htghltghted by Rtch Becker's tnple for
hts 12th RBI of the series.
After Chuck Knoblauch doubled,
Becker tnpled and Molttor then
added ·an RBI ground out Marty
Cordova, who had walked, scored on
Jeff Reboulet 's double
Cleveland p1cked up liS second
run in the th1rd when Albert Belle
walked with the bases loaded. Belle ,
who had hll home runs m three
stra1ght games, was 0-for-3.
Matt Walbeck stngled home a run
1n the fourth. g1vmg the Twins a 42 lead before Carreon's homer tted
It

Nagy. scekmg hts 12th v1ctory,
allowed 12 hils 10 seven mnmgs He
has not won s10ce June 15, and was
the losmg pttcher 10 the All-Star
game.
Notes: Cleveland commmed II
errors tn the ~enc s .. "Nagy ts 0-4
ltfettme at the Metrodome ... Molt tor was 2-for-4 and i's 90 h1ts shy of
3,000 .. The Twms had another v1deo
salute dunng the game for Knhy
Puckett , who announced hJS rellrement on Fnday

In weekend·transactions,

NBA free agent market tallies
more than $500M in trades
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball WrHer
One weekend into the free agent
market and nearly half a billion dollars has already ' been spent.
The Mtami Heat and New York
Knicks are in for $350 milhon, the
Indiana Pacers have committed $80
million and the Los Angeles Lakers
arc waiting for Shaquille O'Neal to
answer their $95 milhon offer.
All around the NBA, teams arc
lining up with tens ofm,Jhons more,
and the best players lucky enough to
be without contracts are enjoymg an
unprecedented payday.
''I'm firing my mother. She's off
the Barkley payroll. She had me too
soon," Charles Barkley said Sunday
as the first wave of movement and
signmgs took place.
Juwan Howard, the 23 -year-old
forward from the Washington Bullets. reportedly agreed to a sevenyear, $98 million deal with Mlamt.
The Heat ,also was said to have
agreed to terms wtth Alonzo Mournmg on a seven-year contract worth
$105 milhon.
' Mtamt sttll has $2 mtllton-$3 mtllion of 'salary cap room and still
needs a point guard- especially if
Tim Hardaway agrees to a tree
agent deal w1th Houston - and Pat
Riley may pursue Derek Harper,
whose rights were renounced by the
New York Knieks on Sunday.
That allowed New York to stgn
tree agent guards Allan
(DetrOit) and Chris Chtlds (New
scy) and finalize a trade for IW&lt;&gt;-llme
All-Star and former overall No.
ptck Larry Johnson.
Charlotte received
·Anthony Mason and center
Lohaus from the Knicks.
Houston will get $56 mill'
over seven years and Chtlds gets
nulhon over stx years.
"We h1t the jackpot,"
manager Ern1c Grunfeld satd.
be one of the top teams compett
for the champ1onshtp, not only
year but for years to come ."
The Pistons were angry that
didn't have a chance to respond
the Knicks' offer to Houston. one
the best young shooting guards m
league.
"I was surprised because tf
ey was the tssue, he could have
ten more money from us . The
.:ard we had was we'd pay h1m
money, " PIStons vtce president
Sund said. "Obviously. he cle!:ted
not to play in Detrott."
Early Saturday mo.mmg, Houston
told the . Kmcks he'd accept their
offer. If Houston had wavered, Grunfeld was ready to call Reggie
Miller's agent
"You've got a lot of players that
probably haven't got to the playoffs
yet or the 'icond mund that arc mak-

mg $10 mtlhon plus. That I don't year, $85 mtllton contract Wtth the
agree wtth," M1ller satd after the SuperSomcs. the team he led to the
US . Olympic Team beat Greece NBA Fmals last year. The Heat were
128-62. Miller was the leadmg scor- the last team to have a shot at Payer m the Dream Team 's f1ve exhtbt- ton after the Kn1cks. Hornets, Rocktion games, averagmg 14.2 pomts.
ets and Bucks dropped out, hut they
Another Olymptan, Barkley. said lost out when Seattle mcrea.,cd ns
the NBA had squashed the proposed offer The s1gnmg was to be
three-team trade that would have announced today.
sent htm to the Houston Rockets,
"I don't need Mtchael money.
Sam Cassell and Robert Horry to I'm glad wnh what I've got M1kc
Denver and Dtkembe Mutombo to wanted one year. I wanted seven, so
Phoentx
J'm all nght," Payton satd m refer"One of my agents sa1d the ence to M1chacl Jordan's one-year.
league wouldn't let the deal go $25 m1lhon contract w1th the Bulls
through because too much tampenng
The Lakcrs. who have offered
had been mvolved," Barkley sa1d. "I about $95 mtlhon over seven years
think that's gutless on the part of the to O'Neal, lost a chance to SJgn Dale
NBA because everybody has tam- Davts as they wa1ted for O' Neal to
pered To hold me hostage because make up h1 s mmd between Los
they're trying to prove a potnt 1s Angeles and Orlando.
unfair."
" The financ1al package wtll he
Miller. upon heanng Barkley's mcredi.blc, so tt 's ~ot somcthmg
conspiracy theory, took an easy shot we're dwelling on," satd O'Neal's
at h1s Dream Teammate .
agent, Leonard Armato "The mam
"Whatever Charles says. do not factors arc the IJkehhood ol a cllamheheve htm," Mtller sa1d.
pionshtp and the feehng Shaq has
Mutombo IS a free agent and may about the c1ty. Orlando wants us to
be able to get a better offer than the
explore the opttons. then they'll put
$8.5-$9 mtllton annually that the. thetr best foot forward ."
Suns would have pa1d htm tn the
DaviS, told the Lake" wanted tu
proposed Barkley deal. The Atlanta wan for O'Neal. chose to re-SJgn
Hawks were believed to be ollermg with lndtana for seven years and $42
close to $10 m1lhon annually for sev- mdlwn, sources sa1d lnd1ana also
en years, and DetrOit was m on the reached agreement with Antonw
b1ddmg as well.
,
Davts, who w1ll re-SJgn lor $3K .5
Gary Payton agreed to a seven- m1lhon over scYcn years

"I say, 'Well, I'm not going to be
Julfilled unull wm some races. and
I'm not gmng to he lullilled unul I
get to race Earnhardt or somebody
for the championshtp and maybe wm

one '"
Earnhardt has won seven titles,
incl11ding four in the 1990s, and led
the standtngs unttl he fintshed 12th
Sunday. Terry Labonte, who started
the day five points behind, finished i
sixth and overtook Earnhardt by IS t
.
I
potnts .
1
Jeff Gordon, who won at New
Hampshire last year and went on to
win the title, missed his chance to
take the lead when he had 1g1tion
problems and finished 34th. He is
third and trails by 116 pomts.
Cy Young won 511 maJor league
games, the most for any maJor ,
league pitcher.

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•ARRIVES At"I'RlFil):.... The Minnesota Twins'
Rich Becker arrives at third base ahead of the
throw to Cleveland third baseman Jim Thome in
the first Inning ot Sunday's American LeaQue

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

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game In Minneapolis, where the Twins won 5-4.
Becker doubled and made It to third on right
fielder Manny Ramirez's error. (AP)

i

In other AL action,

Griffey's return helps Mariners
notch 8-0 victory over Angels
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The swmg was 'o sweet, so
smooth that 1! was hard to tell Ken
Gnffcy Jr. had mJSsed any t1me at all
Gnffey. out Since June 19 because
of a hroken nght wnst. made up for
a 20-game absence 10 a hurry, hlltmg
a two-rliJl homer and an RBI double
Sunday that sent the Seattle Manners
over the Caltforma Angels 8-0.
"I don't hkc to sit at home ," he
smd "I felt h ke I wasready to e&lt;mJC
back and help."
Griffey reJomcd the lmeup about
a week earher than expected Even
though the Manners went 12-8 wuhout htm. the return of the1r All -Star
center fielder was reason enough lor
cclehratton.
ThJ Ktngdome crowd gave Gnffey a standmg ovauon when he took
the f1cld, and he kept them cheenng
Bob Well s ( 10-2 ) took care ol the
Cahforma batters. p1tchmg a lourhitter for his lirst career shutout as
the Manners closed wuhyt three
games ol Texas m the AL ~~
Gnlley hoed out to nght held 111
hJS first at-bat HIS next lime up, he'
h1t a hard double durmg a stx -run
th1rd mnmg
In the lounh, Gnllcy h1t a dnve
toto the tirst deck m nght 1&lt;11 hts 24tll
home run. chasmg Jason Grnnslcy
(4 -6)
" I was out 73 games last ye.tr,"
Gnflcy sa1d. rcl ernng to hts hroken
left wnst 1n 1995 "I had maJor
surgery last year, I had minor surgery
thts year and. hopefully. I w1ll have

nu surgery next year"
Yards thJS season, the hrst \tme
Gnfley starred after only three , they've ever won SJX m a row at Bat Jays of battmg practtq:. He went 2- ' It more tn one year New York is 8-2
for-5. includmg a groundout wuh the overall agamst the Onolcs and has
bases loaded tn the . seventh, and dmched the season senes for the
ratsed hts average to .301
13th t1mc tn 14 years
"It usually takes a httter a few
Red Sox 6, Tigers 4
days to get hts timing down, to stan
Tim Nachnng p1ckcd ~p where he
seemg thc·ball "'ell," Mariners man- left off the prev1ous day, helpmg
uger Lou Ptmella smd. "Espcctally Boston complete 1ts f11st four-game ,
when you've had an operation on sweep at T1gcr Stad1um smce 1976.
your hand and haven' t had the lux - The R~d Sox won then season-h1gh
ury of that much hattmg pmctice. But lifth in a row
Junior's special."
Na9hnng. who homered ilnd
In other games. New York heat scorgct ltvc umes Saturday, hit a
Balttmore 4: 1, Boston defeated three-run homer his lirst tunc up He
Detroit 6-4, Toronto topped Mtl - smgled m his next at-hat and scored
waukee 7-5 in 10 innings. Oakland on an error hy shortstop Andujar
heat Texas 9-1 and Ch1cago downed Cedeno
Kansas City 3-2.
Mo Va~ghn hit hJS 2Nth home run
Yankees 4, Orioles I
mto the uprx;r deck m the filth CedeThe Yankee s lin1shcd off thc11 no hll hts l1rst AL homer.
ftrst four-game sweep m Baltmmre
Blue Jays 7, Brewers 5 (10)
smcc 1955 and opened a I 0-game
Cal Eldred made a solid return w
lead over the second-place Onoles m the maJOrs after mtssmg more than
the AL Easl.
a year because of elbow prohkms,
Andy PcttJtte (14-4), held out ol puchtng seven mmngs lor Mllwauthe AII-St.Jr game bc,·ausc ol worncs kce
about h1s elbow, was sharp lor sevEldred gave up three runs .mel
en llllllfl~s He leads the lc.agut.: m
l1vc ,hits m h1s first g.unc Slnl.:C
v~etoncs
undcrgomg Tommy John-style ten John Wetteland worked the nmth dnn replacement surgery nn Ius nght
lor hJS fourth save of the senes, gtv- elbow on June 21, 1995
mg h1m a major lcague-lcadtng 33
Otts Ntxon led oil the game wtth
He has been successful m his last 27 a hunt smgle. then hunted lor anothcr h1t tn the lOth that helped Turon savc chances
Darryl Strawberry doubled . s1n- to wtn . N1xon stole second and
glctl stnlc a ba'c and scored tw1ce scnred the gn-ahcad run on a s1nglc
lor New York . &lt;&gt;nee on a squeeze by hy Tomas Perez .
Joe G1rard1
The stan at County St;rdJum was
The Yankees went h-ll at Camden pushed hack more th.m two hours
~,.

Don't MtsS TV Tiines•••
Edition ol

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(Contmucd from Page 4)

CompMiu

WHERE EXTRA EFFO .RT . IS OlfR POLICY

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NASCAR...

OAKLAND ATHlETlCS Pun:lw&lt;d
!he rontr:x:l of RHP Dave TeiJhc:der from
Edmonton of lhe Pacific Coast Lcaa.ue ·
OpctonN RHP Jay Wna.•rck 10 Humsvrl le
of •he Southern LeaaYC
SEATTLE MARINER S Act111111ed
OF Ken Gnffey Jr from chc IS-da)' diS·

abled hs1 -

\

game
R1ght fielder Orlando Merced
JUSt mtssed Sanders' first homer, losmg hts glove over the wall as he
stretched to get the ball. On Saturday
ntght, Joe Oliver's homer denected
off the end of Merced's glove.
In the _etghth, Shaw picked off
Jeff Kmg at second llase just before
Johnson's etghth homer Instead of a
game -tymg three-run homer. 1t
became a two-run shot that lelt the
Ptrates down 7-6.
Notes: At 40-51, the Pirates are
JUSt one game off their low pomt for
the season They've been 12 games
under .500 three t1mes, the last on
June I . .. Wagner is 1-7 with a 7.68
ERA m I 0 career appearances
agamst Cmcmnatt. ... Burba was a
I07 career hitter with JUSt one extrabase hit when he homered m the
th11d It was the f1rst homer by a
Reds pncher smce John Sm1lcy
homered last Jun~27 m Phtladelphta
.. Perez's homer made him and h1s
father the fifth father-son combination to homer at Riverfront Stadtum
The others are the Bonds (Barry and
Bobby). the Boones (Bret and Bob).
the Bells (Davtd and Buddy) and the
Kessmgers (Ke1th and Don).

Monday, July 15, 1996

•

Scoreboard
Baseball

sions m hJS mmd today I thmk the
way he threw the ball. he knows he's
OK."
"Jim pulled me aSide before the
game and satd. 'You're fine Just go
out there · It 's hard not to th1nk about
it. " Wagner satd "Now I know I'm
healthy. I look at 11 as a posJtJve
stnde. "
The Ptrates walked four and had
a run-sconng passed ball by catcher
Jason Kendall m the ftfth mnmg,
when the Reds went up 5-1 The
Reds got the decJdtng runs m the
seventh, when Sanders added a solo
homer. h1s I Oth. and Perez homered
off Pams.
Burba, pllchmg on a 92-degree
afternoon, gave up Johnson 's sacnfice fly in the fourth and then faded
m the stxth mnmg, when the Pnates
scored three ttmes to cut It to 5-4 AI
Martm had an RBI double and Hector Carrasco came on w1th the bases
loaded and gave up run-sconng
groundouts by Johnson and Dave
Clark.
Burba gave up stx hll and tour
runs in five-plus mmngs for hts
fourth vtctory m ftvc starts.
The Ptrates had a ncar-mtss and a
mistake that could have turned the

In other NL action, ·

lrvan captures Win
in Jiffy Lube 300
By MIKE RECHT
LOUDON, N.H (AP) - A few
weeks ago. Erme lrvan was beginJIIng to wonder 1f hts days were numhereu on thts season's Winston Cup

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Reggie
Sanders' two homers provtded the
bulk of the offense. Solo shots by
pttcher Dave Burba and Eduardo
Perez provtded the emotion.
The Oncinnatt Reds htt four
homers Sunday, mcludmg two firstof-its-lund shots, and held on for a 76 vtctory over the Ptttsburgh Pirates.
After losmg the opener of the
four-game senes, the Reds won the
last three to get the second half of
their season off to an encouragmg
start.
"There are some ballclubs you
should beat. and the Pnates are one
of them ," manager Ray Kmght sat d.
They won It wtth power. Sanders
homered twtce to dnve m three runs,
Burba htl the first of hts career, and
Perez. the son of former Reds star
Tony Perez, hu hts ftrst m the
Nattonal League .
Perez's solo shot m the seventh
off Steve Parrts provtded the eventual wmni'ng run and brought a
sense of nostalgta to 'the Reds '
dugout m the seventh 1nnmg.
"I had goose bumps," Kmght
sa1d. ''I've sure seen hts dad trot
around there a few ttmes. I was
moved The fact that it' gave us

•

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By The Bend

The Daily Sen(mel
Monday, July

15, 1~

It's·bighly unlikely that sexual activity will bring on a heart attack
I

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: My husband's
brother. age 61, suffered a heart
allack last month. "Hal" is recovering nicely, but his heart allack has put
a serious damper on my sex life.
Hal's wife. "Franny," who has
always talked too much, told several
family members that she feels guilty
because she and Hal had sex about
three hours before he woke up with
terrible chest pains. Franny exceeded the limits of good taste when she
conlided to anyone who would listen
that she had "talked Hal into it" when
he said he wasn 't in the mood.
Since Hal 's heart attack, my husband has come up with a variety of
excuses for not taking care of my
physical needs. I am certai n his

'

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•

.

Ann
Landers
"19115, l.ol AngoiOI

nmoo s~ llld
Crutor1 Syndic:Me·

brother's heart attack is the reason . I
asked our family doctor if sex could ·
bring on a heart attack. He said,
"No." My husband has more faith in
you than in our doctor, so will you
please respond in your· column as
soon -as possible? Thanks, Ann. -Deprived in Prescott, Ariz.
Dear Deprived in Prescott:
According to Dr. James E. Muller. a
heart specialist at Harvard Medical ·
School, it is highly unlikely that sex-

Past vice president Joe Young
installed incoming MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club officers at
;their June 23 club meeting. Accepting the offices were Hal Kneen President, John Anderson - VicePresident, Randy Hays - Secretary,
Karl Kebler Ill - Treasurer and
Bernard Fultz - Sergeant-at-Arms.
The club was founded in February of
1929 and is one of 27,000 Rotarian
clubs that meet weekly throughout
the world. The primary object of
Rotary is to encourage and foster the
ideal of service to others.
Kneen acc~pted the position of
president and challenged his fellow
Rotarians to follow the Rotary Four
Way Test: Is it the truth? Is it fair to
all concerned? Will it build goodwill

RECEIVES PLAQUE - Past president Lloyd Blackwood
· received the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club plaque of appreciation from Joe Young, Immediate past vice president.

Meigs community calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed lo 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.
MONDAY
RACINE -- Budget hearing of
Racine Village Council, 7 p.m. Star
Mill Park, Monday.
EAST MEIG~ -- Eastern Board
of Education, Monday, 6 p.m. cafe-

teria.
TUESDAY
RACINE -- Southern Local Athletic Boosters. Tuesday at 7 p.m. ·at
the high school. Plans will be made
for the Meigs County Fair booth.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Alzheimers Related Disorder Suppon Group, I to 3
p.m., Wednesday, Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center. Darren Torrence
of YRI Security of Cincinnati will
speak and demonstrate a computeriled pill box, Alzheimer's alen system, and an ERS medical alert.

Night camp set up
for children who
can't stand the sun
LAGRANGE. N.Y. (AP)- Night
falls and Sundown Camp comes
alive.
Children splash in the pool, pet the
goats and shovel brownies into their
mouths. The young campers play at
night, under the broad glare of flood lights because, starkly put, sunlight
can kill them.
Eleven children with a rare disorder called xeroderma pigmentosum
gathered last week at a makeshift
camp in a sprawling backyard in the
Hudson Valley 65 miles north of New
York City. They carrie to do something they'd never done before play with kids just like themselves.
· BenJamin Terpstra, an 8-year-old
from Dyer. Ind .. romped around with
a big sm ile , paned a llama and later
curled up in hts healthy sister's arms
beside a post-midnight campfire . The
disease has made Benjamin's walk
wobbly and stunted his mental development. but hts enjoyment was contagious .
"He doesn't know exactly where
he is. but he knows he's somewhere
special." said his' mother, Mary TefJ&gt;stra.
Xeroderma pigmentosum is a rare
degenerativ~ condition that can attack
the siUn, nerve cells and muscles . Its
telltale characteristic: Sufferers are
unable to withstand ultraviolet radiation --just a few moments of sunlight can harm Benjamin and hasten
his decline.
Children with XP. who rarely live
beyond their teen-age years, usually
falling victim to siUn cancer or various organ failwes, must hide from the 1
sun behind tinted windows, floppy
hats, visors, No. 45 sunblock or
heavy clothes. Even sunshine seeping
through a loosely woven garment can
leave painful spots on the skin.
The condition affects different

children in different ways .. Sun exposure appearS to scald and raise painful
blislers.on the skin of many children.
Years later. some develop discolored
cancerous patches on their slUn. One
camper, 8-year-old Alixe Johnson of
Greensboro, N.C. , has only frecklelike spots on her face . Others, like 6year-old Amanda Clanton of Crosby,
Texas, suffer slowed mental growth
and move unstead ily.
"She's like a 1-year-old in her
head ," said Amanda's mother, Angie Calloway. "She's still in diapers;
she'll never be polly-trained."
While the symptoms are different,
campers share an isolation born of
their shaded existence.
"I want Alixe to meet a friend so
she can write letters, exchange piclures," Debbie Johnson said. "At
home ... she gets mad or sh~ starts
crying because she 's not like other !
children...
Caren and Dan Mahar started the

and better friendship? Will it be beneficial to all concerned? Kneen stated that the coming year brings a possibility of high hopes and club opportunities . Each individual Rotarian
can make a difference through his or
her inputs and efforts in fulfilling the
club's goals in the 1996-97 year.
Joe Young continued the program
by presenting Lloyd Blackwood, outgoing president, with a plaque from
his fellow R.otarians for all his efforts
as the 1995-96 president. Young
recalled that be was the one who
sponsored Blackwood's candidacy
as a Rotarian. Young was exceptionally proud of the accomplishments of
club president Blackwood.
Immediate past president Black-

wood summeq up his term of office,
))y saying that he was "happy about
the past year" . Blackwood stated that
his success was due to the cooperation of the fellow Rotarians. His goals
included: increasing club membership- five new members were induct-.
ed; greater membership involvement
- twenty four Rotarians chaired or cochaired Rotarian events such as Adult
·Basic Education Banquet, Junior
Academic Banquet, Pancake Breakfast ; and increase awareness of Dis- .
trict and International aspects of
Rotary. The Middleport/Pomeroy
Rotary Clubwas recently honored as
the Top Per Member Contributor in
Rotary District 6609, District 6609
Club Youth and Community Award:

By MALCOLM RmER
AP Science Writer
PORTSMOUTH, N.H. - At least
a quarter-million heart attacks a year
in this country are triggered by getting angry, having sex, exerting oneself or just getting up in the morning,
a researcher says. .
That's about 17 percent of the
nation 's heart attacks- but it's no
reason for most heart disease patients 1
to be fearful, says Dr. lames Muller.
For most patients, the risk of a
heart attack is still tiny even after
experiencing one of the. potential
heart-attack triggers, said Muller,
director of the Kentucky Heart Institut~ at the University of Kentucky in
Lexington and a pioneer in the study
of heart attack triggers.
"Our general message is one of
reassurance for heart patients," he
said. About II million Americans
have heart disease, which narrows the
blood vessels that feed the heart muscle.
People with heart disease should
talk to their doctor.; to see if that message applies to them. he stressed.
It wouldn't apply to people with
unstable angina, who get chest pain
without any exenion. Nor would it
apply to patients who have a nar.rowing of the aortic valve, which is
one of the main valves of the hean.
Muller said.
In addition, sedentary heart disease patients should be cautious
about sudden heavy exertion, he
said. And people who are angry all
the time , even if they're not heart
patients, should get counseling or
learn stress-reduction techniques.

Muller spoke in an inte rview
before discussing heart attack triggers
Sunday at a meeting of the American
Heart Association. His don't-worry
message about sex received wide
publicity in May when he published

a study in the Journal of the American Metlical Association.
Dr. Sidney Smith, chief of cardiology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said further
research is needed to determine}

614-985-3982

614·992·2979

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Card of Thank11

The family of Anna

B. Welch would like to

: Send questioJts to Ann Landers,
:Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

thank everyone who
gave us comfort &amp;
support in the loss of
our mother.
To
Overbrook
Center, especially
Darrell
Wright,
Debbie
Wayland,
Tracy Green, Betty
Foster,
Do n n a
Pearson, Regina
Kimes, Patty Hern,
Dr. Trent &amp; Dr. Vallee.
Also, Fisher Funeral
Home, The Rutland
Nazarene Church,
Rev. Grimm, Beverly
Adkins, &amp; special
thanks to Loretta
Atkins for their help &amp;
services.
And to all those
offering prayers,
flowers, cards &amp; food,
we
sincerely
appreciate your love
&amp; kindness. May God

and the Most Improved Club in Dis\ trict 6609. He expressed a special
·thank you to his able vice president,
Joe Young for his hard wo~k and '
assistance.
Blackwood's final comments were
that "No one does things they don't
want to do", they are driven by incentives and consequences. He has found
that the rewards of \l.otarian activities
far outweigh the hassles or time commitments. He closed the meeting with
his rule in life - "Leave everything
you are involved in better than you
found it".
Special guest at the meeting was
Anna Blackwood, Lloyd Blackwood's wife. The. evening\ meal
was prepared by the Heath United
Methodist Women .
1

Bless You!
The Family of
Anna B. Welch

•

742-2246
Locally owned &amp;

operated
Free Estimates
Guaranteed results

985..4473

t/Wft

7/lloiM

------Card of Thanks

LIVE PSYHICS

The family of Hazel
Lawson would like to
express
they're
appreciation and your
kindness during the
illness and death of
our loved one.
Special thanks to the
doctors and nurses of
Holzer Medical Center,
Ewing Funeral Home,
and the Rev. James
Satterfield.
Thanks to everyone
for the flowers, cards,
food, prayers, and your
kind words.
TI:te Lawson Family

Waat to Help
You Ill

WICKS
HAULING
Gravel, Sand,

614-992-3470

6_·-

THE 1996

2:·-

'

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

NOnCE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO

DEPARTMENT OF
niANSPORTATION
Columbut, Ohio
Olllct of Contrtcta
LAp! Copy Numlllr IWI1
Unh Price Contrect

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) _
M · c
' . u.s•c ity 's pickers were still grinnm even though they failed to break
· the world guitar marathon record.
Musicians including Chet Atkins,
Steve Earle and the Goo Goo Dolls
camp because of the lonely life fac- showed up for the attempt by nearly
ing their 4-year-old daughter Katie,
1.000 guitar players at Nashville's
·who has XP. Dan. a mail carrier, R'tve rfront Park Saturday night.
carves out time at night for Katie, but
"We've got the U.S. record at :
he knows she ' II eventuallv need 1
more than a father's devotion .
east.:• said Jim Rosenberg, president t
"Many nights it's just Katie and of Epiph~?e &lt;;Juitars, the event's
orgamzer. We II try again next year
me, and we're picking wildflowers or because-this was a lot of fun."
•
we're sleigh-riding or we're catching
Nashville wa5 tryi~~g to surpass the
lightning bugs:" Dan Mahar said.· record set in Vancouver, British
"And although right now her moth- Columbia, in . 1994. That's when
er and father, brothers ~d sister are 1,320 guitarists played "TaiUng Care
her enbre world and she s not lone- · of Business" for 68 minutes and 40
ly, I feel that loneliness for her. 1.. seconds.
know as the years go on she's going
Tbe Guinness Book' of Records:
to start to wonder, 'How comt there listed that feat as the most people
isn't.. ~nyone in the world just like playing the same song together for
me?
.
.
the longest period of time.
The dtsease IS rare - chances of
Nastlville's guitarists did break
geuin~ the ge~etically transmitted Vancouver's time record, as they kepi
condmon are hterally a mtlhon to up Elvis Presley's '.'Heartbreak
one.
Hotel " for 79 minutes and 30 sec- j

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 8, 1995.
'
Advertising Deadline Is
August 1, 1995.

I

CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD .IN
T~S YEAR'S EDITION
)

992-2155

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As of late Friday. more than
52,000 "hits" had contacted the site
to post questions. a network
spokesman said. Visitors got to pointand-click on their highest priority of
six " issues" - crime. health care.
presidential character, etc. - and
frame an e-mail question in 20 woms
or less.
Text, graphics, downloadable
video segments and instantaneouS'
links to other web sit~s ill supplement the TV inforrnati . Eventually, technology will pe it real-time
video and high-fi elity sound,
MSNBCsays.
MSNBC is expected to debut in
22.5 mblion homes and on the Web
in uncounted numbers, entering a
competition which Rupen Murdoch's
News Corp. vows to enter this year.
No one knows if there is profit for

VIlle Road Area . Reward l eu.
245-1401

LOST : Man·s !IIIVet 10 bractltl WI
name on 11. Generous rewlrCI.

30H75-6900 or 3G4·87S·S5:10.

70

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard ·Sale• Must Be Paid

tn

AdvRnce. OEAOUNE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad 11 to run.

tdi110n · 2:00 p.m. Friday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

985-4422

BENNETTS

Chester, Ohio

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

HARTWELL
HOUSE
, Open Monday ·

814 5114-2001 NIGHT

nights until
7:00p.m.
Gifts • Folkart

• Antiques

992-7696

LINDA'S
PAINTING

I'BEE

IIIERIOR·EIIIRIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

T•k• tile ,.,. out ef
,.,.,,.,, ltl •• do

It

fer JOV. ·
VERY RIISOIAill
lAVE RlfiiEIKES

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

.,"Tht
....

Public Notice

dele ttl lor
completion of thla work
ahatl be .. tal forth In the
bidding propottl." Plana
1nd Sptclltcetlona "' on
Ill• In the Dtpartmtnt of
Trsnaportatton.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(7) 15, 22; 2TC

Heat Pump
Afr Condllloning
Furnaces
Rdrigeraton
We havathe naw FR12
Low Colt Replacement
for Automotive R12.

992-2735
7/1198 1 mo.

(614) 992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
6/1811 mo. pd.

Howard Excavatin
TruckingUmestone
Bulldo7.ing and
Bac:khoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

lo place e• ••• cell

992·2156

- 992-3838
All

Kinds of Earth Work

Pick-up discarded
batteries, appliances &amp;
many metals.

614-992-4025
8am - 8pm '

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
94&amp;-2168
~1MM

TFN

. .. .
·~

H&amp;H .
Remodeling
&amp; Roofing
Block Work
Free Estimates

ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE
614-949-3308
Cleaning
Alum &amp; Vinyl siding
Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks - SidewalKs
Experience References

80

Public Sale
anc:l Auction

Wedemey er's AuciJOn Serv1ce
Gallipolis, Ohio 61• ·319-2720
,.
Rick Pearson AuCI1o n Company.
lull 11me aucttoneor . comple rc

aucrton
servtca.
LI C&amp;nscd
166,0hto &amp; Wes 1 V1rgtn1a , 304 ·
77:).5785 Or :Jl4-773-5447

Wan1ed to Buy

Complete Household Or Es1111es1
Any Type 01 Furmtur e. Apphanc .
ea, Antique's, E rc Al so AppniiSal

Avatlable! 614· 379·2720.
Absolure Top Dollar All US. Stl ·
ver And Gold Com s, Pr oot so rs,
0 1amonds. An11que Jowolry, Gold
A rnos . Old Glas swar e, Slo rltng ,

E1c. Acqu ,Siflons Jewelry . M T S.
Com Shop, 1S1 Second Avenue
Galhpoh' 614-446·2842
·

\

••
~
t

ern Avenue. GalbpoUs.
J &amp; D' s Auto Pans Buymg sa l ·

I

'

Non · Worktng Wa thjiHI, Dryora ,
Stoves . R(!lftgerarors , Free2ers,
Au Condlltonor l, Color TV. 'a,·
VCR's, Also Junk Cars . 6U -2§6 .

1238
Paymg Top Dollar For Junk Cars,
Trucllt , &amp; Runm ng Vetl tc les To
Davo. 614 ·4-46 ·957'i
Top dollar . anttques . lurnnuro
glass. chma . clocks . gotct, ••l ver :
co tns . wa tches . est aros Osby .
Mar !ln . 614 -992 · 7441
.

H&amp;H

SAWMILL

Wantn-d "!o Buy : Auro ' :; &amp; Tru c\ s '
Any Condt110n. 614 -388·906 2, Or
6 14·446-PART

Port11ble

•
'

vage vehicles. Selling pans 304 ·
773-5033.

wanted To Buy Uso o Uob•le
Homes Call 6U ·446 ·0175

I'

'

~.

••

Wanted To Buy . Junll Au los Wtth ·

Or Without Motors Call larry
lively. 614,J88·9300.

BfllltlSIIW Ml
Middtepon. Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles
614-742-2193

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

TrN

'

,.'
.'

Clean Lare Model Car s Ot
Trucks. 1890 Models Or N ()w~u,
Smith Buick Ponllac. 1900 East·

711211

~ew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

(

'

'i•

3.04-882·2436

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

R&amp;D ROOFING and
£0NSTBIJ£TION

~

I

BlUE . Commode, stnk &amp; nalhlub
Must be '" e•cellorn co nOITIOfl

992-2768
992-3274

BISSELL ·a·UILDERS, INC.

another news channet.
"Can they somehow make the
content more compelling by marryFREE ESTIMATES
ing the two? '" asks Larry Gerbrandt,
614·992·7&amp;43
a media analyst for Paul Kagan
Associates in Carmel. Calif. "You' ll
(No Sunda~ Calls)
look back in five years and say either :.__________.....;;..._.....;._ _...;21;;;1 1112/1111::.;:::::.:~
they were way too far ahead of their
time, or they were extraordinarily
prescient. "
I
"There is not room, from a purely profit-and-loss basis, for one ," said
inves1ment banker Porter Bibb. a
Residential- Commercial
telecommunications specialist with
Roofing - Rubber- Shingles - Minor Repairs
Ladenburg, Thalmann &amp; Co. "That
isn't why NBC is rolling the dice.
Gutters and Downspouts
"No one knows the impact of a
Complete Remodeling
broad-gauge, mass market marriage
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
between the Internet and television,"
35YNIWExpw#erK:e
Bibb said. "But everybody thinks it's
(614) 992-2364
1-800-889-3943
going to be the next J)hase, and everybody is scrambling for a slot. "

.,'

Advance. Deadl1nt: 1:OOpm Tho
oay before the ad 111 10 run. Sun·
day &amp; Monday edilton · 1·QQpm
Friday.

90

Siding &amp; Some
JESS'
COMPLETE
AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Headliners - Custom Seat
Covers &amp; Carpet -Convertible Tops -Antique cars - Boat Seats Ove~ 20 Years Experience

I
~

AU Yafd Sales Mu ar Be Paid In

with the parfll .t IIKV/ce to beck It up
Serving S.E. Ohl6 &amp; West VIrginia
Toll Free 1-800-672-5967
446-9416

614·915-4110

I '·

'\

Lost and Found

12-6. Corner 01 S88, Kraus Beck
Road, 3 Mites Oul 568. From Gallipolis.

Dlrt•Sand

NBC, Microsoft
go on line today
NEW YORK (AP) - Today is the
day for MSNBC - a 24-hour, all- news cable network put together by
NBC and Microsoft - to go online .
Competing with Cable News Network as a 2ol-hour. all-news network,
MSNBC also is wedded to an Internet news service on the World Wide
Web. It will air 14 hours of original
programming, including a primetime newscast anchored by NBC's
Chief White House correspondent
Brian William, and "lnterNight," a
news-talk show with NBC News
stars as altemare hosts.
President Clinton is the first guest
of "lnterNight." He'll be interviewed
by NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw,
and answer questions from callers on
a toll-free phone, and from e-mail
sent ·'to · .the MSNBC web site:
http://msnbc.com.

lnter Bo•

1 Blue Pomt Siamett Cat Adams -

Llme"cme • Gravel

28563 BASHAN RD.
R1clne, Ohio 45771
(814) Mt-3013 Phone
(814) Mt-2018 FAX

Senti11l Classifieds

K111ena 8 Week s Old

Saturday 13th, 8·5: Sunday, 1•1h

SERVICE

We will work wtlhln your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5881
108 Pomero Street
Mason, wv

Public Notice

Free PUPPitS. molher German
. Shephard, lather Collie. 304-675·
7183.

Oarage Sale . Fuday, Saturday,
Teens Run Road 011 1, Clothes
Furn•ture, Tools, S.kos &amp; M1sc.

DUMP TRUCK

"No Job Too u~ or Too Small"

l.m.
Wtdnatdey, July 31, 1et8
lor tmprovtmanlt In:
Athtnt and Mtlgt
Countlu, Ohio lor
Improving
ttctlona
ATH/ME0-124-0.00 and
verlout, State Aoutet 124
and 144, In tM VIllage of
Cootvtue, by grading and
Public Notice
reaurl1ctng with ·Aaphlh
Concrete with SBS Polymer
Milling Dltt 7·5-88
S1a11d propoaat1 witt 111 on • eom111cttd •ogregela
•cctpltd trom all prt·
quatllled blddert at tht
Olllca of Conlrtcla, Room
FlllltHIMst lltys l1 tH
111 ollht Ohio Dtpart1111nt
of
T r~~~aportlllon.
~umbua, Ohio, unlit 10:00

r:!-

~r&lt;lay.

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sates &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Toot Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Pallo Fumhure, Fireplace
hems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stulll!

Public Notice

Hof•· G14-37Q :

Monday edition · 10~0 1.m. Sat·

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR.
HYDUUUC REPAIR
U2.00/HR.

2547

Sunday

CHEAPER RATES

!ii:f

614-992-3055

Tuppera Plaine, Ohio 45783
614-1185-3813 or 614-667-6414
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D- perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" l'lex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
, 112·· &amp; 3/4"C. P.V.C. pipe
t t/2"thru 4" Sch 40 pipe '
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i . water pipe (tOO' roll's thru 1,000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe l"thru
l'inings - Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Fl~x fining• &amp; Water linings
Full tine of Cistern. SeptiC &amp; Water 1torage tanks.

:=::;:::::::=~-====-~·
J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER
11411-2512
UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

• ~

· EOH

Beaut1lut Fnendly -Black lab Pup·
py, To Good

60

St. Rt. 7

•NewHom11
•Addltf•NewGareo11
•RtmodtllnQ
•Siding
•Roofing
•P1lntlng
1'111!1! I!STIIIATES
(114) tlft-6635
114 m-21sa

Beagle Typo Cog Nttd Ot A
Good Home, 814-448-71199.

Pup, !emale, r'ni•ed . 304 -875 6494 .

I &amp; WPWIIO Alii SUPPLY

Cllatom lutldlng. Rtmodtllng

7 Pupp •es. pan Beagle &amp; part
Coll1e. Can be •••n at Ed Rey burn residence , Plain Valley Rd.
letart W\J.

~oth e r Cat &amp; Kiuens 10 Monlha
Old Parr Reagle .Pan lab Puppy,
Call Allor 5 PM. 814·367.(1451.

mKM 1 mo. pel.

SMITH'S
CONSIRUCTION

e Puppies To GiYeaway, 814 -2455461 .
"

Tratned, 614·367-7078.

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs
Sarv-U (619) 645-8434

.

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

·disabled. FMHA subsidized, basic
rent $260 per month.

• Tilt-in
• Double Hung
•Insulated
Limited Time Offer
Call today with
your window sizes
for a free quote!

1-900-868-41 00
Ext. 5489

...ldGnges
•St. . Doors &amp;wlldows
Adtlfiolt

1/tlll ...

All electric,for elderly and

200 Gallon Fuel 011 Tantl. 304 882·2719 .

Repla(8ment
Windows

LIVE!
PSYCHICS
1 ON 1

8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.
•Rtplac._t W'llllows

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

which groups of patients are partic~­
larly vulnerable to triggering. That
knowledge should lead to recommendations for doctors, he said.
In the meantime, he said, patients
should discuss their individual cases
1 with their doctors.

Free Estimates

Every Wednesday
5:30 , ....

Giveaway

3 Yellow Kittens Two Males One
Female, litter Trained. ln11de
On~ 614-448 -3887.

367-0286 - 1-800-950-3359

1/11/11

-·

40

Owner:- Ronnie Jones

TUPSHOOT

Oon'rger Sbllg by lrgh pric~!
Shop 1M dossified S«&lt;lon.
' ANNOUNCEMENTS

614-992·2772

Ext. 24&amp;g
$3.89 per min.
Mutt be 18 yra.
Strv-U (61 0)-645-8434

STONEWOOD APARTMENTS NOW
ACCIPTING APPLICATIONS FOR
APARTMENTS

Top, Trim, Remqval
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Es:perience •lmured

Racine Gun Club

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

1·90H68-4100

Real Estate Generel

•

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Let them tell you
about the future Ill

JONESI TREE SERVICE

-

·Room AddiUona
•NewGiriQH
•Eiectrlul &amp; Plumbing
•Rooftng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
P1lntlng
AIIO Concr.te WCII'k
(FREE ESnlitATES)'
V.C. YOUNG Ill
H2-6216
Pomeroy, Ohio

949-31~1

FREE ESTIMATES

.. -

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

Limestone,

:

1

Phone

Psychic Tells you
about your financial
Mure,love,
success and your
health Ill
1-900-868-41 00
ext. 6495
3.99 per min. ·
must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

.1-900·988·8988
bt. 7907
2.99/mln 18+
T.T. Phone Req.
Serv·u
(619) 645-8434

Anything

Call
B. D. Constrvdion

Free Estimates

·• Music City effort
at world record
falls short

·

Add-ona

...

Meet your
match

llltha
Remodeling
Windows Kitchens
Siding
Decks
Roofs
Most

_ Roofing, VInyl
Siding, Garages,
. Porches, Sidewalks
andAdd-ons.

Researcher: Most heart pati~nts
shouldn't fear heart-attack triggers

. onds.

•

$64 million question . Too many
· young people today want to staJt married life enjoying the same standard
of living they had when they were
under their parents' roof. This is unrealistic.
\ It's better to be patient and not
panic and settle for inferior merchandise. Those "groups. " along
with church organilations and vol-.
unteer work. are still a very good
place to meet people. And please
remember, it is far better to be alone
than to wish you were . ·

Rotarial)s greet new officers

•

For Quality Work

QUICK
CONSTRUCTION

.

ual activity will bring on a heart heart can handle. P.S. to wives of men be very small and narrowly focused .
attack.
who have a tendency to roam: This
The IUds say their main reason for
Dr. Muller's comprehensive study column could be more effective than jholding back is that economic and job
of heart attacks and what causes them anything you ~auld say. Hang on to :conditions are not stable enough.
appeared in the Journal of the Amer- it.
How can we convince them that these
ican Medical Association recently. He
Dear Ann Landers: My husband are not valid reasons and encourage
said sex is about as risky as getting and I have three grown children in them to take the plunge, pulling love
angry or waking up in tbe morning. their 20s. They are honest and hard- and family before work? The girls are
Heavy exertion can be three times worlUng, have good jobs and are much more willing to marry, but they
risiUer than any of those activities. attractive and well-educated. Why say the men are reluctant to make a
And sex did not .increase the heart can't they find spouses? They say commitment.
attack risk at all among patients who they want a happy, middle-class life
My husband and I are not alone in
got regular exercise.
like we gave them but thty seem our concern about this situation.
I recall another study, done some unable to make a commitment.
Almost everyone we know with sintime back, which said those men who
These young people will not try gle grown kids discusses this topic
died of heart attacks during sex were · dating services, and they don't like endlessly. We hope you can shed light
most likely to be with someone oth- the singles bar scene. They realize on this perplexing problem. --Wester than their wives. Tbe element of they should join groups that share on, Mass., Parents
Dear Weston: You have asked the
danger apparently is more than the their interests, but the groups tend to

)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

J

Pa~ . s

-

.

..
•

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
- Mowing
(residential &amp; commercial)

- Weedeatlng
- Tree Trimming
- Shrubbery Maintenance
No lawn too large
or too small.
can today for free
estimate

742-2803
or 446-3622

Carpenter &amp;
Paint Work
985·4198

Wanted· v•ntage Ba rbte dolls
clorhet and aceesso,.u ( 1958 :
1972). Call804-890·0810

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

$35,000 I VA INCOME Po!enltll
Reading Book s TJII Ftee {1) 800
898·9778 Eat R- 261 ~ Fat Dotatll .
1 Baby s•ller Needed To Get ....
On &amp; Olf The B us Green Schoo.
. D• str•cl . Plea se Call• Alter 5 PM

614·4·1 ·9891

CALL Today, STARTTomo,...w!

.

S 1 .000 S •gn On Bonu s H •ttng
Flatb ed O r4vers -' 11 Mtles Pa td

(Now Scale) . L•le 1H ca11h. Ruror

1

Bonus Program. E CKMtller 1·000·
611 ·8636 Owner Operato rs Also
Wek:cmoo •
ConstruCI•n Worke rs ln~us t r •e t
C onltruc!lon Iron Workers 1
Welden IRtggor s EOE Employer

Pktase Send Reaume To P.O Bo.

M. Walhing1Dn. PS 15301
Onver wa01e&lt;1 · OTH Class A COL
wiHaz!l.lal. 18 Month E•P Pt1ys• ·
cal &amp; Drug Sc reen . leave M es
soge t ·800·741·0176

�-- - - - - ---------------------~,.,.._---~-~~---,-

l\4onday, July 15, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

IRIDOI
PHU.LIP

45
1 Charged atom
4 Ruah
46
9 Demon
49
12 PIIIUrl aound 53
13 Cotmetlca
54

ALDER
Proteas1ona~ Tree S8rv1ce, SlUmp
Removal, Ffee Esumateal In
surance 81dwell Ohto 614 388
9648 6U·367 7010

·ATTN Pomt Pleasant ' Postal
Post ltona Permanent lull t1me lor
cler kl sorten Ful l Benefits For
uam applicatton and salary mlo
ca 1 (708)906 2350Elt3670
8am-8pm
Sh trley

Sun Valley Nursery School
Chlldcare U F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K, Young School Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mmt
1Tl1Jm614 446 3657

Able Avo n Representat•ves
neea ed Ear n money lor Chnsl
rnas tl tlls at hOmenu work 1 8()0
991 6356 o• 304 882 2645 lnd
Rep

Gtve ptano lessons 10 all ages
also teach chordmg and trans
poSing II Interested call 614 992·
5«13

AVON 1 Al l Ar eas
Spears 304 6 75 t429

1

Admlntstrat!Ve AsSistant

FINANCIAL

Admtntslra ttve Asst stant Needed
For llus y Olftce Mtntmum Of 2
Year s Secretanal And Olfrce Ex
penence Proltctem In Computers
Accou ntmg And Organtzauonal
Sk Hs Knowledge 01 Lotus And
Wtndo ws A Mus t Supervt sory
Exper 1ence A Plus Send Resume
By J uly 24 1996 To FACTS
, 770 Ja ck. son Ptke B dwell OH
456 14 EOF MIFIH

210

BUSII)ess
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends thai you do bust
ness wllh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall unul you have tnvesttgated
the oHenng

Ambtos1a Macht ne Inc Looktng
to 1 mach,mst Sy1s expe fle nce

Bustnesspersofl, small stze Con
tractor Nattonal Manulacturer
award•ng local DEALERSHIP lor
steel Dulldmgs Brg Profit Potenttal
on sates and construction
759 3200 ext 23J0

Ca l! 304 675 1722 Monday Fn
aav 7 30 3'00
ATTENTION
82 Year Old Company Located In
Ga lltpoh s Is Cu rrently E•pandulg
It s Wo 1k Force 10 People Are
Needed lmm ed1ately No Expert
encc Nec essary Company Tratn
1ng Prolftded Raptd Promouon Is
PosSibl e Due To Company 5
Growth Management Oppo 1 tun tty
Avatlab le $300 Wee)~ To Slarl
As Per Wr lllen Agreement
Please Call Monday g 5 At su
44 I 1976

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Most Elltctent
A.nd Lowest Em1sstons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Markel
Central Botler Is Currently Look
1ng For A Oualtty Dealer In Thts
fmmed1ate Area For lnformauon
On Becomrng A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1· 800 248
4681 Of 1 2111· 782 257i

:-A::TT::N-:-:W::-O::M::-E::N,-/M=ENE_a_r_n_E-,-1
rra Income Ftex1ble Hoursl S200
$500 Wee kly cau 7 Days •a 7
675 2022 EOI 0526H25

Pep so /Coke Route Many Hog h
Trafl•c Locations 12,000 A Week
PotenuaJ Utn Invest $6,900 1800-840-3826

Three beclroom home 1n coul1try
WhOles Holl Ad Ruttand one balh
•n.ground pool 614-992 5067
'

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12x65 Champton mobtle home
one or rwo bedroom S6SOO 614
992 6324
1961 Elco Mobtle Home Needs
Ltttle Work Excellent For Renlal
Begmner Home $2 200 614
446 0957
1975 Fost1va1 t4x70 3 bedroom
2 bath central atr $6,000 30 4
675-2382 or 304-675 2926

1Q91 Uanston mobtle home rwo
bedroom, total elecruc like new
condthon one person occupt&amp;d
never smoked 1n wtth v1ny1 un
derptmtng 20 deck 10x10 butld
1ng lurntture avatlable $13 000
304 882 2466 anyttme
24x40 Double wtde Redman :1
bedroom 2 bath heal pump
porch lurnrshe(f ~ or unlurn1shed
Locatton Famtly Prtde Park Galh
poJis Forry pnced on tnspecllon
364 675 2580
Lt~e new t991 14x80 all electric
3 bedroom 2 bath heal pump w /

centra l atr 40xto deck 1ncluded
614 992 6134
Llm1ted Ollert t997 doublewtde
3b• 2batn S1799 down $2791
month Free dehvery &amp; setup
Only a1 Oakwood Homes N11ro
wv 304 755 5885

o

3 Bedroom Ranch Cenlrat A11
t8•3fi lnground Pod Garage
Large Fenced Backyard Con
ven tenl Locatton 112 Utle from
State Route 7 on Georges Creek
Road 614 448 3108

work on car s &amp; trucks rea
son able rate s m1nor mechan1c11
eprms oil changes call 6 14 742 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Large
2935 ask lor Ktp Ruuand
Kttchen IOtntng Garage New
Roof !Heat Pump Cny Schools
Ch1l&lt;1 care 1n my nome very clOse
Close To Gallipolis, 614·446
IO schOol E)pe r1 ence 3n(j refer
2472
ences 61 4 gas 41 74o
3 BA 2 bath ranch 2 car garage,
C oan Homes &amp; Olhces Reason
Spnng Valley area dose Holzer
able Rates 614 4410870
Hcspota/ 614 446 7940
Dons l awn lca re Re s1 dent tal
Charleston Area 3 Bedroom
Chu rche s &amp; Ce metanes Rea
fenced yard, lull basement, wood
sonable Aa1est 614 379 2647
burmng hre place oul butl(jtngs
Gunar a: Mutntl?nan ce Potnung ca~age garden sp;;c e Upper
Ynrd Work Wtndows Washed 60s Call 30.4 773 5407 arter
lOam
Guuers C leane c:~ Li'gh t Hauling
Commer•cal Restdent•al Steve
Fou r bedroom&amp; rwo baths 14r36
6t4-388-042Q
lam tly room one car garage
Georges Po rta ble Sawm1 t1 don 1 equ tpped krtche n tn Syracuse
haul your logs to lhe mill 1us1 ca l! $90 000 000 614 992 5882
3)4 675- 195 7
GOV T FORE CLOSED Homes
House cteacmg or olhce clean•ng For Penntes On S1 Oehnquent
Phone 304~ 76 - 2902 II no an Ta. Repo 5 REO s Vou r Area
swer leave "'flWge
lou Free (1) 800 698-9778 Ex1
H 2814 For Curren Ltsonos.
lntenor And Extenor Patnung Ex
penenced References . Reason
One bedroom home tn Pomeroy
able Rates For FreeCaumates W•ll sell on land contrac1 614
6,. 448 2637 Ask For Oaw
992 5858
13oc ~

l •ghl Haul tng House Washrno
Home,
Bustness
Wtndows
Washed , Yard Ua lnlenartce
After 6 P.M 61.4 446-8183

AeduceCJ Pnce country home '"
town beautdul t 314 acres wtttf
WOOds moady levet located '" VII
fage of Mtddteport w•th a lovely
-~---------- 1 1888 Schutrs Spec•al Edttton mo
Lo ok tn g for That E•tra Spect•l bt1e horne, beth &amp; a hall, With car
Touch?
peUng th roughou t some new
Lei Us De lrver Your Personal plus many extras addeCI to nome
Mes sages Wtlh Our Spec1at t{ICfudes deck &amp; cenlra l atr
l OLJChi 61A 44&amp;.8114
~ 8 1.4 992 7350 (NO Sunday

cals)

Nee-d a babylllttr? Call Traq at
614 992 36Q1 Wholoi"""'"' Stale Rou te 588 Cape Cod. •
!Qr your lelsure bmt
...._ B~rooms Central AIC Fut1
and weekend hours
ilabht. 1 Bas.,.,t, 2 Car Detached Ga
oiJer reasonable r•tn end Mwe 1agtt With Wor kshop, 61&lt;4 ••1relerences.
0504

•

Country Furrn!Ure 304 675 8820
Rt 2 N 6motes Pt Pleaean( WV
lues Sat9 6 Sun 11 5

3 Bedroom House In Kanauga
Fenced Yard Carport $325/Mo
$300 Oepos11 No Pets 6t 4 446
12079 5

420

520

Sears Ltfestyle Treadmtll 3yra
old hke new 8 0 mph au10 trchne,
cushton deck 1 25 horse power
DC 1275 3l4-675-1712

Mobile Homes
for Rent

530

2 Bedroom fumshed ac washer
&amp; dryer, $2501mo plus uthttes, no
pets references &amp; dePOSit 304
675'&lt;874

Sc en1c Va lle y App le Grove
oeau rtlu l 2ac lOIS publt c wa ter
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2JJ6
RENTALS

410

540

Merchandise
1991 OldsmoDtle Cutlass Supreme Excellent Condttton All
Power Opttons 4 Door 1995 4x4
300 Honda Only Rode 10 Hours
t 992 12•70 Oakbrook Mobtl~
Home Newly Remodelod Inside &amp;
Out New Gas Furnace Saturday
Eventng &amp; All Day Sunday 814
379 2943

Two and three bedroom mobtle
homes starttng al $240 $300
sewer water and trash mcluded
f31.ol 992 2t87
Apartments
for Rent

2 l rke New Garag, Doors 9X7
Wood While Pnmer Pam1. CompleteS t OO 614-446 4296

t and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshad and unfurntshed securtty
deposll requ~ted no pets 614
992 2216

28 Fl Solar Cover Used Twrce
$90 614 368 9305
4 12M Compe!llton Sunwoolers
Less Than 4 Months Old Perfect
CondtliOn 614 446 8778

1 Booroom 2 Baths 2 Mtles Norlh
01 Vtnlon $300/ Mo Plus $300
Deposll Plus Eleclnctty No Pets
614 388-9080

Be1ge Sofa In Good Cond111on
SSO Call 6t4 446 1167 And
leave Message

t Bedroom apt furntshed ntce
netghborhOod pnvate no pels rei
&amp; depoM 304 675-2651

••BIIc:k quetn alze wlltrbed..
mtrror headboard wlpadded ralls
&amp; limned motiOn mattresl $175
614 11&lt;19 341Xl

f1edroom Super Ntce $2661
Mo
Plus Uttltltes Usually
Somethtng Avat/able l Sun Valley
Apartments 614-446 2957

Boots By Redw•ng, Chippewa,
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowest
Prices At Shoe Cafe Galltpohs

2 Bedroom lurntshed apts de
postt required parMI utiltttes patd
3l4 e7S.6512

Catone efectrrc stove wtth self
cleantng oven good condttton
$100 call 61.4 742 3712 alter
4pm

2bdrm apts total electnc ap
pltances lurntshed launary room
factltttes close to school 1n town
Applrcaltons ava lable at V111age
Green Apls 149 or call614 992
3711 EOH

Coleman Powermate generator
4000 ttO and 220 outlets used
very ltttle $500 614 992 7242

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Concreoe &amp; Plasuc Septoc Tanks
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 300 lh•u 2 000 Gallons Ron
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drtve Evans Enterpnses Jackson OH
/•om $244 lo $315 Walk to shop 1.1;:-80~0-_:53~7::_95::2::8~----­
&amp; movtes Call 614 446 2568 I.
Equal Hous 1ng Opportuntrv
Console
I TV Maple Hu tch
.,
Green Trash Compacto r Never
Elderly Lady Wants Roommate
Used Used Ktng St ze Bo•
Mature Share Rem &amp; UtiiHtes
Spnngs, Cast Iron Tub Stngle
Downtown Galllpol s Call o1 30
S1nk Vanuy, Bunk Beds Wtth
6 30 614 446 8029
Maltresses Floor Model Stereo
eu 368 9t21
Furn1shed Apartment 1 Bedroom
$295/Mo . Utrh11es Patd AC 607 Day Bed, W11h Trundle &amp; Mal
Second Avenue Galli polls 614
tresses like New $150, 61.4 245
446 3844 After 7PM
5903 After 9 ~M
Grac•ous hvrng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments a1 V1llage Manor and
Rtverslde Aparti'TI\tnts 10 Mtddle
port From S232 $355 Call 6t4
~ugn~t1~~ 4 Equal Housmg Opper

Dryer $75 Good Cond tlton
Washer $50 Needs New Ttmer
614 446 4948
Elect(IC
Scooter&amp;
And
Wheelcharrs fl'ew /Used Van 1
Car lrlt Installed Starrglr(jes Ltlt
Chatrs Call For Brochure 6t4
448 n83

M ddteport N 3rd Ave 1Dedroom
lurntshed apl Clepostt &amp; reJerence
reQutred 304 882 2566

Etvts Re cord Collection Some
Fla re Also Elv1s Autograpned
Photo 614 682 7894

New Haven 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom lur
n1shec:J apts Oepos•l &amp; relerei"'C
es 304 882 2566

G1bson model chest lreezer 304
773 5950

Ntce Clean 2 Bedroom All Elec
tnc Furntshed K•tchen Close To
Spnng Valley No Pets S3501Mo
+DO Relorences 614 446 6157

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapatred New &amp; RebUill In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 fK&gt;O 537 9528

Ntce rwo bedroom apartment 1n
Pomeroy, no pets 614 992 5858

Ltlestyler Treadmrll Excellent
Condtllon $300 Call After 5 PM
614 367 0451

One bedroom apanmenl n Mtd
dlepor! an uttiHtes patd S270tmo
plus S100 deposrl Call 614 QQ2
7806 6am Spm

Ltke new sola ma.tchrng rocMer
and chatr collee taDie and two
end tables IWo lamps also recliner $499 614 992 2268

Twtn Rtvers Tower now accopttng
appl catiOns lor 1br ~UD subs1d
tzed apt for elderly and hand•
capped EOH 304 675-6679

l ncoln portable welder Onan
powered $950 so· pull beh ind
mower lor Jap lractor $650 6t4
992 3/181

Two 1bedroom apartmen ts lur
mshed utrlmes •ncl ~ded 304 675
3595

Ltvrng Room BO" Two Cushion
Couch $100, 30R Whole House
Fan 4900 CFM $125, 100,QIIO
BTU Fuat Dot Fumace $150 Call
Aner 5 oo 614 445-73 75

Two bedroom tn Pomeroy $2501
mo plus utrlrues depostl lease
no peta 614 667-6205
Very clean one bedroom tur
mshed apanmenl m Mtddleport
call 614 446 3091 or 6t4 992
2178

450

New Gas Furnaces Now Galvan
rzed Duct Work New Hood Fans
614 379 2720 AFTER 6 pu

:::---..:-=::~::.:.::_:.:::"'.:___1

Furnished

2 Be droom House Relng erator
Stove Fu rnosh ed $2401MO $150
Dewsu 6 14 446 3670
2 Bet:Jroom House 2 Beoroom
"{ratler AC In Gall•polt s 6 u 446
8849 For lnlorma110n
205 Popu lar St 2 Bedroom fu ll
bsm1 no pet s S215Jmo depo stt &amp;
references :K)4 6 7~381 2
Avatlable soon n1ce 3 bedroom
references, depostt &amp; no pets
304-675-5162
1n

AKC
Mint
Dauchshunds
Wormed,
CFA.
Regtstered
Stamese Klllens Wormed &amp; Ltlter
Traoned 814 367 7705

Dog &amp; Cat Groomtng r&amp;asonable
pnces 1Syrs e11penence Call for
appts 304 875 8831
German Shepherd Pups 6
Weeks Black &amp; Tan Pu rebred No
Papers Wormed $75 614 388

8546
Goldtn Retr.everl Border Collte
pups lor sale call614 992 2313

1986 Thunderbord V 6 PS PB
PW AtC 80 918 miles mtnor lelt
ntar damage $1050 614 949
23t 1 days or 6U 949 2644

198 7 Camero 2 8 6 Cyltnder 5
Speec:J Uu11 Pen AC Runs
looKs Good S2 500 6t4 441
0409

t.Atntature Schnauzer pups must
sell 614 992 5407
Monthly Flea Programs Are Ex
pens•ve &amp; Don t Kt11 Treks For
Fleas Treks Flies And Hoi
Spots Ask J 0 NORTH PRO
DUCE 814 446 1933 About HAP
PY JACK KENNEL DIP

1987 Ford Taurus wagon lour
door PS P8 PW power seats aJ
c 94 372 miles blue w1th gray tn
tenor, mtnor from damage S1:150
814·949-2311 days o• 614 949·
2644 even ngs

Puppy Pala-ce Kennels Boardtng
S!ud Servtce Pupptes Groommg
Buy Sell &amp; Trade All Breeds
Paymenrs Welcome 614 388
0429

1087 Ford Taurus Wtlh Atr, Au
tomattc Transmtss•on Good Con
dtlton 4 Door Low Mtleage 614
379 2720 AFTER 6 PM

Regtstered Aouwetlers 12 Weeks
All Shots And Wormea Up To
Date Both Parents On Prem•ses
$250 614 368 9220

nae

1988 Plymouth Voyager SE
Crutse, 5 Speed, Manual Trans
t10000 Mtles $27.00 614 446-

Sybert~n Husky 18 Montns Old

113~

Has Papers SSO 614 448 4210
After 6 P.M
Whne AKC Regtst&amp;red Poo(jles
one 18male two males ages 4
mos to 5yrs 6t4 992 7641

1969 Butck LeSabre, excellent
runmng condtllon, V·6, PB, PS,
AC, power WindoWS, $3800, 614·
949 2045 or 614 949·2302.

570

1989 Ford Escort 4 Door. Au tomanc $500 61,.448-1870

Musical
Instruments

1989 Olds Cu tlass Coe•a Body
Damage Runs Good 4 Door, M:.,
PB PS, PW $750 614 448 1615,
Alter Sl11614 4oi6 1244

Bundy Saxaphone ltke New Call
614 3"/Q 288a

1989 Ponttac Formula 30St1o, all
power Hops, Alprne stereo
$6 800 080,304-675 6780

FARM SUPPLIES
LIVESTOCK

1990 Dodge Sp1o1 ,. Door, AU·
tomat•c Good Condtllon, $2,800
OBO 614 256 1233, 614· 258·
1569

Farm Equipment

720 Clatk Bobcat $5 500 304
895·3467 or 3l4 895-3859

111191 Mustang GT conventble, 5
speed 4 7k miles all op110n1 ntce
cap leiters $10 800 8 14 049
2732

Dozers loaaers John Deere
450c 350 600 Backhoe TO 25
lnt 977 Cal Bantam Eacavator
Massey Ferguson traclor 80
Ford dump !ruck uSed parts :3()4
736 7896
farmal l Super M Wtde Front Ena
Power Steenng Wet Lmes Re
SIOfed $4 000 6t4 379 ~381
For Sale Sawnull 3:&gt;4 4SS.155t
Gravely With Frntshtng Mower
Stckle Bar Brand New T•res As~
rng $750, Kabota Tractor 4 WD
Otesel, 3 PT Huch Wtth 4 Ft Ftn
1sh1ng Mower On BacM A.sktng
$3 000 HeaVy Duly UulltyTralter
Askrng 1300 215 70 t5 Ttres
Askmg $15 Ptece &amp;u 441 07Q6
Or 614-388.9449

&amp;

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Tan At HOillO
Buy DIRECT and SAVEl
Commerc\81/Home Untts From
$199 00
'
Low t.lonohly Paymerus FREE
Color Catalog can TODAY
1 1100 842 1305

Tratler space lor rent tn Mtddle
port 614 992 3194
MERCHANDISE

510

Household

GoOds
Atr Condmoners Washer Dryer
Relngerato r Freezer Stove, M1
crowave, Color TV. VCR 61 4
256 1238

Used
toms
$35
Each

Appliances
Recondntoned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrt grators 90 Oay Guarantee!
Frenct1 Ctty Mayrag eu 446
7795

Used R 40 Otten Wtlch Trencher
caus14-s94 7842

550

Btg, Savmgs On Carpet &amp; V•nyl In
Stock $6 00 VoH Up Mollohan
Ca&lt;peo~ R7N 814-446-7444

Block, brrck, sewer prpe 1 wrncl
ows ltnrets, etc Claude Wtnlert
R oo G•lnde OH Call 614 245
5121

no pel~ 614·992 5858

house wtth stage, tables lor rent
fo r parttes and homecomtngt
Bnng you r own n'l\.lstc 6t4 2117·
2120 o• 30qn so86
,
Small 1 Be&lt;lroom House UnJur
nosned No Pets, Near K Mart t
Wondow Aor Cond olooner $3251
Mo You Pay Gas &amp; Elecuoc Call
Before 9 A M 0• Afte&lt; 9 PM
8, 4446 1822

Btallng
Supplies

Fa

Ponderosl Cempground SR
338, Apple Grove, Otlto- prrmulve
camptng electrtc hook ups rea
sonable ralea alsb large sheller

Kt!Chon Cabinets Top tBot
$50 2 Pc 40 5 Cabrnet
Fa11 Machme $1 70 080
6t 4 245 9448 Mark

69 Ponuac Formula excellent
conchllon, very clean, low rrntes 1
lOPS loaded 61 .. 992·5138
"89 Thundart&gt;rd SC, two door, 3 8
hire, V-8. ohte riiOdol turbo PS
PB, AC , 5 speed, power seats
and locka , "Groll Car.- $5200
neg , 614 992-7478 or a14 94g

2679

'

1967 Plymoulh Sportolu•y 62 000
Must Sell lmmedtatalyl 3 Can
ongo'""l moles. $1 ,800 OBQ
Ctled or Uncjeftvered Arch StHI
1971 New Yorker ~rts or whole
Butldtngs 20x32 30•66, 40x50
car 300-675-2158 after 5
Otseounle(j Sh1pp.ng on Se!Kt8'0
Mode4s C.M 1 800 341 700 7 ~
1973 Cnevy MaiiDu 4 Door
Runs Good $600, 614 446 4270
Pets for Sale
1978 Toyota Celoca GT good 20R
12 Foncll8nll Plus Ca~ St!iO 8 engono. wo/1 sell lo• Plrll s•oo
Plua Ca~ S 100. 814 888· 304-675-5181 ~·pm

111~,~~;:9~:;:::~~~:~:~~,:~.~~

I::..::.::::=..::.:.::.:::..:::=:___ 560

Hou-

VrRA FURNITURE
614·446-3158
0.0~
Furnllre And
-GreatOtllo On
Cuh And c.ry1 RENT-2-0WN
And tay-v Al10 Milablt
Free OeiMtr)' Within 25 Milu

=

3 Baby Cockobels . t-olbino, 2IJOY 304-675-5505

'

Eamhart Monl8 Cerlo,
Of A Kondl 814 441

K 7 5 3
10

,.

West
Pass
Pass

WHAT FOR?
HE'S HAPPY
- MIRE II

Nortb
Db I

3•

Pass

Pass

PB5S

•Opemng lead •

~ ••
·
=~------------------~
Boats &amp; Motors
:·
, •:

~~~~--~.:.:~~---:·
12 ~type boat rwo swrvel sea Jli _,,
.:...,}

12ft Wllh lfatler 6001 Capllvtly •
loot pedal trolley motor wlbalterr.A~
7 112hp motor 304 675 6809
'

'
,'
:
'•

CUARLIE BROWN SA'f5 1-115

ELBOW I-IURTS 50 MUCI-l 1-11: MAl(
NEVE~ BE ABLE TO PITCj.j A6AIN ..

1-lt

01-1, WELL, l-IE
WASN'T MtJCI-l
OF A PITCI-IER

AN'{WA'&lt;..

-------------------=-,
t70hp Mere 191t open !:low new •:
cus tom cove rs tra th ng cover ••1
'

304 875 3284 Leave message

7::::---~----~~===---· ·

1074 15Ft Bonna Ftshtng Boa! ::
1-988 15 HP Motor Trolhng Motor .A,
And 1981 Drily Tra tler $2 000 1t
614 245 5766
:·

----------------- ·'

1976 Checkmate 17Ft Boat 14G •'
HP Evtnrude Outboard Gare.ga...! :
Kept Trade r 1994 Patnt, WooeSiats Carpeltltghts t995 Ttret '{
Boat 1904 Martne PlywoOd Ftoor T
Seats Carpel Stereo Speakers, '
1995 Bauery Wondshletd $4 ooo '
11
614 446 4102

•,.lll'ftld ,....
FRANK &amp; F.ARNF.~T

.

f

'•

1979 Starcrah ~n bow 140 hp ,•
outboard 17 112 asktng $2600 .... ,;
814 742 2367
:.

,.

1993 21 Ft Marada .4 3 LX!.
MercCrutser Open Bow Sta•rf;
less Prop Ft•ll Canva&amp; Package
Moormg Cover Sunc~eck Tan ·
oem Tratler Wlltl Brakes Alumt
num Wheels Much More• Excel.,.
lenl Condmon 614 367 0659 Or
1314 367 7379

•'
1

'

:·
,,
1

!:
,
t,

'•

20R Checkmate t 70 hp 10 sk 1( :•
tube &amp; Jackets garage kept e11c ...
cond $4 a&gt;o 304 882 2970
~ ~

2329

790

wda.)

god

24 Pocket bnlld
25 White I - t
26 Remove (from
office)
27 Couch
29 Verdi 01*1

Horla'allllt

31 Large knlle
38 Actor-

Meclachlln
lhiM
42 Smoolh
44 Mualc bull'e

Phillip Alder

purchMe
46Embr47 Somethlno
unique
4B layer of

•

0 IH&amp; by N£A Inc

THE BORN LOSER

l e.oJ61-\T TI-ll:) I'm( Cf ~ 'l
YE:!&gt;~~'( 10 RJ&gt;,NT ~')
lo4t&gt;..T~:)

Are you careful wtth the cards that
you play• True, agaonst many oppo
nents 1t won't matter tf you make a
small slip, but not agrunst an expert hke
Kit Woolsey, from Kenstnglon. Cahr
North's double was negative, showmg hearts
Agamst four hearts, Woolsev led the
spade knrg seven, rove, rou"r From
th1s , Woolsey realized thai hos partner
had started woth eother the smgleton
five or the doublelon queen five Woth
tbe doublelon 10 five. East would have
played the 10, not the five So. Woolsey
contmued w1th the spade none the
hogh card bemg a su1t preference sog
nal ror doamonds
After wmnmg With the spade queen.
East, Bill Pollack from Wam!n, NJ , re
turned the diamond sox When declarer
played low from hand, 11 was temptmg,
gtven ~uth's one· doamond openmg
btd, for Woolsey to Win With the ace and
try to gove hts partner a d1amond ruff
But Woolsey played low Why?
Knowmg Ea ~t had four hearts
Wool sey realized South couldn t draw
all the trumps H South dtd that
Woolsey would run hos remamtng
spades when m wtth the dtamond ace
And 1f South drove out the doamond
ace before pulling al: the trumps, East
would get hos ruff, whether he started
wtth a smgleton or doubleton doa
mond The contract was dead
What was South's error•
At tnck one, he should have dropped
the spade 10 Then tt would have been
dangerous for Woolsey to lead a low
spade at trick two because East mtght
have begun With the doublelon five four
To make 1t harder ror the defenders
to read theor sognals copy the1r meth
ods, playmg hogh from a doubleton
and low from a tnpleton

50 Doggie doce
51 Wciila Of
underallndlno
52

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Futura lltye.'

I IIIII

55

u.nnon·a 10ft

56 CeiH. llfllne
CleaUnetlon
57 Comecllll'l

c...

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrtty Clf)he1 cryplogram&amp; are created hom quo1aloo5 by IIITKXJ5 people pall aoo PI'IMI'II
Each leller '" tke c1pher standt lor another Today s clwt P ~lilt" v

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UG E

AKB YR R

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CBZGAZEA

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WHDPZBAZN

A H

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CBGKGO

U G E

WKBYEA

OZZAYDC

VYRRT

V GV Z

BSAK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -Power corrupts but lack of power corrupt&amp;
absolutely " - Orson Welles

T::~:t:~' &lt;O©~~lA-tl£t.~s·
0
U/oo4

~r

CLAY I

:::

1'011AN __.;__ _ _ __

Reorronoe letters of
four scromblec:l words
low lo form four words

R E MK A T

IIII

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H UG C L
,-,-,::-c::-c-----.~

L E A D I 1.~''.
«
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·You should always be prepared ' the troop leader sa1d
"The best way to start a fire w11h

I

,-----------. two sttcks ts to make sure one
E E M0 8
of the sltcks 1s a - - -- _, ..
~-r~--.,~,-,-.-,-;,.1,_5;:...,.---1 0 Complele lht chuckle quoled

c

Motor Homes
1972 Star Craft pop up camper
lair condotoon $600 304 882 '

.
.
•
•
.
by ftl!tng tn rhe mrssm9 words
.___._
...... _...__..__.._-J
you develop from step No J below

:, :
II

1984 Ntssan Mtraoe mtm moto tJ 1
home 4cyl 5s;pd dual rear! '
wheels, stove refugerator stnhl.f •
sleeps 5, 20mpg $2 BOO 3043&lt;
875-2949

•

SQNES 1

LOOK

"'T THIS!

1

SIC.ULL ~

614 388

•

SrECIES.!

SCRAM.J.rTS

Tile Treosure
Sov1n11 You'll Find In tile
ClossJ(Ied SeciiCHJ.

'
:
'

Home

.. ;
:,::

----~BA~&amp;~M~E~N~T~----. ~

Auro Loan$. Dealer will arrange f1
nanc.ng even tf you have been
turned down elsewhere Up1on
Equtpment Usod Cars 304 458
1069

WATERPROOFING
•'\.
Unc:onchttonal hleume guarantee-..
Local references lurmshed Es •"'
tabltshed 1975 Call (61o1) 446 ·~ ::
0870 Or 1 800 287 0576 Raoars 't.
Waletprooftng
Y'4 .,,

IN

TO GET ANSWER

f\A.VE. UIIICO\IERE.D

.A-N ENTIRELY NEW

Improvements

LETTERS

A UNSCRAMBLE A80Vf LUTfiS

L.OOI' /lo.J Ttl\.!&gt; _TIIINC.'
WHAT "' I&gt;I:KOVlltY I
rT COULD ~E A '
Dt I'Co.sAU" ! r t1AY

I

SERV ICES

PRINT NUMi£REO
THESE SQUARES

~~~~~~~~:~~~;:;
Campe v

810

end
22 CrHPIIY
23 Mlnneaoll
cepllel (2

10-LIII
11 Small hD&lt;ae
16 Scandinavian

30

Campers&amp;

3235

Come to en

liaaue

750

=~=--,--...:..~---~

20

K

By

oeo

How IWHI

38 Groupo!

t99S Kaw BayClu 4 Wheelet''
Sellmg For Payoll 01 S2 500 614 :
256 6696

S:I&gt;O 614-M2 7242

9

Eesl
Pass

Small slip, high price

for Sale

Lauder
14 Plua
59
15 lawyers
60
17 Tavern
61
18 -laland
62 Temperahlental
19 Composition
63 Collector 'a
21 Ending tor
goal
Brooklyn
23 JFK olght
DOWN
24 Moat artificial
1 Construction
28 Kind of grain
beam (2 wda)
32 Debtor's note
33 Farm product 2 Vow
3 Weotern
34 Fishing reel
defense org
35 Chore
4 Certain
37 - - first you
dlaaenter
doni
5 Navalabbr
39 Female deer
6 Map abbr.
40 Bohemian
41 Poet- (dlotln- 7 Spenlah king
8 Positive worda
gulahlld tltlt)

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

t Q9S Z-28 Camara loaded wit
tops, all leather mter~or black
117 500 304 773-6166

=
720

ll"ucks for Sale

' 841 Ford Ranger wnh topper $
speed V 6 a•r condluontng QOOCI
condnron S1500 080 75 Krown
ODD up camper new lites very
good CO\'Idttton S1000, 614 D40

TRANSPORTATION

86 Chovy Barena GT V 6 au
lomat tc new patnt ntce car
$2400 614 11&lt;19 2877

t

"'A K

58

•

Put down
ActreuUIImenn
Tourlotl(ljlglng
Writer Shute
one, In Frence
CEO'a quality?
Halr-atyllng
lotion
Not IUillble
It's In the bag!
Mra In Madrid

·I MONDAY

111111

ANSWiaS

Exhort - Batch - Smge - Throng - NEIGHBOR
_

My s1ster ts

a

very compet1hve person

Lately she

1 seems very con!ent The reason lor her contentment IS
1
that she ha•; everythong her NEIGHBOR has'

JULY 151

ROBOTMAN

~.

N H, 277 HayDone $2500 Phone
814-682·3956

Uprrght Freezer Wood tCoa l
Cook Stove Gasoltne Hoater ti
AM 4 PM 614 379 2840

-

SEIZED CARS From $175
Porsches, Cadrllaca Ch~vys
BMW's. Corvettes Also Jeeps 4
WO's Your Area Toll Free 1
800-898 0718 Ext A 281' Fo'
..
-=c:;ur;:ren1;..;.::L:;.:";::IlnG::!:s.:_______

La,rge round batls of nay 18001)
S12DOea 004~75-1365

84 Ford Tempo 4 door automat
•c left rear tall light damage
97 000 mtles S350 OBO 6 t .4
9•9 231 1 days or 6t4 949 264-i
evenlflgs

•Jt875

Motor Gutde 720 Trolling Malo( '
18 tb Thrust. Fool Steertng Anct ~
Take Off$125, 614 682 3938

7060

.J

Wtde Gliele 3,900 M•les. E•cellent ,.
Co ndnton $15 500 61-i 4 46 ' :
9230
:.

1995 Pontrac Bonnev111e SE
Leather SealS, PW, POL, Au
romattc TemQeraturt Control Au
lomatrc Moon Roof 6 U-367

20 Btg Round Batls 01 Hay 614
4404344

710 ' Autos for Sele

South
• 10 4

1992 Chrysler New Yorker Ftfttl
Avenue Wnll Mark Cross Leath
er lntertor, Power Seats Wtth
Drrver's Stde Memory Po__wer
Wmdows /Locks All The Extras!
Garage Kept, Less Than 34,000
Mtles, Ltke New, 614 256 1275
Ahe&lt;6

tomattc , SE Atrbags,
B•ekea,
PW, POL, Anulock
614 386
0568

G[aln

Super stngle water-bed. minored
bookce!e headboard 1 8 drawor
pedestal 304 6 75.1988

tA984
•64

___ L,,_---·

Used A 40 Ouch Wuch Toencher
614-684 7842
'

Hay

•10932
tQ6
•98753

1993 Mercury Tracer Take Over
Coachman 35ft Slh wheel
Payments 01 S2001Mo. Senous
CallsOriy, 614 4.4t 0608
1 --·----wlaccessones Raady to
-:-~-:-~--...:..:.::.:_
see 111000 304 773
199.4 Pon11ac Grand Prtx, Au

no

640

•4

Bay l•ner 2311 Cuddy Crutset ":,
new 350 Cl tnboar(j sleeps 1/ 1:
stove head rcebox 304 675t;-

1993 Chry~er LeBaron GTC Low
Mtles
Excellent Cond tllon
$10 999 304 675 1762 Leave
Messaoe

NH 273 Square Baler, NH 310
Square Bater, 2 NH 855 Balers
All Excellent Condntonl NH 851
Baler Goo~ Condllton NH 718 •
F
•
oeld Choppe,, G•ass Head,
1 &amp; 2 Row Corn Heads NH 256
Hay Rake All Are Freid Ready
614-669 St01

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Uprtghl Ron Evans EnrerprtSes
Jackson Olloo 1 1100 537 9528

•QS

8011 Otle&lt;, 614-&lt;46-0350

1991 Olds Cu1lass Calay 2dr,
4cyl Sspd sunroof rear defrost
runs &amp; looks good S2 BOO 304675 2949

1992 Plymouth Aetlatm V-6, Au
lomattc:, Loaded, 56,00Q Mtles
$6 495080, 614·441-1195

HydrauliC Hoses Made To Order
S•d~Jr s Equtpment Co 30&lt;1 ti75
7421

Rooms lor rent week or month
Starling at $120/mo Galha Hotel
614 446 9580

Easl

•AK9632

14 Fl Ftbergtass Skt Type Boat
20 HP Mercury, Oul~oard Motor
Wtth Tilt Tratler $800 6t4 6B2i
7894

1987 Honda CRX looks and runs
good, htgh m•l~ge $1450, 6U
992

Regtslered Weunaraner pupptes
304-675 7740

610

West

109.4 Astra Conver110n Van Wtth

,,

eventngs

07 IS 96

CO AU Power ExceWent Cor'lditton

~~~-----------------'·'·
-~1994
Harley Davtdson Dyna 't"

882 2625

Jack Russell temer pupp•es 1Q
lbs lull 9fDWn all colors S2501ea
two Shellte mtntature ColltltS
males S12Siea e14 742 2050

&amp;

EEK&amp;MEEK

i]:

Groom Shop Pet Groommg Fea
tuono Hydro Bath Don Sheers
Call614 446 0231

North
• J 8 7
• A QJ 6
t J I0 2
• QJ 2

1-__;__________:,

1gg,. GMC Safart Van )(T 4 3 V :
1983 Trans Am 25th Anntversary 6 Auto 100 PW PL AC PM '
Of Daytona 500 Ed1t1on All Op Loaded Must Sell 614-388 9556 ;
tJons Southern Car 1gee Nnssan
1986 Ford F tSO 414 8100 Miles :
Cook Motors, 614 446.()103
Auto Blue $7300 304 67 5 1782
1984 BMW 3181 ale sunroof S o•304 675-4815
speed , amlfm cassetle good
740 Motorcycles
condttton $2500 080 614 992
76 t 9
1982 Yamaha Verago low Mtle '
1984 Chevy Cavelter tht Deer age Good Condtt1on S1 300 OBO :
814 446 3278 6t.4 446 3()9g
I
Many New Parts $500 OBO 614
446 1228 Alter 5PU
~~----------~~
r
t990 Kawasakt 600Fl 4 700 Mtle~
1984 O!ds Cunass 4 dr a~r auto Black In Color S2 500 614 446
~
radto runs good great worK car 2924
$700 1 6, 4 388 8303
1992 Suzukt GSXR 600W Lor.
1986 Chevy Cavalier 4cyl auto, M1les Good Cond ttlon Exira
good cond Call al!er 5pm 304- $4200 30.4 875 1782 Leave MeSI' •

AKC Whtre &amp;st lver sable Ger
man Shephar(j pupp!es excellent
le~rament Xl4-675-7oi95

Motel Gall tpolts OH 614
446 2501 or 6t4 367 0612 Elle
Ctency Rooms Cable An Phone
Mtcrowave &amp; Rein ) erato r Tax•
Serv•ce 112 Pm Fo r Motel
Guest

C~rcle

1963 Thunaerb~td Heruaoe 50 h
tre loaded new ttres looks and
runs good $1250 1982 Chrysler
LeBaron convert 1ble 4 cyl au
tomallc looks and runs good
$1300 614 247 ~292

AKC Lhasa Apso Pupptes,
Ready I ShOll Wormed Pnvate
Owner, Alhens tt.tartena Slate
Rc1111e 550, eu 551 2722

Bailed StnrN 614 245-5135

2 Bedroo m House In Galllpolt s
Reteren ces &amp; Depo s1 t 614 379
24 00

Na 2 or 3 bedroom hOuse

AKC Lhasa Apse pupp•es 111
shots &amp; wormed 6wks old $175
1-6U 388-8434 before Spm Mon
Frt 1 61-4 388-8956 after Spm

Oueen Stze OrthOpedrc Manress
Livestock
Set And F r am~ Never Used Strll 630
In Plasttc Cost S800 Sell $250
6t4 775 2360
For &amp;ale Dr traete - four year old
::-,--::.:.:.:::...__ __;:____ 1 nereford Lomoustn bull 614 949.
Relr1gera1ors Stoves, Washers ~g
~
And Dryers All ReconditiOned
And GaurameM I $100 And Up Goats Btg Nanny s $60 Young
Wtll DeliVer 6t4 669 6&lt;1 4 t
Nanny 5 We alkers S35 61 4 256
6504

Rooms

executive-

1 Week Olcj Purebred Male Rat
Terner Puppy Had 1st Shots
Been Wormed $50 6t4-245:
55e7
'

Miscellaneous

Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom unturntshed 507 112
2nd St New Haven Call aher
5pm 304 675 3469

~

Antiques

Buy or sell Rtverme Antiques
112-i E Matn Streer on AI 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 oc:i
am ro 600 pm Sunday too to
6 oo p m 614 992 2526, Ruas
Moore owner

2 Bedrooms In Mercemlle Area

440

Sporting

GoOds

1984 Clayton Mobtle Home&amp;, 2 614·256-1686
Bedrooms 1 Bath 614 441 0608
---------3 bedroom mobile home 2 baths
1989 Paul Harbor 14x72 wt ex
tn M•ddleport no pels 614 992
pando 3 bedroom 2 bath ser~ous 5858
1nquues only 304 882 3656
Tratler lor rent m Galhpohs area
1990 Sunshtne 14x70 2 Full 614 446-8649
Baths 2 Large Bedrooms Large
Tratler lor ren1 outsrde ol Pamer
Covered Patto AC $21 000 614
oy 614 992 5039
441 1205

Baby s• Her Needed In My H o m e l 1 • • • • • • • • • • 1,
Non Smoker Would Be Avarlable
fo Work Any ~ours For More In
lormauon Call 614 441 0602 After
New 141f80 Only make 2 pay
6 PM
ments &amp; move 1n no paymeQI al
ter 4 years, lree set up &amp; delivery
304 755 5885
Earn 1000s weeiUy swffrng envel
New Bank Repo s, only 3 lei! free
opes at home Be 1our boss Star!
All real estate advertising In
set up &amp; (je•very 304 755 7191
no w No expenence Free sup
this newspaper Is subject to
Plt es tnfo no oblrgatton Send
New Bank Repos Onty 3 lelt Sltll
llle Federal Faor Hcuslng Act
S A S E to Presttge Untt l P 0
1n warranty 304 755 7191
Bo- t 95609 Wtnler Spnngs FL
ol1968 which makes II Illegal
32 719
to adverttse "any preference,
oraer Schultz home owner occu
limitation or dlscrtmlnat!On
pted 2 bedroom excellent lor
Easy Wo rk ! Excellem Pay I As
based on race color rellgklll
young or retrred couple prtced on
semb,e Producls a1 Home Call
tnspeclon 304 675 5394
sex fam1hal status or nalionat
Toll Free t 800 467 5566 EXT
ongln or any Jntentlon to
12170
Pr ce Buster 1997 3beoroom
make any such preference,
$825 down St S9Jmo Free dehv
HOME TYPI ST PC users need
llmttatron or d1scnmrnation •
ery &amp; setup Only at Oakwooa
eo $45 000 mcome potenrral
Homes Nttro WV 304 755 5865
Call I 800 513 4343 Ext B 9J66
Thts newspaper will not
knowllngty accept
340 Business and
l ocal lu• Serv1ce Needtng Men
&amp; Women For Dispatcher s &amp;
advertisements for real estate
Buildings
Or tver s 614 446 7088
which Is In vlotatlon of the law
Our readers are hereby
Commerctal Butldtng For Sale On
Need someone to dtg oul lounda
Route 7 Crown Cny 100 Fl x60
lnlonne&lt;lthatal awellongs
1on mu st be reasonable 614
Ft 2 Baths &amp; Kitchen $65 000
advenlsed 1n this ney,spaper
Q92 30QO
614·258 1270
are available on an equal
One D:1y !Week Dental Hygten
opportunity basis
ProlesstonaVBustness butlcltng lor
Pos tlton Available Wtth Pan Ttm&amp;
sublease Located at 509 S Thrrd
Por en11al In Team Ortented Prac
Street Middleport OhiO E•cellent
Ice Must Be Wtlltng To Work
for phys1cran oll tce or real estate
REAL ESTATE
Haro Rend er Quality Care And
space Ample street parktng
EnJOY Wo rktng W1lh The PubliC
Avatlable •mmedtately Contact
Please Se nd Resume s To Drs
A l Kunz 614 593 3375 collect
Sm !h &amp; Jorgensen Spt1ng Vallev 31
Homes for Sale
Pr olP.ss ona l Bldg 995 Jackson
P1Ke Suit e 10 1 Galll po lts Ohto 1 t /2 Story house new roo! new 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
&lt;~56 31 Or Call 614 446 219 1 To v1ny t Stdtng new pa tnt 1ns1de &amp;
ou t 2614 Ltnco ln Ave Call roll 1 Acre loolers water septtc ga
Schedule An ln1erv1ew
rage black top road 1n Addtson
lree ask lor Anna 1 BOO 7t5
area 6td 386 8978
Pan lime dtetary atdes lor 100 3366
oed Sktlled tac 111~ Appty between
14 parcels Irom 1 2 to t1 6 acres
9am &amp; Jpm at Rocksprmgs Rehab 1994 14x76 Fleelwood 2 bed
some ovorlooktng Ractne partial
room
2
bath,
ElK
LA.
all
electnc
Center 36 759 Rockspnng s Road
t nanctng 614 992 7104 alter
Pome roy Oh 45 769 No phon e Cia appltances skylights garden 6pm
tub many extras. No money down
calls EOE
payoff or take over loan ol 25 Acres Hannan Trace School
Person to mtlk 614 949 2578
$21 800 304 773 5302
Dtstnct Small Tobacco Allotment
Mtneral R1gh1s 614 256 1611
Postal Jobs 3 Postllons Avail 2 BR. 1 Balh level Lo1 Rremo
able No E xpe rten._~ NeCessa ry died Fatrl i nd 1 Gallta County
39 Acres 5 room trovse 2 out
Fo, 1ntorm a110n Ca ll 1 818 76 4 Schools C ~U Oe tatls
(6 t 41 bulldtngs near Eureka Oh10 304
001 6 Ex l 11 26
256 1095
273 9895 o• 304 576 3199
Rewp!IOmst F le Clerk 4 Day s A 2 br home 5 acres on Sr 124
BRUNER LAND
Wee~ Send Resume To PO Box Aacme 2 car garage wlaparrment
614 775 9173
33 Galltpalts OH 4563t
well eleclnc heal other bulldtngs
call Home Nattonal Bank Racme
t..Aetgs County Close To Athens
WILDLI FE !CONSERVATION
Oh 614 949 2210
Country Lots 5 Acres $6 500 12
JOBS
Acres $9 000 10• Acres $6 500
Game War dens Secu nty Ma tn 2 3 bedroom house 50x t 00 lot
tenancc Etc No EJp Nece!sary located tn Syracuse appliances Great Home Sues Or Hunung
Now Hutng For lnlo Call (2t 9) mcluded call 614 992 5767 alter
Gall•a County Just N 01 Hunttng
7g4 0010 Ex t 8710 9 AM To 11 4pm
ron 3 Mt!es Out Teens Run &amp;
PM 7 Days
2872 Thtrd Street, Syracuse 2 Chamber s Ads 7• Acres With
Pond S12 000 Your Horses Wtll
Your Burger Kt ng Is Genmg Real lots 112 acre tota l, 4 BR, LA FA
Close We Sell The Besl Bu rgers OR, kttchen ut~•ty, new bath new Love Th ts a. Acre s Wtth Stream
In The Busmess And Are Look Dlumbtng overlookrng OhiO RIVer S1 t 900 GallipoliS Area 10 Acr
es$17000 9Acres$t45000r
mg for The Oht Employees To available September 1st $4 5 000
22 Acres W1111 Pond $25 000
tl elp Us Apply In Per son At Res 614 992 5006 or 614 9927496
au r~n t S11 e (Gal ltpolts) From 8
II. M To 5 PM Da tl y Tue sday 3 Bedroom Bnck Home 1 112 Owner Fmanctng 10% QJI Cash
Purchases Call For Free Maps
l nrt F rtd ;~y
Baths New f;ton t &amp; Back Porch
New 30 Year Shtngtes, New Sothet
Lots lor rent Now taktng appl•ca
180 Wanted To Do
&amp; Gulters New CA Wen lnsulat
liOns Country Lane Mob•le Home
ed 5 M1nu1es From Galltpolls
Park Galltpol s Fefly WV 304
fl. ., y Odd Jo cs pa mltng carpon
Small Vtnyl Stded Our Butldtng
675 5421
ty lawncare etc 3046757t12
$79 900 614 441 1417
8 lbfS•III ng 1n my home reason
dU i e ra te s llex tbl e hours na'l e
1ererencl'S close to schOol 304
6h 2784

1----...,;;.,:..:.,::.:____

211&lt;4 Monroe Ave 4 Bedroom,
lull bsml no pels $4001mo de
pos11 &amp; references 3 0~ 6 75
3812

&lt;J3

ACROSS

- - - - - - - - - - • ·•,
Apphance Parts And Servtee All :•
Nama Q1ands Over 25 Vears Ex
•:
•
penance All Work Guaranleed
f'
French Ctty Maylag 6141 4.46 - •'

1795
~
1-----------'
,,
C&amp;c Gene•ao Home Moon ;, '::
tenence Pa•ntmg v1nyl s•d•ng ) ~
carpentry doors wtndows balhs " ~
1
mobile horre repstr and more For "'
free estunare call Chet 6t4 992~
6323

:s·

=

CR"lWAll

23-i-i

H~, fintsh repaw
91 Ford F250 heavy duty truck, Cethngs tertured, plaster repatr
rtght front suspenston dam•ge, 5 Call Tom 304 8 75 4186 2Q years
speed nnsmtsston, 83,000 nllles, e•perK~nee
nkmg 13000, 8t4 9411 23t1
Ron s TV Servrce specrahz•ng rn~
days Ot 614 949 26C.4 -..,.ngs
Z~~nrtn also servtc•ng mos! olherl
1971 Chevy Dump Truck Cheater braMs House calls 1 800 797 "
Tandem C60 Senes. 12 Fl Metal 001~ WV304 516 239a
Good Shape Woth Roll Tarp
t lots New Parts 814 Rooltno &amp; Qulters comote1e home
2~~~~;~~-:..~~-~ romodeltng decks &amp; !11d1ng 35
~
F
years e•pertenco B &amp; 9 Roohng
1977 100 Ford 300 8 Cyhnder and Consuuct•on 614 992 2364 $1 200 61 • 245-55Q7
' o&lt;1 BOO 889 3/143

1Q83 Food F-100 stop side, 302.
3tpd wloverclnve, blue 1ntertor
good c!and whtl• S2 000 304:
451-1Q10
1988 lsuz~ Pock-Up Great Run
Around Truck $1,000 080 814
446·4333
'
19i2 Ford Explorer 4 Door
80811 Mlleo. loaded Mull Se/11
810·387.02!111
1892 tluzu PickUP, 5 Speed niCI

SSOOO, 814·G92-2504 aflaropm

'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1986 Chevy Fun Slzo Corworolon
Van Excellent Conchtton low
Miloo,go.814-4467Q2&amp;

'

840

Electrical

ASTRO·GRAPH

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) II you are truly
determoned to achieve a specific Objec·
tova today, yotJ woll suoceed. but you must
not doubt your capability
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) !nlormatoon
pertltntng to a conlidentoal Issue should
be reatricled to the people who are direct-

and

ly Involved

Refrigeration
RSES CERTIFIED DEALEfl
LAWRENCE ~RPRI&amp;S
Heat Pumps, Atr Cond1t1ontng If
You Oon't Call Us We Bolh Lo;e•
F,.e ESiunates, 1 800 291 0098 • 614 448 e:!08 WV 002945
.lfll') l•

R es1denual or commetCI&amp;I wmng
new aervtee or repatrl Ma!t8f' u • "
censvcl electrtctan Rtdenou, ,., :-"•
Eltclrtc•l WV000306 304 875 r:tf
1786
' •

~=-:--~:-:----- Juo •

Resrdentral Or Commere•al Wtr y
rng New Semce Ot Rtpalf'l l•
--censed- Electnctan Wel1h Elec
...
lfiC 614 446 9950 Gallipolis • ff'

Oflio

what to do to mal&lt;e the retatooshop wort.
Mall $2 75 to Matchmaker rio this news·
pape1 _ P 0 Box 1758, Murray Holl
Statoon, New York NY 10156

' ••• •~.

Tuelday July

16, 1M

Suoceaa os indicalad on lhe year ah86d W
you lonlsh old prolect• before tackling
new ones Try to
patient and llll:k
to your'limellbll
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Strove lor
r lalrneaa In your bu11n111 alluatoon8
today, but alao be real11tl' and form
Spicily your Ierma, but make
sionl when necnaary Try~ng to patch up
a broken romance? The Aatro· Greph
Matchmaker can help you underatend

rema111

ooncea-

"

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You might
have an opportunoty today to do something constNGIIVe to strengthen an omportant rebll100sh1p Take advantage d this
favorable trend
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You may
nrcewe ecknowleCigment or a reward as
a rnuh of a recent ellon This accolade
wiM Ill your expectatoons
SAGmAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Treat
today"s events pholosophocally even
when dealing with senous manors When
your mind-set IS positiVI you Wtl get bel·

ttf reeuha

take on more management respOns1bth
lies today on a collectove arrangement
Bolh you and your partner can benefit
!rom this
AQUARIUS (Jin ~lb 19) In order to
get others to support your onterests loday
you musl forst be Willing to cooperate
Eveoythong woll be done on a quid pro-quo

basis
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) You can
haM18 your commercoal affaors more
effectively today than you woll be able to
tomorrow Keep thos In mond when you

.. ,,;
)

arrange your agenda
ARIES (Mirch 21-Aprll Ill) Today you
can direct others WithOut act1ng tn a dicta
tonal manner Let your effechveness
determone your behaVIOr
TAUAUII (April »--liy 20) An opporl\r·
nlly of a limned nature might come your
way today v1a a concerned assocoate
Treat thos opportunity with respect
GEJIINI (lily 21.June 20) Handle your
moat dofllwlt aaSignmenta ea~y on the
day Both your dnve and eliJlectailons
might diminish later 11 the day

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JMI. 11) Try ~o

•

�•.

•·
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel
.

.

.

d~hes -------Giant dishes being replaced-------:

Large satellite
are disappearing
·from rural landscape
POTrERS MILLS, Pa. (AP) - In .
territory too remote for cable television, identical lawn ornaments for
years have graced huge estates and
rundown trailers alike- monstrous,
yawning satellite dishes.
But like outhouses and milk cans,
the dishes are giving way to the !atest tecl)nology- 18-inch dishes that
are just as powerful as models 15 feel
wide.
Cathy Nardozzo made the switch
from an old C-band dish to a small
one eight months ago when the
motor th,at rotated the large dish
broke.
"We figured instead of spending
the money to fix the motor, we'll just
get a small dish, " she said.
Like a jalopy next to a sports car,
the Nardozzos' old dish sits dormant
by the new one on their central Pennsylvania farm. Bird droppings cover
the large black dish. and her dogs
sometimes sprawl in its ample shade.
" I have no idea what to do with
it," she said.
Other owners have turned them
into kiddie pools, landscaping ponds .
or birdbaths.
.
The C-band dishes first hit the :
market in the early 1980s and were
scooped up by television-starved rur- ·
al residents weary of snowy reception
and the two or three channels available with an old-fashioned antenna.
The first dishes - advertised in
Neiman-Marcus catalogs in 1979cost $36,000 and were almost 20 feet
wide. The price dropped to $3,500 by
1984 and, eventually, to less than
$2.500.
The large dishes used to be status
symbols in rural areas, and residents
typically placed them prominently in
front yards. People joked that Vermont, where 30 percent of the populatlon can't get cable, should declare
the satellite dish the official state
flower.
The first C-band owners were able
to pirate almost any signal they
wanted, from movie channels such as
Home Box Office to raw network
feeds that allowed peeks at what
news anchors and sports announcers
did during commercial breaks.

her

:Vol. 47, NO. 56

use
are rep,laclllg
In
landscapea, but what to do with
. problem for owners. (AP)

south to Fresno so they could feed the oought the school bus he drove July .
·
news to their editors, until Pacific 15, 1976, as a memento.
Bell installed a battery of private teleA memorial plaque surrounded by
phone lines in a makeshift press room yellow roses in front of City Hall lists .
that normally housed fire trucks.
: the victims' names and expresses .
Town residents hung around out- "heartfelt thanks" for their safe
side, shocked and worried about the return . A cobweb shrouds a bronze :
children, but fascinated by the media inlay depicting their Dairyland school :
frenzy .
bus.
Fi~t rumor, then fact, circulated in
Frederick N. Woods and brothers the evening that the cnildren had been James and Richard Schoenfeld. :
found alive and safe.
scions of well-to-do San Francisco '
The youngsters - ages 5- 14 area families. were convicled of kid- :
and their bus driver literally had dug napping and sentenced to life prison :
their way to freedom after being terms . They appear before parole :
entombed for some 18 hours.
boards every few years. but so far •
It had been almost 30 hours since have not convinced ·anyone they
they had been abducted and forced should be set free .
.
from their yellow school bus into two _ James Schoenfeld summed up the
mini -vans while on their way home crime in a pre-sentencing interview: ·
from summer sc hool.
"The plan was simple in theory - :
A chartered bus brought the chil- kidnap a school bus, hold the occu- :
dren to the police station parking lot pants for ransom . The state pays us; :
before dawn on July 17 to the cheers we release the hostages. All our .
of townspeople and the tears of par- problems would be solved , and the •
ents.
state would be reimbursed by their •
The children arc grown now and 1insurancc company."
'
scattered. Ray. retired for eight years,

'

..
'

'

-

'

changed."
""'
Some of the other voices from the
early pages of Parents foreshadowed
the evolution in thinking on how to
be a good parent.
-A businessman told in 1927
how be uied to get the most out of the
few minutes he had with his children
between dinner and bedtime each
weeknight.
-A first-time mother in 1929
confided her fears at having !O bathe
,her newborn .
-And educator Maria Montessori
urged parents to create an envimnjment for their children's intellectual
development
t

-~-_:_--~-- - - --

--

- - -

- --

..
"·
.
...... -

!' • ~

,

'

; ..

.

CENTER OF DEBATE • Amanda SmiHk, 17, of Emmett, ldl·
ho, shown with her son Tyler, has become the center of a deblte
over teen prignancy. Smisek Ia being charged with a little known
75-yur-old law against fornication, and Ia one of a half-dozen
young people charged in Emmett. (AP)

'
-- - -

--

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stefl
Economic and workforce development were among the topics
addressed by Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister during a. two-day tour of
southeastern Ohio, culminating this
morning with an economic forum
in Marietta.
Monday morning, Hollister
toured the Carleton School in Syracuse, in particular examining the
combined manufacturing facilities
of Meigs Industries arid the school.
Currently, Meigs lndustries is
producing parts for teddy bears
manufactured by the Ohio River
Bear Co. of Middleport, cutting out
patterns for the bears which are
assembled later.
The Ohio River Bear Co. and its
owner, Susan Baker, were recently bestowed the Governor's Award
of Excellence in Exporting.
"All (the bears) have different
personalities," Hollister said. "People need to be aware ... · they are
creating different personalities."
In keeping with that theme, the
patterns are marked with each
bear's individual name - no two
bears are the same.
In addition, Hollister was updaied on Meigs Industries' other activities, including the construction of
wooden crates on contract for the
College &amp;ook Store in Athens. The
crates are "standard·college furnilure," according to Adult Services
Director David Milliken.
Hollister asked what those asso- __
ciated with Carleton School/Meigs- ·
Industries see as their biggest challenge.
"The need to expand,'' remarked

.,

------- ---------

WASHINGTON (AP) - Trying
to reach out to female voters and transcend bitter GOP differences over
abortion, Bob Dole has picked a New
York congresswoman who supports
abortion rights to deliver the keynote
address at next month's Republican
convention.
"Let's be realistic, we cannot be
a one-issue party," Dole said as he
announced his selection of Rep.
Susan Molinari - a moderate
Republican - to give the important
prime-time speech.
"We want to win the election."
Dole said in a joint appearance with
his wife, Elizabeth, on CNN's "Larry King Live" Monday night.

VIEWING REVITALIZATION - Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister briefly viewed progress on
Pomeroy's downtown revltellzation project Monday aa part ot a twcHiay tour of southeastern
Ohio. Pomeroy Councilman John MueHr, right, polnttd out~- of· the work that haa been
completed.

Meigs MRDD Vice President Unda Warner. "They're kind of packed
in back there."
Milliken noted the need for
expandJ:d. home services while
MRDD Director Steve ' Beha
observed challenges in transporting
MRDD clients of all ages across
·the-county.
Beha added that MRDD has
received great community support .

"You guys have done a nice job.
You are to be commended for that,"
Hollister said.
Hollister then viewed the area
Wbe!'f till: bearparu ~tre-produced,
meeting with Meigs Industries
workers, including Kenny Napper
of Harrisonville, who had a list of
questions prepared for Hollister.
She also talked with Baker
about assembly of the bears and

met with MI clients Brent Larkins
and Lisa Montgomery, who were
busy in the production of Ohio
River Bear Co. bears.
•Afterwards, Napper · sl\owed
Hollister other Ml products including the wooden crates.
Later, Hollister briefly viewed
progress on the Po.mcroy downtown revitalization project, including building renovation and the
parking lot promenade .

Commissioners approve $3 million budget

Dole himself has a long record in.
opposition to abortion. But he has
advocated tolerance among Republicans for those with rival views on the
divisive subject.
Molinari, who called the show
from a restaurant in Buffalo, said her
selection was a complete surprise.
''I' m delighted ," she said.
Dole also announced during the
hour-long interview that his proposed economic package - to be
unveiled by month's end - would
include a tax cut. He did not say how
large.
On the subject of a running mate ,
Dole acknowledged that ~iM ~11111paign bad done li preliminary interview with Pennsylvania Gov. Tom
Ridge, who has emerged as a first-tier
prospect.

"It's fair to say he has been contacted. But others have been contacted. Others will be contacted.'' ·
As Dole intensifies his search, the
50-year-old Ridge "is the top hone
at the moment," according to a senior
Dole aide who spoke on the condition
of anonymity.
Dole himself spokc ·for 20 minutes
Sunday with another prospect, Wis-.
consin Gov. Tommy Thompson, but
aides to both men said the vice presidential nomination did not come up.
Asked by King whether any
women were under consideration.
Dole replied: "Yes, obviously."
And, while Colin Powell appears
to have lllkllll himtiCII' OU\ o! vice
presidcntla~eonslderGtion, rlnlc uidthe retired general remains a top
prospect for a possible Dole administration Cahinet post.

Personal loans boost
Cremeans warchest
WASHINGTON (AP)- Personal wealth helped Republican Rep. Frank
Cremeans surge ahead of his challenger in the 6th District when both campaigns tallied their available cash.
The Cremeans campaign's financial disclosure statement showed Monday that the freshmad began July with more than $428.000 in the bank. compared with just over $255.000 for the campaign of Democrat Ted Strickland.
Cremeans, who owns a concrete business in Gallipolis, actually would
have been trailing Strickland, a psychologist , in the cash department if he
hadn't been willing to put his own money into the campaign in the form of
$325,000 in personal loans so far this year.
Cremeans also used his own money to anchor his successful 1994 campaign, and then devoted 1995 to finding Republicans contributors who would
donate retroactively and help the campaign repay the money to Cremeans
himself.
That experience helped make Cremeans an experienced fund -raiser.
Throughout the first six months of the year, Cremeans attracted more political action committee money ($157,000 vs. $118,000 for Strickland) and more
individual contributions ($200,251 vs. $7K,()(X) for Strickland.)
Not evident on the forms was whatever boost Strickland has received from
commercials written independent of the campaign .and paid fnr hy groups
opposing Cremeans' positions on selected issues.
Both Citizen Action and the AFL-CIO have bought those kinds of commercials in southern Ohio.

"If all funds are spent in 1997 that ing the courthouse more accessible to
By JIM FREEMAN
are budgcied, the balance at the end working residents of the county.
·Sentinel News Stefl
Changing courthouse hours has
The Meigs County Board.of Com- of 1997 would be only $89,923,"
missioners proposed a $3,093.170 Hoffman explained. "We need at been a topic of discussion among
:budget for 1997 during a public bud- least $250,000 in carryover funds in candidates for the board of county
·get hearing Monday afternoon at the order for the county_to operate dur- commissioners and has been brought
up at recent meetings of Pomeroy
commissioners· regular weekly meet- ing the first few months of 1998 .
Village
Council.
"Apprq~
imately
$160,000
needs
mg.
"I personally feel this idea should
The board then approved submit- to be added to the revenues or cut
ting the proposed budget to the coun- from the expenses in 1997 in or&lt;!er be pursued," Hoffman said.
However, he pointed out two
ty Budget Commission for further forthe county to operate in 1998." he
added.
items
in the Ohio Revised Code indireview.
"'-...._... 1
Decisions
on
cutting
expenses
or
cating
that county commissioners
Commission President Fred Hoffincreasing
revenue
by
$160,000
will
have
no
authority to fix opening and
man said the proposed budget "provides approximately the same amount have to be made before appropria- closing times for county offices.
"This decision is left to the disof funding to each department that tions for 1997 are made in January,
Hoffman
pointed
out.
cretion
of the individual officeholdwas available in 1996."
In addition, commi ssioners dis- ers," he said.
Meanwhile, commissioners called
Hoffman said it would be a good
on officeholders and department cussed recent comments on the
'
C
hanging
of
courthouse
hours,
mak
idea
to get all officeholders together
·heads to operate within their budgets.

to discuss the proposal and to later
have a public meeting where members of the public can address the
office holders concerning courthouse
hours.
'"We want hours where the average
person can take care of business in
the courthouse," he said.
Commission Vice President Janet
Howard said she checked into
extending the hours of some offices
early in her term, only to hit a bottleneck .
"The (elected) officeholders
weren't interested," she sa1d. "They
don't want to do what the people
want.
'"People want the title office open
in conjunction with the license
(Continued on Page 3)

:Profit performance
;worries Wall Street

Outage disrupts area's business day

NEW YORK (AP) - What's
.bugging Wall Street'! In a word: profits.
Earnings season, the several-week
period when companies unveil their
quarterly profit reports en masse, has
become a major problem '.•.'ith some
early disappointments throwing the
stock market into a frenzy.
The Dow Jones industrial average
on Monday posted its fourth-biggest
point drop ever. Continued selling iri
the technology-heavy Nasdaq Slock
Market left it with almost no gain for
the year. The turmoil is raising questions about'whether the 5 1/2-yearold bull market is finished.
"There's been a change of character," said Stan Weinstein, publisher of the Professional Tape Reader, a
market newsletter.
· The Dow average, the market's
most widely followed index, finished
Monday down 161.05 points, or 2.9
Jlertent. at 5,349.51. · That was its
~iecpest slide since March 8 and lowest close since late January.
: Other market averages saw significant erosion, too, especially the
Nasdaq cOmposite index. The Nasllaq, •home to companies like
t&gt;ficrosof~and chip-maker Intel, saw
,• .

.'

Parents magazine marks 70th anniversary as category leader

I

Moderate chosen
to deliver GOP's
keynote address

Meigs entrepreneurship, MR
progress detailed to Hollister

truancy, than children who have the country," said Dennis Mansfield , a much higher risk of dropping out of
benefit of both parents to support and founder of the Idaho Family Forum. school, which just starts the poverty
In small towns like Emmett, a cycle all over again," he said.
raise them," Varie said.
farming
and one-time mill ,town of
For now, Amanda has finished the
Since Amanda 's day in court May
4,600,
the
impact
of
Amanda's
conparenting
class and is committed to
15, six other young people in Emmell
viction
is
magnified.
Somebody
in
completing
her final year of high
have been charged under the law.
the
commumty
who
has
not
been
school.
Critics say Varie 's crusade is
She and her son are living with her
inflicting needless trauma on teen&gt; identified- notified the county that
already saddled with the over- she was pregnant, prompting Varie to mother. After high sc hool , she plans
to marry Tyler's father, 16-year-old
whelmmg responsibility of parent- file charges.
Amanda's se ntencing came just Chris Lay, who received a similar
hood .
"When I heard about it, I could- two weeks before her son, Tyler, was sentence after pleading guilty to forn't believe it," said Amanda's moth- born. She rece1ved a 30-day sus- nication .
er, Jody Smisek. "I thought they were pended ja&lt;l sentence, three ye~rs
Although Amanda did not appeal
buuing into our lives where they probation and a directive to complete her conviction, she said she believes
shouldn't be. I'd like to get the law parenting classes.
she was unfairly prose&lt;;uted, while
Magistrate Gordon Petrie lectured other sexually active teen-a~ers and
off the books so they can't use it anymore . So~ lawyers want to help me her ior two hours about the financial unmarried adults who don't have
burden that young, unwed mothers children are ignored.
do that."
·
·
Varie's upporters see it as a vic- place on society.
"If you uphold the law, you have
Varie
says
poverty
is
a
"huge
to treat everyone the same," she said.
tory for fa ily values.
"Uitim tely. what we see in financial problem" in Idaho: "Girls "The law doesn't say pregnant teenEmmett is going to be seen across the who get pregnant in their teens are at agers or non-pregnant teen-agers.''

vision, where parenthood has become
a frequent talk-show topic.
"The competition has helped us
stay on our toes," said Ann Pleshette
Murphy, Parents' editor in chief for
the past eight years .
Murphy said she was struck in
preparing the anniversary issue by the
similarities in the concerns shared by
families over the years.
The sunlight treatments popular in
the 1920s to help ward off diseases
like rickets seem ill-advised today
given concerns over skin cancer. But ·
Murphy said the topic showed ''the
concern parents have about theirchildren's health and safety baven't-

'•

35 cenll!
A O.nnett Co. Henp8per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 16, 1996

. 1 Section, 10 Pagea

Prosecutor's crusade against
teen pregnancy creates ruckus

pic bringing up children. .
. Parents marks ns 70th anntv~rsary
thts year and rematns the leader m the
par~nthood group of maga~1nes m
tenns of both ctrculatton and allverttsmg pages, wtth a monthly ctrculaIt on of more than 1.8 mtlhon:
Its August tssue appeanng on
newsstands th1s_ week contams a f&gt;!&gt;. page retrospective datmg back to tts
1926 debut. .
After havmg the parenthood field
, to 1fself f~r most of tts ltfe. Parents IS
now facmg vtgomus compebtton
from nval magazmes s~ch ~ Parenung, Famtly Fun, Farmly Ltfe and
Working Mother as well as from tele'

.Pick 3:
6-3-5
Pick 4:
3-8-2-o
Buckeye 5:
8-18-20-32-36

en tine

Bizarre California busnapping of
26 children recalled 20 years later

Gas prices fall
at .n ation's pumps

NEW YORK (AP) - Hourlong
sunbaths f~r chtldren were touted to
ward off wtnterttme dtseases. A program was described for tratnmg
tnfants. ~ young as two months to
qu1t sotltng thetrdtapers . And moms
were adv1sed to stay th.ree weeks m
the hospttal after dehver~ng thetr chlldren .
.
Those tdeas from the 1920s and
1930s may sound s1lly today g1ven
~vances tn med1cal and psychologteal. t!t•nking and modern economiC
realtUes.
.
.
But Parents magazme _earned
them even as It was establishing ttself
as a hvely and useful gut de for peo•

Reds defeat
improves leatl
for St. Louis
Sports on Page 5

Most large-dish owners now pay
a monthly fee to a provider who
beams them a package of networks.
All small-dish owners pay such a fee.
But the small dish is much easier
to use because it is stabilized and
doesn't have to be programmed by
the user.
"When we first got the big dish,
I didn't change the channel for three
months," Mrs. Nardozzo said. "With ·
the small dish, we don 't have to give · .
babysitters and friends training on
how to use the television."
The small dishes cost about $600,
but most companies offer leasing
plans. Basic service can run as low as
$30 per month, although most subscribers receive optional packages
that push the price higher.
The large dishes aren't completely obsolete because they allow viewers access to programs they can't get
anywhere else, said Chuck Hewitt,
president of Satellite Broadcasting
and Communications Assoc iation, a
trade group for satellite retailers,
manufacturers and programmers.
"People who like to watch reli- .
,gious channels, certain sports -~
especially college games from other.
parts of the country__:_ and of course,
adult programming," he said.
The small dishes, available for just
the last four years, already have more
subscribers than their big brothers.
About 2.37 million large dishes are
being used in the United States,
compared to 3.47 million small dishes.
The small dishes, because of their
N..i-.:tft,,t&gt; llanelli nexi to
broken 15-foot·wlde &lt;:-band
convenient size and competitive
satellite dish while her replllcement 18-inch dish eltt in the backprice, have .appeal beyond non-cable
ground at her central Pennsylvania farm In Potters Milia, Pa. The
areas. They've also been sprouting
among yards and porches in suburbia,
said George Morgan, director of the
Center for Commercial Space Communications at Virginia Tech.
"The cable systems are quite
afraid, and rightly so, that the small
direct satellite providers are going to
take a huge chunk of the business
away," he said. "In Europe, you can
CHOWCHILLA, Calif. (AP) ago, the nation's news center was this
already see small dishes hanging out ,
The
news
was
almost
too
bizarre
to
hot, dusty farm town of 5,000 people
of windows from high-rise apartment :
believea
school
bus
full
of
youngsmack
dllb in California's geographbuildings."
'
sters had vanished from a rural road ic center.
.
on a hot summer day, leaving no
Residents and reporters alike said
trace .
they didn't really believe the first
But it was true, and the news soon Associated Press stories saying that
spread across the nation on July 15, Ray and his 26 passengers were miss1976, .as police and reporters scram- ing.
bled to explain the mysterious disapThe town's lone police dispatchpearance.
er was swamped with media calls as
It was as i'f the earth had swal- word of the kidnappings spread durlowed
them . And indeed , it had.
ing the night. Someone estimated that
· LOS ANGELES (AP) - The cost lowing a more than 20-cent rise
The
second jolt came some 30 200 reporters came to cover the stoof a gallon of gas at the nation's gaso- - posted from January to May, she said.
line pumps fell more than 2 cents
The earlier increase wru; driven by 'hours later when the children and ry. A New York Daily News staffer
over the past three weeks, according higher crude oil prices and a tight . their driver, Ed Ray, reappeared miles took a taxi 250 miles from Los Angeto a survey.
gasoline supply. When crude oil . away after tunneling free from a les.
The crush of reporters overThe new average price for all prices subsequently dropped, gaso- moving van in which they had been
buried alive in a rock quarry by three whelmed telephone service in that
grades, both self-serve and full ser- line prices followed .
vice, was $1.33 a gallon on Friday,
In the survey released Sunday, young kidnappers with a $5 million pre-cellular era, resulting in busy signals on call after call from pay
said Trilby Lundberg, whose Lund- self-serve prices per gallon averaged dream .
The Democrats nominated Jimmy phones by the middle of the followberg Survey monitors prices at $1.27 for regular unleaded gasoline;
I 0,000 gas stations nationwide.
$1.36 for mid-grade unleaded and Carter for president the night before ing day, July 16.
the kidnapping, the Olympics were
The phone jam was so bad the kidThe price was down 2.15 cents a $1.45 for premium.
gallon since the June 21 survey, conFull-service prices per gallon under way and the nation still was nappers were unable to reach officials
tinuing a decline that began earlier, averaged $1 .60 for regular unleaded; reveling in its July 4th bicentennial in Chowchilla to demand a $5 million
Lundberg said.
$1.68 for mid-grade . and $1.75 for celebration.
ransom.
But for a couple of days 20 years
Some reporters drove 40 mile s
The latest price represents a 5-cent premium.
decline in the past seven weeks. foi-

EMMETI, Idaho (AP) - Amanda Smisek is waiting tables , caring
for her newborn son and, at 17,
weathering a legal and moral tempest
over her conviction for violating a
75-year-old law against fornication.
"When I was first served with the
papers, I didn't even know what fornication was. I had to look it up," she
sa1d. "It's any unmarried person
who has sex, and they got me on
that."
Gem County Prosecutor Douglas
Varie says he is usmg the all-but-forgolten I 92 1 state law to try to wipe
out teen pregnancy in this county
northweSI of Boise, which has one of
the state's highest teen pregnancy
rates.
"Children who are born to teenage mothers arc immediately at a
greater risk to be involved in delinquent behavior, substance abuse and

Ohio Lottery

Monday, July 15, 1996:

Pomer9y • Middleport, Ohio.

its main index lose 3.9 percent of its
value. leaving it ahead less than I
percent for the year.
Trading today will represent an
important test of the market's
strength. Will stocks tum.and rally, or
will they tank again?
Concern about corporate profits
triggered the recent slump, particularly earnings in the important technology sector. Profits drive stocks
more than anything else, and word of
weakness can quickly shake confidence .

Percentage plunges
/11 terms of ptrctiiiORt, htrt an the

/0 worst days for tht Dow Jonts
industrial average:
Point• Percent
Dltf
Ocl19, 1987

508

22.61

Ocl28, 1929

38.33

12.82

Ocl29, 1929

30.57

11.73

Nov. 8.1929

25.55

9.92

Doc. 18,'1899

5.57

8.72

- AUg. 12.-1932

5.79

8.40

Mard'l14, 19Q7

6.89

8.29

Ocl26, 1Wr

156.83

8.04

7.55

7.84

J~21,

'

1933

7.75
Ocl18, 1937 ·10.57
Last Thursday. the Dow lost more
than 83 points after an announcement
July 15 1995 11.1 :15
2 92
late Wednesday by computer maker
Hewlett-Packard that an order- SOUICO: Dow Jones l Co.
growth slowdown would hurt sales
and profits. That came a day after a
That represents so_mething oF a
disappointing earnings report from
chang' in psychology for a market
chip-maker Motorola.
used to roarin~ ahelldlwith abandon.
The drop Monday, h~wever, did
not follow any major economic news.
For years the bull market has tak"The market is reacting in en eare of investors, moving generadvance of these earnings and in fellr ally and predictably upward, backed
of what they might bring," said by the leadersltip of technology comEugene Peroni, director of technical panies like IBM and Intel. It has also
resear.ch at Janney Montgomery snapped back powerfully after big
Scott, a brokerage.
declines.

cleanup and line work could be completed, according to Ron McDade.
AEP district manager.
Power was restored to much of
downtown Pomeroy and I .762 customers at 12:27 p.m., while 240 other customer&lt; in the immediate area of
Union Avenue remained ofT until
nearly
4 p.m., according to McDade.
noun .
The
outa~c had a bi~ effect on the
A main AEP feeder line• was
area
businc~s
community, shutting
knocked out of service along Union
down
businesses
lrom Racine to
Avenue when a tree fell and broke
Middleport
and
affecti
ng banks, grotwo poles off near the intersection of
cery
stores
and
restaurants
at their
Osbourne Street around 8:35 a.m.
busiest
times.
.
Monday.
"We
didn't
have
any
phone
service
- AEP customers in the village of
Pomeroy maintained part power for due to the outage. so we decided to
a short time, until workers shut down close early because of the situation.
circuits to the three villages so

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Stefl
A widespread power outage early
Monday brought operations to a
standstill for several offices and busine sses in Pomeroy, Racine and Syracuse for nearly four hours before service was restored late Monday after-

Jac~son

It hurts anytime that you lose a day
of busi ness. but the situation was
beyond anyone's control," said Susan
Clark of Clark's Jewelry Store.
Clark commended AEP crews for
their quick work in restoring service
to the 2,000 customers affected .
"It doesn't matter what nature
gives us, this business community
just pi ck~ up the p iece~ and m:wc~
.forward . We'll do the same thin~ after
1thi s outage," she said.
· All county offices at the Meigs
County Counhousc remained open
through the outage, with only minor
computer problems in the County
Court and auditor's offices resulting
from the loss of power, according to
county Treasurer Howard Frank.

County firm nets water grant

COLUMBU 0 (AP)- Two Ohio mission ar~a. presented the check to
areas were approved for federal ·mon- local officials. The money is a comey to build or improve public drink- bined grant and loan.
The USDA also announced that a
ing water systems, the U.S. Depart$1 million award will go to the vilment of Agriculture said.
The Jackson County Water Co. lage of Manchester in Adams Counreceived a $1.6 million check Mon- · ty. That money will be used to
day to extend water service tb 166 replace a water-treatment plant.
"These loans and grants will help
new households in Jefferson, Hamilrural
communities where households
ton, Madison and Scioto townships.
either
do not have drinking water or
Bart Chilton, senior policy directo~ for USDA's rural development

their tap water is still undrinkable."
said Linda K. Page, state director of
the USDA's rural development mission area.
The money is pan of a ~ationwide
initiative to provide safe drinking
water to rural communities, the
agency said. Fifty -four communities
in 35 states will receive a total of $70
million .
President Clinton launched the
Water 2000 program in August 1994.

&lt; ''

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>July 15, 1996</text>
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      <name>dewhurst</name>
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    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
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</item>
